The apostle, when he wishes to cast down the arrogance of humankind, does so by these testimonies: “‘No one is righteous, no one understands, no one seeks God. All have turned aside, together they have become unprofitable; no one does good, not even one’ [Psalm 14:1–3; 53:1–3]. ‘Their throat is an open grave, they use their tongues deceitfully’ [Psalm 5:9]. ‘The venom of asps is under their lips’ [Psalm 140:3]. ‘Their mouth is full of cursing and bitterness’ [Psalm 10:7]. ‘Their feet are swift to shed blood; in their paths are
ruin and misery’ [Isaiah 59:7 P.]. There is no fear of God before their eyes” [Romans 3:10-16, 18 p.]. With these thunderbolts he inveighs not against particular men but against the whole race of Adam’s children. Nor is he decrying the depraved morals of one age or another, but indicting the unvarying corruption of our nature. Now his intention in
this passage is not simply to rebuke men that they may repent, but rather to teach them that they have all been overwhelmed by an unavoidable calamity from which only God’s mercy can deliver them. (Institutes, 2.3.2)
Man, as he was corrupted by the Fall, sinned willingly, not unwillingly or by compulsion; by the most eager inclination of his heart, not by forced compulsion; by the prompting of his own lust, not by compulsion from without. Yet so depraved is his nature that he can be moved or impelled only to evil. But if this is true, then it is clearly expressed that man is surely subject to the necessity of sinning. (2.3.5)
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