LETTERS OF ST. AUGUSTIN: LETTERS CXV TO CXXVI (INCLUDING LETTER TO DIOSCORUS &
BEGINNING OF THIRD DIVISION)
LETTER CXV. (A.D. 410.)
TO FORTUNATUS, MY COLLEAGUE IN THE PRIESTHOOD, MY LORD MOST BLESSED, AND MY
BROTHER BELOVED WITH PROFOUND ESTEEM, AND TO THE BRETHREN WHO ARE WITH THEE,
AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
Your Holiness is well acquainted with Faventius, a tenant on the estate of
the Paratian forest, He, apprehending some injury or other at the hands of the
owner of that estate, took refuge in the church at Hippo, and was there, as
fugitives are wont to do, waiting till he could get the matter settled through my
mediation. Becoming every day, as often happens, less and less alarmed, and in
fact completely off his guard, as if his adversary had desisted from his,
enmity, he was, when leaving the house of a friend after supper, suddenly carried
off by one Florentinus, an officer of the Count, who used in this act of
violence a band of armed men sufficient for the purpose. When this was made known to
me, and as yet it was unknown by whose orders or by whose hands he had been
carried off, though suspicion naturally fell on the man from whose apprehended
injury he had claimed the protection of the Church, I at once communicated with the
tribune who is in command of the coast-guard. He sent out soldiers, but no one
could be found. But in the morning we learned in what house he had passed the
night, and also that he had left it after cock-crowing, with the man who had
him in custody. I sent also to the place to which it was reported that he had
been removed: there the officer above-named was found, but refused to allow the
presbyter whom I had sent to have even a sight of his prisoner. On the following
day I sent a letter requesting that he should be allowed the privilege which
the Emperor appointed in cases such as his, namely, that persons summoned to
appear to be tried should in the municipal court be interrogated whether they
desired to spend thirty days under adequate surveillance in the town, in order to
arrange their affairs, or find funds for the expense of their trial,. my
expectation being that within that period of time we might perhaps bring his matters to
some amicable settlement. Already, however, he had gone farther under charge
of the officer Florentinus; but my fear is, lest perchance, if he be brought
before the tribunal of the magistrate,' he suffer some injustice. For although the
integrity of that judge is widely famed as incorruptible, Faventius has for
his adversary a man of very great wealth. To secure that money may not prevail in
that court, I beg your Holiness, my beloved lord and venerable brother, to
have the kindness to give the accompanying letter to the honourable magistrate, a
man very much beloved by us, and to read this letter also to him; for I have
not thought it necessary to write twice the same statement of the case. I trust
that he will delay the hearing of the case, because I do not know whether the
man is innocent or guilty. I trust also that he will not overlook the fact that
the laws have been violated in his having been suddenly carried off, without
being brought, as was enacted by the Emperor, before the municipal court, in order
to his being asked whether he wished to accept the benefit of the delay of
thirty days, so that in this way we may get the affair settled between him and his
adversary.
LETTER CXVI.
(ENCLOSED IN THE FOREGOING LETTER.)
TO GENEROSUS, MY NOBLE AND JUSTLY DISTINGUISHED LORD, MY HONOURED AND
MUCH-LOVED SON, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
Although the praises and favourable report of your administration and your
own illustrious good name always give me the greatest pleasure because of the
love which we feel due to your merit and to your benevolence, on no occasion
have I hitherto been burdensome to your Excellency as an intercessor requesting
any favour from you, my much-loved lord and justly-honoured son. When, however,
your Excellency has learned from the letters which I have sent to my venerable
brother and colleague, Fortunatus, what has occurred in the town in which I
serve the Church of God, your kind heart will at once perceive the necessity under
which I have been constrained to trespass by this petition on your time,
already fully occupied. I am perfectly assured that, cherishing towards us the
feeling which, in the name of Christ, we are fully warranted to expect, you will act
in this matter as becomes not only an upright, but also a Christian magistrate.
LETTER CXVII. (A.D. 410.)
FROM DIOSCORUS TO AUGUSTIN.
To you, who esteem the substance, not the style of expression, as
important, any formal preamble to this letter would be not only unnecessary, but
irksome. Therefore, without further preface, I beg your attention. The aged Alypius
had often promised, in answer to my request, that he would, with your help,
furnish a reply to a very few brief questions of mine in regard to the Dialogues of
Cicero; and as he is said to be at present in Mauritania, I ask and earnestly
entreat you to condescend to give, without his assistance, those answers which,
even had your brother been present, it would doubtless have fallen to you to
furnish. What I require is not money, it is not gold; though, if you possessed
these, you would, I am sure, be willing to give them to me for any fit object.
This request of mine you can grant without effort, by merely speaking. I might
importune you at a greater length, and through many of your dear friends; but I
know your disposition, that you do not desire to be solicited, but show
kindness readily to all, if only there be nothing improper in the thing requested: and
there is absolutely nothing improper in what I ask. Be this, however, as it
may, I beg you to do me this kindness, for I am on the point of embarking on a
voyage. You know how very painful it is to me to be burdensome to any one, and
much more to one of your frank disposition; but God alone knows how irresistible
is the pressure of the necessity under which I have made this application. For,
taking leave of you, and committing myself to divine protection, I am about to
undertake a voyage; and you know the ways of men, how prone they are to
censure, and you see how any one will be regarded as illiterate and stupid who, when
questions are addressed to him, can return no answer. Therefore, I implore you,
answer all my queries without delay. Send me not away downcast. I ask this
that so I may see my parents; for on this one errand I have sent Cerdo to you, and
I now delay only till he return. My brother Zenobius has been appointed
imperial remembrancer,1 and has sent me a free pass for my journey, with provisions.
If I am not worthy of your reply, let at least the fear of my forfeiting these
provisions by delay move you to give answers to my little questions.2
May the most high God spare you long to us in health !Papas salutes your
excellency most cordially.
LETTER CXVIII. (A.D. 410.)
AUGUSTIN TO DIOSCORUS.
CHAP. I.--I. YOU have sent suddenly upon me a countless multitude of questions, by
which you must have purposed to blockade me on every side, or rather bury me
completely, even if you were under the impression that I was otherwise unoccupied
and at leisure; for how could I, even though wholly at leisure, furnish the
solution of so many questions to one in such haste as you are, and, in fact, as you
write, on the eve of a journey? I would, indeed, be prevented by the mere
number of the questions to be resolved, even if their solution were easy. But they
are so perplexingly intricate, and so hard, that even if they were few in
number, and engaging me when otherwise wholly at leisure, they would, by the mere
time required, exhaust my powers of application, and wear out my strength. I
would, however, fain snatch you forcibly away from the midst of those inquiries in
which you so much delight, and fix you down among the cares which engage my
attention, in order that you may either learn not to be unprofitably curious, or
desist from presuming to impose the task of feeding and fostering your curiosity
upon men among whose cares one of the greatest is to repress and curb those who
are too inquisitive. For if time and pains are devoted to writing anything to
you, how much better and more profitably are these employed in endeavours to
cut off those vain and treacherous passions (which are to be guarded against with
a caution proportioned to the ease with which they impose upon us, by their
being disguised and cloaked under the semblance of virtue and the name of liberal
studies), rather than in causing them to be, by our sen,ice, or rather
obsequiousness, so to speak, roused to a more vehement assertion of the despotism
under which they so oppress your excellent spirit.
2. For tell me what good purpose is served by the many Dialogues which you
have read, if they have in no way helped you towards the discovery and
attainment of the end of all your actions? For by your letter you indicate plainly
enough what you have proposed to yourself as the end to be attained by all this
most ardent study of yours, which is at once useless to yourself and troublesome
to me. For when you were in your letter using every means to persuade me to
answer the questions which you sent, you wrote these words: "I might importune you
at greater length, and through many of your dear friends; but I know your
disposition, that you do not desire to be solicited, but show kindness readily to
all, if only there be nothing improper in the thing requested: and there is
absolutely nothing improper in what I ask. Be this, however, as it may, I beg you
to do me this kindness, for I am on the point of embarking on a voyage." In
these words of your letter you are indeed right in your opinion as to myself, that
I am desirous .of showing kindness to all, if only there be nothing improper in
the request made; but it is not my opinion that there is nothing improper in
what you ask. For when I consider how a bishop is distracted and overwrought by
the cares of his office clamouring on every side, it does not seem to me proper
for him suddenly, as if deaf, to withdraw himself from all these, and devote
himself to the work of expounding to a single student some unimportant questions
in the Dialogues of Cicero. The impropriety of this you yourself apprehend,
although, carried away with zeal in the pursuit of your studies, you will by no
means give heed to it. For what other construction can I put on the fact that,
after saying that in this matter there is absolutely !nothing improper, you have
immediately subjoined: "Be this, however, as it may, I beg you to do me this
kindness, for I am on the point of embarking on a voyage "? For this intimates
!that in your view, at least, there is no impropriety in your request, but that
whatever impropriety may be in it, you nevertheless ask me to do what you ask,
because you are about to go on a voyage. Now what is the force of this
supplementary plea--"I am on the point of embarking on a voyage "? Do you mean that,
unless you were in these circumstances, I ought not to do you service in which
anything improper may be involved ? You think, forsooth, that the impropriety
can be washed away by salt water. But even were it so, my share at least of the
fault would remain unexpiated, because I do not propose undertaking a voyage.'
3. You write, further, that I know how very painful it is to you to be
burdensome to any one, and you solemnly protest that God alone knows how
irresistible is the necessity under which you make the application. When I came to this
statement in your letter, I turned my attention eagerly to learn the nature of
the necessity; and, behold, you bring it before me in these words: "You know
the ways of men, how prone they are to censure, and how any one will be regarded
as illiterate and stupid who, when questions are addressed to him, can return
no answer." On reading this sentence, I felt a burning desire to reply to your
letter; for, by the morbid weakness of mind which this indicated, you pierced my
inmost heart, and forced your way into the midst of my cares, so that I could
not refuse to minister to your relief, so far as God might enable me--not by
devising a solution of your difficulties, but by breaking the connection between
your happiness and the wretched support on which it now insecurely hangs, viz.
the opinions of men, and fastening it to a hold which is firm and immovable. Do
you not, O Dioscorus, remember an ingenious line of your favourite Persius, in
which he not only rebukes your folly, but administers to your boyish head, if
you have only sense to feel it, a deserved correction, restraining your vanity
with the words, "To know is nothing in your eyes unless another knows that you
know" ?' You have, as I said before, read so many Dialogues, and devoted your
attention to so many discussions of philosophers--tell me which of them has
placed the chief end of his actions in the applause of the vulgar, or in the
opinion even of good and wise men ? But you,--and what should make you the more
ashamed, -- you, when on the eve of sailing away from Africa, give evidence of your
having made signal progress, forsooth, in your studies here, when you affirm
that the only reason why you impose the task of expounding Cicero to you upon
bishops, who are already oppressed with work and engrossed with matters of a very
different nature, is, that you fear that if, whoa questioned by men prone to
censure, you cannot answer, you will be regarded by them as illiterate and
stupid. O cause well worthy to occupy the hours which bishops devote to study while
other men sleep!
4. You seem to me to be prompted to mental effort night and day by no
other motive than ambition to be praised by men for your industry and acquisitions
in learning. Although I have ever regarded this as fraught with danger to
persons who are striving after the true and the right, I am now, by your case, more
convinced of the danger than before. For it is due to no [other cause than this
same pernicious habit that you have failed to see by what motive we might be
induced to grant to you what you asked; for as by a perverted judgment you
yourself are urged on to acquire a knowledge of the things about which you put
questions, from no other motive than that you may receive praise or escape censure
from men, you imagine that we, by a like perversity of judgment, are to be
influenced by the considerations alleged in your request. Would that, when we
declare to you that by your writing such things concerning yourself we are moved, not
to grant your request, but to reprove and correct you, we might be able to
effect for you also complete emancipation from the influence of a boon so
worthless and deceitful as the applause of men ! "It is the manner of men," you say,
"to be prone to censure." What then ? "Any one who can make no reply when
questions are addressed to him," you say, "will be regarded as illiterate and stupid."
Behold, then, I ask you a question not concerning something in the books of
Cicero, whose meaning, perchance, his readers may not be able to find, but
concerning your own letter and the meaning of your own words. My question is: Why did
you not say, "Any one who can make no reply will be proved to be illiterate
and stupid," but prefer to say, "He will be regarded as illiterate and stupid "?
Why, if not for this reason, that you yourself already understand well enough
that the person who fails to answer such questions is not in reality, but only
in the opinion of some, illiterate and stupid ? But I warn you that he who fears
to be subjected to the edge of the pruning-hook by the tongues of such men is
a sapless log, and is therefore not only regarded as illiterate and stupid, but
is actually such, and proved to be so.
5. Perhaps you will say, "But seeing that I am not stupid, and that I am
specially earnest in striving not to be stupid, I am reluctant even to be
regarded as stupid." And rightly so; but I ask, What is your motive in this
reluctance ? For in stating why you did not hesitate to burden us with those questions
which you wish to have solved and explained, you said that this was the reason,
and that this was the end, and an end so necessary in your estimation that you
said it was of overwhelming urgency, -- lest, forsooth, if you were posed with
these questions and gave no answer, you should be regarded as illiterate and
stupid by men prone to censure. Now, I ask, is this [jealousy as to your own
reputation'] the whole reason why you beg this from us, or is it because of some
ulterior object that you are unwilling to be thought illiterate and stupid ? If
this be the whole reason, you see, as I think, that this one thing [the praise
of mend is the end pursued by that vehement zeal of yours, by which, as you
admit, a burden is imposed on us. But, from Dioscorus, what can be to us a burden,
except that burden which Dioscorus himself unconsciously bears, -- a burden
which he will begin to feel only when he attempts to rise, --a burden of which I
would fain believe that it is not so bound to him as to defy his efforts to
shake his shoulders free? And this I say not because these questions engage your
studies, but because they are studied by you for such an end. For surely you by
this time feel that this end is trivial, unsubstantial, and light as air. It is
also apt to produce in the soul what may be likened to a dangerous swelling,
beneath which lurk the germs of decay, and by it the eye of the mind becomes
suffused, so that it cannot discern the riches of truth. Believe this, my
Dioscorus, it is true: so shall I enjoy thee in unfeigned longing for truth, and in that
essential dignity of truth by the shadow of which you are turned aside. If I
have failed to convince you of this by the method which I have now used, I know
no other that I can use. For you do not see it; nor can you possibly see it so
long as you build your joys on the crumbling foundation of human applause.
6. If, however, this be not the end aimed at in these actions and by this
zeal of yours, but there is some other ulterior reason for your unwillingness
to be regarded as illiterate and stupid, I ask what that reason is. If it be to
remove impediments to the acquisition of temporal riches, or the obtaining of a
wife, or the grasping of honours, and other things of that kind which are
flowing past with a headlong current, and dragging to the bottom those who fall
into them, it is assuredly not our duty to help you towards that end, nay, rather
we ought to turn you away from it. For we do not so forbid your fixing the aim
of your studies in the precarious possession of renown as to make you leave, as
it were, the waters of the Mincius and enter the Eridanus, into which,
perchance, the Mincius would carry you even without yourself making the change. For
when the vanity of human applause has failed to satisfy the soul, because it
furnishes for its nourishment nothing real and substantial, this same eager desire
compels the mind to go on to something else as more rich and productive; and
if, nevertheless, this also belong to the things which pass away with time, it is
as when one river leads us into another, so that there can be no rest from our
miseries so long as the end aimed at in our discharge of duty is placed in
that which is unstable. We desire, therefore, that in some firm and immutable good
you should fix the home of your most stedfast efforts, and the perfectly
secure resting-place of all your good and honourable activity. Is it, perchance,
your intention, if you succeed by the breath of propitious fame, or even by
spreading 'our sails for its fitful gusts, in reaching that earthly happiness of
which I have spoken, to make it subservient to the acquisition of the other--the
sure and true and satisfying good? But to me it does not seem probable -- and
truth itself forbids the supposition -- that it should be reached either by such a
circuitous way when it is at hand, or at such cost when it is freely given.
7. Perhaps you think that we ought to turn the praise of men itself to
good account as an instrument for making others accessible to counsels regarding
that which is good and useful; and perhaps you are anxious lest, if men regard
you as illiterate and stupid, they think you unworthy to receive their earnest
or patient attention, if you were either exhorting any one to do well, or
reproving the malice and wickedness of an evil-doer. If, in proposing these
questions, you contemplated this righteous and beneficent end, we have certainly been
wronged by your not giving the preference to this in your letter as the
consideration by which we might be moved either to grant willingly what you asked, or,
if declining your request, to do so on the ground of some other cause which
might perchance prevent us, but not on the ground of our being ashamed to accept
the position of serving or even not resisting the aspirations of your vanity.
For, I pray you, consider how much better and more profitable it is for you to
receive from us with far more certainty and with less loss of time those
principles of truth by which you can for yourself refute all that is false, and by so
doing be prevented from cherishing an opinion so false and contemptible as this
-- that you are learned and intelligent if you have studied with a zeal in which
there is more pride than prudence the worn-out errors of many writers of a
bygone age. But this opinion I do not suppose you now to hold, for surely I have
not in vain spoken so long to Dioscorus things so manifestly true; and from
this, as understood, I proceed with my letter.
CHAP. II. --8. Wherefore, seeing that you do not consider a man illiterate and stupid
merely on the ground of ignorance of these things, but only if he be ignorant of
the truth itself, and that, consequently, the opinions of any one who has
written or may have written on these subjects are either true, and therefore are
already held by you, or false, and therefore you may be content not to know them,
and need not be consumed with vain solicitude about knowing the variety of the
opinions of other men under the fear of otherwise remaining illiterate and
stupid, --seeing, I say, that this is the case, let us now, if you please,
consider whether, in the event of other men, who are, as you say, prone to censure,
finding you ignorant of these things, and therefore regarding you, though
falsely, as an illiterate and stupid person, this mistake of theirs ought to have so
much weight with you as to make it not unseemly for you to apply to bishops for
instruction in these things. I propose this on the assumption that we now
believe you] to be seeking this instruction in order that by it[ you may be helped
in recommending the truth to men, and in reclaiming men who, if they sup- I
posed you to be illiterate and stupid in regard to [ those books of Cicero, would
regard you as a[ person from whom they considered it unworthy of them to receive
any useful or profitable instruction. Believe me, you are under a mistake.
9. For, in the first place, I do not at all see that, in the countries in
which you are so afraid of being esteemed deficient in education and acuteness,
there are any persons who will ask you a single question about these matters.
Both in this country, to which you came to learn these things, and at Rome, you
know by experience how little they are esteemed, and that, in consequence,
they are neither taught nor learned; and throughout all Africa, so far are you
from being troubled by any such questioner, that you cannot find any one who will
be troubled with your questions, and are compelled by the dearth of such
persons to send your questions to bishops to be solved by them: as if, indeed, these
bishops, although in their youth, under the influence of the same ardour--let
me rather say error--which carries you away, they were at pains to learn these
things as matters of great moment, permitted them still to remain in memory now
that their heads are white with age and they are burdened with the
responsibilities of episcopal office; or as if, supposing them to desire to retain these
things in memory, greater and graver cares would not in spite of their desire
banish them from their hearts; or as if, in the event of some of these things
lingering in recollection by the force of long habit, they would not wish rather to
bury in utter oblivion what was] thus remembered, than to answer senseless
questions at a time when, even amidst the comparative leisure enjoyed in the
schools and in the lecture-rooms of rhetoricians, they seem to have so lost both
voice and vigour that, in order to have instruction imparted concerning them, it
is deemed necessary to send from Carthage to Hippo,- a place in which all such
things are so unwonted and so wholly foreign, that if, in taking the trouble of
writing an answer to your question, I wished to look at any passage to discover
the order of thought in the context preceding or following the words requiring
exposition, I would be utterly unable to find a manuscript of the works of
Cicero. However, these teachers of rhetoric in Carthage who have failed to satisfy
you in this matter are not only not blamed, but, on the contrary, commended by
me, if, as I suppose, they have not forgotten that the scene of these contests
was wont to be, not the Roman forum, but the Greek gymnasia. But when you have
applied your mind to these gymnasia, and have found even them to be in such
things bare and cold, the church of the Christians of Hippo occurred to you as a
place where you might lay down your cares, because the bishop now occupying
that see at one time took fees for instructing boys in these things. But, on the
one hand, I do not wish you to be still a boy, and, on the other hand, it is not
becoming for me, either for a fee or as a favour, to be dealing now in
childish things. This, therefore, being the case-seeing, that is to say, that these
two great cities, Rome and Carthage, the living centres of Latin literature,
neither try your patience by asking you such questions as you speak of, nor care
patiently to listen to you when you propound them, I am amazed in a degree beyond
all expression that a young man of your good sense should be afraid lest you
should be afflicted with any questioner on these subjects in the cities of
Greece and of the East. You are much more likely to hear jackdaws' in Africa than
this manner of conversation in those lands.
10. Suppose, however, in the next place, that I am wrong, and that
perchance some one should arise putting questions like these,- a phenomenon the more
unwelcome because in those parts peculiarly absurd,- are you not much more
afraid lest far more readily men arise who, being Greeks, and finding you settled in
Greece, and acquainted with the Greek language as your mother tongue, may ask
you some things in the original works of their philosophers which Cicero may
not have put into his treatises? If this happen, what reply will you make? Will
you say that you preferred to learn these things from the books of Latin rather
than of Greek authors ? By such an answer you will, in the first place, put an
affront upon Greece; and you know how men of. that nation resent this. And in
the next place, they being now wounded and angry, how readily will you find what
you are too anxious to avoid, that they will count you on the one hand stupid,
because you preferred to learn the opinions of the Greek philosophers, or,
more properly speaking, some isolated and scattered tenets of their philosophy, in
Latin dialogues, rather than to study the complete and connected system of
their opinions in the Greek originals,and, on the other hand, illiterate, because,
although ignorant of so many things written in your language, you have
unsuccessfully laboured to gather some of them together from writings in a foreign
tongue. Or will you perhaps reply that you did not despise the Greek writings on
these subjects, but that you devoted your attention first to the study of Latin
works, and now, proficient in these, are beginning to inquire after Greek
learning? If this does not make you blush, to confess that you, being a Greek, have
in your boyhood learned Latin, and are now, like a man of some foreign nation,'
desirous of studying Greek literature, surely you will not blush to own that
in the department of Latin literature you are ignorant of some things, of which
you may perceive how many versed in Latin learning are equally ignorant, if you
will only consider that, although living in the midst of so many learned men
in Carthage, you assure me that it is under the pressure of necessity that you
impose this burden on me.
11. Finally, suppose that you, being asked all those questions which you
have submitted to me, have been able to answer them all. Behold! you are now
spoken of as most learned and most acute; behold! now this insignificant breath of
Greek laudation raises you to heaven. Be it yours now to remember your
responsibilities and the end for which you coveted these praises, namely, that to men
who have been easily won to admire you by these trifles, and who are now
hanging most affectionately and eagerly on your lips, you may impart some truly
important and wholesome instruction; and I should like to know whether you possess,
and can rightly impart to others, that which is truly most important and
wholesome. For it is absurd if, after learning many unnecessary things with a view to
preparing the ears of men to receive what is necessary, you be found not to
possess those necessary things for the reception of which you have by these
unnecessary things prepared the way; it is absurd if, while busying yourself with
learning things by which you may win men's attention, you refuse to learn that
which may be poured into their minds when their attention is secured. But if you
reply that you have already learned this, and say that the truth supremely
necessary is Christian doctrine, which I know that you esteem above all other
things, placing in it alone your hope of everlasting salvation, then surely this
does not demand a knowledge of the Dialogues of Cicero, and a collection of the
beggarly and divided opinions of other men, in order to your persuading men to
give it a hearing. Let your character and manner of life command the attention of
those who are to receive any such teaching from you. I would not have you open
the way for teaching truth by first teaching what . must be afterwards
unlearned.
12. For if the knowledge of the discordant and mutually contradictory
opinions of others is of any service to him who would obtain an en-'trance for
Christian truth in overthrowing the opposition of error, it is useful only in the
way i of preventing the assailant of the truth from i being at liberty to fix
his eye solely on the work of controverting your tenets, while carefully hiding
his own from view. For the knowledge of the truth is of itself sufficient both
to detect and 'to subvert all errors, even those which may not have been heard
before, if only they are brought ' forward. If, however, in order to secure not
only the demolition of open errors, but also the rooting out of those which
lurk in darkness, it is necessary for you to be acquainted with the erroneous
opinions which others have advanced, let both eye and ear be wakeful, I beseech
you, --look well and listen well whether any of our assailants bring forward a
single argument from Anaximenes and from Anaxagoras, when, though the Stoic and
Epicurean philosophies were more recent and taught largely, even their ashes are
not so warm as that a single spark can be struck out from them against the
Christian faith. The i din which resounds in the battle-field of controversy now
comes from innumerable small companies and cliques of sectaries, some of them
easily discomfited, others presuming to make bold resistance,- such as the
partisans of Donatus, Maximian, and Manichaeus here, or the unruly herds of Arians,
Eunomians, Macedonians, and Cataphrygians and other pests which abound in the
countries to which you are on your way. If you shrink from the task of acquainting
yourself with the errors of all these sects, what occasion have we in
defending the Christian religion to inquire after the tenets of Anaximenes, and with
idle curiosity to awaken anew controversies which have slept for ages, when
already the cavillings and arguments even of some of the heretics who claimed the
glory of the Christian name, such as the Marcionites and the Sabellians, and
man), more, have been put to silence? Nevertheless, if it be necessary, as I have
said, to know beforehand some of the opinions which war against the truth, and
become thoroughly conversant with these, it is our i duty to give a place in
such study to the heretics who call themselves Christians, much rather than to
Anaxagoras and Democritus.
CHAP. III.- 13. Again, whoever may put to you the questions which you have propounded to
us, let him understand that, under the guidance of deeper erudition and
greater wisdom, you are ignorant of things like these. For if Themistocles regarded
it as a small matter that he was looked upon as imperfectly educated when he had
declined to play on the lyre at a banquet, and at the same time, when, after
he had confessed ignorance of this accomplishment, one said, "What, then, do you
know?" gave as his reply, "The art of making a small republic great "--are you
to hesitate about admitting ignorance in trifles like these, when it is in
your power to answer any one who may ask, "What, then, do you know ? "--" The
secret by which without such knowledge a man may be blessed "? And if you do not
yet possess this secret, you act in searching into those other matters with as
blind perversity as if, when labouring under some dangerous disease of the body,
you eagerly sought after dainties in food and finery in dress, instead of
physic and physicians. For this attainment ought not to be put off upon any pretext
whatever, and no other knowledge ought, especially in our age, to receive a
prior place in your studies. And now see how easily you may have this knowledge if
you desire it. He who inquires how he may attain a blessed life is assuredly
inquiring after nothing else than this: where is the highest good? in other
words, wherein resides man's supreme good, not according to the perverted and hasty
opinions of men, but according to the sure and immovable truth? Now its
residence is not found by any one except in the body, or in the mind, or on God, or
in two of these, or in the three combined. If, then, you have learned that
neither the supreme good nor any part whatever of the Supreme good is in the body,
the remaining alternatives are, that it is in the mind, or in God, or in both
combined. And if now you have also learned that what is true of the body in this
respect is equally true of the mind, what now remains but God Himself as the
One in whom resides man's supreme good ? -- not that' there are no other goods,
but that good is called the supreme good to which all others are related. For
every one is blessed when he enjoys that for the sake of which he desires to have
all other things, seeing that it is loved for its own sake, and not on account
of something else. And the supreme good is said to be there because at this
point nothing is found towards l which the supreme good can go forth, or to which
it is related. In it is the resting-place of desire; in it is assured
fruition; in it the most tranquil satisfaction of a will morally perfect.
14. Give me a man who sees at once that the body is not the good of the
mind, but that the mind is rather the good of the body: with such a man we would,
of course, forbear from inquiring whether the highest good of which we speak,
or any part of it, is in the body. For that the mind is better than the body is
a truth which it would be utter folly to deny. Equally absurd would it be to
deny that that which gives a happy life, or any part of a happy life, is better
than that which receives the boon. The mind, therefore, does not receive from
the body either the supreme good or any part of the supreme good. ' Men who do
not see this have been blinded by that sweetness of carnal pleasures which they
do ' not discern to be a consequence of imperfect I health Now, perfect health
of body shall be the consummation of the immortality of the whole man. For God
has endowed the soul with a nature so powerful, that from that consummate
fulness of joy which is promised to the saints in the end of time, some portion
overflows also upon the lower part of our nature, the body,- not the blessedness
which is proper to the part which enjoys and understands, but the plenitude of
health, that is, the vigour of incorruption. Men who, as I have said, do not see
this war with each other in unsatisfactory debates, each maintaining the view
which may please his own fancy, but all placing the supreme good of man in the
body, and so stir up crowds of disorderly carnal minds, of whom the Epicureans
have flourished in pre-eminent estimation with the unlearned multitude.
15. Give me a man who sees at once, moreover, that when the mind is happy,
it is happy not by good which belongs to itself, else it would never be
unhappy: and with such a man we would, of course, forbear from inquiring whether that
highest and, so to speak, bliss-bestowing good, or any part of it, is in the
mind. For when the mind is elated with joy in itself, as if in good which
belongs to itself, it is proud. But when the mind perceives itself to be mutable,a
fact which may be learned from this, even though nothing else proved it, that the
mind from being foolish may be made wise,- and apprehends that wisdom is
unchangeable, it must at the same time apprehend that wisdom is superior to its own
nature, and that it finds more abundant and abiding joy in the communications
and light of wisdom than in itself. Thus desisting and subsiding from boasting
and self-conceit, it strives to cling to God, and to be recruited and reformed
by Him who is unchangeable; whom it now understands to be the Author not only of
every species of all things with which it comes in contact, either by the
bodily senses or by intellectual faculties, but also of even the very capacity of
taking form before any form has been taken, since the formless is defined to be
that which can receive a form. Therefore it feels its own instability more,
just in proportion as it clings less to God, whose being is perfect: it discerns
also that the perfection of His being is consummate because He is immutable, and
therefore neither gains nor loses, but that in itself every change by which it
gains capacity for perfect clinging to God is advantageous, but every change
by which it loses is pernicious, and further, that all loss tends towards
destruction; and although it is not manifest whether any thing is ultimately
destroyed, it is manifest to every one that the loss brings destruction so far that the
object no longer is what it was. Whence the mind infers that the one reason
why things suffer loss, or are liable to suffer loss, is, that they were made out
of nothing; so that their property of being, and of permanence, and the
arrangement whereby each finds even according to its imperfections its own place in
the complex whole, all depend on the goodness and omnipotence of Him whose being
is perfect,' and who is the Creator able to make out of nothing not only
something, but something great; and that the first sin, i.e. the first voluntary
loss, is rejoicing in its own power: for it rejoices in something less than would
be the[ source of its joy if it rejoiced in the power of[ God, which is
unquestionably greater. Not perceiving this, and looking only to the capacities of the
human mind, and the great beauty of its achievements in word and deed, some,
who would have been ashamed to place man's supreme good in the body, have, by
placing it in the mind, assigned to it unquestionably a lower sphere than that
assigned to it by unsophisticated reason. Among Greek philosophers who hold these
views, the chief place both in number of adherents and in subtlety of
disputation has been held by the Stoics, who have, however, in consequence of their
opinion that in nature everything is material, succeeded in turning the mind
rather from carnal than material objects.
16. Among those, again, who say that our supreme and only good is to enjoy
God, by whom both we ourselves and all things were made, the most eminent have
been the Platonists, who not unreasonably judged it to belong to their duty to
confute the Stoics and Epicureans--the latter especially, and almost
exclusively. The Academic School is identical with the Platonists, as is shown plainly
enough by the links of unbroken succession connecting the schools. For if you
ask who was the predecessor of Arcesilas, the first who, announcing no doctrine
of his own, set himself to the one work of refuting the Stoics and Epicureans,
you will find that it was Polemo; ask who preceded Polemo, it was Xenocrates;
but Xenocrates was Plato's disciple, and by him appointed his successor in the
academy. Wherefore, as to this question concerning the supreme good, if we set
aside the representatives of conflicting views, and consider the abstract
question, you find at once that two errors confront each other as diametrically
opposed --the one declaring the body, and the other declaring the mind to be the seat
of the supreme good of men. You find also that truly enlightened reason, by
which God is perceived to be our supreme good, is opposed to both of these
errors, but does not impart the knowledge of what is true until it has first made men
unlearn what is false. If now you consider the question in connection with the
advocates of different views, you will find the Epicureans and Stoics most
keenly contending with each other, and the Platonists, on the other hand,
endeavouring to decide the controversy between them, concealing the truth which they
held, and devoting themselves only to prove and overthrow the vain confidence
with which the others adhered to error.
17. It was not in the power of the Platonists, however, to be so efficient
in supporting the side of reason enlightened by truth, as the others were in
supporting their own errors. For from them all there was then withheld that
example of divine humility, which, in the fullness of time,' was furnished by our
Lord Jesus Christ,- that one example before which, even in the mind of the most
headstrong and arrogant, all pride bends, breaks, and dies. And therefore the
Platonists, not being able by their authority to lead the mass of mankind,
blinded by love of earthly things, into faith in things invisible, --although they
saw them moved, especially by the arguments of the Epicureans, not only to drink
freely the cup of the pleasures of the body to which they were naturally
inclined, but even to plead for these, affirming that they constitute man's highest
good; although, moreover, they saw that those who were moved to abstinence from
these pleasures by the praise of virtue found it easier to regard pleasure as
having its true seat in the soul, whence the good actions, concerning which
they were able, in some measure, to form an opinion, proceeded,- at the same time,
saw that if they attempted to introduce into the minds of men the notion of
something divine and supremely immutable, which cannot be reached by any one of
the bodily senses, but is apprehensible only by reason, which, nevertheless,
surpasses in its nature the mind itself, and were to teach that this is God, set
before the human soul to be enjoyed by it when purged from all stains of human
desires, [in whom alone every longing after happiness finds rest, and in whom
alone we ought to find the consummation of all good,--men would not understand
them, and would much more readily award the palm to their antagonists, whether
Epicureans or Stoics; the result of which would be a thing most disastrous to the
human race, namely, that the doctrine, which is true and profitable, would
become sullied by the contempt of the uneducated masses. So much in regard to
Ethical questions.
18. As to Physics, if the Platonists taught that the originating cause of
all natures is immaterial wisdom, and if, on the other hand, the rival sects of
philosophers never got above material things, while the beginning of all
things was attributed by some to atoms, by others to the four elements, in which
fire was of special power in the construction of all things, --who could fail to
see to which opinion a favourable verdict would be given, when the great mass of
unthinking men are enthralled by material things, and can in no wise
comprehend that an immaterial power could form the universe?
19. The department of dialectic questions remains to be discussed; for, as
you are aware, all questions in the pursuit of wisdom are classified under
three heads, --Ethics, Physics, and Dialectics. When, therefore, the Epicureans
said that the senses are never deceived, and, though the Stoics admitted that
they sometimes are mistaken, both placed in the senses the standard by which truth
is to be comprehended, who would listen to the Platonists when both of these
sects opposed them? Who would look upon them as entitled to be esteemed men at
all, and much less wise men, if, without hesitation or qualification, they
affirmed not only that there is something which cannot be discerned by touch, or
smell, or taste, or hearing, or sight, and which cannot be conceived of by any
image borrowed from the things with which the senses acquaint us, but that this
alone truly exists, and is alone capable of being perceived, because it is alone
unchangeable and eternal, but is perceived only[ by reason, the faculty whereby
alone truth, in so: far as it can be discovered by us, is found?
20. Seeing, therefore, that the Platonists held opinions which they could
not impart to men: enthralled by the flesh; seeing also that they were not of
such authority among the common people as to persuade them to accept what they
ought to believe until the mind should be trained to that condition in which
these things can be understood,- they chose to hide their own opinions, and to
content themselves with arguing against those who, although they affirmed that the
discovery of truth is made through the senses of the body, boasted that they
had found the truth. And truly, what occasion have we to inquire as to the
nature of' their teaching? We know that it was not divine, nor invested with any
divine authority. But this one fact merits our attention, that whereas Plato is in
many ways most clearly proved by Cicero to have placed both the supreme good
and the causes of things, and the certainty of the processes of reason, in
Wisdom, not human, but divine, whence in some way the light of human wisdom is
derived -- in Wisdom which is wholly immutable, and in Truth always consistent with
itself; and whereas we also learn from Cicero that the followers of Plato
laboured to overthrow the philosophers known as Epicureans and Stoics, who placed
the supreme good, the causes of things, and the certainty of the processes of
reason, in the nature either of body or of mind, -- the controversy had continued
rolling on with successive centuries, so that even at the commencement of the
Christian era, when the faith of things invisible and eternal was with saving
power preached by means of visible miracles to men, who could neither see nor
imagine anything beyond things material, these same Epicureans and Stoics are
found in the Acts of the Apostles to have opposed themselves to the blessed Apostle
Paul, who was beginning to scatter the seeds of that faith among the Gentiles.
21. By which thing it seems to me to be sufficiently proved that the
errors of the Gentiles in ethics, physics, and the mode of seeking truth, errors
many and manifold, but conspicuously represented in these two schools of
philosophy, continued even down to the Christian era, notwithstanding the fact that the
learned assailed them most vehemently, and employed both remarkable skill and
abundant labour in subverting them. Yet these errors we see in our time to have
been already so completely silenced, that now in our schools of rhetoric the
question what their opinions were is scarcely ever mentioned; and these
controversies have been now so completely eradicated or suppressed in even the Greek
gymnasia, notably fond of discussion, that whenever now any school of error lifts
up its head against the truth, i.e. against the Church of Christ, it does not
venture to leap into the arena except under the shield of the Christian name.
Whence it is obvious that the Platonist school of philosophers felt it necessary,
having changed those few things in their opinions which Christian teaching
condemned, to submit with pious homage to Christ, the only King who is invincible,
and to apprehend the Incarnate Word of God, at whose command the truth which
they had even feared to publish was immediately believed.
22. To Him, my Dioscorus, I desire you to submit yourself with unreserved
piety, and I wish you to prepare for yourself no other way of seizing and
holding the truth than that which has been prepared by Him who, as God, saw the
weakness of our goings. In that way the first part is humility; the second,
humility; the third, humility: and this I would continue to repeat as often as you
might ask direction, not that there are no other instructions which may be given,
but because, unless humility precede, accompany, and follow every good action
which we perform, being at once the object which we keep before our eyes, the
support to which we cling, and the monitor by which we are restrained, pride
wrests wholly from our hand any good work on which we are congratulating
ourselves.' All other vices are to be apprehended when we are doing wrong; but pride is
to be feared even when we do right actions, test those things which are done in
a praiseworthy manner be spoiled by the desire for praise itself. Wherefore, as
that most illustrious orator, on being asked what seemed to him the first
thing to be observed in the art of eloquence, is said to have replied, Delivery;
and when he was asked what was the second thing, replied again, Delivery; and
when asked what was the third thing, still gave no other reply than this,
Delivery; so if you were to ask me, however often you might repeat the question, what
are the instructions of the Christian religion, I would be disposed to answer
always and only, "Humility," although, perchance, necessity might constrain me to
speak also of other things.
CHAP. IV. -- 23. To this most wholesome humility, in which our Lord Jesus Christ is our
teacher --having submitted to humiliation that He might instruct us in this-
to this humility, I say, the most formidable adversary is a certain kind of most
unenlightened knowledge, if I may so call it, in which we congratulate
ourselves on knowing what may have been the views of Anaximenes, Anaxagoras,
Pythagoras, Democritus, and others of the same kind, imagining that by this we become
learned men and scholars, although such attainments are far removed from true
learning and erudition. For the man who has learned that God is not extended or
diffused through space, either finite or infinite, so as to be greater in one
part and less in another, but that He is wholly present everywhere, as the Truth
is, of which no one in his senses will affirm that it is partly in one place,
partly in another --and the Truth is God Himself--such a man will not be moved by
the opinions of any philosopher soever who believes [like Anaximenes] that the
infinite air around us is the true God. What matters it to such a man though
he be ignorant what bodily form they speak of, since they speak of a form which
is bounded on all sides? What matters it to him whether it was only as an
Academician, and merely for the purpose of confuting Anaximenes, who had said that
God is a material existence, -- for air is material, -- that Cicero objected
that God must have form and beauty?2 or himself perceived that truth has
immaterial form and beauty, by which the mind itself is moulded, and by which we judge
all the deeds of the wise man to be beautiful, and therefore affirmed that God
must be of the most perfect beauty, not merely for the purpose of confuting an
antagonist, but with profound [insight into the fact that nothing is more
beautiful than truth itself, which is cognisable by the understanding alone, and is
immutable ? Moreover, as to the opinion of Anaximenes, who held that the air is
generated, and at the same time believed it to be God, it does not in the least
move the man who understands that, since the air is certainly not God, there
is no likeness between the manner in which the air is generated, that is to say,
produced by some cause, and the manner, understood by none except through
divine inspiration, in which He was begotten who is the Word of God, God with God.
Moreover, who does not see that even in regard to material things he speaks
most foolishly in affirming that air is generated, and is at the same time God,
while he refuses to give the name of God to that by which the air has been
generated, -- for it is impossible that it could be generated by no power ? Yet once
more, his saying that the air is always in motion will have no disturbing
influence as proof that the air is God upon the man who knows that all movements of
body are of a lower order than movements of the soul, but that even the
movements of the soul are infinitely slow compared with His who is supreme and
immutable Wisdom.
24. In like manner, if Anaxagoras or any other affirm that the mind is
essential truth and wisdom? what call have I to debate with a man about a word?
For it is manifest that mind gives being to the order and mode of all things, and
that it may be suitably called infinite with respect not to its extension in
space, but to its power, the range of which transcends all human thought. Nor
[shall I dispute his assertion] that this essential wisdom is formless; for this
is a property of material things, that whatever bodies are infinite are also
formless. Cicero, however, from his desire to confute such opinions, as I
suppose, in contending with adversaries who believed in nothing immaterial, denies
that anything can be annexed to that which is infinite, because in things material
there must be a boundary at the part to which anything is annexed. Therefore
he says that Anaxagoras "did not see that motion joined to sensation and to it"
(i.e. linked to it in unbroken connection) "is impossible in the infinite
"(that is, m a substance which is infinite), as if treating of material substances,
to which nothing can be joined except at their boundaries. Moreover, in the
succeeding words-" and that sensation of which the whole system of nature is not
sensible when struck is an impossibility .... Cicero speaks as if Anaxagoras had
said that mind-to which he ascribed the power of ordering and fashioning all
things -- had sensation such as the soul has by means of the body. For it is
manifest that the whole soul has sensation when it feels anything by means of the
body; for whatever is perceived by sensation is not concealed from the whole
soul. Now, Cicero's design in saying that the whole system of nature must be
conscious of every sensation was, that he might, as it were, take from the
philosopher that mind which he affirms to be infinite. For how does: the whole of
nature experience sensation if it be infinite? Bodily sensation begins at some
point, and does not pervade the whole of any substance unless it be one in which it
can reach an end; but this, of course, cannot be said of that which is
infinite. Anaxagoras, however had not said anything about bodily sensation. The word
"whole," moreover, is used differently when we speak of that which is immaterial,
because it is understood to be without boundaries in space, so that it may be
spoken of as a whole and at the same time as infinite --the former because of
its completeness, the latter because of its not being limited by boundaries in
space.
25. "Furthermore," says Cicero, "if he will affirm that the mind itself
is, so to speak, some kind of animal, there must be some principle from within
from which it receives the name' animal,' "-- so that mind, according to
Anaxagoras, is a kind of body, and has within it an animating, principle, because of
which it is called "animal." Observe how he speaks in language which we are
accustomed to apply to things corporeal,animals being in the ordinary sense of the
word visible substances,- adapting himself, as I suppose, to the blunted
perceptions of those against whom he argues; and yet he has uttered a thing which, if
they could awake to perceive it, might suffice to teach them that everything
which presents itself to our minds as a living body must be thought of not as
itself a soul, but as an animal having a soul. For having said, "There must be
something within from which it receives the name animal," he adds, "But what is
deeper within than mind ?" The mind, therefore, cannot have any inner soul, by
possessing which it is an animal; for it is itself that which is inner! most. If,
then, it is an animal, let it have some i external body in relation to which
it may be within; for this is what he means by saying, "It is therefore girt
round by an exterior body," as if Anaxagoras had said that mind cannot be
otherwise than as belonging to some animal. And yet Anaxagoras held the opinion that
essential supreme Wisdom is mind, although it is not the peculiar property of any
living being, so to speak, since Truth is near to all souls alike that are
able to enjoy it. Observe, therefore, how wittily he concludes the argument:
"Since this is not the opinion of Anaxagoras" (i.e. seeing that he does not hold
that that mind which he calls God is girt about with an external body, through its
relation to which it could be an animal), "we must say that mind pure and
simple, without the addition of anything" (i.e. of any body) "through which it may
exercise sensation, seems to be beyond the range and conceptions of our
intelligence."2
26. Nothing is more certain than that this lies beyond the range and
conception of the intelligence of Stoics and Epicureans, who cannot think of and,
thing which is not material. But by the word "our" intelligence he means "human"
intelligence; and he very properly does not say, "it lies beyond our
intelligence," but "it seems to lie beyond." For their opinion is, that this lies beyond
the understanding of all men, and therefore they think that nothing of the kind
can be. But there are some whose intelligence apprehends, in so far as this is
given to man, the fact that there is pure and simple Wisdom and Truth, which
is the peculiar property of no living being, but which imparts wisdom and truth
to all souls alike which are susceptible of its influence. If Anaxagoras
perceived the existence of this supreme Wisdom, and apprehended it to be God, and
called it Mind, it is not by the mere name of this philosopher-with whom, on
account of his place in the remote antiquity of erudition, all raw recruits in
literature s (to adopt a military phrase) delight to boast an acquaintance- that we
are made learned and wise; nor is it even by our having the knowledge through
which he knew this truth. For truth ought to be dear to me not merely because it
was not unknown to Anaxagoras, but because, even though none of these
philosophers had known it, it is the truth.
27. If, therefore, it is unbecoming for us to be elated either by the
knowledge of the man who peradventure apprehended the truth, by which knowledge we
obtain, as it were, the appearance of learning, or even by the solid possession
of the truth itself, whereby we obtain real acquisitions in learning, how much
less can the names and tenets of those men who were in error assist us in
Christian learning and in making known things obscure ? For if we be men, it would
be more fitting that we should grieve on account of the errors into which so
many famous men fell, if we happen to hear of them, than that we should
studiously investigate them, in order that, among men who are ignorant of them, we may
enjoy the gratification of a most contemptible conceit of knowledge. For how
much better would it be that I should never have heard the name of Democritus,
than that I should now with sorrow ponder the fact that a man was highly esteemed
in his own age who thought that the gods were images which emanated from solid
bodies, but were not solid themselves; and that these, circling this way and
that way by their independent motion, and gliding into the minds of men, make the
divine power enter into the region of their thoughts, although, certainly,
that body from which the image emanated may be rightly judged to surpass the image
in excellence and proportion, as it surpasses it in solidity. Hence his
opinion wavered, as they say, and oscillated, so that sometimes he said that the
deity was some kind of nature from which images emanate, and which nevertheless can
be thought of only by means of those images which he pours forth and sends
out, that is, which from that nature (which he considered to be something material
and eternal, and on this very account divine) were borne as by a kind of
evaporation or continuous emanation, and came and entered into our · minds, so that
we could form the thought of a god or gods. For these philosophers conceive of
no cause of thought in our minds, except when images from those bodies which
are the object of our thoughts come and enter into our! minds; as if, forsooth,
there were not many things, yea, more than we can number, which, without any
material form, and yet intelligible, are apprehended by those who know how to
apprehend such things. Take as an example essential Wisdom and Truth, of which if
they can frame no idea, I wonder why they dispute concerning it at all; if,
however, they do frame some idea of it in thought, I wish they would tell me either
from what body the image of truth comes into their minds, or of what kind it
is.
28. Democritus, however, is said to differ here also in his doctrine on
physics from Epicurus; for he holds that there is in the concourse of atoms a
certain vital and breathing power, by which power (I believe) he affirms that the
images themselves (not all images of all things, but images of the gods) are
endued with divine attributes, and that the first beginnings of the mind are in
those universal elements to which he ascribed divinity, and that the images
possess life, inasmuch as they are wont either to benefit or to hurt us. Epicurus,
however, does not assume anything in the first beginnings of things but atoms,
that is, certain corpuscles, so minute that they cannot be divided or perceived
either by sight or by touch; and his doctrine is, that by the fortuitous
concourse (clashing) of these atoms, existence is given both to innumerable worlds
and to living things, and to the souls which animate them, and to the gods whom,
in human form, he has located, not in any world, but outside of the worlds,
and in the spaces which separate them; and he will not allow of any object of
thought beyond things material. But in order to these becoming an object of
thought, he says that from those things which he represents as formed of atoms,
images more subtle than those which come to our eyes flow down and enter into the
mind. For according to him, the cause of our seeing is to be found in certain
images so huge that they embrace the whole outer world. But I suppose that you
already understand their opinions regarding these images.
29. I wonder that Democritus was not convinced of the error of his
philosophy even by this fact, that such huge images coming into our minds, which are
so small {,if being, as they affirm, material, the soul is confined within the
body's dimensions), could not possibly, in the entirety of their size, come into
contact with it. For when a small body is brought into contact with a large
one, it cannot in any wise be touched at the same moment by all points of the
larger. How, then, are these images at the same moment in their whole extent
objects of thought, if they become objects of thought only in so far as, coming and
entering into the mind, they touch it, seeing that they cannot in their whole
extent either find entrance into so small a body or come in contact with so
small a mind ? Bear in mind, of course, that I am speaking now after their manner;
for I do not hold the mind to be such as they affirm. It is true that Epicurus
alone can be assailed with this argument, if Democritus holds that the mind is
immaterial; but we may ask him in turn why he did not perceive that it is at
once unnecessary and impossible for the mind, being immaterial, to think through
the approach and contact of material images. Both philosophers alike are
certainly confuted by the facts of vision; for images so great cannot possibly touch
in their entirety eyes so small.
30. Moreover, when the question is put to them, how it comes that one
image is seen of a body from which images emanate in countless multitudes, their
answer is, that just because the images are emanating and passing in such
multitudes, the effect produced by their being crowded and massed together is, that
out of the many one is seen. The absurdity of this Cicero exposes by saying that
their deity cannot be thought of as eternal, for this very reason, that he is
thought of through images which are in countless multitudes flowing forth and
passing away. And when they say that the forms of the gods are rendered eternal
by the innumerable hosts of atoms supplying constant reinforcements, so that
other corpuscles immediately take the place of those which depart from the divine
substance, and by the same succession prevent the nature of the gods from being
dissolved, Cicero replies, "On this ground all things would be eternal as well
as the gods," since there is nothing which has not the same boundless store of
atoms by which it may repair its perpetual decays. Again, he asks how their
god could be otherwise than afraid of coming to destruction, seeing that he is
without a moment's intermission beaten and shaken by an unceasing incursion of
atoms,beaten, inasmuch as he is struck by atoms rushing upon him, and shaken,
inasmuch as he is penetrated by atoms rushing through him. Nay, more; seeing that
from himself there emanate continually images (of which we have said enough),
what good ground can he have for persuasion of his own immortality?'
31. As to all these ravings of the men who entertain such opinions, it is
especially deplorable that the mere statement of them does not suffice to
secure their rejection without any one controverting them in discussion; instead of,
which, the minds of men most gifted with acuteness have accepted the task of
copiously refuting opinions which, as soon as they were enunciated Ought to have
been rejected with contempt even by the slowest intellects. For even granting
that there are atoms, and that these strike and shake each other by clashing
together as chance may guide them, is it lawful for us to grant also that atoms
thus meeting in fortuitous concourse can so make anything as to fashion its
distinctive forms, determine its figure, polish its surface, enliven it with color,
or quicken it by imparting to it a spirit? -- all which things every one sees
to be accomplished in no other way than by the providence of God, if only he
loves to see with the mind rather than with the eye alone, and asks this faculty
of intelligent perception from the Author of his being. Nay, more; we are not
at liberty even to grant the existence of atoms themselves, for, without
discussing the subtle theories of the learned as to the divisibility of matter,
observe how easily the absurdity of atoms may be proved from their own opinions. For
they, as is well known, affirm that there is nothing else in nature but bodies
and empty space, and the accidents of these, by which I believe that they mean
motion and striking, and the forms which result from these. Let them tell us,
then, under which category they reckon the images which they suppose to flow
from the more solid bodies, but which, if indeed they are bodies, possess so
little solidity that they are not discernible except by their contact with the eyes
when we see them, and with the mind when we think of them. For the opinion of
these philosophers is, that these images can proceed from the material object
and , come to the eyes or to the mind, which, nevertheless, they affirm to be
material. Now, I ask, Ho these images flow from atoms themselves ? If they do, how
can these be atoms from which some bodily particles are in this process
separated? If they do not, either something can be the object of thought without such
images, which they vehemently deny, or we ask, whence have they acquired a
knowledge of atoms, seeing that they can in nowise become objects of thought to
us? But I blush to have even thus far refuted these opinions, although they did
not blush to hold them. When, however, I consider that they have even dared to
defend them, I blush not on their account, but for the race of mankind itself
whose ears could tolerate such nonsense.
CHAP. V.--32. Wherefore, seeing that the minds of men are, through the pollution of
sin and the lust of the flesh, so blinded that even these monstrous errors could
waste in discussion concerning them the leisure of learned men, will you,
Dioscorus, or will any man of an servant mind, hesitate to affirm that in no way
could better provision have been made for the pursuit of truth by mankind than
that a Man, assumed into ineffable and miraculous union by the Truth Himself, and
being the manifestation of His Person on the earth, should by perfect .teaching
and divine acts move men to saving faith in that which could not as yet be
intellectually apprehended? To the glory of Him who has done this we give our
service; and we exhort you to believe immoveably and stedfastly in Him through whom
it has come ta pass that not a select few, but whole peoples, unable to
discern these things by reason, do accept them in faith, until, upheld by instruction
in saving truth, they escape from these perplexities into the' atmosphere of
perfectly pure and simple truth. It becomes us, moreover, to field submission to
His authority all the more unreservedly, when we see that in our day no error
dares to lift up itself to rally round it the uninstructed crowd without
seeking the shelter of the Christian name, and that of all who, belonging to an
earlier age, now remain outside of the Christian name, those alone continue to have
in their obscure assemblies a considerable attendance who retain the Scriptures
by which, however they may pretend not to see or understand it, the Lord Jesus
Christ Himself was prophetically announced. Moreover, those who, though they
are not within the Catholic unity and communion, boast of the name of
Christians, are compelled to oppose them that believe, and presume' to mislead the
ignorant by a pretence of appealing to reason, since the Lord came with this remedy
above all others, that He enjoined on the nations the duty of faith. But they
are compelled, as I have said, to adopt this policy because they feel themselves
most miserably overthrown if their authority is compared with the Catholic
authority. They attempt, accordingly, to prevail against the firmly-settled
authority of the immoveable Church by the name and the promises of a pretended appeal
to reason This kind of effrontery is, we may, say, characteristic of all
heretics. But He who is the most merciful Lord of faith has both secured the Church
in the citadel of authority by most famous oecumenical Councils and the
Apostolic sees themselves, and furnished her with the abundant armour of equally
invincible reason by means of a few men of pious erudition and unfeigned
spirituality. The perfection of method in training disciples is, that those who are weak be
encouraged to the utmost to enter the citadel of authority, in order that when
they have been safely placed.. there, the conflict necessary for their defence
may be maintained with the most strenuous use of reason.
33. The Platonists, however, who, amidst the errors of false philosophies
assailing them at that time on all sides, rather concealed their own doctrine
to be searched for than brought it into the light to be vilified, as they had no
divine personage to command faith, began to exhibit and unfold the doctrines
of Plato after the name of Christ had become widely known to the wondering and
troubled kingdoms of this world. Then flourished at Rome the school of Plotinus,
which had as scholars many men of great acuteness and ability. But some of
them were corrupted by curious inquiries into magic, and others, recognising in
the Lord Jesus Christ the impersonation of that essential and immutable Truth and
Wisdom which they were endeavouring to reach, passed into His service. Thus
the whole supremacy of authority and light of reason for regenerating and
reforming the human race has been made to reside in the one saving Name, and in His
one Church.
34. I do not at all regret that I have stated these things at great length
in this letter, although perhaps you would have preferred that I had taken
another course; for the more progress that you make in the truth, the more will
you approve what I have written, and you will then approve of my counsel, though
now you do not think it helpful to your studies. At the same time, I have, to
the best of my ability, given answers to your questions,- to some of them in
this letter, and to almost all the rest by brief annotations on the parchments on
which you had sent them. If in these answers you think I have done too little,
or done something else than you expected, you do not duly consider, my
Dioscorus, to whom you addressed your questions. I have passed without reply all the
questions concerning the orator and the books of Cicero de Oratore. I would have
seemed to myself a contemptible trifler if I had entered on the exposition of
these topics. For I might with propriety be questioned on all the other
subjects, if any one desired me to handle and expound them, not in connection with the
works of Cicero, but by themselves; but in these questions the subjects
themselves are not in harmony with my profession now. I would not, however, have done
all that I have done in this letter had I not removed from Hippo for a time
after the illness under which I laboured when your messenger came to me. Even in
these days I have been visited again with interruption of health and with fever,
on which account there has been more delay than might otherwise have been in
sending these to you. I earnestly beg you to write and let me know how you
receive them.
LETTER CXXII. (A.D. 410.)
TO HIS WELL-BELOVED BRETHREN THE CLERGY, AND TO THE WHOLE PEOPLE' [OF HIPPO],
AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. In the first place, I beseech you, my friends, and implore you, for
Christ's sake, not to let my bodily absence grieve you. For I suppose you do not
imagine that I could by any means be separated in spirit and in unfeigned love
from you, although perchance it is even a greater grief to me than to you that
my weakness unfits me for bearing all the cares which are i laid on me by those
members of Christ to whose service both fear of Him and love to them constrain
me to devote myself. For you know this, my beloved, that I have never absented
myself from you through self-indulgent taking of ease, but only when compelled
by such duties as have made it necessary for some of my holy colleagues and
brethren to endure, both on the sea and in countries beyond the sea, labours from
which I was exempted, not because of reluctance of spirit, but by reason of
imperfect bodily health. Wherefore, my dearly-beloved brethren, act so that, as
the apostle says, "whether I come and see you, or else be absent, I may hear of
your affairs, that ye stand fast in one spirit, with one mind striving together
for the faith of the gospel."' If any vexation pertaining to time causes you
distress, this itself ought the more to remind you how you should occupy your
thoughts with that life in which you may live without any burden, escaping not the
annoying hardships of this short life, but the dread flames of eternal fire.
For if ye strive with so much anxiety, so much earnestness, and so much labour,
to save yourselves from failing into some transient sufferings in this world,
how solicitous ought you to be to escape everlasting misery! And if the death
which puts an end to the labours of time is so feared, how ought we to fear the
death which ushers men into eternal pain! And if the short-lived and sordid
pleasures of this world are so loved, with how much greater earnestness ought we to
seek the pure and infinite joys of the world to come ! Meaditating upon these
things, be not slothful in good works, that ye may come in due season to reap
what you have sown.
2. It has been reported to me that you have forgotten your custom of
providing raiment for the poor, to which work of charity I exhorted you when I was
present with you; and I now exhort you not to allow yourselves to be overcome
and made slothful by the tribulation of this world, which you see now visited
with such calamities as were foretold by our Lord and Redeemer, who cannot lie.
You ought in present circumstances not to be less diligent in works of charity,
but rather to be more abundant in these than you were wont to be. For as men
betake then{selves !n greater haste to a place of greater security when they see
in the shaking of their walls the ruin of their house impending, so ought
Christians, the more that they perceive, from the increasing frequency of their
afflictions, that the destruction of this world is at hand, to be the more prompt
and active in transferring l to the treasury of heaven the goods which they 'were
proposing to store up on earth, in order Z that, if any accident common to the
lot of men occur, he may rejoice who has escaped from a dwelling doomed to
ruin; and if, on the other hand, nothing of this kind happen, he may be exempt
from painful solicitude who, die when he may, has committed his possessions to the
keeping of the ever-living Lord, to whom he is about to go. Wherefore, my
dearly-beloved brethren, let every one of you, according to his ability, of which
he himself is the best judge, do with a portion of his substance as ye were wont
to do; do it also with a more willing mind than ye were wont i and amid all
the vexations of this life bear in your hearts the apostolic exhortation: "The
Lord is at hand: be careful for nothing."' Let such things be reported to me
concerning you as may make me understand that it is not through my presence with
you, but from obedience to the precept of God, who is never absent, that you
follow that good practice which for many years while I was with you, and for some
time after my departure, you observed.
May the Lord preserve you in peace ! And, dearly-beloved brethren, pray
for us.
LETTER CXXIII. (A.D. 410.)
[FROM JEROME TO AUGUSTIN.]
There are many who go halting upon both feet, and refuse to bend their
heads even when their necks are broken, persisting in adherence to their former
errors, even though they have not their former liberty of proclaiming them.
Respectful salutations are sent to you by the holy brethren who are with
your humble servant, and especially by your pious and venerable daughters.s I
beg your Excellency to salute in my name your brethren my lord Alypius and my
lord Evodius. Jerusalem is held captive by Nebuchadnezzar, and refuses to listen
to the counsels of Jeremiah, preferring to look wistfully towards Egypt, that it
may die in Tahpanhes, and perish there in eternal bondage.4
THIRD DIVISION.
LETTERS WHICH WERE WRITTEN BY AUGUSTIN AFTER THE TIME OF THE CONFERENCE WITH
THE DONATISTS AND THE RISE OF THE PELAGIAN HERESY IN AFRICA; I.E., DURING THE
LAST TWENTY YEARS OF HIS LIFE (A.D. 411-430).
LETTER CXXIV. (A.D. 411.)
TO ALBINA, PINIANUS, AND MELANIA, HONOURED IN THE LORD, BELOVED IN HOLINESS
AND LONGED FOR IN BROTHERLY AFFECTION AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. I AM, whether through present infirmity or by natural temperament, very
susceptible of cold; nevertheless, it would not be possible for me to suffer
greater heat than I have done throughout this exceptionally dreadful winter,
having been kept in a fever by distress because I have been unable, I do not say
to hasten, but to fly to you (to visit whom it would have been fitting for me to
fly across the seas), after you had been settled so near to me, and had come
from so remote a land to see me. It may be, also, that you have supposed the
rigorous weather of this winter to be the only cause of my suffering this
disappointment; I pray you, beloved, give no place to this thought. For what
inconvenience, hardship, or even danger, can these heavy rains bring, which I would not
have encountered and endured in order to make my way to you, who are such
comforters to us in our great calamities, and who, in the midst of a crooked and
perverse generation, are lights kindled into vehement flame by the Supreme Light,
raised aloft by lowliness of spirit, and deriving more glorious lustre from the
glory which you have despised? Moreover, I would have enjoyed participation in
the spiritual felicity vouchsafed to my earthly birthplace, in that it has been
permitted to have you present, of whom when absent its citizens had heard
much--so much, indeed, that although giving charitable credence to the report of
what you were by nature and had become by grace, they feared, perchance, to
repeat it to others, lest it should be disbelieved.
2. I shall therefore tell you the reason why I have not come, and the
trials by which I have been kept back from so great a privilege, that I may obtain
not only your forgiveness, but also, through your prayers, the mercy of Him who
so works in you that ye live to Him. The congregation of Hippo, whom the Lord
has ordained me to serve, is in great measure, and almost wholly, of a
constitution so infirm, that the pressure of even a comparatively light affliction
might seriously endanger its well-being; at pres-sent, however, it is smitten with
tribulation so overwhelming, that, even were it strong, it could scarcely
survive the imposition of the burden. Moreover, when I returned to it recently, I
found it offended to a most dangerous degree by my absence; and you, over whose
spiritual strength we rejoice in the Lord, can with healthful taste relish and
approve the saying of Paul: "Who is weak, and I am not weak? who is offended,
and I burn not ?" 2 I feel this especially because there are many here who by
disparaging us attempt to excite against us the minds of the others by whom we
seem to be loved, in order that they may make room in them for the devil. But when
those whose salvation is our care are angry with us, their strong
determination to take vengeance on us is only an unreasonable desire for bringing death to
themselves,- not the death of the body, but of the soul, in which the fact of
death discovers itself mysteriously by the odour of corruption before it is
possible for our care to foresee and provide against it.
Doubtless you will readily excuse this anxiety on my part, especially
because, if you were displeased and wished to punish me, you could perhaps invent
no severer pain than what I already suffer in not seeing you at Thagaste. I
trust, however, that, assisted by your prayers, I may be permitted when the present
hindrance has been removed with all speed to come to you, in whatsoever part
of Africa you may be, if this town in which I labour is not worthy (and I do not
presume to pronounce it worthy) to be along with us made joyful by your
presence.
LETTER CXXV. (A.D. 411)
TO ALYPIUS, MY LORD MOST BLESSED AND BROTHER BELOVED WITH ALL REVERENCE, AND
MY PARTNER IN THE PRIESTLY OFFICE, AND TO THE BRETHREN WHO ARE WITH HIM,
AUGUSTIN AND THE BRETHREN WHO ARE WITH HIM SEND GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. We are deeply grieved, and can by no means regard it as a small matter,
that the people of Hippo clamorously said so much to the disparagement of your
Holiness; but, my good brother, their clamorous utterance of these things is
not so great a cause for grief as the fact that we are, without open accusation,
deemed guilty of similar things. For when we are believed to be actuated in
retaining God's servants among us, not by love of righteousness, but by love of
money, is it not to be desired that persons who believe this concerning us
should with their voices avow what is hidden in their hearts, and so obtain, if
possible, remedies great in proportion to the disease, rather than silently perish
under the venom of these fatal suspicions ? Wherefore it ought to be a greater
care to us (and for this reason we conferred together before this happened) to
provide how men to whom we are commanded to be examples in good works may be
convinced that there is no ground for suspicions which they cherish, than to
provide how those may be rebuked who in words give definite utterance to their
suspicions.
2. Wherefore I am not angry with the pious Albina, nor do I judge her to
deserve rebuke; but I think she requires to be cured of such suspicions. It is
true that she has not pointed at myself the words to which I refer, but has
complained of the people of Hippo, as it were, alleging that their covetousness has
been brought to light, and that in desiring to retain among them a man of'
wealth who was known to despise money, and to give it away freely, they were
moved, not by his fitness for the office, but by regard to his ample means;
nevertheless, she almost said openly that she had the same suspicion of myself, and not
she only, but also her pious son-in-law and daughter, who, on that very day,
said the same thing in the apse of the church.' In my opinion, it is more
necessary that the suspicions of these persons should be removed than that their
utterance of them should be rebuked. For where can immunity and rest from such
thorns be provided and given to us, if they can sprout forth against us even in the
hearts of intimate friends, so pious and so much beloved by us ? It is by the
ignorant multitude that such things have been thought concerning you, but I am
the victim of similar suspicions from those who are the lights of the Church;
you may see, therefore, which of us has the greater cause for grief. It seems to
me that both cases call, not for invectives, but for remedial measures; for
they are men, and their suspicions are of men, and therefore such things as they
suspect, though they may be false, are not incredible. Persons such as these
are of course not so foolish as to believe that the people are coveting their
money, especially after their experience that the people of Thagaste obtained none
of their money, from which it was certain that the people of Hippo would also
obtain none. Nay, all the violence of this odium comes against the clergy
alone, and especially against the bishops, whose authority is visibly pre-eminent,
and who are supposed to use and enjoy as owners and lords the property of the
Church. My dear Alypius, let not the weak be encouraged through our example to
cherish this pernicious and fatal covetousness. Call to mind what we said to each
other before the occurrence of this temptation, which makes the duty all the
more urgent. Let us rather by God's help endeavour to have this difficulty
removed by friendly conference, and let us not count it sufficient to be guided by
our own conscience alone; for this is not one of the cases in which its voice
alone is sufficient for our direction. For if we be not unworthy servants of our
God, if there live in us a spark of that charity which seeketh not her own, we
are bound by all means to provide things honest, not only in the sight of God,
but also in the sight of men, lest: while drinking untroubled waters in our own
conscience, we be chargeable with treading with incautious feet, and so making
the Lord's flock drink from a turbid stream.
3. For as to the proposal in your letter that we should discuss together
the obligation of an oath which has been extorted by force, I beseech you, let
not the method of our discussion involve in obscurity things which are perfectly
clear. For if inevitable death were threatened in order to compel a servant of
God to swear that he would do something forbidden by laws both human and
divine, it would be his duty to prefer death to such an oath, lest he should be
guilty of a crime in fulfilling his oath. But in this case, in which the determined
clamour of the people, and only this, was forcing the man, not to a crime, but
to that which if it were done would be lawfully done; when, moreover, there
was indeed apprehension lest some reckless men, such as are mixed with a
multitude even of good men, should through love of rioting break out into some wicked
deeds of violence, if they found a pretext for disturbance and for plausibly
justifiable indignation, but there was no certainty of this fear being realized,
--who will affirm that it is lawful to commit a deliberate act of perjury in
order to escape from uncertain consequences, involving, I shall not say loss or
bodily injury, but even death itself? Regulus had not heard anything from the
Holy Scriptures concerning the impiety of perjury, he had never heard of the
flying roll of Zechariah, and he confirmed his oath to the Carthaginians, not by the
sacraments of Christ, but by the abominations of false gods; and yet in the
face of inevitable tortures, and a death of unprecedented horror, he was not
moved by fear so as to swear under constraint, but, because he had given his oath,
he of his own free will submitted to these, test he should be guilty of
perjury. In that age, also, the Roman censors refused to inscribe in the roll, not of
saints inheriting heavenly glory, but of senators received into the curia of
Rome, not only men who, through fear of death and of cruel tortures, had chosen
rather to commit manifest perjury than to return to merciless enemies, but also
one who had believed himself clear of the guilt of perjury, because, after
giving his oath, he had under the pretext of alleged necessity violated it by
returning; in which we see that those who expelled him from the senate took into
consideration, not what he himself had in his mind when he gave his oath, but what
those to! whom he pledged his word expected from him. Yet they had never read
what we sing continually in the Psalm: "He that sweareth to his own hurt, and
changeth not." 2 We are wont to speak of these instances of virtue with the
highest admiration, although they are found in men who were strangers to the grace
and to the name of Christ; and yet do we seriously imagine that the question
whether perjury is occasionally lawful is one for an answer to which we should
search the divine books, in which, to prevent us from falling into this sin by
inconsiderate oaths, this prohibition is written: "Swear not at all "?
4. I by no means dispute the perfect correctness of the maxim, that good
faith requires an oath to be kept, not according to the mere words of him who
gives it, but according to that which the person giving the oath knows to be the
expectation of the person to whom he swears. For it is very difficult to define
in words, especially in few words, the promise in regard to which security is
exacted from him who gives his oath. They, therefore, are guilty of perjury,
who, while adhering to the letter of their promise, disappoint the known
expectation of those to whom their oath was given; and they are not guilty of perjury,
who, even though departing from the letter of the promise, fulfil that which
was expected of them when they gave their oath. Wherefore, seeing that the people
of Hippo desired to ha.re the holy Pinianus, not as a prisoner who had
forfeited liberty, but as a much-loved resident in their town, the limits of that
which they expected from him, though it could not be adequately embraced in the
words of his promise, are nevertheless so obvious that the fact of his being at
this moment absent, after giving his oath to remain among them, does not disturb
any one who may have heard that he was to leave this place for a definite
purpose, and with the intention of returning. Accordingly, he will not be guilty of
perjury, nor will he be regarded by them as violating his oath, unless he
disappoint their expectation; and he will not disappoint their expectation, unless
he either abandon his purpose of residing among them, or at some future time
depart from them without intending to return. May God forbid that he should so
depart from the holiness and fidelity which he owes to Christ and to the Church !
For, not to speak of the dread judgment of God upon perjurers, which you know
as well as myself, I am perfectly certain that henceforth we shall have no right
to be displeased With any one who may refuse to believe what we attest by an
oath, if we are found to think that i perjury in such a man as Pinianus is to be
not only tolerated without indignation, but actually defended. From this may
we be saved by the mercy of Him who delivers from temptation those who put their
trust in Him ! Let Pinianus, therefore, as you have written in your
communication, fulfil the promise by which he bound himself not to depart from Hippo,
just as I myself and the other inhabitants of the town do not depart from it,
having, of course, full freedom in going and returning at any time; the only
difference being, that those who are not bound by any oath to reside here have it
also in their power at any time, without being chargeable with perjury, to depart
with no purpose of coming back again.
5. As to our clergy and the brethren settled in our monastery, I do not
know that it can be proved that they either aided or abetted in the 'reproaches
which were made against you. For when I inquired into this, I was informed that
only one from our monastery, a man of Carthage, had taken part in the clamour
of the people; and this was not when they were uttering insults against you, but
when they were demanding Pinianus as presbyter.
I have annexed to this letter a copy of the promise given to him, taken
from the very paper which he subscribed and corrected under my own inspection.
LETTER CXXVI. (A.D. 411.)
TO THE HOLY LADY AND VENERABLE HANDMAID OF GOD ALBINA, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING
IN THE LORD,
1. As to the sorrow of your spirit, which you describe as inexpressible,
it becomes me to assuage rather than to augment its bitterness, endeavouring if
possible to remove your suspicions, instead of increasing the agitation of one
so venerable and so devoted to God by giving vent to indignation because of
that which I have suffered in this matter. Nothing was done to our holy brother,
your son-in-law Pinianus, by the people of Hippo which might justly awaken in
him the fear of death, although, perchance, he himself had such fears. Indeed, we
also were apprehensive lest some of the reckless characters who are often
secretly banded together for mischief in a crowd might break out into bold acts of
violence, finding occasion for beginning a riot with some plausible pretext for
passionate excitement. Nothing of this nature, however, was either spoken of
or attempted by any one, as I have since had opportunity to ascertain; but
against my brother Alypius the people did clamorously utter many opprobrious and
unworthy reproaches, for which great sin I desire that they may obtain pardon in
answer to his prayers. For my own part, after their outcries began, when I had
told them how I was precluded by promise from ordaining him against his will,
adding that, if they obtained him as their presbyter through my breaking my word,
they could not retain me as their bishop, I left the multitude, and returned
to my own seat.' Thereupon, they being made for a little while to pause and
waver by my unexpected reply, like a flame driven back for a moment by the wind,
began to be much more warmly excited, imagining that possibly a violation of my
promise might be extorted from me, or that, in the event of my abiding by my
promise, he might be ordained by another bishop. To all to whom I could address
myself, namely, to the more venerable and aged men who had come up to me in the
apse, I stated that I could not be moved to break my word, and that in the
church committed to my care he could not be ordained by any other bishop except with
my consent asked and obtained, in granting which I should be no less guilty of
a breach of faith. I said, moreover, that if he were ordained against his own
will, the people were only wishing him to depart from us as soon as he was
ordained. They did not believe that this was possible. But the crowd having
gathered in front of the steps, and persisting in the same determination with terrible
and incessant clamour and shouting, made them irresolute and perplexed. At
that time unworthy reproaches were loudly uttered against my brother Alypius: at
that time, also, more serious consequences were apprehended by us.
2. But although I was much disturbed by so great a commotion among the
people, and such trepidation among the office-bearers of the church, I did not say
to that mob anything else than that I could not ordain him against his own
will; nor after all that had passed was I influenced to do what I had also
promised not to do, namely, to advise him m any way to accept the office of presbyter,
which had I been able to persuade him to do, his ordination would have been
with his consent. I remained faithful to both the promises which I had made, --
not only to the one which I had shortly before intimated to the people, but also
to the one in regard to which I was bound, so far as men were concerned, by
only one witness. I was faithful, I say, not to an oath, but to my bare promise,
even in the face of such danger. It is true that the fears of danger were, as
we afterwards ascertained, without foundation; but whatever the danger might be,
it was shared by us all alike. The fear was also shared by all; and I myself
had thoughts of retiring, being alarmed chiefly for the safety of the building
in which we were assembled. But there was reason to apprehend that if I were
absent some disaster might be more likely to occur, as the people would then be
more exasperated by disappointment, and less restrained by reverential
sentiments. Again, if I had gone through the dense mob along with Alypius, I had reason
to fear lest some one should dare to lay violent hands on him; if, on the other
hand, I had gone without him, what would have been the most natural opinion for
men to have formed, if any accident had befallen Alypius, and I appeared to
have deserted him in order to hand him over to the power of an infuriated people?
3. In the midst of this excitement and great distress, when, being at our
wit's end, we could not, so to speak, take breath, behold our pious son
Pinianus, suddenly and quite unexpectedly, sends to me a servant of God, to tell me
that he wished to swear to the people, that if he were ordained against his will
he would leave Africa altogether, thinking, I believe, that the people, knowing
that of course he could not violate his oath, would not continue their outcry,
seeing that by perseverance they could gain nothing, but only drive from among
us a man whom we ought at least to retain as a neighbour, if he was to be no
more. As it seemed to me, however, that it was to be feared that the vehemence
of the people's grief would be increased by his taking an oath of this kind, I
was silent in regard to it; and as he had by the same messenger begged me to
come to him, I went without delay. When he had said to me again what he had stated
by the messenger, he immediately added to the same oath what he had sent
another messenger to.intimate to me while I was hastening towards him, namely, that
he would consent to reside in Hippo if no one compelled him to accept against
his will the burden of the clerical office. On this, being comforted in my
perplexities as by a breath of air when in danger of suffocation, I made no reply,
but went with quickened pace to my brother Alypius, and told him what Pinianus
had said. But he, being careful, I suppose, lest anything should be done with
his sanction by which he thought you might. be offended, said, "Let no one ask my
opinion on this subject." Having heard this, I hastened to the noisy crowd,
and having obtained silence, declared to them what had been promised, along with
the proffered guarantee of an oath. The people, however, having no other
thought or desire than that he should be their presbyter, did not receive the
proposal as I had expected they would, but, after talking in an under-tone among
themselves, made the request that to this promise and oath a clause might be added,
that if at any time he should be pleased to consent to accept the clerical
office, he should do so in no other church than that of Hippo. I reported this to
him: without hesitation he agreed to it. I returned to them with his answer;
they were filled with joy, and presently demanded the promised oath.
4. I came back to your son-in-law, and found him at a loss as to the words
in which his promise, confirmed by oath, could be expressed, because of
various kinds of necessity which might emerge and might make it necessary for him to
leave Hippo. He stated at the time what he feared, namely, that a hostile
incursion of barbarians might occur, to avoid which it would be necessary to leave
the place. The holy Melania wished to add also, as a possible reason for
departure, the unhealthiness of the climate; but she was kept from this by his reply.
I said, however, that he had brought forward an important reason deserving
consideration, and one which, if it occurred, would compel the citizens themselves
to abandon the place; but that, if this reason were stated to the people, we
might justly fear lest they should regard us as prophet-saying evil, and, on the
other hand, if a pretext for withdrawing from the promise were put under the
general name of necessity, it might be thought that the necessity was only
covering an intention to deceive. It seemed good to him, therefore, that we should
test the feeling of the people in regard to this, and we found the result exactly
as I had expected. For when the words which he had dictated were read by the
deacon, and had been received with approbation, as soon as the clause concerning
necessity which might hinder the fulfilment of his promise fell upon their
ears, there arose at once a shout of remonstrance, and the promise was rejected;
and the tumult began to break out again, the people thinking that these
negotiations had no other object than to deceive them. When our pious son saw this, he
ordered the clause regarding necessity to be struck out, and the people
recovered their cheerfulness once more.
5. I would gladly have excused myself on the ground of fatigue, but he
would not go to the people unless I accompanied him; so we went together. He told
them that he had himself dictated what they had heard from the deacon, that he
had confirmed the promise by an oath, and would do the things promised, after
which he forthwith rehearsed all in the words which he had dictated. The
response of the people was, "Thanks be unto God !" and they begged that all which was
written should be subscribed. We dismissed the catechumens, and he adhibited
his signature to the document at once. Then we [Alypius and myself] began to be
urged, not by the voices of the crowd, but by faithful men of good report as
their representatives, that we also as bishops should subscribe the writing. But
when I began to do this, the pious Melania protested against it. I wondered why
she did this so late, as if we could make his promise and oath void by
forbearing from appending our names to it; I obeyed, however, and so my signature
remained incomplete, and no one thought it necessary to insist further upon our
subscription.
6. I have been at pains to communicate to your Holiness, so far as I
thought sufficient, what were the feelings, or rather the remarks, of the people on
the following day, when they heard that he had left the town. Whoever,
therefore, may have told you anything contradicting what I stated, is either
intentionally or through his own mistake misleading you. For I am aware that I passed
over some things which seemed to me irrelevant, but I know that I said nothing but
the truth. It is therefore true that our holy son Pinianus took his oath in my
presence and with my permission, but it is not true that he did it in
obedience to any command from me. He himself knows this:it is also known to those
servants of God whom he sent to me, the first being the pious Barnabas, the second
Timasius, by whom also he sent me the promise of his remaining in Hippo. As for
the people themselves, moreover, they were urging him by their cries to accept
the office of presbyter. They did not ask for his oath, but they did not refuse
it when offered, because they hoped that if he remained amongst us, there
might be produced in him a willingness to consent to ordination, while they feared
lest, if ordained against his will, he should, according to his oath, leave
Africa. And therefore they also were actuated in their clamorous procedure by
regard to God's ' work (for surely the consecration of a presbyter is a work of
God); and inasmuch as they did not feel satisfied with his promise of remaining in
Hippo, unless it were also promised that, in the event of his at any time
accepting the clerical office, he should do it nowhere else than among them, it is
perfectly manifest what they hoped for from his dwelling among them, and that
they did not abandon their zeal for the work of God.
7. On what ground, then, do you allege that the people did this out of a
base desire for money? In the first place, the people who were so clamorous have
nothing whatever of this kind to gain; for as the people of Thagaste derive
from the gifts which you have bestowed on their church no profit but the joy of
seeing your good work, it will be the same in the case of the people of Hippo,
or of any other place in which you have obeyed or may yet obey the law of your
Lord concerning the "mammon of unrighteousness." The people, therefore, in most
vehemently insisting upon guiding the procedure of their church in regard to so
great a man, did not ask from you a pecuniary advantage, but testified their
admiration for your contempt of, money. For if in my own case, because they had
heard that, despising my patrimony, which i consisted of only a few small
fields, I had consecrated myself to the liberty of serving God, they loved this
disinterestedness, and did not grudge this gift to the church of my birthplace,
Thagaste, but, when it had not imposed upon me the clerical office, made me by
force, so to speak, their own, how much more ardently might they love in our
Pinianus his overcoming and treading under foot with such remarkable decision riches
so great and hopes so bright, and a strong natural capacity for enjoying this
world ! I indeed seem, in the opinion of many, who compare' themselves with
themselves, to have rather found than forsaken wealth. For my patrimony can j
scarcely be considered a twentieth part of the ecclesiastical property which I am
now supposed to possess as master. But in whatever church, especially in Africa,
our Pinianus might be ordained (I do not say a presbyter, but) a bishop, he
would be still in deep poverty compared with his former affluence, even if he
were using the church's revenues in the spirit of one lording it over God's
heritage. Christian poverty is much more clearly and certainly loved in the case of
one in whom there is no room for suspecting a desire for acquiring an accession
to his wealth. It was this admiration which kindled the minds of the people,
and roused them to such violence of persevering clamour. Let us therefore not
charge them gratuitously with base covetousness, but rather, without imputing
unworthy motives, allow them at least to love in others that good thing which they
do not themselves possess, For although there may have mixed in the crowd some
who are indigent or beggars, who helped to increase the clamour, and were
actuated by the hope of some relief to their wants out of your honourable affluence,
even this is not, in my opinion, base covetousness.
8. It remains, therefore, that the reproach of disgraceful covetousness
must be levelled indirectly at the clergy, and especially at the bishop. For we
are supposed to act as lords of the church's property; we are supposed to enjoy
its revenues. In short, whatever money we have received for the church either
is still in our possession or has been spent according to our judgment; and of
it we have given nothing to any of the people besides the clergy and the
brethren in the monastery, excepting only a very few indigent persons. I do not mean
by this to say that the things which were said by you must necessarily have been
said specially against us, but that, if said against any others than
ourselves, they must have been incredible. What, then, shall we do? If it be not
possible to clear ourselves before enemies, by what means may we at least clear
ourselves before you ? The matter is one pertaining to the soul; it is within us,
hidden from the eyes of men, and known to God alone. What, then, remains for us
but to call to witness God, to whom it is known ? When, therefore, you harbour
these suspicions concerning us, you do not command but absolutely compel us to
give our oath,--a much more grievous wrong than the commanding of an oath, which
you have thought proper in your letter to censure as highly culpable in me; you
compel us, I say, not by menacing death to the body, as the people of Hippo
were supposed to have done, but by menacing death to our good name, which
deserves to be regarded by us as more precious than life itself, for the sake of those
weak brethren to whom we endeavour in all circumstances to exhibit ourselves
as ensamples in good works.
9. We, however, are not indignant against you who compel us to this oath,
as you are indignant against the people of Hippo. For you believe, as men
judging of other men, things which, though not actually existing in us, might
possibly have existed. Your suspicions we must labour not so much to reprove as to
remove; and since our conscience is clear in the sight of God, we must seek to
clear our character in your sight. It may be, as Alypius and I said to each other
before this trial occurred, that God will grant that not only you, our
much-beloved fellow-members of Christ's body, but even our most implacable enemies,
may be thoroughly satisfied that we are not defiled by any love of money in our
administration of ecclesiastical affairs. Until this be done (if the Lord,
answering our prayer, permit it to be done), hear in the meantime what we are
compelled to do, rather than put off for any length of time the healing of your
heart. God is my witness that, as for the whole management of those ecclesiastical
revenues over which we are supposed to love to exercise lordship, I only bear it
as a burden which is imposed on me by love to the brethren and fear of God: I
do not love it; nay, if I could, without unfaithfulness to my office, I would
desire to be rid of it. God also is my witness that I believe the sentiments of
Alypius to be the same as mine in this matter. Nevertheless, on the one hand,
the people, and what is worse, the people of Hippo, have hastily done Alypius
great wrong by entertaining another opinion of his character; and on the other
hand, you who are saints of God and full of unfeigned compassion have, through
believing such things concerning us, thought proper to touch and admonish us
while nominally censuring the same people of Hippo, who have no part whatever in
the guilt of the alleged covetousness. You have desired unqUestionably to correct
us, and that without hating us (this be far from you !); wherefore I ought not
to be angry with you, but to thank you, because it was not possible for you to
have combined modesty and freedom more happily than when, instead of stating
your sentiments as an offensive accusation against the bishop, you left them to
be discovered by indirect inferences.
10. Let not the fact that I have thought it necessary thus to confirm my
statements by oath cause you vexation by making you think that you are treated
with harshness. There was no hardness or lack of kindly feeling in the apostle
towards those to whom he wrote: "Neither used we at any time flattering words,
as ye know, nor a cloak of covetousness; God is witness." In the thing which was
opened to men's observation he appealed to their own testimony, but in regard
to that which was hidden, to whom could he appeal but to God ? If, therefore,
fear lest the ignorance of men should make them entertain some such thoughts
concerning him was reasonably felt even by Paul, whose labours, as all men knew,
were such that except in extreme necessity he never took anything for his own
benefit from the communities to which he dispensed the grace of Christ, obtaining
in all other cases the necessary provision for his support by working with his
own hands, how much more pains must be taken to establish confidence in our
disinterestedness by us, who are, both in the merit of holiness and in strength
of mind, so far behind him, and who are not only unable to do anything by the
work of our hands to support ourselves, but also precluded from this, even if we
could work, by an accumulation of duties from which I believe that the apostles
were exempt ! Let the charge, therefore, of most base covetousness be brought
no more in this matter against the Christian people- that is, the Church of
Christ. For it is more tolerable that this charge be alleged against us, on whom
the suspicion, though groundless, might fall without being utterly improbable,
than on the people, of whom it is certainly known that they could not either
cherish the covetous desire or be reasonably suspected of entertaining it.
11. For persons possessing any faith land how much more the Christian
faith!To be unfaithful to their oath, I do not say by doing something contrary to
it, but by hesitating at all as to its fulfilment, is utterly wrong. What my
judgment is on this question I have with sufficient fulness declared in the letter
which I sent to my brother Alypius. Your Holiness wrote asking me "whether I
or the people of Hippo consider any one under obligation to fulfil an oath which
has been extorted by violence." But what is your opinion ? Do you think that
even if death, which in this case was feared without reason, were certainly
imminent, a Christian might use the name of his Lord to confirm a lie, and call his
God to be witness to a falsehood? For assuredly a Christian, if urged by the
menace of instant death to perjure himself by false testimony, ought to fear the
loss of hon-our more than the loss of life. Hostile armies confront each other
in the battle-field with mutual menaces of death, about which there can be no
uncertainty; and yet, when they pledge themselves to each other by oath, we
praise those who are faithful to their engagement, and we justly abhor those who
are unfaithful. Now what was the motive leading them to swear to each other, but
the fear on both sides of being killed or taken prisoners? And by this promise
even such men hold themselves bound, lest they be guilty of sacrilege and
perjury if they did not . fulfil the oath extorted by the fear of death or
captivity, and broke the promise given in such circumstances: they are more afraid of
breaking their oath than of taking a man's life. And do we propose to discuss as
a debatable question whether an oath must be fulfilled which has been given
under fear of harm by servants of God, who are under pre-eminent obligations to
holiness, by monks who are running the race towards Christian perfection, by
distributing their property according to Christ's command?
12. Tell me, I beseech you, what hardship deserving the name of exile, or
transportation, or banishment, is involved in his promise to reside: here ? I
suppose that the office of presbyter is: not exile. Would our Pinianus prefer
exile to! that office ? Far be it from us to find such apology for one who is a
saint of God and very dear to us: God forbid, I say, that it should be said of
him that he preferred exile to the office of presbyter, and preferred to perjure
himself rather than submit to exile. This I would say even if it were true
that the oath by which he promised to reside among us had been extorted from him
but the fact is that, instead of being extorted in spite of his refusal, it was
accepted when he had proffered it himself. It was accepted, moreover, as I have
already said, because of the hope, which was encouraged by his remaining here,
that he might also consent to comply with our desire that he should accept the
clerical office. In fine, whatever opinion may be entertained concerning us or
concerning the people of Hippo, the case of those who may have compelled him
to take the oath is very different from that of those who may have -- I do not
say compelled, but at least- counselled him to break the oath. I trust, also,
that Pinianus himself will not refuse to consider seriously whether it is worse
to swear under the pressure of fear, however great, or, in the absence of all
alarm, to commit deliberate perjury.
13. God be thanked that the men of Hippo regard his promise of residence
here as kept fully, if only he come with the intention of making this town his
home, and in going whithersoever necessity may call him, go with the intention
of coming back to us again. For if they were to exact literal fulfilment of the
words of the promise, it would be the duty of a servant of God to adhere to
every sentence of it rather than forswear himself. But as it would be a crime for
them so to bind any one, much more such a man as he is, so they have themselves
proved that they had no such unreasonable expectation; for on hearing that he
had gone away with the intention of returning, they expressed their
satisfaction; and fidelity to an oath requires no more than the performance of what was
expected by those to whom it was given. Let me ask, moreover, what is meant by
saying that he, in giving the oath with his own lips, mentioned the possibility
of necessity preventing his fulfilment of the promise? The truth is, that with
his own lips he ordered the qualifying clause to be removed. If he put it in, it
would be when he himself spoke to the people; but! if he had done so, they
assuredly would not have answered, "Thanks be unto God," but would have renewed
the protestations which they made when it was read with the qualifying clause by
the deacon. And what difference does it really make whether this plea of
necessity for departing from the promise was or was not inserted? Nothing more than
we have stated above was expected from him; but he who disappoints the known
expectation of those to whom his oath is given, cannot but be a perjured person.
14. Wherefore, let his promise be fulfilled, and let the hearts of the
weak be healed, lest, on the one hand, those who approve of it be taught by such a
conspicuous example to imitate an act of perjury, and lest, on the other hand,
those who condemn it have just grounds for saying that none of us is worthy to
be believed, not only when we make promises, but even when we give our oath.
Let us especially guard against giving occasion in this to the tongues of
enemies, which are used by the great Enemy as darts wherewith to slay the weak. But
God forbid that we should expect from a man like Pinianus anything else than
what the fear of God inspires, and the superior excellence of his own piety
approves. As for myself, whom you blame for not interfering to forbid his oath, I
admit that I could not bring myself to believe that, in circumstances so
disorderly and scandalous, I ought rather to allow the church which I serve to be
overthrown, than accept the deliverance which was offered to us by such a man.