Anselm on the Goodness of God
Cur Deus Homo
We do no injustice or dishonor to God, but give him thanks with
all the heart, praising and proclaiming the ineffable height of his
compassion. For the more astonishing a thing it is and beyond
expectation, that he has restored us from so great and deserved ills in
which we were, to so great and unmerited blessings which we had
forfeited; by so much the more has he shown his more exceeding love and
tenderness towards us. For did they but carefully consider how fitly in
this way human redemption is secured, they would not ridicule our
simplicity, but would rather join with us in praising the wise
beneficence of God. For, as death came upon the human race by the
disobedience of man, it was fitting that by man's obedience life should
be restored. And, as sin, the cause of our condemnation, had its origin
from a woman, so ought the author of our righteousness and salvation to
be born of a woman. And so also was it proper that the devil, who,
being man's tempter, had conquered him in eating of the tree, should be
vanquished by man in the suffering of the tree which man bore. Many
other things also, if we carefully examine them, give a certain
indescribable beauty to our redemption as thus procured.
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