LETTERS OF ST. AUGUSTIN: LETTERS LXXVI TO LXXXVI (INCLUDING REPLY TO JEROME'S
LETTERS)
LETTER LXXVI. (A.D. 402.)
1. Hear, O Donatists, what the Catholic Church says to you: "0 ye sons of
men, how long will ye be slow of heart ? why will ye love vanity, and follow
after lies ? "= Why have you severed yourselves, by the heinous impiety of
schism, from the unity of the whole world ? You give heed to the falsehoods
concerning the surrendering of the divine books to persecutors, which men who are either
deceiving you, or are themselves deceived, utter in order that you may die in
a state of heretical separation: and you do not give heed to what these divine
books themselves proclaim, in order that you may live in the peace of the
Catholic Church. Wherefore do you lend an open ear to the words of men who tell you
things which they have never been able to prove, and are deaf to the voice of
God speaking thus: "The Lord hath said unto me, Thou art My Son; this day have I
begotten Thee. Ask of Me, and I shall give Thee the heathen for Thine
inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for Thy possession "? s "To Abraham
and his seed were the promises made. He saith not, ' And to seeds,' as of many,
but as of one, 'And to thy seed,' which is Christ." 4 And the promise to which
the apostle refers is this: "In thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be
blessed." s Therefore lift up the eyes of your souls, and see how in the whole
world all nations are blessed in Abraham's seed. Abraham, in his day, believed
what was not yet seen; but you who see it refuse to believe what has been
fulfilled The Lord's death was the ransom of the world; He paid the price for the
whole world; and you do not dwell in concord with the whole world, as would be
for your advantage, but stand apart and strive contentiously to destroy the whole
world, to your own loss. Hear now what is said in the Psalm concerning this
ransom: "They pierced my hands and my feet. I may tell all my bones; they look
and stare upon me. They part my garments among them, and cast lots upon my
vesture." 7 Wherefore will you be guilty of dividing the garments of the Lord, and
not hold in common with the whole world that coat of charity, woven from above
throughout, which even His executioners did not rend ? In the same Psalm we read
that the whole world holds this, for he says: "All the ends of the world shall
remember and turn unto the Lord, and all the kindreds of the nations shall
worship before Thee; for the kingdom is the Lord's, and He is the Governor among
the nations." 8 Open the ears of your soul, and hear: "The mighty God, even the
Lord, hath spoken, and called the earth, from the rising of the sun unto the
going down thereof; out of Zion, the perfection of beauty." 9 If you do not wish
to understand this, hear the gospel from the Lord's own lips, how He said: "All
things must be fulfilled which were written in the Law of Moses, and in the
Prophets, and in the Psalms, concerning Him; and that repentance and remission of
sins should be preached in His name 'among all nations, beginning at
Jerusalem." 10 The words in the Psalm, "the earth from the rising of the sun unto the
going down thereof," correspond to these in the Gospel, "among all nations;" and
as He said in the Psalm, "from Zion, the perfection of beauty," He has said in
the Gospel, "beginning at Jerusalem."
2. Your imagination that you are separating yourselves, before the time of
the harvest, from the tares which are mixed with the wheat, proves that you
are only tares. For if you were wheat, you would bear with the tares, and not
separate yourselves from that which is growing in Christ's field. Of the tares,
indeed, it has been said, "Because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall
wax cold;" but of the wheat it is said, "He that shall endure unto the end, the
same shall be saved."" What grounds have you for believing that the tares have
increased and filled the world, and that the wheat has decreased, and is found
now in Africa alone? You claim to be Christians, and you disclaim the
authority of Christ. He said, "Let both grow together till the harvest;" He said not,
"Let the wheat decrease, and let the tares multiply." He said, "The field is the
world;" He said not, "The field is Africa." He said, "The harvest is the end
of the world;" He said not, "The harvest is the time of Donatus." He said, "The
reapers are the angels;" He said not, "The reapers are the captains of the
Circumcelliones." 12 But you, by charging the good wheat with being tares, have
proved yourselves to be tares; and what is worse, you have prematurely separated
yourselves from the wheat. For some of your predecessors, in whose impious
schism you obstinately remain, delivered up to persecutors the sacred Mss. and the
vessels of the Church (as may be seen in municipal records '); others of them
passed over the fault which these men confessed, and remained in communion with
them; and both parties having come together to Carthage as an infatuated
faction, condemned others without a hearing, on the charge of that fault which they
had agreed, so far as they themselves were concerned, to forgive, and then set up
a bishop against the ordained bishop, and erected an altar against the altar
already recognised. Afterwards they sent to the Emperor Constantine a letter
begging that bishops of churches beyond the sea should be appointed to arbitrate
between the bishops of Africa. When the judges whom they sought were granted,
and at Rome had given their decision, they refused! to submit to it, and
complained to the Emperor or against the bishops as having judged unrighteously. From
the sentence of another bench of bishops sent to Arles to try the case, they
appealed to the Emperor himself. When he had heard them, and they had been proved
guilty of calumny, they still persisted in their wickedness. Awake to the
interest of your salvation! love peace, and return to unity! Whensoever you desire
it, we are ready to recite in detail the events to which we have referred.
3. He is the associate of wicked men who consents to the deeds of wicked
men; not he who suffers the tares to grow in the Lord's field unto the harvest,
or the chaff to remain until the final winnowing time. If you hate those who do
evil, shake yourselves free from the crime of schism. If you really feared to
associate with the wicked, you would not for so many years have permitted
Optatus2 to remain among you when he was living in the most flagrant sin. And as you
now give him the name of martyr, you must, if you are consistent, give him for
whom he died the name of Christ. Finally, wherein has the Christian world
offended you, from which you have insanely and wickedly cut yourselves off? and
what claim upon your esteem have those followers of Maximianus, whom you have
received back with honour after they had been condemned by you, and violently cast
forth by warrant of the civil authorities from their churches? Wherein has the
peace of Christ offended you, that you resist it by separating yourselves from
those whom you calumniate ? and wherein has the peace of Donatus earned your
favour, that to promote it you receive back those whom you condemned? Felicianus
of Musti is now one of you. We have read concerning him, that he was formerly
condemned by your council, and afterwards accused by you at the bar of the
proconsul, and in the town of Musti was attacked as is stated in the municipal
records.
4. If the surrendering of the sacred books to destruction is a crime
which, in the case of the king who burned the book of Jeremiah, God punished with
death as a prisoner of war,3 how much greater is the guilt of schism ! For those
authors of schism to whom you have compared the followers of Maximianus, the
earth opening, swallowed up alive.4 Why, then, do you object against us the
charge of surrendering the sacred books which you do not prove, and at the same time
both condemn and welcome back those among yourselves who are schismatics ? If
you are proved to be in the right by the fact that you have suffered
persecution from the Emperor, a still stronger claim than yours must be that of the
followers of Maximianus, whom you have yourselves persecuted by the help of judges
sent to you by Catholic emperors. If you alone have baptism, what weight do you
attach to the baptism administered by followers of Maximianus in the case of
those whom Felicianus baptized while he was under your sentence of condemnation,
who came along with him when he was afterwards restored by you ? Let your
bishops answer these questions to your laity at least, if they will not debate with
us; and do you, as you value your salvation, consider what kind of doctrine
that must be about which they refuse to enter into discussion with us. If the
wolves have prudence enough to keep out of the way of the shepherds, why have the
flock so lost their prudence, that they go into the dens of the wolves?
LETTER LXXVII. (A.D. 404.)
TO FELIX AND HILARINUS, MY LORDS MOST BELOVED, AND BRETHREN WORTHY OF ALL
HONOUR, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. I do not wonder to see the minds of believers disturbed by Satan, whom
resist, continuing in the hope which rests on the promises of God, who cannot
lie, who has not only condescended to promise in eternity rewards to us who
believe and hope in Him, and who persevere in love unto the end, but has also
foretold that in time offences by which our faith must be tried and proved shall not
be wanting; for He said, "Because iniquity shall abound, the love of many
shall wax cold;" but He added immediately, "and he that shall endure to the end,
the same shall be saved."' Why, therefore, should it seem strange that men bring
calumnies against the servants of God, and being unable to turn them aside from
an upright life, endeavour to blacken their reputation, seeing that they do
not cease uttering blasphemies daily against God, the Lord of these servants, if
they are displeased by anything in which the execution of His righteous and
secret counsel is contrary to their desire? Wherefore I appeal to your wisdom, my
lords most beloved, and brethren worthy of all honour, and exhort you to
exercise your minds in the way which best becomes Christians, setting over against
the empty calumnies and groundless suspicions of men the written word of God,
which has foretold that these things should come, and has warned us to meet them
with fortitude.
2. Let me therefore say in a few words to your Charity, that the presbyter
Boniface has not been discovered by me to be guilty of any crime, and that I
have never believed, and do not yet believe, any charge brought against him.
How, then, could I order his name to be deleted from the roll of presbyters, when
filled with alarm by that word of our Lord in the gospel: "With what judgment
ye judge ye shall be judged "? 2 For, seeing that the dispute which has arisen
between him and Spes has by their consent been submitted to divine arbitration
in a way which, if you desire it, can be made known to you? who am I, that I
should presume to anticipate the divine award by deleting or passing over his
name? As a bishop, I ought not rashly to suspect him; and as being only a man, I
cannot decide infallibly concerning things which are hidden from me. Even in
secular matters, when an appeal has been made to a higher authority, all procedure
is sisted while the case awaits the decision from which there is no appeal;
because if anything were changed while the matter is depending on his arbitration,
this would be an insult to the higher tribunal. And how great the distance
between even the highest human authority and the divine!
May the mercy of the Lord our God never forsake you, my lords most
beloved, and brethren worthy of all honour.
LETTER LXXVIII. (A.D. 404)
TO MY MOST BELOVED BRETHREN, THE CLERGY, ELDERS, AND PEOPLE OF THE CHURCH OF
HIPPO, WHOM I SERVE IN THE LOVE OF CHRIST, I, AUGUSTIN, SEND GREETING IN THE
LORD.
1. Would that you, giving. earnest heed to the word of God, did not
require counsel of mine to support you under whatsoever offences may arise! Would
that your comfort rather came from Him by whom we also are comforted; who has
foretold not only the good things which He designs to give to those who are holy
and faithful, but also the evil things in which this world is to abound; and has
caused these to be written, in order that we may expect the blessings which are
to follow the end of this world with a certainty not less complete than that
which attends our present experience of the evils which had been predicted as
coming before the end of the world! Wherefore also the apostle says, "Whatsoever
things were written aforetime, were written for our learning, that we through
patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hone "4 And wherefore did our
Lord Himself judge it necessary not only to say, "Then shall the righteous
shine forth as the sun in the kingdom of their Father" s which shall come to pass
after the end of the world, but also to exclaim, "Woe unto the world because of
offences!" 6 if not to prevent us from flattering ourselves with the idea that
we can reach the mansions of eternal felicity, unless we have overcome the
temptation to yield when exercised by the afflictions of time? Why was it necessary
for Him to say, "Because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax
cold," if not in order that those of whom He spoke in the next sentence," but he
that shall endure to the end shall be saved,"' might, when they saw love waxing
cold through abounding iniquity, be saved from being put to confusion, or
filled with fear, or crushed with grief about such things, as if they were strange
and unlooked for, and might rather, through witnessing the events which had been
predicted as appointed to occur before the end, be assisted in patiently
enduring unto the end, so as to obtain after the end the reward of reigning in peace
in that life which has no end?
2. Wherefore, beloved, in regard to that scandal by which some are
troubled concerning the presbyter Boniface, I do not say to you that you are not to be
grieved for it; for in men who do not grieve for such things the love of
Christ is not, whereas those who take pleasure in such things are filled with the
malice of the devil. Not; however, that anything has come to our knowledge which
deserves censure in the presbyter aforesaid, but that two in our house,are so
situated that one of them must be regarded as beyond all doubt wicked; and
though the conscience of the other be not defiled, his good name is forfeited in the
eyes of some, and suspected by others. Grieve for these things, for they are
to be lamented; but do not so grieve as to let your love grow cold, and
yourselves be indifferent to holy living. Let it rather burn the more vehemently in the
exercise of prayer to God, that if your presbyter is guiltless (which I am the
more inclined to believe, because, when he had discovered the immoral and vile
proposal of the other, he would neither consent to it nor conceal it), a
divine decision may speedily restore him to the exercise of his official duties with
his innocence vindicated; and that if, on the other hand, knowing himself to
be guilty, which I dare not suspect, he has deliberately tried to destroy the
good name of another when he could not corrupt his morals, as he charges his
accuser with having done, God may not permit him to hide his wickedness, so that
the thing which men cannot discover may be revealed by the judgment of God, to
the conviction of the one or of the other.
3. For when this case had long disquieted me, and I could find no way of
convicting either of the two as guilty, although I rather inclined to believe
the presbyter innocent, I had at first resolved to leave both in the hand of God,
without deciding the case, until something should be done by the one of whom I
had suspicion, giving just and unquestionable reasons for his expulsion: from
our house. But when he was labouring most earnestly to obtain promotion to the
rank of the clergy, either on the spot from myself, or elsewhere through letter
of recommendation from me, and I could on no account be induced either to lay
hands in the act of ordination upon one of whom I thought so ill, or to consent
to introduce him through commendation of mine to any brother for the same
purpose, he began to act more violently demanding that if he was not to be promoted
to clerical orders, Boniface should not be permitted to retain his status as a
presbyter. This demand having been made, when I perceived that Boniface was
unwilling that, through doubts as to his holiness of life, offence should be
given to any who were weak and inclined to suspect him, and that he was ready to
suffer the loss of his honour among men rather than vainly persist even to the
disquieting of the Church in a contention the very nature of which made it
impossible for him to prove his innocence (of which he was conscious) to the
satisfaction of those who did not know him, or were in doubt or prone to suspicion in
regard to him, I fixed upon the following as a means of discovering the truth.
Both pledged themselves in a solemn compact to go to a holy place, where the
more awe-inspiring works of God might much more readily make manifest the evil of
which either of them was conscious, and compel the guilty to confess, either by
judgment or through fear of judgment. God is everywhere, it is true, and He
that made all things is not contained or confined to dwell in any place; and He
is to be worshipped in spirit and in truth by His true worshippers, in order
that, as He heareth in secret, He may also in secret justify and reward. But in
regard to the answers to prayer which are visible to men, who can search out His
reasons for appointing some places rather than others to be the scene of
miraculous interpositions? To many the holiness of the place in which the body of the
blessed Felix is buried is well known, and to this place I desired them to
repair; because from it we may receive more easily and more reliably a written
account of whatever may be discovered in either of them by divine interposition.
For I myself knew how, at Milan, at the tomb of the saints, where demons are
brought in a most marvellous and awful manner to confess their deeds, a thief who
had come thither intending to deceive by perjuring himself, was compelled to
own his theft, and to restore what he had taken away; and is not Africa also full
of the bodies of holy martyrs? Yet we do not know of such things being done in
any place here. Even as the gift of healing and the gift of discerning of
spirits are not given to all saints? as the apostle declares; so it is not at all
the tombs of the saints that it has pleased Him who divideth to each severally
as He will, to cause such miracles to be wrought.
4. Wherefore, although I had purposed not to let this most heavy burden on
my heart come to your knowledge, lest I should disquiet you by a painful but
useless vexation, it has pleased God to make it known to you, perhaps for this
reason, that you may along with me devote yourselves to prayer, beseeching Him
to condescend to reveal that which He knoweth, but which we cannot know in this
matter. For I did not presume to suppress or erase from the roll of his
colleagues the name of this presbyter, lest I should seem to insult the Divine
Majesty, upon whose arbitration the case now depends, if I were to forestall His
decision by any premature decision of mine: for even in secular affairs, when a
perplexing case is referred to a higher authority, the inferior judges do not
presume to make any change 'while the reference is pending. Moreover, it was i
decreed in a Council of bishops 3 that no clergyman who has not yet been proved
guilty be suspended from communion, unless he fail to present ' himself for the
examination of the charges against him. Boniface, however, humbly agreed to forego
his claim to a letter of commendation, by the use of which on his journey he
might have secured the recognition of his rank, preferring that both should
stand on a footing of equality in a place where both were alike unknown. And now if
you, prefer that his name should not be read that we "may cut off occasion,"
as the apostle says, from those that desire occasion' to justify their
unwillingness to come to the Church, this omission of his name shall be not our deed,
but theirs on whose account it may be done. For what does it harm any man, that
men through ignorance refuse to have his name read from that tablet, so long as
a guilty conscience does not blot his name out of the Book of Life?
5. Wherefore, my brethren who fear God,: remember what the Apostle Peter
says: Your adversary, the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom
he may devour."2 When he cannot devour a man through seducing him into
iniquity, he attempts to injure his good name, that if it be possible, he may give way
under the reproaches of men and the calumnies of slandering tongues, and may
thus fall into his jaws. If, however, he be unable even to sully the good name of
one who is innocent, he tries to persuade him to cherish unkindly suspicions
of his brother, and judge him harshly, and so become entangled, and be an easy
prey. And who is able to know or to tell all his snares and wiles ?
Nevertheless, in reference to those three, which belong more especially to the case before
us; in the first place, lest you should be turned aside to wickedness through
following bad examples, God gives you by the apostle these warnings: "Be ye not
unequally yoked together with unbelievers; for what fellowship hath
righteousness with unrighteousness, and what communion, hath light with darkness ?" 3 and
in another place :, "Be not deceived; evil communications corrupt good manners:
awake to righteousness? and sin not." s Secondly, that ye may not give way
under the tongues of slanderers, He saith by the prophet, "Hearken unto Me, ye
that know righteousness, the people in whose heart is My law: fear ye not the
reproach of men, neither be ye afraid of their revilings.6 For the moth shall eat
them up like a garment, and the worm shall eat them like wool; but My
righteousness shall be for ever." 7 And thirdly, lest you should be undone through
groundless and malevolent suspicions concerning any servants of God, remember that
word of the apostle, "Judge nothing before the time, until the Lord come, who
beth will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the
counsels 'of the hearts, and then shall every man have praise of God;"8 and
this also, "The things which are revealed belong to you, but the secret things
belong unto the Lord your God."9
6. It is indeed manifest that such things do not take place in the Church
without great sorrow on the part of saints and believers; but let Him be our
Comforter who hath foretold all these events, and has warned us not to become
cold in love through abounding iniquity, to endure to the end that we may be
saved. For, as far as I am concerned, if there be in me a spark of the love of
Christ, who among you is weak, and I am not weak ? who among you is offended, and I
burn not? ,o Do not therefore add to my distresses, by your yielding either by
groundless !suspicions or by occasion of other men's sins. Do not, I beseech
you, lest I say of you, "They have added to the pain of my wounds."" For it is
much more easy to bear the reproach of those who take open pleasure in these our
pains, of whom it was foretold in regard to Christ Himself, "They that sit in
the gate speak against Me, and I was the song of the drunkards," ,2 for whom
also we have been taught to pray, and to seek their welfare. For why do they sit
at the gate, and what do they watch for, if it be not for this, that so soon as
any bishop or clergyman or monk or nun has fallen, they may have ground for
believing, and boasting, and maintaining that all are the same as the one that has
fallen, but that all cannot be convicted and unmasked? Yet these very men do
not straightway cast forth their wives, or bring accusation against their
mothers, ff some married woman has been discovered to be an adulteress But the moment
that any crime is either falsely alleged or actually proved against any one
who makes a profession of piety, these men are incessant and unwearied in their
efforts to make this charge be believed against all religious men. Those men,
therefore, who eagerly find what is sweet to their malicious tongues in the
things which grieve us, we may compare to those dogs (if, indeed, they are to be
understood as increasing his misery) which licked the sores of the beggar who lay
before the rich man's gate, and endured with patience every hardship and
indignity until he should come to rest in Abraham's bosom.13
7. Do not add to my sorrows, O ye who have some hope toward God. Let not
the wounds which these lick be multiplied by you, for whom we are in jeopardy
every hour, having fightings without and fears within, and perils in the city,
perils in the wilderness, perils by the heathen, and perils by false brethren.1 I
know that you are grieved, but is your grief more poignant than mine ? I know
that you are disquieted, and I fear lest by the tongues of slanderers some weak
one for whom Christ died should perish. Let not my grief be increased by you,
for it is not through my fault that this grief was made yours. For I used the
utmost precautions to secure, if it were possible, both that the steps necessary
for the prevention of this evil should not be neglected, and that it should
not be brought to your knowledge, since this could only cause unavailing vexation
to the strong, and dangerous disquietude to the weak, among you. But may He
who hath permitted you to be tempted by knowing this, give you strength to bear
the trial, and "teach you out of His law, and give you rest from the days of
adversity, until the pit be digged for the wicked."'
8. I hear that some of you are more cast down with sorrow by this event,
than by the fall of the two deacons who had joined us from the Donatist party,
as if they had brought reproach upon the discipline of Proculeianus; 3 whereas
this checks your boasting about me, that under my discipline no such
inconsistency among the clergy had taken place. Let me frankly say to you, whoever you are
that have done this, you have not done well. Behold, God hath taught you, "He
that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord;" 4 and ye ought to bring no reproach
against heretics but this, that they are not Catholics. Be not like these
heretics, who, because they have nothing to plead in ,defence of their schism,
attempt nothing beyond heaping up charges against the men from whom they are
separated, and most falsely boast that in these we have an unenviable pre-eminence, in
order that since they can neither impugn nor darken the truth of the Divine
Scripture, from which the Church of Christ spread abroad everywhere receives its
testimony, they may bring into disfavour the men by whom it is preached,
against whom they are capable of affirming anything--whatever comes into their mind.
"But ye have not so learned Christ, if so be that ye have heard Him, and have
been taught by Him." s For He Himself has guarded His believing people from
undue disquietude concerning wickedness, even in stewards of the divine mysteries,
as doing evil which was their own, but speaking good which was His. "All
therefore whatsoever they bid you observe, that observe and do; but do not ye after
their works: for they say, and do not."6 Pray by all means for me, lest
perchance "when I have preached to others, I myself should be a castaway;" 7 but when
you glory, glory not in me, but in the Lord. For however watchful the discipline
of my house may be, I am but a man, and I live among men; and I do not presume
to pretend that my house is better than the ark of Noah, in which among eight
persons one was found a castaway; s or better than the house of Abraham,
regarding which it was said, "Cast out the bondwoman and her son; "9 or better than
the house of Isaac, regarding whose twin sons it ' was said, "I loved Jacob, and
I hated Esau;"10 or better than the house of Jacob himself, in which Reuben
defiled his father's bed;" or better than the house of David, in which one son
wrought folly with his sister.12 and another rebelled against a father of such
holy clemency; or better than the band of companions of Paul the apostle, who
nevertheless would not have said, as above' quoted, "Without are fightings, and
within are fears," if he had dwelt with none but good men; nor would have said,
in speaking of the holiness and fidelity of Timothy, "I have no man like-minded
who will naturally care for your state; for all seek their own, not the things
which are Jesus Christ's;" ,s or better than the band of the disciples of the
Lord Christ Himself, in which eleven good men bore with Judas, who was a thief
and a traitor; or, finally, better than heaven itself, from which the angels
fell.
9. I frankly avow to your Charity, before the Lord our God, whom I have
taken, since the time when I began to serve Him, as a witness upon my soul, that
as I have hardly found any men better than those who have done well in
monasteries, so I have not found any men worse than monks who have fallen; whence I
suppose that to them applies the word written in the Apocalypse, "He that is
righteous, let him be still more righteous; and he that is filthy, let : him be
still more filthy." ,4 Wherefore, if we be grieved by some foul blemishes, we are
comforted by a much larger proportion of examples of an opposite kind. Let not,
therefore, the dregs which offend your eyes cause you to hate the oil-presses
whence the Lord's storehouses are supplied to their profit with a more brightly
illuminating oil.
May the mercy of our Lord keep you in His peace, safe from all the snares
of the enemy, my dearly beloved brethren.
LETTER LXXIX. (A.D. 404.)
A short and stern challenge to some Manichaean teacher who had succeeded
Fortunatus (supposed to be Felix).
Your attempts at evasion are to no purpose: your real character is patent
even a long way off. My brethren have reported to me their conversation with
you. You say that you do not fear death; it is well: but you ought to fear that
death which you are bringing upon yourself by your blasphemous assertions
concerning God. As to your understanding that the visible death which all men know is
a separation between soul and body, this is a truth which demands no great
grasp of intellect. But as to the statement which you annex to this, that death is
a separation between good and evil, do you not see that, if the soul be good
and the body be evil, he who joined them together, is not good ? But you affirm
that the good God has joined them together; from which it follows that He is
either evil, or swayed by fear of one who is evil. Yet you boast of your having
no fear of man, when at the same time you conceive God to be such! that,
through fear of Darkness, He would join together good and evil. Be not uplifted, as
your writing shows you to be, by supposing that I magnify you, by my resolving
to check the out-flowing of your poison, lest its insidious and pestilential
power should do harm: for the apostle does not magnify those whom he calls "dogs,"
saying to the Philippians, "Beware of dogs; "2 nor does he magnify those of
whom he says that their word doth eat as a canker.3 Therefore, in the name of
Christ, I demand of you to answer, if you are able, the question which baffled
),our predecessor Fortunatus.4 For he went from the scene of our discussion
declaring that he would not return, unless, after conferring with his party, he found
something by which he could answer the arguments used by our brethren. And if
you are not prepared to do this, begone from this place, and do not pervert the
right ways of the Lord, ensnaring and infecting with your poison the minds of
the weak, lest, by the Lord's right hand helping me, you be put to confusion in
a way which you did not expect.
LETTER LXXX. (A.D. 404.)
A letter to Paulinus, asking him to explain more fully how we may know
what is the will of God and rule of our duty in the ordinary course of providence.
This letter may be omitted as merely propounding a question, and containing
nothing specially noticeable.
LETTER LXXXI. (A.D. 405.)
TO AUGUSTIN, MY LORD TRULY HOLY, AND MOST BLESSED FATHER, JEROME SENDS
GREETING IN THE LORD.
Having anxiously inquired of our holy brother Firmus regarding your state,
I was glad to hear that you are well. I expected him to bring, or, I should
rather say, I insisted upon his giving me, a letter from you; upon which he told
me that he had set out from Africa without communicating to you his intention.
I therefore send to you my respectful salutations through this brother, who
clings to you with a singular warmth of affection; and at the same time, in regard
to my last letter, I beg you to forgive the modesty which made it impossible
for me to refuse you, when you had so long required me to write you in reply.
That letter, moreover, was not an answer from me to you, but a confronting of my
arguments with yours. And if it was a fault in me to send a reply (I beseech
you hear me patiently),.the fault of him who insisted upon it was still greater.
But let us be done with such quarrelling; let there be sincere brotherliness
between us.; and henceforth let us exchange 'letters, not of controversy, but of
mutual charity. The holy brethren who with me serve the Lord send you cordial
salutations. Salute from us the holy brethren who with you bear Christ's easy
yoke; especially I beseech you to convey my respectful salutation to the holy
father Alypius, worthy of all esteem. May Christ, our almighty God, preserve you
safe, and not unmindful of me, my lord truly holy, and most blessed father. If
you have read my commentary on Jonah, I think you will not recur to the
ridiculous gourd-debate. If, moreover, the friend who first assaulted me with his sword
has been driven back by my pen, I rely upon your good feeling and equity to
lay blame on the one who brought, and not on the one who repelled, the
accusation. Let us, if you please, exercise ourselves s in the field of Scripture without
wounding each other.
LETTER LXXXII. (A.D. 405.)
A Reply to Letters LXXII., LXXV., and LXXXI.
TO JEROME, MY LORD BELOVED AND HONOURED IN THE BOWELS OF CHRIST, MY HOLY
BROTHER AND FELLOW-PRESBYTER, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
CHAP. I. -- 1. Long ago I sent to your Charity a long letter in reply to the one which
you remember sending to me by your holy son Asterius, who is now not only my
brother, but also my colleague. Whether that reply reached you or not I do not
know, unless I am to infer this from the words in your letter brought to me by
our most sincere friend Firmus, that if the one who first assaulted you with his
sword has been driven back by your pen, you rely upon my good feeling and
equity to lay blame on the one who brought, not on the one who repelled, the
accusation. From this one indication, though very slight, I infer that you have read
my letter. In that letter I expressed indeed my sorrow that so great discord
had arisen between you and Rufinus, over the strength of whose former friendship
brotherly love was wont to rejoice in all parts to which the fame of it had
come; but I did not in this intend to rebuke you, my brother, whom I dare not say
that I have found blameable in that matter. I only lamented the sad lot of men
in this world, in whose friendships, depending as they do on the · continuance
of mutual regard, there is no stability, however great that regard may
sometimes be. I would rather, however, have been informed by l your letter whether you
have granted me the pardon which I begged, of which I now desire' you to give
me more explicit assurance; although the more genial and cheerful tone of your
letter seems to signify that I have obtained what I asked in mine, if indeed it
was despatched after mine had been read by you, which is, as I have said, not
clearly indicated.
2. You ask, or rather you give a command with the confiding boldness of
charity, that we should amuse ourselves' in the field of Scripture without
wounding each other. For my part, I am by all means disposed to exercise myself in
earnest much rather than in mere amusement on such themes. If, however, you have
chosen this word because of its suggesting easy exercise, let me frankly say
that I desire something more from one who has, as you have, great talents under
the control of a benignant disposition, together with wisdom enlightened by
erudition, and whose application to study, hindered by no other distractions, is
year after year impelled by enthusiasm and guided by genius: the Holy Spirit not
only giving you all these advantages, but expressly charging you to come with
help to those who are engaged in great and difficult investigations; not as if,
in studying Scripture, they were amusing themselves on a level plain, but as
men punting and toiling up a steep ascent. If, however, perchance, you selected
the expression "ludamus" [let us amuse ourselves] because of the genial
kindliness which befits discussion between loving friends, whether the matter debated
be obvious and easy, or intricate and difficult, I beseech you to teach me how I
may succeed in securing this; so that when I am dissatisfied with anything
which, not through want of careful attention, but perhaps through my slowness of
apprehension, has not been demonstrated to me, if I should, in attempting to
make good an opposite opinion, express myself with a measure of unguarded
frankness, I may not fall under the suspicion of childish conceit and forwardness, as
if I sought to bring my own name into renown by assailing illustrious men;2 and
that if, when something harsh has been demanded by the exigencies of argument,
I attempt to make it less hard to bear by stating it in mild and courteous
phrases, I may not be pronounced guilty of wielding a "honeyed sword." The only way
which I can see for avoiding both these faults, or the suspicion of either of
them, is to consent that when I am thus arguing with a friend more learned than
myself, I must approve of everything which he says, and may not, even for the
sake of more accurate information, hesitate before accepting his decisions.
3. On such terms we might amuse ourselves without fear of offending each
other in the field of Scripture, but I might well wonder if the amusement was
not at my expense. For I confess to your Charity that I have learned to yield
this respect and honour only to the canonical books of Scripture: of these alone
do I most !firmly believe that the authors were completely free from error. And
if in these writings I am perplexed by anything which appears to me opposed to
truth, I do not hesitate to suppose that either the Ms. is faulty, or the
translator has not caught the meaning of what was said, or I myself have failed to
understand it. As to all other writings, in reading them, however great the
superiority of the authors to myself in sanctity and learning, I do not accept
their teaching as true on the mere ground of the opinion being held by them; but
only because they have succeeded in convincing my judgment of in truth either by
means of these canonical writings themselves, or by arguments addressed to my
reason. I believe, my brother, that this is your own opinion as well as mine. I
do not need to say that I do not suppose you to wish your books to be read like
those of prophets or of apostles, concerning which it would be wrong to doubt
that they are free from error. Far be such arrogance from that humble piety and
just estimate of yourself which I know you to have, and without which
assuredly you would not have said, "Would that I could receive your embrace, and that
by converse we might aid each other in learning !"3
CHAP. II.-- 4. Now if, knowing as I do your life and conversation, I do not believe in
regard to you that you have spoken anything with an intention of dissimulation
and deceit, how much more reasonable is it for me to believe, in regard to the
Apostle Paul, that he did not think one thing and affirm another when he wrote
of Peter and Barnabas: "When I saw that they walked not uprightly, according to
the truth of the gospel, I said unto Peter before them all, ' If thou, being a
Jew, live. st after the manner of the Gentiles, and not as to the Jews, why
compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews ? .... For whom can I confide
in, as assuredly not deceiving me by spoken or written statements, if the
apostle deceived his own "children," for whom he "travailed in birth again until
Christ (who is the Truth) were formed in them" ?' After having previously said to
them, "The things which J. write unto you, behold, before God, I lie not," a
could he in writing to these same persons state what was not true, and deceive
them by a fraud which was in some way sanctioned by expediency, when he said
that he had seen Peter and Barnabas not walking uprightly, according to the truth
of the gospel, and that he had withstood Peter to the face because of this,
that he was compelling the Gentiles to live after the manner of the Jews?
5. But you will say it is better to believe that. the Apostle Paul wrote
what was not true, than to believe that the Apostle Peter did what was not
right. On this principle, we must say (which far be it from us to say), that it is
better to believe that the gospel history is false, than to believe that Christ
was denied by Peter; and better to charge the book of Kings [second book of
Samuel] with false statements, than believe that so great a prophet, and one so
signally chosen by the Lord God as David was, committed adultery in lusting after
and taking away the wife of another. and committed such detestable homicide in
procuring the death of her husband.s Better far that I should read with
certainty and persuasion of its truth the Holy Scripture, placed on the highest (even
the heavenly) pinnacle of authority, and should, without questioning the
trustworthiness of its statements, learn from it that men have been either.corn-'
mended, or corrected, or condemned, than that, through fear of believing that by
men, who, though of most praiseworthy excellence, were no more than men,
actions deserving rebuke might sometimes be done, I should admit suspicions affecting
the trustworthiness of the whole "oracles of God."
6. The Manichaeans maintain that the greater part of the Divine Scripture,
by which their wicked error is in the most explicit terms confuted, is not
worthy of credit, because they cannot pervert its language so as to support their
opinions; yet they lay the blame of the alleged mistake not upon the apostles
who originally wrote the words, but upon some unknown corrupters of the
manuscripts. Forasmuch, however, as they have never succeeded in proving this by more
numerous and by earlier manuscripts, or by appealing to the original language
from which the Latin translations have been drawn, they retire from the arena of
debate, vanquished and confounded by truth which is well known to all. Does not
your holy prudence discern how great scope is given to their malice against
the truth, if we say not (as they do) that the apostolic writings have been
tampered with by others, but that the apostles themselves wrote what they knew to be
untrue ?
7. You say that it is incredible that Paul should have rebuked in Peter
that which Paul himself had done. I am not at present inquiring about what Paul
did, but about what he wrote. This is most pertinent to the matter which I have
in hand,- namely, the confirmation of the universal and unquestionable truth of
the Divine Scriptures, which have been delivered to us for our edification in
the faith, not by unknown men, but by the apostles, and have on this account
been received as the authoritative canonical standard. For if Peter did on that
occasion what he ought to have done, Paul falsely affirmed that he saw him
walking not uprightly, according to the truth of the gospel. For whoever does what
he ought to do, walks uprightly. He therefore is guilty of falsehood. who,
knowing that another has done what he ought to have done, says that he has not done
uprightly, If, then, Paul wrote what was true, it is true that Peter was not
then walking up-rightly, according to the truth of the gospel. He was therefore
doing what he ought not to have done; and if Paul had himself already done
something of the same kind, I would prefer to believe that, having been himself
corrected, he could not omit the correction of his brother apostle, than to believe
that he put down any false statement in his epistle; and if in any epistle of
Paul this would be strange, how much more in the one in the preface of which he
says, "The things which I write unto you, behold, before God, I lie not"!
8. For my part, I believe that Peter so acted on this occasion as to
compel the Gentiles to live as Jews: because I read that Paul wrote this, and I do
not believe that he lied. And therefore Peter was not acting uprightly. For it
was contrary to the truth of the gospel, that those who believed in Christ
should think that without those ancient ceremonies they could not be saved. This was
the position maintained at Antioch by those of the circumcision who had
believed; against whom Paul protested constantly and vehemently. As to Paul's
circumcising of Timothy,' performing a vow at Cenchrea,2 and undertaking on the
suggestion of James at Jerusalem to share the performance of the appointed rites with
some who had made a vow? it is manifest that Paul's design in these things was
not to give to others the impression that he thought that by these observances
salvation is given under the Christian dispensation, ! but to prevent men from
believing that he condemned as no better than heathen idolatrous worship,
those rites which God had appointed] in the former dispensation as suitable to it,
and! as shadows of things to come. For this is what! James said to him, that
the report had gone i abroad concerning him that he taught men "to' forsake
Moses." 4 This would be by all means' wrong for those who believe in Christ, to
forsake him who prophesied of Christ, as if they detested and condemned the
teaching of him of whom Christ said, "Had ye believed Moses, ye would have believed
Me; for he wrote of Me."
9. For mark, I beseech you, the words of James: "Thou seest, brother, how
many thousands of Jews there are which believe; and they are all zealous of the
law: and they are informed of thee, that thou teachest all the Jews which are
among the Gentiles to forsake Moses, saying that they ought not to circumcise
their children, neither to walk after the customs. What is it therefore ? the
multitude must needs come together: for they will hear that thou art come. Do
therefore this that we say to thee: We have four men which have a vow on them;
them take, and purify thyself with them, and be at charges with them, that they
may shave their heads: and all may know that those things, whereof they were
informed concerning thee, are nothing; but that thou thyself also walkest orderly,
and keepest the law. As touching the Gentiles which have believed, we have
written and concluded that they observe no such thing, save only that they keep
themselves from things offered to idols, and from blood, and from things
strangled, and from fornication." s It is, in my opinion, very clear that the reason why
James gave this advice was, that the falsity of what they had heard concerning
him might be known to those Jews, who, though they had believed in Christ,
were jealous for the honour of the law, and would not have it thought that the
institutions which had been given by Moses to their fathers were condemned by the
doctrine of Christ as if they were profane, and had not been originally given
by divine authority. For the men who had brought this reproach against Paul were
not those who understood the right spirit in which observance of these
ceremonies should be practised under the Christian dispensation by believing Jews, --
namely, as a way of declaring the divine authority of these rites, and their
holy use in the prophetic dispensation, and not as a means of obtaining
salvation, which was to them already revealed in Christ and ministered by baptism. On
the contrary, the men who had spread abroad this report against the apostle were
those who would have these rites observed, as if without their observance there
could be no salvation to those who believed the gospel. For these false
teachers had found him to be a most zealous preacher of free grace, and a most
decided opponent of their views, teaching as he did that men are not justified by
these things, but by the grace of Jesus Christ, which these ceremonies of the law
were appointed to foreshadow. This party, therefore, endeavouring to raise
odium and persecution against him, charged him with being an enemy of the law and
of the divine institutions; and there was no more fitting way in which he could
turn aside the odium caused by this false accusation, than by himself
celebrating those rites which he was supposed to condemn as profane, and thus showing
that, on the one hand, the Jews were not to be debarred from them as if they were
unlawful, and on the other hand, that the Gentiles were not to be compelled to
observe them as if they were necessary.
10. For if he did in truth condemn these things in the way in which he was
reported to have done, and undertook to perform these rites in order that he
might, by dissembling, disguise his real sentiments, James would not have said
to him, "and all shall know," but, "all shall think that those things whereof
they were informed concerning thee are nothing;" 6 especially seeing that in
Jerusalem itself the apostles had already decreed that no one should compel the
Gentiles to adopt Jewish ceremonies, but had not decreed that no one should then
prevent the Jews from living according to their customs, although upon them also
Christian doctrine imposed no such obligation. Wherefore, if it was after the
apostle's decree that Peter's dissimulation at Antioch took place, whereby he
was compelling the Gentiles to live after the manner of the Jews, which he
himself was not compelled to do, although he was not forbidden to use Jewish rites
in order to declare the honour of the oracles of God which were committed to the
Jews;--if this,'I say, were the case, was it strange that Paul should exhort
him to declare freely that decree which he remembered to have framed in
conjunction with the other apostles at Jerusalem?
11. If, however, as I am more inclined to think, Peter did this before the
meeting of that council at Jerusalem, in that case also it is not strange that
Paul wished him not to conceal timidly, but to declare boldly, a rule of
practice in regard to which he already knew that they were both of the same mind;
whether he was aware of this from having conferred with him as to the gospel
which both preached, or from having heard that, at the calling of the centurion
Cornelius, Peter had been divinely instructed in regard to this matter, or from
having seen him eating with Gentile converts before those whom he feared to
offend had come to Antioch. For we do not deny that Peter was already of the same
opinion in regard to this question as Paul himself was. Paul, therefore, was not
teaching Peter what was the truth concerning that matter, but was reproving his
dissimulation as a thing by which the Gentiles were compelled to act as Jews
did; for no other reason than this, that the tendency of all such dissembling
was to convey or confirm the impression that they taught the truth who held that
believers could not be saved without circumcision and other ceremonies, which
were shadows of things to come.
12. For this reason also he circumcised Timothy, lest to the Jews, and
especially to his relations by the mother's side, it should seem that the Gentiles
who had believed in Christ abhorred circumcision as they abhorred the worship
of idols; whereas the former was appointed by God, and the latter invented by
Satan. Again, he did not circumcise Titus, lest he should give occasion to those
who said that believers could not be saved without circumcision, and who, in
order to deceive the Gentiles, openly declared that this was the view held by
Paul. This is plainly enough intimated by himself, when he says: "But neither
Titus, who was with me, being a Greek, was compelled to be circumcised: and that
because of false brethren unawares brought in, who came in privily to spy out
our liberty which we have in Christ Jesus, that they might bring us into bondage:
to whom we gave place by subjection, no, not for an hour, that the truth of
the gospel might continue with you."' Here we see plainly what he perceived them
to be eagerly watching for, and why it was that he did not do in the case of
Titus as he had done in the case of Timothy, and as he might otherwise have done
in the exercise of that liberty, by which he had shown that these observances
were neither to be demanded as necessary to salvation, nor denounced as unlawful.
13. You say, however, that in this discussion we must beware of affirming,
with the philosophers, that some of the actions of men lie in a region between
right and wrong, and are to be reckoned, accordingly, neither among good
actions nor among the opposite; and it is urged in your argument that the
observance of legal ceremonies cannot be a thing indifferent, but either good or bad; so
that if I affirm it to be good, I acknowledge that we also are bound to
observe these ceremonies; but if I affirm it to be bad, I am bound to believe that
the apostles observed them not sincerely, but in a way of dissimulation. I, for
my part, would not be so much afraid of defending the apostles by the authority
of philosophers, since these teach some measure of truth in their
dissertations, as of pleading on their behalf the practice of advocates at the bar, in
sometimes serving their clients' interests at the expense of truth. If, as is stated
in your exposition of the Epistle to the Galatians, this practice of
barristers may be in your opinion with propriety quoted as resembling and justifying
dissimulation on the part of Peter and Paul, why should I fear to allege to you
the authority of philosophers whose teaching we account worthless, not because
everything which they say is false, but because they are in most things mistaken,
and wherein they are found affirming truth, are notwithstanding strangers to
the grace of Christ, who is the Truth?
14. But why may I not say regarding these institutions of the old economy,
that they are neither good nor bad: not good, since men are not by them
justified, they having been only shadows predicting the grace by which we are
justified; and not bad, since they were divinely appointed as suitable both to the
time and to the people? Why may I not say this, when I am supported by that saying
of the prophet, that I God gave unto His people "statutes that were not good
"? 3 For we have in this perhaps the reason of his not calling them "bad," but
calling them "not good," i.e. not such that either by them men could be made
good, or that without them men could not possibly become good. I would esteem it a
favour to be informed by your Sincerity, whether any saint, coming from 'the
East to Rome, would be guilty of dissimulation if he fasted on the seventh day
of each week, excepting the Saturday before Easter. For if we say that it is
wrong to fast on the seventh day, we shall condemn not only the Church of Rome,
but also many other churches, both neighbouring and more remote, in which the
same custom continues to be observed. if, on the other hand, we pronounce it wrong
not to fast on the seventh day, how great is our presumption in censuring so
many churches in the East, and by far the greater part of the Christian world !
Or do you prefer to say of this practice, that it is a thing indifferent in
itself, but commendable in him who conforms with it, not as a dissembler, but from
a seemly desire for the fellowship and deference for the feelings of others ?
No precept, however, concerning this practice is given to Christians in the
canonical books. How much more, then, may I shrink from pronouncing that to be bad
which I cannot deny to be of divine institution !--this fact being admitted by
me in the exercise of the same faith by which I know that not through these
observances, but by the grace of God through our Lord Jesus Christ, I am
justified.
15. I maintain, therefore, that circumcision, and other things of this
kind, were, by means of what is called the Old Testament, given to the Jews with
divine authority, as signs of future things which were to be fulfilled in
Christ; and that now, when these things have been fulfilled, the laws concerning
these rights remained only to be read by Christians in order to their understanding
the prophecies which had been given before, but not to be of necessity
practised by them, as if the coming of that revelation of faith which they prefigured
was still future. Although, however, these rites were not to be imposed upon
the Gentiles, the compliance with them, to which the Jews had been accustomed,
was not to be prohibited in such a way as to give the impression that it was
worthy of abhorrence and condemnation. Therefore slowly, and by degrees, all this
observance of these types was to vanish away through the power of the sound
preaching of the truth of the grace of Christ, to which alone believers would be
taught to ascribe their justification and salvation, and not to those types and
shadows of things which till then had been future, but which were now newly come
and present, as at the time of the calling of those Jews whom the personal
coming of our Lord and the apostolic times had found accustomed to the observance
of these ceremonial institutions. The toleration, for the time, of their
continuing to observe these was enough to declare their excellence as things which,
though they were to be given up, were not, like the worship of idols, worthy of
abhorrence; but they were not to be imposed upon others, lest they should be
thought necessary, either as means or as conditions of salvation. This was the
opinion of those heretics who, while anxious to be both Jews and Christians,
could not be either the one or the other. Against this opinion you have most
benevolently condescended to warn me, although I never entertained it. This also was
the opinion with which, through i fear, Peter fell into the fault of pretending
to i yield concurrence, though in reality he did not agree with it; for which
reason Paul wrote most truly of him, that he saw him not walking up-rightly,
according to the truth of the gospel, and most truly said of him that he was
compelling the Gentiles to live as did the Jews. Paul did not impose this burden on
the Gentiles through his sincerely complying, when it was needful, with these
ceremonies, with the design of proving that they were not to be utterly
condemned (as idol-worship ought to be); for he nevertheless constantly preached that
not by these things, but by the grace revealed to faith, believers obtain
salvation, lest he should lead any one to take up these Jewish observances as
necessary to salvation. Thus, therefore, I believe that the Apostle Paul did all
these things honestly, and without dissimulation; and yet if any one now leave
Judaism and become a Christian, I neither compel nor permit him to imitate Paul's
example, and go on with the sincere observance of Jewish rites, any more than
you, who think that Paul dissembled when he practised these rites, would compel
or permit such an one to follow the apostle in that dissimulation.
16. Shall I also sum up "the matter in debate, or rather your opinion
concerning it "' (to quote your own expression)? It seems to me to be this: that
after the gospel of Christ has been published, the Jews who believe do rightly if
they offer sacrifices as Paul did, if they circumcise their children as Paul
circumcised Timothy, and if they observe the "seventh day of the week, as the
Jews have always done, provided only that they do all this as dissemblers and
deceivers." If this is your doctrine, we are now precipitated, not into the heresy
of Ebion, or of those who are commonly called Nazarenes, or any other known
heresy, but into some new error, which is all the more pernicious because it
originates not in .mistake, but in deliberate and designed endeavour to deceive.
If, in order to clear yourself from the charge of entertaining such sentiments,
you answer that the apostles were to be commended for dissimulation in these
instances, their purpose being to avoid giving offence to the many weak Jewish
believers who did not yet understand that these things were to be rejected, but
that now, when the doctrine of Christ's grace has been firmly established
throughout so many nations, and when, by the reading of the Law and the Prophets
throughout all the churches of Christ, it is well known that these are not read for
our observance, but for our instruction, any man who should propose to feign
compliance with these rites would be regarded as a madman. What objection can
there be to my affirming that the Apostle Paul, and other sound and faithful
Christians, were bound sincerely to declare the worth of these old observances by
occasionally honouring them, lest it should be thought that these institutions,
originally full of prophetic significance, and cherished sacredly by their most
pious forefathers, were to be abhorred by their posterity as profane inventions
of the devil? For now, when the faith had come, which, previously foreshadowed
by these ceremonies, was revealed after the death and resurrection of the
Lord, they became, so far as their office was concerned, defunct. But just as it is
seemly that the bodies of the deceased be carried honourably to the grave by
their kindred, so was it fitting that these rites should be removed in a manner
worthy of their origin and history, and this not with pretence of respect, but
as a religious duty, instead of being forsaken at once, or cast forth to be
torn in pieces by the reproaches of their enemies, as by the teeth of dogs. To
carry the illustration further, if now any Christian (though he may have been
converted from Judaism) were proposing to imitate the apostles in the observance of
these ceremonies, like one who disturbs the ashes of those who rest, he would
be not piously performing his part in the obsequies, but impiously violating.
the sepulchre.
17. I acknowledge that in the statement contained in my letter, to the
effect that the reason! why Paul undertook (although he was an apostle of Christ)
to perform certain rites, was that he might show that these ceremonies were not
pernicious to those who desired to continue that which they had received by
the Law from their fathers, I have not explicitly enough qualified the statement,
by adding that this was the case only in that time in which the grace of
faith was at first revealed,' for at that time this was not pernicious. These
observances were to be given up by all Christians step by step, as time advanced;
not all at once, lest, if this were done, men should not perceive the difference
between what God by Moses appointed to His ancient people, and the rites which
the unclean spirit taught men to practise in the temples of heathen deities. I
grant, therefore, that in this your censure is justifiable, and my omission
deserved rebuke. Nevertheless, long before the time of: my receiving your letter,
when I wrote a treatise against Faustus the Manichaean, I did not omit to
insert the qualifying douse which I have just stated, in a short exposition which I
gave of the same passage, as you may see for yourself if you kindly condescend
to read that treatise; or you may be satisfied in any other way that you please
by the bearer of this letter, that I had long ago published this restriction
of the general affirmation. And I now, as speaking in the sight of God, beseech
you by the law of charity to believe me when I say with my whole heart, that it
never was my opinion that in our time, Jews who become Christians were either
required or at liberty to observe in any manner, or from any motive whatever,
the ceremonies of the ancient dispensation; although I have always held, in
regard to the Apostle Paul, the opinion which you call in question, from the time
that I became acquainted with his writings. Nor can these two things appear
incompatible to you; for you do not think it is the duty of any one in our day to
feign compliance with these Jewish observances, although you believe that the
apostles did this.
18. Accordingly, as you in opposing me affirm, and, to quote your own
words, "though the world were to protest against it, boldly declare that the Jewish
ceremonies are to Christians both hurtful and fatal, and that whoever observes
them, whether he was originally Jew or Gentile, is on his way to the pit of
perdition," ' I entirely indorse that statement, and add to it, "Whoever observes
these ceremonies, whether he was originally Jew or Gentile, is on his way to
the pit of perdition, not only if he is sincerely observing them, but also if he
is observing them with dissimulation." What more do you ask? But as you draw a
distinction between the dissimulation which you hold to have been practised by
the apostles, and the rule of conduct befitting the present time, I do the
same between the course which Paul, as I think, sincerely followed in all these
examples then, and the matter of observing in our day these Jewish ceremonies,
although it were done, as by him, without any dissimulation, since it was then to
be approved, but is now to be abhorred. Thus, although we read that "the law
and the prophets were until John," and that "therefore the Jews sought the more
to kill Him, because He not only had broken the Sabbath, but said also that
God was His Father, making Himself equal with God,"3 and that "we have received
grace for grace for the law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by
Jesus Christ;" 4 and although it was promised by Jeremiah that God would make a new
covenant with the house of Judah, not according to the covenant which He made
with their fathers; s nevertheless I do not think that the Circumcision of our
Lord by His parents was an act of dissimulation. If any one object that He did
not forbid this because He was but an infant, I go on to say that I do not
think that it was with intention to deceive that He said to the leper, "Offer for
thy cleansing those things which Moses commanded for a testimony unto them,"1
--thereby adding His own precept to the authority of the law of Moses regarding
that ceremonial usage. Nor was there dissimulation in His going up to the
feast,2 as there was also no desire to be seen of men; for He went up, not openly,
but secretly.
19. But the words of the apostle himself may be quoted against me:
"Behold, I Paul say unto you, that if ye be circumcised, Christ shall profit you
nothing." 3 It follows from this that he deceived Timothy, and made Christ profit
him nothing, for he circumcised Timothy, Do you answer that this circumcision did
Timothy no harm, because it was done with an intention to deceive ? I reply
that the apostle has not made any such exception. He does not say, If ye be
circumcised without dissimulation, any more than, If ye be circumcised with
dissimulation. He says unreservedly, "If ye be circumcised, Christ shall profit you
nothing." As, therefore, you insist upon finding room for your interpretation, by
proposing to supply the words, "unless it be done as an act of dissimulation,"
I make no unreasonable demand in asking you to permit me to understand the
words, "if ye be circumcised," to be in that passage addressed to those who
demanded circumcision, for this reason, that they thought it impossible for them to be
otherwise saved by Christ. Whoever was then circumcised because of such
persuasion and desire, and with this design, Christ assuredly profited him nothing,
as the apostle elsewhere expressly affirms, "If righteousness come by the law,
Christ is dead in vain. 4 The same is affirmed in words which you have quoted:
"Christ is become of no effect to you, whosoever of you is justified by the law;
ye are fallen from grace."5 His rebuke, therefore, was addressed to those who
believed that they were to be justified by the law,- not to those who, knowing
well the design with which the legal ceremonies were instituted as
foreshadowing truth, and the time for which they were destined to be in force, observed
them in order to honour Him who appointed them at first. Wherefore also he says
elsewhere, "If ye be led of the Spirit, ye are not under the law," 6--a passage
from which you infer, that evidently "he has not the Holy Spirit who submits to
the Law, not, as our fathers affirmed the apostles to have done, feignedly
under the promptings of a wise discretion, but "--as I suppose to have been the
case -- "sincerely." 7
20. It seems to me important to ascertain precisely what is that
submission to the law which the apostle here condemns; for I do not think that he speaks
here of circumcision merely, or of the sacrifices then offered by our fathers,
but now not offered by Christians, and other observances of the same nature. I
rather hold that he includes also that precept of the law, "Thou shalt not
covet," 8 which we confess that Christians are unquestionably bound to obey, and
which we find most fully proclaimed by the light which the Gospel has shed upon
it.9 "The law," he says, "is holy, and the commandment holy, and just, and
good;" and then adds, "Was, then, that which is good made death unto me ? God
forbid." "But sin, that it might appear sin, wrought death in me by that which is
good; that sin, by the commandment, might become exceeding sinful." 10 As he says
here, "that sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful," so
elsewhere, "The law entered that the offence might abound; but where sin abounded,
grace did much more abound."11 Again, in another place, after affirming, when
speaking of the dispensation of grace, that grace alone justifies, he asks,
"Wherefore then serveth the law?" and answers immediately, "It was added because of
transgressions, until the Seed should come to whom the promises were made." ,2 The
persons, therefore, whose submission to the law the apostle here pronounces to
be the cause of their own condemnation, are those whom the law brings in
guilty, as not fulfilling its requirements, and who, not understanding the efficacy
of free grace, rely with self-satisfied presumption on their own strength to
enable them to keep the law of God; for "love is the fulfilling of the law." '3
Now "the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts," not by our own power, but
"by the Holy Ghost, which is given unto us." 14 The satisfactory discussion of
this, however, would require too long a digression, if not a separate volume. If,
then, that precept of the law, "Thou shalt not covet," holds under it as
guilty the man whose human weakness is not assisted by the grace of God, and instead
of acquitting the sinner, condemns him as a transgressor, how much more was it
impossible for those ordinances which were merely typical, circumcision and
the rest, which were destined to be abolished when the revelation of grace became
more widely known, to be the means of justifying any man ! Nevertheless they
were not on this ground to be immediately shunned with abhorrence, like the
diabolical impieties of heathenism, from the first beginning of the revelation of
the grace which had been by these shadows prefigured; but to be for a little
while tolerated, especially among those who joined the Christian Church from that
nation to whom these ordinances had been given. When, however, they had been,
as it were, honourably buried, they were thenceforward to be finally abandoned
by all Christians.
21. Now, as to the words which you use, "non dispensative, ut nostri
voluere majores," ' -- "not in a way justifiable by expediency, the ground on which
our fathers were disposed to explain the conduct of the apostles," -- pray what
do these words mean? Surely nothing else than that which I call "officiosum
mendacium," the liberty granted by expediency being equivalent to a call of duty
to utter a falsehood with pious intention. I at least can see no other
explanation, unless, of course, the mere addition of the words "permitted by
expediency" be enough to make a lie cease to be a lie; and if this be absurd, why do you
not openly say that a lie spoken in the way of duty is to be defended ?
Perhaps the name offends you, because the word "officium" is .not common in
ecclesiastical books; but this did not deter our Ambrose from its use, for he has chosen
the title "De Officiis" for some of his books that are full of useful rules.
Do you mean to say, that whoever utters a lie from a sense of duty is to be
blamed, and whoever does the same on the ground of expediency is to be approved? I
beseech you, consider that the man who thinks this may lie whenever he thinks
fit, because this involves the whole important question whether to say what is
false be at any time the duty of a good man, especially of a Christian man, to
whom it has been' said, "Let your yea be yea, and your nay, nay, lest ye fall
into condemnation," 3 and who believes the Psalmist's word, "Thou wilt destroy
all them that speak lies." 4
22. This, however, is, as I have said, another and a weighty question; I
leave him who is of this opinion to judge for himself the circumstances in which
he is at liberty to utter a lie: provided, however, that it be most assuredly
believed and maintained that this way of lying is far removed from the authors
who were employed to write holy writings, especially the canonical Scriptures;
lest those who are the stewards of Christ, of whom it is said, "It is required
in stewards, that a man be found faithful," s should seem to have proved their
fidelity by learning as an important lesson to speak what is false when this is
expedient for the truth's sake, although the word fidelity itself, in the!
Latin tongue, is said to signify originally a real correspondence between what is
said and what is done.6 Now, where that which is spoken is actually done, there
is assuredly no room for falsehood. Paul therefore, as a "faithful steward"
doubtless is to be regarded as approving his fidelity in his writings; for he was
"steward of truth, not of falsehood. Therefore he wrote the truth when he
wrote that he had seen Peter walking not uprightly, according to the truth of the
gospel, and that he had withstood him to the face because he was compelling the
Gentiles to live as the Jews did. And Peter himself received, with the holy
and loving humility which became him, the rebuke which Paul, in the interests of
truth, and with the boldness of love, administered. Therein Peter left to those
that came after him an example, that, if at any time they deviated from the
right path, they should not think it beneath them to accept correction from those
who were their juniors, -- an example more rare, and requiring greater piety,
than that which Paul's conduct on the same occasion left us, that those who are
younger should have courage even to withstand their seniors if the defence of
evangelical truth required it, yet in such a way as to preserve unbroken
brotherly love. For while it is better for one to succeed in perfectly keeping the
right path, it is a thing much more worthy of admiration and praise to receive
admonition meekly, than to admonish a transgressor boldly. On that occasion,
therefore, Paul was to be praised for upright courage, Peter was to be praised for
holy humility; and so far as my judgment enables me to form an opinion, this
ought rather to have been asserted in answer to the calumnies of Porphyry, than
further occasion given to him for finding fault, by putting it in his power to
bring against Christians this much more damaging accusation, that either in
writing their letters or in complying with the ordinances of God they practised
deceit.
CHAP. III.-- 23- You call upon me to bring forward the name of even one whose opinion I
have followed in this matter, and at the same time you have quoted the names of
many who , have held before you the opinion which you defend? You also say
that if I censure you for an error in this, you beg to be allowed to remain in
error in company with such great men. I have not read their writings; but although
they are only six or seven in all, you have yourself impugned the authority of
four of them. For as to the Laodicean author,s whose name you do not give, you
say that he has lately forsaken the Church; Alexander you describe as a
heretic of old standing; and as to Origen and Didymus, I read in some of your more
recent works, censure passed on their opinions, and that in no measured terms,
nor in regard to insignificant questions, although formerly you gave Origen
marvellous praise. I suppose, therefore, that .you would not even yourself be
contented to be m error with these men; although the language which I refer to is
equivalent to an assertion that in this matter they have not erred. For who is
there that would consent to be knowingly mistaken, with whatever company he might
share his errors? Three of the even therefore alone remain, Eusebius of Emesa,
Theodorus of Heraclea, and John, whom you afterwards mention, who formerly
presided as pontiff over the Church of Constantinople.
24. However, if you inquire or recall to memory the opinion of our
Ambrose,1 and also of our Cyprian,2 on the point in question, you will perhaps find
that I also have not been without some whose footsteps I follow in that which I
have maintained. At the same time, as I have said already, it is to the
canonical Scriptures alone that I am bound to yield such implicit subjection as to
follow their teaching, without admitting the slightest suspicion that in them any
mistake or any statement intended to mislead could find a place. Wherefore, when
I look round for a third name that I may oppose three on my side to your
three, I might indeed easily find one, I believe, if my reading had been extensive;
but one occurs to me whose name is as good as all these others, nay, of greater
authority -- I mean the Apostle Paul himself. To him I betake myself; to
himself I appeal from the verdict of all those commentators on his writings who
advance an opinion different from mine. I interrogate him, and demand from himself
to know whether he wrote what was true, or under some plea of expediency wrote
what he knew to be false, when he wrote that he saw Peter not walking
uprightly, according to the truth of the gospel, and withstood him to his face. because
by that dissimulation he was compelling the Gentiles to live after the manner
of the Jews. And I hear him in reply proclaiming with a solemn oath in an
earlier part of the epistle, where he began this narration, "The things that I write
unto you, behold, before God, I lie not." s
25. Let those who think otherwise, however great their names, excuse my
differing from them. The testimony of so great an apostle using, in his own
writings. an oath as a confirmation of their truth, is of more weight with me than
the opinion of any man, however learned, who is discussing the writings of
another. Nor am I afraid lest men should say that, in vindicating Paul from the
charge of pretending to conform to the errors of Jewish prejudice, I affirm him to
have actually so conformed. For as, on the one hand, he was not guilty of
pretending conformity to error when, with the liberty of an apostle, such as was
suitable to that period of transition, he did, by practising those ancient holy
ordinances, when it was necessary to declare their original excellence as
appointed not by the wiles of Satan to deceive men, but by the wisdom of God for the
purpose of typically foretelling things to come; so, on the other hand, he was
not guilty of real conformity to the errors of Judaism, seeing that he not only
knew, but also preached constantly and vehemently, that those were in error who
thought that these ceremonies were to be imposed upon the Gentile converts, or
were necessary to the justification of any who believed.
26. Moreover, as to my saying that to the Jews he became as a Jew, and to
the Gentiles as a Gentile, not with the subtlety of intentional deceit, but
with the compassion of pitying love? it seems to me that you have not sufficiently
considered my meaning in the words; or rather, perhaps, I have not succeeded
in making it plain. For I did not mean by this that I supposed him to have
practised in either case a feigned conformity; but I said it because his conformity
was sincere, not less in the things in which he became to the Jews as a Jew,
than in those in which he became to the Gentiles as a Gentile,a parallel which
you yourself suggested, and by which I thankfully acknowledge that you have
materially assisted my argument. For when I had in my letter asked you to explain
how it could be supposed that Paul's becoming to the Jews as a Jew involved the
supposition that he must have acted deceitfully in conforming to the Jewish
observances, seeing that no such deceptive conformity to heathen customs was
involved in his becoming as a Gentile to the Gentiles; your answer was, that his
becoming to the Gentiles as a Gentile meant no more than his receiving the
uncircumcised, and permitting the free use of those meats which were pronounced unclean
by Jewish law. If, then, when I ask whether in this also he practised
dissimulation, such an idea is repudiated as palpably most absurd and false: it is an
obvious inference, that in his performing those things in which he became as a
Jew to the Jews, he was using a wise liberty, not yielding to a degrading
compulsion, nor doing what would be still more unworthy of him, viz. stooping from
integrity to fraud out of a regard to expediency.
27. For to believers, and to those who know the truth, as the apostle
testifies (unless here too, perhaps, he is deceiving his readers), "every creature
of God is good, and nothing to be refused, if it be received with
thanksgiving.'' Therefore to Paul himself, not only as a man, but as a steward eminently
faithful, not only as knowing, but also as a teacher of the truth, every creature
of God which is used for food was not feignedly but truly good. If, then, to
the Gentiles he became as a Gentile, by holding and teaching the truth concerning
meats and circumcision although he feigned no conformity to the rites and
ceremonies of the Gentiles, why say that it was impossible for him to become as a
Jew to the Jews, unless he practised dissimulation in performing the rites of
their religion Why did ! he maintain the true faithfulness o''town. a steward
irds the wild olive branch that was engrafted,and yet hold up a strange veil of
dissimulation, on the plea of expediency, before those who were the natural and
original branches of the olive tree ? Why was it that, in becoming as a Gentile
to the Gentiles, his teaching and his conduct2 are in harmony with his real
sentiments; but that, in becoming as a Jew to the Jews, he shuts up one thing in
his heart, and declares something wholly different in his words, deeds, and
writings ? But far be it from us to entertain such thoughts of him. To both Jews
and Gentiles he owed "charity out of a pure heart, and of a good conscience, and
of faith unfeigned; "3 and therefore he became all things! to all men, that he
might gain nil,4 not with the subtlety of a deceiver, but with the love of one
filled with compassion; that is to say, not by pretending himself to do all
the evil things which other men did, but by using the utmost pains to minister
with all compassion the remedies required by the evils under which other men
laboured, as if their case had been his own.
28. When, therefore, he did not refuse to practise some of these Old
Testament observances, he was not led by his compassion for Jews to feign this
conformity, but unquestionably was acting sincerely; and by this course of action
declaring his respect for those things which in the former dispensation had been
for a time enjoined by God, he distinguished between them and the impious rites
of heathenism. At that time, moreover, not with the subtlety of a deceiver,
but with the love of one moved by compassion, he became to the Jews as a Jew,
when, :: seeing them to be in error, which either reader3 them unwilling to
believe in Christ, or made them think that by these old sacrifices and ceremonial
observances they could be cleansed from sin and made partakers of salvation, he
desired so to deliver them from that error as if he saw not !them, but himself,
entangled in it; thus truly loving his neighbour as himself, and doing to others
as he would have others do to him if he required their help,- a duty to the
statement of which our Lord added these words, "This is the law and the
prophets." s
29. This compassionate affection Paul recommends in the same Epistle to
the Galatians, saying: "If a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual
restore such an one in the spirit of meekness; considering thyself, lest thou
also be tempted." 6 See whether he has not said, "Make thyself as he is, that
thou mayest gain him." Not, indeed, that one should commit or pretend to have
committed the same fault as the one who has been overtaken, but that in the fault
of that other he should consider what might happen to himself, and so
compassionately render assistance to that other, as he would wish that other to do to
him if the case were his; that is, not with the subtlety of a deceiver, but with
the love of one filled with compassion. Thus, whatever the error or fault in
which Jew or Gentile or any man was found by Paul, to all men he became all
things,- not by feigning what was not true, but by feeling, because the case might
have been his own, the compassion of one who put himself in the other's place,-
that he might gain all.
CHAP. IV.-- 30. I beseech you to look, if you please, for a little into your own heart,
-- I mean, into your own heart as it stands affected towards myself, --and
recall, or if you have it in writing beside you, read again, your own words in
that letter (only too brief) which you sent to me by Cyprian our brother, now my
colleague. Read with what sincere brotherly and loving earnestness you have
added to a serious complaint of what I had done to you these words: "In this
friendship is wounded, and the laws of brotherly union are set at nought. Let not the
world see us quarrelling like children, and giving material for angry
contention between those who may become our respective supporters or adversaries."
These words I perceive to be spoken by you from the heart, and from a heart kindly
seeking to give me good advice. Then you add, what would have been obvious to
me even without your stating it: "I write what I have now written, because I
desire to cherish towards you pure and Christian love, and not to hide in my heart
anything which does not agree with the utterance of my lips." O pious man,
beloved by me, as God who seeth my soul is witness, with a true heart I believe y,
our statement; and just as I do not question the sincerity of the profession
which you have thus made in a letter to me, so do I by all means believe the
Apostle Paul when he makes the very same profession in his letter, addressed not
to any one individual, but to Jews and Greeks, and all those Gentiles who were
his children in the gospel, for whose spiritual birth he travailed, and after
them to so many thousands of believers in Christ, for whose sake that letter has
been preserved. I believe, I say, that he did not "hide in his heart anything
which did not agree with the utterance of his lips."
31. You have indeed yourself done towards me this very thing,- becoming to
me as I am, --" not with the subtlety of deception, but with the love of
compassion," when you thought that it behoved you to take as much pains to prevent
me from being left in a mistake, in which you believed me to be, as you would
have wished another to take for your deliverance if the case had been your own.
Wherefore, gratefully acknowledging this evidence of your goodwill towards me, I
also claim that you also be not displeased with me, if, when anything in your
treatises disquieted me, I acquainted you with my distress, desiring the same
course to be followed by all towards me as I have followed towards you, that
whatever they think worthy of censure in my writings, they would neither flatter
me with deceitful commendation nor blame me before others for that of which they
are silent towards myself; thereby, as it seems to me, more seriously
"wounding friendship and setting at nought the laws of brotherly union." For I would
hesitate to give the name of Christian to those friendships in which the common
proverb, "Flattery makes friends, and truth makes enemies," ' is of more
authority than the scriptural proverb, "Faithful are the wounds of a friend, but the
kisses of an enemy are deceitful."2
32. Wherefore let us rather do our utmost to set before our beloved
friends, who most cordially wish us well in our labours, such an example that they
may know that it is possible for the most intimate friends to differ so much in
opinion, that the views of the one may be contradicted by the other without any
diminution of their mutual affection, and without hatred being kindled by that
truth which is due to genuine friendship, whether the contradiction be in
itself in accordance with truth, or at least, whatever its intrinsic value is, be
spoken from a sincere heart by one who is resolved not "to hide in his heart
anything which does not agree with the utterance of his lips." Let therefore our
brethren, your friends, of whom you bear testimony that they are vessels of
Christ, believe me when I say that it was wholly against my will that my letter came
into the hands of many others before it reached your own, and that my heart is
filled with no small sorrow for this mistake. How it happened would take long
to tell, and this is now, if I am not mistaken, unnecessary; since, if my word
is to be taken at all in regard to this, it suffices for me to say that it was
not done by me with the sinister intention which is supposed by some, and that
it was not by my wish, or arrangement, or consent, or design that this has
taken place. If they do not believe this, which I affirm in the sight of God, I can
do no more to satisfy them. Far be it, however, from me.to believe that they
made this suggestion to your Holiness with the malicious desire to kindle enmity
between you and me, from which may God in His mercy defend us! Doubtless,
without any intention of doing me wrong, they readily suspected me, as a man, to be
capable of failings common to human nature. For it is right for me to believe
this concerning them, if they be vessels of Christ appointed not to dishonour,
but to honour, and made meet by God for every good work in His great house.s
If, however, this my solemn protestation come to their knowledge, and they still
persist in the same opinion of my conduct, you will yourself see that in this
they will do wrong.
33. As to my having written that I had never sent to Rome a book against
you, I wrote this because, in the first place, I did not regard the name "book"
as applicable to my letter, and therefore was under the impression that you had
heard of something else entirely different from it; in the second place, I had
not sent the letter in question to Rome, but to you; and in the third place, I
did not consider it to be against l you, because I knew that I had been
prompted by the sincerity of friendship, which should give I liberty for the exchange
of suggestions and corrections between us. Leaving out of sight for a little
while your friends of whom I have spoken, I implore yourself, by the grace
whereby we have been redeemed, not to suppose that I have been guilty of artful
flattery in anything which I have said in my letters concerning the good gifts
which have been by the Lord's goodness bestowed on you. If, however, I have in
anything wronged you, forgive me. As to that incident in the life of some forgotten
bard, which, with perhaps more pedantry than good taste, I quoted from classic
literature, I beg you not to carry the application of it to yourself further
than my words warranted for I immediately added: "I do not say this in order
that you may recover the faculty of spiritual sight- far be it from me to say that
you have lost it !--but that, having eyes both clear and quick in discernment,
you may turn them to this matter." 4 I thought a reference to that incident
suitable exclusively in connection with the <greek>palinwdia</greek>, in which we
ought all to imitale Stesichorus if we have written anything which it becomes
our duty to correct in a writing of later date, and not at all in connection
with the blindness of Stesichorus, which I neither ascribed to your mind, nor
feared as likely to be fall you. And again, I beseech you to correct boldly
whatever you see needful to censure in my writings. For although, so far as the
titles of honour which prevail in the Church are concerned, a bishop's rank is above
that of a presbyter, nevertheless in many things Augustin is in inferior to
Jerome; albeit correction is not to be refused nor despised, even when it comes
from I one who in all respects may be an inferior.
CHAP. V.-- 34. As to your translation, you have now convinced me of the benefits to be
secured by your proposal to translate the Scriptures from the original Hebrew,
in order that you may bring to light those things which have been either
omitted or perverted by the Jews. But I beg you to be so good as state by what Jews
this has been done, whether by those who before the Lord's advent translated
the Old Testament- and if so, by what one or more of them --or by the Jews of
later times, who may be supposed to have mutilated or corrupted the Greek Mss., in
order to prevent themselves from being unable to answer the evidence given by
these concerning the Christian faith. I cannot find any reason which should
have prompted the earlier Jewish translators to such unfaithfulness. I beg of you,
moreover, to send us your translation of the Septuagint, which I did not know
that you had published. I am also longing to read that book of yours which you
named De optimo genere interpretandi, and to know from it how to adjust the
balance between the product of the translator's acquaintance with the original
language, and the conjectures of those who 'are able commentators on the
Scripture, who, notwithstanding their common loyalty to the one true faith, must often
bring forward various opinions on account of the obscurity of many passages;1
although this difference of interpretation by no means involves departure from
the unity of the faith; just as one commentator may himself give, in harmony with
the faith which he holds, two different interpretations of the same passage,
because the obscurity of the passage makes both equally admissible.
35. I desire, moreover, your translation of the Septuagint, in order that
we may be delivered, so far as is possible, from the consequences of the
notable incompetency of those who, whether qualified or not, have attempted a Latin
translation; and in order that those who think that I look with jealousy on your
useful labours, may at : length, if it be possible, perceive that my only
reason for objecting to the public reading of your translation from the Hebrew in
our churches was, lest, bringing forward anything which was, as it were, new and
opposed to the authority of the Septuagint version, we should trouble by
serious cause of offence the flocks of Christ, whose ears and hearts have become
accustomed to listen to that version to which the seal of approbation was given by
the apostles themselves. Wherefore, as to that shrub in the book of Jonah,' if
in the Hebrew it is neither "gourd" nor "ivy," but something else which stands
erect, supported by its own stem without other props, I would prefer to call
it "gourd" in all our Latin versions; for I do not think that the Seventy would
have rendered it thus at random, had they not known that the plant was
something like a gourd.
36. I think I have now given a sufficient answer (perhaps more than
sufficient) to your three letters; of which I received two by Cyprian, and one by
Firmus. In replying, send whatever you think likely to be of use in instructing me
and others. And I shall take more care, as the Lord may help me, that any
letter which I may write to you shall reach yourself before it fills into the hand
of any other, by whom its contents may be published abroad; for I confess that
I would not like any letter of yours to me to meet with the fate of which you
justly complain as having befallen my letter to you. Let us, however, resolve to
maintain between ourselves the liberty as well as the love of friends; so that
in the letters which we exchange, neither of us shall be restrained from
frankly stating to the other whatever seems to him open to correction, provided
always that this be done in the spirit which does not, as inconsistent with i
brotherly love, displease God. if, however, you do not think that this can be done
between us without endangering that brotherly love, let us not do it: for the
love which I should like to see maintained between us is assuredly the greater
love which would make this mutual freedom possible; but the smaller measure of it
is better than none at all.3
LETTER LXXXIII. (A.D. 405.)
TO MY LORD ALYPIUS MOST BLESSED, MY BROTHER AND COLLEAGUE, BELOVED AND LONGED
FOR WITH SINCERE VENERATION, AND TO THE BRETHREN THAT ARE WITH HIM, AUGUSTIN
AND THE BRETHREN WITH HIM SEND GREETING IN THE LORD
1. The sorrow of the members of the Church at Thiave prevents my heart
from having any rest until I hear that they have been brought again to be of the
same mind towards you as they formerly were; which must be accomplished without
delay. For if the apostle was concerned about one individual, "lest perhaps
such an one should be swallowed up with overmuch sorrow," adding in the same
context the words, "lest Satan should get an advantage of us, for we are not
ignorant of his devices,"' how much more does it become us to act with caution, lest
we cause similar grief to a whole flock, and especially one composed of persons
who have lately been reconciled to the Catholic Church, and whom I can upon no
account forsake ! As, however, the short time at our disposal did not permit us
so to take counsel together as to arrive at a mature and satisfactory
decision, may it please your Holiness to accept in this letter the finding which
commended itself most to me when I had long reflected upon the matter since we
parted; and if you approve of it, let the enclosed letter,' which I have written to
them in the name of both of us, be sent to them without delay.
2. You proposed that they should have the one half [of the property left
by Honoratus], and that the other half should be made up to them/by me from such
resources as might be at my disposal. I think, however, that if the whole
property had been taken from them, men might reasonably have said that we had taken
the great pains in this matter which we have done, for the sake of justice,
not for pecuniary advantage. But when we concede to them one half, and in that
way settle with them by a compromise, it will be manifest that our anxiety has
been only about the money; and you see what harm must follow from this. For, on
the one hand, we shall be regarded by them as having taken away one half of a
property to which we had no claim; and, on the other hand, they will be regarded
by us as dishonourably and unjustly consenting to accept aid from one half of a
property of which the whole belonged to the poor. For your remark, "We must
beware lest, in our efforts to obtain a right adjustment of a difficult question,
we cause more serious wounds," applies with no less force if the half be
conceded to them. For those whose turning from the world to monastic life we desire
to secure, will, for the sake of this half of their private estates, be
disposed to find some excuse for putting off the sale of these, in order that their
case may be dealt with according to this precedent. Moreover, would it not be
strange, if, in a question like this, where much may be said on both sides, a
whole community should, through our not avoiding the appearance of evil, be
offended by the impression that their bishops, whom they hold in high esteem, are
smitten with sordid avarice?
3. For when any one is turned to adopt the life of a monk, if he is
adopting it with a true heart, he does not think of that which I have just mentioned,
especially if he be admonished of the sinfulness of such conduct. But if he be
a deceiver, and is seeking "his own things, not the things which are Jesus
Christ's," 3 he has not charity; and without this, what does it profit him,
"though he bestow all his goods to feed the poor, and though he give his body to be
burned" ? 4 Moreover, as we agreed when conversing together, this may be
henceforth avoided, and an arrangement made with each individual who is disposed to
enter a monastery, if he cannot be admitted to the society of the brethren before
he has relieved himself of all these encumbrances, and comes as one at leisure
from all business, because the property which belonged to him has ceased to be
his. But there is no other way in which this spiritual death of weak brethren,
and grievous obstacle to the salvation of those for whose reconciliation with
the Catholic Church we so earnestly labour, can be avoided, than by our giving
them most clearly to understand that we are by no means anxious about money in
such cases as this. And this they cannot be made to understand, unless we leave
to their use the estate which they always supposed to belong to their late
presbyter; because, even if it was not his, they ought to have known this from the
beginning.
4. It seems to me, therefore, that in matters of this kind, the rule which
ought to hold is, that whatever belonged, according to the ordinary civil laws
regarding property, to him who is an ordained clergyman in any place, belongs
after his death to the Church over which he was ordained. Now, by civil law,
the property in question belonged to the presbyter Honoratus; so that not only on
account of his being ordained elsewhere. but even had he remained in the
monastery of Thagaste, if he had died without having either sold his estate or
handed it over by express deed of gift to any one, the right of succession to it
would belong only to his heirs: as brother AEmilianus inherited those thirty
shillings s left by the brother Privatus. This, therefore, behoved to be considered
and provided for in time i but if no provision was made for it, we must, in the
disposal of the estate, comply with the laws which have been appointed to
regulate in civil society the holding or not holding of property; that we may, so
far as is in our power, abstain not only from the reality, but also from all
appearance of evil, and preserve that good name which is so necessary to our
office as stewards. How truly this procedure has the appearance of evil, I beseech
your wisdom to observe. For having heard of their sorrow, which we ourselves
witnessed at Thiave, fearing lest, as frequently happens, I should myself be
mistaken through partiality for my own opinion, I stated the facts of the case to
our brother and colleague Samsucius, without telling him at the time my present
view of the matter, but rather stating the view taken up by both of us when we
were resisting their demands. He was exceedingly shocked, and wondered that we
had entertained such a view; being moved by nothing else but the ugly appearance
of the transaction, as one wholly unworthy not only of us, but of any man.
5. Wherefore I implore you to subscribe and transmit without delay the
letter which I have written to them in name of both of us. And even if, perchance,
you discern the other course to be a just one in the matter, let not these
brethren who are weak be compelled to learn now what I myself cannot understand;
rather let this word of the Lord be remembered in dealing with them: "I have yet
many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now." x For He Himself,
out of condescension to such weakness, said on another occasion (it was in
reference to the payment of tribute), "Then are the children free; notwithstanding
lest we offend them," etc.; and sent Peter to pay the didrachmae which were then
exacted? For He knew another law according to which he was not bound to make
any such payment; but He made the payment which was imposed upon Him by that law
according to which, as I have said, succession to the estate of Honoratus
behoved to be regulated, if he died before either giving away or selling his
property. Nay, even in regard to the law of the Church, Paul showed forbearance
towards the weak, and did not insist upon his receiving the money due to him,
although fully persuaded in his conscience that he might with perfect justice insist
upon it; waiving his claim, however, only because he thereby avoided a
suspicion of his motives which would mar the sweet savour of Christ among them, and
abstained from the appearance of evil in a region in which he knew that this was
his duty, and probably even before he had known by experience the sorrow which
it would occasion. Let us now, though we are somewhat behind-hand, and have been
admonished by experience, correct that which we ought to have foreseen.
6. I remember that you proposed when we parted that the brethren at
Thagaste should hold me responsible to make up the half of the sum claimed; let me
say in conclusion, that as I fear everything which may make my attempt
unsuccessful, if you clearly perceive that proposal to be a just one, I do not refuse to
comply with it on this condition, however, that I am to pay the amount only
when I have it in my power, i.e. when something so considerable falls to our
monastery at Hippo that this can be done without unduly straitening us, -- the
amount remaining after the subtraction of so large a sum being still such as to
provide for our monastery here aft equal share in proportion to the number of
resident brethren.
LETTER LXXXIV. (A.D. 405.)
TO MY LORD NOVATUS, MOST BLESSED, MY BROTHER AND PARTNER IN THE PRIESTLY
OFFICE, ESTEEMED AND LONGED FOR, AND TO THE BRETHREN WHO ARE WITH HIM, AUGUSTIN AND
THE BRETHREN WITH HIM SEND GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. I myself feel how hard-hearted I must appear to you, and I can scarcely
excuse to myself my conduct in not consenting to send to your Holiness my son
the deacon Lucillus, your own brother. But when your own time comes to
surrender to the claims of Churches in remote places some of those whom you have
educated, and who are most dear and sweet to you, then, and not till then, will you
know the pangs of longing which pierce me through and through for some who, once
united to me in the strongest and most pleasing intimacy, are no more beside
me. Let me submit to your thoughts the case of one who is far away. However
strong be the bond of kindred between brothers, it does not surpass the bond by
which my brother Severus and I are united to each other, and yet you know how
rarely I have the happiness of seeing him. And this has been caused neither by his
wish nor by mine, but because of our giving to the claims of our mother the
Church precedency above the claims of this present world, out of regard to that
coming eternity in which we shall dwell together and part no more. How much more
reasonable, therefore, is it for you to submit for the sake of the Church's
welfare to the absence of that brother, with whom you have not shared the food
which the Lord our Shepherd provides for nearly so long a period as I did with my
most amiable fellow-townsman Severus, who now only with an effort and at long
intervals converses with me by means of brief letters, --letters, moreover,
which are for the most part burdened with the cares and affairs of other men,
instead of bearing to me any reminiscence of those green pastures in which we were
wont to lie down under Christ's loving care!
2. You will perhaps reply, "What then ? May not my brother be of service
to the Church here also ? Is it for any other end than usefulness to the Church
that I desire to have him with me?" Truly, if his being beside you seemed to me
to be as important for the gathering in or ruling of the Lord's flock as his
presence here is for these ends, every one might justly blame me for being not
merely hard-hearted, but unjust. But since he is conversant with the Punic1
language, through want of which the preaching of the gospel is greatly hindered in
these parts, whereas the use of that language is general with you, do you think
that we would be doing our duty in consulting for the welfare of the Lord's
flocks, if we were to send this talent to a place where it is not specially
needful, and remove it from this region, where we thirst for it with such parched
spirits ? Forgive me, therefore, when I do, not only against your will, but also
against my own feeling, what the care of the burden imposed upon me compels me
to do. The Lord, to whom you have given your heart, will grant you such aid in
your labours that you shall be recompensed for this kindness; for we
acknowledge that you have with a good grace rather than of necessity conceded the deacon
Lucillus to the burning thirst of the regions in which our lot is cast. For you
will do me no small favour if you do not burden me with any further request
upon this subject, lest I should have occasion to appear anything more than
somewhat hard-hearted to you, whom I revere for your holy benignity of disposition.
LETTER LXXXV. (A.D. 405.)
TO MY LORD PAULUS, MOST BELOVED, MY BROTHER AND COLLEAGUE IN THE PRIESTHOOD,
WHOSE HIGHEST WELFARE IS SOUGHT BY ALL MY PRAYERS, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN
THE LORD.
1. You would not call me so inexorable if you did not think me also a
dissembler. For what else do you believe concerning my spirit, if I am to judge by
what you have written, than that I cherish towards you dislike and antipathy
which merit blame and detestation; as if in a matter about which, there could be
but one opinion I was not careful lest, while warning others, I myself should
deserve reproof? or were wishing to cast the mote out of your eye while
retaining and fostering the beam in my own? 3 It is by no means as you suppose. Behold!
I repeat this, and call God to witness, that if you were only to desire for
yourself what I desire on your behalf, you would now be living in Christ free
from all disquietude, and would make the whole Church rejoice in glory brought by
you to His name. Observe, I pray you, that I have addressed you not only as my
brother, but also as my colleague. For it cannot be that any bishop whatsoever
of the Catholic Church should cease to be my colleague, so long as he has not
been condemned by any ecclesiastical tribunal. As to my refusing to hold
communion with you, the only reason for this is that I cannot flatter you. For
inasmuch as I have begotten you in Christ, I am under very special obligation to
render to you the salutary severity of love in faithful admonition and reproof. It
is true that I rejoice in the numbers who have been, by God's blessing on your
work, gathered into the Catholic Church; but this does not make me less bound to
weep that a greater number are i being by you scattered from the Church. For
you have so wounded the Church of Hippo,4 that unless the Lord make you
disengage yourself from all secular cares and burdens, and recall you to the manner of
living and deportment which become the true bishop, the wound may soon be
beyond remedy.
2. Seeing, however, that you continue to involve yourself more and more
deeply in these affairs, and have, notwithstanding your vow of :renunciation,
entangled yourself again with the things which you had solemnly laid aside,- a
step which could not be justified even by the laws of ordinary human affairs;
seeing also that you are reported to be living in a style of extravagance which
cannot be maintained by the slender income of your church,- why do you insist upon
communion with me, while you refuse to hear my rebuke of your faults? Is it
that men whose complaints I cannot bear, may justly blame me for whatever you do
? You are, moreover, mistaken in suspecting that those who find fault with you
are persons who have always been against you even in your earlier life. It is
not so: and you have no reason to be surprised that many things escape your
observation. But even were this the case, it is your duty to secure that they find
nothing in your conduct which they might reasonably blame, and for which they
might bring reproach against the Church. Perhaps you think that my reason for
saying these things is, that I have not accepted what you urged in your defence.
Nay, rather my reason is, that if I were to say nothing regarding these things,
I would be guilty of that for which I could urge nothing in my defence before
God. I know your abilities; but even a man of dull mind is kept from
disquietude if he sets his affections on heavenly things, whereas a man of acute mind has
this gift in vain if he set his affections on earthly things. The office of a
bishop is not designed to enable one to spend a life of vanity. The Lord God,
who has closed against you all the ways by which you were disposed to make Him
minister to your gain, in order that He may guide you, if you but understand
Him, into that way, with a view to the pursuit of which that holy responsibility
was laid upon you, will Himself teach you what I now say.
LETTER LXXXVI. (A.D. 405.)
TO MY NOBLE LORD CAECILIANUS, MY SON TRULY AND JUSTLY HONOURABLE AND ESTEEMED
IN THE LOVE OF CHRIST, AUGUSTIN, BISHOP, SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
The renown of your administration and the fame of your virtues, as well as
the praiseworthy zeal and faithful sincerity of your Christian piety, --gifts
of God which make you rejoice in Him from whom they came, and from whom you
hope to receive yet greater things, -- have moved me to acquaint your Excellency
by this letter with the cares which agitate my mind. As our joy is great that
throughout the rest of Africa you have taken measures with remarkable success on
behalf of Catholic unity, our sorrow is proportionately great because the
district of Hippo and the neighbouring regions on the borders of Numidia have not
enjoyed the benefit of the vigour with which as a magistrate you have enforced
your proclamation, my noble lord, and my son truly and justly honourable and
esteemed in the love of Christ. Lest this should be regarded rather as due to the
neglect of duty by me who bear the burden of the episcopal office at Hippo, I
have considered myself bound to mention it to your Excellency. If you condescend
to acquaint yourself with the extremities to which the effrontery of the
heretics has proceeded in the region of Hippo, as you may do by questioning my
brethren and colleagues, who are able to furnish your Excellency with information, or
the presbyter whom I have sent with this letter, I am sure you will so deal
with this tumour of impious presumption, that it shall be healed by warning
rather than painfully removed afterwards by punishment.