ON CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE: PREFACE & BOOK I
ON CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE
IN FOUR BOOKS.
TRANSLATED BY
REV. PROFESSOR J. F. SHAW,
OF LONDONDERRY.
ON CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE.
INTRODUCTORY NOTE BY THE EDITOR.
The four books of St. Augustin On Christian Doctrine (De Doctrina
Christiana, iv libri) are a compend of exegetical theology to guide the reader in the
understanding and interpretation of the Sacred Scriptures, according to the
analogy of faith.The first three books were written A. D. 397; the fourth was added
426.
He speaks of it in his Retractations, Bk. ii., chap. 4, as follows:
"Finding that the books on Christian Doctrine were not finished, I thought it better
to complete them before passing on to the revision of others. Accordingly, I
completed the third book, which had been written as far as the place where a
quotation is made from the Gospel about the woman who took leaven and hid it in
three measures of meal till the whole was leavened.(1) I added also the last book,
and finished the whole work in four books [in the year 426]: the first three
affording aids to the interpretation of Scripture, the last giving directions as
to the mode of making known our interpretation. In the second book,(2) I made
a mistake as to the authorship of the book commonly called the Wisdom of
Solomon. For I have since learnt that it is not a well-established fact, as I said it
was, that Jesus the son of Sirach, who wrote the book of Ecclesiasticus, wrote
this book also: on the contrary, I have ascertained that it is altogether more
probable that he was not the author of this book. Again, when I said, 'The
authority of the Old Testament is contained within the limits of these forty-four
books,'(3) I used the phrase 'Old Testament' in accordance with ecclesiastical
usage. But the apostle seems to restrict the application of the name 'Old
Testament' to the law which was given on Mount Sinai.(4) And in what I said as to
St. Ambrose having, by his knowledge of chronology, solved a great difficulty,
when he showed that Plato and Jeremiah were contemporaries,(5) my memory betrayed
me. What that great bishop really did say upon this subject may be seen in the
book which he wrote, 'On Sacraments or Philosophy.'"(6)
ON CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE.
PREFACE.
SHOWING THAT TO TEACH RULES FOR THE INTERPRETATION OF SCRIPTURE IS NOT A
SUPERFLUOUS TASK.
1. THERE are certain rules for the interpretation of Scripture which I
think might with great advantage be taught to earnest students of the word, that
they may profit not only from reading the works of others who have laid open the
secrets of the sacred writings, but also from themselves opening such secrets
to others. These rules I propose to teach to those who are able and willing to
learn, if God our Lord do not withhold from me, while I write, the thoughts He
is wont to vouchsafe to me in my meditations on this subject. But before I
enter upon this undertaking, I think it well to meet the objections of those who
are likely to take exception to the work, or who would do so, did I not
conciliate them beforehand. And if, after all, men should still be found to make
objections, yet at least they will not prevail with others (over whom they might have
influence, did they not find them forearmed against their assaults), to turn
them back from a useful study to the dull sloth of ignorance.
2. There are some, then, likely to object to this work of mine, because
they have failed to understand the rules here laid down. Others, again, will
think that I have spent my labor to no purpose, because, though they understand the
rules, yet in their attempts to apply them and to interpret Scripture by them,
they have failed to clear up the point they wish cleared up; and these,
because they have received no assistance from this work themselves, will give it as
their opinion that it can be of no use to anybody. There is a third class of
objectors who either really do understand Scripture well, or think they do, and
who, because they know (or imagine) that they have attained a certain power of
interpreting the sacred books without reading any directions of the kind that I
propose to lay down here, will cry out that such rules are not necessary for any
one, but that everything rightly done towards clearing up the obscurities of
Scripture could be better done by the unassisted grace of God.
3. To reply briefly to all these. To those who do not understand what is
here set down, my answer is, that I am not to be blamed for their want of
understanding. It is just as if they were anxious to see the new or the old moon, or
some very obscure star, and I should point it out with my finger: if they had
not sight enough to see even my finger, they would surely have no right to fly
into a passion with me on that account. As for those who, even though they know
and understand my directions, fail to penetrate the meaning of obscure passages
in Scripture, they may stand for those who, in the case I have imagined, are
just able to see my finger, but cannot see the stars at which it is pointed. And
so both these classes had better give up blaming me, and pray instead that God
would grant them the sight of their eyes. For though I can move my finger to
point out an object, it is out of my power to open men's eyes that they may see
either the fact that I am pointing, or the object at which I point.
4. But now as to those who talk vauntingly of Divine Grace, and boast that
they understand and can explain Scripture without the aid of such directions
as those I now propose to lay down, and who think, therefore, that what I have
undertaken to write is entirely superfluous. I would such persons could calm
themselves so far as to remember that, however justly they may rejoice in God's
great gift, yet it was from human teachers they themselves learnt to read. Now,
they would hardly think it right that they should for that reason be held in
contempt by the Egyptian monk Antony, a just and holy man, who, not being able to
read himself, is said to have committed the Scriptures to memory through
hearing them read by others, and by dint of wise meditation to have arrived at a
thorough understanding of them; or by that barbarian slave Christianus, of whom I
have lately heard from very respectable and trustworthy witnesses, who, without
any teaching from man, attained a full knowledge of the art of reading simply
through prayer that it might be revealed to him; after three days' supplication
obtaining his request that he might read through a book presented to him on the
spot by the astonished bystanders.
5. But if any one thinks that these stories are false, I do not strongly
insist on them. For, as I am dealing with Christians who profess to understand
the Scriptures without any directions from man (and if the fact be so, they
boast of a real advantage, and one of no ordinary kind), they must surely grant
that every one of us learnt his own language by hearing it constantly from
childhood, and that any other language we have learnt,--Greek, or Hebrew, or any of
the rest,--we have learnt either in the same way, by hearing it spoken, or from a
human teacher. Now, then, suppose we advise all our brethren not to teach
their children any of these things, because on the outpouring of the Holy Spirit
the apostles immediately began to speak the language of every race; and warn
every one who has not had a like experience that he need not consider himself a
Christian, or may at least doubt whether he has yet received the Holy Spirit? No,
no; rather let us put away false pride and learn whatever can be learnt from
man; and let him who teaches another communicate what he has himself received
without arrogance and without jealousy. And do not let us tempt Him in whom we
have believed, lest, being ensnared by such wiles of the enemy and by our own
perversity, we may even refuse to go to the churches to hear the gospel itself, or
to read a book, or to listen to another reading or preaching, in the hope that
we shall be carried up to the third heaven, "whether in the body or out of the
body," as the apostle says,(1) and there hear unspeakable words, such as it is
not lawful for man to utter, or see the Lord Jesus Christ and hear the gospel
from His own lips rather than from those of men.
6. Let us beware of such dangerous temptations of pride, and let us rather
consider the fact that the Apostle Paul himself, although stricken down and
admonished by the voice of God from heaven, was yet sent to a man to receive the
sacraments and be admitted into the Church;(2) and that Cornelius the
centurion. although an angel announced to him that his prayers were heard and his alms
had in remembrance, was yet handed over to Peter for instruction, and not only
received the sacraments from the apostle's hands, but was also instructed by him
as to the proper objects of faith, hope, and love.(3) And without doubt it was
possible to have done everything through the instrumentality of angels, but
the condition of our race would have been much more degraded if God had not
chosen to make use of men as the ministers of His word to their fellow-men. For how
could that be true which is written, "The temple of God is holy, which temple
ye are,"(4) if God gave forth no oracles from His human temple, but communicated
everything that He wished to be taught to men by voices from heaven, or
through the ministration of angels? Moreover, love itself, which binds men together
in the bond of unity, would have no means of pouring soul into soul, and, as it
were, mingling them one with another, if men never learnt anything from their
fellow-men.
7. And we know that the eunuch who was reading Isaiah the prophet, and did
not understand what he read, was not sent by the apostle to an angel, nor was
it an angel who explained to him what he did not understand, nor was he
inwardly illuminated by the grace of God without the interposition of man; on the
contrary, at the suggestion of God, Philip, who did understand the prophet, came to
him, and sat with him, and in human words, and with a human tongue, opened to
him the Scriptures.(5) Did not God talk with Moses, and yet he, with great
wisdom and entire absence of jealous pride, accepted the plan of his father-in-law,
a man of an alien race, for ruling and administering the affairs of the great
nation entrusted to him?(6) For Moses knew that a wise plan, in whatever mind
it might originate, was to be ascribed not to the man who devised it, but to Him
who is the Truth, the unchangeable God.
8. In the last place, every one who boasts that he, through divine
illumination, understands the obscurities of Scripture, though not instructed in any
rules of interpretation, at the same time believes, and rightly believes, that
this power is not his own, in the sense of originating with himself, but is the
gift of God. For so he seeks God's glory, not his own. But reading and
understanding, as he does, without the aid of any human interpreter, why does he
himself undertake to interpret for others? Why does he not rather send them direct to
God, that they too may learn by the inward teaching of the Spirit without the
help of man? The truth is, he fears to incur the reproach: "Thou wicked and
slothful servant thou oughtest to have put my money to the exchangers."(1) Seeing,
then, that these men teach others, either through speech or writing, what they
understand, surely they cannot blame me if I likewise teach not only what they
understand, but also the rules of interpretation they follow. For no one ought
to consider anything as his own, except perhaps what is false. All truth is of
Him who says, "I am the truth."(2) For what have we that we did not receive?
and if we have received it, why do we glory, as if we had not received it?(3)
9. He who reads to an audience pronounces aloud the words he sees before
him: he who teaches reading, does it that others may be able to read for
themselves. Each, however, communicates to others what he has learnt himself. Just so,
the man who explains to an audience the passages of Scripture he understands
is like one who reads aloud the words before him. On the other hand, the man who
lays down rules for interpretation is like one who teaches reading, that is,
shows others how to read for themselves. So that, just as he who knows how to
read is not dependent on some one else, when he finds a book, to tell him what is
written in it, so the man who is in possession of the rules which I here
attempt to lay down, if he meet with an obscure passage in the books which he reads,
will not need an interpreter to lay open the secret to him, but, holding fast
by certain rules, and following up certain indications, will arrive at the
hidden sense without any error, or at least without falling into any gross
absurdity. And so although it will sufficiently appear in the course of the work
itself that no one can justly object to this undertaking of mine, which has no other
object than to be of service, yet as it seemed convenient to reply at the
outset to any who might make preliminary objections, such is the start I have
thought good to make on the road I am about to traverse in this book.
BOOK I.
CONTAINING A GENERAL VIEW OF THE SUBJECTS TREATED IN HOLY SCRIPTURE.
ARGUMENT.
THE AUTHOR DIVIDES HIS WORK INTO TWO PARTS, ONE RELATING TO THE DISCOVERY, THE
OTHER TO THE EXPRESSION, OF THE TRUE SENSE OF SCRIPTURE. HE SHOWS THAT TO
DISCOVER THE MEANING WE MUST ATTEND BOTH TO THINGS AND TO SIGNS, AS IT IS NECESSARY
TO KNOW WHAT THINGS WE OUGHT TO TEACH TO THE CHRISTIAN PEOPLE, AND ALSO THE
SIGNS OF THESE THINGS, THAT IS, WHERE THE KNOWLEDGE OF THESE THINGS IS TO BE
SOUGHT. IN THIS FIRST BOOK HE TREATS OF THINGS, WHICH HE DIVIDES INTO THREE
CLASSES,--THINGS TO BE ENJOYED, THINGS TO BE USED, AND THINGS WHICH USE AND ENJOY. THE
ONLY OBJECT WHICH OUGHT TO BE ENJOYED IS THE TRIUNE GOD, WHO IS OUR HIGHEST
GOOD AND OUR TRUE HAPPINESS. WE ARE PREVENTED BY OUR SINS FROM ENJOYING GOD; AND
THAT OUR SINS MIGHT BE TAKEN AWAY, "THE WORD WAS MADE FLESH," OUR LORD
SUFFERED, AND DIED, AND ROSE AGAIN, AND ASCENDED INTO HEAVEN, TAKING TO HIMSELF AS HIS
BRIDE THE CHURCH, IN WHICH WE RECEIVE REMISSION OF OUR SINS. AND IF OUR SINS
ARE REMITTED AND OUR SOULS RENEWED BY GRACE, WE MAY AWAIT WITH HOPE THE
RESURRECTION OF THE BODY TO ETERNAL GLORY; IF NOT, WE SHALL BE RAISED TO EVERLASTING
PUNISHMENT. THESE MATTERS RELATING TO FAITH HAVING BEEN EXPOUNDED, THE AUTHOR GOES
ON TO SHOW THAT ALL OBJECTS, EXCEPT GOD, ARE FOR USE; FOR, THOUGH SOME OF THEM
MAY BE LOVED, YET OUR LOVE IS NOT TO REST IN THEM, BUT TO HAVE REFERENCE TO
GOD. AND WE OURSELVES ARE NOT OBJECTS OF ENJOYMENT TO GOD; HE USES US, BUT FOR
OUR OWN ADVANTAGE. HE THEN GOES ON TO SHOW THAT LOVE--THE LOVE OF GOD FOR HIS OWN
SAKE AND THE LOVE OF OUR NEIGHBOR FOR GOD'S SAKE--IS THE FULFILLMENT AND THE
END OF ALL SCRIPTURE. AFTER ADDING A FEW WORDS ABOUT HOPE, HE SHOWS, IN
CONCLUSION, THAT FAITH, HOPE, AND LOVE ARE GRACES ESSENTIALLY NECESSARY FOR HIM WHO
WOULD UNDERSTAND AND EXPLAIN ARIGHT THE HOLY SCRIPTURES.
CHAP. 1.--THE INTERPRETATION OF SCRIPTURE DEPENDS ON THE DISCOVERY AND
ENUNCIATION OF THE MEANING, AND IS TO BE UNDERTAKEN IN DEPENDENCE ON GOD'S AID.
1. THERE are two things on which all interpretation of Scripture depends:
the mode of ascertaining the proper meaning, and the mode of making known the
meaning when it is ascertained. We shall treat first of the mode of
ascertaining, next of the mode of making known, the meaning;--a great and arduous
undertaking, and one that, if difficult to carry out, it is, I fear, presumptuous to
enter upon. And presumptuous it would undoubtedly be, if I were counting on my own
strength; but since my hope of accomplishing the work rests on Him who has
already supplied me with many thoughts on this subject, I do not fear but that He
will go on to supply what is yet wanting when once I have begun to use what He
has already given. For a possession which is not diminished by being shared
with others, if it is possessed and not shared, is not yet possessed as it ought
to be possessed. The Lord saith "Whosoever hath, to him shall be given."(1) He
will give, then, to those who have; that is to say, if they use freely and
cheerfully what they have received, He will add to and perfect His gifts. The loaves
in the miracle were only five and seven in number before the disciples began
to divide them among the hungry people. But when once they began to distribute
them, though the wants of so many thousands were satisfied, they filled baskets
with the fragments that were left.(2) Now, just as that bread increased in the
very act of breaking it, so those thoughts which the Lord has already
vouchsafed to me with a view to undertaking this work will, as soon as I begin to impart
them to others, be multiplied by His grace, so that, in this very work of
distribution in which I have engaged, so far from incurring loss and poverty, I
shall be made to rejoice in a marvellous increase of wealth.
CHAP. 2.--WHAT A THING IS, AND WHAT A SIGN.
2. All instruction is either about things or about signs; but things are
learnt by means of signs. I now use the word "thing" in a strict sense, to
signify that which is never employed as a sign of anything else: for example, wood,
stone, cattle, and other things of that kind. Not, however, the wood which we
read Moses cast into the bitter waters to make them sweet,(3) nor the stone
which Jacob used as a pillow,(4) nor the ram which Abraham offered up instead of
his son;(5) for these, though they are things, are also signs of other things.
There are signs of another kind, those which are never employed except as signs:
for example, words. No one uses words except as signs of something else; and
hence may be understood what I call signs: those things, to wit, which are used
to indicate something else. Accordingly, every sign is also a thing; for what is
not a thing is nothing at all. Every thing, however, is not also a sign. And
so, in regard to this distinction between things and signs, I shall, when I
speak of things, speak in such a way that even if some of them may be used as signs
also, that will not interfere with the division of the subject according to
which I am to discuss things first and signs afterwards. But we must carefully
remember that what we have now to consider about things is what they are in
themselves, not what other things they are signs of.
CHAP. 3.--SOME THINGS ARE FOR USE, SOME FOR ENJOYMENT.
3. There are some things, then, which are to be enjoyed, others which are
to be used, others still which enjoy and use. Those things which are objects of
enjoyment make us happy. Those things which are objects of use assist, and (so
to speak) support us in our efforts after happiness, so that we can attain the
things that make us happy and rest in them. We ourselves, again, who enjoy and
use these things, being placed among both kinds of objects, if we set
ourselves to enjoy those which we ought to use, are hindered in our course, and
sometimes even led away from it; so that, getting entangled in the love of lower
gratifications, we lag behind in, or even altogether turn back from, the pursuit of
the real and proper objects of enjoyment.
CHAP. 4.--DIFFERENCE OF USE AND ENJOYMENT.
4. For to enjoy a thing is to rest with satisfaction in it for its own
sake. To use, on the other hand, is to employ whatever means are at one's disposal
to obtain what one desires, if it is a proper object of desire; for an
unlawful use ought rather to be called an abuse. Suppose, then, we were wanderers in a
strange country, and could not live happily away from our fatherland, and that
we felt wretched in our wandering, and wishing to put an end to our misery,
determined to return home. We find, however, that we must make use of some mode
of conveyance, either by land or water, in order to reach that fatherland where
our enjoyment is to commence. But the beauty of the country through which we
pass, and the very pleasure of the motion, charm our hearts, and turning these
things which we ought to use into objects of enjoyment, we become unwilling to
hasten the end of our journey; and becoming engrossed in a factitious delight,
our thoughts are diverted from that home whose delights would make us truly
happy. Such is a picture of our condition in this life of mortality. We have
wandered far from God; and if we wish to return to our Father's home, this world must
be used, not enjoyed, that so the invisible things of God may be clearly seen,
being understood by the things that are made,(6)--that is, that by means of
what is material and temporary we may lay hold upon that which is spiritual and
eternal.
CHAP. 5.--THE TRINITY THE TRUE OBJECT OF ENJOYMENT.
5. The true objects of enjoyment, then, are the Father and the Son and the
Holy Spirit, who are at the same time the Trinity, one Being, supreme above
all, and common to all who enjoy Him, if He is an object, and not rather the
cause of all objects, or indeed even if He is the cause of all. For it is not easy
to find a name that will suitably express so great excellence, unless it is
better to speak in this way: The Trinity, one God, of whom are all things, through
whom are all things, in whom are all things.(1) Thus the Father and the Son
and the Holy Spirit, and each of these by Himself, is God, and at the same time
they are all one God; and each of them by Himself is a complete substance, and
yet they are all one substance. The Father is not the Son nor the Holy Spirit;
the Son is not the Father nor the Holy Spirit; the Holy Spirit is not the Father
nor the Son: but the Father is only Father, the Son is only Son, and the Holy
Spirit is only Holy Spirit. To all three belong the same eternity, the same
unchangeableness, the same majesty, the same power. In the Father is unity, in the
Son equality, in the Holy Spirit the harmony of unity and equality; and these
three attributes are all one because of the Father, all equal because of the
Son, and all harmonious because of the Holy Spirit.
CHAP. 6.--IN WHAT SENSE GOD IS INEFFABLE.
6. Have I spoken of God, or uttered His praise, in any worthy way? Nay, I
feel that I have done nothing more than desire to speak; and if I have said
anything, it is not what I desired to say. How do I know this, except from the
fact that God is unspeakable? But what I have said, if it had been unspeakable,
could not have been spoken. And so God is not even to be called "unspeakable,"
because to say even this is to speak of Him. Thus there arises a curious
contradiction of words, because if the unspeakable is what cannot be spoken of, it is
not unspeakable if it can be called unspeakable. And this opposition of words is
rather to be avoided by silence than to be explained away by speech. And yet
God, although nothing worthy of His greatness can be said of Him, has
condescended to accept the worship of men's mouths, and has desired us through the medium
of our own words to rejoice in His praise. For on this principle it is that He
is called Dues (God). For the sound of those two syllables in itself conveys
no true knowledge of His nature; but yet all who know the Latin tongue are led,
when that sound reaches their ears, to think of a nature supreme in excellence
and eternal in existence.
CHAP. 7.--WHAT ALL MEN UNDERSTAND BY THE TERM GOD.
7. For when the one supreme God of gods is thought of, even by those who
believe that there are other gods, and who call them by that name, and worship
them as gods, their thought takes the form of an endeavor to reach the
conception of a nature, than which nothing more excellent or more exalted exists. And
since men are moved by different kinds of pleasures, partly by those which
pertain to the bodily senses, partly by those which pertain to the intellect and
soul, those of them who are in bondage to sense think that either the heavens, or
what appears to be most brilliant in the heavens, or the universe itself, is
God of gods: or if they try to get beyond the universe, they picture to
themselves something of dazzling brightness, and think of it vaguely as infinite, or of
the most beautiful form conceivable; or they represent it in the form of the
human body, if they think that superior to all others. Or if they think that
there is no one God supreme above the rest, but that there are many or even
innumerable gods of equal rank, still these too they conceive as possessed of shape
and form, according to what each man thinks the pattern of excellence. Those, on
the other hand, who endeavor by an effort of the intelligence to reach a
conception of God, place Him above all visible and bodily natures, and even above all
intelligent and spiritual natures that are subject to change. All, however,
strive emulously to exalt the excellence of God: nor could any one be found to
believe that any being to whom there exists a superior is God. And so all concur
in believing that God is that which excels in dignity all other objects.
CHAP. 8.--GOD TO BE ESTEEMED ABOVE ALL ELSE, BECAUSE HE IS UNCHANGEABLE WISDOM.
8. And since all who think about God think of Him as living, they only can
form any conception of Him that is not absurd and unworthy who think of Him as
life itself; and, whatever may be the bodily form that has suggested itself to
them, recognize that it is by life it lives or does not live, and prefer what
is living to what is dead; who understand that the living bodily form itself,
however it may outshine all others in splendor, overtop them in size, and excel
them in beauty, is quite a distinct thing from the life by which it is
quickened; and who look upon the life as incomparably superior in dignity and worth to
the mass which is quickened and animated by it. Then, when they go on to look
into the nature of the life itself, if they find it mere nutritive life, without
sensibility, such as that of plants, they consider it inferior to sentient
life, such as that of cattle; and above this, again, they place intelligent life,
such as that of men. And, perceiving that even this is subject to change, they
are compelled to place above it, again, that unchangeable life which is not at
one time foolish, at another time wise, but on the contrary is wisdom itself.
For a wise intelligence, that is, one that has attained to wisdom, was, previous
to its attaining wisdom, unwise. But wisdom itself never was unwise, and never
can become so. And if men never caught sight of this wisdom, they could never
with entire confidence prefer a life which is unchangeably wise to one that is
subject to change. This will be evident, if we consider that the very rule of
truth by which they affirm the unchangeable life to be the more excellent, is
itself unchangeable: and they cannot find such a rule, except by going beyond
their own nature; for they find nothing in themselves that is not subject to
change.
CHAP. 9.--ALL ACKNOWLEDGE THE SUPERIORITY OF UNCHANGEABLE WISDOM TO THAT WHICH
IS VARIABLE.
9. Now, no one is so egregiously silly as to ask, "How do you know that a
life of unchangeable wisdom is preferable to one of change?" For that very
truth about which he asks, how I know it? is unchangeably fixed in the minds of all
men, and presented to their common contemplation. And the man who does not see
it is like a blind man in the sun, whom it profits nothing that the splendor
of its light, so clear and so near, is poured into his very eye-balls. The man,
on the other hand, who sees, but shrinks from this truth, is weak in his mental
vision from dwelling long among the shadows of the flesh. And thus men are
driven back from their native land by the contrary blasts of evil habits, and
pursue lower and less valuable objects in preference to that which they own to be
more excellent and more worthy.
CHAP. 10.--TO SEE GOD, THE SOUL MUST BE PURIFIED.
10. Wherefore, since it is our duty fully to enjoy the truth which lives
unchangeably, and since the triune God takes counsel in this truth for the
things which He has made, the soul must be purified that it may have power to
perceive that light, and to rest in it when it is perceived. And let us look upon
this purification as a kind of journey or voyage to our native land. For it is not
by change of place that we can come nearer to Him who is in every place, but
by the cultivation of pure desires and virtuous habits.
CHAP. 11.--WISDOM BECOMING INCARNATE, A PATTERN TO US OF PURIFICATION.
11. But of this we should have been wholly incapable, had not Wisdom
condescended to adapt Himself to our weakness, and to show us a pattern of holy life
in the form of our own humanity. Yet, since we when we come to Him do wisely,
He when He came to us was considered by proud men to have done very foolishly.
And since we when we come to Him become strong, He when He came to us was
looked upon as weak. But "the foolishness of God is wiser than men; and the weakness
of God is stronger than men."(1) And thus, though Wisdom was Himself our home,
He made Himself also the way by which we should reach our home.
CHAP. 12.--IN WHAT SENSE THE WISDOM OF GOD CAME TO US.
And though He is everywhere present to the inner eye when it is sound and
clear, He condescended to make Himself manifest to the outward eye of those
whose inward sight is weak and dim. "For after that, in the wisdom of God, the
world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to
save them that believe."(2)
12. Not then in the sense of traversing space, but because He appeared to
mortal men in the form of mortal flesh, He is said to have come to us. For He
came to a place where He had always been, seeing that "He was in the world, and
the world was made by Him." But, because men, who in their eagerness to enjoy
the creature instead of the Creator had grown into the likeness of this world,
and are therefore most appropriately named "the world," did not recognize Him,
therefore the evangelist says, "and the world knew Him not."(3) Thus, in the
wisdom of God, the world by wisdom knew not God. Why then did He come, seeing that
He was already here, except that it pleased God through the foolishness of
preaching to save them that believe?
CHAP. 13.--THE WORD WAS MADE FLESH.
In what way did He come but this, "The Word was made flesh, and dwelt
among us"?(1) Just as when we speak, in order that what we nave in our minds may
enter through the ear into the mind of the hearer, the word which we have in our
hearts becomes an outward sound and is called speech; and yet our thought does
not lose itself in the sound, but remains complete in itself, and takes the
form of speech without being modified in its own nature by the change: so the
Divine Word, though suffering no change of nature, yet became flesh, that He might
dwell among us.
CHAP. 14.--HOW THE WISDOM OF GOD HEALED MAN.
13. Moreover, as the use of remedies is the way to health, so this remedy
took up sinners to heal and restore them. And just as surgeons, when they bind
up wounds, do it not in a slovenly way, but carefully, that there may be a
certain degree of neatness in the binding, in addition to its mere usefulness, so
our medicine, Wisdom, was by His assumption of humanity adapted to our wounds,
curing some of them by their opposites, some of them by their likes. And just as
he who ministers to a bodily hurt in some cases applies contraries, as cold to
hot, moist to dry, etc., and in other cases applies likes, as a round cloth to
a round wound, or an oblong cloth to an oblong wound, and does not fit the
same bandage to all limbs, but puts like to like; in the same way the Wisdom of
God in healing man has applied Himself to his cure, being Himself healer and
medicine both in one. Seeing, then, that man fell through pride, He restored him
through humility. We were ensnared by the wisdom of the serpent: we are set free
by the foolishness of God. Moreover, just as the former was called wisdom, but
was in reality the folly of those who despised God, so the latter is called
foolishness, but is true wisdom in those who overcome the devil. We used our
immortality so badly as to incur the penalty of death: Christ used His mortality so
well as to restore us to life. The disease was brought in through a woman's
corrupted soul: the remedy came through a woman's virgin body. To the same class
of opposite remedies it belongs, that our vices are cured by the example of His
virtues. On the other hand, the following are, as it were, bandages made in the
same shape as the limbs and wounds to which they are applied: He was born of a
woman to deliver us who fell through a woman: He came as a man to save us who
are men, as a mortal to save us who are mortals, by death to save us who were
dead. And those who can follow out the matter more fully, who are not hurried on
by the necessity of carrying out a set undertaking, will find many other
points of instruction in considering the remedies, whether opposites or likes,
employed in the medicine of Christianity.
CHAP. 15.--FAITH IS BUTTRESSED BY THE RESURRECTION AND ASCENSION OF CHRIST,
AND IS STIMULATED BY HIS COMING TO JUDGMENT.
14. The belief of the resurrection of our Lord from the dead, and of His
ascension into heaven, has strengthened our faith by adding a great buttress of
hope. For it clearly shows how freely He laid down His life for us when He had
it in His power thus to take it up again. With what assurance, then, is the
hope of believers animated, when they reflect how great He was who suffered so
great things for them while they were still in unbelief! And when men look for Him
to come from heaven as the judge of quick and dead, it strikes great terror
into the careless, so that they betake themselves to diligent preparation, and
learn by holy living to long for His approach, instead of quaking at it on
account of their evil deeds. And what tongue can tell, or what imagination can
conceive, the reward He will bestow at the last, when we consider that for our
comfort in this earthly journey He has given us so freely of His Spirit, that in the
adversities of this life we may retain our confidence in, and love for, Him
whom as yet we see not; and that He has also given to each gifts suitable for the
building up of His Church, that we may do what He points out as right to be
done, not only without a murmur, but even with delight?
CHAP. 16.--CHRIST PURGES HIS CHURCH BY MEDICINAL AFFLICTIONS.
15. For the Church is His body, as the apostle's teaching shows us;(2) and
it is even called His spouse.(3) His body, then, which has many members, and
all performing different functions, He holds together in the bond of unity and
love, which is its true health. Moreover He exercises it in the present time,
and purges it with many wholesome afflictions, that when He has transplanted it
from this world to the eternal world, He may take it to Himself as His bride,
without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing.
CHAP.17.--CHRIST, BY FORGIVING OUR SINS, OPENED THE WAY TO OUR HOME.
16. Further, when we are on the way, and that not a way that lies through
space, but through a change of affections, and one which the guilt of our past
sins like a hedge of thorns barred against us, what could He, who was willing
to lay Himself down as the way by which we should return, do that would be still
gracious and more merciful, except to forgive us all our sins, and by being
crucified for us to remove the stern decrees that barred the door against our
return?
CHAP. 18.--THE KEYS GIVEN TO THE CHURCH.
17. He has given, therefore, the keys to His Church, that whatsoever it
should bind on earth might be bound in heaven, and whatsoever it should loose on
earth might be, loosed in heaven;(1) that is to say, that whosoever in the
Church should not believe that his sins are remitted, they should not be remitted
to him; but that whosoever should believe and should repent, and turn from his
sins, should be saved by the same faith and repentance on the ground of which he
is received into the bosom of the Church. For he who does not believe that his
sins can be pardoned, falls into despair, and becomes worse as if no greater
good remained for him than to be evil, when he has ceased to have faith in the
results of his own repentance.
CHAP. 19.--BODILY AND SPIRITUAL DEATH AND RESURRECTION.
18. Furthermore, as there is a kind of death of the soul, which consists
in the putting away of former habits and former ways of life, and which comes
through repentance, so also the death of the body consists in the dissolution of
the former principle of life. And just as the soul, after it has put away and
destroyed by repentance its former habits, is created anew after a better
pattern, so we must hope and believe that the body, after that death which we all owe
as a debt contracted through sin, shall at the resurrection be changed into a
better form;--not that flesh and blood shall inherit the kingdom of God (for
that is impossible), but that this corruptible shall put on incorruption, and
this mortal shall put on immortality.(2) And thus the body, being the source of no
uneasiness because it can feel no want, shall be animated by a spirit
perfectly pure and happy, and shall enjoy unbroken peace.
CHAP. 20.--THE RESURRECTION TO DAMNATION.
19. Now he whose soul does not die to this world and begin here to be
conformed to the truth, falls when the body dies into a more terrible death, and
shall revive, not to change his earthly for a heavenly habitation, but to endure
the penalty of his sin.
CHAP. 21.--NEITHER BODY NOR SOUL EXTINGUISHED AT DEATH.
And so faith clings to the assurance, and we must believe that it is so in
fact, that neither the human soul nor the human body suffers complete
extinction, but that the wicked rise again to endure inconceivable punishment, and the
good to receive eternal life.
CHAP. 22.--GOD ALONE TO BE ENJOYED.
20. Among all these things, then, those only are the true objects of
enjoyment which we have spoken of as eternal and unchangeable. The rest are for use,
that we may be able to arrive at the full enjoyment of the former. We,
however, who enjoy and use other things are things ourselves. For a great thing truly
is man, made after the image and similitude of God, not as respects the mortal
body in which he is clothed, but as respects the rational soul by which he is
exalted in honor above the beasts. And so it becomes an important question,
whether men ought to enjoy, or to use, themselves, or to do both. For we are
commanded to love one another: but it is a question whether man is to be loved by man
for his own sake, or for the sake of something else. If it is for his own
sake, we enjoy him; if it is for the sake of something else, we use him. It seems
to me, then, that he is to be loved for the sake of something else. For if a
thing is to be loved for its own sake, then in the enjoyment of it consists a
happy life, the hope of which at least, if not yet the reality, is our comfort in
the present time. But a curse is pronounced on him who places his hope in man.(1)
21. Neither ought any one to have joy in himself, if you look at the
matter clearly, because no one ought to love even himself for his own sake, but for
the sake of Him who is the true object of enjoyment. For a man is never in so
good a state as when his whole life is a journey towards the unchangeable life,
and his affections are entirely fixed upon that. If, however, he loves himself
for his own sake, he does not look at himself in relation to God, but turns his
mind in upon himself, and so is not occupied with anything that is
unchangeable. And thus he does not enjoy himself at his best, because he is better when
his mind is fully fixed upon, and his affections wrapped up in, the unchangeable
good, than when he turns from that to enjoy even himself. Wherefore if you
ought not to love even yourself for your own sake, but for His in whom your love
finds its most worthy object, no other man has a right to be angry if you love
him too for God's sake. For this is the law of love that has been laid down by
Divine authority: "Thou shall love thy neighbor as thyself;" but, "Thou shall
love God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind:"(1) so
that you are to concentrate all your thoughts, your whole life and your whole
intelligence upon Him from whom you derive all that you bring. For when He says,
"With all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind," He means
that no part of our life is to be unoccupied, and to afford room, as it were,
for the wish to enjoy some other object, but that whatever else may suggest
itself to us as an object worthy of love is to be borne into the same channel in
which the whole current of our affections flows. Whoever, then, loves his neighbor
aright, ought to urge upon him that he too should love God with his whole
heart, and soul, and mind. For in this way, loving his neighbor as himself, a man
turns the whole current of his love both for himself and his neighbor into the
channel of the love of God, which suffers no stream to be drawn off from itself
by whose diversion its own volume would be diminished.
CHAP. 23.--MAN NEEDS NO INJUNCTION TO LOVE HIMSELF AND HIS OWN BODY.
22. Those things which are objects of use are not all, however, to be
loved, but those only which are either united with us in a common relation to God,
such as a man or an angel, or are so related to us as to need the goodness of
God through our instrumentality, such as the body. For assuredly the martyrs did
not love the wickedness of their persecutors, although they used it to attain
the favor of God. As, then, there are four kinds of things that are to be
loved,--first, that which is above us; second, ourselves; third, that which is on a
level with us; fourth, that which is beneath us,--no precepts need be given
about the second and fourth of these. For, however far a man may fall away from
the truth, he still continues to love himself, and to love his own body. The soul
which flies away from the unchangeable Light, the Ruler of all things, does so
that it may rule over itself and over its own body; and so it cannot but love
both itself and its own body.
23. Morever, it thinks it has attained something very great if it is able
to lord it over its companions, that is, other men. For it is inherent in the
sinful soul to desire above all things, and to claim as due to itself, that
which is properly due to God only. Now such love of itself is more correctly called
hate. For it is not just that it should desire what is beneath it to be
obedient to it while itself will not obey its own superior; and most justly has it
been said, "He who loveth iniquity hateth his own soul."(2) And accordingly the
soul becomes weak, and endures much suffering about the mortal body. For, of
course, it must love the body, and be grieved at its corruption; and the
immortality and incorruptibility of the body spring out of the health of the soul. Now
the health of the soul is to cling steadfastly to the better part, that is, to
the unchangeable God. But when it aspires to lord it even over those who are by
nature its equals,--that is, its fellow-men,--this is a reach of arrogance
utterly intolerable.
CHAP. 24.--NO MAN HATES HIS OWN FLESH, NOT EVEN THOSE WHO ABUSE IT.
24. No man, then, hates himself. On this point, indeed, no question was
ever raised by any sect. But neither does any man hate his own body. For the
apostle says truly, "No man ever yet hated his own flesh."(3) And when some people
say that they would rather be without a body altogether, they entirely deceive
themselves. For it is not their body, but its corruptions and its heaviness,
that they hate. And so it is not no body, but an uncorrupted and very light body,
that they want. But they think a body of that kind would be no body at all,
because they think such a thing as that must be a spirit. And as to the fact that
they seem in some sort to scourge their bodies by abstinence and toil, those
who do this in the right spirit do it not that they may get rid of their body,
but that they may have it in subjection and ready for every needful work. For
they strive by a kind of toilsome exercise of the body itself to root out those
lusts that are hurtful to the body, that is, those habits and affections of the
soul that lead to the enjoyment of unworthy objects. They are not destroying
themselves; they are taking care of their health.
25. Those, on the other hand, who do this in a perverse spirit, make war
upon their own body as if it were a natural enemy. And in this matter they are
led astray by a mistaken interpretation of what they read: "The flesh lusteth
against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh, and these are contrary the
one to the other."(1) For this is said of the carnal habit yet unsubdued,
against which the spirit lusteth, not to destroy the body, but to eradicate the lust
of the body--i.e., its evil habit--and thus to make it subject to the spirit,
which is what the order of nature demands. For as, after the resurrection, the
body, having become wholly subject to the spirit, will live in perfect peace to
all eternity; even in this life we must make it an object to have the carnal
habit changed for the better, so that its inordinate affections may not war
against the soul. And until this shall take place, "the flesh lusteth against the
spirit, and the spirit against the flesh;" the spirit struggling, not in hatred,
but for the mastery, because it desires that what it loves should be subject
to the higher principle; and the flesh struggling, not in hatred, but because of
the bondage of habit which it has derived from its parent stock, and which has
grown in upon it by a law of nature till it has become inveterate. The
spirit, then, in subduing the flesh, is working as it were to destroy the ill-founded
peace of an evil habit, and to bring about the real peace which springs out of
a good habit. Nevertheless, not even those who, led astray by false notions,
hate their bodies would be prepared to sacrifice one eye, even supposing they
could do so without suffering any pain, and that they had as much sight left in
one as they formerly had in two, unless some object was to be attained which
would overbalance the loss. This and other indications of the same kind are
sufficient to show those who candidly seek the truth how well-founded is the
statement of the apostle when he says, "No man ever yet hated his own flesh." He adds
too, "but nourisheth and cherisheth it, even as the Lord the Church."(2)
CHAP. 25.--A MAN MAY LOVE SOMETHING MORE THAN HIS BODY, BUT DOES NOT THEREFORE
HATE HIS BODY.
26. Man, therefore, ought to be taught the due measure of loving, that is,
in what measure he may love himself so as to be of service to himself. For
that he does love himself, and does desire to do good to himself, nobody but a
fool would doubt. He is to be taught, too, in what measure to love his body, so as
to care for it wisely and within due limits. For it is equally manifest that
he loves his body also, and desires to keep it safe and sound. And yet a man may
have something that he loves better than the safety and soundness of his body.
For many have been found voluntarily to suffer both pains and amputations of
some of their limbs that they might obtain other objects which they valued more
highly. But no one is to be told not to desire the safety and health of his
body because there is something he desires more. For the miser, though he loves
money, buys bread for himself,--that is, he gives away money that he is very fond
of and desires to heap up,--but it is because he values more highly the bodily
health which the bread sustains. It is superfluous to argue longer on a point
so very plain, but this is just what the error of wicked men often compels us
to do.
CHAP. 26.--THE COMMAND TO LOVE GOD AND OUR NEIGHBOR INCLUDES A COMMAND TO LOVE
OURSELVES.
27. Seeing, then, that there is no need of a command that every man should
love himself and his own body,--seeing, that is, that we love ourselves, and
what is beneath us but connected with us, through a law of nature which has
never been violated, and which is common to us with the beasts (for even the beasts
love themselves and their own bodies),--it only remained necessary to lay
injunctions upon us in regard to God above us, and our neighbor beside us. "Thou
shalt love," He says, "the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy
soul, and with all thy mind; and thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. On these
two commandments hang all the law and the prophets."(3) Thus the end of the
commandment is love, and that twofold, the love of God and the love of our
neighbor. Now, if you take yourself in your entirety,--that is, soul and body
together,--and your neighbor in his entirety, soul and body together (for man is made
up of soul and body), you will find that none of the classes of things that are
to be loved is overlooked in these two commandments. For though, when the love
of God comes first, and the measure of our love for Him is prescribed in such
terms that it is evident all other things are to find their centre in Him,
nothing seems to be said about our love for ourselves; yet when it is said, "Thou
shall love thy neighbor as thyself," it at once becomes evident that our love for
ourselves has not been overlooked.
CHAP. 27.--THE ORDER OF LOVE.
28. Now he is a man of just and holy life who forms an unprejudiced
estimate of things, and keeps his affections also under strict control, so that he
neither loves what he ought not to love, nor fails to love what he ought to love,
nor loves that more which ought to be loved less, nor loves that equally which
ought to be loved either less or more, nor loves that less or more which ought
to be loved equally. No sinner is to be loved as a sinner; and every man is to
be loved as a man for God's sake; but God is to be loved for His own sake. And
if God is to be loved more than any man, each man ought to love God more than
himself. Likewise we ought to love another man better than our own body,
because all things are to be loved in reference to God, and another man can have
fellowship with us in the enjoyment of God, whereas our body cannot; for the body
only lives through the soul, and it is by the soul that we enjoy God.
CHAP. 28.--HOW WE ARE TO DECIDE WHOM TO AID.
29. Further, all men are to be loved equally. But since you cannot do good
to all, you are to pay special regard to those who, by the accidents of time,
or place, or circumstance, are brought into closer connection with you. For,
suppose that you had a great deal of some commodity, and felt bound to give it
away to somebody who had none, and that it could not be given to more than one
person; if two persons presented themselves, neither of whom had either from need
or relationship a greater claim upon you than the other, you could do nothing
fairer than choose by lot to which you would give what could not be given to
both. Just so among men: since you cannot consult for the good of them all, you
must take the matter as decided for you by a sort of lot, according as each man
happens for the time being to be more closely connected with you.
CHAP. 29.--WE ARE TO DESIRE AND ENDEAVOR THAT ALL MEN MAY LOVE GOD.
30. Now of all who can with us enjoy God, we love partly those to whom we
render services, partly those who render services to us, partly those who both
help us in our need and in turn are helped by us, partly those upon whom we
confer no advantage and from whom we look for none. We ought to desire, however,
that they should all join with us in loving God, and all the assistance that we
either, give them or accept from them should tend to that one end. For in the
theatres, dens of iniquity though they be, if a man is fond of a particular
actor, and enjoys his art as a great or even as the very greatest good, he is fond
of all who join with him in admiration of his favorite, not for their own
sakes, but for the sake of him whom they admire in common; and the more fervent he
is in his admiration, the more he works in every way he can to secure new
admirers for him, and the more anxious he becomes to show him to others; and if he
find any one comparatively indifferent, he does all he can to excite his
interest by urging his favorite's merits: if, however, he meet with any one who
opposes him, he is exceedingly displeased by such a man's contempt of his favorite,
and strives in every way he can to remove it. Now, if this be so, what does it
become us to do who live in the fellowship of the love of God, the enjoyment of
whom is true happiness of life, to whom all who love Him owe both their own
existence and the love they bear Him, concerning whom we have no fear that any one
who comes to know Him will be disappointed in Him, and who desires our love,
not for any gain to Himself, but that those who love Him may obtain an eternal
reward, even Himself whom they love? And hence it is that we love even our
enemies. For we do not fear them, seeing they cannot take away from us what we love;
but we pity them rather, because the more they hate us the more are they
separated from Him whom we love. For if they would turn to Him, they must of
necessity love Him as the supreme good, and love us too as partakers with them in so
great a blessing.
CHAP. 30.--WHETHER ANGELS ARE TO BE RECKONED OUR NEIGHBORS.
31. There arises further in this connection a question about angels. For
they are happy in the enjoyment of Him whom we long to enjoy; and the more we
enjoy Him in this life as through a glass darkly, the more easy do we find it to
bear our pilgrimage, and the more eagerly do we long for its termination. But
it is not irrational to ask whether in those two commandments is included the
love of angels also. For that He who commanded us to love our neighbor made no
exception, as far as men are concerned, is shown both by our Lord Himself in the
Gospel, and by the Apostle Paul. For when the man to whom our Lord delivered
those two commandments, and to whom He said that on these hang all the law and
the prophets, asked Him, "And who is my neighbor?" He told him of a certain man
who, going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, fell among thieves, and was severely
wounded by them, and left naked and half dead.(1) And He showed him that nobody
was neighbor to this man except him who took pity upon him and came forward to
relieve and care for him. And the man who had asked the question admitted the
truth of this when he was himself interrogated in turn. To whom our Lord says,
"Go and do thou likewise;" teaching us that he is our neighbor whom it is our
duty to help in his need, or whom it would be our duty to help if he were in
need. Whence it follows, that he whose duty it would be in turn to help us is our
neighbor. For the name "neighbor" is a relative one, and no one can be neighbor
except to a neighbor. And, again, who does not see that no exception is made
of any one as a person to whom the offices of mercy may be denied when our Lord
extends the rule even to our enemies? "Love your enemies, do good to them that
hate you."(2)
32. And so also the Apostle Paul teaches when he says: "For this, Thou
shall not commit adultery, Thou shall not kill, Thou shall not steal, Thou shalt
not bear false witness, Thou shall not covet; and if there be any other
commandment, it is briefly comprehended in this saying, namely, Thou shall love thy
neighbor as thyself. Love worketh no ill to his neighbor."(3) Whoever then
supposes that the apostle did not embrace every man in this precept, is compelled to
admit, what is at once most absurd and most pernicious, that the apostle thought
it no sin, if a man were not a Christian or were an enemy, to commit adultery
with his wife, or to kill him, or to covet his goods. And as nobody but a fool
would say this, it is clear that every man is to be considered our neighbor,
because we are to work no ill to any man.
33. But now, if every one to whom we ought to show, or who ought to show
to us, the offices of mercy is by right called a neighbor, it is manifest that
the command to love our neighbor embraces the holy angels also, seeing that so
great offices of mercy have been performed by them on our behalf, as may easily
be shown by turning the attention to many passages of Holy Scripture. And on
this ground even God Himself, our Lord, desired to be called our neighbor. For
our Lord Jesus Christ points to Himself under the figure of the man who brought
aid to him who was lying half dead on the road, wounded and abandoned by the
robbers. And the Psalmist says in his prayer, "I behaved myself as though he had
been my friend or brother."(4) But as the Divine nature is of higher excellence
than, and far removed above, our nature, the command to love God is distinct
from that to love our neighbor. For He shows us pity on account of His own
goodness, but we show pity to one another on account of His;--that is, He pities us
that we may fully enjoy Himself; we pity one another that we may fully enjoy Him.
CHAP. 31.--GOD USES RATHER THAN ENJOYS US.
34. And on this ground, when we say that we enjoy only that which we love
for its own sake, and that nothing is a true object of enjoyment except that
which makes us happy, and that all other things are for use, there seems still to
be something that requires explanation. For God loves us, and Holy Scripture
frequently sets before us the love He has towards us. In what way then does He
love us? As objects of use or as objects of enjoyment? If He enjoys us, He must
be in need of good from us, and no sane man will say that; for all the good we
enjoy is either Himself, or what comes from Himself. And no one can be ignorant
or in doubt as to the fact that the light stands in no need of the glitter of
the things it has itself lit up. The Psalmist says most plainly, "I said to the
Lord, Thou art my God, for Thou needest not my goodness."(5) He does not enjoy
us then, but makes use of us. For if He neither enjoys nor uses us, I am at a
loss to discover in what way He can love us.
CHAP. 32.--IN WHAT WAY GOD USES MAN.
35. But neither does He use after our fashion of using. For when we use
objects, we do so with a view to the full enjoyment of the goodness of God. God,
however, in His use of us, has reference to His own goodness. For it is because
He is good we exist; and so far as we truly exist we are good. And, further,
because He is also just, we cannot with impunity be evil; and so far as we are
evil, so far is our existence less complete. Now He is the first and supreme
existence, who is altogether unchangeable, and who could say in the fullest sense
of the words, "I AM THAT I AM," and "Thou shalt say to them, I AM hath sent me
unto you;"(6) so that all other things that exist, both owe their existence
entirely to Him, and are good only so far as He has given it to them to be so.
That use, then, which God is said to make of us has no reference to His own
advantage, but to ours only; and, so far as He is concerned, has reference only to
His goodness. When we take pity upon a man and care for him, it is for his
advantage we do so; but somehow or other our own advantage follows by a sort of
natural consequence, for God does not leave the mercy we show to him who needs it to
go without reward. Now this is our highest reward, that we should fully enjoy
Him, and that all who enjoy Him should enjoy one another in Him.
CHAP. 33.--IN WHAT WAY MAN SHOULD BE ENJOYED.
36. For if we find our happiness complete in one another, we stop short
upon the road, and place our hope of happiness in man or angel. Now the proud man
and the proud angel arrogate this to themselves, and are glad to have the hope
of others fixed upon them. But, on the contrary, the holy man and the holy
angel, even when we are weary and anxious to stay with them and rest in them, set
themselves to recruit our energies with the provision which they have received
of God for us or for themselves; and then urge us thus refreshed to go on our
way towards Him, in the enjoyment of whom we find our common happiness. For even
the apostle exclaims, "Was Paul crucified for you? or were ye baptized in the
name of Paul?"(1) and again: "Neither is he that planteth anything, neither he
that watereth; but God that giveth the increase."(2) And the angel admonisheth
the man who is about to worship him, that he should rather worship Him who is
his Master, and under whom he himself is a fellow-servant.(3)
37. But when you have joy of a man in God, it is God rather than man that
you enjoy. For you enjoy Him by whom you are made happy, and you rejoice to
have come to Him in whose presence you place your hope of joy. And accordingly,
Paul says to Philemon, "Yea, brother, let me have joy of thee in the Lord."(4)
For if he had not added "in the Lord," but had only said, "Let me have joy of
thee," he would have implied that he fixed his hope of happiness upon him,
although even in the immediate context to "enjoy" is used in the sense of to "use with
delight." For when the thing that we love is near us, it is a matter of course
that it should bring delight with it. And if you pass beyond this delight, and
make it a means to that which you are permanently to rest in, you are using
it, and it is an abuse of language to say that you enjoy it. But if you cling
to it, and rest in it, finding your happiness complete in it, then you may be
truly and properly said to enjoy it. And this we must never do except in the case
of the Blessed Trinity, who is the Supreme and Unchangeable Good.
CHAP. 34.--CHRIST THE FIRST WAY TO GOD.
38. And mark that even when He who is Himself the Truth and the Word, by
whom all things were made, had been made flesh that He might dwell among us, the
apostle yet says: "Yea, though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now
henceforth know we Him no more."(5) For Christ, desiring not only to give the
possession to those who had completed the journey, but also to be Himself the way
to those who were just setting out, determined to take a fleshly body. Whence
also that expression, "The Lord created(6) me in the beginning of His way,"(7)
that is, that those who wished to come might begin their journey in Him. The
apostle, therefore, although still on the way, and following after God who called
him to the reward of His heavenly calling, yet forgetting those things which
were behind, and pressing on towards those things which were before,(8) had
already passed over the beginning of the way, and had now no further need of it;
yet by this way all must commence their journey who desire to attain to the
truth, and to rest in eternal life. For He says: "I am the way, and the truth, and
the life;"(9) that is, by me men come, to me they come, in me they rest. For
when we come to Him, we come to the Father also, because through an equal an equal
is known; and the Holy Spirit binds, and as it were seals as, so that we are
able to rest permanently in the supreme and unchangeable Good. And hence we may
learn how essential it is that nothing should detain us on the way, when not
even our Lord Himself, so far as He has condescended to be our way, is willing to
detain us, but wishes us rather to press on; and, instead of weakly clinging
to temporal things, even though these have been put on and worn by Him for our
salvation, to pass over them quickly, and to struggle to attain unto Himself,
who has freed our nature from the bondage of temporal things, and has set it down
at the right hand of His Father.
CHAP. 35.--THE FULFILLMENT AND END OF SCRIPTURE IS THE LOVE OF GOD AND OUR
NEIGHBOR.
39. Of all, then, that has been said since we entered upon the discussion
about things, this is the sam: that we should clearly understand that the
fulfillment and the end of the Law, and of all Holy Scripture, is the love of an
object which is to be enjoyed, and the love of an object which can enjoy that
other in fellowship with ourselves. For there is no need of a command that each man
should love himself. The whole temporal dispensation for our salvation,
therefore, was framed by the providence of God that we might know this truth and be
able to act upon it; and we ought to use that dispensation, not with such love
and delight as if it were a good to rest in, but with a transient feeling
rather, such as we have towards the road, or carriages, or other things that are
merely means. Perhaps some other comparison can be found that will more suitably
express the idea that we are to love the things by which we are borne only for
the sake of that towards which we are borne.
CHAP. 36.--THAT INTERPRETATION OF SCRIPTURE WHICH BUILDS US UP IN LOVE IS NOT
PERNICIOUSLY DECEPTIVE NOR MENDACIOUS, EVEN THOUGH IT BE FAULTY. THE
INTERPRETER, HOWEVER, SHOULD BE CORRECTED.
40. Whoever, then, thinks that he understands the Holy Scriptures, or any
part of them, but puts such an interpretation upon them as does not tend to
build up this twofold love of God and our neighbor, does not yet understand them
as he ought. If, on the other hand, a man draws a meaning from them that may be
used for the building up of love, even though he does not happen upon the
precise meaning which the author whom he reads intended to express in that place,
his error is not pernicious, and he is wholly clear from the charge of deception.
For there is involved in deception the intention to say what is false; and we
find plenty of people who intend to deceive, but nobody who wishes to be
deceived. Since, then, the man who knows practises deceit, and the ignorant man is
practised upon, it is quite clear that in any particular case the man who is
deceived is a better man than he who deceives, seeing that it is better to suffer
than to commit injustice. Now every man who lies commits an injustice; and if
any man thinks that a lie is ever useful, he must think that injustice is
sometimes useful. For no liar keeps faith in the matter about which he lies. He
wishes, of course, that the man to whom he lies should place confidence in him; and
yet he betrays his confidence by lying to him. Now every man who breaks faith is
unjust. Either, then, injustice is sometimes useful (which is impossible), or
a lie is never useful.
41. Whoever takes another meaning out of Scripture than the writer
intended, goes astray, but not through any falsehood in Scripture. Nevertheless, as I
was going to say, if his mistaken interpretation tends to build up love, which
is the end of the commandment, he goes astray in much the same way as a man who
by mistake quits the high road, but yet reaches through the fields the same
place to which the road leads. He is to be corrected, however, and to be shown
how much better it is not to quit the straight road, lest, if he get into a habit
of going astray, he may sometimes take cross roads, or even go in the wrong
direction altogether.
CHAP. 37.--DANGERS OF MISTAKEN INTERPRETATION.
For if he takes up rashly a meaning which the author whom he is reading
did not intend, he often falls in with other statements which he cannot harmonize
with this meaning. And if he admits that these statements are true and
certain, then it follows that the meaning he had put upon the former passage cannot be
the true one: and so it comes to pass, one can hardly tell how, that, out of
love for his own opinion, he begins to feel more angry with Scripture than he is
with himself. And if he should once permit that evil to creep in, it will
utterly destroy him. "For we walk by faith, not by sight."(1) Now faith will totter
if the authority of Scripture begin to shake. And then, if faith totter, love
itself will grow cold. For if a man has fallen from faith, he must necessarily
also fall from love; for he cannot love what he does not believe to exist. But
if he both believes and loves, then through good works, and through diligent
attention to the precepts of morality, he comes to hope also that he shall attain
the object of his love. And so these are the three things to which all
knowledge and all prophecy are subservient: faith, hope, love.
CHAP. 38.--LOVE NEVER FAILETH.
42. But sight shall displace faith; and hope shall be swallowed up in that
perfect bliss to which we shall come: love, on the other hand, shall wax
greater when these others fail. For if we love by faith that which as yet we see
not, how much more shall we love it when we begin to see! And if we love by hope
that which as yet we have not reached, how much more shall we love it when we
reach it! For there is this great difference between things temporal and things
eternal, that a temporal object is valued more before we possess it, and begins
to prove worthless the moment we attain it, because it does not satisfy the
soul, which has its only true and sure resting-place in eternity: an eternal
object, on the other hand, is loved with greater ardor when it is in possession than
while it is still an object of desire, for no one in his longing for it can
set a higher value on it than really belongs to it, so as to think it
comparatively worthless when he finds it of less value than he thought; on the contrary,
however high the value any man may set upon it when he is on his way to possess
it, he will find it, when it comes into his possession, of higher value still.
CHAP. 39.--HE WHO IS MATURE IN FAITH, HOPE AND LOVE, NEEDS SCRIPTURE NO LONGER.
43. And thus a man who is resting upon faith, hope and love, and who keeps
a firm hold upon these, does not need the Scriptures except for the purpose of
instructing others. Accordingly, many live without copies of the Scriptures,
even in solitude, on the strength of these three graces. So that in their case,
I think, the saying is already fulfilled: "Whether there be prophecies, they
shall fail; whether there be tongues, they shall cease; whether there be
knowledge, it shall vanish away."(1) Yet by means of these instruments (as they may be
called), so great an edifice of faith and love has been built up in them, that,
holding to what is perfect, they do not seek for what is only in part
perfect--of course, I mean, so far as is possible in this life; for, in comparison with
the future life, the life of no just and holy man is perfect here. Therefore
the apostle says: "Now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the
greatest of these is charity:"(2) because, when a man shall have reached the eternal
world, while the other two graces will fail, love will remain greater and more
assured.
CHAP. 40.--WHAT MANNER OF READER SCRIPTURE DEMANDS.
44. And, therefore, if a man fully understands that "the end of the
commandment is charity, out of a pure heart, and of a good conscience, and of faith
unfeigned,"(3) and is bent upon making all his understanding of Scripture to
bear upon these three graces, he may come to the interpretation of these books
with an easy mind. For while the apostle says "love," he adds "out of a pure
heart," to provide against anything being loved but that which is worthy of love.
And he joins with this "a good conscience," in reference to hope; for, if a man
has the burthen of a bad conscience, he despairs of ever reaching that which he
believes in and loves. And in the third place he says: "and of faith
unfeigned." For if our faith is free from all hypocrisy, then we both abstain from loving
what is unworthy of our love, and by living uprightly we are able to indulge
the hope that our hope shall not be in vain.
For these reasons I have been anxious to speak about the objects of faith,
as far as I thought it necessary for my present purpose; for much has already
been said on this subject in other volumes, either by others or by myself. And
so let this be the end of the present book. In the next I shall discuss, as far
as God shall give me light, the subject of signs.