THE FIFTEEN BOOKS OF AURELIUS AUGUSTINUS, BISHOP OF HIPPO, ON THE TRINITY:
BOOK XII
BOOK XII.
COMMENCING WITH A DISTINCTION BETWEEN WISDOM AND KNOWLEDGE, POINTS OUT A KIND
OF TRINITY, OF A PECULIAR SORT, IN THAT WHICH IS PROPERLY CALLED KNOWLEDGE, AND
WHICH IS THE LOWER OF THE TWO; AND THIS TRINITY, ALTHOUGH IT CERTAINLY
PERTAINS TO THE INNER MAN, IS STILL NOT YET TO BE CALLED OR THOUGHT AN IMAGE OF GOD.
CHAP. 1.--OF WHAT KIND ARE THE OUTER AND THE INNER MAN.
1. COME now, and let us see where lies, as it were, the boundary line
between the outer and inner man. For whatever we have in the mind common with the
beasts, thus much is rightly said to belong to the outer man. For the outer man
is not to be considered to be the body only, but with the addition also of a
certain peculiar life of the body, whence the structure of the body derives its
vigor, and all the senses with which he is equipped for the perception of
outward things; and when the images of these outward things already perceived, that
have been fixed in the memory, are seen again by recollection, it is still a
matter pertaining to the outer man. And in all these things we do not differ from
the beasts, except that in shape of body we are not prone, but upright. And we
are admonished through this, by Him who made us, not to be like the beasts in
that which is our better part--that is, the mind--while we differ from them by
the uprightness of the body. Not that we are to throw our mind into those bodily
things which are exalted; for to seek rest for the will, even in such things,
is to prostrate the mind. But as the body is naturally raised upright to those
bodily things which are most elevated, that is, to things celestial; so the
mind, which is a spiritual substance, must be raised upright to those things which
are most elevated in spiritual things, not by the elation of pride, but by the
dutifulness of righteousness.
CHAP. 2.--MAN ALONE OF ANIMATE CREATURES PERCEIVES THE ETERNAL REASONS OF
THINGS PERTAINING TO THE BODY.
2. And the beasts, too, are able both to perceive things corporeal from
without, through the senses of the body, and to fix them in the memory, and
remember them, and in them to seek after things suitable, and shun things
inconvenient. But to note these things, and to retain them not only as caught up
naturally but also as deliberately committed to memory, and to imprint them again by
recollection and conception when now just slipping away into forgetfulness; in
order that as conception is formed from that which the memory contains, so also
the contents themselves of the memory may be fixed firmly by thought: to combine
again imaginary objects of sight, by taking this or that of what the memory
remembers, and, as it were, tacking them to one another: to examine after what
manner it is that in this kind things like the true are to be distinguished from
the true, and this not in things spiritual, but in corporeal things
themselves;--these acts, and the like, although performed in reference to things sensible,
and those which the mind has deduced through the bodily senses, yet, as they
are combined with reason, so are not common to men and beasts. But it is the
part of the higher reason to judge of these corporeal things according to
incorporeal and eternal reasons; which, unless they were above the human mind, would
certainly not be unchangeable; and yet, unless something of our own were
subjoined to them, we should not be able to employ them as our measures by which to
judge of corporeal things. But we judge of corporeal things from the rule of
dimensions and figures, which the mind knows to remain unchangeably.(1)
CHAP. 3.--THE HIGHER REASON WHICH BELONGS TO CONTEMPLATION, AND THE LOWER
WHICH BELONGS TO ACTION, ARE IN ONE MIND.
3. But that of our own which thus has to do with the handling of corporeal
and temporal things, is indeed rational, in that it is not common to us with
the beasts; but it is drawn, as it were, out of that rational substance of our
mind, by which we depend upon and cleave to the intelligible and unchangeable
truth, and which is deputed to handle and direct the inferior things. For as
among all the beasts there was not found for the man a help like unto him, unless
one were taken from himself, and formed to be his consort: so for that mind, by
which we consult the supernal and inward truth, there is no like help for such
employment as man's nature requires among things corporeal out of those parts
of the soul which we have in common with the beasts. And so a certain part of
our reason, not separated so as to sever unity, but, as it were, diverted so as
to be a help to fellowship, is parted off for the performing of its proper work.
And as the twain is one flesh in the case of male and female, so in the mind
one nature embraces our intellect and action, or our counsel and performance, or
our reason and rational appetite, or whatever other more significant terms
there may be by which to express them; so that, as it was said of the former, "And
they two shall be in one flesh,"(1) it may be said of these, they two are in
one mind.
CHAP. 4.--THE TRINITY AND THE IMAGE OF GOD IS IN THAT PART OF THE MIND ALONE
WHICH BELONGS TO THE CONTEMPLATION OF ETERNAL THINGS.
4. When, therefore, we discuss the nature of the human mind, we discuss a
single subject, and do not double it into those two which I have mentioned,
except in respect to its functions. Therefore, when we seek the trinity in the
mind, we seek it in the whole mind, without separating the action of the reason in
things temporal from the contemplation of things eternal, so as to have
further to seek some third thing, by which a trinity may be completed. But this
trinity must needs be so discovered in the whole nature of the mind, as that even if
action upon temporal things were to be withdrawn, for which work that help is
necessary, with a view to which some part of the mind is diverted in order to
deal with these inferior things, yet a trinity would still be found in the one
mind that is no where parted off; and that when this distribution has been
already made, not only a trinity may be found, but also an image of God, in that
alone which belongs to the contemplation of eternal things; while in that other
which is diverted from it in the dealing with temporal things, although there may
be a trinity, yet there cannot be found an image of God.
CHAP. 5.--THE OPINION WHICH DEVISES AN IMAGE OF THE TRINITY IN THE MARRIAGE OF
MALE AND FEMALE, AND IN THEIR OFFSPRING.
5. Accordingly they do not seem to me to advance a probable opinion, who
lay it down that a trinity of the image of God in three persons, so far as
regards human nature, can so be discovered as to be completed in the marriage of
male and female and in their offspring; in that the man himself, as it were,
indicates the person of the Father, but that which has so proceeded from him as to
be born, that of the Son; and so the third person as of the Spirit, is, they
say, the woman, who has so proceeded from the man as not herself to be either son
or daughter,(2) although it was by her conception that the offspring was born.
For the Lord hath said of the Holy Spirit that He proceedeth from the
Father,(3) and yet he is not a son. In this erroneous opinion, then, the only point
probably alleged, and indeed sufficiently shown according to the faith of the Holy
Scripture, is this,--in the account of the original creation of the
woman,--that what so comes into existence from some person as to make another person,
cannot in every case be called a son; since the person of the woman came into
existence from the person of the man, and yet she is not called his daughter. All
the rest of this opinion is in truth so absurd, nay indeed so false, that it is
most easy to refute it. For I pass over such a thing, as to think the Holy
Spirit to be the mother of the Son of God, and the wife of the Father; since perhaps
it may be answered that these things offend us in carnal things, because we
think of bodily conceptions and births. Although these very things themselves are
most chastely thought of by the pure, to whom all things are pure; but to the
defiled and unbelieving, of whom both the mind and conscience are polluted,
nothing is pure;(1) so that even Christ, born of a virgin according to the flesh,
is a stumbling-block to some of them. But yet in the case of those supreme
spiritual things, after the likeness of which those kinds of the inferior creature
also are made although most remotely, and where there is nothing that can be
injured and nothing corruptible, nothing born in time, nothing formed from that
which is formless, or whatever like expressions there may be; yet they ought not
to disturb the sober prudence of any one, lest in avoiding empty disgust he
run into pernicious error. Let him accustom himself so to find in corporeal
things the traces of things spiritual, that when he begins to ascend upwards from
thence, under the guidance of reason, in order to attain to the unchangeable
truth itself through which these things were made, he may not draw with himself to
things above what he despises in things below. For no one ever blushed to
choose for himself wisdom as a wife, because the name of wife puts into a man's
thoughts the corruptible connection which consists in begetting children; or
because in truth wisdom itself is a woman in sex, since it is expressed in both
Greek and Latin tongues by a word of the feminine gender.
CHAP. 6. --WHY THIS OPINION IS TO BE REJECTED.
6. We do not therefore reject this opinion, because we fear to think of
that holy and inviolable and unchangeable Love, as the spouse of God the Father,
existing as it does from Him, but not as an offspring in order to beget the
Word by which all things are, made; but because divine Scripture evidently shows
it to be false. For God said, "Let us make man in our image, after our
likeness;" and a little after it is said, "So God created man in the image of God."(2)
Certainly, in that it is of the plural number, the word "our" would not be
rightly used if man were made in the image of one person, whether of the Father, or
of the Son, or of the Holy Spirit; but because he was made in the image of the
Trinity, on that account it is said, "After our image." But again, lest we
should think that three Gods were to be believed in the Trinity, whereas the same
Trinity is one God, it is said, "So God created man in the image of God,"
instead of saying, "In His own image."
7. For such expressions are customary in the Scriptures; and yet some
persons, while maintaining the Catholic faith, do not carefully attend to them, in
such wise that they think the words, "God made man in the image of God," to
mean that the Father made man after the image of the Son; and they thus desire to
assert that the Son also is called God in the divine Scriptures, as if there
were not other most true and clear proofs wherein the Son is called not only God,
but also the true God. For whilst they aim at explaining another difficulty in
this text, they become so entangled that they cannot extricate themselves. For
if the Father made man after the image of the Son, so that he is not the image
of the Father, but of the Son, then the Son is unlike the Father. But if a
pious faith teaches us, as it does. that the Son is like the Father after an
equality of essence, then that which is made in the likeness of the Son must needs
also be made in the likeness of the Father. Further, if the Father made man not
in His own image, but in the image of His Son, why does He not say, "Let us
make man after Thy image and likeness," whereas He does say, "our;" unless it be
because the image of the Trinity was made in man, that in this way man should
be the image of the one true God, because the Trinity itself is the one true
God? Such expressions are innumerable in the Scriptures, but it will suffice to
have produced these. It is so said in the Psalms, "Salvation belongeth unto the
Lord; Thy blessing is upon Thy people;"(3) as if the words were spoken to some
one else, not to Him of whom it had been said, "Salvation belongeth unto the
Lord." And again, "For by Thee," he says, "I shall be delivered from temptation,
and by hoping in my God I shall leap over the wall;"(4) as if he said to some
one else, "By Thee I shall be delivered from temptation." And again, "In the
heart of the king's enemies; whereby the people fall under Thee;"(5) as if he were
to say, in the heart of Thy enemies. For he had said to that King, that is, to
our Lord Jesus Christ, "The people fall under Thee," whom he intended by the
word King, when he said, "In the heart of the king's enemies." Things of this
kind are found more rarely in the New Testament. But yet the apostle says to the
Romans, "Concerning His Son who was made to Him of the seed of David according
to the flesh, and declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the
spirit of holiness, by the resurrection of the dead of Jesus Christ our Lord;"(6)
as though he were speaking above of some one else. For what is meant by the Son
of God declared by the resurrection of the dead of Jesus Christ, except of the
same Jesus Christ who was declared to be Son of God with power? And as then in
this passage, when we are told, "the Son of God with power of Jesus Christ,"
or "the Son of God according to the spirit of holiness of Jesus Christ," or "the
Son of God by the resurrection of the dead of Jesus Christ," whereas it might
have been expressed in the ordinary way, In His own power, or according to the
spirit of His own holiness, or by the resurrection of His dead, or of their
dead: as, I says we are not compelled to understand another person, but one and
the same, that is, the person of the Son of God our Lord Jesus Christ; so, when
we are told that "God made man in the image of God," although it might have been
more usual to say, after His own image, yet we are not compelled to understand
any other person in the Trinity, but the one and selfsame Trinity itself, who
is one God, and after whose image man is made.
8. And since the case stands thus, if we are to accept the same image of
the Trinity, as not in one, but in three human beings, father and mother and
son, then the man was not made after the image of God before a wife was made for
him, and before they procreated a son; because there was not yet a trinity. Will
any one say there was already a trinity, because, although not yet in their
proper form, yet in their original nature, both the woman was already in the side
of the man, and the son in the loins of his father? Why then, when Scripture
had said, "God made man after the image of God," did it go on to say, "God
created him; male and female created He them: and God blessed them"?(1) (Or if it is
to be so divided, "And God created man," so that thereupon is to be added, "in
the image of God created He him," and then subjoined in the third place, "male
and female created He them;" for some have feared to say, He made him male and
female, lest something monstrous, as it were; should be understood, as are
those whom they call hermaphrodites, although even so both might be understood not
falsely in the singular number, on account of that which is said, "Two in one
flesh.") Why then, as I began by saying, in regard to the nature of man made
after the image of God, does Scripture specify nothing except male and female?
Certainly, in order to complete the image of the Trinity, it ought to have added
also son, although still placed in the loins of his father, as the woman was in
his side. Or was it perhaps that the woman also had been already made, and
that Scripture had combined in a short and comprehensive statement, that of which
it was going to explain afterwards more carefully, how it was done; and that
therefore a son could not be mentioned, because no son was yet born? As if the
Holy Spirit could not have comprehended this, too, in that brief statement, while
about to narrate the birth of the son afterwards in its own place; as it
narrated afterwards in its own place, that the woman was taken from the side of the
man,(2) and yet has not omitted here to name her.
CHAP. 7.--HOW MAN IS THE IMAGE OF GOD. WHETHER THE WOMAN IS NOT ALSO THE IMAGE
OF GOD.HOW THE SAYING OF THE APOSTLE, THAT THE MAN IS THE IMAGE OF GOD, BUT
THE WOMAN IS THE GLORY OF THE MAN, IS TO BE UNDERSTOOD FIGURATIVELY AND
MYSTICALLY.
9. We ought not therefore so to understand that man is made in the image
of the supreme Trinity, that is, in the image of God, as that the same image
should be understood to be in three human beings; especially when the apostle says
that the man is the image of God, and on that account removes the covering
from his head, which he warns the woman to use, speaking thus: " For a man indeed
ought not to cover his head, forasmuch as he is the image and glory of God; but
the woman is the glory of the man." What then shall we say to this? If the
woman fills up the image of the trinity after the measure of her own person, why
is the man still called that image after she has been taken out of his side? Or
if even one person of a human being out of three can be called the image of
God, as each person also is God in the supreme Trinity itself, why is the woman
also not the image of God? For she is instructed for this very reason to cover
her head, which be is forbidden to do because he is the image of God.(3)
10. But we must notice how that which the apostle says, that not the woman
but the man is the image of God, is not contrary to that which is written in
Genesis, "God created man: in the image of God created He him; male and female
created He them: and He blessed them." For this text says that human nature
itself, which is complete [only] in both sexes, was made in the image of God; and
it does not separate the woman from the image of God which it signifies. For
after saying that God made man in the image of God, "He created him," it says,
"male and female:" or at any rate, punctuating the words otherwise, "male and
female created He them." How then did the apostle tell us that the man is the image
of God, and therefore he is forbidden to cover his head; but that the woman is
not so, and therefore is commanded to cover hers? Unless, forsooth, according
to that which I have said already, when I was treating of the nature of the
human mind, that the woman together with her own husband is the image of God, so
that that whole substance may be one image; but when she is referred separately
to her quality of help-meet, which regards the woman herself alone, then she is
not the image of God; but as regards the man alone, he is the image of God as
fully and completely as when the woman too is joined with him in one. As we
said of the nature of the human mind, that both in the case when as a whole it
contemplates the truth it is the image of God; and in the case when anything is
divided from it, and diverted in order to the cognition of temporal things;
nevertheless on that side on which it beholds and consults truth, here also it is
the image of God, but on that side whereby it is directed to the cognition of the
lower things, it is not the image of God. And since it is so much the more
formed after the image of God, the more it has extended itself to that which is
eternal, and is on that account not to be restrained, so as to withhold and
refrain itself from thence; therefore the man ought not to cover his head. But
because too great a progression towards inferior things is dangerous to that
rational cognition that is conversant with things corporeal and temporal; this ought
to have power on its head, which the covering indicates, by which it is
signified that it ought to be restrained. For a holy and pious meaning is pleasing to
the holy angels.(1) For God sees not after the way of time, neither does
anything new take place in His vision and knowledge, when anything is done in time and
transitorily, after the way in which such things affect the senses, whether
the carnal senses of animals and men, or even the heavenly senses of the angels.
11. For that the Apostle Paul, when speaking outwardly of the sex of male
and female, figured the mystery of some more hidden truth, may be understood
from this, that when he says in another place that she is a widow indeed who is
desolate, without children and nephews, and yet that she ought to trust in God,
and to continue in prayers night and day,(2) he here indicates, that the woman
having been brought into the transgression by being deceived, is brought to
salvation by child-bearing; and then he has added, "If they continue in faith, and
charity, and holiness, with sobriety."(3) As if it could possibly hurt a good
widow, if either she had not sons, or if those whom she had did not choose to
continue in good works. But because those things which are called good works
are, as it were, the sons of our life, according to that sense of life in which it
answers to the question, What is a man's life? that is, How does he act in
these temporal things? which life the Greeks do not call but Bios; and because
these good works are chiefly performed in the way of offices of mercy, while works
of mercy are of no profit, either to Pagans, or to Jews who do not believe in
Christ, or to any heretics or schismstics whatsoever in whom faith and charity
and sober holiness are not found: what the apostle meant to signify is plain,
and in so far figuratively and mystically, because he was speaking of covering
the head of the woman, which will remain mere empty words, unless referred to
some hidden sacrament.
12. For, as not only most true reason but also the authority of the
apostle himself declares, man was not made in the image of God according to the shape
of his body, but according to his rational mind. For the thought is a debased
and empty one, which holds God to be circumscribed and limited by the
lineaments of bodily members. But further, does not the same blessed apostle say, "Be
renewed in the spirit of your mind, and put on the new man, which is created
after God;"(4) and in another place more clearly, "Putting off the old man," he
says, "with his deeds; put on the new man, which is renewed to the knowledge of
God after the image of Him that created him?"(5) If, then, we are renewed in the
spirit of our mind, and he is the new man who is renewed to the knowledge of
God after the image of Him that created him; no one can doubt, that man was made
after the image of Him that created him, not according to the body, nor
indiscriminately according to any part of the mind, but according to the rational
mind, wherein the knowledge of God can exist And it is according to this renewal,
also, that we are made sons of God by the baptism of Christ; and putting on the
new man, certainly put on Christ through faith. Who is there, then, who will
hold women to be alien from this fellowship, whereas they are fellow-heirs of
grace with us; and whereas in another place the same apostle says, "For ye are all
the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus; for as many as have been
baptized into Christ have put on Christ: there is neither Jew nor Greek, there is
neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female; for ye are all one in
Christ Jesus?"(1) Pray, have faithful women then lost their bodily sex? But because
they are there renewed after the image of God, where there is no sex; man is
there made after the image of God, where there is no sex, that is, in the spirit
of his mind. Why, then, is the man on that account not bound to cover his
head, because he is the image and glory of God, while the woman is bound to do so,
because she is the glory of the man; as though the woman were not renewed in
the spirit of her mind, which spirit is renewed to the knowledge of God after the
image of Him who created him? But because she differs from the man in bodily
sex, it was possible rightly to represent under her bodily covering that part of
the reason which is diverted to the government of temporal things; so that the
image of God may remain on that side of the mind of man on which it cleaves to
the beholding or the consulting of the eternal reasons of things; and this, it
is clear, not men only, but also women have.
CHAP. 8.--TURNING ASIDE FROM THE IMAGE OF GOD.
13. A common nature, therefore, is recognized in their minds, but in their
bodies a division of that one mind itself is figured. As we ascend, then, by
certain steps of thought within, along the succession of the parts of the mind,
there where something first meets us which is not common to ourselves with the
beasts reason begins, so that here the inner man can now be recognized. And if
this inner man himself, through that reason to which the administering of
things temporal has been delegated, slips on too far by over-much progress into
outward things, that which is his head moreover consenting, that is, the (so to
call it)masculine part which presides in the watch-tower of counsel not
restraining or bridling it: then he waxeth old because of all his enemies,(2) viz. the
demons with their prince the devil, who are envious of virtue; and that vision of
eternal things is withdrawn also from the head himself, eating with his spouse
that which was forbidden, so that the light of his eyes is gone from him;(3)
and so both being naked from that enlightenment of truth, and with the eyes of
their conscience opened to behold how they were left shameful and unseemly, like
the leaves of sweet fruits, but without the fruits themselves, they so weave
together good words without the fruit of good works, as while living wickedly to
cover over their disgrace as it were by speaking well.(4)
CHAP. 9.--THE SAME ARGUMENT IS CONTINUED.
14. For the soul loving its own power, slips onwards from the whole which
is common, to a part, which belongs especially to itself. And that apostatizing
pride, which is called "the beginning of sin,"(5) whereas it might have been
most excellently governed by the laws of God, if it had followed Him as its
ruler in the universal creature, by seeking something more than the whole, and
struggling to govern this by a law of its own, is thrust on, since nothing is more
than the whole, into caring for a part; and thus by lusting after something
more, is made less; whence also covetousness is called "the root of all evil."(6)
And it administers that whole, wherein it strives to do something of its own
against the laws by which the whole is governed, by its own body, which it
possesses only in part; and so being delighted by corporeal forms and motions,
because it has not the things themselves within itself, and because it is wrapped up
in their images, which it has fixed in the memory, and is foully polluted by
fornication of the phantasy, while it refers all its functions to those ends, for
which it curiously seeks corporeal and temporal things through the senses of
the body, either it affects with swelling arrogance to be more excellent than
other souls that are given up to the corporeal senses, or it is plunged into a
foul whirlpool of carnal pleasure.
CHAP. 10.--THE LOWEST DEGRADATION REACHED BY DEGREES.
15. When the soul then consults either for itself or for others with a
good will towards perceiving the inner and higher things, such as are possessed in
a chaste embrace, without any narrowness or envy, not individually, but in
common by all who love such things; then even if it be deceived in anything,
through ignorance of things temporal (for its action in this case is a temporal
one), and if it does not hold fast to that mode of acting which it ought, the
temptation is but one common to man. And it is a great thing so of pass through this
life, on which we travel, as it were, like a road on our return home, that no
temptation may take us, but what is common to man.(1) For this is a sin,
without the body, and must not be reckoned fornication, and on that account is very
easily pardoned. But when the soul does anything in order to attain those things
which are perceived through the body, through lust of proving or of surpassing
or of handling them, in order that it may place in them its final good, then
whatever it does, it does wickedly, and commits fornication, sinning against its
own body:(2) and while snatching from within the deceitful images of corporeal
things, and combining them by vain thought, so that nothing seems to it to be
divine, unless it be of such a kind as this; by selfish greediness it is made
fruitful in errors, and by selfish prodigality it is emptied of strength. Yet it
would not leap on at once from the commencement to such shameless and
miserable fornication, but, as it is written, "He that contemneth small things, shall
fall by little and little."(3)
CHAP. 11.--THE IMAGE OF THE BEAST IN MAN.
16. For as a snake does not creep on with open steps, but advances by the
very minutest efforts of its several scales; so the slippery motion of falling
away [from what is good] takes possession of the negligent only gradually, and
beginning from a perverse desire for the likeness of God, arrives in the end at
the likeness of beasts. Hence it is that being naked of their first garment,
they earned by mortality coats of skins.(4) For--the true honor of man is the
image and likeness of God, which is not preserved except it be in relation to Him
by whom it is impressed. The less therefore that one loves what is one's own,
the more one cleaves to God. But through the desire of making trial of his own
power, man by his own bidding falls down to himself as to a sort of
intermediate grade. And so, while he wishes to be as God is, that is, under no one, he is
thrust on, even from his own middle grade, by way of punishment, to that which
is lowest, that is, to those things in which beasts delight: and thus, while
his honor is the likeness of God, but his dishonor is the likeness of the beast,
"Man being in honor abideth not: he is compared to the beasts that are foolish,
and is made like to them."(5) By what path, then, could he pass so great a
distance from the highest to the lowest, except through his own intermediate
grade? For when he neglects the love of wisdom, which remains always after the same
fashion, and lusts after knowledge by experiment upon things temporal and
mutable, that knowledge puffeth up, it does not edify:(6) so the mind is overweighed
and thrust out, as it were, by its own weight from blessedness; and learns by
its own punishment, through that trial of its own intermediateness, what the
difference is between the good it has abandoned and the bad to which it has
committed itself; and having thrown away and destroyed its strength, it cannot
return, unless by the grace of its Maker calling it to repentance, and forgiving its
sins. For who will deliver the unhappy soul from the body of this death,
unless the grace of God through Jesus Christ our Lord?(7) of which grace we will
discourse in its place, so far as He Himself enables us.
CHAP. 12.--THERE IS A KIND OF HIDDEN WED LOCK IN THE INNER MAN.UNLAWFUL
PLEASURES OF THE THOUGHTS.
17. Let us now complete, so far as the Lord helps us, the discussion which
we have undertaken, respecting that part of reason to which knowledge belongs,
that is, the cognizance of things temporal and changeable, which is necessary
for managing the affairs of this life. For as in the case of that visible
wedlock of the two human beings who were made first, the serpent did not eat of the
forbidden tree, but only persuaded them to eat of it; and the woman did not eat
alone, but gave to her husband, and they eat together; although she alone
spoke with the serpent, and she alone was led away by him:(8) so also in the case
of that hidden and secret kind of wedlock, which is transacted and discerned in
a single human being, the carnal, or as I may say, since it is directed to the
senses of the body, the sensuous movement of the soul, which is common to us
with beasts, is shut off from the reason of wisdom. For certainly bodily things
are perceived by the sense of the body; but spiritual things, which are eternal
and unchangeable, are understood by the reason of wisdom. But the reason of
knowledge has appetite very near to it: seeing that what is called the science or
knowledge of actions reasons concerning the bodily things which are perceived
by the bodily sense; if well, in order that it may refer that knowledge to the
end of the chief good; but if ill, in order that it may enjoy them as being
such good things as those wherein it reposes with a false blessedness. Whenever,
then, that carnal or animal sense introduces into this purpose of the mind which
is conversant about things temporal and corporeal, with a view to the offices
of a man's actions, by the living force of reason, some inducement to enjoy
itself, that is, to enjoy itself as if it were some private good of its own, not
as the public and common, which is the unchangeable, good; then, as it were, the
serpent discourses with the woman. And to consent to this allurement, is to
eat of the forbidden tree. But if that consent is satisfied by the pleasure of
thought alone, but the members are so restrained by the authority of higher
counsel that they are not yielded as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin;(1)
this, I think, is to be considered as if the woman alone should have eaten the
forbidden food. But if, in this consent to use wickedly the things which are
perceived through the senses of the body, any sin at all is so determined upon, that
if there is the power it is also fulfilled by the body; then that woman must
be understood to have given the unlawful food to her husband with her, to be
eaten together. For it is not possible for the mind to determine that a sin is not
only to be thought of with pleasure, but also to be effectually committed,
unless also that intention of the mind yields, and serves the bad action, with
which rests the chief power of applying the members to an outward act, or of
restraining them from one.
18. And yet, certainly, when the mind is pleased in thought alone with
unlawful things, while not indeed determining that they are to be done, but yet
holding and pondering gladly things which ought to have been rejected the very
moment they touched the mind, it cannot be denied to be a sin, but far less than
if it were also determined to accomplished it in outward act. And therefore
pardon must be sought for such thoughts too, and the breast must be smitten, and
it must be said, "Forgive us our debts;" and what follows must be done, and must
be joined in our prayer, "As we also forgive our debtors."(2) For it is not as
it was with those two first human beings, of which each one bare his own
person; and so, if the woman alone had eaten the forbidden food, she certainly alone
would have been smitten with the punishment of death: it cannot, I say, be so
said also in the case of a single human being now, that if the thought,
remaining alone, be gladly fed with unlawful pleasures, from which it ought to turn
away directly, while yet there is no determination that the bad actions are to be
done, but only that they are retained with pleasure in remembrance, the woman
as it were can be condemned without the man. Far be it from us to believe this.
For here is one person, one human being, and he as a whole will be condemned,
unless those things which, as lacking the will to do, and yet having the will
to please the mind with them, are perceived to be sins of thought alone, are
pardoned through the grace of the Mediator.(3)
19. This reasoning, then, whereby we have sought in the mind of each
several human being a certain rational wedlock of contemplation and action, with
functions distributed through each severally, yet with the unity of the mind
preserved in both; saving meanwhile the truth of that history which divine testimony
hands down respecting the first two human beings, that is, the man and his
wife, from whom the human species is propagated;(4)--this reasoning, I say, must
be listened to only thus far, that the apostle may be understood to have
intended to signify something to be sought in one individual man, by assigning the
image of God to the man only, and not also to the woman, although in the merely
different sex of two human beings.
CHAP. 13.--THE OPINION OF THOSE WHO HAVE THOUGHT THAT THE MIND WAS SIGNIFIED
BY THE MAN, THE BODILY SENSE BY THE WOMAN,
20. Nor does it escape me, that some who before us were eminent defenders
of the Catholic faith and expounders of the word of God, while they looked for
these two things in one human being, whose entire soul they perceived to be a
sort of excellent paradise, asserted that the man was the mind, but that the
woman was the bodily sense. And according to this distribution, by which the man
is assumed to be the mind, but the woman the bodily sense, all things seem aptly
to agree together if they are handled with due attention: unless that it is
written, that in all the beasts and flying things there was not found for man an
helpmate like to himself; and then the woman was made out of his side(5) And on
this account I, for my part, have not thought that the bodily sense should be
taken for the woman, which we see to be common to ourselves and to the beasts;
but I have desired to find something which the beasts had not; and I have
rather thought the bodily sense should be understood to be the serpent, whom we read
to have been more subtle than all beasts of the field.(6) For in those natural
good things which we see are common to ourselves and to the irrational
animals, the sense excels by a kind of living power; not the sense of which it is
written in the epistle addressed to the Hebrews, where we read, that "strong meat
belongeth to them that are of full age, even those who by reason of use have
their senses exercised to discern both good and evil;"(1) for these "senses"
belong to the rational nature and pertain to the understanding; but that sense which
is divided into five parts in the body, through which corporeal species and
motion is perceived not only by ourselves, but also by the beasts.
21. But whether that the apostle calls the man the image and glory of God,
but the woman the glory of the man,(2) is to be received in this, or that, or
in any other way; yet it is clear, that when we live according to God, our mind
which is intent on the invisible things of Him ought to be fashioned with
proficiency from His eternity, truth, charity; but that something of our own
rational purpose, that is, of the same mind, must be directed to the using of
changeable and corporeal things, without which this life does not go on; not that we
may be conformed to this world,(3) by placing our end in such good things, and
by forcing the desire of blessedness towards them, but that whatever we do
rationally in the using of temporal things, we may do it with the contemplation of
attaining eternal things, passing through the former, but cleaving to the latter.
CHAP. 14.--WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN WISDOM AND KNOWLEDGE. THE WORSHIP OF
GOD IS THE LOVE OF HIM. HOW THE INTELLECTUAL COGNIZANCE OF ETERNAL THINGS
COMES TO PASS THROUGH WISDOM.
For knowledge also has its own good measure, if that in it which puffs up,
or is wont to puff up, is conquered by love of eternal things, which does not
puff up, but, as we know, edifieth.(4) Certainly without knowledge the virtues
themselves, by which one lives rightly, cannot be possessed, by which this
miserable life may be so governed, that we may attain to that eternal life which is
truly blessed.
22. Yet action, by which we use temporal things well, differs from
contemplation of eternal things; and the latter is reckoned to wisdom, the former to
knowledge. For although that which is wisdom can also be called knowledge, as
the apostle too speaks, where he says, "Now I know in part, but then shall I know
even as also I am known;"(5) when doubtless he meant his words to be
understood of the knowledge of the contemplation of God, which will be the highest
reward of the saints; yet where he says, "For to one is given by the Spirit the
word of wisdom, to another the word of knowledge by the same Spirit,"(6) certainly
he distinguishes without doubt these two things, although he does not there
explain the difference, nor in what way one may be discerned from the other. But
having examined a great number of passages from the Holy Scriptures, I find it
written in the Book of Job, that holy man being the speaker, "Behold, piety,
that is wisdom; but to depart from evil is knowledge."(7) In thus distinguishing,
it must be understood that wisdom belongs to contemplation, knowledge to
action. For in this place he meant by piety the worship of God, which in Greek is
called <greek>qeosbeia</greek>. For the sentence in the Greek MSS. has that word.
And what is there in eternal things more excellent than God, of whom alone the
nature is unchangeable? And what is the worship of Him except the love of Him,
by which we now desire to see Him, and we believe and hope that we shall see
Him; and in proportion as we make progress, see now through a glass in an
enigma, but then in clearness? For this is what the Apostle Paul means by "face to
face."(8) This is also what John says, "Beloved, now we are the sons of God, and
it doth not yet appear what we shall be; but we know that, when He shall
appear, we shall be like Him; for we shall see Him as He is."(9) Discourse about
these and the like subjects seems to me to be the discourse itself of wisdom. But
to depart from evil, which Job says is knowledge, is without doubt of temporal
things. Since it is in reference to time [and this world] that we are in evil,
from which we ought to abstain that we may come to those good eternal things.
And therefore, whatsoever we do prudently, boldly, temperately, and justly,
belongs to that knowledge or discipline wherewith our action is conversant in
avoiding evil and desiring good; and so also, whatsoever we gather by the knowledge
that comes from inquiry, in the way of examples either to be guarded against or
to be imitated, and in the way of necessary proofs respecting any subject,
accommodated to our use.
23. When a discourse then relates to these things, I hold it to be a
discourse belonging to knowledge, and to be distinguished from a discourse belonging
to wisdom, to which those things belong, which neither have been, nor shall
be, but are; and on account of that eternity in which they are, are said to have
been, and to be, and to be about to be, without any changeableness of times.
For neither have they been in such way as that they should cease to be, nor are
they about to be in such way as if they were not now; but they have always had
and always will have that very absolute being. And they abide, but not as if
fixed in some place as are bodies; but as intelligible things in incorporeal
nature, they are so at hand to the glance of the mind, as things visible or tangible
in place are to the sense of the body. And not only in the case of sensible
things posited in place, there abide also intelligible and incorporeal reasons of
them apart from local space; but also of motions that pass by in successive
times, apart from any transit in time, there stand also like reasons, themselves
certainly intelligible, and not sensible. And to attain to these with the eye
of the mind is the lot of few; and when they are attained as much as they can
be, he himself who attains to them does not abide in them, but is as it were
repelled by the rebounding of the eye itself of the mind, and so there comes to be
a transitory thought of a thing not transitory. And yet this transient thought
is committed to the memory through the instructions by which the mind is
taught; that the mind which is compelled to pass from thence, may be able to return
thither again; although, if the thought should not return to the memory and find
there what it had committed to it, it would be led thereto like an
uninstructed person, as it had been led before, and would find it where it had first found
it, that is to say, in that incorporeal truth, whence yet once more it may be
as it were written down and fixed in the mind. For the thought of man, for
example, does not so abide in that incorporeal and unchangeable reason of a square
body, as that reason itself abides: if, to be sure, it could attain to it at
all without the phantasy of local space. Or if one were to apprehend the rhythm
of any artificial or musical sound, passing through certain intervals of time,
as it rested without time in some secret and deep silence, it could at least be
thought as long as that song could be heard; yet what the glance of the mind,
transient though it was, caught from thence. and, absorbing as it were into a
belly, so laid up in the memory, over this it will be able to rumiuate in some
measure by recollection, and to transfer what it has thus learned into systematic
knowledge. But if this has been blotted out by absolute forgetfulness, yet
once again, Under the guidance of teaching, one wilt come to that which had
altogether dropped away, and it will be found such as it was.
CHAP. 15. --IN OPPOSITION TO THE REMINISCENCE OF PLATO AND PYTHAGORAS.
PYTHAGORAS THE SAMIAN. OF THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN WISDOM AND KNOWLEDGE, AND OF SEEKING
THE TRINITY IN THE KNOWLEDGE OF TEMPORAL THINGS.
24. And hence that noble philosopher Plato endeavored to persuade us that
the souls of men lived even before they bare these bodies; and that hence those
things which are learnt are rather remembered, as having been known already,
than taken into knowledge as things new. For he has told us that a boy, when
questioned I know not what respecting geometry, replied as if he were perfectly
skilled in that branch of learning. For being questioned step by step and
skillfully, he saw what was to be seen, and said that which he saw.(1) But if this
had been a recollecting of things previously known, then certainly every one, or
almost every one, would not have been able so to answer when questioned. For
not every one was a geometrician in the former life, since geometricians are so
few among men that scarcely one can be found anywhere. But we ought rather to
believe, that the intellectual mind is so formed in its nature as to see those
things, which by the disposition of the Creator are subjoined to things
intelligible in a natural order, by a sort of incorporeal light of an unique kind; as
the eye of the flesh sees things adjacent to itself in this bodily light, of
which light it is made to be receptive, and adapted to it. For none the more does
this fleshly eye, too, distinguish black things from white without a teacher,
because it had already known them before it was created in this flesh. Why,
lastly, is it possible only in intelligible things that any one properly questioned
should answer according to any branch of learning, although ignorant of it?
Why can no one do this with things sensible, except those which he has seen in
this his present body, or has believed the information of others who knew them,
whether somebody's writings or words? For we must not acquiesce in their story.
who assert that the Samian Pythagoras recollected some things of this kind,
which he had" experienced when he was previously here in another body; and others
tell yet of others, that they experienced something of the same sort in their
minds: but it may be conjectured that these were untrue recollections, such as
we commonly experience in sleep, when we fancy we remember, as though we had
done or seen it, what we never did or saw at all; and that the minds of these
persons, even though awake, were affected in this way at the suggestion of
malignant and deceitful spirits, whose care it is to confirm or to sow some false
belief concerning the changes of souls, in order to deceive men. This, I say, may
be conjectured from this, that if they really remembered those things which they
had seen here before, while occupying other bodies, the same thing would
happen to many, nay to almost all; since they suppose that as the dead from the
living, so, without cessation and continually, the living are coming into existence
from the dead; as sleepers from those that are awake, and those that are awake
from them that sleep.
25. If therefore this is the right distinction between wisdom and
knowledge, that the intellectual cognizance of eternal things belongs to wisdom, but
the rational cognizance of temporal things to knowledge, it is not difficult to
judge which is to be preferred or postponed to which. But if we must employ some
other distinction by which to know these two apart, which without doubt the
apostle teaches us are different, saying, "To one is given by the Spirit the word
of wisdom; to another the word of knowledge, by the same Spirit:" still the
difference between those two which we have laid down is a most evident one, in
that the intellectual cognizance of eternal things is one thing, the rational
cognizance of temporal things another; and no one doubts but that the former is to
be preferred to the latter. As then we leave behind those things which belong
to the outer man, and desire to ascend within from those things which we have
in common with beasts, before we come to the cognizance of things intelligible
and supreme, which are eternal, the rational cognizance of temporal things
presents itself. Let us then find a trinity in this also, if we can, as we found one
in the senses of the body, and in those things which through them entered in
the way of images into our soul or spirit; so that instead of corporeal things
which we touch by corporeal sense, placed as they are without us, we might have
resemblances of bodies impressed within on the memory from which thought might
be formed, while the will as a third united them; just as the sight of the eyes
was formed from without, which the will applied to the visible thing in order
to produce vision. and united both, while itself also added itself thereto as a
third. But this subject must not be compressed into this book; so that in that
which follows, if God help, it may be suitably examined, and the conclusions
to which we come may be unfolded.