July 26
Having been forgiven, be merciful to others
third time the
girl repeated: You too were with that man yesterday, but a third
time he denied it. Finally Jesus looked at him, reminding him of his previous
assertion. Peter understood, repented of his sin, and began to weep. Mercifully,
however, Jesus forgave him his sin, because he knew that Peter, being a
man, was subject to human frailty.
Now, as I said before, the reason God's plan permitted Peter to sin was because he was to be entrusted with the whole people of God, and sinlessness added to his severity might have made him unforgiving toward his brothers and sisters. He fell into sin so that remembering his own fault and the Lord's forgiveness, he also might forgive others out of love for them. This was God's providential dispensation. He to whom the Church was to be entrusted, he, the pillar of the churches, the harbor of faith, was allowed to sin; Peter, the teacher of the world, was permitted to sin, so that having been forgiven himself he would be merciful to others.
| Augustine Day By Day | The Augustinians - St. Thomas of Villanova Province |
From John E. Rotelle, O.S.A., Tradition Day by Day: Readings from Church Writers. Augustinian Press. Villanova, PA, 1994.
HTML text prepared by David P. Steelman