As stated by Clement it is envy that prompts Cain to kill Abel, envy that drives Moses to flee, envy that causes Joseph’s brothers to sell Joseph into slavery, and so on. And yet the sins of the past are overcome when Clement says “Leave these instances from the past and come to some of the heroes of more recent times.” The heroes of more recent times, refer, of course, to the saints who have lived their lives by the grace of Christ and experienced his mercy in the gift of confession. What follows then is an explanation of grace and repentance. Once more he references the scriptures, but this time it is to show the Lord’s mercy. “We have only to survey the generations of the past to see that in every one of them the Lord has offered the chance of repentance to any who were willing to turn to him.” He then entreats all of the faithful in Corinth to believe the good news and conform to the will of the Father because it is the will of the Father that “repentence should be open to every one of his beloved.”
In conclusion, in his letter to the Corinthians Pope Saint Clement addresses the Corinthians in their dire state of discord and then offers them the mercy and peace that come from