THE CONFESSIONS OF SAINT AUGUSTINE (401 A.D.).--ANOTHER TRANSLATION (BOOKS V
TO VII)
Book V
CHAPTER I-THAT IT BECOMES THE SOUL TO PRAISE GOD, AND TO CONFESS UNTO HIM.
Accept the sacrifice of my confessions from the ministry of my tongue, which
Thou hast formed and stirred up to confess unto Thy name. Heal Thou all my
bones, and let them say, O Lord, who is like unto Thee? For he who confesses to Thee
doth not teach Thee what takes place within him; seeing a closed heart closes
not out Thy eye, nor can man's hard-heartedness thrust back Thy hand: for Thou
dissolvest it at Thy will in pity or in vengeance, and nothing can hide itself
from Thy heat. But let my soul praise Thee, that it may love Thee; and let it
confess Thy own mercies to Thee, that it may praise Thee. Thy whole creation
ceaseth not, nor is silent in Thy praises; neither the spirit of man with voice
directed unto Thee, nor creation animate or inanimate, by the voice of those who
meditate thereon: that so our souls may from their weariness arise towards
Thee, leaning on those things which Thou hast created, and passing on to Thyself,
who madest them wonderfully; and there is refreshment and true strength.
CHAPTER II-ON THE VANITY OF THOSE WHO WISHED TO ESCAPE THE OMNIPOTENT GOD.
Let the restless, the godless, depart and flee from Thee; yet Thou seest them,
and dividest the darkness. And behold, the universe with them is fair, though
they are foul. And how have they injured Thee? or how have they disgraced Thy
government, which, from the heaven to this lowest earth, is just and perfect?
For whither fled they, when they fled from Thy presence? or where dost not Thou
find them? But they fled, that they might not see Thee seeing them, and,
blinded, might stumble against Thee (because Thou forsakest nothing Thou hast made);
that the unjust, I say, might stumble upon Thee, and justly be hurt; withdrawing
themselves from thy gentleness, and stumbling at Thy uprightness, and falling
upon their own ruggedness. Ignorant, in truth, that Thou art every where, Whom
no place encompasseth! and Thou alone art near, even to those that remove far
from Thee. Let them then be turned, and seek Thee; because not as they have
forsaken their Creator, hast Thou forsaken Thy creation. Let them be turned and
seek Thee; and behold, Thou art there in their heart, in the heart of those that
confess to Thee, and cast themselves upon Thee, and weep in Thy bosom, after all
their rugged ways. Then dost Thou gently wipe away their tears, and they weep
the more, and joy in weeping; even for that Thou, Lord, -not man of flesh and
blood, but -Thou, Lord, who madest them, re-makest and comfortest them. But
where was I, when I was seeking Thee? And Thou wert before me, but I had gone away
from Thee; nor did I find myself, how much less Thee!
CHAPTER III-HEAVING HEARD FAUSTUS, THE MOST LEARNED BISHOP OF THE MANICHAEANS,
HE DISCERNS THAT GOD, THE AUTHOR BOTH OF THINGS ANIMATE AND INANIMATE, CHIEFLY
HAS CARE FOR THE HUMBLE.
I would lay open before my God that nine-and-twentieth year of mine age. There
had then come to Carthage a certain Bishop of the Manichees, Faustus by name,
a great snare of the Devil, and many were entangled by him through that lure of
his smooth language: which though I did commend, yet could I separate from the
truth of the things which I was earnest to learn: nor did I so much regard the
service of oratory as the science which this Faustus, so praised among them,
set before me to feed upon. Fame had before bespoken him most knowing in all
valuable learning, and exquisitely skilled in the liberal sciences. And since I
had read and well remembered much of the philosophers, I compared some things of
theirs with those long fables of the Manichees, and found the former the more
probable; even although they could only prevail so far as to make judgment of
this lower world, the Lord of it they could by no means find out. For Thou art
great, O Lord, and hast respect unto the humble, but the proud Thou beholdest
afar off. Nor dost Thou draw near, but to the contrite in heart, nor art found by
the proud, no, not though by curious skill they could number the stars and the
sand, and measure the starry heavens, and track the courses of the planets.
For with their understanding and wit, which Thou bestowedst on them, they
search out these things; and much have they found out; and foretold, many years
before, eclipses of those luminaries, the sun and moon, -what day and hour, and
how many digits, -nor did their calculation fail; and it came to pass as they
foretold; and they wrote down the rules they had found out, and these are read at
this day, and out of them do others foretell in what year and month of the
year, and what day of the month, and what hour of the day, and what part of its
light, moon or sun is to be eclipsed, and so it shall be, as it is foreshowed. At
these things men, that know not this art, marvel and are astonished, and they
that know it, exult, and are puffed up; and by an ungodly pride departing from
Thee, and failing of Thy light, they foresee a failure of the sun's light, which
shall be, so long before, but see not their own, which is. For they search not
religiously whence they have the wit, wherewith they search out this. And
finding that Thou madest them, they give not themselves up to Thee, to preserve
what Thou madest, nor sacrifice to Thee what they have made themselves; nor slay
their own soaring imaginations, as fowls of the air, nor their own diving
curiosities (wherewith, like the fishes of the seal they wander over the unknown
paths of the abyss), nor their own luxuriousness, as beasts of the field, that
Thou, Lord, a consuming fire, mayest burn up those dead cares of theirs, and
re-create themselves immortally.
But they knew not the way, Thy Word, by Whom Thou madest these things which
they number, and themselves who number, and the sense whereby they perceive what
they number, and the understanding, out of which they number; or that of Thy
wisdom there is no number. But the Only Begotten is Himself made unto us wisdom,
and righteousness, and sanctification, and was numbered among us, and paid
tribute unto Caesar. They knew not this way whereby to descend to Him from
themselves, and by Him ascend unto Him. They knew not this way, and deemed themselves
exalted amongst the stars and shining; and behold, they fell upon the earth, and
their foolish heart was darkened. They discourse many things truly concerning
the creature; but Truth, Artificer of the creature, they seek not piously, and
therefore find Him not; or if they find Him, knowing Him to be God, they
glorify Him not as God, neither are thankful, but become vain in their imaginations,
and profess themselves to be wise, attributing to themselves what is Thine; and
thereby with most perverse blindness, study to impute to Thee what is their
own, forging lies of Thee who art the Truth, and changing the glory of
uncorruptible God into an image made like corruptible man, and to birds, and four-footed
beasts, and creeping things, changing Thy truth into a lie, and worshipping and
serving the creature more than the Creator.
Yet many truths concerning the creature retained I from these men, and saw the
reason thereof from calculations, the succession of times, and the visible
testimonies of the stars; and compared them with the saying of Manichaeus, which
in his frenzy he had written most largely on these subjects; but discovered not
any account of the solstices, or equinoxes, or the eclipses of the greater
lights, nor whatever of this sort I had learned in the books of secular philosophy.
But I was commanded to believe; and yet it corresponded not with what had been
established by calculations and my own sight, but was quite contrary.
CHAPTER IV-THAT THE KNOWLEDGE OF TERRESTRIAL AND CELESTIAL THINGS DOES NOT
GIVE HAPPINESS, BUT THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD ONLY.
Doth then, O Lord God of truth, whoso knoweth these things, therefore please
Thee? Surely unhappy is he who knoweth all these, and knoweth not Thee: but
happy whoso knoweth Thee, though he know not these. And whoso knoweth both Thee and
them is not the happier for them, but for Thee only, if, knowing Thee, he
glorifies Thee as God, and is thankful, and becomes not vain in his imaginations.
For as he is better off who knows how to possess a tree, and return thanks to
Thee for the use thereof, although he know not how many cubits high it is, or how
wide it spreads, than he that can measure it, and count all its boughs, and
neither owns it, nor knows or loves its Creator: so a believer, whose all this
world of wealth is, and who having nothing, yet possesseth all things, by
cleaving unto Thee, whom all things serve, though he know not even the circles of the
Great Bear, yet is it folly to doubt but he is in a better state than one who
can measure the heavens, and number the stars, and poise the elements, yet
neglecteth Thee who hast made all things in number, weight, and measure.
CHAPTER V-OF MANICHAEUS PERTINACIOUSLY TEACHING FALSE DOCTRINES, AND PROUDLY
ARROGATING TO HIMSELF THE HOLY SPIRIT.
But yet who bade that Manichaeus write on these things also, skill in which
was no element of piety? For Thou hast said to man, Behold piety and wisdom; of
which he might be ignorant, though he had perfect knowledge of these things; but
these things, since, knowing not, he most impudently dared to teach, he
plainly could have no knowledge of piety. For it is vanity to make profession of
these worldly things even when known; but confession to Thee is piety. Wherefore
this wanderer to this end spake much of these things, that convicted by those who
had truly learned them, it might be manifest what understanding he had in the
other abstruser things. For he would not have himself meanly thought of, but
went about to persuade men, "That the Holy Ghost, the Comforter and Enricher of
Thy faithful ones, was with plenary authority personally within him." When then
he was found out to have taught falsely of the heaven and stars, and of the
motions of the sun and moon (although these things pertain not to the doctrine of
religion), yet his sacrilegious presumption would become evident enough, seeing
he delivered things which not only he knew not, but which were falsified, with
so mad a vanity of pride, that he sought to ascribe them to himself, as to a
divine person.
For when I hear any Christian brother ignorant of these things, and mistaken
on them, I can patiently behold such a man holding his opinion; nor do I see
that any ignorance as to the position or character of the corporeal creation can
injure him, so long as he doth not believe any thing unworthy of Thee, O Lord,
the Creator of all. But it doth injure him, if he imagine it to pertain to the
form of the doctrine of piety, and will yet affirm that too stiffly whereof he
is ignorant. And yet is even such an infirmity, in the infancy of faith, borne
by our mother Charity, till the new-born may grow up unto a perfect man, so as
not to be carried about with every wind of doctrine. But in him who in such wise
presumed to be the teacher, source, guide, chief of all whom he could so
persuade, that whoso followed him thought that he followed, not a mere man, but Thy
Holy Spirit; who would not judge that so great madness, when once convicted of
having taught any thing false, were to be detested and utterly rejected? But I
had not as yet clearly ascertained whether the vicissitudes of longer and
shorter days and nights, and of day and night itself, with the eclipses of the
greater lights, and whatever else of the kind I had read of in other books, might be
explained consistently with his sayings; so that, if they by any means might,
it should still remain a question to me whether it were so or no; but I might,
on account of his reputed sanctity, rest my credence upon his authority.
CHAPTER VI-FAUSTUS WAS INDEED AN ELEGANT SPEAKER, BUT KNEW NOTHING OF THE
LIBERAL SCIENCES.
And for almost all those nine years, wherein with unsettled mind I had been
their disciple, I had longed but too intensely for the coming of this Faustus.
For the rest of the sect, whom by chance I had lighted upon, when unable to solve
my objections about these things, still held out to me the coming of this
Faustus, by conference with whom these and greater difficulties, if I had them,
were to be most readily and abundantly cleared. When then he came, I found him a
man of pleasing discourse, and who could speak fluently and in better terms, yet
still but the self-same things which they were wont to say. But what availed
the utmost neatness of the cup-bearer to my thirst for a more precious draught?
Mine ears were already cloyed with the like, nor did they seem to me therefore
better, because better said; nor therefore true, because eloquent; nor the soul
therefore wise, because the face was comely, and the language graceful. But
they who held him out to me were no good judges of things; and therefore to them
he appeared understanding and wise, because in words pleasing. I felt however
that another sort of people were suspicious even of truth, and refused to assent
to it, if delivered in a smooth and copious discourse. But Thou, O my God,
hadst already taught me by wonderful and secret ways, and therefore I believe that
Thou taughtest me, because it is truth, nor is there besides Thee any teacher
of truth, where or whencesoever it may shine upon us. Of Thyself therefore had
I now learned, that neither ought any thing to seem to be spoken truly, because
eloquently; nor therefore falsely, because the utterance of the lips is
inharmonious; nor, again, therefore true, because rudely delivered; nor therefore
false, because the language is rich; but that wisdom and folly are as wholesome
and unwholesome food; and adorned or unadorned phrases as courtly or country
vessels; either kind of meats may be served up in either kind of dishes.
That greediness then, wherewith I had of so long time expected that man, was
delighted verily with his action and feeling when disputing, and his choice and
readiness of words to clothe his ideas. I was then delighted, and, with many
others and more than they, did I praise and extol him. It troubled me, however,
that in the assembly of his auditors, I was not allowed to put in and
communicate those questions that troubled me, in familiar converse with him. Which when I
might, and with my friends began to engage his ears at such times as it was
not unbecoming for him to discuss with me, and had brought forward such things as
moved me; I found him first utterly ignorant of liberal sciences, save
grammar, and that but in an ordinary way. But because he had read some of Tully's
Orations, a very few books of Seneca, some things of the poets, and such few
volumes of his own sect as were written in Latin and neatly, and was daily practised
in speaking, he acquired a certain eloquence, which proved the more pleasing
and seductive because under the guidance of a good wit, and with a kind of
natural gracefulness. Is it not thus, as I recall it, O Lord my God, Thou judge of my
conscience? before Thee is my heart, and my remembrance, Who didst at that
time direct me by the hidden mystery of Thy providence, and didst set those
shameful errors of mine before my face, that I might see and hate them.
CHAPTER VII-CLEARLY SEEING THE FALLACIES OF THE MANICHAEANS, HE RETIRES FROM
THEM, BEING REMARKABLY AIDED BY GOD.
For after it was clear that he was ignorant of those arts in which I thought
he excelled, I began to despair of his opening and solving the difficulties
which perplexed me (of which indeed however ignorant, he might have held the truths
of piety, had he not been a Manichee). For their books are fraught with prolix
fables, of the heaven, and stars, sun, and moon, and I now no longer thought
him able satisfactorily to decide what I much desired, whether, on comparison of
these things with the calculations I had elsewhere read, the account given in
the books of Manichaeus were preferable, or at least as good. Which when I
proposed to he considered and discussed, he, so far modestly, shrunk from the
burthen. For he knew that he knew not these things, and was not ashamed to confess
it. For he was not one of those talking persons, many of whom I had endured, who
undertook to teach me these things, and said nothing. But this man had a
heart, though not right towards Thee, yet neither altogether treacherous to himself.
For he was not altogether ignorant of his own ignorance, nor would he rashly
be entangled in a dispute, whence he could neither retreat nor extricate himself
fairly. Even for this I liked him the better. For fairer is the modesty of a
candid mind, than the knowledge of those things which I desired; and such I
found him, in all the more difficult and subtile questions.
My zeal for the writings of Manichaeus being thus blunted, and despairing yet
more of their other teachers, seeing that in divers things which perplexed me,
he, so renowned among them, had so turned out; I began to engage with him in
the study of that literature, on which he also was much set (and which as
rhetoric-reader I was at that time teaching young students at Carthage), and to read
with him, either what himself desired to hear, or such as I judged fit for his
genius. But all my efforts whereby I had purposed to advance in that sect, upon
knowledge of that man, came utterly to an end; not that I detached myself from
them altogether, but as one finding nothing better, I had settled to be content
meanwhile with what I had in whatever way fallen upon, unless by chance
something more eligible should dawn upon me. Thus, that Faustus, to so many a snare
of death, had now neither willing nor witting it, begun to loosen that wherein I
was taken. For Thy hands, O my God, in the secret purpose of Thy providence,
did not forsake my soul; and out of my mother's heart's blood, through her tears
night and day poured out, was a sacrifice offered for me unto Thee; and Thou
didst deal with me by wondrous ways. Thou didst it, O my God: for the steps of a
man are ordered by the Lord, and He shall dispose his way. Or how shall we
obtain salvation, but from Thy hand, re-making what it made?
CHAPTER VIII-HE SETS OUT FOR ROME, HIS MOTHER IN VAIN LAMENTING IT.
Thou didst deal with me, that I should be persuaded to go to Rome, and to
teach there rather, what I was teaching at Carthage. And how I was persuaded to
this, I will not neglect to confess to Thee; because herein also the deepest
recesses of Thy wisdom, and Thy most present mercy to us, must be considered and
confessed. I did not wish therefore to go to Rome, because higher gains and higher
dignities were warranted me by my friends who persuaded me to this (though
even these things had at that time an influence over my mind), but my chief and
almost only reason was, that I heard that young men studied there more
peacefully, and were kept quiet under a restraint of more regular discipline; so that
they did not, at their pleasures, petulantly rush into the school of one whose
pupils they were not, nor were even admitted without his permission. Whereas at
Carthage there reigns among the scholars a most disgraceful and unruly licence.
They burst in audaciously, and with gestures almost frantic, disturb all order
which any one hath established for the good of his scholars. Divers outrages
they commit, with a wonderful stolidity, punishable by law, did not custom uphold
them; that custom evincing them to be the more miserable, in that they now do
as lawful what by Thy eternal law shall never be lawful; and they think they do
it unpunished, whereas they are punished with the very blindness whereby they
do it, and suffer incomparably worse than what they do. The manners then which,
when a student, I would not make my own, I was fain as a teacher to endure in
others: and so I was well pleased to go where, all that knew it, assured me that
the like was not done. But Thou, my refuge and my portion in the land of the
living; that I might change my earthly dwelling for the salvation of my soul, at
Carthage didst goad me, that I might thereby be torn from it; and at Rome
didst proffer me allurements, whereby I might be drawn thither, by men in love with
a dying life, the one doing frantic, the other promising vain, things; and, to
correct my steps, didst secretly use their and my own perverseness. For both
they who disturbed my quiet were blinded with a disgraceful frenzy, and they who
invited me elsewhere savoured of earth. And I, who here detested real misery,
was there seeking unreal happiness.
But why I went hence, and went thither, Thou knewest, O God, yet showedst it
neither to me, nor to my mother, who grievously bewailed my journey, and
followed me as far as the sea. But I deceived her, holding me by force, that either
she might keep me back or go with me, and I feigned that I had a friend whom I
could not leave, till he had a fair wind to sail. And I lied to my mother, and
such a mother, and escaped: for this also hast Thou mercifully forgiven me,
preserving me, thus full of execrable defilements, from the waters of the sea, for
the water of Thy Grace; whereby when I was cleansed, the streams of my mother's
eyes should be dried, with which for me she daily watered the ground under her
face. And yet refusing to return without me, I scarcely persuaded her to stay
that night in a place hard by our ship, where was an Oratory in memory of the
blessed Cyprian. That night I privily departed, but she was not behind in weeping
and prayer. And what, O Lord, was she with so many tears asking of Thee, but
that Thou wouldest not suffer me to sail? But Thou, in the depth of Thy counsels
and hearing the main point of her desire, regardest not what she then asked,
that Thou mightest make me what she ever asked. The wind blew and swelled our
sails, and withdrew the shore from our sight; and she on the morrow was there,
frantic with sorrow, and with complaints and groans filled Thine ears, Who didst
then disregard them; whilst through my desires, Thou wert hurrying me to end
all desire, and the earthly part of her affection to me was chastened by the
allotted scourge of sorrows. For she loved my being with her, as mothers do, but
much more than many; and she knew not how great joy Thou wert about to work for
her out of my absence. She knew not; therefore did she weep and wail, and by
this agony there appeared in her the inheritance of Eve, with sorrow seeking what
in sorrow she had brought forth. And yet, after accusing my treachery and
hardheartedness, she betook herself again to intercede to Thee for me, went to her
wonted place, and I to Rome.
CHAPTER IX-BEING ATTACKED BY FEVER, HE IS IN GREAT DANGER
And lo, there was I received by the scourge of bodily sickness, and I was
going down to hell, carrying all the sins which I had committed, both against Thee,
and myself, and others, many and grievous, over and above that bond of
original sin, whereby we all die in Adam. For Thou hadst not forgiven me any of these
things in Christ, nor had He abolished by His Cross the enmity which by my sins
I had incurred with Thee. For how should He, by the crucifixion of a phantasm,
which I believed Him to be? So true, then, was the death of my soul, as that
of His flesh seemed to me false; and how true the death of His body, so false
was the life of my soul, which did not believe it. And now the fever heightening,
I was parting and departing for ever. For had I then parted hence, whither had
I departed, but into fire and torments, such as my misdeeds deserved in the
truth of Thy appointment? And this she knew not, yet in absence prayed for me.
But Thou, everywhere present, heardest her where she was, and, where I was, hadst
compassion upon me; that I should recover the health of my body, though
frenzied as yet in my sacrilegious heart. For I did not in all that danger desire Thy
baptism; and I was better as a boy, when I begged it of my mother's piety, as
I have before recited and confessed. But I had grown up to my own shame, and I
madly scoffed at the prescripts of Thy medicine, who wouldest not suffer me,
being such, to die a double death. With which wound had my mother's heart been
pierced, it could never be healed. For I cannot express the affection she bore to
me, and with how much more vehement anguish she was now in labour of me in the
spirit, than at her childbearing in the flesh.
I see not then how she should have been healed, had such a death of mine
stricken through the bowels of her love. And where would have been those her so
strong and unceasing prayers, unintermitting to Thee alone? But wouldest Thou, God
of mercies, despise the contrite and humbled heart of that chaste and sober
widow, so frequent in almsdeeds, so full of duty and service to Thy saints, no day
intermitting the oblation at Thine altar, twice a day, morning and evening,
without any intermission, coming to Thy church, not for idle tattlings and old
wives' fables; but that she might hear Thee in Thy discourses, and Thou her in
her prayers. Couldest Thou despise and reject from Thy aid the tears of such an
one, wherewith she begged of Thee not gold or silver, nor any mutable or passing
good, but the salvation of her son's soul? Thou, by whose gift she was such?
Never, Lord. Yea, Thou wert at hand, and wert hearing and doing, in that order
wherein Thou hadst determined before that it should be done. Far be it that Thou
shouldest deceive her in Thy visions and answers, some whereof I have, some I
have not mentioned, which she laid up in her faithful heart, and ever praying,
urged upon Thee, as Thine own handwriting. For Thou, because Thy mercy endureth
for ever, vouchsafest to those to whom Thou forgivest all of their debts, to
become also a debtor by Thy promises.
CHAPTER X-WHEN HE HAD LEFT THE MANICHAEANS, HE RETAINED HIS DEPRAVED OPINIONS
CONCERNING SIN AND THE ORIGIN OF THE SAVIOUR.
Thou recoveredst me then of that sickness, and healedst the son of Thy
handmaid, for the time in body, that he might live, for Thee to bestow upon him a
better and more abiding health. And even then, at Rome, I joined myself to those
deceiving and deceived "holy ones"; not with their disciples only (of which
number was he, in whose house I had fallen sick and recovered); but also with those
whom they call "The Elect." For I still thought "that it was not we that sin,
but that I know not what other nature sinned in us"; and it delighted my pride,
to be free from blame; and when I had done any evil, not to confess I had done
any, that Thou mightest heal my soul because it had sinned against Thee: but I
loved to excuse it, and to accuse I know not what other thing, which was with
me, but which I was not. But in truth it was wholly I, and mine impiety had
divided me against myself: and that sin was the more incurable, whereby I did not
judge myself a sinner; and execrable iniquity it was, that I had rather have
Thee, Thee, O God Almighty, to be overcome in me to my destruction, than myself of
Thee to salvation. Not as yet then hadst Thou set a watch before my mouth, and
a door of safe keeping around my lips, that my heart might not turn aside to
wicked speeches, to make excuses of sins, with men that work iniquity; and,
therefore, was I still united with their Elect.
But now despairing to make proficiency in that false doctrine, even those
things (with which if I should find no better, I had resolved to rest contented) I
now held more laxly and carelessly. For there half arose a thought in me that
those philosophers, whom they call Academics, were wiser than the rest, for that
they held men ought to doubt everything, and laid down that no truth can be
comprehended by man: for so, not then understanding even their meaning, I also
was clearly convinced that they thought, as they are commonly reported. Yet did I
freely and openly discourage that host of mine from that over-confidence which
I perceived him to have in those fables, which the books of Manichaeus are
full of. Yet I lived in more familiar friendship with them, than with others who
were not of this heresy. Nor did I maintain it with my ancient eagerness; still
my intimacy with that sect (Rome secretly harbouring many of them) made me
slower to seek any other way: especially since I despaired of finding the truth,
from which they had turned me aside, in Thy Church, O Lord of heaven and earth,
Creator of all things visible and invisible: and it seemed to me very unseemly
to believe Thee to have the shape of human flesh, and to be bounded by the
bodily lineaments of our members. And because, when I wished to think on my God, I
knew not what to think of, but a mass of bodies (for what was not such did not
seem to me to be anything), this was the greatest, and almost only cause of my
inevitable error.
For hence I believed Evil also to be some such kind of substance, and to have
its own foul and hideous bulk; whether gross, which they called earth, or thin
and subtile (like the body of the air), which they imagine to be some malignant
mind, creeping through that earth. And because a piety, such as it was,
constrained me to believe that the good God never created any evil nature, I
conceived two masses, contrary to one another, both unbounded, but the evil narrower,
the good more expansive. And from this pestilent beginning, the other
sacrilegious conceits followed on me. For when my mind endeavoured to recur to the
Catholic faith, I was driven back, since that was not the Catholic faith which I
thought to be so. And I seemed to myself more reverential, if I believed of Thee,
my God (to whom Thy mercies confess out of my mouth), as unbounded, at least on
other sides, although on that one where the mass of evil was opposed to Thee, I
was constrained to confess Thee bounded; than if on all sides I should imagine
Thee to be bounded by the form of a human body. And it seemed to me better to
believe Thee to have created no evil (which to me ignorant seemed not some
only, but a bodily substance, because I could not conceive of mind unless as a
subtile body, and that diffused in definite spaces), than to believe the nature of
evil, such as I conceived it, could come from Thee. Yea, and our Saviour
Himself, Thy Only Begotten, I believed to have been reached forth (as it were) for
our salvation, out of the mass of Thy most lucid substance, so as to believe
nothing of Him, but what I could imagine in my vanity. His Nature then, being such,
I thought could not be born of the Virgin Mary, without being mingled with the
flesh: and how that which I had so figured to myself could be mingled, and not
defiled, I saw not. I feared therefore to believe Him born in the flesh, lest
I should be forced to believe Him defiled by the flesh. Now will Thy spiritual
ones mildly and lovingly smile upon me, if they shall read these my
confessions. Yet such was I.
CHAPTER XI-HELPIDIUS DISPUTED WELL AGAINST THE MANICHAEANS AS TO THE
AUTHENTICITY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT.
Furthermore, what the Manichees had criticised in Thy Scriptures, I thought
could not be defended; yet at times verily I had a wish to confer upon these
several points with some one very well skilled in those books, and to make trial
what he thought thereon; for the words of one Helpidius, as he spoke and disputed
face to face against the said Manichees, had begun to stir me even at
Carthage: in that he had produced things out of the Scriptures, not easily withstood,
the Manichees' answer whereto seemed to me weak. And this answer they liked not
to give publicly, but only to us in private. It was, that the Scriptures of the
New Testament had been corrupted by I know not whom, who wished to engraff the
law of the Jews upon the Christian faith: yet themselves produced not any
uncorrupted copies. But I, conceiving of things corporeal only, was mainly held
down, vehemently oppressed and in a manner suffocated by those "masses"; panting
under which after the breath of Thy truth, I could not breathe it pure and
untainted.
CHAPTER XII-PROFESSING RHETORIC AT ROME, HE DISCOVERS THE FRAUD OF HIS
SCHOLARS.
I began then diligently to practise that for which I came to Rome, to teach
rhetoric; and first, to gather some to my house, to whom, and through whom, I had
begun to be known; when to, I found other offences committed in Rome, to which
I was not exposed in Africa. True, those "subvertings" by profligate young men
were not here practised, as was told me: but on a sudden, said they, to avoid
paying their master's stipend, a number of youths plot together, and remove to
another; -breakers of faith, who for love of money hold justice cheap. These
also my heart hated, though not with a perfect hatred: for perchance I hated them
more because I was to suffer by them, than because they did things utterly
unlawful. Of a truth such are base persons, and they go a whoring from Thee,
loving these fleeting mockeries of things temporal, and filthy lucre, which fouls
the hand that grasps it; hugging the fleeting world, and despising Thee, Who
abidest, and recallest, and forgivest the adulteress soul of man, when she returns
to Thee. And now I hate such depraved and crooked persons, though I love them
if corrigible, so as to prefer to money the learning which they acquire, and to
learning, Thee, O God, the truth and fulness of assured good, and most pure
peace. But then I rather for my own sake misliked them evil, than liked and wished
them good for Thine.
CHAPTER XIII-HE IS SENT TO MILAN, THAT HE, ABOUT TO TEACH RHETORIC, MAY BE
KNOWN BY AMBROSE.
When therefore they of Milan had sent to Rome to the prefect of the city, to
furnish them with a rhetoric reader for their city, and sent him at the public
expense, I made application (through those very persons, intoxicated with
Manichaean vanities, to be freed wherefrom I was to go, neither of us however knowing
it) that Symmachus, then prefect of the city, would try me by setting me some
subject, and so send me. To Milan I came, to Ambrose the Bishop, known to the
whole world as among the best of men, Thy devout servant; whose eloquent
discourse did then plentifully dispense unto Thy people the flour of Thy wheat, the
gladness of Thy oil, and the sober inebriation of Thy wine. To him was I
unknowing led by Thee, that by him I might knowingly be led to Thee. That man of God
received me as a father, and showed me an Episcopal kindness on my coming.
Thenceforth I began to love him, at first indeed not as a teacher of the truth (which
I utterly despaired of in Thy Church), but as a person kind towards myself.
And I listened diligently to him preaching to the people, not with that intent I
ought, but, as it were, trying his eloquence, whether it answered the fame
thereof, or flowed fuller or lower than was reported; and I hung on his words
attentively; but of the matter I was as a careless and scornful looker-on; and I was
delighted with the sweetness of his discourse, more recondite, yet in manner
less winning and harmonious, than that of Faustus. Of the matter, however, there
was no comparison; for the one was wandering amid Manichaean delusions, the
other teaching salvation most soundly. But salvation is far from sinners, such as
I then stood before him; and yet was I drawing nearer by little and little,
and unconsciously.
CHAPTER XIV-HAVING HEARD THE BISHOP, HE PERCIEVES THE FORCE OF THE CATHOLIC
FAITH, YET DOUBTS, AFTER THE MANNER OF THE MODERN ACADEMICS.
For though I took no pains to learn what he spake, but only to hear how he
spake (for that empty care alone was left me, despairing of a way, open for man,
to Thee), yet together with the words which I would choose, came also into my
mind the things which I would refuse; for I could not separate them. And while I
opened my heart to admit "how eloquently he spake," there also entered "how
truly he spake"; but this by degrees. For first, these things also had now begun
to appear to me capable of defence; and the Catholic faith, for which I had
thought nothing could be said against the Manichees' objections, I now thought
might be maintained without shamelessness; especially after I had heard one or two
places of the Old Testament resolved, and ofttimes "in a figure," which when I
understood literally, I was slain spiritually. Very many places then of those
books having been explained, I now blamed my despair, in believing that no
answer could be given to such as hated and scoffed at the Law and the Prophets. Yet
did I not therefore then see that the Catholic way was to be held, because it
also could find learned maintainers, who could at large and with some show of
reason answer objections; nor that what I held was therefore to be condemned,
because both sides could be maintained. For the Catholic cause seemed to me in
such sort not vanquished, as still not as yet to be victorious.
Hereupon I earnestly bent my mind, to see if in any way I could by any certain
proof convict the Manichees of falsehood. Could I once have conceived a
spiritual substance, all their strongholds had been beaten down, and cast utterly out
of my mind; but I could not. Notwithstanding, concerning the frame of this
world, and the whole of nature, which the senses of the flesh can reach to, as I
more and more considered and compared things, I judged the tenets of most of the
philosophers to have been much more probable. So then after the manner of the
Academics (as they are supposed) doubting of every thing, and wavering between
all, I settled so far, that the Manichees were to be abandoned; judging that,
even while doubting, I might not continue in that sect, to which I already
preferred some of the philosophers; to which philosophers notwithstanding, for that
they were without the saving Name of Christ, I utterly refused to commit the
cure of my sick soul. I determined therefore so long to be a Catechumen in the
Catholic Church, to which I had been commended by my parents, till something
certain should dawn upon me, whither I might steer my course.
Book VI
CHAPTER I-HIS MOTHER HAVING FOLLOWED HIM TO MILAN, DECLARES THAT SHE WILL NOT
DIE BEFORE HER SON SHALL HAVE EMBRACED THE CATHOLIC FAITH.
O Thou, my hope from my youth, where wert Thou to me, and whither wert Thou
gone? Hadst not Thou created me, and separated me from the beasts of the field,
and fowls of the air? Thou hadst made me wiser, yet did I walk in darkness, and
in slippery places, and sought Thee abroad out of myself, and found not the God
of my heart; and had come into the depths of the sea, and distrusted and
despaired of ever finding truth. My mother had now come to me, resolute through
piety, following me over sea and land, in all perils confiding in Thee. For in
perils of the sea, she comforted the very mariners (by whom passengers unacquainted
with the deep, use rather to be comforted when troubled), assuring them of a
safe arrival, because Thou hadst by a vision assured her thereof. She found me
in grievous peril, through despair of ever finding truth. But when I had
discovered to her that I was now no longer a Manichee, though not yet a Catholic
Christian, she was not overjoyed, as at something unexpected; although she was now
assured concerning that part of my misery, for which she bewailed me as one
dead, though to be reawakened by Thee, carrying me forth upon the bier of her
thoughts, that Thou mightest say to the son of the widow, Young man, I say unto
thee, Arise; and he should revive, and begin to speak, and Thou shouldest deliver
him to his mother. Her heart then was shaken with no tumultuous exultation, when
she heard that what she daily with tears desired of Thee was already in so
great part realised; in that, though I had not yet attained the truth, I was
rescued from falsehood; but, as being assured, that Thou, Who hadst promised the
whole, wouldest one day give the rest, most calmly, and with a heart full of
confidence, she replied to me, "She believed in Christ, that before she departed
this life, she should see me a Catholic believer." Thus much to me. But to Thee,
Fountain of mercies, poured she forth more copious prayers and tears, that Thou
wouldest hasten Thy help, and enlighten my darkness; and she hastened the more
eagerly to the Church, and hung upon the lips of Ambrose, praying for the
fountain of that water, which springeth up unto life everlasting. But that man she
loved as an angel of God, because she knew that by him I had been brought for
the present to that doubtful state of faith I now was in, through which she
anticipated most confidently that I should pass from sickness unto health, after the
access, as it were, of a sharper fit, which physicians call "the crisis."
CHAPTER II-SHE, ON THE PROHIBITION OF AMBROSE, ABSTAINS FROM HONOURING THE
MEMORY OF THE MARTYRS.
When then my mother had once, as she was wont in Afric, brought to the
Churches built in memory of the Saints, certain cakes, and bread and wine, and was
forbidden by the door-keeper; so soon as she knew that the Bishop had forbidden
this, she so piously and obediently embraced his wishes, that I myself wondered
how readily she censured her own practice, rather than discuss his prohibition.
For wine-bibbing did not lay siege to her spirit, nor did love of wine provoke
her to hatred of the truth, as it doth too many (both men and women), who
revolt at a lesson of sobriety, as men well-drunk at a draught mingled with water.
But she, when she had brought her basket with the accustomed festival-food, to
be but tasted by herself, and then given away, never joined therewith more than
one small cup of wine, diluted according to her own abstemious habits, which
for courtesy she would taste. And if there were many churches of the departed
saints that were to be honoured in that manner, she still carried round that same
one cup, to be used every where; and this, though not only made very watery,
but unpleasantly heated with carrying about, she would distribute to those about
her by small sips; for she sought there devotion, not pleasure. So soon, then,
as she found this custom to be forbidden by that famous preacher and most pious
prelate, even to those that would use it soberly, lest so an occasion of
excess might be given to the drunken; and for these, as it were, anniversary funeral
solemnities did much resemble the superstition of the Gentiles, she most
willingly forbare it: and for a basket filled with fruits of the earth, she had
learned to bring to the Churches of the martyrs a breast filled with more purified
petitions, and to give what she could to the poor; that so the communication of
the Lord's Body might be there rightly celebrated, where, after the example of
His Passion, the martyrs had been sacrificed and crowned. But yet it seems to
me, O Lord my God, and thus thinks my heart of it in Thy sight, that perhaps
she would not so readily have yielded to the cutting off of this custom, had it
been forbidden by another, whom she loved not as Ambrose, whom, for my
salvation, she loved most entirely; and he her again, for her most religious
conversation, whereby in good works, so fervent in spirit, she was constant at church; so
that, when he saw me, he often burst forth into her praises; congratulating me
that I had such a mother; not knowing what a son she had in me, who doubted of
all these things, and imagined the way to life could not be found out.
CHAPTER III-AS AMBROSE WAS OCCUPIED WITH BUSINESS AND STUDY, AUGUSTIN COULD
SELDOM CONSULT HIM CONCERNING THE HOLY SCRIPTURES.
Nor did I yet groan in my prayers, that Thou wouldest help me; but my spirit
was wholly intent on learning, and restless to dispute. And Ambrose himself, as
the world counts happy, I esteemed a happy man, whom personages so great held
in such honour; only his celibacy seemed to me a painful course. But what hope
he bore within him, what struggles he had against the temptations which beset
his very excellencies, or what comfort in adversities, and what sweet joys Thy
Bread had for the hidden mouth of his spirit, when chewing the cud thereof, I
neither could conjecture, nor had experienced. Nor did he know the tides of my
feelings, or the abyss of my danger. For I could not ask of him, what I would as I
would, being shut out both from his ear and speech by multitudes of busy
people, whose weaknesses he served. With whom when he was not taken up (which was
but a little time), he was either refreshing his body with the sustenance
absolutely necessary, or his mind with reading. But when he was reading, his eye
glided over the pages, and his heart searched out the sense, but his voice and
tongue were at rest. Ofttimes when we had come (for no man was forbidden to enter,
nor was it his wont that any who came should be announced to him), we saw him
thus reading to himself, and never otherwise; and having long sat silent (for who
durst intrude on one so intent?) we were fain to depart, conjecturing that in
the small interval which he obtained, free from the din of others' business,
for the recruiting of his mind, he was loth to be taken off; and perchance he
dreaded lest if the author he read should deliver any thing obscurely, some
attentive or perplexed hearer should desire him to expound it, or to discuss some of
the harder questions; so that his time being thus spent, he could not turn over
so many volumes as he desired; although the preserving of his voice (which a
very little speaking would weaken) might be the truer reason for his reading to
himself. But with what intent soever he did it, certainly in such a man it was
good.
I however certainly had no opportunity of enquiring what I wished of that so
holy oracle of Thine, his breast, unless the thing might be answered briefly.
But those tides in me, to be poured out to him, required his full leisure, and
never found it. I heard him indeed every Lord's day, rightly expounding the Word
of truth among the people; and I was more and more convinced that all the knots
of those crafty calumnies, which those our deceivers had knit against the
Divine Books, could be unravelled. But when I understood withal, that "man created
by Thee, after Thine own image," was not so understood by Thy spiritual sons,
whom of the Catholic Mother Thou hast born again through grace, as though they
believed and conceived of Thee as bounded by human shape (although what a
spiritual substance should be I had not even a faint or shadowy notion); yet, with
joy I blushed at having so many years barked not against the Catholic faith, but
against the fictions of carnal imaginations. For so rash and impious had I
been, that what I ought by enquiring to have learned, I had pronounced on,
condemning. For Thou, Most High, and most near; most secret, and most present; Who hast
not limbs some larger, some smaller, but art wholly every where, and no where
in space, art not of such corporeal shape, yet hast Thou made man after Thine
own image; and behold, from head to foot is he contained in space.
CHAPTER IV-HE RECOGNISES THE FALSITY OF HIS OWN OPINIONS, AND COMMITS TO
MEMORY THE SAYING OF AMBROSE.
Ignorant then how this Thy image should subsist, I should have knocked and
proposed the doubt, how it was to be believed, not insultingly opposed it, as if
believed. Doubt, then, what to hold for certain, the more sharply gnawed my
heart, the more ashamed I was, that so long deluded and deceived by the promise of
certainties, I had with childish error and vehemence, prated of so many
uncertainties. For that they were falsehoods became clear to me later. However I was
certain that they were uncertain, and that I had formerly accounted them
certain, when with a blind contentiousness, I accused Thy Catholic Church, whom I now
discovered, not indeed as yet to teach truly, but at least not to teach that
for which I had grievously censured her. So I was confounded, and converted: and
I joyed, O my God, that the One Only Church, the body of Thine Only Son
(wherein the name of Christ had been put upon me as an infant), had no taste for
infantine conceits; nor in her sound doctrine maintained any tenet which should
confine Thee, the Creator of all, in space, however great and large, yet bounded
every where by the limits of a human form.
I joyed also that the old Scriptures of the law and the Prophets were laid
before me, not now to be perused with that eye to which before they seemed absurd,
when I reviled Thy holy ones for so thinking, whereas indeed they thought not
so: and with joy I heard Ambrose in his sermons to the people, oftentimes most
diligently recommend this text for a rule, The letter killeth, but the Spirit
giveth life; whilst he drew aside the mystic veil, laying open spiritually what,
according to the letter, seemed to teach something unsound; teaching herein
nothing that offended me, though he taught what I knew not as yet, whether it
were true. For I kept my heart from assenting to any thing, fearing to fall
headlong; but by hanging in suspense I was the worse killed. For I wished to be as
assured of the things I saw not, as I was that seven and three are ten. For I was
not so mad as to think that even this could not be comprehended; but I desired
to have other things as clear as this, whether things corporeal, which were
not present to my senses, or spiritual, whereof I knew not how to conceive,
except corporeally. And by believing might I have been cured, that so the eyesight
of my soul being cleared, might in some way be directed to Thy truth, which
abideth always, and in no part faileth. But as it happens that one who has tried a
bad physician, fears to trust himself with a good one, so was it with the
health of my soul, which could not be healed but by believing, and lest it should
believe falsehoods, refused to be cured; resisting Thy hands, Who hast prepared
the medicines of faith, and hast applied them to the diseases of the whole
world, and given unto them so great authority.
CHAPTER V-FAITH IS THE BASIS OF HUMAN LIFE; MAN CANNOT DISCOVER THAT TRUTH
WHICH HOLY SCRIPTURE HAS DISCLOSED.
Being led, however, from this to prefer the Catholic doctrine, I felt that her
proceeding was more unassuming and honest, in that she required to be believed
things not demonstrated (whether it was that they could in themselves be
demonstrated but not to certain persons, or could not at all be), whereas among the
Manichees our credulity was mocked by a promise of certain knowledge, and then
so many most fabulous and absurd things were imposed to be believed, because
they could not be demonstrated. Then Thou, O Lord, little by little with most
tender and most merciful hand, touching and composing my heart, didst persuade me-
considering what innumerable things I believed, which I saw not, nor was
present while they were done, as so many things in secular history, so many reports
of places and of cities, which I had not seen; so many of friends, so many of
physicians, so many continually of other men, which unless we should believe, we
should do nothing at all in this life; lastly, with how unshaken an assurance
I believed of what parents I was born, which I could not know, had I not
believed upon hearsay -considering all this, Thou didst persuade me, that not they
who believed Thy Books (which Thou hast established in so great authority among
almost all nations), but they who believed them not, were to be blamed; and that
they were not to be heard, who should say to me, "How knowest thou those
Scriptures to have been imparted unto mankind by the Spirit of the one true and most
true God?" For this very thing was of all most to be believed, since no
contentiousness of blasphemous questionings, of all that multitude which I had read
in the self-contradicting philosophers, could wring this belief from me, "That
Thou art" whatsoever Thou wert (what I knew not), and "That the government of
human things belongs to Thee."
This I believed, sometimes more strongly, more weakly otherwhiles; yet I ever
believed both that Thou wert, and hadst a care of us; though I was ignorant,
both what was to be thought of Thy substance, and what way led or led back to
Thee. Since then we were too weak by abstract reasonings to find out truth: and
for this very cause needed the authority of Holy Writ; I had now begun to believe
that Thou wouldest never have given such excellency of authority to that Writ
in all lands, hadst Thou not willed thereby to be believed in, thereby sought.
For now what things, sounding strangely in the Scripture, were wont to offend
me, having heard divers of them expounded satisfactorily, I referred to the
depth of the mysteries, and its authority appeared to me the more venerable, and
more worthy of religious credence, in that, while it lay open to all to read, it
reserved the majesty of its mysteries within its profounder meaning, stooping
to all in the great plainness of its words and lowliness of its style, yet
calling forth the intensest application of such as are not light of heart; that so
it might receive all in its open bosom, and through narrow passages waft over
towards Thee some few, yet many more than if it stood not aloft on such a height
of authority, nor drew multitudes within its bosom by its holy lowliness. These
things I thought on, and Thou wert with me; I sighed, and Thou heardest me; I
wavered, and Thou didst guide me; I wandered through the broad way of the
world, and Thou didst not forsake me.
CHAPTER VI-ON THE SOURCE AND CAUSE OF TRUE JOY,-THE EXAMPLE OF THE JOYOUS
BEGGAR BEING ADDUCED.
I panted after honours, gains, marriage; and thou deridedst me. In these
desires I underwent most bitter crosses, Thou being the more gracious, the less Thou
sufferedst aught to grow sweet to me, which was not Thou. Behold my heart, O
Lord, who wouldest I should remember all this, and confess to Thee. Let my soul
cleave unto Thee, now that Thou hast freed it from that fast-holding birdlime
of death. How wretched was it! and Thou didst irritate the feeling of its wound,
that forsaking all else, it might be converted unto Thee, who art above all,
and without whom all things would be nothing; be converted, and be healed. How
miserable was I then, and how didst Thou deal with me, to make me feel my misery
on that day, when I was preparing to recite a panegyric of the Emperor,
wherein I was to utter many a lie, and lying, was to be applauded by those who knew I
lied, and my heart was panting with these anxieties, and boiling with the
feverishness of consuming thoughts. For, passing through one of the streets of
Milan, I observed a poor beggar, then, I suppose, with a full belly, joking and
joyous: and I sighed, and spoke to the friends around me, of the many sorrows of
our frenzies; for that by all such efforts of ours, as those wherein I then
toiled dragging along, under the goading of desire, the burthen of my own
wretchedness, and, by dragging, augmenting it, we yet looked to arrive only at that very
joyousness whither that beggar-man had arrived before us, who should never
perchance attain it. For what he had obtained by means of a few begged pence, the
same was I plotting for by many a toilsome turning and winding; the joy of a
temporary felicity. For he verily had not the true joy; but yet I with those my
ambitious designs was seeking one much less true. And certainly he was joyous, I
anxious; he void of care, I full of fears. But should any ask me, had I rather
be merry or fearful? I would answer merry. Again, if he asked had I rather be
such as he was, or what I then was? I should choose to be myself, though worn
with cares and fears; but out of wrong judgment; for, was it the truth? For I
ought not to prefer myself to him, because more learned than he, seeing I had no
joy therein, but sought to please men by it; and that not to instruct, but
simply to please. Wherefore also Thou didst break my bones with the staff of Thy
correction.
Away with those then from my soul who say to her, "It makes a difference
whence a man's joy is. That beggar-man joyed in drunkenness; Thou desiredst to joy
in glory." What glory, Lord? That which is not in Thee. For even as his was no
true joy, so was that no true glory: and it overthrew my soul more. He that very
night should digest his drunkenness; but I had slept and risen again with
mine, and was to sleep again, and again to rise with it, how many days, Thou, God,
knowest. But "it doth make a difference whence a man's joy is." I know it, and
the joy of a faithful hope lieth incomparably beyond such vanity. Yea, and so
was he then beyond me: for he verily was the happier; not only for that he was
thoroughly drenched in mirth, I disembowelled with cares: but he, by fair
wishes, had gotten wine; I, by lying, was seeking for empty, swelling praise. Much to
this purpose said I then to my friends: and I often marked in them how it
fared with me; and I found it went ill with me, and grieved, and doubled that very
ill; and if any prosperity smiled on me, I was loth to catch at it, for almost
before I could grasp it, it flew away.
CHAPTER VII-HE LEADS TO REFORMATION HIS FRIEND ALYPIUS, SEIZED WITH MADNESS
FOR THE CIRCENSIAN GAMES.
These things we, who were living as friends together, bemoaned together, but
chiefly and most familiarly did I speak thereof with Alypius and Nebridius, of
whom Alypius was born in the same town with me, of persons of chief rank there,
but younger than I. For he had studied under me, both when I first lectured in
our town, and afterwards at Carthage, and he loved me much, because I seemed to
him kind, and learned; and I him, for his great towardliness to virtue, which
was eminent enough in one of no greater years. Yet the whirlpool of
Carthaginian habits (amongst whom those idle spectacles are hotly followed) had drawn him
into the madness of the Circus. But while he was miserably tossed therein, and
I, professing rhetoric there, had a public school, as yet he used not my
teaching, by reason of some unkindness risen betwixt his father and me. I had found
then how deadly he doted upon the Circus, and was deeply grieved that he seemed
likely, nay, or had thrown away so great promise: yet had I no means of
advising or with a sort of constraint reclaiming him, either by the kindness of a
friend, or the authority of a master. For I supposed that he thought of me as did
his father; but he was not such; laying aside then his father's mind in that
matter, he began to greet me, come sometimes into my lecture room, hear a little,
and be gone.
I however had forgotten to deal with him, that he should not, through a blind
and headlong desire of vain pastimes, undo so good a wit. But Thou, O Lord, who
guidest the course of all Thou hast created, hadst not forgotten him, who was
one day to be among Thy children, Priest and Dispenser of Thy Sacrament; and
that his amendment might plainly be attributed to Thyself, Thou effectedst it
through me, unknowingly. For as one day I sat in my accustomed place, with my
scholars before me, he entered, greeted me, sat down, and applied his mind to what
I then handled. I had by chance a passage in hand, which while I was
explaining, a likeness from the Circensian races occurred to me, as likely to make what I
would convey pleasanter and plainer, seasoned with biting mockery of those
whom that madness had enthralled; God, Thou knowest that I then thought not of
curing Alypius of that infection. But he took it wholly to himself, and thought
that I said it simply for his sake. And whence another would have taken occasion
of offence with me, that right-minded youth took as a ground of being offended
at himself, and loving me more fervently. For Thou hadst said it long ago, and
put it into Thy book, Rebuke a wise man and he will love Thee. But I had not
rebuked him, but Thou, who employest all, knowing or not knowing, in that order
which Thyself knowest (and that order is just), didst of my heart and tongue
make burning coals, by which to set on fire the hopeful mind, thus languishing,
and so cure it. Let him be silent in Thy praises, who considers not Thy mercies,
which confess unto Thee out of my inmost soul. For he upon that speech burst
out of that pit so deep, wherein he was wilfully plunged, and was blinded with
its wretched pastimes; and he shook his mind with a strong self-command;
whereupon all the filths of the Circensian pastimes flew off from him, nor came he
again thither. Upon this, he prevailed with his unwilling father that he might be
my scholar. He gave way, and gave in. And Alypius beginning to be my hearer
again, was involved in the same superstition with me, loving in the Manichees that
show of continency which he supposed true and unfeigned. Whereas it was a
senseless and seducing continency, ensnaring precious souls, unable as yet to reach
the depth of virtue, yet readily beguiled with the surface of what was but a
shadowy and counterfeit virtue.
CHAPTER VIII-THE SAME WHEN AT ROME, BEING LED BY OTHERS INTO THE AMPHITHEATRE,
IS DELIGHTED WITH THE GLADITORIAL GAMES.
He, not forsaking that secular course which his parents had charmed him to
pursue, had gone before me to Rome, to study law, and there he was carried away
incredibly with an incredible eagerness after the shows of gladiators. For being
utterly averse to and detesting spectacles, he was one day by chance met by
divers of his acquaintance and fellow-students coming from dinner, and they with a
familiar violence haled him, vehemently refusing and resisting, into the
Amphitheatre, during these cruel and deadly shows, he thus protesting: "Though you
hale my body to that place, and there set me, can you force me also to turn my
mind or my eyes to those shows? I shall then be absent while present, and so
shall overcome both you and them." They, hearing this, led him on nevertheless,
desirous perchance to try that very thing, whether he could do as he said. When
they were come thither, and had taken their places as they could, the whole
place kindled with that savage pastime. But he, closing the passage of his eyes,
forbade his mind to range abroad after such evil; and would he had stopped his
ears also! For in the fight, when one fell, a mighty cry of the whole people
striking him strongly, overcome by curiosity, and as if prepared to despise and be
superior to it whatsoever it were, even when seen, he opened his eyes, and was
stricken with a deeper wound in his soul than the other, whom he desired to
behold, was in his body; and he fell more miserably than he upon whose fall that
mighty noise was raised, which entered through his ears, and unlocked his eyes,
to make way for the striking and beating down of a soul, bold rather than
resolute, and the weaker, in that it had presumed on itself, which ought to have
relied on Thee. For so soon as he saw that blood, he therewith drunk down
savageness; nor turned away, but fixed his eye, drinking in frenzy, unawares, and was
delighted with that guilty fight, and intoxicated with the bloody pastime. Nor
was he now the man he came, but one of the throng he came unto, yea, a true
associate of theirs that brought him thither. Why say more? He beheld, shouted,
kindled, carried thence with him the madness which should goad him to return not
only with them who first drew him thither, but also before them, yea and to draw
in others. Yet thence didst Thou with a most strong and most merciful hand
pluck him, and taughtest him to have confidence not in himself, but in Thee. But
this was after.
CHAPTER IX-INNOCENT ALYPIUS, BEING APPREHENDED AS A THIEF, IS ST AT LIBERTY BY
THE CLEVERNESS OF AN ARCHITECHT.
But this was already being laid up in his memory to be a medicine hereafter.
So was that also, that when he was yet studying under me at Carthage, and was
thinking over at mid-day in the market-place what he was to say by heart (as
scholars use to practise), Thou sufferedst him to be apprehended by the officers of
the market-place for a thief. For no other cause, I deem, didst Thou, our God,
suffer it, but that he who was hereafter to prove so great a man, should
already begin to learn that in judging of causes, man was not readily to be
condemned by man out of a rash credulity. For as he was walking up and down by himself
before the judgment-seat, with his note-book and pen, lo, a young man, a
lawyer, the real thief, privily bringing a hatchet, got in, unperceived by Alypius,
as far as the leaden gratings which fence in the silversmiths' shops, and began
to cut away the lead. But the noise of the hatchet being heard, the
silversmiths beneath began to make a stir, and sent to apprehend whomever they should
find. But he, hearing their voices, ran away, leaving his hatchet, fearing to be
taken with it. Alypius now, who had not seen him enter, was aware of his going,
and saw with what speed he made away. And being desirous to know the matter,
entered the place; where finding the hatchet, he was standing, wondering and
considering it, when behold, those that had been sent, find him alone with the
hatchet in his hand, the noise whereof had startled and brought them thither. They
seize him, hale him away, and gathering the dwellers in the market-place
together, boast of having taken a notorious thief, and so he was being led away to be
taken before the judge.
But thus far was Alypius to be instructed. For forthwith, O Lord, Thou
succouredst his innocency, whereof Thou alone wert witness. For as he was being led
either to prison or to punishment, a certain architect met them, who had the
chief charge of the public buildings. Glad they were to meet him especially, by
whom they were wont to be suspected of stealing the goods lost out of the
marketplace, as though to show him at last by whom these thefts were committed. He,
however, had divers times seen Alypius at a certain senator's house, to whom he
often went to pay his respects; and recognising him immediately, took him aside
by the hand, and enquiring the occasion of so great a calamity, heard the whole
matter, and bade all present, amid much uproar and threats, to go with him. So
they came to the house of the young man who had done the deed. There, before
the door, was a boy so young as to be likely, not apprehending any harm to his
master, to disclose the whole. For he had attended his master to the
market-place. Whom so soon as Alypius remembered, he told the architect: and he showing the
hatchet to the boy, asked him "Whose that was?" "Ours," quoth he presently:
and being further questioned, he discovered every thing. Thus the crime being
transferred to that house, and the multitude ashamed, which had begun to insult
over Alypius, he who was to be a dispenser of Thy Word, and an examiner of many
causes in Thy Church, went away better experienced and instructed.
CHAPTER X-THE WONDERFUL INTEGRITY OF ALYPIUS IN JUDGMENT. THE LASTING
FRIENDSHIP OF NEBRIDIUS WITH AUGUSTIN.
Him then I had found at Rome, and he clave to me by a most strong tie, and
went with me to Milan, both that he might not leave me, and might practise
something of the law he had studied, more to please his parents than himself. There he
had thrice sat as Assessor, with an uncorruptness much wondered at by others,
he wondering at others rather who could prefer gold to honesty. His character
was tried besides, not only with the bait of covetousness, but with the goad of
fear. At Rome he was Assessor to the count of the Italian Treasury. There was
at that time a very powerful senator, to whose favours many stood indebted, many
much feared. He would needs, by his usual power, have a thing allowed him
which by the laws was unallowed. Alypius resisted it: a bribe was promised; with
all his heart he scorned it: threats were held out; he trampled upon them: all
wondering at so unwonted a spirit, which neither desired the friendship, nor
feared the enmity of one so great and so mightily renowned for innumerable means of
doing good or evil. And the very judge, whose councillor Alypius was, although
also unwilling it should be, yet did not openly refuse, but put the matter off
upon Alypius, alleging that he would not allow him to do it: for in truth had
the judge done it, Alypius would have decided otherwise. With this one thing in
the way of learning was he well-nigh seduced, that he might have books copied
for him at Praetorian prices, but consulting justice, he altered his
deliberation for the better; esteeming equity whereby he was hindered more gainful than
the power whereby he were allowed. These are slight things, but he that is
faithful in little, is faithful also in much. Nor can that any how be void, which
proceeded out of the mouth of Thy Truth: If ye have not been faithful in the
unrighteous Mammon, who will commit to your trust true riches? And if ye have not
been faithful in that which is another man's, who shall give you that which is
your own? He being such, did at that time cleave to me, and with me wavered in
purpose, what course of life was to be taken.
Nebridius also, who having left his native country near Carthage, yea and
Carthage itself, where he had much lived, leaving his excellent family-estate and
house, and a mother behind, who was not to follow him, had come to Milan, for no
other reason but that with me he might live in a most ardent search after
truth and wisdom. Like me he sighed, like me he wavered, an ardent searcher after
true life, and a most acute examiner of the most difficult questions. Thus were
there the mouths of three indigent persons, sighing out their wants one to
another, and waiting upon Thee that Thou mightest give them their meat in due
season. And in all the bitterness which by Thy mercy followed our worldly affairs,
as we looked towards the end, why we should suffer all this, darkness met us;
and we turned away groaning, and saying, How long shall these things be? This too
we often said; and so saying forsook them not, for as yet there dawned nothing
certain, which these forsaken, we might embrace.
CHAPTER XI-BEING TROUBLED BY HIS GRIEVOUS ERRORS, HE MEDITATES ENTERING ON A
NEW LIFE.
And I, viewing and reviewing things, most wondered at the length of time from
that my nineteenth year, wherein I had begun to kindle with the desire of
wisdom, settling when I had found her, to abandon all the empty hopes and lying
frenzies of vain desires. And lo, I was now in my thirtieth year, sticking in the
same mire, greedy of enjoying things present, which passed away and wasted my
soul; while I said to myself, "Tomorrow I shall find it; it will appear
manifestly and I shall grasp it; to, Faustus the Manichee will come, and clear every
thing! O you great men, ye Academicians, it is true then, that no certainty can be
attained for the ordering of life! Nay, let us search the more diligently, and
despair not. Lo, things in the ecclesiastical books are not absurd to us now,
which sometimes seemed absurd, and may be otherwise taken, and in a good sense.
I will take my stand, where, as a child, my parents placed me, until the clear
truth be found out. But where shall it be sought or when? Ambrose has no
leisure; we have no leisure to read; where shall we find even the books? Whence, or
when procure them? from whom borrow them? Let set times be appointed, and
certain hours be ordered for the health of our soul. Great hope has dawned; the
Catholic Faith teaches not what we thought, and vainly accused it of; her
instructed members hold it profane to believe God to be bounded by the figure of a human
body: and do we doubt to 'knock,' that the rest 'may be opened'? The forenoons
our scholars take up; what do we during the rest? Why not this? But when then
pay we court to our great friends, whose favour we need? When compose what we
may sell to scholars? When refresh ourselves, unbending our minds from this
intenseness of care?
"Perish every thing, dismiss we these empty vanities, and betake ourselves to
the one search for truth! Life is vain, death uncertain; if it steals upon us
on a sudden, in what state shall we depart hence? and where shall we learn what
here we have neglected? and shall we not rather suffer the punishment of this
negligence? What, if death itself cut off and end all care and feeling? Then
must this be ascertained. But God forbid this! It is no vain and empty thing, that
the excellent dignity of the authority of the Christian Faith hath overspread
the whole world. Never would such and so great things be by God wrought for us,
if with the death of the body the life of the soul came to an end. Wherefore
delay then to abandon worldly hopes, and give ourselves wholly to seek after God
and the blessed life? But wait! Even those things are pleasant; they have
some, and no small sweetness. We must not lightly abandon them, for it were a shame
to return again to them. See, it is no great matter now to obtain some
station, and then what should we more wish for? We have store of powerful friends; if
nothing else offer, and we be in much haste, at least a presidentship may be
given us: and a wife with some money, that she increase not our charges: and this
shall be the bound of desire. Many great men, and most worthy of imitation,
have given themselves to the study of wisdom in the state of marriage.
While I went over these things, and these winds shifted and drove my heart
this way and that, time passed on, but I delayed to turn to the Lord; and from day
to day deferred to live in Thee, and deferred not daily to die in myself.
Loving a happy life, I feared it in its own abode, and sought it, by fleeing from
it. I thought I should be too miserable, unless folded in female arms; and of
the medicine of Thy mercy to cure that infirmity I thought not, not having tried
it. As for continency, I supposed it to be in our own power (though in myself I
did not find that power), being so foolish as not to know what is written,
None can be continent unless Thou give it; and that Thou wouldest give it, if with
inward groanings I did knock at Thine ears, and with a settled faith did cast
my care on Thee.
CHAPTER XII-DISCUSSION WITH ALYPIUS CONCERNING A LIFE OF CELIBACY.
Alypius indeed kept me from marrying; alleging that so could we by no means
with undistracted leisure live together in the love of wisdom, as we had long
desired. For himself was even then most pure in this point, so that it was
wonderful; and that the more, since in the outset of his youth he had entered into
that course, but had not stuck fast therein; rather had he felt remorse and
revolting at it, living thenceforth until now most continently. But I opposed him
with the examples of those who as married men had cherished wisdom, and served God
acceptably, and retained their friends, and loved them faithfully. Of whose
greatness of spirit I was far short; and bound with the disease of the flesh, and
its deadly sweetness, drew along my chain, dreading to be loosed, and as if my
wound had been fretted, put back his good persuasions, as it were the hand of
one that would unchain me. Moreover, by me did the serpent speak unto Alypius
himself, by my tongue weaving and laying in his path pleasurable snares, wherein
his virtuous and free feet might be entangled.
For when he wondered that I, whom he esteemed not slightly, should stick so
fast in the birdlime of that pleasure, as to protest (so oft as we discussed it)
that I could never lead a single life; and urged in my defence when I saw him
wonder, that there was great difference between his momentary and
scarce-remembered knowledge of that life, which so he might easily despise, and my continued
acquaintance whereto if the honourable name of marriage were added, he ought
not to wonder why I could not contemn that course; he began also to desire to be
married; not as overcome with desire of such pleasure, but out of curiosity.
For he would fain know, he said, what that should be, without which my life, to
him so pleasing, would to me seem not life but a punishment. For his mind, free
from that chain, was amazed at my thraldom; and through that amazement was
going on to a desire of trying it, thence to the trial itself, and thence perhaps
to sink into that bondage whereat he wondered, seeing he was willing to make a
covenant with death; and he that loves danger, shall fall into it. For whatever
honour there be in the office of well-ordering a married life, and a family,
moved us but slightly. But me for the most part the habit of satisfying an
insatiable appetite tormented, while it held me captive; him, an admiring wonder was
leading captive. So were we, until Thou, O Most High, not forsaking our dust,
commiserating us miserable, didst come to our help, by wondrous and secret ways.
CHAPTER XIII-BEING URGED BY HIS MOTHER TO TAKE A WIFE, HE SOUGHT A MAIDEN THAT
WAS PLEASING UNTO HIM.
Continual effort was made to have me married. I wooed, I was promised, chiefly
through my mother's pains, that so once married, the health-giving baptism
might cleanse me, towards which she rejoiced that I was being daily fitted, and
observed that her prayers, and Thy promises, were being fulfilled in my faith. At
which time verily, both at my request and her own longing, with strong cries
of heart she daily begged of Thee, that Thou wouldest by a vision discover unto
her something concerning my future marriage; Thou never wouldest. She saw
indeed certain vain and fantastic things, such as the energy of the human spirit,
busied thereon, brought together; and these she told me of, not with that
confidence she was wont, when Thou showedst her any thing, but slighting them. For she
could, she said, through a certain feeling, which in words she could not
express, discern betwixt Thy revelations, and the dreams of her own soul. Yet the
matter was pressed on, and a maiden asked in marriage, two years under the fit
age; and, as pleasing, was waited for.
CHAPTER XIV-THE DESIGN OF ESTABLISHING A COMMON HOUSEHOLD WITH HIS FRIENDS IS
SPEEDILY HINDERED.
And many of us friends conferring about, and detesting the turbulent turmoils
of human life, had debated and now almost resolved on living apart from
business and the bustle of men; and this was to be thus obtained; we were to bring
whatever we might severally procure, and make one household of all; so that
through the truth of our friendship nothing should belong especially to any; but the
whole thus derived from all, should as a whole belong to each, and all to all.
We thought there might be some often persons in this society; some of whom were
very rich, especially Romanianus our townsman, from childhood a very familiar
friend of mine, whom the grievous perplexities of his affairs had brought up to
court; who was the most earnest for this project; and therein was his voice of
great weight, because his ample estate far exceeded any of the rest. We had
settled also that two annual officers, as it were, should provide all things
necessary, the rest being undisturbed. But when we began to consider whether the
wives, which some of us already had, others hoped to have, would allow this, all
that plan, which was being so well moulded, fell to pieces in our hands, was
utterly dashed and cast aside. Thence we betook us to sighs, and groans, and our
steps to follow the broad and beaten ways of the world; for many thoughts were
in our heart, but Thy counsel standeth for ever. Out of which counsel Thou
didst deride ours, and preparedst Thine own; purposing to give us meat in due
season, and to fill our souls with blessing.
CHAPTER XV-HE DISMISSES ONE MISTRESS, AND CHOOSES ANOTHER.
Meanwhile my sins were being multiplied, and my concubine being torn from my
side as a hindrance to my marriage, my heart which clave unto her was torn and
wounded and bleeding. And she returned to Afric, vowing unto Thee never to know
any other man, leaving with me my son by her. But unhappy I, who could not
imitate a very woman, impatient of delay, inasmuch as not till after two years was
I to obtain her I sought not being so much a lover of marriage as a slave to
lust, procured another, though no wife, that so by the servitude of an enduring
custom, the disease of my soul might be kept up and carried on in its vigour, or
even augmented, into the dominion of marriage. Nor was that my wound cured,
which had been made by the cutting away of the former, but after inflammation and
most acute pain, it mortified, and my pains became less acute, but more
desperate.
CHAPTER XVI-THE FEAR OF DEATH AND JUDGMENT CALLED HIM, BELIEVING IN THE
IMMORTALITY OF THE SOUL, BACK FROM HIS WICKEDNESS, HIM WHO AFORETIME BELIEVED IN THE
OPINIONS OF EPICURUS.
To Thee be praise, glory to Thee, Fountain of mercies. I was becoming more
miserable, and Thou nearer. Thy right hand was continually ready to pluck me out
of the mire, and to wash me thoroughly, and I knew it not; nor did anything call
me back from a yet deeper gulf of carnal pleasures, but the fear of death, and
of Thy judgment to come; which amid all my changes, never departed from my
breast. And in my disputes with my friends Alypius and Nebridius of the nature of
good and evil, I held that Epicurus had in my mind won the palm, had I not
believed that after death there remained a life for the soul, and places of
requital according to men's deserts, which Epicurus would not believe. And I asked,
"were we immortal, and to live in perpetual bodily pleasure, without fear of
losing it, why should we not be happy, or what else should we seek?" not knowing
that great misery was involved in this very thing, that, being thus sunk and
blinded, I could not discern that light of excellence and beauty, to be embraced
for its own sake, which the eye of flesh cannot see, and is seen by the inner
man. Nor did I, unhappy, consider from what source it sprung, that even on these
things, foul as they were, I with pleasure discoursed with my friends, nor could
I, even according to the notions I then had of happiness, be happy without
friends, amid what abundance soever of carnal pleasures. And yet these friends I
loved for themselves only, and I felt that I was beloved of them again for
myself only.
O crooked paths! Woe to the audacious soul, which hoped, by forsaking Thee, to
gain some better thing! Turned it hath, and turned again, upon back, sides,
and belly, yet all was painful; and Thou alone rest. And behold, Thou art at
hand, and deliverest us from our wretched wanderings, and placest us in Thy way,
and dost comfort us, and say, "Run; I will carry you; yea I will bring you
through; there also will I carry you."
Book VII
CHAPTER I-HE REGARDED NOT GOD INDEED UNDER THE FORM OF A HUMAN BODY, BUT AS A
CORPOREAL SUBSTANCE DIFFUSED THROUGH SPACE.
Deceased was now that my evil and abominable youth, and I was passing into
early manhood; the more defiled by vain things as I grew in years, who could not
imagine any substance, but such as is wont to be seen with these eyes. I thought
not of Thee, O God, under the figure of a human body; since I began to hear
aught of wisdom, I always avoided this; and rejoiced to have found the same in
the faith of our spiritual mother, Thy Catholic Church. But what else to conceive
of Thee I knew not. And I, a man, and such a man, sought to conceive of Thee
the sovereign, only, true God; and I did in my inmost soul believe that Thou
wert incorruptible, and uninjurable, and unchangeable; because though not knowing
whence or how, yet I saw plainly, and was sure, that that which may be
corrupted must be inferior to that which cannot; what could not be injured I preferred
unhesitatingly to what could receive injury; the unchangeable to things subject
to change. My heart passionately cried out against all my phantoms, and with
this one blow I sought to beat away from the eye of my mind all that unclean
troop which buzzed around it. And to, being scarce put off, in the twinkling of an
eye they gathered again thick about me, flew against my face, and beclouded
it; so that though not under the form of the human body, yet was I constrained to
conceive of Thee (that incorruptible, uninjurable, and unchangeable, which I
preferred before the corruptible, and injurable, and changeable) as being in
space, whether infused into the world, or diffused infinitely without it. Because
whatsoever I conceived, deprived of this space, seemed to me nothing, yea
altogether nothing, not even a void, as if a body were taken out of its place, and
the place should remain empty of any body at all, of earth and water, air and
heaven, yet would it remain a void place, as it were a spacious nothing.
I then being thus gross-hearted, nor clear even to myself, whatsoever was not
extended over certain spaces, nor diffused, nor condensed, nor swelled out, or
did not or could not receive some of these dimensions, I thought to be
altogether nothing. For over such forms as my eyes are wont to range, did my heart then
range: nor yet did I see that this same notion of the mind, whereby I formed
those very images, was not of this sort, and yet it could not have formed them,
had not itself been some great thing. So also did I endeavour to conceive of
Thee, Life of my life, as vast, through infinite spaces on every side penetrating
the whole mass of the universe, and beyond it, every way, through unmeasurable
boundless spaces; so that the earth should have Thee, the heaven have Thee,
all things have Thee, and they be bounded in Thee, and Thou bounded nowhere. For
that as the body of this air which is above the earth, hindereth not the light
of the sun from passing through it, penetrating it, not by bursting or by
cutting, but by filling it wholly: so I thought the body not of heaven, air, and sea
only, but of the earth too, pervious to Thee, so that in all its parts, the
greatest as the smallest, it should admit Thy presence, by a secret inspiration,
within and without, directing all things which Thou hast created. So I guessed,
only as unable to conceive aught else, for it was false. For thus should a
greater part of the earth contain a greater portion of Thee, and a less, a lesser:
and all things should in such sort be full of Thee, that the body of an
elephant should contain more of Thee, than that of a sparrow, by how much larger it
is, and takes up more room; and thus shouldest Thou make the several portions of
Thyself present unto the several portions of the world, in fragments, large to
the large, petty to the petty. But such art not Thou. But not as yet hadst
Thou enlightened my darkness.
CHAPTER II-THE DISPUTATION OF NEBRIDIUS AGAINST THE MANICHAEANS, ON THE
QUESTION "WHETHER GOD BE CORRUPTIBLE OR INCORRUPTIBLE."
It was enough for me, Lord, to oppose to those deceived deceivers, and dumb
praters, since Thy word sounded not out of them; -that was enough which long ago,
while we were yet at Carthage, Nebridius used to propound, at which all we
that heard it were staggered: "That said nation of darkness, which the Manichees
are wont to set as an opposing mass over against Thee, what could it have done
unto Thee, hadst Thou refused to fight with it? For, if they answered, 'it would
have done Thee some hurt,' then shouldest Thou be subject to injury and
corruption: but if could do Thee no hurt,' then was no reason brought for Thy
fighting with it; and fighting in such wise, as that a certain portion or member of
Thee, or offspring of Thy very Substance, should he mingled with opposed powers,
and natures not created by Thee, and be by them so far corrupted and changed to
the worse, as to be turned from happiness into misery, and need assistance,
whereby it might be extricated and purified; and that this offspring of Thy
Substance was the soul, which being enthralled, defiled, corrupted, Thy Word, free,
pure, and whole, might relieve; that Word itself being still corruptible
because it was of one and the same Substance. So then, should they affirm Thee,
whatsoever Thou art, that is, Thy Substance whereby Thou art, to be incorruptible,
then were all these sayings false and execrable; but if corruptible, the very
statement showed it to be false and revolting." This argument then of Nebridius
sufficed against those who deserved wholly to be vomited out of the overcharged
stomach; for they had no escape, without horrible blasphemy of heart and
tongue, thus thinking and speaking of Thee.
CHAPTER III-THAT THE CAUSE OF EVIL IS THE FREE JUDGMENT OF THE WILL.
But I also as yet, although I held and was firmly persuaded that Thou our Lord
the true God, who madest not only our souls, but our bodies, and not only our
souls and bodies, but all beings, and all things, wert undefilable and
unalterable, and in no degree mutable; yet understood I not, clearly and without
difficulty, the cause of evil. And yet whatever it were, I perceived it was in such
wise to be sought out, as should not constrain me to believe the immutable God
to be mutable, lest I should become that evil I was seeking out. I sought it out
then, thus far free from anxiety, certain of the untruth of what these held,
from whom I shrunk with my whole heart: for I saw, that through enquiring the
origin of evil, they were filled with evil, in that they preferred to think that
Thy substance did suffer ill than their own did commit it.
And I strained to perceive what I now heard, that free-will was the cause of
our doing ill, and Thy just judgment of our suffering ill. But I was not able
clearly to discern it. So then endeavouring to draw my soul's vision out of that
deep pit, I was again plunged therein, and endeavouring often, I was plunged
back as often. But this raised me a little into Thy light, that I knew as well
that I had a will, as that I lived: when then I did will or nill any thing, I was
most sure that no other than myself did will and nill: and I all but saw that
there was the cause of my sin. But what I did against my will, I saw that I
suffered rather than did, and I judged not to be my fault, but my punishment;
whereby, however, holding Thee to be just, I speedily confessed myself to be not
unjustly punished. But again I said, Who made me? Did not my God, Who is not only
good, but goodness itself? Whence then came I to will evil and nill good, so
that I am thus justly punished? who set this in me, and ingrated into me this
plant of bitterness, seeing I was wholly formed by my most sweet God? If the
devil were the author, whence is that same devil? And if he also by his own
perverse will, of a good angel became a devil, whence, again, came in him that evil
will whereby he became a devil, seeing the whole nature of angels was made by
that most good Creator? By these thoughts I was again sunk down and choked; yet
not brought down to that hell of error (where no man confesseth unto Thee), to
think rather that Thou dost suffer ill, than that man doth it.
CHAPTER IV-THAT GOD IS NOT CORRUPTIBLE, WHO, IF HE WERE, WOULD NOT BE GOD AT
ALL.
For I was in such wise striving to find out the rest, as one who had already
found that the incorruptible must needs be better than the corruptible: and Thee
therefore, whatsoever Thou wert, I confessed to be incorruptible. For never
soul was, nor shall be, able to conceive any thing which may be better than Thou,
who art the sovereign and the best good. But since most truly and certainly,
the incorruptible is preferable to the corruptible (as I did now prefer it),
then, wert Thou not incorruptible, I could in thought have arrived at something
better than my God. Where then I saw the incorruptible to be preferable to the
corruptible, there ought I to seek for Thee, and there observe "wherein evil
itself was"; that is, whence corruption comes, by which Thy substance can by no
means be impaired. For corruption does no ways impair our God; by no will, by no
necessity, by no unlooked-for chance: because He is God, and what He wills is
good, and Himself is that good; but to be corrupted is not good. Nor art Thou
against Thy will constrained to any thing, since Thy will is not greater than Thy
power. But greater should it be, were Thyself greater than Thyself. For the
will and power of God is God Himself. And what can be unlooked-for by Thee, Who
knowest all things? Nor is there any nature in things, but Thou knowest it. And
what should we more say, "why that substance which God is should not be
corruptible," seeing if it were so, it should not be God?
CHAPTER V-QUESTIONS CONCERNING THE ORIGIN OF EVIL IN REGARD TO GOD, WHO, SINCE
HE IS THE CHIEF GOD, CANNOT BE THE CAUSE OF EVIL.
And I sought "whence is evil," and sought in an evil way; and saw not the evil
in my very search. I set now before the sight of my spirit the whole creation,
whatsoever we can see therein (as sea, earth, air, stars, trees, mortal
creatures); yea, and whatever in it we do not see, as the firmament of heaven, all
angels moreover, and all the spiritual inhabitants thereof. But these very
beings, as though they were bodies, did my fancy dispose in place, and I made one
great mass of Thy creation, distinguished as to the kinds of bodies; some, real
bodies, some, what myself had feigned for spirits. And this mass I made huge, not
as it was (which I could not know), but as I thought convenient, yet every way
finite. But Thee, O Lord, I imagined on every part environing and penetrating
it, though every way infinite: as if there were a sea, every where, and on
every side, through unmeasured space, one only boundless sea, and it contained
within it some sponge, huge, but bounded; that sponge must needs, in all its parts,
be filled from that unmeasurable sea: so conceived I Thy creation, itself
finite, full of Thee, the Infinite; and I said, Behold God, and behold what God
hath created; and God is good, yea, most mightily and incomparably better than all
these: but yet He, the Good, created them good; and see how He environeth and
fulfils them. Where is evil then, and whence, and how crept it in hither? What
is its root, and what its seed? Or hath it no being? Why then fear we and avoid
what is not? Or if we fear it idly, then is that very fear evil, whereby the
soul is thus idly goaded and racked. Yea, and so much a greater evil, as we have
nothing to fear, and yet do fear. Therefore either is that evil which we fear,
or else evil is, that we fear. Whence is it then? seeing God, the Good, hath
created all these things good. He indeed, the greater and chiefest Good, hath
created these lesser goods; still both Creator and created, all are good. Whence
is evil? Or, was there some evil matter of which He made, and formed, and
ordered it, yet left something in it which He did not convert into good? Why so
then? Had He no might to turn and change the whole, so that no evil should remain
in it, seeing He is All-mighty? Lastly, why would He make any thing at all of
it, and not rather by the same All-mightiness cause it not to be at all? Or,
could it then be against His will? Or if it were from eternity, why suffered He it
so to be for infinite spaces of times past, and was pleased so long after to
make something out of it? Or if He were suddenly pleased now to effect somewhat,
this rather should the All-mighty have effected, that this evil matter should
not be, and He alone be, the whole, true, sovereign, and infinite Good. Or if it
was not good that He who was good should not also frame and create something
that were good, then, that evil matter being taken away and brought to nothing,
He might form good matter, whereof to create all things. For He should not be
All-mighty, if He might not create something good without the aid of that matter
which Himself had not created. These thoughts I revolved in my miserable
heart, overcharged with most gnawing cares, lest I should die ere I had found the
truth; yet was the faith of Thy Christ, our Lord and Saviour, professed in the
Church Catholic, firmly fixed in my heart, in many points, indeed, as yet
unformed, and fluctuating from the rule of doctrine; yet did not my mind utterly leave
it, but rather daily took in more and more of it.
CHAPTER VI-HE REFUTES THE DIVINATIONS OF THE ASTROLOGERS, DEDUCED FROM THE
CONSTELLATIONS.
But this time also had I rejected the lying divinations and impious dotages of
the astrologers. Let Thine own mercies, out of my very inmost soul, confess
unto Thee for this also, O my God. For Thou, Thou altogether (for who else calls
us back from the death of all errors, save the Life which cannot die, and the
Wisdom which needing no light enlightens the minds that need it, whereby the
universe is directed, down to the whirling leaves of trees?) -Thou madest
provision for my obstinacy wherewith I struggled against Vindicianus, an acute old man,
and Nebridius, a young man of admirable talents; the first vehemently
affirming, and the latter often (though with some doubtfulness) saying, "That there was
no such art whereby to foresee things to come, but that men's conjectures were
a sort of lottery, and that out of many things which they said should come to
pass, some actually did, unawares to them who spake it, who stumbled upon it,
through their oft speaking." Thou providedst then a friend for me, no negligent
consulter of the astrologers; nor yet well skilled in those arts, but (as I
said) a curious consulter with them, and yet knowing something, which he said he
had heard of his father, which how far it went to overthrow the estimation of
that art, he knew not. This man then, Firminus by name, having had a liberal
education, and well taught in Rhetoric, consulted me, as one very dear to him,
what, according to his socalled constellations, I thought on certain affairs of
his, wherein his worldly hopes had risen, and I, who had herein now begun to
incline towards Nebridius' opinion, did not altogether refuse to conjecture, and
tell him what came into my unresolved mind; but added, that I was now almost
persuaded that these were but empty and ridiculous follies. Thereupon he told me
that his father had been very curious in such books, and had a friend as earnest
in them as himself, who with joint study and conference fanned the flame of
their affections to these toys, so that they would observe the moments whereat the
very dumb animals, which bred about their houses, gave birth, and then observed
the relative position of the heavens, thereby to make fresh experiments in
this so-called art. He said then that he had heard of his father, that what time
his mother was about to give birth to him, Firminus, a woman-servant of that
friend of his father's was also with child, which could not escape her master, who
took care with most exact diligence to know the births of his very puppies.
And so it was that (the one for his wife, and the other for his servant, with the
most careful observation, reckoning days, hours, nay, the lesser divisions of
the hours) both were delivered at the same instant; so that both were
constrained to allow the same constellations, even to the minutest points, the one for
his son, the other for his new-born slave. For so soon as the women began to be
in labour, they each gave notice to the other what was fallen out in their
houses, and had messengers ready to send to one another so soon as they had notice
of the actual birth, of which they had easily provided, each in his own
province, to give instant intelligence. Thus then the messengers of the respective
parties met, he averred, at such an equal distance from either house that neither
of them could make out any difference in the position of the stars, or any
other minutest points; and yet Firminus, born in a high estate in his parents'
house, ran his course through the gilded paths of life, was increased in riches,
raised to honours; whereas that slave continued to serve his masters, without any
relaxation of his yoke, as Firminus, who knew him, told me.
Upon hearing and believing these things, told by one of such credibility, all
that my resistance gave way; and first I endeavoured to reclaim Firminus
himself from that curiosity, by telling him that upon inspecting his constellations,
I ought if I were to predict truly, to have seen in them parents eminent among
their neighbours, a noble family in its own city, high birth, good education,
liberal learning. But if that servant had consulted me upon the same
constellations, since they were his also, I ought again (to tell him too truly) to see in
them a lineage the most abject, a slavish condition, and every thing else
utterly at variance with the former. Whence then, if I spake the truth, I should,
from the same constellations, speak diversely, or if I spake the same, speak
falsely: thence it followed most certainly that whatever, upon consideration of the
constellations, was spoken truly, was spoken not out of art, but chance; and
whatever spoken falsely, was not out of ignorance in the art, but the failure of
the chance.
An opening thus made, ruminating with myself on the like things, that no one
of those dotards (who lived by such a trade, and whom I longed to attack, and
with derision to confute) might urge against me that Firminus had informed me
falsely, or his father him; I bent my thoughts on those that are born twins, who
for the most part come out of the womb so near one to other, that the small
interval (how much force soever in the nature of things folk may pretend it to
have) cannot be noted by human observation, or be at all expressed in those figures
which the astrologer is to inspect, that he may pronounce truly. Yet they
cannot be true: for looking into the same figures, he must have predicted the same
of Esau and Jacob, whereas the same happened not to them. Therefore he must
speak falsely; or if truly, then, looking into the same figures, he must not give
the same answer. Not by art, then, but by chance, would he speak truly. For
Thou, O Lord, most righteous Ruler of the Universe, while consulters and consulted
know it not, dost by Thy hidden inspiration effect that the consulter should
hear what, according to the hidden deservings of souls, he ought to hear, out of
the unsearchable depth of Thy just judgment, to Whom let no man say, What is
this? Why that? Let him not so say, for he is man.
CHAPTER VII-HE IS SEVERELY EXERCISED AS TO THE ORIGIN OF EVIL.
Now then, O my Helper, hadst Thou loosed me from those fetters: and I sought
"whence is evil," and found no way. But Thou sufferedst me not by any
fluctuations of thought to be carried away from the Faith whereby I believed Thee both to
be, and Thy substance to be unchangeable, and that Thou hast a care of, and
wouldest judge men, and that in Christ, Thy Son, Our Lord, and the holy
Scriptures, which the authority of Thy Catholic Church pressed upon me, Thou hadst set
the way of man's salvation, to that life which is to be after this death. These
things being safe and immovably settled in my mind, I sought anxiously "whence
was evil?" What were the pangs of my teeming heart, what groans, O my God! yet
even there were Thine ears open, and I knew it not; and when in silence I
vehemently sought, those silent contritions of my soul were strong cries unto Thy
mercy. Thou knewest what I suffered, and no man. For, what was that which was
thence through my tongue distilled into the ears of my most familiar friends? Did
the whole tumult of my soul, for which neither time nor utterance sufficed,
reach them? Yet went up the whole to Thy hearing, all which I roared out from the
groanings of my heart; and my desire was before Thee, and the light of mine
eyes was not with me: for that was within, I without: nor was that confined to
place, but I was intent on things contained in place, but there found I no
resting-place, nor did they so receive me, that I could say, "It is enough," "it is
well": nor did they yet suffer me to turn back, where it might be well enough
with me. For to these things was I superior, but inferior to Thee; and Thou art my
true joy when subjected to Thee, and Thou hadst subjected to me what Thou
createdst below me. And this was the true temperament, and middle region of my
safety, to remain in Thy Image, and by serving Thee, rule the body. But when I rose
proudly against Thee, and ran against the Lord with my neck, with the thick
bosses of my buckler, even these inferior things were set above me, and pressed
me down, and no where was there respite or space of breathing. They met my sight
on all sides by heaps and troops, and in thought the images thereof presented
themselves unsought, as I would return to Thee, as if they would say unto me,
"Whither goest thou, unworthy and defiled?" And these things had grown out of my
wound; for Thou "humbledst the proud like one that is wounded," and through my
own swelling was I separated from Thee; yea, my pride-swollen face closed up
mine eyes.
CHAPTER VIII-BY GOD'S ASSISTANCE HE BY DEGREES ARRIVES AT THE TRUTH.
But Thou, Lord, abidest for ever, yet not for ever art Thou angry with us;
because Thou pitiest our dust and ashes, and it was pleasing in Thy sight to
reform my deformities; and by inward goads didst Thou rouse me, that I should be ill
at ease, until Thou wert manifested to my inward sight. Thus, by the secret
hand of Thy medicining was my swelling abated, and the troubled and bedimmed
eyesight of my mind, by the smarting anointings of healthful sorrows, was from day
to day healed.
CHAPTER IX-HE COMPARES THE DOCTRINE OF THE PLATONISTS CONCERNING THE "Lovgo"
WITH THE MUCH MORE EXCELLENT DOCTRINE OF CHRISTIANITY.
And Thou, willing first to show me how Thou resistest the proud, but givest
grace unto the humble, and by how great an act of Thy mercy Thou hadst traced out
to men the way of humility, in that Thy Word was made flesh, and dwelt among
men:- Thou procuredst for me, by means of one puffed up with most unnatural
pride, certain books of the Platonists, translated from Greek into Latin. And
therein I read, not indeed in the very words, but to the very same purpose, enforced
by many and divers reasons, that In the beginning was the Word, and the Word
was with God, and the Word was God: the Same was in the beginning with God: all
things were made by Him, and without Him was nothing made: that which was made
by Him is life, and the life was the light of men, and the light shineth in the
darkness, and the darkness comprehended it not. And that the soul of man,
though it bears witness to the light, yet itself is not that light; but the Word of
God, being God, is that true light that lighteth every man that cometh into
the world. And that He was in the world, and the world was made by Him, and the
world knew Him not. But, that He came unto His own, and His own received Him
not; but as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God,
as many as believed in His name; this I read not there.
Again I read there, that God the Word was born not of flesh nor of blood, nor
of the will of man, nor of the will of the flesh, but of God. But that the Word
was made flesh, and dwelt among us, I read not there. For I traced in those
books that it was many and divers ways said, that the Son was in the form of the
Father, and thought it not robbery to be equal with God, for that naturally He
was the Same Substance. But that He emptied Himself, taking the form of a
servant, being made in the likeness of men, and found in fashion as a man, humbled
Himself, and became obedient unto death, and that the death of the cross:
wherefore God exalted Him from the dead, and gave Him a name above every name, that
at the name of Jesus every knee should how, of things in heaven, and things in
earth, and things under the earth; and that every tongue should confess that the
Lord Jesus Christ is in the glory of God the Father; those books have not. For
that before all times and above all times Thy Only-Begotten Son remaineth
unchangeable, co-eternal with Thee, and that of His fulness souls receive, that
they may be blessed; and that by participation of wisdom abiding in them, they are
renewed, so as to be wise, is there. But that in due time He died for the
ungodly; and that Thou sparedst not Thine Only Son, but deliveredst Him for us all,
is not there. For Thou hiddest these things from the wise, and revealedst them
to babes; that they that labour and are heavy laden might come unto Him, and
He refresh them, because He is meek and lowly in heart; and the meek He
directeth in judgment, and the gentle He teacheth His ways, beholding our lowliness and
trouble, and forgiving all our sins. But such as are lifted up in the lofty
walk of some would-be sublimer learning, hear not Him, saying, Learn of Me, for I
am meek and lowly in heart, and ye shall find rest to your souls. Although
they knew God, yet they glorify Him not as God, nor are thankful, but wax vain in
their thoughts; and their foolish heart is darkened; professing that they were
wise, they became fools.
And therefore did I read there also, that they had changed the glory of Thy
incorruptible nature into idols and divers shapes, into the likeness of the image
of corruptible man, and birds, and beasts, and creeping things; namely, into
that Egyptian food for which Esau lost his birthright, for that Thy first-born
people worshipped the head of a four-footed beast instead of Thee; turning in
heart back towards Egypt; and bowing Thy image, their own soul, before the image
of a calf that eateth hay. These things found I here, but I fed not on them.
For it pleased Thee, O Lord, to take away the reproach of diminution from Jacob,
that the elder should serve the younger: and Thou calledst the Gentiles into
Thine inheritance. And I had come to Thee from among the Gentiles; and I set my
mind upon the gold which Thou willedst Thy people to take from Egypt, seeing
Thine it was, wheresoever it were. And to the Athenians Thou saidst by Thy
Apostle, that in Thee we live, move, and have our being, as one of their own poets had
said. And verily these books came from thence. But I set not my mind on the
idols of Egypt, whom they served with Thy gold, who changed the truth of God into
a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator.
CHAPTER X-DIVINE THINGS ARE THE MORE CLEARLY MANIFESTED TO HIM WHO WITHDRAWS
INTO THE RECESSES OF HIS HEART.
And being thence admonished to return to myself, I entered even into my inward
self, Thou being my Guide: and able I was, for Thou wert become my Helper. And
I entered and beheld with the eye of my soul (such as it was), above the same
eye of my soul, above my mind, the Light Unchangeable. Not this ordinary light,
which all flesh may look upon, nor as it were a greater of the same kind, as
though the brightness of this should be manifold brighter, and with its
greatness take up all space. Not such was this light, but other, yea, far other from
these. Nor was it above my soul, as oil is above water, nor yet as heaven above
earth: but above to my soul, because It made me; and I below It, because I was
made by It. He that knows the Truth, knows what that Light is; and he that knows
It, knows eternity. Love knoweth it. O Truth Who art Eternity! and Love Who
art Truth! and Eternity Who art Love! Thou art my God, to Thee do I sigh night
and day. Thee when I first knew, Thou liftedst me up, that I might see there was
what I might see, and that I was not yet such as to see. And Thou didst beat
back the weakness of my sight, streaming forth Thy beams of light upon me most
strongly, and I trembled with love and awe: and I perceived myself to be far off
from Thee, in the region of unlikeness, as if I heard this Thy voice from on
high: "I am the food of grown men, grow, and thou shalt feed upon Me; nor shalt
thou convert Me, like the food of thy flesh into thee, but thou shalt be
converted into Me." And I learned, that Thou for iniquity chastenest man, and Thou
madest my soul to consume away like a spider. And I said, "Is Truth therefore
nothing because it is not diffused through space finite or infinite?" And Thou
criedst to me from afar: "Yet verily, I AM that I AM." And I heard, as the heart
heareth, nor had I room to doubt, and I should sooner doubt that I live than that
Truth is not, which is clearly seen, being understood by those things which
are made. And I beheld the other things below Thee, and I perceived that they
neither altogether are, nor altogether are not, for they are, since they are from
Thee, but are not, because they are not what Thou art. For that truly is which
remains unchangeably. It is good then for me to hold fast unto God; for if I
remain not in Him, I cannot in myself; but He remaining in Himself, reneweth all
things. And Thou art the Lord my God, since Thou standest not in need of my
goodness.
CHAPTER XI-THAT CREATURES ARE MUTABLE AND GOD ALONE IMMUTABLE.
And I viewed the other things below Thee, and perceived that they neither
altogether are, nor altogether are not. They are, indeed, because thay are from
Thee; but are not, because they are not what Thou art. For that truly is which
remains immutably.2 It is good then, for me to cleave unto God,3 for if I remain
not in Him, neither shall I in myself; but He, remaining in Himself, reneweth
all things.4 And Thou art the Lord my God, since Thou standest not in need of my
gooodness.5
CHAPTER XII-WHATEVER THINGS THE GOOD GOD HAS CREATED ARE VERY GOOD.
And it was manifested unto me, that those things be good which yet are
corrupted; which neither were they sovereignly good, nor unless they were good could
he corrupted: for if sovereignly good, they were incorruptible, if not good at
all, there were nothing in them to be corrupted. For corruption injures, but
unless it diminished goodness, it could not injure. Either then corruption injures
not, which cannot be; or which is most certain, all which is corrupted is
deprived of good. But if they he deprived of all good, they shall cease to be. For
if they shall be, and can now no longer he corrupted, they shall be better than
before, because they shall abide incorruptibly. And what more monstrous than
to affirm things to become better by losing all their good? Therefore, if they
shall be deprived of all good, they shall no longer be. So long therefore as
they are, they are good: therefore whatsoever is, is good. That evil then which I
sought, whence it is, is not any substance: for were it a substance, it should
be good. For either it should be an incorruptible substance, and so a chief
good: or a corruptible substance; which unless it were good, could not be
corrupted. I perceived therefore, and it was manifested to me that Thou madest all
things good, nor is there any substance at all, which Thou madest not; and for that
Thou madest not all things equal, therefore are all things; because each is
good, and altogether very good, because our God made all things very good.
CHAPTER XIII-IT IS MEET TO PRAISE THE CREATOR FOR THE GOOD THINGS WHICH ARE
MADE IN HEAVEN AND EARTH.
And to Thee is nothing whatsoever evil: yea, not only to Thee, but also to Thy
creation as a whole, because there is nothing without, which may break in, and
corrupt that order which Thou hast appointed it. But in the parts thereof some
things, because unharmonising with other some, are accounted evil: whereas
those very things harmonise with others, and are good; and in themselves are good.
And all these things which harmonise not together, do yet with the inferior
part, which we call Earth, having its own cloudy and windy sky harmonising with
it. Far be it then that I should say, "These things should not be": for should I
see nought but these, I should indeed long for the better; but still must even
for these alone praise Thee; for that Thou art to be praised, do show from the
earth, dragons, and all deeps, fire, hail, snow, ice, and stormy wind, which
fulfil Thy word; mountains, and all hills, fruitful trees, and all cedars;
beasts, and all cattle, creeping things, and flying fowls; kings of the earth, and
all people, princes, and all judges of the earth; young men and maidens, old men
and young, praise Thy Name. But when, from heaven, these praise Thee, praise
Thee, our God, in the heights all Thy angels, all Thy hosts, sun and moon, all
the stars and light, the Heaven of heavens, and the waters that be above the
heavens, praise Thy Name; I did not now long for things better, because I
conceived of all: and with a sounder judgment I apprehended that the things above were
better than these below, but altogether better than those above by themselves.
CHAPTER XIV-BEING DISPLEASED WITH SOME PART OF GOD'S CREATION, HE CONCEIVES OF
TWO ORIGINAL SUBSTANCES.
There is no soundness in them, whom aught of Thy creation displeaseth: as
neither in me, when much which Thou hast made, displeased me. And because my soul
durst not be displeased at my God, it would fain not account that Thine, which
displeased it. Hence it had gone into the opinion of two substances, and had no
rest, but talked idly. And returning thence, it had made to itself a God,
through infinite measures of all space; and thought it to be Thee, and placed it in
its heart; and had again become the temple of its own idol, to Thee abominable.
But after Thou hadst soothed my head, unknown to me, and closed mine eyes that
they should not behold vanity, I ceased somewhat of my former self, and my
frenzy was lulled to sleep; and I awoke in Thee, and saw Thee infinite, but in
another way, and this sight was not derived from the flesh.
CHAPTER XV-WHATEVER IS, OWES ITS BEING TO GOD.
And I looked back on other things; and I saw that they owed their being to
Thee; and were all bounded in Thee: but in a different way; not as being in space;
but because Thou containest all things in Thine hand in Thy Truth; and all
things are true so far as they nor is there any falsehood, unless when that is
thought to be, which is not. And I saw that all things did harmonise, not with
their places only, but with their seasons. And that Thou, who only art Eternal,
didst not begin to work after innumerable spaces of times spent; for that all
spaces of times, both which have passed, and which shall pass, neither go nor
come, but through Thee, working and abiding.
CHAPTER XVI-EVIL ARISES NOT FROM A SUBSTANCE, BUT FROM THE PERVERSION OF THE
WILL.
And I perceived and found it nothing strange, that bread which is pleasant to
a healthy palate is loathsome to one distempered: and to sore eyes light is
offensive, which to the sound is delightful. And Thy righteousness displeaseth the
wicked; much more the viper and reptiles, which Thou hast created good,
fitting in with the inferior portions of Thy Creation, with which the very wicked
also fit in; and that the more, by how much they be unlike Thee; but with the
superior creatures, by how much they become more like to Thee. And I enquired what
iniquity was, and found it to be substance, but the perversion of the will,
turned aside from Thee, O God, the Supreme, towards these lower things, and
casting out its bowels, and puffed up outwardly.
CHAPTER XVII-ABOVE HIS CHANGEABLE MIND, HE DISCOVERS THE UNCHANGEABLE AUTHOR
OF TRUTH.
And I wondered that I now loved Thee, and no phantasm for Thee. And yet did I
not press on to enjoy my God; but was borne up to Thee by Thy beauty, and soon
borne down from Thee by mine own weight, sinking with sorrow into these
inferior things. This weight was carnal custom. Yet dwelt there with me a remembrance
of Thee; nor did I any way doubt that there was One to whom I might cleave, but
that I was not yet such as to cleave to Thee: for that the body which is
corrupted presseth down the soul, and the earthly tabernacle weigheth down the mind
that museth upon many things. And most certain I was, that Thy invisible works
from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things
that are made, even Thy eternal power and Godhead. For examining whence it was
that I admired the beauty of bodies celestial or terrestrial; and what aided
me in judging soundly on things mutable, and pronouncing, "This ought to be
thus, this not"; examining, I say, whence it was that I so judged, seeing I did so
judge, I had found the unchangeable and true Eternity of Truth above my
changeable mind. And thus by degrees I passed from bodies to the soul, which through
the bodily senses perceives; and thence to its inward faculty, to which the
bodily senses represent things external, whitherto reach the faculties of beasts;
and thence again to the reasoning faculty, to which what is received from the
senses of the body is referred to be judged. Which finding itself also to be in
me a thing variable, raised itself up to its own understanding, and drew away my
thoughts from the power of habit, withdrawing itself from those troops of
contradictory phantasms; that so it might find what that light was whereby it was
bedewed, when, without all doubting, it cried out, "That the unchangeable was to
be preferred to the changeable"; whence also it knew That Unchangeable, which,
unless it had in some way known, it had had no sure ground to prefer it to the
changeable. And thus with the flash of one trembling glance it arrived at THAT
WHICH IS. And then I saw Thy invisible things understood by the things which
are made. But I could not fix my gaze thereon; and my infirmity being struck
back, I was thrown again on my wonted habits, carrying along with me only a loving
memory thereof, and a longing for what I had, as it were, perceived the odour
of, but was not yet able to feed on.
CHAPTER XVIII-JESUS CHRIST, THE MEDIATOR, IS THE ONLY WAY OF SAFETY.
Then I sought a way of obtaining strength sufficient to enjoy Thee; and found
it not, until I embraced that Mediator betwixt God and men, the Man Christ
Jesus, who is over all, God blessed for evermore, calling unto me, and saying, I am
the way, the truth, and the life, and mingling that food which I was unable to
receive, with our flesh. For, the Word was made flesh, that Thy wisdom,
whereby Thou createdst all things, might provide milk for our infant state. For I did
not hold to my Lord Jesus Christ, I, humbled, to the Humble; nor knew I yet
whereto His infirmity would guide us. For Thy Word, the Eternal Truth, far above
the higher parts of Thy Creation, raises up the subdued unto Itself: but in
this lower world built for Itself a lowly habitation of our clay, whereby to abase
from themselves such as would be subdued, and bring them over to Himself;
allaying their swelling, and tomenting their love; to the end they might go on no
further in self-confidence, but rather consent to become weak, seeing before
their feet the Divinity weak by taking our coats of skin; and wearied, might cast
themselves down upon It, and It rising, might lift them up.
CHAPTER XIX-HE DOES NOT YET FULLY UNDERSTAND THE SAYING OF JOHN, THAT "THE
WORD WAS MADE FLESH."
But I thought otherwise; conceiving only of my Lord Christ as of a man of
excellent wisdom, whom no one could be equalled unto; especially, for that being
wonderfully born of a Virgin, He seemed, in conformity therewith, through the
Divine care for us, to have attained that great eminence of authority, for an
ensample of despising things temporal for the obtaining of immortality. But what
mystery there lay in "The Word was made flesh," I could not even imagine. Only I
had learnt out of what is delivered to us in writing of Him that He did eat,
and drink, sleep, walk, rejoiced in spirit, was sorrowful, discoursed; that flesh
did not cleave by itself unto Thy Word, but with the human soul and mind. All
know this who know the unchangeableness of Thy Word, which I now knew, as far
as I could, nor did I at all doubt thereof. For, now to move the limbs of the
body by will, now not, now to be moved by some affection, now not, now to deliver
wise sayings through human signs, now to keep silence, belong to soul and mind
subject to variation. And should these things be falsely written of Him, all
the rest also would risk the charge, nor would there remain in those books any
saving faith for mankind. Since then they were written truly, I acknowledged a
perfect man to be in Christ; not the body of a man only, nor, with the body, a
sensitive soul without a rational, but very man; whom, not only as being a form
of Truth, but for a certain great excellence of human nature and a more perfect
participation of wisdom, I judged to be preferred before others. But Alypius
imagined the Catholics to believe God to be so clothed with flesh, that besides
God and flesh, there was no soul at all in Christ, and did not think that a
human mind was ascribed to Him. And because he was well persuaded that the actions
recorded of Him could only be performed by a vital and a rational creature, he
moved the more slowly towards the Christian Faith. But understanding
afterwards that this was the error of the Apollinarian heretics, he joyed in and was
conformed to the Catholic Faith. But somewhat later, I confess, did I learn how in
that saying, The Word was made flesh, the Catholic truth is distinguished from
the falsehood of Photinus. For the rejection of heretics makes the tenets of
Thy Church and sound doctrine to stand out more clearly. For there must also be
heresies, that the approved may be made manifest among the weak.
CHAPTER XX-HE REJOICES THAT HE PROCEEDED FROM PLATO TO THE HOLY SCRIPTURES,
AND NOT THE REVERSE.
But having then read those books of the Platonists, and thence been taught to
search for incorporeal truth, I saw Thy invisible things, understood by those
things which are made; and though cast back, I perceived what that was which
through the darkness of my mind I was hindered from contemplating, being assured
"That Thou wert, and wert infinite, and yet not diffused in space, finite or
infinite; and that Thou truly art Who art the same ever, in no part nor motion
varying; and that all other things are from Thee, on this most sure ground alone,
that they are." Of these things I was assured, yet too unsure to enjoy Thee. I
prated as one well skilled; but had I not sought Thy way in Christ our Saviour,
I had proved to be, not skilled, but killed. For now I had begun to wish to
seem wise, being filled with mine own punishment, yet I did not mourn, but rather
scorn, puffed up with knowledge. For where was that charity building upon the
foundation of humility, which is Christ Jesus? or when should these books teach
me it? Upon these, I believe, Thou therefore willedst that I should fall,
before I studied Thy Scriptures, that it might be imprinted on my memory how I was
affected by them; and that afterwards when my spirits were tamed through Thy
books, and my wounds touched by Thy healing fingers, I might discern and
distinguish between presumption and confession; between those who saw whither they were
to go, yet saw not the way, and the way that leadeth not to behold only but to
dwell in the beatific country. For had I first been formed in Thy Holy
Scriptures, and hadst Thou in the familiar use of them grown sweet unto me, and had I
then fallen upon those other volumes, they might perhaps have withdrawn me from
the solid ground of piety, or, had I continued in that healthful frame which I
had thence imbibed, I might have thought that it might have been obtained by
the study of those books alone.
CHAPTER XXI-WHAT HE FOUND IN THE SACRED BOOKS WHICH ARE NOT TO BE FOUND IN
PLATO.
Most eagerly then did I seize that venerable writing of Thy Spirit; and
chiefly the Apostle Paul. Whereupon those difficulties vanished away, wherein he once
seemed to me to contradict himself, and the text of his discourse not to agree
with the testimonies of the Law and the Prophets. And the face of that pure
word appeared to me one and the same; and I learned to rejoice with trembling. So
I began; and whatsoever truth I had read in those other books, I found here
amid the praise of Thy Grace; that whoso sees, may not so glory as if he had not
received, not only what he sees, but also that he sees (for what hath he, which
he hath not received?), and that he may be not only admonished to behold Thee,
who art ever the same, but also healed, to hold Thee; and that he who cannot
see afar off, may yet walk on the way, whereby he may arrive, and behold, and
hold Thee. For, though a man be delighted with the law of God after the inner
man, what shall he do with that other law in his members which warreth against the
law of his mind, and bringeth him into captivity to the law of sin which is in
his members? For, Thou art righteous, O Lord, but we have sinned and committed
iniquity, and have done wickedly, and Thy hand is grown heavy upon us, and we
are justly delivered over unto that ancient sinner, the king of death; because
he persuaded our will to be like his will whereby he abode not in Thy truth.
What shall wretched man do? who shall deliver him from the body of his death, but
only Thy Grace, through Jesus Christ our Lord, whom Thou hast begotten
co-eternal, and formedst in the beginning of Thy ways, in whom the prince of this
world found nothing worthy of death, yet killed he Him; and the handwriting, which
was contrary to us, was blotted out? This those writings contain not. Those
pages present not the image of this piety, the tears of confession, Thy sacrifice,
a troubled spirit, a broken and a contrite heart, the salvation of the people,
the Bridal City, the earnest of the Holy Ghost, the Cup of our Redemption. No
man sings there, Shall not my soul be submitted unto God? for of Him cometh my
salvation. For He is my God and my salvation, my guardian, I shall no more be
moved. No one there hears Him call, Come unto Me, all ye that labour. They scorn
to learn of Him, because He is meek and lowly in heart; for these things hast
Thou hid from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes. For it
is one thing, from the mountain's shaggy top to see the land of peace, and to
find no way thither; and in vain to essay through ways unpassable, opposed and
beset by fugitives and deserters, under their captain the lion and the dragon:
and another to keep on the way that leads thither, guarded by the host of the
heavenly General; where they spoil not who have deserted the heavenly army; for
they avoid it, as very torment. These things did wonderfully sink into my bowels,
when I read that least of Thy Apostles, and had meditated upon Thy works, and
trembled exceedingly.