One of the most difficult texts to read in all of Scripture seems to be Romans 3:12 where Paul writes (quoting the Psalms), “No one does good, not even one.” “Of course there are good people," we all want to counter. "Just open your eyes. Even bad people do good things.” We even contend that humans are “basically good” in direct opposition to this text. But the text isn’t ambiguous. So I ask myself, “How did the early church fathers interpret this text?”
The early church fathers read “There is none good; no, not one” with remarkable unanimity and seriousness. They did not treat Paul’s words as exaggeration, nor did they soften them into general moral observations. Instead, they understood the phrase as a literal description of humanity’s condition apart from God’s grace. What varies among them is not whether the statement is true of all people, but how they explain the depth and cause of that universal condition.
Origen (early 3rd century) interprets the phrase as a theological diagnosis of humanity “in Adam.” For him, Paul is not denying that people can perform outwardly virtuous acts; rather, he is saying that no one possesses the kind of goodness that counts as righteousness before God. Origen emphasizes that even the most virtuous pagan philosophers fall short of divine goodness because their virtue is not rooted in the knowledge of the true God. Thus, “none good” means “none good in the way God defines goodness.” Righteousness must be given, not achieved.
John Chrysostom (late 4th century), the great preacher of Antioch and Constantinople, takes Paul’s words as a deliberate leveling of all humanity. In his homilies on Romans, he stresses that Paul’s purpose is to “cut off all boasting” by showing that no one, Jew or Gentile, has any natural claim to righteousness. Chrysostom interprets “none good” as referring to the inward disposition of the heart rather than outward deeds. People may appear good, he says, but no one naturally seeks God or fulfills His will without divine help. Chrysostom’s reading is pastoral and moral, but it is also uncompromising: the human heart is bent away from God unless God intervenes.
Ambrosiaster (4th century), whose commentary on Romans was widely read in the West, interprets the phrase in a way that anticipates Augustine. He argues that Paul is describing the universal corruption inherited from Adam. For Ambrosiaster, “none good” means that all people are born with a nature inclined toward sin, and therefore no one can claim goodness before God. He does not deny that believers can become righteous through grace, but he insists that no one begins in that state. His interpretation is one of the clearest early articulations of what would later be called original sin.
Augustine (late 4th-early 5th century) takes the fathers’ consensus and systematizes it. For him, Romans 3:10-12 is a foundational text proving that humanity is universally sinful and incapable of doing good without grace. Augustine repeatedly cites “none good” in his debates with Pelagius, arguing that if even one person could be good without grace, Paul’s argument would collapse. Augustine reads the phrase as absolute: no one, apart from God’s regenerating work, does good in the sense that God requires. His interpretation is the most rigorous, but it is not a departure from earlier fathers—it is a sharpening of what they already affirmed.
Even fathers who emphasize human freedom, such as Justin Martyr or Clement of Alexandria, still acknowledge that Paul’s statement describes humanity’s natural state apart from divine aid. They do not interpret “none good” as referring only to particularly wicked individuals. Instead, they see it as a universal truth about fallen humanity: goodness, in the full biblical sense, is impossible without God.
In short: The early church fathers consistently interpret “There is none good; no, not one” as a literal, universal statement about humanity’s condition apart from grace. They differ in how they explain the mechanics of sin and grace, but they agree that Paul means exactly what he says. No father treats the phrase as hyperbole, and none restrict it to a subset of humanity. For them, Paul is describing the spiritual reality of the human race in Adam—a reality that only God’s grace can overcome.
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