LETTERS OF ST. AUGUSTIN: LETTERS CXXX TO CXXXVII (INCLUDING LETTERS TO PROBA &
VOLUSIANUS)
LETTER CXXX. (A.D. 412.)
TO PROBA,1 A DEVOTED HANDMAID OF GOD, BISHOP AUGUSTIN, A SERVANT OF CHRIST AND
OF CHRIST'S SERVANTS, SENDS GREETING IN THE NAME OF THE LORD OF LORDS.
CHAP. I.-- I. Recollecting your request and my promise, that as soon as time and
opportunity should be given by Him to whom we pray, I would write you something on
the subject of prayer to God, I feel it my duty now to discharge this debt, and
in the love of Christ to minister to the satisfaction of your pious desire. I
cannot express in words how greatly I rejoiced because of the request, in which
I perceived how great is your solicitude about this supremely important matter.
For what could be more suitably the business of your widowhood than to
continue in supplications night and day, according to the apostle's admonition, "She
that is a widow indeed, and desolate, trusteth in God, and continueth in
supplications night and day"?' It might, indeed, appear wonderful that solicitude
about prayer should occupy your heart and claim the first place in it, when you
are, so far as this world is concerned, noble and wealthy, and the mother of such
an illustrious family, and, although a widow, not desolate, were it not that
you wisely understand that in this world and in this life the soul has no sure
portion.
2. Wherefore He who inspired you with this thought is assuredly doing what
He promised to His disciples when they were grieved, not for themselves, but
for the whole human family, and were despairing of the salvation of any one,
after they heard from Him that it was easier for a camel to go through the eye of
a needle than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of heaven. He gave them
this marvellous and merciful reply: "The things which are impossible with men
are possible with God."' He, therefore, with whom it is possible to make even
the rich enter into the kingdom of heaven, inspired you with that devout anxiety
which makes you think it necessary to ask my counsel on the question how you
ought to pray. For while tie was yet on earth, He brought Zaccheus,3 though rich,
into the kingdom of heaven, and, after being glorified in His resurrection and
ascension, He made many who were rich to despise this present world, and made
them more truly rich by extinguishing their desire for riches through His
imparting to them His Holy Spirit. For how could you desire so much to pray to God
if you did not trust in Him? And how could you trust in Him if you were fixing
your trust in uncertain riches, and neglecting the wholesome exhortation of the
apostle: "Charge them that are rich in this world that they be not high-minded,
nor trust in uncertain riches, but in the living God, who giveth us richly all
things to enjoy; that they do good, that they be rich in good works, ready to
distribute, willing to communicate, laying up in store for themselves a good
foundation, that they may lay hold on eternal life" ? 4
CHAP. II.-- 3. It becomes you, therefore, out of love to this true life, to account
yourself "desolate" in this world, however great the prosperity of your lot may
be. For as that is the true life, in comparison with which the present life,
which is much loved, is not worthy to be called life, however happy and prolonged
it be, so is it also the true consolation promised by the Lord in the words of
Isaiah, "I will give him the true consolation, peace upon peace," s without
which consolation men find themselves, in the midst of every mere earthly solace,
rather desolate than comforted. For as for riches and high rank, and all other
things in which men who are strangers to true felicity imagine that happiness
exists, what comfort do they bring, seeing that it is better to be independent of
such things than to enjoy abundance of them, because, when possessed, they
occasion, through our fear of losing them, more vexation than was caused by the
strength of desire with which their possession was coveted ? Men are not made
good by possessing these so-called good things, but, if men have become good
otherwise, they make these things to be really good by using them well. Therefore
true comfort is to be found not in them, but rather in those things in which true
life is found. For a man can be made blessed only by the same power by which
he is made good.
4. It is true, indeed, that good men are seen to be the sources of no
small comfort to others in this world. For if we be harassed by poverty, or
saddened by bereavement, or disquieted by bodily pain, or pining in exile, or vexed by
any kind of calamity, let good men visit us, men who can not only rejoice with
them that !rejoice, but also weep with them that weep,6 and who know how to
give profitable counsel, and win us to express our feelings in conversation: the
effect is, that rough things become smooth, heavy burdens are lightened, and
difficulties vanquished most wonderfully. But this is done in and through them by
Him who has made them good by His Spirit. On the other hand, although riches
may abound, and no bereavement befal us, and health of body be enjoyed, and we
live in our own country in peace and safety, if, at the same time, we have as
our neighbours wicked men, among whom there is not one who can be trusted, not
one from whom we do not apprehend and experience treachery, deceit, outbursts of
anger, dissensions, and snares, in such a case are not all these other things
made bitter and vexatious, so that nothing sweet or pleasant is left in them?
Whatever, therefore, be our circumstances in this world, there is nothing truly
enjoyable without a friend. But how rarely is one found in this life about whose
spirit and behaviour as a true friend there may be perfect confidence! For no
one is known to another so intimately as he is known to himself, and yet no one
is so well known even to himself that he can be sure as to his own conduct on
the morrow; wherefore, although many are known by their fruits, and some
gladden their neighhours by their good lives, while others grieve their neighbours by
their evil lives, yet the minds of men are so unknown and so unstable, that
there is the highest wisdom in the exhortation of the apostle: "Judge nothing
before the time until the Lord come, who both will bring to light the hidden
things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the hearts; and then
shall every man have praise of God."'
5. In the darkness, then, of this world, in which we are pilgrims absent
from the Lord as long as "we walk by faith and not by sight,"2 the Christian
soul ought to feel itself desolate, and continue in prayer, and learn to fix the
eye of faith on the word of the divine sacred Scriptures, as "on a light shining
in a dark place, until the day dawn, and the day-star arise in our hearts."3
For the ineffable source from which this lamp borrows its light is the Light
which shineth in darkness, but the darkness comprehendeth it not- the Light, in
order to seeing which our hearts must be purified by faith; for "blessed are the
pure in heart, for they shall see God; "4 and "we know that when He shall
appear, we shall be like Him, foe we shall see Him as He is." 5 Then after death
shall come the true life, and after desolation the true consolation, that life
shall deliver our "souls from death "that consolation shall deliver our "eyes from
tears," and, as follows in the psalm, our feet shall be delivered from
falling; for there shall be no temptation there.6 Moreover, if there be no temptation,
there will be no prayer; for there we shall not be waiting for promised
blessings,: but contemplating the blessings actually bestowed; wherefore he adds, "I
will walk before the Lord in the land of the living," 7 where we shall then
be--not in the wilderness of the dead, where we now are: "For ye are dead," says
the apostle, "and your life is hid with Christ in God; when Christ, who is our
life, shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him in glory." s For that is
the true life on which the rich are exhorted to lay hold by being rich in good
works; and in it is the true consolation, for want of which, meanwhile, a widow
is "desolate" indeed, even though she has sons and grandchildren, and conducts
her household piously, entreating all dear to her to put their hope in God:
and in the midst of all this, she says in her prayer, "My soul thirsteth for
Thee; my flesh longeth in a dry and thirsty land, where no water is;" 9 and this
dying life is nothing else than such a land, however numerous our mortal
comforts, however pleasant our companions in the pilgrimage, and however great the
abundance of our possessions. You know how uncertain all these things are; and even
if they were not uncertain, what would they be in comparison with the felicity
which is promised in the life to come!
6. In saying these things to you, who, being a widow, rich and noble, and
the mother of an illustrious family, have asked from me a discourse on prayer,
my aim has been to make you feel that, even while your family are spared to
you, and live as you would desire, you are desolate so long as you have not
attained to that life in which is the true and abiding consolation, in which shall be
fulfilled what is spoken in prophecy: "We are satisfied in the morning with
Thy mercy, we rejoice and are glad all our days; we are made glad according to
the days wherein Thou hast afflicted us, and the years wherein we have seen
evil." ,o
CHAP. III.-- 7. Wherefore, until that consolation come, remember, in order to your
"continuing in prayers and supplications night and day," that, however great the
temporal prosperity may be which flows around you, you are desolate. For the
apostle does not ascribe this gift to every widow, but to her who, being a widow
indeed, and desolate, "trusteth in God, and continueth in supplication night and
day." Observe, however, most vigilantly the warning which follows: "But she that
liveth in pleasure is dead while she liveth;" ,2 for a person lives in those
things which he loves, which he greatly desires, and in which he believes
himself to be blessed. Wherefore, what Scripture has said of riches: "If riches
increase, set not your heart upon them,"12 I say to you concerning pleasures: "If
pleasures increase, set not your heart upon them." Do not, therefore,'think
highly of yourself because these things are not wanting, but are yours abundantly,
flowing, as it were, from a most copious fountain of earthly felicity. 'By all
means look upon your possession of these things with indifference and contempt,
and seek nothing from them beyond health of body. For this is a blessing not to
be despised, because of its being necessary to the work of life until "this
mortal shall have put on immortality"1 in other words, the true, perfect, and
everlasting health, which is neither reduced by earthly infirmities nor repaired
by corruptible gratification, but, enduring with celestial rigour, is animated
with a life eternally incorruptible. For the apostle himself says, "Make not
provision for the flesh, to fulfil the lusts thereof," 2 because we must take care
of the flesh, but only in so far as is necessary for health; "For no man ever
yet hated his own flesh,"3 as he himself likewise says. Hence, also, he
admonished Timothy, who was, as it appears, too severe upon his body, that he should
"use a little wine for his stomach's sake, and for his often infirmities." 4
8. Many holy men and women, using every precaution against those pleasures
in which she that liveth, cleaving to them, and dwelling in them as her
heart's delight, is dead while she liveth, have cast from them that which is as it
were the mother of pleasures, by distributing their wealth among the poor, and so
have stored it in the safer keeping of the treasury of heaven. If you are
hindered from doing this by some consideration of duty to your family, you know
yourself what account you can give to God of your use of riches. For no one
knoweth what passeth within a man, "but the spirit of the man which is in him." s We
ought not to judge anything "before the time until the Lord come who both will
bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the
counsels of the hearts, and then shall every man have praise of God." 6 It pertains,
therefore, to your care as a widow, to see to it that if pleasures increase you
do not set your heart upon them, lest that which ought to rise that it may
live, die through contact with their corrupting influence. Reckon yourself to be
one of those of whom it is written, "Their hearts shall live for ever." 7
CHAP. IV. -- 9. You have now heard what manner of person you should be if you would
pray; hear, in the next place, what you ought to pray for. This is the subject on
which you have thought it most necessary to ask my opinion, because you were
disturbed by the words of the apostle: "We know not what we should pray for as we
ought;"8 and you became alarmed lest it should do you more harm to pray
otherwise than you ought, than to desist from praying altogether. A short solution of
your difficulty may be given thus: "Pray for a happy life." This all men wish
to have; for even those whose lives are worst and most abandoned would by no
means live thus, unless they thought that in this way they either were made or
might be made truly happy. Now what else ought we to pray for than that which
both bad and good desire, but which only the good obtain ?
CHAP. V. -- 10. You ask, perchance, What is this happy life? On this question the
talents and leisure of many philosophers have been wasted, who, nevertheless,
failed in their researches after it just in proportion as they failed to honour Him
from whom it proceeds, and were unthankful to Him. In the first place, then,
consider whether we should accept the opinion of those philosophers who pronounce
that man happy who lives according to his own will. Far be it, surely, from us
to believe this; for what if a man's will inclines him to live in wickedness ?
Is he not proved to be a miserable man in proportion to the facility with
which his depraved will is carried out ? Even philosophers who were strangers to
the worship of God have rejected this sentiment with deserved abhorrence. One of
them, a man of the greatest eloquence, says: "Behold, however, others, not
philosophers indeed, but men of ready power in disputation, who affirm that all men
are happy who live according to their own will. But this is certainly untrue,
for to wish that which is unbecoming is itself a most miserable thing; nor is
it so miserable a thing to fail in obtaining what you wish as to wish to obtain
what you ought not to desire."9 What is your opinion? Are not these words, by
whomsoever they are spoken, derived from the Truth itself? We may therefore here
say what the apostle said of a certain Cretan poet10 whose sentiment had
pleased him: "This witness is true."
11. He, therefore, is truly happy who has all that he wishes to have, and
wishes to have nothing which he ought not to wish. This being understood, let
us now observe what things men may without impropriety wish to have. One desires
marriage; another, having become a widower, chooses thereafter to live a life
of continence; a third chooses to practise continence though he is married. And
although of these three conditions one may be found better than another, we
cannot say that any one of the three persons is wishing what he ought not: the
same is true of the desire for children as the fruit of marriage, and for life
and health to be enjoyed by the children who have been received,- of which
desires the latter is one with which widows remaining unmarried are for the most part
occupied; for although, refusing a second marriage, they do not now wish to
have children, they wish that the children that they have may live in health.
From all such care those who preserve their virginity intact are free.
Nevertheless, all have some dear to them whose temporal welfare they do without
impropriety desire. But when men have obtained this health for themselves, and for those
whom they love, are we at liberty to say that they are now happy ? They have,
it is true, something which it is quite becoming to desire; but if they have not
other things which are greater, better, and more full both of utility and
beauty, they are still far short of possessing a happy life.
CHAP. VI. -- 12. Shall we then say, that in addition to this health of body men may
desire for themselves and for those dear to them honour and power? By all means,
if they desire these in order that by obtaining them they may promote the
interest of those who may be their dependants. If they seek these things not for the
sake of the things themselves, but for some good thing which may through this
means be accomplished, the wish is a proper one; but if it be merely for the
empty gratification of pride, and arrogance, and for a superfluous and pernicious
triumph of vanity, the wish is improper. Wherefore, men do nothing wrong in
desiring for themselves and for their kindred the competent portion of necessary
things, of which the apostle speaks when he says: "Godliness with a competency
[contentment in English version] is great gain; for we brought nothing into this
world, and it is certain we can carry nothing out: and having food and
raiment, let us be therewith content. But they that will be rich fall into temptation,
and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in
destruction and perdition; for the love of money is the root of all evil, which
while some coveted after, they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves
through with many sorrows."1 This competent portion he desires without
impropriety who desires it and nothing beyond it; for if his desires go beyond it, he is
not desiring it, and therefore his desire is improper. This was desired, and
was prayed for by him who said: "Give me neither poverty nor riches: feed me with
food convenient for me: lest I be full, and deny Thee, and say, Who is the
Lord? or lest be poor, and steal, and take the name of my God in vain."2 You see
assuredly that this competency is desired not for its own sake, but to secure
the health of the body, and such provision of house and clothing as is befitting
the man's circumstances, that he may appear as he ought to do among those
amongst whom he has lo live, so as to retain their respect and discharge the duties
of his position.
13. Among all these things, our own welfare and the benefits which
friendship bids us ask for others are things to be desired on their own account; but a
competency of the necessaries of life is usually sought, if it be sought in
the proper way, not on its own account, but for the sake of the two higher
benefits. Welfare consists in the possession of life itself, and health and soundness
of mind and body. The claims of friendship, moreover, are not to be confined
within tao narrow range, for it embraces all to whom love and kindly affection
are due, although the heart goes out to some of these more freely, to others
more cautiously; yea, it even extends to our enemies, for whom also we are
commanded to pray. There is accordingly no one in the whole human family to whom
kindly affection is not due by reason of the bond of a common humanity, although it
may not be due on the ground of reciprocal love;
CHAP. VII.--but in those by whom we are requited with a holy and pure love, we find
great and reasonable pleasure.
For these things, therefore, it becomes us to pray: if we have them, that
we may keep them; if we have them not, that we may get them.
14. Is this all? Are these the benefits in which exclusively the happy
life is found? Or does truth teach us that something else is to be preferred to
them all ? We know that both the competency of things necessary, and the
well-being of ourselves and of our friends, so long as these concern this present world
alone, are to be cast aside as dross in comparison with the obtaining of
eternal life; for although the body may be in health, the mind cannot be regarded as
sound which does not prefer eternal to temporal things; yea, tim life which we
live in time is wasted, if it be not spent in obtaining that by which we may
be worthy of eternal life. Therefore all things which are the objects of useful
and becoming desire are unquestionably to be viewed with reference to that one
life which is lived with God, and is derived from Him. In so doing, we love
ourselves if we love God; and we truly love our neighbours as ourselves, according
to the second great commandment, if, so far as is in our power, we persuade
them to a similar love of God. We love God, therefore, for what He is in Himself,
and ourselves and our neighbours for His sake. Even when living thus, let us
not think that we are securely established in that happy life, as if there was
nothing more for which we should still pray. For how could we be said to live a
happy life now, while that which alone is the object of a well-directed life is
still wanting to us?
CHAP. VIII. -- 15. Why, then, are our desires scattered over many things, and why,
through fear of not praying as we ought, do we ask what we should pray for, and not
rather say with the Psalmist: "One thing have I desired of the Lord, that will I
seek after: that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life,
to behold the beauty of the Lord, and to inquire in His temple "?z For in the
house of the Lord "all the days of life" are not days distinguished by their
successively coming and passing away: the beginning of one day is not the end of
another; but they are all alike unending in that place where the life which is
made up of them has itself no end. In order to our obtaining this true blessed
life, He who is Himself the True Blessed Life has taught us to pray, not with
much speaking, as if our being heard depended upon the fluency with which we
express ourselves, seeing that we are praying to One who, as the Lord tells us,
"knoweth what things we have need of before we ask Him.", Whence it may seem
surprising that, although He has forbidden "much speaking," He who knoweth before
we ask Him what things we need has nevertheless given us exhortation to prayer
in such words as these: "Men ought always to pray and not to faint;" setting
before us the case of a widow, who, desiring to have justice done to her against
her adversary, did by her persevering entreaties persuade an unjust judge to
listen to her, not moved by a regard either to justice or to mercy, but overcome
by her wearisome importunity; in order that we might be admonished bow much more
certainly the Lord God, who is merciful and just, gives ear to us praying
continually to Him, when this widow, by her unremitting supplication, prevailed
over the indifference of an unjust and wicked judge, and how willingly and
benignantly He fulfils the good desires of those whom He knows to have forgiven others
their trespasses, when this suppliant, though seeking vengeance upon her
adversary, obtained her desire.3 A similar lesson the Lord gives in the parable of
the man to whom a friend in his journey had come, and who, having nothing to set
before him, desired to borrow from another friend three loaves (in which,
perhaps, there is a figure of the Trinity of persons of one substance), and finding
him already along with his household asleep, succeeded by very urgent and
importunate entreaties in rousing him up, so! that he gave him as many as he
needed, being moved rather by a wish to avoid further annoyance than by benevolent
thoughts: from which! the Lord would have us understand that, if even one who was
asleep is constrained to give, even in spite of himself, after being disturbed
in his sleep by the person who asks of him, how much more kindly will He give
who never sleeps, and who rouses us from sleep that we may ask from Him.4
16. With the same design He added: "Ask, and ye shall receive; seek, and
ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you: for every one that asketh
receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be
opened. If a son shall ask bread of any of you that is a father, will he give
him a stone ? or if he ask a fish, will he for a fish give him a serpent ? or if
he shall ask an egg, will he offer him a scorpion? If ye then, being evil, know
how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your heavenly
Father give good things to them that ask Him?" s We have here what corresponds
to those three things which the apostle commends: faith is signified by 'the
fish, either on account of the element of water used in baptism, or because it
remains unharmed amid the tempestuous waves of this world,contrasted with which is
the serpent, that with poisonous deceit persuaded man to disbelieve God; hope
is signified by the egg, because the life of the young bird is not yet in it,
but is to be is not seen, but hoped for, because "hope which is seen is not
hope," 6 -- contrasted with which is the scorpion, for the man who hopes for
eternal life forgets the things which are behind, and reaches forth to the things
which are before, for to him it is dangerous to look back; but the scorpion is to
be guarded against on account of what it has in its tail, namely, a sharp and
venomous sting; charity, is signified by bread, for "the greatest of these is
charity," and bread surpasses all other kinds of food in usefulness, --contrasted
with which is a stone, because hard hearts refuse to exercise charity. Whether
this be the meaning of these symbols, or some other more suitable be found, it
is at least certain that He who knoweth how to give good gifts to His children
urges us to "ask and seek and knock."
17. Why .this should be done by Him who "before we ask Him knoweth what
things we have need of," might perplex our minds, if we did not understand that
the Lord our God requires us to ask not that thereby our wish may be intimated
to Him, for to Him it cannot be unknown, but in order that by prayer there may
be exercised in us by supplications that desire by which we may receive what He
prepares to bestow. His gifts are very great, but we are small and straitened
in our capacity of receiving. Wherefore it is said to us: "Be ye enlarged, not
bearing the yoke along with unbelievers. 7 For, in proportion to the simplicity
of our faith, the firmness of our hope, and the ardour of our desire, will we
more largely receive of that which is immensely great; which "eye hath not
seen," for it is not colour; which "the ear hath not heard," for it is not sound;
and which hath not ascended into the heart of man, for the heart of man must
ascend to it.1
CHAP. IX. -- 18. When we cherish uninterrupted desire along with the exercise of faith
and hope and charity, we "pray always." But at certain stated hours and seasons
we also use. words in prayer to God, that by these signs of things we may
admonish ourselves, and may acquaint ourselves with the measure of progress which
we have made in this desire, and may more warmly excite ourselves to obtain an
increase of its strength. For the effect following upon prayer will be excellent
in proportion to the fen, our of the desire which precedes its utterance. And
therefore, what else is intended by the words of the apostle: "Pray without
ceasing," 2 than," Desire without intermission, from Him who alone can give it, a
happy life, which no life can be but that which is eternal "? This, therefore,
let us desire continually from the Lord our God; and thus let us pray
continually. But at certain hours we recall our minds from other cares and business, in
which desire itself somehow is cooled down, to the business of prayer,
admonishing ourselves by the words of our prayer to fix attention upon that which we
desire, lest what had begun to lose heat become altogether cold, and be finally
extinguished, if the flame be not more frequently fanned. Whence, also, when the
same apostle says, "Let your requests be made known unto God," 3 this is not
to be understood as if thereby they become known to God, who certainly knew them
before they were uttered, but in this sense, that they are to be made known to
ourselves in the presence of God by patient waiting upon Him, not in the
presence of men by ostentatious worship. Or perhaps that they may be made known also
to the angels that are in the presence of God, that these beings may in some
way present them to God, and consult Him concerning them, and may bring to us,
either manifestly or secretly, that which, hearkening to His commandment, they
may have learned to be His will, and which must be fulfilled by them according
to that which they have there learned to be their duty; for the angel said to
Tobias:4 "Now, therefore, when thou didst pray, and Sara thy daughter-in-law, I
did bring the remembrance of your prayers before the Holy One."
CHAP. X. -- 19. Wherefore it is neither wrong ! nor unprofitable to spend much time in
praying, if there be leisure for this without hindering other good and
necessary works to which duty' calls us, although even in the doing of these, as I
have said, we ought by cherishing holy desire to pray without ceasing. For to
spend a long time in prayer is not, as some think, the same thing as to pray "with
much speaking." Multiplied words are one thing, long-continued warmth of desire
is another. For even of the Lord Himself it is written, that He continued all
night in prayer,s and that His prayer was more prolonged when He was in an
agony; and in this is not an example given to us by Him who is in time an
Intercessor such as we need, and who is with the Father eternally the Hearer of prayer?
20. The brethren in Egypt are reported to 'have very frequent prayers, but
these very brief, and, as it were, sudden and ejaculatory, lest the wakeful
and aroused attention which is indispensable in prayer should by protracted
exercises vanish or lose its keenness. And in this they themselves show plainly
enough, that just as this attention is not to be allowed to become exhausted if it
cannot continue long, so it is not to be suddenly suspended if it is sustained.
Far be it from us either to use "much speaking" in prayer, or to refrain from
prolonged prayer, if fervent attention of the soul continue. To use much
speaking in prayer is to employ a superfluity of words in asking a necessary thing;
but to prolong prayer is to have the heart throbbing with continued pious
emotion towards Him to whom we pray. For in most cases prayer consists more in
groaning than in speaking, in tears rather than in words. But He setteth our tears in
His sight, and our groaning is not hidden from Him who made all things by the
word, and does not need human words.
CHAP. XI. -- 21. To us, therefore, words are necessary, that by them we may be assisted
in considering and observing what we ask, not as means by which we expect that
God is to be either informed or moved to compliance. When, therefore, we say:
"Hallowed be Thy name," we admonish ourselves to desire that His name, which is
always holy, may be also among men esteemed holy, that is to say, not despised
;. which is an advantage not to God, but to men. When we say: "Thy kingdom
come," which shall certainly come whether we wish it or not, we do by these words
stir up our own desires for that kingdom, that it may come to us, and that we
may be found worthy to reign in it. When we say: "Thy will be done on earth as
it is in heaven," we pray for ourselves that He would give us the grace of
obedience, that His will may be done by us in the same way as it is done in heavenly
places by His angels. When we say: "Give us this day our daily bread," the
word "this day" signifies for the present time, in which we ask either for that
competency of temporal blessings which I have spoken of before (" bread" being
used to designate the whole of those blessings, because of its constituting so
important a part of them), or the sacrament of believers, which is in this
present time necessary, but necessary in order to obtain the felicity not of the
present time, but of eternity. When we say: "Forgive us our debts as we forgive
our! debtors," we remind ourselves both what we should ask, and what we should do
in order that we may be worthy to receive what we ask. When we say: "Lead us
not into temptation," we admonish ourselves to seek that we may not, through
being deprived of God's help, be either ensnared to consent or compelled to yield
to temptation. When we say: "Deliver us from evil," we admonish ourselves to
consider that we are not yet enjoying that good estate in which we shall
experience no evil. And this petition, which stands last in the Lord's Prayer, is so
comprehensive that a Christian, in whatsoever affliction he be placed, may in
using it give utterance to his groans and find vent for his tears -- may begin with
this petition, go on with it, and with it conclude his prayer. For it was
necessary that by the use of these words the things which they signify should be
kept before our memory.
CHAP. XII. -- 22. For whatever other words we may say,- whether the desire of the person
praying go before the words, and employ them in order to give definite form to
its requests, or come after them, and concentrate attention upon them, that it
may increase in fervour, -- if we pray rightly, and as becomes our wants, we
say nothing but what is already contained in the Lord's Prayer. And whoever says
in prayer anything which cannot find its place in that gospel prayer, is
praying in a way which, if it be not unlawful, is at least not spiritual; and I know
not how carnal prayers can be lawful, since it becomes those who are born
again by the Spirit to pray in no i other way than spiritually. For example, when
one prays: "Be Thou glorified among all nations as Thou art glorified among us,"
and "Let Thy prophets be found faithful,"' what else does he ask than,
"Hallowed be Thy name "? When one says: "Turn us again, O Lord God of hosts, cause Thy
face to shine, and we shall be saved," ' what else is he saying than, "Let Thy
kingdom come "? When one says: "Order my steps in Thy word, and let not any
iniquity have dominion over me," 3 what else is he saying than, "Thy will be done
on earth as it is in heaven "? When one says: "Give me ne, neither poverty nor
riches," 4 what else is this than, Give us this day our daily bread "? When
one says: "Lord, remember David, and all his compassion," s or, "O Lord, if I
have done this, if there be iniquity in my hands, if I have rewarded evil to them
that did evil to me," 6 what else is this than, "Forgive us our debts as we
forgive our debtors "? When one says: "Take away from me the lusts of the
appetite, and let not sensual desire take hold on me," 7 what else is this than, "Lead
us not into temptation"? When one says: "Deliver me from mine enemies, O my
God; defend me from them that rise up against me," s what else is this than,
"Deliver us from evil "? And if you go over all the words of holy prayers, you will,
I believe, find nothing which cannot be comprised and summed up in the
petitions of the Lord's Prayer. Wherefore, in praying, we are free to use different
words to any extent, but we must ask the same things; in this we have no choice.
23. These things it is our duty to ask without hesitation for ourselves
and for our friends, and for strangers -- yea, even for enemies; although in the
heart of the person praying, desire for one and for another may arise,
differing in nature or in strength according to the more immediate or more remote
relationship. But he who says in prayer such words as, "0 Lord, multiply my riches;"
or, "Give me as much wealth as Thou hast given to this or that man;" or,
"Increase my honours, make me eminent for power and fame in this world," or
something else of this sort, and who asks merely from a desire for these things, and
not in order through them to benefit men agreeably to God's will, I do not think
that he will find any part of the Lord's Prayer in connection with which he
could fit in these requests. Wherefore let us be ashamed at least to ask these
things, if we be not ashamed to desire them. If, however, we are ashamed of even
desiring them, but feel ourselves overcome by the desire, how much better would
it be to ask to be freed from this plague of desire by Him to whom we say,
"Deliver us from evil"!
CHAP. XIII. -- 24. You have now, if I am not mistaken, an answer to two questions, --
what kind of person you ought to be if you would pray, and what things you should
ask in prayer; and the answer has been given not by my teaching, but by His who
has condescended to teach us all. A happy life is to be sought after, and this
is to be asked from the Lord God. Many different answers have been given by
many in discussing wherein true happiness consists; but why should we go to many
teachers, or consider many answers to this question? It has been briefly and
truly stated in the divine Scriptures, "Blessed is the people whose God is the
Lord." ' That we may be numbered among this people, and that we may attain to
beholding Him and dwelling for ever with Him, "the end of the commandment is,
charity out of a pure heart, and of a good conscience, and of faith unfeigned."2 In
the same three, hope has been placed instead of a good conscience. Faith,
hope, and charity, therefore, lead unto God the man who prays, i.e. who believes,
hopes, and desires, and is guided as to what he should ask from the Lord by
studying the Lord's Prayer. Fasting, and abstinence from gratifying carnal desire
in other pleasures without injury to health, and especially frequent almsgiving,
are a great assistance in prayer; so that we may be able to say, "In the day
of my trouble I sought the Lord, with my hands in the night before Him, and I
was not deceived." s For how can God, who is a Spirit, and who cannot be touched,
be sought with hands in any other sense than by good works?
CHAP. XIV. -- 25. Perhaps you may still ask why the apostle said, "We know not what to
pray for as we ought," 4 for it is wholly incredible that either he or those to
whom he wrote were ignorant of the Lord's Prayer. He could not say this either
rashly or falsely; what, then, do we suppose to be his reason for the
statement? Is it not that vexations and troubles in this world are for the most part
profitable either to heal the swelling of pride, or to prove and exercise
patience, for which, after such probation and discipline, a greater reward is reserved,
or to punish and eradicate some sins; but we, not knowing what beneficial
purpose these may serve, desire to be freed from all tribulation? To this ignorance
the apostle showed that even he himself was not a stranger (unless, perhaps,
he did it notwithstanding his knowing what to pray for as he ought), when, lest
he should be exalted above measure by the greatness of the revelations, there
was given unto him a thorn in the flesh, a messenger of Satan to buffet him; for
which thing, not knowing surely what he ought to pray for, he besought the
Lord thrice that it might depart from him. At length he received! the answer of
God, declaring why that which so great a man prayed for was denied, and why it
was expedient that it should not be done: "My grace is sufficient for thee; my
strength is made perfect in weakness."5
26. Accordingly, we know not what to pray for as we ought in regard to
tribulations, which may do us good or harm; and yet, because they are hard and
painful, and against the natural feelings of our weak nature, we pray, with a
desire which is common to mankind, that they may be removed from us. But we ought
to exercise such submission to the will of the Lord our God, that if He does not
remove those vexations, we do not suppose ourselves to be neglected by Him,
but rather, in patient endurance of evil, hope to be made partakers of greater
good, for so His strength is perfected in our weakness. God has sometimes in
anger granted the request of impatient petitioners, as in mercy He denied it to the
apostle. For we read what the Israelites asked, and in what manner they asked
and obtained their request; but while their desire was granted, their
impatience was severely corrected? Again, He gave them, in answer to their request, a
king according to their heart, as it is written, not according to His own heart?
He granted also what the devil asked, namely, that His servant, who was to be
proved, might be tempted.s He granted also the request of unclean spirits, when
they besought Him that their legion might be sent into the great herd of
swine.9 These things are written to prevent any one from thinking too highly of
himself if he has received an answer when he was urgently asking anything which it
would be more advantageous for him not to receive, or to prevent him from being
cast down and despairing of the divine compassion towards himself if he be not
heard, when, perchance, he is asking something by the obtaining of which he
might be more grievously afflicted, or might be by the corrupting influences of
prosperity wholly destroyed. In regard to such things, therefore, we know not
what to pray for as we ought. Accordingly, if anything is ordered in a way
contrary to our prayer, we ought, patiently bearing the disappointment, and in
everything giving thanks to God, to entertain no doubt whatever that it was right that
the will of God and not our will should be done. For of this the Mediator has
given us an example, inasmuch as, after He had said, "Father, if it be
possible, let this cup pass from me," transforming the human will which was in Him
through His incarnation, He immediately added, "Nevertheless, O Father, not as I
will but as Thou wilt."'° Wherefore, not without reason are many made righteous
by the obedience of One."
27. But whoever desires from the Lord that "one thing," and seeks after
it, 12 asks in certainty and in confidence, and has no fear lest when obtained it
be injurious to him, seeing that, without it, anything else which he may have
obtained by asking in a right way is of no advantage to him. The thing referred
to is the one true and only happy life, in which, immortal and
incorincorruptible in body and spirit, we may contemplate the joy of the Lord for ever. All
other things are desired, and are without impropriety prayed for, with a view to
this one thing. For whosoever has it shall have all that he wishes, and cannot
possibly wish to have anything along with it which would be unbecoming. For in
it is the fountain of life, which we must now thirst for in prayer so long as
we live in hope, not yet seeing that which we hope for, trusting under the
shadow of His wings before whom are all our desires, that we may be abundantly
satisfied with the fatness of His house, and made to drink of the river of His
pleasures; because1 with Him is the fountain of life, and in His light we shall see
light,, when our desire shall be satisfied with good things, and when there
shall be nothing beyond to be sought after with groaning, but all things shall be
possessed by us with rejoicing. At the same time, because this blessing is
nothing else than the "peace which passeth all understanding,"2 even when we are
asking it in our prayers, we know not what to pray for as we ought. For inasmuch
as we cannot present it to our minds as it really is, we do not know it, but
whatever image of it may be presented to our minds we reject, disown, and
condemn; we know it is not what we are seeking, although we do not yet know enough to
be able to define what we seek.
CHAP. XV.--28. There is therefore in us a certain learned ignorance, so to speak--an
ignorance which we learn from that Spirit of God who helps our infirmities. For
after the apostle said, "If we hope for that we see not, then do we with
patience wait for it," he added in the same passage, "Likewise the Spirit also helpeth
our infirmities: for we know not what we should pray for as we ought, but the
Spirit itself maketh intercession for us, with groanings which cannot be
uttered. And He that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is in the mind of the Spirit,
because He maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of God." a
This is not to be understood as if it meant that the Holy Spirit of God, who is
in the Trinity, God unchangeable, and is one God with the Father and the Son,
intercedes for the saints like one who is not a divine person; for it is said,
"He maketh intercession for the saints," because He enables the saints to make
intercession, as in another place it is said, "The Lord your God proverb you,
that He may know whether ye love Him," 4 i.e. that He may make you know. He
therefore makes the saints intercede with groanings which cannot be uttered, when
He inspires them with longings for that great blessing, as yet unknown, for
which we patiently wait. For how is that which is desired set forth in language if
it be unknown, for if it were utterly unknown it would' not be desired; and on
the other hand, if it were seen, it would not be desired nor sought for with
groanings?
CHAP. XVI. -- 29. Considering all these things, and whatever else the Lord shall have
made known to you in this matter, which either does not occur to me or would take
too much time to state here, strive in prayer to overcome this world: pray in
hope, pray in faith, pray in love, pray earnestly and patiently, pray as a
widow belonging to Christ. For although prayer is, as He has taught, the duty of
all His members, i.e. of all who believe in Him and are united to His body, a
more assiduous attention to prayer is found to be specially enjoined in Scripture
upon those who are widows. Two women of the name of Anna are honourably named
there, -- the one, Elkanah's wife, who was the mother of holy Samuel; the other,
the widow who recognised the Most Holy One when He was yet a babe. The former,
though married, prayed with sorrow of mind and brokenness of heart because she
had no sons; and she obtained Samuel, and dedicated him to the Lord, because
she vowed to do so when she prayed for him.s It is not easy, however, to find to
what petition of the Lord's Prayer her petition could be referred, unless it
be to the last, "Deliver us from evil," because it was esteemed to be an evil to
be married and not to have offspring as the fruit of marriage. Observe,
however, what is written concerning the other Anna, the widow: she "departed not from
the temple, but served God with fastings and prayers night and day." 6 In
'like manner, the apostle said in words already quoted, "She that is a widow
indeed, and desolate, trusteth in God and continueth in supplications and prayers
night and day ;" 7 and the Lord, when exhorting men to pray always and not to
faint, made mention of a widow, who, by persevering importunity, persuaded a judge
to attend to her cause, though he was an unjust and wicked man, and one who
neither feared God nor regarded man. How incumbent it is on widows to go beyond
others in devoting time to prayer may be plainly enough seen from the fact that
from among them are taken the examples set forth as an exhortation to all to
earnestness in prayer.
30. Now what makes this work specially suitable to widows but their
bereaved and desolate condition? Whosoever, then, understands that he is in this
world bereaved and desolate as long as he is a pilgrim absent from his Lord, is
careful to commit his widowhood, so to speak, to his God as his shield in
continual and most fervent prayer. Pray, therefore, as a widow of Christ, not yet
seeing Him whose help you implore. And though you are very wealthy, pray as a poor
person, for you have not yet the true riches of the world to come, in which you
have no loss to fear. Though you have sons and grandchildren, and a large
household, still pray, as I said already, as one who is desolate, for we have no
certainty in regard to all temporal blessings that they shall abide for our
consolation even to the end of this present life. If you seek and relish the things
that are above, you desire things everlasting and sure; and as long as you do
not yet possess them, you ought to regard yourself as desolate, even though all
your family are spared to you, and live as you desire. And if you thus act,
assuredly your example will be followed by your most devout daughter-in-law,1 and
the other holy widows and virgins that are settled in peace under your care; for
the more pious the manner in which you order your house, the more are you
bound to persevere fervently in prayer, not engaging yourselves with the affairs of
this world further than is demanded in the interests of religion.
31. By all means remember to pray earnestly for me. I would not have you
yield such deference to the office fraught with perils which I bear, as to
refrain from giving the assistance which I know myself to need. Prayer was made by
the household of Christ for Peter and for Paul. I rejoice that you are in His
household; and I need, incomparably more than Peter and Paul did, the help of the
prayers of the brethren. Emulate each other in prayer with a holy rivalry,
with one heart, for you wrestle not against each other, but against the devil, who
is the common enemy of all the saints. "By fasting, by vigils, and all
mortification of the body, prayer is greatly helped." 2 Let each one do what she can;
what one cannot herself do, she does by another who can do it, if she loves in
another that which personal inability alone hinders her from doing; wherefore
let her who can do less not keep back the one who can do more, and let her who
can do more not urge unduly her who can do less. For your conscience is
responsible to God; to each other owe nothing but mutual love. May the Lord, who is
able to do above what we ask or think, give ear to your prayers.3
LETTER CXXXI. (A.D. 412.)
TO HIS MOST EXCELLENT DAUGHTER, THE NOBLE AND DESERVEDLY ILLUSTRIOUS LADY
PROBA, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
You speak the truth when you say that the soul, having its abode in a
corruptible body, is restrained by this measure of contact with the earth, and is
somehow so bent and crushed by this burden that its desires and thoughts go more
easily downwards to many things than upwards to one. For Holy Scripture says
the same: "The corruptible body presseth down the soul, and the earthly
tabernacle weigheth down the mind that museth upon many things." 4 But our Saviour, who
by His healing word raised up the woman in the gospel that had been eighteen
years bowed down 5 (whose case was, perchance, a figure of spiritual infirmity),
came for this purpose, that Christians might not hear in vain the call, "Lift
up your hearts," and might truly reply, "We lift them up to the Lord." Looking
to this, you do well to regard the evils of this world as easy to bear because
of the hope of the world to come. For thus, by being rightly used, these evils
become a blessing, because, while they do not increase our desires for this
world, they exercise our patience; as to which the apostle says, "We know that all
things work together for good to them that love God: "6 all things, he saith
-- not only, therefore, those which are desired because pleasant, but also those
which are shunned because painful; since we receive the former without being
carried away by them, and bear the latter without being crushed by them, and in
all give thanks, according to the divine command, to Him of whom we say, "I
will bless the Lord at all times; His praise shall continually be in my mouth," 7
and, "It is good for me that Thou hast humbled me, that I might learn Thy
statutes." 8 The truth is, most noble lady, that if the calm of this treacherous
prosperity were always smiling upon us, the soul of man would never make for the
haven of true and certain safety. Wherefore, in returning the respectful
salutation due to your Excellency, and expressing my gratitude for your most pious
care for my welfare, I ask of the Lord that He may grant to you the rewards of the
life to come, and consolation in the present life; and I commend myself to the
love and prayers of all of you in whose hearts Christ dwells by faith.
(In another hand.) May the true and faithful God truly comfort your heart
and preserve your health, my most excellent daughter and noble lady, deservedly
illustrious.
LETTER CXXXII. (A.D. 412.)
TO VOLUSIANUS, MY NOBLE LORD AND MOST JUSTLY DISTINGUISHED SON, BISHOP
AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
In my desire for your welfare, both in this world and in Christ, I am
perhaps not even surpassed by the prayers of your pious mother. Wherefore, in
reciprocating your salutation with the respect due to your worth, I beg to exhort
you, as earnestly as I can, not to grudge to devote attention to the study of the
Writings which are truly and unquestionably holy. For they are genuine and
solid truth, not winning their way to the mind by artificial eloquence, nor giving
forth with flattering voice a vain and uncertain sound. They deeply interest
the man who is hungering not for words but for things; and they cause great
alarm at first in him whom they are to render safe from fear. I exhort you
especially to read the writings of the apostles, for from them you will receive a
stimulus to acquaint yourself with the prophets, whose testimonies the apostles use.
If in your reading or meditation on what you have read any question arises to
the solution of which I may appear necessary, write to me, that I may write in
reply. For, with the Lord helping me, I may perhaps be more able to serve you
in this way than by personally conversing with you on such subjects, partly
because, through the difference in our occupations, it does not happen that you
have leisure at the same times as I might have it, but especially because of the
irrepressible intrusion of those who are for the most part not adapted to such
discussions, and take more pleasure in a war of words than in the clear light of
knowledge; whereas, whatever is written stands always at the service of the
reader when he has leisure, and there can be nothing burdensome in the society of
that which is taken up or laid aside at your own pleasure.
LETTER CXXXIII. (A.D. 412.)
TO MARCELLINUS,1 MY NOBLE LORD, JUSTLY DISTINGUISHED, MY SON VERY MUCH BELOVED
AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. I have learned that the Circumcelliones and clergy of the Donatist
faction belonging to the district of Hippo, whom the guardians of public order had
brought to trial for their deeds, have been examined by your Excellency, and
that the most of them have confessed their share in the violent death which the
presbyter Restitutus suffered at their hands, and in the beating of Innocentius,
another Catholic presbyter, as well as in digging out the eye and cutting off
the finger of the said Innocentius. This news has plunged me into the deepest
anxiety, lest perchance your Excellency should judge them worthy, according to
the laws, of punishment not less severe than suffering in their own persons the
same injuries as they have inflicted on others. Wherefore I write this letter
to implore you by your faith in Christ, and by the mercy of Christ the Lord
Himself, by no means to do this or permit it to be done. For although we might
silently pass over the execution of criminals who may be regarded as brought up for
trial not upon an accusation of ours, but by an indictment presented by those
to whose vigilance the preservation of the public peace is entrusted, we do not
wish to have the sufferings of the servants of God avenged by the infliction
of precisely similar injuries in the way of retaliation. Not, of course, that we
object to the removal from these wicked men of the liberty to perpetrate
further crimes; but our desire is rather that justice be satisfied without the
taking of their lives or the maiming of their bodies in any part, and that, by such
coercive measures as may be in accordance with the laws, they be turned from
their insane frenzy to the quietness of men in their sound judgment, or compelled
to give up mischievous violence and betake themselves to some useful labour.
This is indeed called a penal sentence; but who does not see that when a
restraint is put upon the boldness of savage violence, and the remedies fitted to
produce repentance are not withdrawn, this discipline should be called a benefit
rather than vindictive punishment?
2. Fulfil, Christian judge, the duty of an affectionate father; let your
indignation against their : crimes be tempered by considerations of humanity; be
not provoked by the atrocity of their sinful deeds to gratify the passion of
revenge, but rather be moved by the wounds which these deeds have inflicted on
their own souls to exercise a desire to heal them. Do not lose now that fatherly
care which you maintained when prosecuting the examination, in doing which you
:extracted the confession of such horrid crimes, not by stretching them on the
rack, not by furrowing their flesh with iron claws,1 not by scorching them
with flames, but by beating them with rods, a mode of correction used by
schoolmasters? and by parents themselves in chastising children, and often also by
bishops in the sentences awarded by them. Do not, therefore, now punish with extreme
severity the crimes which you searched out with lenity. The necessity for
harshness is greater in the investigation than in the infliction of punishment; for
even the gentlest men use diligence and stringency in searching out a hidden
crime, that they may find to whom they may show mercy. Wherefore it is generally
necessary to use more rigour in making inquisition, so that when the crime has
been brought to light, there may be scope for displaying clemency. For all
good works love to be set in the light, not in order to obtain glory from men,
but, as the Lord saith, "that they seeing your good works may glorify your Father
who is in heaven." 3 And, for the same reason, the apostle was not satisfied
with merely exhorting us to practise moderation, but also commands us to make it
known: "Let your moderation," he says, "be known unto all men; "4 and in
another place, "Showing all meekness unto all men." 5 Hence, also, that most signal
forbearance of the holy David, when he mercifully spared his enemy when
delivered into his hand,6 would not have been so conspicuous had not his power to act
otherwise been manifest. Therefore let not the power of executing vengeance
inspire you with harshness, seeing that the necessity of examining the criminals
did not make you lay aside your clemency. Do not call for the executioner now
when the crime has been found out, after having forborne from calling in the
tormentor when you were finding it out.
3. In fine, you have been sent hither for the benefit of the Church. I
solemnly declare that what I recommend is expedient in the interests of the
Catholic Church, or, that I may not seem to pass beyond the boundaries of my own
charge, I protest that it is for the good of the Church belonging to the diocese of
Hippo. If you do not hearken to me asking this favour as a friend, hearken to
me offering this counsel as a bishop; although, indeed, it would not be
presumption for me to say -- since I am addressing a Christian, and especially in such
a case as this -- that it becomes you to hearkem to me as a bishop commanding
with authority, my noble and justly distinguished lord and much -- loved son. I
am aware that the principal charge of law cases connected with the affairs of
the Church has been devolved on your Excellency, but as I believe that this
particular case belongs to the very illustrious and honourable proconsul, I have
written a letter 7 to him also, which I beg you not to refuse to give to him,
or, if necessary, recommend to his attention; and I entreat you both not to
resent our intercession, or counsel, or anxiety, as officious. And let not the
sufferings of Catholic servants of God, which ought to be useful in the spiritual
upbuilding of the weak, be sullied by the retaliation of injuries on those who
did them wrong, but rather, tempering the rigour of justice, let it be your care
as sons of the Church to commend both your own faith and your Mother's clemency.
May almighty God enrich your Excellency with all good things, my noble and
justly distinguished lord and dearly beloved son!
LETTER CXXXV.
TO BISHOP AUGUSTIN, MY LORD TRULY HOLY, AND FATHER JUSTLY REVERED, VOLUSIANUS
SENDS GREETING.
1. O man who art a pattern of goodness and uprightness, you ask me to
apply to you for instruction in regard to some of the obscure passages which occur
in my reading. I accept at your command the favour of this kindness, and
willingly offer myself to be taught by you, acknowledging the authority of the
ancient proverb, "We are never too old to learn." With good reason the author of this
proverb has not restricted by any limits or end our pursuit of wisdom; for
truth,8 secluded in its original principles, is never so disclosed to those who
approach it as to be wholly revealed to their knowledge. It seems to me,
therefore, my lord truly holy, and father justly revered, worth while to communicate to
you the substance of a conversation which recently took place among us. I was
present at a gathering of friends, and a great many opinions were brought
forward there, such as the disposition and studies of each suggested. Our discourse
was chiefly, however, on the department of rhetoric which treats of proper
arrangement.9 I speak to one familiar with the subject, for you were not long ago a
teacher of these things. Upon this followed a discussion regarding "invention"
in rhetoric, its nature, what boldness it requires, how great the labour,
involved in methodical arrangement, what is the charm of metaphors, and the beauty
of illustrations, and the power of applying epithets suitable to the character
and nature of the subject in hand. Others extolled with partiality the poet's
art. This part also of eloquence is not left unnoticed or unhonoured by you. We
may appropriately apply to you that line of the poet: "The ivy is intertwined
with the laurels which reward your victory."1 We spoke, accordingly, of the
embellishments which skilful arrangement adds to a poem, of the beauty of
metaphors, and of the sublimity of well-chosen comparisons; then we spoke of smooth and
flowing versification, and, if I may use the expression, the harmonious
variation of the pauses in the lines? The conversation turned next to a subject with
which you are very familiar, namely, that philosophy which you were wont
yourself to cherish after the manner of Aristotle and Isocrates. We asked what had
been achieved by the philosopher of the Lyceum, by the varied and incessant
doubtings of the Academy, by the debater of the Porch, by the discoveries of natural
philosophers, by the self-indulgence of the Epicureans; and what had been the
result of their boundless zeal in disputation with each other, and how truth was
more than ever unknown by them after they assumed that its knowledge was
attainable.
2. While our conversation continues on these. topics, one of the large
company says: "Who among us is so thoroughly acquainted with the wisdom taught by
Christianity as to be able to resolve the doubts by which I am entangled, and
to give firmness to my hesitating acceptance of its teaching by arguments in
which truth or probability may claim my belief ?" We are all dumb with amazement.
Then, of his own accord, he breaks forth in these words: "I wonder whether the
Lord and Ruler of the world did indeed fill the womb of a virgin ; -- did His
mother endure the protracted fatigues of ten months, and, being yet a virgin, in
due season bring forth her child, and continue even after that with her
virginity intact?" To this he adds other statements: "Within the small body of a
crying infant He is concealed whom the universe .scarcely can contain; He bears the
years of childhood, He grows up, He is established in the rigour of manhood;
this Governor is so long an exile from His own dwelling-place, and the care of
the whole world is transferred to one body of insignificant dimensions.
Moreover, He falls asleep, takes food to support Him, is subject to all the sensations
of mortal men. Nor did the proofs of so great majesty shine forth with adequate
fulness of evidence; for the casting out of devils, the curing of the sick,
and the restoration of the dead to life are, if you consider others who have
wrought these wonders, but small works for God to do." We prevent him from
continuing such questions, and the meeting having broken up, we referred the matter to
the valuable decision of experience beyond our own, lest, by too rashly
intruding into hidden things, the error, innocent thus far, should become blameworthy.
You have heard, O man worthy of all honour, the confession of our
ignorance; you perceive what is requested at your hands. Your reputation is interested
in our obtaining an answer to these questions. Ignorance may, without harm to
religion, be tolerated in other priests; but when we come to Bishop Augustin,
whatever we find unknown to him is no part of the Christian system. May the
Supreme God protect your venerable Grace, my lord truly holy and justly revered!
LETTER CXXXVI. (A.D. 412.)
TO AUGUSTIN, MY LORD MOST VENERABLE, AND FATHER SINGULARLY WORTHY OF ALL
POSSIBLE SERVICE FROM ME, I, MARCELLINUS SEND GREETING.
1. The noble Volusianus read to me the letter of your Holiness, and, at my
urgent solicitation, he read to many more the sentences which had won my
admiration, for, like everything else coming from your pen, they were worthy of
admiration. Breathing as it did a humble spirit, and rich in the grace of divine
eloquence, it succeeded easily in pleasing the reader.. What especially pleased
me was your strenuous effort to establish and hold up the steps of one who is
somewhat hesitating, by counselling him to form a good resolution. For I have
every day some discussion with the same man, so far as my abilities, or rather my
lack of talent, may enable me. Moved by the earnest entreaties of his pious
another, I am at pains to visit him frequently, and he is so good as to return my
visits from time to time. But on receiving this letter from your venerable
Eminence, though he is kept back from firm faith in the true God by the influence
of a class of persons who abound in this city, he was so moved, that, as he
himself tells me, he was prevented only by the fear of undue prolixity in his
letter from unfolding to you every possible difficulty in regard to the Christian
faith. Some things, however, he has very earnestly asked you to explain,
expressing himself in a polished and accurate style, and with the perspicuity and
brilliancy of Roman eloquence, such as you will yourself deem worthy of approbation.
The question which he has submitted to you is indeed worn threadbare in
controversy, and the craftiness which, from the same quarter, assails with reproaches
the Lord's incarnation is well known. But as I am confident that whatever you
write in reply will be of use to a very large number, I would approach you with
the request, that even in this question you would condescend to give a
thoroughly guarded answer to their false statement that in His works the Lord
performed nothing beyond what other men have been able to do. They are accustomed to
bring forward their Apollonius and Apuleius, and other men who professed magical
arts, whose miracles they maintained to have been greater than the Lord's.
2. The noble Volusianus aforesaid declared also in the presence of a
number, that there were many other things which might not unreasonably be added to
the question which he has sent, were it not that, as I have already stated,
brevity had been specially studied by him in his letter. Although, however, he
forbore from writing them, he did not pass them over in silence. For he is wont to
say that, even if a reasonable account of the Lord's incarnation were now given
to him, it would still be very difficult to give a satisfactory reason why
this God, who is affirmed to be the God also of the Old Testament, is pleased with
new sacrifices after having rejected the ancient sacrifices. For he alleges
that nothing could be corrected but that which is proved to have been previously
not rightly done; or that what has once been done rightly ought not to be
altered in the very least. That which has been rightly done, he said, cannot be
changed without wrong, especially because the variation might bring upon the Deity
the reproach of inconstancy. Another objection which he stated was, that the
Christian doctrine and preaching were in no way consistent with the duties and
rights of citizens; because, to quote an instance frequently alleged, among its
precepts we find, "Recompense to no man evil for evil,"1 and, "Whosoever shall
smite thee on one cheek, turn to him the other also; and if any man take away
thy coat, let him have I thy cloak also; and whosoever shall compel thee to go a
mile, go with him twain;"2 -- all which he affirms to be contrary to the duties
and rights of citizens. For who would submit to have anything taken from him
by an enemy, or forbear from retaliating the evils of war upon an invader who
ravaged a Roman province? The other precepts, as your Eminence understands, are
open to similar objections. Volusianus thinks that all these difficulties may be
added to the question formerly stated, especially because it is manifest
(though he is silent on this point) that very great calamities have befallen the
commonwealth under the government of emperors observing, for the most part, the
Christian religion.3
3. Wherefore, as your Grace condescends along with me to acknowledge, it
is important that all these difficulties be met by a full, thorough, and
luminous reply (since the welcome answer of your Holiness will doubtless be put into
many hands); especially because, while this discussion was going on, a
distinguished lord and proprietor in the region of Hippo was present, who ironically
said some flattering things concerning your Holiness, and affirmed that he had
been by no means satisfied when he inquired into these matters himself.
I, therefore, not unmindful of your promise, but insisting on its
fulfilment, beseech you to write, on the questions submitted, treatises which will be
of incredible service to the Church, especially at the present time.
LETTER CXXXVII. (A.D. 412.)
TO MY MOST EXCELLENT SON, THE NOBLE AND JUSTLY DISTINGUISHED LORD VOLUSIANUS,
AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
Chap. I. -- I. I have read your letter, containing an abstract of a notable
conversation given with praiseworthy conciseness. I feel bound to reply to it, and to
forbear from alleging any excuse for delay; for it happens opportunely that I have
a short time of leisure from occupation with the affairs of other persons. I
have also put off in the meantime dictating to my amanuensis certain things to
which I had purposed to devote this leisure, for I think it would be a grievous
injustice to delay answering questions which I had myself exhorted the
questioner to pro. pound. For which of us who are administering, as we are able, the
grace of Christ would wish to see you instructed in Christian doctrine only so
far as might suffice to secure to yourself salvation not salvation in this
present life, which, as the word of God is careful to remind us, is but a vapor
appearing for a little while and then vanishing away, but that salvation in order to
the obtaining and eternal possession of which we are Christians? It seems to
us too l little that you should receive only so much instructions suffices to
your own. deliverance. For your gifted mind, and your singularly able land lucid
power of speaking, ought to be of service to all others around you, against
whom, whether slowness or perversity be the cause, it is necessary to defend in a
competent way the dispensation of such abounding grace, which small minds in
their arrogance despise, boasting that they can do very great things, while in
fact they can do nothing to cure or even to curb their own vices.
2. You ask: "Whether the Lord and Ruler of the world did indeed fill the
womb of a virgin? did His mother endure the protracted fatigues of ten months,
and, being yet a virgin, in due season bring forth her child, and continue even
after that with her virginity intact? Was He whom the universe is supposed to
be scarcely able to contain concealed within the small body of a crying infant?
did He bear the years of childhood, and grow up and become established in the
rigour of manhood? Was this Governor so long an exile from His own
dwelling-place, and was the care of the whole world transferred to a body of such
insignificant dimensions? Did He sleep, did He take food as nourishment, and was He
subject to all the sensations of mortal men?" You go on to say that "the proofs of
His great majesty do not shine forth with any adequate fulness of evidence; for
the casting out of devils, the curing of the sick, and the restoration of the
dead are, if we consider others who have performed these wonders, but small
works for God to do." 1 This question, you say, was introduced in a certain
meeting of friends by one of the company,, but that the rest of you prevented him
from bringing forward any further questions, and, breaking up the meeting,
deferred the consideration of the matter till you should have the benefit of
experience beyond your own, lest, by too rashly intruding into hidden things, the error,
innocent thus far, should become blame-worthy.
3. Thereupon you appeal to me, and request me to observe what is desired
from me after this confession of your ignorance. You add, that my reputation is
concerned in your obtaining an answer to these questions, because, though
ignorance is tolerated without injury to religion in other priests, when an inquiry
is addressed to me, who am a bishop, whatever is not known to me must be no
part of the Christian system.
I begin, therefore, by requesting you to lay aside the opinion which you
have too easily. formed concerning me, and dismiss those sentiments, though they
are gratifying evidences of your goodwill, and believe my testimony rather
than any other's regarding myself, if you reciprocate my affection. For such is
the depth of the Christian Scriptures, that even if I were attempting to study
them and nothing else from early boyhood to decrepit old age, with the utmost
leisure, the most unwearied zeal, and talents greater than I have, I would be
still daily making progress in discovering their treasures; not that there is so
great difficulty in coming through them to know the things necessary to
salvation, but when any one has accepted these truths with the faith that is
indispensable as the foundation of a life of piety and uprightness, so many things which
are veiled under manifold shadows of mystery remain to be inquired into by those
who are advancing in the study, and so great is the depth of wisdom not only
in the words in which these have been expressed, but also in the things
themselves, that the experience of the oldest, the ablest, and the most zealous
students of Scripture illustrates what Scripture itself has said: "When a man hath
done, then he beginneth."2
Chap. II. -- 4. But why say more as to this? must rather address myself to the question
which you propose. In the first place, I wish you to understand that the
Christian doctrine does not hold that the Godhead was so blended with the human
nature in which He was born of the virgin that He either relinquished or lost the
administration of the universe, or transferred it to that body as a small and
limited material substance. Such an opinion is held only by men who are incapable
of conceiving of anything but material substances -- whether more dense, like
water and earth, or more subtle, like air and light; but all alike
distinguished by this condition, that none of them can be in its entirety everywhere,
because, by reason of its many parts, it cannot but have one part here, another
there, and however great or small the body may be, it must occupy some place, and
so fill it that in its entirety it is in no one part of the space occupied. And
hence it is the distinctive property of material bodies that they can be
condensed and rarefied, contracted and dilated, crushed into small fragments and
enlarged to great masses. The nature of the soul is very far different from that of
the body; and how much more different must be the nature of God, who is the
Creator of both soul and body ! God is not said to fill the world in the same way
as water, air, and even light occupy space, so that with a greater or smaller
part of Himself He occupies a greater or smaller part of the world. He is able
to be everywhere present in the entirety of His being: He cannot be confined in
any place: He can come without leaving the place where He was: He can depart
without forsaking the place to which He had come.
5. The mind of man wonders at this, and because it cannot comprehend it,
refuses, perhaps, to believe it. I,et it, however, not go on to wonder
incredulously at the attributes of the Deity without first wondering in like manner at
the mysteries within itself;1 let it, if possible, raise itself for a little
above the body, and above those things which it is accustomed to perceive by the
bodily organs, and let it contemplate what that is which uses the body as its
instrument. Perhaps it cannot do this, for it requires, as one has said, great
power of mind to call the mind aside from the senses, and to lead thought away
from its wonted track? Let the mind, then, examine the bodily senses in this
somewhat unusual manner, and with the utmost attention. There are five distinct
bodily senses, which cannot exist either without the body or without the soul;
because perception by the senses is possible, on the one hand, only while a man
lives, and the body receives life from the soul; and on the other hand, only by
the instrumentality of the body vessels and organs, through which we exercise
sight, hearing, and the three other senses. Let the reasoning m soul concentrate
attention upon this subject, and: consider the senses of the body not by these
senses themselves, but by its own intelligence and, reason. A man cannot, of
course, perceive by these senses unless he lives; but up to the time when soul
and body are separated by death, he lives in the body. How, then, does his soul,
which lives nowhere else than in his body, perceive things which are beyond
the surface of that body? Are not the stars in heaven very remote from his body?
and yet does he not see the sun yonder? and is not seeing an exercise of the
bodily senses -- may, is it not the noblest of them all? What, then? Does he live
in heaven as well as in his body, because he perceives by one of his senses
what is in heaven, and perception by sense cannot be in a place where there is no
life of the person perceiving? Or does he perceive even where he is not living
-- because while he lives only in his own body, his perceptive sense is active
also in those places which, outside of his body and remote from it, contain
the objects with which he is in contact by sight ? Do you see how great a mystery
there is even in a sense so open to our observation as that which we call
sight? Consider hearing also, and say whether the soul diffuses itself in some way
abroad beyond the body. For how do we say, "Some one knocks at the door,"
unless we exercise the sense of hearing at the place where the knock is sounding ?
In this case also, therefore, we live beyond the limits of our bodies. Or can we
perceive by sense in a place in which we are not living? But we know that
sense cannot be in exercise where life is not.
6. The other three senses are exercised through immediate contact with
their own organs. Perhaps this may be reasonably disputed in regard to the sense
of smell; but there is no controversy ins to the senses of taste and touch, that
we perceive nowhere else than by contact with our bodily organism the things
which we taste and touch. Let these three senses, therefore, be set aside from
present consideration The senses of sight and hearing present to us a wondered
question, requiring us to explain either how the soul I can perceive by these
senses in a place where it does not live, or how it can live in a place where it
is not. For it is not anywhere but in its own body, and yet it perceives by
these senses in places beyond that body. For in whatever place the soul sees
anything, in that place it is exercising the faculty of perception, because seeing
is an act of perception; and in whatever place the soul hears anything, in that
place it is exercising the faculty of perception, because hearing is an act of
perception. Wherefore the soul is either living in that place where it sees or
hears, and consequently is itself in that place, or it exercises perception in
a place where it is not living, or it is living in a place and yet at the same
moment is not there. All these things are astonishing; not one of them can be
stated without seeming absurdity; and we are speaking only of senses which are
mortal. What, then, is the soul itself which is beyond the bodily senses, that
is to say, which resides in the understanding I whereby it considers these
mysteries ? For it is not by means of the senses that it forms a judgment concerning
the senses themselves. And do we suppose that something incredible is told us
regarding the omnipotence of God, when it is affirmed that the Word of God, by
whom all things were made, did so assume a body from the Virgin, and manifest
Himself with mortal senses, as neither to destroy His own immortality, nor to
change His eternity, nor to diminish His power, nor to relinquish the government
of the world, nor to withdraw from the bosom of the Father, that is, from the
secret place where He is with Him and in Him?
7. Understand the nature of the Word of God, by whom all things were made,
to be such that you cannot think of any part of the Word as passing, and, from
being future, becoming past. He remains as He is, and He is everywhere in His
entirety. He comes when He is manifested, and departs when He is concealed. But
whether concealed or manifested, He is present with us as light is present to
the eyes both of the seeing and of the blind; but it is felt to be present by
the man who sees, and absent by him who is blind. In like manner, the sound of
the voice is near alike to the hearing and to the deaf, but it makes its
presence known to the former and is hidden from the latter. But what is more wonderful
than what happens in connection with the sound of our voices and our words, a
thing, for-sooth, which passes away in a month? For when we speak, there is no
place for even the next syllable till after the preceding one has ceased to
sound; nevertheless, if one hearer be present, he hears the whole of what we say,
and if two hearers be present, both hear the same, and to each of them it is
the whole; and if a multitude listen in silence, they do not break up the sounds
like loaves of bread, to be distributed among them individually, but all that
is uttered is imparted to all and to each in its entirety. Consider this, and
say if it is not more incredible that the abiding word of God should not
accomplish in the universe what the passing word of man accomplishes in the ears of
listeners, namely, that as the word of man is present in its entirety to each and
all of the hearers, so tile Word of God should be present in the entirety of
His being at the same moment everywhere.
8. There is, therefore, no reason to fear in regard to the small body of
the Lord in His infancy, lest in it the Godhead should seem to have been
straitened. For it is not in vast size but in power that God is great: He has in His
providence given to ants and to bees senses superior to those given to asses and
camels; He forms the huge proportions of the fig-tree from one of the minutest
seeds, although many smaller plants spring from much larger seeds; He also has
furnished the small pupil of the eye with the power which. by one glance,
sweeps over almost the half of heaven in a moment; He diffuses the whole fivefold
system of the nerves over tile body from one centre and point in the brain; He
dispenses vital motion throughout the whole body from the heart, a member
comparatively small; and by these and other similar things, He, who in small things
is great, mysteriously produces that which is great from things which are
exceedingly little. Such is the greatness of His power that He is conscious of no
difficulty in that which is difficult. It was this same power which originated,
not from without, but from within, the conception of a child in the Virgin's
womb: this same power associated with Himself a human soul, and through it also a
human body in short, the whole human nature to be elevated by its union with Him
-- without His being thereby lowered in any degree; justly assuming from it
the name of humanity, while amply giving to it the name of Godhead. The body of
the infant Jesus was brought forth from the womb of His mother, still a virgin,
by the same power which afterwards introduced His body when He was a man
through the closed door into the upper chamber? Here, if the reason of the event is
sought out, it will no longer be a miracle; if an example of a precisely similar
event is demanded. it will no longer be unique.3 Let us grant that God can do
something which we must admit to be beyond our comprehension. In such wonders
the whole explanation of the work is the power of Him by whom it is wrought.
Chap. III. -- 9. The fact that He took rest in sleep, and was nourished by food, and
experienced all the feelings of humanity, is the evidence to men of the reality of
that human nature which He assumed but did not destroy. Behold, this was the
fact; and yet some heretics, by a perverted admiration and praise of Hishave
refused altogether to acknowledge the reality of His human nature, in which is he
guarantee of all that grace by which He saves those who believe in Him,
containing deep treasures of wisdom and knowledge, and imparting faith to the minds
which He raises to the eternal contemplation of unchangeable truth. What if the
Almighty had created the human nature of Christ not by causing Him to be born
of a mother, but by some other way, and had presented Him suddenly to the eyes
of mankind ? What if the Lord had not passed through the stages of progress from
infancy to manhood, and had taken neither food nor sleep? Would not this have
confirmed the erroneous impression above referred to, and have made it
impossible to believe at all that He had taken to Himself true human nature; and, while
leaving what was marvellous, would eliminate the element of mercy from His
actions? But now He has so appeared as the Mediator between God and men, that,
uniting the two natures in one person, He both exalted what was ordinary by what
was extraordinary, and tempered what was extraordinary by what was ordinary in
Himself.
10. But where in all the varied movements of creation is there any work of
God which is not wonderful, were it not that through familiarity these wonders
have become small in our esteem ? Nay, how many common things are trodden
under foot, which, if examined carefully, awaken our astonishment ! Take, for
example, the propertries of seeds: who can either comprehend or declare the variety
of species, the vitality, vigour, and secret power by which they from within
small compass evolve great things ? Now the human body and soul which He took to
Himself was created without seed by Him who in the natural world created
originally seeds from no pre-existent seeds. In the body which thus became His, he
who, without any liability to change in Him;elf, has woven according to His
counsel the vicissitudes of all past centuries, became subject o the succession of
seasons and the ordinary .rages of the life of man. For His body, as it began to
exist at a point of time, became developed with the lapse of time. But the
Word of God, who was in the beginning, and to whom, he ages of time owe their
existence, did not how to time as bringing round the event of His incarnation apart
from His consent, but chose he point of time at which He freely took our
nature to Himself. The human nature was brought into union with the divine; God did
not withdraw from Himself.1
11. Some resist upon being furnished with an explanation of the manner in
which the Godhead was so united with a human soul and body as to constitute the
one person of Christ, when it was necessary that this should be done once in
the world's history, with as much boldness as if they were themselves able to
furnish an explanation of the manner in which the soul is so united to: he body
as to constitute the one person of man, an event which is occurring every day.
For just as the soul is united to the body in one person so as to constitute
man, in the same way God united to man in one person so as to constitute Christ.
In the former personality there is a combination of soul and body; in the
latter here is a combination of the Godhead and man. I let my reader, however, guard
against borrowing his idea of the combination from the properties of material
bodies, by which two fluids when combined are so mixed that neither preserves
its original character; although even among material bodies there are
exceptions, such as light, which sustains no change when combined with the atmosphere. In
the person of man, therefore, there is a combination of soul and body; in the
i person of Christ there is a combination of the I Godhead with man; for when
the Word of God was united to a soul having a body, He took into union with
Himself both the soul and the body. The former event takes place daily in the
beginning of life in individuals of the human race; the latter took place once for
the salvation.of men. And yet of the two events, the combination of two
immaterial substances ought to be more easily behaved than a combination in which the
one is immaterial and the other material. For if the soul is not mistaken in
regard to its own nature, it understands itself to be immaterial. Much more
certainly does this attribute belong to the Word of God; and consequently the
combination of the Word with the human soul is a combination which ought to be much
more credible than that of soul and body. The latter is realized by us in
ourselves; the former we are commanded to believe to have been realized in Christ. But
if both of them were alike foreign to our experience, and we were enjoined to
believe that both had taken place, which of the two would we more readily
believe to have occurred? Would were not admit that two immaterial substances could
be more easily combined than one immaterial and one material; unless, perhaps,
it be unsuitable to use the word combination in connection with these things,
because of the difference between their nature and that of material substances,
both in themselves and as known to us?
12. Wherefore the Word of God, who is also the Son of God, co-eternal with
the Father, the Power and the Wisdom of God? mightily pervading and
harmoniously ordering all things, from the highest limit of the intelligent to the lowest
limit of the material creation? revealed and concealed, nowhere confined,
nowhere divided, nowhere distended, but without dimensions, everywhere present in
His entirety, -- this Word of God, I say, took to Himself, in a manner entirely
different from that in which He is present to other creatures, the soul and
body of a man, and made, by the union of Himself therewith, the one person Jesus
Christ, Mediator between God and men,4 he His Deity equal with the Father, in
His flesh, i.e. in His human nature, inferior to the Father, -- unchangeably
immortal in respect of the divine nature, in which He is equal with the Father, and
yet changeable and mortal in respect of the infirmity which was His through
participation with our nature.
In this Christ there came to men, at the time which He knew to be most
fitting, and which He had fixed before the world began, the instruction and the
help necessary to the obtaining of eternal salvation. Instruction came by Him,
because those truths which had been, for men's advantage, spoken before that time
on earth not only by the holy prophets, all whose words were true, but also by
philosophers and even poets and authors in every department of literature (for
beyond question they mixed much truth with what was false), might by the
actual presentation of His authority in human nature be confirmed as true for the
sake of those who could not perceive and distinguish them in the light of
essential Truth, which Truth was, even before He assumed human nature, present to all
who were capable of receiving truth. Moreover, by the fact of His incarnation,
He taught this above all other things for our benefit, -- that whereas men
longing after the Divine Being supposed, from pride rather than piety, that they
must approach Him not directly, but through heavenly powers which they regarded
as gods, and through various forbidden rites which were holy but profane, -- in
which worship devils succeed, through the bond which pride forms between
mankind and them in taking the place of holy angels, -- now men might understand that
the God whom they were regarding as far removed, and whom they approached not
directly but through mediating powers, is actually so very near to the pious
longings of men after Him, that He has condescended to take a human soul and body
into such union with Himself that this complete man is joined to Him in the
same way as the body is joined to the soul in man, excepting that whereas both
body and soul have a common progressive development, He does not participate in
this growth, because it implies mutability, a property which God cannot assume.
Again, in this Christ the held necessary to salvation was brought to men, for
without the grace of that faith which is from Him, no one can either subdue
vicious desires, or be cleansed by pardon from the guilt of any power of sinful
desire which he may not have wholly vanquished. As to the effects produced by His
instruction, is there now even an imbecile, however weak, or a silly woman,
however low, that does not believe in the immortality of the soul and the reality
of a life after death ? Yet these are truths which, when Pherecydes 1 the
Assyrian for the first time maintained them in discussion among the Greeks of old,
moved Pythagoras of Samos so deeply by their novelty, as to make him turn from
the exercises of the athlete to the studies of the philosopher. But now what
Virgil said we all behold: "The balsam of Assyria grows everywhere."2 And as to
the help given through the grace of Christ, in Him truly are the words of the
same poet fulfilled: "With Thee as our leader, the obliteration of all the traces
of our sin which remain shall deliver the earth from perpetual alarm." 3
Chap. IV. -- 13. "But," they say, "the proofs of so great majesty did not shine forth
with adequate fulness of evidence; for the casting out of devils, the healing of
the sick, and the restoration of the dead to life are but small works for God
to do, if the others who have wrought similar wonders be borne in mind." 4 We
ourselves admit that the prophets wrought some miracles like those performed by
Christ. For among these miracles what is more wonderful than the raising of the
dead? Yet both Elijah and Elisha did this.s As to the miracles of magicians,
and the question whether they also raised the dead, let those pronounce an
opinion who strive, not as accusers, but as panegyrists, to prove Apuleius guilty of
those charges of practising magical arts from which he himself takes abundant
pains to defend his reputation. We read that the magicians of Egypt, the most
skilled in these arts, were vanquished by Moses, the servant of God, when they
were working wonderfully by impious enchantments, and he, by simply calling upon
God in prayer, overthrew all their machinations? But this Moses himself and
all the other true prophets prophesied concerning the Lord Christ, and gave to
Him great glory; they predicted that He would come not as One merely equal or
superior to them in the same power of working miracles, but as One who was truly
God the Lord of all, and who became man for the benefit of men. He was pleased
to do also some miracles, such as they had done, to prevent the incongruity of
His not doing in person such things as He had done by them. Nevertheless, He was
to do also some things peculiar to Him, self, namely, to be born of a virgin,
to rise from the dead, to ascend to heaven. I know not what greater things he
can look for who thinks these too little for God to do.
14. For I think that such signs of divine power are demanded by these
objectors as were not suitable for Him to do when wearing the nature of men. The
Word was in the beginning, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God, and
by Him all things were made.8 Now, when the Word became flesh, was it necessary
for Him to create another world, that we might believe Him to be the person by
whom the world was made ? But within this world it would have been impossible
to make another greater than itself, or equal to it. If, however, He were to
make a world inferior to that which now exists, this, too, would be considered too
small a work to prove His deity. Wherefore, since it was not necessary that He
should make a new world, He made new things in the world. For that a man
should be born of a virgin, and raised from the dead to eternal life, and exalted
above the heavens, is perchance a work involving a greater exertion of power than
the creating of a world. Here, probably, objectors ma, answer that they do not
believe that these things took place. What, then, can be done for men who
despise smaller evidences as inadequate, and reject greater evidences as incredible
? That life has been restored to the dead is believed, because it has been
accomplished by others, and I is too small a work to prove him who performs it to
be God: that a true body was created in a virgin, and being raised from death
to eternal life, was taken up to heaven, is not believed, because no one else
has done this, and it is what God alone could do. On this principle every man is
to accept with equanimity whatever he thinks easy for himself not indeed to do,
but to conceive, and is to reject as false and fictitious whatever goes beyond
that limit. I beseech you, do' not be like these men.
15. These topics are elsewhere more amply discussed, and in fundamental
questions of doctrine every intricate point has been opened up by thorough
investigation and debate; but faith gives the understanding access to these things,
unbelief closes the door. What man might not be moved to faith in the doctrine
of Christ by such a remarkable chain of events from the beginning, and by the
manner in which the epochs of the world are linked together, so that our faith in
regard to present things is assisted by what happened in the past, and the
record o? earlier and ancient things is attested by later and more recent events?
One is chosen from among the Chaldeans, a man endowed with most eminent piety
and faith, that to him may be given divine promises, appointed to be fulfilled
in the last times of the world, after the lapse of so many centuries; and it is
foretold that in his seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed.' This
man, worshipping the one true God, the Creator of the universe, begets in his
old age a son, when sterility and advanced years had made his wife give up all
expectation of becoming a mother. The descendants of this son become a very
numerous tribe, being increased in Egypt, to which place they had been removed from
the East, by Divine Providence multiplying as time went on both the promises
given and the works wrought on their behalf. From Egypt they come forth a mighty
nation, being brought out with terrible signs and wonders; and the wicked
nations of the promised land being driven out from before them, they are brought
into it and settled there, and exalted to the position of a kingdom. Thereafter,
frequently provoking by prevailing sin and idolatrous impieties the true God,
who had bestowed on them so many benefits, and experiencing alternately the
chastisements of calamity land the consolations of restored prosperity, the history
of the nation is brought down to the incarnation and the manifestation of
Christ. Predictions that this Christ, being the Word of God, the Son of God, and
God Himself, was to become incarnate, to die, to rise again, to ascend into
heaven, to have multitudes of all nations through the power of His name surrendering
themselves to Him, and that by Him pardon of sins and eternal salvation would
be given to all who believe in Him,- these predictions, I say, have been
published by all tim promises given to that nation, by all the prophecies, the
institution of the priesthood, the sacrifices, the temple, and, in short, by all
their sacred mysteries.
16. Accordingly Christ comes: in His birth, life, words, deeds,
sufferings, death, resurrection, ascension, all which the prophets had foretold is
fulfilled? He sends the Holy Spirit; fills with this Spirit the believers when they
are assembled in one house, and expecting with prayer and ardent desire this
promised gift. Being thus filled with the Holy Spirit, they speak immediately in
the tongues of all nations, they boldly confute errors, they preach the truth
that is most profitable for mankind, they exhort men to repent of their past
blameworthy lives, and promise pardon by the free grace of God. Signs and miracles
suitable for confirmation follow their preaching of piety and of the true
religion. The cruel enmity of unbelief is stirred up against them; they bear
predicted trials, they hope for promised blessings, and teach that which they had been
commanded to make known. Few in number at first, they become scattered like
seed throughout the world; they convert nations with won drous facility; they
grow in number in the midst of enemies; they become increased by persecutions;
and, under the severity of hardships, instead of being straitened, they extend
their influence to the utmost boundaries of the earth. From being very ignorant,
despised, and few, They become enlightened, distinguished, and numerous, men of
illustrious talents and of polished eloquence; they also bring under the yoke
of Christ, and attract to the work of preaching the way of holiness and
salvation, the marvellous attainments of men remarkable for genius, eloquence, and
erudition. Amid alternations of adversity and prosperity, they watchfully practise
patience and self-control; and when the world's day is drawing near its close,
and the approaching consummation is heralded by the calamities which exhaust
its energies, they, seeing in this the fulfilment of prophecy, only expect with
increased. confidence the everlasting blessedness of the heavenly city.
Moreover, amidst all these changes, the unbelief of the heathen nations continues to
rage against the Church of Christ; she gains the victory by patient endurance,
and by the maintenance of unshaken faith in the face of the cruelties of her
adversaries.
The sacrifice of Him in whom the truth, long veiled under mystic promises,
is revealed, having been offered, those sacrifices by which it was prefigured
are finally abolished by the utter destruction of the Jewish temple. The Jewish
nation, itself rejected because of unbelief, being now rooted out from its own
land, is dispersed to every region of the world, in order that it may carry
everywhere the Holy Scriptures, and that in this way our adversaries themselves
may bring before mankind the testimony furnished by the prophecies concerning
Christ and His Church, thus precluding the possibility of the supposition that
these predictions were forged by us to suit the time; in which prophecies, also,
the unbelief of these very Jews is foretold. The temples, images, and impious
worship of the heathen divinities are overthrown gradually and in succession,
according to the prophetic intimations. Heresies bud forth against the name of
Christ, though veiling themselves under His name, as had been foretold, by which
the doctrine of the holy religion is tested and developed. All these things are
now seen to be accomplished, in exact fulfilment of the predictions which we
read in Scripture; and from these important and numerous instances of fulfilled
prophecy, the fulfilment of the predictions which remain is confidently
expected. Where, then, is the mind, having aspirations after eternity, and moved by
the shortness of this present life, which can resist the clearness and perfection
of these evidences of the divine origin of our faith?
Chap. V. -- 17. What discourses or writings of philosophers, what laws of any
commonwealth in any land or age, are worthy for a moment to be compared with the two
commandments on which Christ saith that all the law and the prophets hang: "Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with
all thy mind, and thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself"?' All philosophy
is here, -- physics, ethics, logic: the first, because in God the Creator are
all the causes of all existences in nature; the second, because a good and honest
life is not produced in any other way than by loving, in the manner in which
they should be loved, the proper objects of our love, namely, God and our
neighbour; and the third, because God alone is the Truth and the Light of the
rational soul. Here also is security for the welfare and renown of a commonwealth; for
no state is perfectly established and preserved otherwise than on the
foundation and by the bond of faith and of firm concord, when the highest and truest
common good, namely, God, is loved by all, and men love each other in Him without
dissimulation, because they love one another for His sake from whom they
cannot disguise the real character of their love.
18. Consider, moreover, the style in which Sacred Scripture is composed,
-- how accessible it is to all men, though its deeper mysteries are penetrable
to very few. The plain truths which it contains it declares in the artless
language of familiar friendship to the hearts both of the unlearned and of the
learned; but even the truths which it veils in symbols it does not set forth in
stiff and stately sentences, which a mind somewhat sluggish and uneducated might
shrink from approaching, as a poor man shrinks from the presence of the rich;
but, by the condescension of its style, it invites all not only to be fed with the
truth which is plain, but also to be exercised by the truth which is
concealed, having both m its simple and in its obscure portions the same truth. Lest
what is easily understood should beget satiety in the reader, the same truth being
in another place more obscurely expressed becomes again desired, and, being
desired, is somehow invested with a new attractiveness, and thus is received with
pleasure into the heart. By these means wayward minds are corrected, weak
minds are nourished, and strong minds are filled with pleasure, in such a way as is
profitable to all. This doctrine has no enemy but the man who, being in error,
is ignorant of its incomparable usefulness, or, being spiritually diseased, is
averse to its healing power.
19. You see what a long letter I have written. If, therefore, anything
perplexes you, and you regard it of sufficient importance to be discussed between
us, let not yourself be straitened by keeping within the bounds of ordinary
letters; for you know as well as any one what long letters the ancients wrote when
they were treating of any subject which they were not able briefly to explain.
And even if the custom of authors in . other department. s of literature had
been different, the authority of Christian writers, whose example has a worthier
claim upon our imitation, might be set before us. Observe, therefore, the
length of the apostolic epistles, and of the commentaries written on these divine
oracles, and do not hesitate either to ask many questions if you have many
difficulties, or to handle more fully the questions which you propound, in order
that, in so far as it can be achieved with such abilities as we possess, there may
remain no cloud of doubt to obscure the light of truth.
20. For I am aware that your Excellency has to encounter the most
determined opposition from certain persons, who think, or would have others think, that
Christian doctrine is incompatible with the welfare of the commonwealth,
because they wish to see the commonwealth established not by the stedfast practice
of virtue, but by granting impunity to vice. But with God the crimes in which
many are banded together do not pass unavenged, as is often the case with a king,
or any other magistrate who is only a man. Moreover, His mercy and grace,
published to men by Christ, who is Himself man, and imparted to man by the same
Christ, who is also God and the Son of God, never fail those who live by faith in
Him and piously worship Him, in adversity patiently and bravely bearing the
trials of this life, in prosperity using with self-control and with compassion for
others the good things of this life; destined to receive, for faithfulness in
both conditions, an eternal recompense in that divine and heavenly city in
which there shall be no longer calamity to be painfully endured, nor inordinate
desire to be with laborious care controlled, where our only work shall be to
preserve, without any difficulty and with perfect liberty, our love to God and to
our neighbour.
May the infinitely compassionate omnipotence of God preserve you in safety
and increase your happiness, my noble and distinguished Lord, and my most
excellent son. With profound respect, as is due to your worth, I salute your pious
and most truly venerable mother, whose prayers on your behalf may God hear! My
pious brother and fellow bishop, Possidius, warmly salutes your Grace.