ON THE PROFIT OF BELIEVING. [DE UTILITATE CREDENDI.]
Retract. i. cap. 14. Moreover now at Hippo-Regius as Presbyter I wrote a
book on the Profit of Believing, to a friend of mine who had been taken in by
the Manichees, and whom I knew to be still held in that error, and to deride the
Catholic school of Faith, in that men were bid believe, but not taught what was
truth by a most certain method. In this book I said, &c. * * * This book
begins thus, "Si mihi Honorate, unum atque idem videretur esse."
St. Augustin enumerates his book on the Profit of Believing first amongst
those he wrote as Presbyter, to which order he was raised at Hippo about the
beginning of the year 391. The person for whom he wrote had been led into error
by himself, and appears to have been recovered from it, at least if he is the
same who wrote to St. Augustin from Carthage about 412, proposing several
questions, and to whom St. Augustin wrote his 140th Epistle. Cassiodorus calls him a
Presbyter, though at that time he was not baptized. In Ep. 88, St. Augustin
speaks of the death of another Honoratus, a Presbyter. Towards the end of his life
he also wrote his 228th Epistle to a Bishop of Thabenna of the same
name.--(Bened. Ed.)
The remarks in the Retractations are given in notes to the passages where
they occur.
1. IF, Honoratus, a heretic, and a man trusting heretics seemed to me one
and the same, I should judge it my duty to remain silent both in tongue and pen
in this matter. But now, whereas there is a very great difference between
these two: forasmuch as he, in my opinion, is an heretic, who, for the sake of some
temporal advantage, and chiefly for the sake of his own glory and
pre-eminence, either gives birth to, or follows, false and new opinions; but he, who trusts
men of this kind, is a man deceived by a certain imagination of truth and
piety. This being the case, I have not thought it my duty to be silent towards you,
as to my opinions on the finding and retaining of truth: with great love of
which, as you know, we have burned from our very earliest youth: but it is a
thing far removed from the minds of vain men, who, having too far advanced and
fallen into these corporeal things, think that there is nothing else than what they
perceive by those five well-known reporters of the body; and what
impressions(1) and images they have received from these, they carry over with themselves,
even when they essay to withdraw from the senses; and by the deadly and most
deceitful rule of these think that they measure most rightly the unspeakable
recesses of truth. Nothing is more easy, my dearest friend, than for one not only to
say, but also to think, that he hath found out the truth; but how difficult it
is in reality, you will perceive, I trust, from this letter of mine. And that
this may profit you, or at any rate may in no way harm you, and also all, into
whose hands it shall chance to come, I have both prayed, and do pray, unto God;
and I hope that it will be so, forasmuch as(1) I am fully conscious that I
have undertaken to write it, in a pious and friendly spirit, not as aiming at vain
reputation, or trifling display.
2. It is then my purpose to prove to you, if I can, that the Manichees
profanely and rashly inveigh against those, who, following the authority of the
Catholic Faith. before that they are able to gaze upon that Truth, which the pure
mind beholds, are by believing forearmed, and prepared for God Who is about to
give them light. For you know, Honoratus, that for no other reason we fell in
with such men, than because they used to say, that, apart from all terror of
authority, by pure and simple reason, they would lead within to God, and set free
from all error those who were willing to be their hearers. For what else
constrained me, during nearly nine years, spurning the religion which had been set
in me from a child by my parents, to be a follower and diligent hearer of those
men,(2) save that they said that we are alarmed by superstition, and are
commanded to have faith before reason, but that they urge no one to have faith,
without having first discussed and made clear the truth? Who would not be enticed by
such promises, especially the mind of a young man desirous of the truth, and
further a proud and talkative mind by discussions of certain learned men in the
school? such as they then found me, disdainful forsooth as of old wives'
fables, and desirous to grasp and drink in, what they promised, the open and pure
Truth? But what reason, on the other hand, recalled me, not to be altogether
joined to them, so that I continued in that rank which they call of Hearers, so that
I resigned not the hope and business of this world; save that I noticed that
they also are rather eloquent and full in refutation of others, than abide firm
and sure in proof of what is their own. But of myself what shall I say, who was
already a Catholic Christian? teats which now, after very long thirst, I
almost exhausted and dry, have returned to with all greediness, and with deeper
weeping and groaning have shaken together and wrung them out more deeply, that so
there might flow what might be enough to refresh me affected as I was, and to
bring back hope of life and safety. What then shall I say of myself? You, not yet
a Christian, who, through encouragement from me, execrating them greatly as
you did, were hardly led to believe that you ought to listen to them and make
trial of them, by what else, I pray you, were you delighted, call to mind,I
entreat you, save by a certain great presumption and promise of reasons? But because
they disputed long and much with very great copiousness and vehemence
concerning the errors of unlearned men, a thing which I learned too late at length to be
most easy for any moderately educated man; if even of their own they implanted
in us any thing, we thought that we were obliged to retain it, insomuch as
there fell not in our way other things, wherein to acquiesce. So they did in our
case what crafty fowlers are wont to do, who set branches smeared with bird-lime
beside water to deceive thirsty birds. For they fill up and cover anyhow the
other waters which are around, or fright them from them by alarming devices,
that they may fall into their snares, not through choice, but want.
3. But why do I not make answer to myself, that these fair and clever
similies, and charges of this nature may be poured forth against all who are
teachers of any thing by any adversary, with abundance of wit and sarcasm? But I
thought that I ought to insert something of this kind in my letter, in order to
admonish them to give over such proceedings; so that, as he(3) says, apart from
trifles of common-places, matter may contend with matter, cause with cause,
reason with reason. Wherefore let them give over that saying, which they have in
their mouths as though of necessity, when any one, who hath been for some long
time a hearer, hath left them; "The Light hath made a passage through him." For
you see, you who are my chief care, (for I am not over anxious about them,) how
empty this is, and most easy for any one to find fault with. Therefore I leave
this for your own wisdom to consider. For I have no fear that you will think me
possessed by indwelling Light, when I was entangled in the life of this world,
having a darkened hope, of beauty of wife, of pomp of riches, of emptiness of
honors, and of all other hurtful and deadly pleasures. For all these, as is not
unknown to you, I ceased not to desire and hope for, at the time when I was
their attentive hearer. And I do not lay this to the charge of their teaching; for
I also confess that they also carefully advise to shun these. But now to say
that I am deserted by light, when I have turned myself from all these shadows of
things, and have determined to be content with that diet merely which is
necessary for health of body; but that I was enlightened and shining, at a time when
I loved these things, and was wrapped up in them, is the part of a man, to use
the mildest expression, wanting in a keen insight into matters, on which he
loves to speak at length. But, if you please, let us come to the cause in hand.
4. For you well know that the Manichees move the unlearned by finding
fault with the Catholic Faith, and chiefly by rending in pieces and tearing the Old
Testament: and they are utterly ignorant, how far(1) these things are to be
taken, and how drawn out they descend with profit into the veins and marrows of
souls as yet as it were but able to cry.(2) And because there are in them
certain things which are some slight offense to minds ignorant and careless of
themselves, (and there are very many such,) they admit of being accused in a popular
way: but defended in a popular way they cannot be, by any great number of
persons, by reason of the mysteries that are contained in them. But the few, who
know how to do this, do not love public and much talked of controversies and
dispute:(3) a and on this account are very little known, save to such as are most
earnest in seeking them out. Concerning then this rashness of the Manichees,
whereby they find fault with the Old Testament and the Catholic Faith, listen, I
entreat you, to the considerations which move me. But I desire and hope that you
will receive them in the same spirit in which I say them. For God, unto Whom
are known the secrets of my conscience knows, that in this discourse I am doing
nothing of evil craft; but, as I think it should be received, for the sake of
proving the truth, for which one thing we have now long ago determined to live;
and with incredible anxiety, lest it may have been most easy for me to err with
you, but most difficult, to use no harder term, to hold the right way with you.
But I venture(4) to anticipate that, in this hope, wherein I hope that you
will hold with us the way of wisdom, He will not fail me, unto Whom I have been
consecrated; Whom day and night I endeavor to gaze upon: and since, by reason of
my sins, and by reason of past habit, having the eye of the mind wounded by
strokes of feeble opinions, I know that I am without strength, I often entreat
with tears, and as, after long blindness and darkness the eyes being hardly
opened, and as yet, by frequent throbbing and turning away, refusing the light which
yet they long after; specially if one endeavor to show to them the very sun;
so it has now befallen me, who do not deny that there is a certain unspeakable
and singular good of the soul, which the mind sees; and who with tears and
groaning confess that I am not yet worthy of it. He will not then fail me, if I
feign nothing, if I am led by duty, if I love truth, if I esteem friendship, if I
fear much lest you be deceived.
5. All that Scripture therefore, which is called the Old Testament, is
handed down fourfold to them who desire to know it, according to history,
according to aetiology, according to analogy, according to allegory. Do not think me
silly for using Greek words. In the first place, because I have so received, nor
do I dare to make known to you otherwise than I have received. Next you
yourself perceive, that we have not in use terms for such things: and had I translated
and made such, I should have been indeed more silly: but, were I to use
circumlocution, I should be less free in treating: this only I pray you to believe,
that in whatever way I err, I am not inflated or swollen in any thing that I do.
Thus (for example) it is handed down according to history, when there is
taught what hath been written, or what hath been done; what not done, but only
written as though it had been done. According to aetiology, when it is shown for
what cause any thing hath been done or said. According to analogy, when it is
shown that the two Testaments, the Old and the New, are not contrary the one to the
other. According to allegory, when it is taught that certain things which have
been written are not to be taken in the letter, but are to be understood in a
figure.
6. All these ways our Lord Jesus Christ and His Apostles used. For when it
had been objected that His disciples had plucked the ears of corn on the
sabbath-day, the instance was taken from history; "Have ye not read," saith He,
"what David did when he was an hungered, and they that were with him; how he
entered into the house of God, and did eat the shewbread, which was not lawful for
him to eat, neither for them that were with him, but only for the priests?"(5)
But the instance pertains to aetiology, that, when Christ had forbidden a wife to
be put away, save for the cause of fornication, and they, who asked Him, had
alleged that Moses had granted permission after a writing of divorcement had
been given, This, saith He, "Moses did because of the hardness of your heart."(6)
For here a reason was given, why that had been well allowed by Moses for a
time; that this command of Christ might seem to show that now the times were other.
But it were long to explain the changes of these times, and their order
arranged and settled by a certain marvellous appointment of Divine Providence.
7. And further, analogy, whereby the agreement of both Testaments is
plainly seen, why shall I say that all have made use of, to whose authority they
yield; whereas it is in their power to consider with themselves, how many things
they are wont to say have been inserted in the divine Scriptures by certain, I
know not who, corrupters of truth? Which speech of theirs I always thought to be
most weak, even at the time that I was their hearer: nor I alone, but you
also, (for I well remember,) and all of us, who essayed to exercise a little more
care in forming a judgment than the crowd of hearers. But now, after that many
things have been expounded and made clear to me, which used chiefly to move me:
those I mean, wherein their discourse for the most part boasts itself, and
expatiates the more freely, the more safely it can do so as having no opponent; it
seems to me that there is no assertion of theirs more shameless, or (to use a
milder phrase) more careless and weak than that the divine Scriptures have been
corrupted; whereas there are no copies in existence, in a matter of so recent
date, whereby they can prove it. For were they to assert, that they thought not
that they ought thoroughly to receive them, because they had been written by
persons, who they thought had not written the truth; any how their refusal(1)
would be more right, or their error more natural.(2) For this is what they have
done in the case of the Book which is inscribed the Acts of the Apostles. And
this device of theirs, when I consider with myself, I cannot enough wonder at. For
it is not the want of wisdom in the men that I complain of in this matter, but
the want of ordinary understanding.(3) For that book hath so great matters,
which are like what they receive, that it seems to me great folly to refuse to
receive this book also, and if any thing offend them there to call it false and
inserted. Or, if such language is shameless, as it is why in the Epistles of
Paul, why in the four books of the Gospel, do they think that they(4) are of any
avail, in which I am not sure but that there are in proportion many more things,
than could be in that book, which they will have believed to have been
interpolated by falsifiers. But fosooth this is what I believe to be the case, and I
ask of you to consider it with me with as calm and serene a judgment as
possible. For you know that, essaying to bring the person of their founder Manichaeus
into the number of the Apostles, they say that the Holy Spirit, Whom the Lord
promised His disciples that He would send, hath come to us through him.
Therefore, were they to receive those Acts of the Apostles, in which the coming of the
Holy Spirit is plainly set forth,(5) they could not find how to say that it was
interpolated. For they will have it that there were some, I know not who,
falsifiers of the divine Books before the times of Manichaeus himself; and that they
were falsified by persons who wished to combine the Law of the Jews with the
Gospel. But this they cannot say concerning the Holy Spirit, unless haply they
assert that those persons divined, and set m their books what should be brought
forward against Manichaeus, who should at some future time arise, and say that
the Holy Spirit had been sent through him. But concerning the Holy Spirit we
will speak somewhat more plainly in another place. Now let us return to my
purpose.
8. For that both history of the Old Testament, and aetiology, and analogy
are found in the New Testament, has been, as I think, sufficiently proved: it
remains to show this of allegory. Our Redeemer Himself in the Gospel uses
allegory out of the Old Testament. "This generation," saith He, "seeketh a sign, and
there shall not be given it save the sign of Jonas the prophet. For as Jonas
was three days and three nights in the whale's belly, so also shall the Son of
Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth."(6) For why should
I speak of the ApOstle Paul, who in his first Epistle to the Corinthians shows
that even the very history of the Exodus was an allegory of the future
Christian People. "But I would not that ye should be ignorant, brethren, how that all
our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea, and were all
baptized into Moses, in the cloud, and in the sea, and did all eat the same
spiritual meat, and did all drink the same spiritual drink; for they drank of the
spiritual Rock that followed with them; and that Rock was Christ. But in the
more part of them God was not well pleased: for they were overthrown in the
wilderness. But these things were figures of us,(7) that we be not lustful of evil
things, as they also lusted. Neither let us worship idols, as certain of them; as
it is written, The people sat down to eat and drink, and rose up to play.
Neither let us commit fornication, as certain of them committed, and fell in one
day three and twenty thousand men. Neither let us tempt Christ, as certain of
them tempted, and perished of serpents. Neither murmur we, as certain of them
murmured, and perished of the destroyer. But all these things happened unto them in
a figure.(1) But they were written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of
the world have come."(2) There is also in the Apostle a certain allegory, which
indeed greatly relates to the cause in hand, for this reason that they
themselves are wont to bring it forward, and make a display of it in disputing. For the
same Paul says to the Galatians, "For it is written, that Abraham had two
sons, one of a bond-maid, and one of a free woman. But he who was of the bond-maid
was born after the flesh: but he who was of the free woman, by promise: which
things were spoken by way of allegory.(3) For these are the two Testaments, one
of Mount Sinai gendering unto bondage, which is Agar: for Sinai is a mount in
Arabia, which bordereth(4) upon that Jerusalem which now is, and is in bondage
with her children. But that Jerusalem which is above is free, which is the
mother of us all."(5)
9. Here therefore these men too evil, while they essay to make void the
Law, force us to approve these Scriptures. For they mark what is said, that they
who are under the Law are in bondage, and they keep flying above the rest that
last saying, "Ye are made empty(6) of Christ, as many of you as are justified
in the Law; ye have fallen from Grace."(7) We grant that all these things are
true, and we say that the Law is not necessary, save for them unto whom bondage
is yet profitable: and that the Law was on this account profitably enacted, in
that men, who could not be recalled from sins by reason, needed to be restrained
by such a Law, that is to say, by the threats and terrors of those punishments
which can be seen by fools: from which when the Grace of Christ sets us free,
it condemns not that Law, but invites us at length to yield obedience to its
love, not to be slaves to the fear of the Law. Itself is Grace, that is free
gift,(8) which they understand not to have come to them from God, who still desire
to be under the bonds of the Law. Whom Paul deservedly rebukes as unbelievers,
because they do not believe that now through our Lord Jesus they have been set
free from that bondage, under which they were placed for a certain time by the
most just appointment of God. Hence is that saying of the same Apostle, "For
the Law was our schoolmaster in Christ."(9) He therefore gave to men a
schoolmaster to fear, Who after gave a Master to love. And yet in these precepts and
commands of the Law, which now it is not allowed Christians to use, such as either
the Sabbath, or Circumcision, or Sacrifices, and if there be any thing of this
kind, so great mysteries are contained, as that every pious person may
understand, there is nothing more deadly than that whatever is there be understood to
the letter, that is, to the word:(10) and nothing more healthful than that it be
unveiled in the Spirit. Hence it is: "The letter killeth, but the Spirit
quickeneth."(11) Hence it is, "That same veil remaineth in the reading of the Old
Testament, which veil is not taken away; since it is made void in Christ."(12)
For there is made void in Christ, not the Old Testament, but its veil: that so
through Christ that may be understood, and, as it were, laid bare, which without
Christ is obscure and covered. Forasmuch as the same Apostle straightway adds,
"But when thou shalt have passed over to Christ, the veil shall be taken
away."(13) For he saith not, the Law shall be taken away, or, the Old Testament. Not
therefore through the Grace of the Lord, as though useless things were there
hidden, have they been taken away; but rather the covering whereby useful things
were covered. In this manner all they are dealt with, who earnestly and
piously, not disorderly and shamelessly, seek the sense of those Scriptures, and they
are carefully shown both the order of events, and the causes of deeds and
words, and so great agreement of the Old Testament with the New, that there is left
no jot(14) that agrees not; and so great secrets of figures, that all the
things that are drawn forth by interpretation force them to confess that they are
wretched, who will to condemn these before they learn them.
10. But, passing over in the mean while the depth of knowledge, to deal
with you as I think I ought to deal with my intimate friend; that is, as I have
myself power, not as I have wondered at the power of very learned men; there are
three kinds of error, whereby men err, when they read anything. I will speak
of them one by one. The first kind is, wherein that which is false is thought
true, whereas the writer thought otherwise. A second kind, although not so
extensive, yet not less hurtful, when that, which is false, is thought true, yet the
thought is the same as that of the writer. A third kind, when from the writing
of another some truth is understood, whereas the writer understood it not. In
which kind there is no little profit, rather, if you consider carefully, the
whole entire fruit of reading. An instance of the first kind is, as if any one,
for example, should say and believe that Rhadamanthus hears and judges the causes
of the dead in the realms below, because he hath so read in the strain of
Maro.(1) For this one errs in two ways: both in that he believes a thing not to be
believed, and also in that he, whom he reads, is not to be thought to have
believed it. The second kind may be thus noticed: if one, because Lucretius writes
that the soul is formed of atoms, and that after death it is dissolved into the
same atoms and perishes, were to think this to be true and what he ought to
believe. For this one also is not less wretched, if, in a matter of so great
moment, he hath persuaded himself of that which is false, as certain; although
Lucretius, by whose books he hath been deceived, held this opinion. For what doth
it profit this one to be assured of the meaning of the author, whereas he hath
chosen him to himself not so as through him to escape error, but so as with him
to err. An instance suited to the third kind is, if one, after having read in
the books of Epicurus some place wherein he praises continence, were to assert
that he had made the chief good to consist in virtue, and that therefore he is
not to be blamed. For how is this man injured by the error of Epicurus, what
though Epicurus believe that bodily pleasure is the chief good of man: whereas he
hath not surrendered up himself to so base and hurtful an opinion, and is
pleased with Epicurus for no other reason, than that he thinks him not to have held
sentiments which ought not to be holden. This error is not only natural to
man,(2) but often also most worthy of a man. For what, if word were brought to me,
concerning some one whom I loved, that, when now he was of bearded age, he had
said, in the hearing of many, that he was so pleased with boyhood and
childhood, as even to swear that he wished to live after the same fashion, and that that
was so proved to me, as that I should be shameless to deny it: I should not,
should I, seem worthy of blame, if I thought that, in saying this, he wished to
show, that he was pleased with the innocence, and with the temper of mind
alien from those desires in which the race of man is wrapped up, and from this
circumstance should love him yet more and more, than I used to love him before;
although perhaps he had been foolish enough to love in the age of children a
certain freedom in play and food, and an idle ease? For suppose that he had died
after this report had reached me, and that I had been unable to make any inquiry
of him, so as for him to open his meaning; would there be any one so shameless
as to be angry with me, for praising the man's purpose and wish, through those
very words which I had heard? What, that even a just judge of matters would not
hesitate perhaps to praise my sentiment and wish, in that both I was pleased
with innocence, and, as man of man, in a matter of doubt, preferred to think
well, when it was in my power also to think ill?
11. And, this being so, hear also just so many conditions and differences
of the same Scriptures. For it must be that just so many meet us. For either
any one hath written profitably, and is not profitably understood by some one: or
both take place unprofitably: or the reader understands profitably, whereas
he, who is read, hath written contrariwise. Of these the first I blame not, the
last I regard not. For neither can I blame the man, who without any fault of his
own hath been ill understood; nor can I be distressed at any one being read,
who hath failed to see the truth, when I see that the readers are no way
injured. There is then one kind most approved, and as it were most cleansed, when both
the things written are well, and are taken in a good sense by the readers. And
yet that also is still further divided into two: for it doth not altogether
shut out error. For it generally comes to pass, that, when a writer hath held a
good sense, the reader also holds a good sense; still other than he, and often
better, often worse, yet profitably. But when both we hold the same sense as he
whom we read, and that is every way suited to right conduct of life, there is
the fullest possible measure of truth, and there is no place opened for error
from any other quarter. And this kind is altogether very rare, when what we read
is matter of extreme obscurity: nor can it, in my opinion, be clearly known,
but only believed. For by what proofs shall I so gather the will of a man who is
absent or dead, as that I can swear to it: when, even if he were questioned
being present, there might be many things, which, if he were no ill man, he would
most carefully hide? But I think that it hath nothing to do towards learning
the matter of fact, of what character the writer was; yet is he most fairly
believed good, whose writings have benefited the human race and posterity.
12. Wherefore I would that they would tell me, in what kind they place
the, supposed, error of the Catholic Church. If in the first, it is altogether a
grave charge; but it needs not a far-fetched defense: for it is enough to deny
that we so understand, as the persons, who inveigh against us, suppose. If in
the second, the charge is not less grave; but they shall be refuted by the same
saying. If in the third, it is no charge at all. Proceed. and next consider the
Scriptures themselves. For what objection do they raise against the books of
(what is called) the Old Testament? Is it that they are good, but are understood
by us in an ill sense? But they themselves do not receive them. Or is it that
they are neither good, nor are well understood? But our defense above is enough
to drive them from this position. Or is it this that they will say, although
they are understood by you in a good sense, yet they are evil? What is this other
than to acquit living adversaries, with whom they have to do, and to accuse
men long ago dead, with whom they have no strife? I indeed believe that both
those men profitably delivered to memory all things, and that they were great and
divine. And that that Law was published, and framed by the command and will of
God: and of this, although I have but very slight knowledge of books of that
kind, yet I can easily persuade any, if there apply to me a mind fair and no way
obstinate: and this I will do, when you shall grant to me your ears and mind
well disposed: this however when it shall be in my power: but now is it not enough
for me, however that matter may stand, not to have been deceived?
13. I call to witness, Honoratus, my conience, and God Who hath His
dwelling in pure souls, that I account nothing more prudent, chaste, and religious,
than are all those Scriptures, which under the name of the Old Testament the
Catholic Church retains. You wonder at this, I am aware. For I cannot hide that we
were far otherwise persuaded. But there is indeed nothing more full of
rashness, (which at that time, being boys, we had in us,) than in the case of each
several book, to desert expounders, who profess that they hold them, and that they
can deliver them to their scholars, and to seek their meaning from those, who,
I know not from what cause compelling, have proclaimed a most bitter war
against the framers and authors of them. For who ever thought that the hidden and
dark books of Aristotle were to be expounded to him by one who was the enemy of
Aristotle; to speak of these systems of teaching, wherein a reader may perhaps
err without sacrilege? Who, in fine, willed to read or learn the geometrical
writings of Archimedes, under Epicurus as a master; against which Epicurus used
to argue with great obstinacy, so far as I judge, understanding them not at all?
What are those Scriptures of the law most plain, against which, as though set
forth in public, these men make their attack in vain and to no purpose? And
they seem to me to be like that weak woman, whom these same men are wont to mock
at, who enraged at the sun being extolled to her, and recommended as an object
of worship by a certain female Manichee, being as she was simple-minded and of
a religions spirit, leaped up in haste, and often striking with her foot that
spot on which the sun through the window cast light, began to cry out, Lo, I
trample on the sun and your God: altogether after a foolish and womanish manner;
Who denies it? But do not those men seem to you to be such, who, in matters
which they understand not, either wherefore, or altogether of what kind they are,
although like to matters cast in the way,(1) yet to such as understand them
exact(2) and divine, rending them with great onset of speech and reproaches, think
that they are effecting something, because the unlearned applaud them? Believe
me, whatever there is in these Scriptures, it is lofty and divine: there is in
them altogether truth, and a system of teaching most suited to refresh and
renew minds: and clearly so ordered in measure, as that there is no one but may
draw thence, what is enough for himself, if only he approach to draw with devotion
and piety, as true religion demands. To prove this to you, needs many reasons
and a longer discourse. For first I must so treat with you as that you may not
hate the authors themselves; next, so as that you may love them: and this I
must treat in any other way, rather than by expounding their meanings and words.
For this reason, because in case we hated Virgil, nay, rather in case we loved
him not, before understanding him, by the commendation of our forefathers, we
should never be satisfied on those questions about him without number, by which
grammarians are wont to be disquieted and troubled; nor should we listen
willingly to one who solved these at the same time praising him; but should favor that
one who by means of these essayed to show that he had erred and doated. But
now, whereas many essay to open these, and each (in a different way according to
his capacity, we applaud these in preference, through whose exposition the
poet is found better, who is believed, even by those who do not understand him,
not only in nothing to have offended, but also to have sung nothing but what was
worthy of praise. So that in some minute question, we are rather angry with the
master who fails, and has not what to answer, than think him silent through
any fault in Maro. And now, if, in order to defend himself, he should wish to
assert a fault in so great an author, hardly will his scholars remain with him,
even after they have paid his fee. How great matter were it, that we should shew
like good will towards them, of whom it hath been confirmed by so long time of
old that the Holy Spirit spake by them? But, forsooth, we youths of the
greatest understanding, and marvellous searchers out of reasons, without having at
least unrolled these writings, without having sought teachers, without having
somewhat chided our own dullness, lastly, without having yielded our heart even in
a measure(1) to those who have willed that writings of this kind be so long
read, kept, and handled through the whole world; have thought that nothing in them
is to be believed, moved by the speech of those who are unfriendly and hostile
to them, with whom, under a false promise of reason, we should be compelled to
believe and cherish thousands of fables.
14. But now I will proceed with what I have begun, if I can, and I will so
treat with you, as not in the mean while to lay open the Catholic Faith, but,
in order that they may search out its great mysteries, to show to those who
have a care for their souls, hope of divine fruit, and of the discerning of truth.
No one doubts of him who seeks true religion, either that he already believes
that there is an immortal soul for that religion to profit, or that he also
wishes to find that very thing in this same religion. Therefore all religion is
for the sake of the soul; for howsoever the nature of the body may be, it causes
no care or anxiety, especially after death, to him, whose soul possesses that
whereby it is blessed. For the sake of the soul, therefore, either alone or
chiefly, hath true religion, if there be any such, been appointed. But this soul,
(I will consider for what reason, and I confess the matter to be most obscure,)
yet errs, and is foolish, as we see, until it attain to and perceive wisdom,
and perhaps this very [wisdom] is true religion. I am not, am I, sending you to
fables? I am not, am I, forcing you to believe rashly? I say that our soul
entangled and sunk in error and folly seeks the way of truth, if there be any such.
If this be not your case, pardon me, I pray, and share with me your wisdom; but
if you recognize in yourself what I say, let us, I entreat, together seek the
truth.
15. Put the case that we have not as yet heard a teacher of any religion.
Lo we have undertaken a new matter and business. We must seek, I suppose, them
who profess this matter, if it have any existence. Suppose that we have found
different persons holding different opinions, and through their difference of
opinions seeking to draw persons each one to himself: but that, in the mean
while, there are certain pre-eminent from being much spoken of, and from having
possession of nearly all peoples. Whether these hold the truth, is a great
question: but ought we not to make full trial of them first, in order that, so long as
we err, being as we are men, we may seem to err with the human race itself?
16. But it will be said, the truth is with some few; therefore you already
know what it is, if you know with whom it is. Said I not a little above, that
we were in search of it as unlearned men? But if from the very force of truth
you conjecture that few possess it, but know not who they are; what if it is
thus, that there are so few who know the truth, as that they hold the multitude by
their authority, whence the small number may set itself free, and, as it were,
strain itself(2) forth into those secrets? Do we not see how few attain the
highest eloquence, whereas through the whole world the schools of rhetoricians
are resounding with troops of young men? What, do they, as many as desire to turn
out good orators, alarmed at the multitude of the unlearned, think that they
are to bestow their labor on the orations of Caecilius, or Erucius, rather than
those of Tullius? All aim at these, which are confirmed by authority of our
forefathers. Crowds of unlearned persons essay to learn the same, which by the few
learned are received as to be learned: yet very few attain, yet fewer
practise, the very fewest possible become famous. What, if true religion be some such
thing? What if a multitude of unlearned persons attend the Churches, and yet
that be no proof, that therefore no one is made perfect by these mysteries? And
yet, if they who studied eloquence were as few as the few who are eloquent, our
parents would never believe that we ought to be committed to such masters.
Whereas, then, we have been called to these studies by a multitude, which is
numerous in that portion of it which is made up of the unlearned, so as to become
enamored of that which few can attain unto; why are we unwilling to be in the same
case in religion, which perhaps we despise with great danger to our soul? For
if the truest and purest worship of God, although it be found with a few, be yet
found with those, with whom a multitude albeit wrapped up in lusts, and
removed far from purity of understanding, agrees; (and who can doubt that this may
happen?) I ask, if one were to charge us with rashness and folly, that we seek
not diligently with them who teach it, that, which we are greatly anxious to
discover, what can we answer? [Shall we say,] I was deterred by numbers? Why from
the pursuit of liberal arts, which hardly bring any profit to this present life;
why from search after money? Why from attaining unto honor; why, in fine, from
gaining and keeping good health; lastly, why from the very aim at a happy
life; whereas all are engaged in these, few excel; were you deterred by no numbers?
17. "But they seemed there to make absurd statements." On whose assertion?
Forsooth on that of enemies, for whatever cause, for whatever reason, for this
is not now the question, still enemies. Upon reading, I found it so of myself.
Is it so? Without having received any instruction in poetry, you would not
dare to essay to read Terentianus Maurus without a master: Asper, Cornutus,
Donatus, and others without number are needed, that any poet whatever may be
understood, whose strains seem to court even the applause of the theatre; do you in the
case of those books, which, however they may be, yet by the confession of
well-nigh the whole human race are commonly reported to be sacred and full of
divine things, rush upon them without a guide, and dare to deliver an opinion on
them without a teacher; and, if there meet you any matters, which seem absurd, do
not accuse rather your own dullness, and mind decayed by the corruption of this
world, such as is that of all that are foolish, than those [books] which haply
cannot be understood by such persons! You should seek some one at once pious
and learned, or who by consent of many was said to be such, that you might be
both bettered by his advice, and instructed by his learning. Was he not easy to
find? He should be searched out with pains. Was there no one in the country in
which you lived? What cause could more profitably force to travel? Was he quite
hidden, or did he not exist on the continent? One should cross the sea. If
across the sea he was not found in any place near to us, you should proceed even as
far as those lands, in which the things related in those books are said to
have taken place, What, Honoratus, have we done of this kind? And yet a religion
perhaps the most holy, (for as yet I am speaking as though it were matter of
doubt,) the opinion whereof hath by this time taken possession of the whole world,
we wretched boys condemned at our own discretion and sentence. What if those
things which in those same Scriptures seem to Offend some unlearned persons,
were so set there for this purpose, that when things were read of such as are
abhorrent from the feeling of ordinary men, not to say of wise and holy men, we
might with much more earnestness seek the hidden meaning. Perceive you not how the
Catamite of the Bucolics,(2) for whom the rough shepherd gushed forth into
tears, men essay to interpret, and affirm that the boy Alexis, on whom Plato also
is said to have composed a love strain, hath some great meaning or other, but
escapes the judgment of the unlearned; whereas without any sacrilege a poet
however rich may seem to have published wanton songs?
18. But in truth was there either decree of any law, or power of
gainsayers, or vile character of persons consecrated, or shameful report, or newness of
institution, or hidden profession, to recall us from, and forbid us, the
search? There is nothing of these. All laws divine and human allow us to seek the
Catholic Faith; but to hold and exercise it is allowed us at any rate by human
law, even if so long as we are in error there be a doubt concerning divine law; no
enemy alarms our weakness, (although truth and the salvation of the soul, in
case being diligently sought it be not found where it may with most safety,
ought to be sought at any risk); the degrees of all ranks and powers most devotedly
minister to this divine worship; the name of religion is most honorable and
most famous. What, I pray, hinders to search out and discuss with pious and
careful enquiry, whether there be here that which it must needs be few know and
guard in entire purity, although the goodwill and affection of all nations conspire
in its favor?
19. The case standing thus, suppose, as I said, that we are now for the
first time seeking unto what religion we shall deliver up our souls, for it to
cleanse and renew them; without doubt we must begin with the Catholic Church. For
by this time there are more Christians, than if the Jews and idolaters be
added together. But of these same Christians, whereas there are several heresies,
and all wish to appear Catholics, and call all others besides themselves
heretics, there is one Church, as all allow: if you consider the whole world, more
full filled in number; but, as they who know affirm, more pure also in truth than
all the rest. But the question of truth is another; but, what is enough for
such as are in search, there is one Catholic, to which different heresies give
different names whereas they themselves are called each by names of their own,
which they dare not deny. From which may be understood, by judgment of umpires who
are hindered by no favor, to which is to be assigned the name Catholic, which
all covet. But, that no one may suppose that it is to be made matter of over
garrulous or unnecessary discussion, this is at any rate one, in which human laws
themselves also are in a certain way Christian. I do not wish any prejudgment
to be formed from this fact, but I account it a most favorable commencement for
enquiry. For We are not to fear lest the true worship of God; resting on no
strength of its own, seem to need to be supported by them whom it ought to
support: but, at any rate, it is perfect happiness, if the truth may be there found,
where it is most safe both to search for it and to hold it: in case it cannot,
then at length, at whatever risk, we must go and search some other where.
20. Having then laid down these principles, which, as I think, are so just
that I ought to win this cause before you, let who will be my adversary, I
will set forth to you, as I am able, what way I followed, when I was searching
after true religion in that spirit, in which I have now set forth that it ought to
be sought. For upon leaving you and crossing the sea, now delaying and
hesitating, what I ought to hold, what to let go; which delay rose upon me every day
the more, from the time that I was a hearer of that man,(1) whose coming was
promised to us, as you know, as if from heaven, to explain all things which moved
us, and found him, with the exception of a certain eloquence, such as the rest;
being now settled in Italy, I reasoned and deliberated greatly with myself,
not whether I should continue in that sect, into which I was sorry that I had
fallen, but in what way I was to find the truth, my sighs through love of which
are known to no one better than to yourself. Often it seemed to me that it could
not be found, and huge waves of my thoughts would roll toward deciding in favor
of the Academics. Often again, with what power I had, looking into the human
soul, with so much life, with so much intelligence, with so much clearness, I
thought that the truth lay not hid, save that in it the way of search lay hid,
and that this same way must be taken from some divine authority. It remained to
enquire what was that authority, where in so great dissensions each promised
that he would deliver it. Thus there met me a wood, out of which there was no way,
which I was very loath to be involved in: and amid these things, without any
rest, my mind was agitated through desire of finding the truth. However, I
continued to unsew myself more and more from those whom now I had proposed to leave.
But there remained nothing else, in so great dangers, than with words full of
tears and sorrow to entreat the Divine Providence to help me. And this I was
content to do: and now certain disputations of the Bishop of Milan(2) had almost
moved me to desire, not without some hope, to enquire into many things
concerning the Old Testament itself, which, as you know, we used to view as accursed,
having been ill commended to us. And I had decided to be a Catechumen in the
Church, unto which I had been delivered by my parents, until such time as I should
either find what I wished, or should persuade myself that it needed not to be
sought. Therefore had there been one who could teach me, he would find me at a
very critical moment most fervently disposed and very apt to learn. If you see
that you too have been long affected in this way, therefore, and with a like
care for thy soul, and if now you seem to yourself to have been tossed to and fro
enough, and wish to put an end to labors of this kind, follow the pathway of
Catholic teaching, which hath flowed down from Christ Himself through the
Apostles even unto us, and will hereafter flow down to posterity.
21. This, you will say, is ridiculous, whereas all profess to hold and
teach this: all heretics make this profession, I cannot deny it; but so, as that
they promise to those whom they entice, that they will give them a reason
concerning matters the most obscure: and on this account chiefly charge the Catholic
[Church], that they who come to her are enjoined to believe; but they make it
their boast, that they impose not a yoke of believing, but open a fount of
teaching. You answer, What could be said, that should pertain more to their praise?
It is not so. For this they do, without being endued with any strength, but in
order to conciliate to themselves a crowd by the name of reason: on the promise
of which the human soul naturally is pleased, and, without considering its own
strength and state of health, by seeking the food of the sound, which is ill
entrusted save to such as are in health, rushes upon the poisons of them who
deceive. For true religion, unless those things be believed, which each one after,
if he shall conduct himself well and shall be worthy, attains unto and
understands, and altogether without a certain weighty power of authority, can in no
way be rightly entered upon.
22. But perhaps you seek to have some reason given you on this very point,
such as may persuade you, that you ought not to be taught by reason before
faith. Which may easily be done, if only you make yourself a fair hearer. But, in
order that it may be done suitably, I wish you as it were to answer my
questions; and, first, to tell me, why you, think that one ought not to believe.
Because, you say, credulity, from which men are called credulous, in itself, seems
to me to be a certain fault: otherwise we should not use to cast this as a term
of reproach. For if a suspicious man is in fault, in that he suspects things
not ascertained; how much more a credulous man, who herein differs from a
suspicious man, that the one allows some doubt, the other none, in matters which he
knows not. In the mean while I accept this opinion and distinction. But you know
that we are not wont to call a person even curious without some reproach; but
we call him studious even with praise. Wherefore observe, if you please, what
seems to you to be the difference between these two. This surely, you answer,
that, although both be led by great desire to know, yet the curious man seeks
after things that no way pertain to him, but the studious man, on the contrary,
seeks after what pertain to him. But, because we deny not that a man's wife and
children, and their health, pertain unto him; if any one, being settled abroad,
were to be careful to ask all comers, how his wife and children are and fare, he
is surely led by great desire to know, and yet we call not this man studious,
who both exceedingly wishes to know, and that (in) matters which very greatly
pertain unto him. Wherefore you now understand that the definition of a studious
person falters in this point, that every studious person wishes to know what
pertain to himself, and yet not every one, who makes this his business, is to be
called studious; but he who with all earnestness seeks those things which
pertain unto the liberal culture and adornment of the mind. Yet we rightly call him
one who studies,(1) especially if we add what he studies to hear. For we may
call him even studious of his own (family) if he love only his own (family), we
do not however, without some addition, think him worthy of the common name of
the studious. But one who was desirous to hear how his family were I should not
call studious of hearing, unless taking pleasure in the good report, he should
wish to hear it again and again: but one who studied, even if only once. Now
return to the curious person, and tell me, if any one should be willing to listen
to some tale, such as would no way profit him, that is, of matters that
pertain not to him: and that not in an offensive way and frequently, but very seldom
and with great moderation, either at a feast, or in some company, or meeting of
any kind; would be seem to you curious? I think not: but at any rate he would
certainly seem to have a care for that matter, to which he was willing to
listen. Wherefore the definition of a curious person also must be corrected by the
same rule as that of a studious person: Consider therefore whether the former
statements also do not need to be corrected. For why should not both he, who at
some time suspects something, be unworthy the name of a suspicious person; and
he who at some time believes something, of a credulous person? Thus as there is
very great difference between one who studies any matter, and the absolutely
studious; and again between him who hath a care and the curious; so is there
between him who believes and the credulous.
23. But you will say, consider now whether we ought to believe in
religion. For, although we grant that it is one thing to believe, another to be
credulous, it does not follow that it is no fault to believe in matters of religion.
For what if it be a fault both to believe and to be credulous, as (it is) both
to be drunk and to be a drunkard? Now he who thinks this certain, it seems to me
can have no friend; for, if it is base to believe any thing, either he acts
basely who believes a friend, or in nothing believing a friend I see not how he
can call either him or himself a friend. Here perhaps you may say, I grant that
we must believe something at some time; now make plain, how in the case of
religion it be not base to believe before one knows. I will do so, if I can.
Wherefore I ask of you, which you esteem the graver fault, to deliver religion to one
unworthy, or to believe what is said by them who deliver it. If you understand
not whom I call unworthy, I call him, who approaches with feigned breast. You
grant, as I suppose, that it is more blameable to unfold unto such an one
whatever holy secrets there are, than to believe religious men affirming any thing
on the matter of religion itself. For it would be unbecoming you to make any
other answer. Wherefore now suppose him present, who is about to deliver to you a
religion, in what way shall you assure him, that you approach with a true mind,
and that, so far as this matter is concerned, there is in you no fraud or
feigning? You will say, your own good conscience that you are no way reigning,
asserting this with words as strong as you can, but yet with words. For you cannot
lay open man to man the hiding places of your soul, so that you may be
thoroughly known. But if he shall say, Lo, I believe you, but is it not more fair that
you also believe me, when, if I hold any truth, you are about to receive, I
about to give, a benefit? what will you answer, save that you must believe?
24. But you say, Were it not better that you should give me a reason,
that, wherever, that shall lead me, I may follow without any; rashness? Perhaps it
were: but, it being so great a matter, that you are by reason to come to the
knowledge of God, do you think that all are qualified to understand the reasons,
by which the human soul is led to know God, or many, or few? Few I think, you
say. Do you believe that you are in the number of these? It is not for me, you
say, to answer this. Therefore you think it is for him to believe you in this
also: and this indeed he does: only do you remember, that he hath already twice
believed you saying things uncertain; that you are unwilling to believe him even
once admonishing you in a religious spirit. But suppose that it is so, and
that you approach with a true mind to receive religion, and that you are one of
few men in such sense as to be able to take in the reasons by Which the Divine
Power(1) is brought into certain knowledge; what? do you think that other men,
who are not endued with so serene a disposition, are to be denied religion? or
do you think that they are to be led gradually by certain steps unto those
highest inner recesses? You see clearly which is the more religious. For you cannot
think that any one whatever in a case where he desires so great a thing, ought
by any means to be abandoned or rejected. But do you not think, that, unless he
do first believe that he shall attain unto that which he purposes; and do
yield his mind as a suppliant; and, submitting to certain great and necessary
precepts, do by a certain course of life thoroughly cleanse it, that he will not
otherwise attain the things that are purely true? Certainly you think so. What,
then, is the case of those, (of whom I already believe you to be one,) who are
able most easily to receive divine secrets by sure reason, will it, I ask, be to
them any hindrance at all, if they so come as they who at the first believe? I
think not. But yet, you say, what need to delay them? Because although they
will in no way harm themselves by what is done, yet they will harm the rest by the
precedent. For there is hardly one who has a just notion of his own power: but
he who has a less notion must be roused; he who has a greater notion must be
checked: that neither the one be broken by despair, nor the other carried
headlong by rashness. And this is easily done, if even they, who are able to fly,
(that they be not alluring the occasion of any into danger,) are forced for a
short time to walk where the rest also may walk with safety. This is the
forethought of true religion: this the command of God: this what hath been handed down
from our blessed forefathers, this what hath been preserved even unto us: to wish
to distrust and overthrow this, is nothing else than to seek a sacrilegious
way unto true religion. And whoso do this, not even if what they wish be granted
to them are they able to arrive at the point at which they aim. For whatever
kind of excellent genius they have, unless God be present, they creep on the
ground. But He is then present, if they, who are aiming at God, have a regard for
their fellow men. Than which step there can be found nothing more sure
Heavenward. I for my part cannot resist this reasoning, for how can I say that we are to
believe nothing without certain knowledge? whereas both there can be no
friendship at all, unless there be believed something which cannot be proved by some
reason, and often stewards, who are slaves, are trusted by their masters
without any fault on their part. But in religion what can there be more unfair than
that the ministers(2) of God believe us when we promise an unfeigned mind, and
we are unwilling to believe them when they enjoin us any thing. Lastly, what way
can there be more healthful, than for a man to become fitted to receive the
truth by believing those things, which have been appointed by God to serve for
the previous culture and treatment of the mind? Or, if you be already altogether
fitted, rather to make some little circuit where it is safest to tread, than
both to cause yourself danger, and to be a precedent for rashness to other men?
25. Wherefore it now remains to consider, in what manner we ought not to
follow these, who profess that they will lead by reason. For how we may without
fault follow those who bid us to believe, hath been already said: but unto
these who make promises of reason certain think that they come, not only without
blame, but also with some praise: but it is not so. For there are two (classes
of) persons, praiseworthy in religion; one of those who have already found, whom
also we must needs judge most blessed; another of those who are seeking with
all earnestness and in the right way. The first, therefore, are already in very
possession, the other on the way, yet on that way whereby they are most sure to
arrive.(1) There are three other kinds of men altogether to be disapproved of
and detested. One is of those who hold an opinion,(2) that is, of those who
think that they know what they know not. Another is of those who are indeed aware
that they know not, but do not so seek as to be able to find. A third is of
those who neither think that they know, nor wish to seek. There are also three
things, as it were bordering upon one another, in the minds of men well worth
distinguishing; understanding, belief, opinion. And, if these be considered by
themselves, the first is always without fault, the second sometimes with fault, the
third never without fault. For the understanding of matters great, and
honorable, and even divine, is most blessed.(3) But the understanding of things
unnecessary is no injury; but perhaps the learning was an injury, in that it took up
the time of necessary matters. But on the matters themselves that are injurious,
it is not the understanding, but the doing or suffering them, that is
wretched. For not, in case any understand how an enemy may be slain without danger to
himself, is he guilty from the mere understanding, not the wish; and, if the
wish be absent, what can be called more innocent? But belief is then worthy of
blame, when either any thing is believed of God which is unworthy of Him, or any
thing is over easily believed of man. But in all other matters if any believe
aught, provided he understand that he knows it not, there is no fault. For I
believe that very wicked conspirators were formerly put to death by the virtue of
Cicero; but this I not only know not, but also I know for certain that I can by
no means know. But opinion is on two accounts very base; in that both he who
hath persuaded himself that he already knows, cannot learn; provided only it may
be learnt; and in itself rashness is a sign of a mind not well disposed. For
even if any suppose that he know what I said of Cicero, (although it be no
hindrance to him from learning, in that the matter itself is incapable of being
grasped by any knowledge;) yet, (in that he understands not that there is a great
difference, whether any thing be grasped by sure reason of mind, which we call
understanding, or whether for practical purposes it be entrusted to common fame
or writing, for posterity to believe it,) he assuredly errs, and no error is
without what is base. What then we understand, we owe to reason; what we
believe, to authority; what we have an opinion on, to error.(4) But every one who
understands also believes, and also every one who has an opinion believes; not
every one who believes understands, no one who has an opinion understands.
Therefore if these three things be referred unto the five kinds of men, which we
mentioned a little above; that is, two kinds to be approved, which we set first, and
three that remain faulty; we find that the first kind, that of the blessed,
believe the truth itself; but the second kind, that of such as are earnest after,
and lovers of, the truth, believe authority. In which kinds, of the two, the
act of belief is praiseworthy. But in the first of the faulty kinds, that is, of
those who have an opinion that they know what they know not, there is an
altogether faulty credulity. The other two kinds that are to be disapproved believe
nothing, both they who seek the truth despairing of finding it, and they who
seek it not at all. And this only in matters which pertain unto any system of
teaching. For in the other business of life, I am utterly ignorant by what means a
man can believe nothing. Although in the case of those also they who say that
in practical matters they follow probabilities, would seem rather to be unable
to know than unable to believe. For who believes not what he approves?(1) or how
is what they follow probable, if it be not approved? Wherefore there may be
two kinds of such as oppose the truth: one of those who assail knowledge alone,
not faith; the other of those who condemn both: and yet again, I am ignorant
whether these can be found in matters of human life. These things have been said,
in order that we might understand, that, in retaining faith, even of those
things which as yet we comprehend not, we are set free from the rashness of such as
have an opinion. For they, who say that we are to believe nothing but what we
know, are on their guard against that one name "opining,"(2) which must be
confessed to be base and very wretched, but, if they consider carefully that there
is a very great difference, whether one think that he knows, or moved by some
authority believe that which he understands that he knows not, surely he will
escape the charge of error, and inhumanity, and pride.
26. For I ask, if what is not known must not be believed, in what way may
children do service to their parents, and love with mutual affection those whom
they believe not to be their parents? For it cannot, by any means, be known by
reason. But the authority of the mother comes in, that it be believed of the
father; but of the mother it is usually not the mother that is believed, but
midwives, nurses, servants. For she, from whom a son may be stolen and another put
in his place, may she not being deceived deceive? Yet we believe, and believe
without any doubt, what we confess we cannot know. For who but must see, that
unless it be so, filial affection, the most sacred bond of the human race, is
violated by extreme pride of wickedness? For what madman even would think him to
be blamed who discharged the duties that were due to those whom he believed
to be his parents, although they were not so? Who, on the other hand, would
not judge him to deserve banishment, who failed to love those who were perhaps
his true parents, through fear lest he should love pretended. Many things may be
alleged, whereby to show that nothing at all of human society remains safe, if
we shall determine to believe nothing, which we cannot grasp by full
apprehension.(3)
27. But now hear, what I trust I shall by this time more easily persuade
you of. In a matter of religion, that is, of the worship and knowledge of God,
they are less to be followed, who forbid us to believe, making most ready
professions of reason. For no one I doubts that all men are either fools or wise.(4)
But now I call wise, not clever and gifted men, but those, in whom there is, so
much as may be in man, the knowledge of man himself and of God most surely
received, and a life and manners suitable to that knowledge; but all others,
whatever be their skill or want of skill, whatever their manner of life, whether to
be approved or disapproved, I would account in the number of fools. And, this
being so, who of moderate understanding but will clearly see, that it is more
useful and more healthful for fools to obey the precepts of the wise, than to
live by their own judgment? For everything that is done, if it be not rightly
done, is a sin, nor can that any how be rightly done which proceeds not from right
reason. Further, right reason is very virtue. But to whom of men is virtue at
hand, save to the mind of the wise? Therefore the wise man alone sins not.
Therefore every fool sins, save in those actions, in which he hath obeyed a wise
man: for all such actions proceed from right reason, and, so to say, the fool is
not to be accounted master of his own action, he being, as it were, the
instrument and that which ministers(5) to the wise man. Wherefore, if it be better for
all men not to sin than to sin; assuredly all fools would live better, if they
could be slaves of the wise. And, if no one doubts that this is better in
lesser matters, as in buying and selling, and cultivating the ground, in taking a
wife, in undertaking and bringing(1) up children, lastly, in the management of
household property, much more in religion. For both human matters are more easy
to distinguish between, than divine; and in all matters of greater sacredness
and excellence, the greater obedience and service we owe them, the more wicked
and the more dangerous is it to sin. Therefore you see henceforth(2) that nothing
else is left us, so long as we are fools, if our heart be set on an excellent
and religious life, but to seek wise men, by obeying whom we may be enabled
both to lessen the great feeling of the rule of folly, whilst it is in us, and at
the last to escape from it.
28. Here again arises a very difficult question. For in what way shall we
fools be able to find a wise man, whereas this name, although hardly any one
dare openly, yet most men lay claim to indirectly: so disagreeing one with
another in the very matters, in the knowledge of which wisdom consists, as that it
must needs be that either none of them, or but some certain one be wise? But when
the feel enquires, who is that wise man? I do not at all see, in what way he
can be distinguished and perceived. For by no signs whatever can one recognize
any thing, unless he shall have known that thing, whereof these are signs. But
the feel is ignorant of wisdom. For not, as, in the case of gold and silver and
other things of that kind, it is allowed both to know them when you see them
and not to have them, thus may wisdom be seen by the mind's eye of him who hath
it not. For whatever things we come into contact with by bodily sense, are
presented to us from without; and therefore we may perceive by the eyes what belong
to others, when we ourselves possess not any of them or of that kind. But what
is perceived by the understanding is within in the mind, and to have it is
nothing else than to see. But the feel is void of wisdom, therefore he knows not
wisdom. For he could not see it with the eyes: but he cannot see it and not have
it, nor have it and be a feel. Therefore he knoweth it not, and, so long as he
knoweth it not, he cannot recognize it in another place. No one, so long as he
is a feel, can by most sure knowledge find out a wise man, by obeying whom he
may be set free from so great evil of folly.
29. Therefore this so vast difficulty, since our enquiry is about
religion, God alone can remedy: nor indeed, unless we believe both that He is, and that
He helps men's minds, ought we even to enquire after true religion itself. For
what I ask do we with so great endeavor desire to search out? What do we wish
to attain unto? Whither do we long to arrive? Is it at that which we believe
not exists or pertains to us? Nothing is more perverse than such a state of mind.
Then, when you would not dare to ask of me a kindness, or at any rate would be
shameless in daring, come you to demand the discovery of religion, when you
think that God neither exists, nor, if He exist, hath any care for us? What, if
it be so great a matter, as that it cannot be found out, unless it be sought
carefully and with all our might? What, if the very extreme difficulty of
discovery be an exercise for the mind of the inquirer, in order to receive what shall
be discovered? For what more pleasant and familiar to our eyes than this light?
And yet men are unable after long darkness to hear and endure it. What more
suited to the body exhausted by sickness than meat and drink? And yet we see that
persons who are recovering are restrained and checked, lest they dare to commit
themselves to the fullness of persons in health, and so bring to pass by means
of their very food their return to that disease which used to reject it. I
speak of persons who are recovering. What, the very sick, do we not urge them to
take something? Wherein assuredly they would not with so great discomfort obey
us, if they believed not that they would recover from that disease. When then
will you give yourself up to a search very full of pains and labor? When will
you have the heart to impose upon yourself so great care and trouble as the
matter deserves, when you believe not in the existence of that which you are in
search of? Rightly therefore hath it been ordained by the majesty of the Catholic
system of teaching, that they who approach unto religion be before all things
persuaded to have faith.
30. Wherefore that heretic, (inasmuch as our discourse is of those who
wish to be called Christians,) I ask you, what reason he alleges to me? What is
there whereby for him to call me back from believing, as if from rashness? If he
bid me believe nothing; I believe not that this very true religion hath any
existence in human affairs; and what I believe not to exist, I seek not. But He,
as I suppose, will show it to me seeking it: for so it it written, "He that
seeketh shall find."(3) Therefore I should not come unto him, who forbids me to
believe, unless I believed something. Is there any greater madness, than that I
should displease him by faith alone, which is rounded on no knowledge, which
faith alone led me to him?
31. What, that all heretics exhort us to believe in Christ? Can they
possibly be more opposed to themselves? And in this matter they are to be pressed in
a twofold way. In the first place we must ask of them, where is the reason
which they used to promise, where the reproof of rashness, where the assumption of
knowledge? For, if it be disgraceful to believe any without reason, what do
you wait for, what are you busied about, that I believe some one without reason,
in order that I may the more easily be led by your reason? What, will your
reason raise any firm superstructure on the foundation of rashness? I speak after
their manner, whom we displease by believing. For I not only judge it most
healthful to believe before reason, when you are not qualified to receive reason,
and by the very act of faith thoroughly to cultivate the mind to receive the
seeds of truth, but altogether a thing of such sort as that without it health
cannot return to sick souls. And in that this seems to them matter for mockery and
full of rashness, surely they are shameless in making it their business that we
believe in Christ. Next, I confess that I have already believed in Christ, and
have convinced myself that what He hath said is true, although it be supported
by no reason; is this, heretic, what you will teach me in the first place?
Suffer me to consider a little with myself, (since I have not seen Christ Himself,
as He willed to appear unto men, Who is said to have been seen by them, even
by common eyes,) who they are that I have believed concerning Him, in order that
I may approach you already furnished beforehand with such a faith. I see that
there are none that I have believed, save the confirmed opinion and widely
extended report of peoples and nations: and that the mysteries of the Church
Catholic have in all times and places had possession of these peoples. Why therefore
shall I not of these, in preference to others, inquire with all care, what
Christ commanded, by whose authority I have been moved already to believe that
Christ hath commanded something that is profitable? Are you likely to be a better
expounder to me of what He said, Whose past or present existence I should not
believe, if by you I were to be recommended to believe thus? This therefore I
have believed, as I said, trusting to report strengthened by numbers, agreement,
antiquity. But you, who are both so few, and so turbulent, and so new, no one
doubts that ye bring forward nothing worthy of authority. What then is that so
great madness? Believe them, that you are to believe in Christ, and learn from us
what He said. Why, I pray you? For were they fail and to be unable to teach me
any thing with much greater ease could I persuade my self, that I am not to
believe in Christ, than that I am to learn any thing concerning Him, save from
those through whom I had believed in Him. O vast confidence, or rather absurdity!
I teach you what Christ, in Whom you believe, commanded. What, in case I
believed not in Him? You could not, could you, teach me any thing concerning Him?
But, says he, it behoves you to believe. You do not mean, do you, that I am (to
believe) you when you commend Him to my faith? No, saith he, for we lead by
reason them who believe in Him. Why then should I believe in Him? Because report
hath been grounded. Whether is it through you, or through others? Through
others, saith he. Shall I then believe them, in order that you may teach me? Perhaps
I ought to do so, were it not that they gave me this chief charge, that I
should not approach you at all; for they say that you have deadly doctrines. You
will answer, They lie. How then shall I believe them concerning Christ, Whom they
have not seen, (and) not believe them concerning you, whom they are unwilling
to see? Believe the Scriptures, saith he. But every writing,(1) if it be brought
forward new and unheard of, or be commended by few, with no reason to confirm
it, it is not it that is believed, but they who bring it forward. Wherefore,
for those Scriptures, if you are they who bring them forward, you so few and
unknown, I am not pleased to believe them. At the same time also you are acting
contrary to your promise, in enforcing faith rather than giving a reason. You will
recall me again to numbers and (common) report. Curb, I pray you, your
obstinacy, and that untamed lust, I know not what, of spreading your name: and advise
me rather to seek the chief men of this multitude, and to seek with all care
and pains rather to learn something concerning these writings from these men, but
for whose existence, I should not know that I had to learn at all. But do you
return into your dens, and lay not any snares under the name of truth, which
you endeavor to take from those, to whom you yourself grant authority.
32. But if they say that we are not even to believe in Christ, unless
undoubted reason shall be given us, they are not Christians. For this is what
certain pagans say against us, foolishly indeed, yet not contrary to, or
inconsistent with, themselves. But who can endure that these profess to belong to Christ,
who contend that they are to believe nothing, unless they shall bring forward
to fools most open reason concerning God? But we see that He Himself, so far as
that history, which they themselves believe, teaches, willed nothing before, or
more strongly than, that He should be believed in: whereas they, with whom He
had to do, were not yet qualified to receive the secret things of God. For, for
what other purpose are so great and so many miracles, He Himself also saying,
that they are done for no other cause, than that He may be believed in? He used
to lead fools by faith, you lead by reason. He used to cry out, that He should
be believed in, ye cry out against it. He used to praise such as believe in
Him, ye blame them. But unless either He should change water into wine,(1) to
omit other (miracles), if men would follow Him, doing no such, but (only)
teaching; either we must make no account of that saying, "Believe ye God, believe also
Me;"(2) or we must charge him with rashness, who willed not that He should come
into his house, believing that the disease of his servant would depart at His
mere command.(3) Therefore He bringing to us a medicine such as should heal our
utterly corrupt manners, by miracles procured to Himself authority,(4) by
authority obtained Himself belief, by belief drew together a multitude, by a
multitude possessed antiquity, by antiquity strengthened religion: so that not only
the utterly foolish novelty of heretics dealing deceitfully, but also the
inveterate error of the nations opposing with violence, should be unable on any side
to rend it asunder.
33. Wherefore, although I am not able to teach, yet I cease not to advise,
that, (whereas many wish to appear wise, and it is no easy matter to discern
whether they be fools,) with all earnestness, and with all prayers, and lastly
with groans, or even, if so it may be, with tears, you entreat of God to set you
free from the evil of error; if your heart be set on a happy life. And this
will take place the more easily, if you obey with a willing mind His commands,
which He hath willed should be confirmed by so great authority of the Catholic
Church. For whereas the wise man is so joined to God in mind, as that there is
nothing set between to separate; for God is Truth; and no one is by any means
wise, unless his mind come into contact with the Truth; we cannot deny that
between the folly of man, and the most pure Truth of God, the wisdom of man is set,
as something in the middle. For the wise man, so far as it is given unto him,
imitates God; but for a man who is a fool, there is nothing nearer to him, than a
man who is wise, for him to imitate with profit: and since, as has been said,
it is not easy to understand this one by reason, it behoved that certain
miracles be brought near to the very eyes, which fools use with much greater
readiness than the mind, that, men being moved by authority, their life and habits
might first be cleansed, and they thus rendered capable of receiving reason.
Whereas, therefore, it needed both that man be imitated, and that our hope be not set
in man, what could be done on the part of God more full of kindness and grace,
than that the very pure, eternal, unchangeable Wisdom of God, unto Whom it
behoves us to cleave, should deign to take upon Him (the nature of) man? That not
only He might do what should invite us to follow God, but also might suffer
what used to deter us from following God. For, whereas no one can attain unto the
most sure and chief good, unless he shall fully and perfectly love it; which
will by no means take place, so long as the evils of the body and of fortune are
dreaded; He by being born after a miraculous manner and Working caused Himself
to be loved; and by dying and rising again shut out fear. And, further, in all
other matters, which it were long to go through, He shewed Himself such, as
that we might perceive unto what the clemency of God could be reached forth, and
unto what the weakness of man be lifted up.
34. This is, believe me, a most wholesome authority, this a lifting up
first of our mind from dwelling on the earth, this a turning from the love of this
world unto the True God. It is authority alone which moves fools to hasten
unto wisdom. So long as we cannot understand pure (truths), it is indeed wretched
to be deceived by authority, but surely more wretched not to be moved. For, if
the Providence of God preside not over human affairs, we have no need to busy
ourselves about religion. But if both the outward form of all things, which we
must believe assuredly flows from some fountain of truest beauty, and some, I
know not what, inward conscience exhorts, as it were, in public and in private,
all the better order of minds to seek God, and to serve God; we must not give up
all hope that the same God Himself hath appointed some authority, whereon,
resting as on a sure step, we may be lifted up unto God. But this, setting aside
reason, which (as we have often said) it is very hard for fools to understand
pure, moves us two ways; in part by miracles, in part by multitude of followers:
no one of these is necessary to the wise man; who denies it? But this is now
the business in hand, that we may be able to be wise, that is, to cleave to the
truth; which the filthy soul is utterly unable to do: but the filth of the
soul, to say shortly what I mean, is the love of any things whatsoever save God and
the soul: from which filth the more any one is cleansed, the more easily he
sees the truth. Therefore to wish to see the truth, in order to purge your soul,
when as it is purged for the very purpose that you may see, is surely perverse
and preposterous. Therefore to man unable to see the truth, authority is at
hand, in order that he may be made fitted for it, and may allow himself to be
cleansed; and, as I said a little above, no one doubts that this prevails, in part
by miracles, in part by multitude. But I call that a miracle, whatever appears
that is difficult or unusual above the hope or power of them who wonder. Of
which kind there is nothing more suited for the people, and in general for foolish
men, than what is brought near to the senses. But these, again, are divided
into two kinds; for there are certain, which cause only wonder, but certain
others procure also great favor and good-will. For, if one were to see a man flying,
inasmuch as that matter brings no advantage to the spectator, beside the
spectacle itself, he only wonders. But if any affected with grievous and hopeless
disease were to recover straightway, upon being bidden, his affection for him who
heals, will go beyond even his wonder at his healing. Such were done at that
time at which God in True Man appeared unto men, as much as was enough. The sick
were healed, the lepers were cleansed; walking was restored to the lame, sight
to the blind, hearing to the deaf. The men of that time saw water turned into
wine, five thousand filled with five loaves, seas passed on foot, dead rising
again: thus certain provided for the good of the body by more open benefit,
certain again for the good of the soul by more hidden sign, and all for the good of
men by their witness to Majesty: thus, at that time, was the divine authority
moving towards Itself the wandering souls of mortal men. Why, say you, do not
those things take place now? because they would not move, unless they were
wonderful, and, if they were usual, they would not be wonderful.(1) For the
interchanges of day and night, and the settled order of things in Heaven, the
revolution of years divided into four parts, the fall and return of leaves to trees, the
boundless power of seeds, the beauty of light, the varieties of colors,
sounds, tastes, and scents, let there be some one who shall see and perceive them for
the first time, and yet such an one as we may converse with; he is stupified
and overwhelmed with miracles: but we contemn all these, not because they are
easy to understand, (for what more obscure than the causes of these?) but surely
because they constantly meet our senses. Therefore they were done at a very
suitable time, in order that, by these a multitude of believers having been
gathered together and spread abroad, authority might be turned with effect upon
habits.
35. But any habits whatever have so great power to hold possession of
men's minds, that even what in them are evil, which usually takes place through
excess of lusts, we can sooner disapprove of and hate, than desert or change. Do
you think that little hath been done for the benefit of man, that not some few
very learned men maintain by argument, but also an unlearned crowd of males and
females in so many and different nations both believe and set forth, that we
are to worship as God nothing of earth, nothing of fire, nothing, lastly, which
comes into contact with the senses of the body, but that we are to seek to
approach Him by the understanding only? that abstinence is extended even unto the
slenderest food of bread and water, and fastings not only for the day,(2) but
also continued through several days together; that chastity is carried even unto
the contempt of marriage and family; that patience even unto the setting light
by crosses and flames; that liberality even unto the distribution of estates
unto the poor; that, lastly, the contempt of this whole world even unto the
desire of death? Few do these things, yet fewer do them well and wisely: but whole
nations approve, nations hears nations favor, nations, lastly, love. Nations
accuse their own weakness that they cannot do these things, and that not without
the mind being carried forward unto God, nor without certain sparks of
virtue. This hath been brought to pass by the Divine Providence, through the
prophecies of the Prophets, through the manhood and teaching of Christ, through the
journeys of the Apostles, through the insults, crosses, blood, of the Martyrs,
through the praiseworthy life of the Saints, and, in all these, according as
times were seasonable, through miracles worthy of so great matters and virtues.
When therefore we see so great help of God, so great progress and fruit, shall we
doubt to hide ourselves in the bosom of that Church, which even unto the
confession of the human race from [the] apostolic chair(1) through successions Of
Bishops,(2) (heretics in vain lurking around her and being condemned, partly by
the judgment of the very people, partly by the weight of councils, partly also
by the majesty of miracles,) hath held the summit of authority. To be unwilling
to grant to her the first place,(3) is either surely the height of impiety, or
is headlong arrogance. For, if there be no sure way unto wisdom and health of
souls, unless where faith prepare them for reason, what else is it to be
ungrateful for the Divine help and aid, than to wish to resist authority furnished
with so great labor?(4) And if every system of teaching, however mean and easy,
requires, in order to its being received, a teacher or master, what more full of
rash pride, than, in the case of books of divine mysteries,(5) both to be
unwilling to learn from such as interpret them, and to wish to condemn them
unlearned?
36. Wherefore, if either our reasoning or our discourse hath in any way
moved you, and if you have, as I believe, a true care for yourself, I would you
would listen to me, and with pious faith, lively hope, and simple charity,
entrust yourself to good teachers of Catholic Christianity; and cease not to pray
unto God Himself, by Whose goodness alone we were created, and suffer punishment
by His justice, and are set free by His mercy. Thus there will be wanting to
you neither precepts and treatises of most learned and truly Christian men, nor
books, nor calm thoughts themselves, whereby you may easily find what you are
seeking. For do you abandon utterly those wordy and wretched men, (for what other
milder name can I use?) who, whilst they seek to excess whence is evil, find
nothing but evil. And on this question they often rouse their hearers to
inquire; but after that they have been roused, they teach them such lessons as that it
were preferable even to sleep for ever, than than thus to be awake, For in
place of lethargic they make them frantic, between which diseases, both being
usually fatal, there is still this difference, that lethargic persons die without
doing violence to others; but the frantic person many who are sound, and
specially they who wish to help him, have reason to fear. For neither is God the
author of evil, nor bath it ever repented Him that He hath done aught, nor is He
troubled by storm of any passion of soul, nor is a small part of earth His
Kingdom: He neither approves nor commands any sins or wickedness, He never lies. For
these and such like used to move us, when they used them to make great and
threatening assaults, and charged this as being the system of teaching of the Old
Testament, which is most false. Thus then I allow that they do right in censuring
these. What then have I learnt? What think you, save that, when these are
censured, the Catholic system of teaching is not censured. Thus what I had learnt
among them that is true, I hold, what is false that I had thought I reject. But
the Catholic Church hath taught me many other things also, which those men of
bloodless bodies, but coarse minds, cannot aspire unto; that is to say, that God
is not corporeal, that no part of Him can be perceived by corporeal eyes, that
nothing of His Substance or Nature can any way suffer violence or change, or
is compounded or formed; and if you grant me these, (for we may not think
otherwise concerning God,) all their devices are overthrown. But how it is, that
neither God begot or created evil, nor yet is there, or hath there been ever, any
nature and substance, which God either begot not or created not, and yet that He
setteth us free from evil, is proved by reasons so necessary, that it cannot
at all be matter of doubt; especially to you and such as you; that is, if to a
good disposition there be added piety and a certain peace of mind, without which
nothing at all can be understood concerning so great matters. And here there
is no rumor concerning smoke, and I know not what Persian vain fable, unto which
it is enough to lend an ear, and soul I not subtile, but absolutely childish.
Far altogether, far otherwise is the truth, than as the Mancihees dote. But
since this discourse of ours hath gone much further than I thought, here let us
end the book; in which I wish you to remember, that I have not yet begun to
refute the Manichees, and that I have not yet assailed that nonsense; and that
neither have I unfolded any thing great concerning the Catholic Church itself, but
that I have only wished to root out of you, if I could, a false notion
concerning true Christians that was maliciously or ignorantly suggested to us, and to
arouse you to learn certain great and divine things. Wherefore let this volume be
as it is; but when your soul becomes more calmed, I shall perhaps be more
ready in what remains.(1)