Chapter 23
33. And when he reads of the sins of great men, although he may be able to see
and to trace out in them a figure of things to come, let him yet put the
literal fact to this use also, to teach him not to dare to vaunt himself in
his own good deeds, and in comparison with his own righteousness, to despise
others as sinners, when he sees in the case of men so eminent both the storms
that are to be avoided and the shipwrecks that are to be wept over. For the
sins of these men were recorded to this end, that men might everywhere and
always tremble at that saying of the apostle: "Wherefore let him that thinketh
he standeth take heed lest he fall." For there is hardly a page of Scripture
on which it is not clearly written that God resisteth the proud and giveth
grace to the humble.