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But refusing shoes, as forbidden by the command of the gospel, if
bodily weakness or the morning cold in winter or the scorching heat of
midday compels them, they merely protect their feet with sandals,
explaining that by the use of them and the Lord's permission it is implied
that if, while we are still in this world we cannot be completely set free
from care and anxiety about the flesh, nor can we be altogether released
from it, we should at least provide for the wants of the body with as
little fuss and as slight an entanglement as possible: and as for the feet
of our soul which ought to be ready for our spiritual race and always
prepared for preaching the peace of the gospel (with which feet we run
after the odour of the ointments of Christ, and of which David says: "I ran
in thirst," and Jeremiah: "But I am not troubled, following Thee"), we
ought not to suffer them to be entangled in the deadly cares of this world,
filling our thoughts with those things which concern not the supply of the
wants of nature, but unnecessary and harmful pleasures. And this we shall
thus fulfil if, as the Apostle advises, we "make not provision for the
flesh with its lusts." But though lawfully enough they make use of these
sandals, as permitted by the Lord's command, yet they never suffer them to
remain on their feet when they approach to celebrate or to receive the holy
mysteries, as they think that they ought to observe in the letter that
which was said to Moses and to Joshua, the son of Nun: "Loose the latchet
of thy shoe: for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground."
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