This is a Blog for those interested in following hard after His heart. Those willing to strive to live a moment-by-moment life as we go through the transformation process with Him. It is not an easy life, but the Father expects each of us to become an offering for His pleasure. So, if this is you, then let’s journey together hand in hand. I am humbled that you have chosen to walk with me. Thanks!
30 November, 2020
ST. AURELIUS AUGUSTIN BISHOP OF HIPPO—Book VI.— SECOND POST
29 November, 2020
ST. AURELIUS AUGUSTIN BISHOP OF HIPPO—Book VI.— FIRST POST
28 November, 2020
ST. AURELIUS AUGUSTIN BISHOP OF HIPPO—Book V.— FOURTH POST
27 November, 2020
ST. AURELIUS AUGUSTIN BISHOP OF HIPPO—Book V.— THIRD POST
26 November, 2020
ST. AURELIUS AUGUSTIN BISHOP OF HIPPO—Book V.— SECOND POST
25 November, 2020
ST. AURELIUS AUGUSTIN BISHOP OF HIPPO—Book V.—FIRST POST
Book V.
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He describes the twenty-ninth year of his age, in which,
having discovered the fallacies of the Manichæans, he professed rhetoric at
Rome and Milan. Having heard Ambrose, he begins to come to himself.
Chapter I.—That It Becomes the Soul to Praise God, and to
Confess Unto Him.
1. Accept the sacrifice of my confessions by the agency of
my tongue, which Thou hast formed and quickened, that it may confess to Thy
name; and heal Thou all my bones, and let them say, “Lord, who is like unto
Thee?” For neither does he who confesses to Thee teach Thee what may be passing
within him, because a closed heart doth not exclude Thine eye, nor does man’s
hardness of heart repulse Thine hand, but Thou dissolvest it when Thou wiliest,
either in pity or in vengeance, “and there is no One who can hide himself from
Thy heart.” But let my soul praise Thee, that it may love Thee; and let it
confess Thine own mercies to Thee, that it may praise Thee. Thy whole creation
ceaseth not, nor is it silent in Thy praises—neither the spirit of man, by the
voice directed unto Thee, nor animal nor corporeal things, by the voice of
those meditating thereon; so that our souls may from their weariness arise
towards Thee, leaning on those things which Thou hast made, and passing on to
Thee, who hast made them wonderfully and there is there refreshment and true
strength.
Chapter II.—On the Vanity of Those Who Wished to Escape the
Omnipotent God.
2. Let the restless and the unjust depart and flee from
Thee. Thou both seest them and distinguishest the shadows. And lo! all things
with them are fair, yet are they themselves foul. And how have they injured
Thee? Or in what have they disgraced Thy government, which is just and perfect
from heaven even to the lowest parts of the earth. For whither fled they when
they fled from Thy presence? Or where dost Thou not find them? But they fled
that they might not see Thee seeing them, and blinded might stumble against
Thee; since Thou forsakest nothing that Thou hast made—that the unjust might
stumble against Thee, and justly be hurt, withdrawing themselves from Thy
gentleness, and stumbling against Thine uprightness, and falling upon their own
roughness. Forsooth, they know not that Thou art everywhere whom no place
encompasseth, and that Thou alone art near even to those that remove far from
Thee. Let them, then, be converted and seek Thee; because not as they have
forsaken their Creator hast Thou forsaken Thy creature. Let them be converted
and seek Thee; and behold, Thou art there in their hearts, in the hearts of
those who confess to Thee, and cast themselves upon Thee, and weep on Thy bosom
after their obdurate ways, even Thou gently wiping away their tears. And they
weep the more, and rejoice in weeping, since Thou, O Lord, not man, flesh and
blood, but Thou, Lord, who didst make, remakest and comfortest them. And where
was I when I was seeking Thee? And Thou wert before me, but I had gone away
even from myself; nor did I find myself, much less Thee!
Chapter III.—Having Heard Faustus, the Most Learned Bishop of the Manichæans, He Discerns that God, the Author Both of Things Animate and Inanimate, Chiefly Has Care for the Humble.
3. Let me lay bare before my God that twenty-ninth year of my age. There had at this time come to Carthage a certain bishop of the Manichæans, by name Faustus, a great snare of the devil, and in any were entangled by him through the allurement of his smooth speech; the which, although I did commend, yet could I separate from the truth of those things which I was eager to learn. Nor did I esteem the small dish of oratory so much as the science, which this their so praised Faustus placed before me to feed upon. Fame, indeed, had before spoken of him to me, as most skilled in all becoming learning, and pre-eminently skilled in the liberal sciences. And as I had read and retained in memory many injunctions of the philosophers, I used to compare some teachings of theirs with those long fables of the Manichæans and the former things which they declared, who could only prevail so far as to estimate this lower world, while its lord they could by no means find out, seemed to me the more probable. For Thou art great, O Lord, and hast respect unto the lowly, but the proud Thou knowest afar off.” Nor dost Thou draw near but to the contrite heart, nor art Thou found by the proud,—not even could they number by cunning skill the stars and the sand, and measure the starry regions, and trace the courses of the planets.
4. For with their understanding and the capacity which Thou hast bestowed upon them they search out these things; and much have they found out, and foretold many years before,—the eclipses of those luminaries, the sun and moon, on what day, at what hour, and from how many particular points they were likely to come. Nor did their calculation fail them; and it came to pass even as they foretold. And they wrote down the rules found out, which are read at this day; and from these others foretell in what year and in what month of the year, and on what day of the month, and at what hour of the day, and at what quarter of its light, either moon or sun is to be eclipsed, and thus it shall be even as it is foretold. And men who are ignorant of these things marvel and are amazed, and they that know them exult and are exalted; and by an impious pride, departing from Thee, and forsaking Thy light, they foretell a failure of the sun’s light which is likely to occur so long before, but see not their own, which is now present. For they seek not religiously whence they have the ability where-with they seek out these things. And finding that Thou hast made them, they give not themselves up to Thee, that Thou mayest preserve what Thou hast made, nor sacrifice themselves to Thee, even such as they have made themselves to be; nor do they slay their own pride, as fowls of the air, nor their own curiosities, by which (like the fishes of the sea) they wander over the unknown paths of the abyss, nor their own extravagance, as the “beasts of the field,” that Thou, Lord, “a consuming fire,” mayest burn up their lifeless cares and renew them immortally.
5. But the way—Thy Word, by whom Thou didst make these
things which they number, and themselves who number, and the sense by which
they perceive what they number, and the judgment out of which they number—they
knew not, and that of Thy wisdom there is no number. But the Only-begotten has
been “made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification,” and has been
numbered amongst us, and paid tribute to Cæsar. This way, by which they might
descend to Him from themselves, they knew not; nor that through Him they might
ascend unto Him. This way they knew not, and they think themselves exalted with
the stars and shining, and lo! they fell upon the earth, and “their foolish
heart was darkened.” They say many true things concerning the creature; but
Truth, the Artificer of the creature, they seek not with devotion, and hence
they find Him not. Or if they find Him, knowing that He is God, they glorify
Him not as God, neither are they thankful, but become vain in their
imaginations, and say that they themselves are wise, attributing to themselves
what is Thine; and by this, with most perverse blindness, they desire to impute
to Thee what is their own, forging lies against Thee who art the Truth, and
changing the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like corruptible
man, and to birds, and four-footed beasts, and creeping things,—changing Thy
truth into a lie, and worshipping and serving the creature more than the
Creator.
6. Many truths, however, concerning the creature did I
retain from these men, and the cause appeared to me from calculations, the
succession of seasons, and the visible manifestations of the stars; and I compared
them with the sayings of Manichæus, who in his frenzy has written most
extensively on these subjects, but discovered not any account either of the
solstices, or the equinoxes, the eclipses of the luminaries, or anything of the
kind I had learned in the books of secular philosophy. But therein I was
ordered to believe, and yet it corresponded not with those rules acknowledged
by calculation and my own sight, but was far different.
Chapter IV.—That the Knowledge of Terrestrial and Celestial
Things Does Not Give Happiness, But the Knowledge of God Only.
7. Doth, then, O Lord God of truth, whosoever knoweth those
things therefore please Thee? For unhappy is the man who knoweth all those
things, but knoweth Thee not; but happy is he who knoweth Thee, though these he
may not know. But he who knoweth both Thee and them is not the happier on
account of them, but is happy on account of Thee only, if knowing Thee he
glorify Thee as God, and gives thanks, and becomes not vain in his thoughts.
But as he is happier who knows how to possess a tree, and for the use thereof
renders thanks to Thee, although he may not know how many cubits high it is, or
how wide it spreads, than he that measures it and counts all its branches, and
neither owns it nor knows or loves its Creator; so a just man, whose is the
entire world of wealth, and who, as having nothing, yet possesseth all things
by cleaving unto Thee, to whom all things are subservient, though he know not
even the circles of the Great Bear, yet it is foolish to doubt but that he may
verily be better than he who can measure the heavens, and number the stars, and
weigh the elements, but is forgetful of Thee, “who hast set in order all things
in number, weight, and measure.”
Chapter V.—Of Manichæus Pertinaciously Teaching False
Doctrines, and Proudly Arrogating to Himself the Holy Spirit.
8. But yet who was it that ordered Manichæus to write on
these things likewise, skill in which was not necessary to piety? For Thou hast
told man to behold piety and wisdom, of which he might be in ignorance although
having a complete knowledge of these other things; but since, knowing not these
things, he yet most impudently dared to teach them, it is clear that he had no
acquaintance with piety. For even when we have a knowledge of these worldly
matters, it is folly to make a profession of them; but confession to Thee is
piety. It was therefore with this view that this straying one spake much of
these matters, that, standing convicted by those who had in truth learned them,
the understanding that he really had in those more difficult things might be
made plain. For he wished not to be lightly esteemed, but went about trying to
persuade men “that the Holy Ghost, the Comforter and Enricher of Thy faithful
ones, was with full authority personally resident in him.” When, therefore, it
was discovered that his teaching concerning the heavens and stars, and the
motions of sun and moon, was false, though these things do not relate to the
doctrine of religion, yet his sacrilegious arrogance would become sufficiently
evident, seeing that not only did he affirm things of which he knew nothing,
but also perverted them, and with such egregious vanity of pride as to seek to
attribute them to himself as to a divine being.
9. For when I hear a Christian brother ignorant of these things,
or in error concerning them, I can bear with patience to see that man hold to
his opinions; nor can I apprehend that any want of knowledge as to the
situation or nature of this material creation can be injurious to him, so long
as he does not entertain belief in anything unworthy of Thee, O Lord, the
Creator of all. But if he conceives it to pertain to the form of the doctrine
of piety, and presumes to affirm with great obstinacy that whereof he is
ignorant, therein lies the injury. And yet even a weakness such as this in the
dawn of faith is borne by our Mother Charity, till the new man may grow up
“unto a perfect man,” and not be “carried about with every wind of doctrine.”
But in him who thus presumed to be at once the teacher, author, head, and leader
of all whom he could induce to believe this, so that all who followed him
believed that they were following not a simple man only, but Thy Holy Spirit,
who would not judge that such great insanity, when once it stood convicted of
false teaching, should be abhorred and utterly cast off? But I had not yet
clearly ascertained whether the changes of longer and shorter days and nights,
and day and night itself, with the eclipses of the greater lights, and whatever
of the like kind I had read in other books, could be expounded consistently
with his words. Should I have found myself able to do so, there would still
have remained a doubt in my mind whether it were so or no, although I might, on
the strength of his reputed godliness, rest my faith on his authority.
24 November, 2020
ST. AURELIUS AUGUSTIN BISHOP OF HIPPO—Book IV.—FOURTH POST
Chapter XIV.—Concerning the Books Which He Wrote “On the Fair and Fit,” Dedicated to Hierius.
21. But what was it that prompted me, O Lord my God, to dedicate these books to Hierius, an orator of Rome, whom I knew not by sight, but loved the man for the fame of his learning, for which he was renowned, and some words of his which I had heard, and which had pleased me? But the more did he please me in that he pleased others, who highly extolled him, astonished that a native of Syria, instructed first in Greek eloquence, should afterwards become a wonderful Latin orator, and one so well versed in studies pertaining unto wisdom. Thus, a man is commended and loved when absent. Doth this love enters into the heart of the hearer from the mouth of the commander? Not so. But through one who loveth is another inflamed. For hence he is loved who is commended when the commander is believed to praise him with an unfeigned heart; that is, when he that loves him praises him.
22. Thus, then, loved I men upon the judgment of men, not upon Thine, O my God, in which no man is deceived. But yet why not as the renowned charioteer, as the huntsman known far and wide by a vulgar popularity—but far otherwise, and seriously, and so as I would desire to be myself commended? For I would not that they should commend and love me as actors are,—although I myself did commend and love them,—but I would prefer being unknown than so known, and even being hated than so loved. Where now are these influences of such various and divers’ kinds of loves distributed in one soul? What is it that I am in love with in another, which, if I did not hate, I should not detest and repel from myself, seeing we are equally men? For it does not follow that because a good horse is loved by him who would not, though he might, be that horse, the same should therefore be affirmed by an actor, who partakes of our nature. Do I then love in a man that which I, who am a man, hate to be? Man, himself is a great deep, whose very hairs Thou numberest, O Lord, and they fall not to the ground without Thee. And yet are the hairs of his head more readily numbered than are his affections and the movements of his heart.
23. But that orator was of the kind that I so loved as I
wished myself to be such a one; and I erred through an inflated pride, and was
“carried about with every wind,” but yet was piloted by Thee, though very
secretly. And whence know I, and whence confidently confess I unto Thee that I
loved him more because of the love of those who praised him, than for the very
things for which they praised him? Because had he been upraised, and these
self-same men had dispraised him, and with dispraise and scorn told the same
things of him, I should never have been so inflamed and provoked to love him.
And yet the things had not been different, nor he himself different, but only
the affections of the narrators. See where lieth the impotent soul that is not
yet sustained by the solidity of truth! Just as the blasts of tongues blow from
the breasts of conjecturers, so is it tossed this way and that, driven forward
and backward, and the light is obscured to it and the truth not perceived. And
behold it is before us. And to me it was a great matter that my style and
studies should be known to that man; the which if he approved, I were the more
stimulated, but if he disapproved, this vain heart of mine, void of Thy
solidity, had been offended. And yet that “fair and fit,” about which I wrote
to him, I reflected on with pleasure, and contemplated it, and admired it,
though none joined me in doing so.
Chapter XV.—While Writing, Being Blinded by Corporeal Images, He Failed to Recognise the Spiritual Nature of God.
24. But not yet did I perceive the hinge on which this impotent matter turned in Thy wisdom, O Thou Omnipotent, “who alone doest great wonders;” and my mind ranged through corporeal forms, and I defined and distinguished as “fair,” that which is so in itself, and “fit,” that which is beautiful as it corresponds to some other thing; and this I supported by corporeal examples. And I turned my attention to the nature of the mind, but the false opinions which I entertained of spiritual things prevented me from seeing the truth. Yet the very power of truth forced itself on my gaze, and I turned away my throbbing soul from incorporeal substance, to lineaments, and colours, and bulky magnitudes. And not being able to perceive these in the mind, I thought I could not perceive my mind. And whereas in virtue I loved peace, and in viciousness I hated discord, in the former I distinguished unity, but in the latter a kind of division. And in that unity, I conceived the rational soul and the nature of truth and of the chief good330 to consist. But in this division I, unfortunate one, imagined there was I know not what substance of irrational life, and the nature of the chief evil, which should not be a substance only, but real life also, and yet not emanating from Thee, O my God, from whom are all things. And yet the first I called a Monad, as if it had been a soul without sex, but the other a Duad,—anger in deeds of violence, in deeds of passion, lust,—not knowing of what I talked. For I had not known or learned that neither was evil a substance, nor our soul that chief and unchangeable good.
25. For even as it is in the case of deeds of violence, if
that emotion of the soul from whence the stimulus comes be depraved, and carry
itself insolently and mutinously; and in acts of passion, if that affection of
the soul whereby carnal pleasures are imbibed is unrestrained,—so do errors and
false opinions contaminate the life, if the reasonable soul itself be depraved,
as it was at that time in me, who was ignorant that it must be enlightened by
another light that it may be partaker of truth, seeing that itself is not that
nature of truth. “For Thou wilt light my candle; the Lord my God will enlighten
my darkness; and “of His fulness have all we received,” for “that was the true
Light which lighted every man that cometh into the world;” for in Thee there is
“no variableness, neither shadow of turning.”
26. But I pressed towards Thee and was repelled by Thee that
I might taste of death, for Thou “resistest the proud.” But what prouder than
for me, with a marvellous madness, to assert myself to be that by nature which
Thou art? For whereas I was mutable,—so much being clear to me, for my very
longing to become wise arose from the wish from worse to become better,—yet
chose I rather to think Thee mutable, than myself not to be that which Thou
art. Therefore was I repelled by Thee, and Thou resistedst my changeable
stiffneckedness; and I imagined corporeal forms, and, being flesh, I accused
flesh, and, being “a wind that passed away,” I returned not to Thee, but went
wandering and wandering on towards those things that have no being, neither in
Thee, nor in me, nor in the body. Neither were they created for me by Thy truth
but conceived by my vain conceit out of corporeal things. And I used to ask Thy
faithful little ones, my fellow-citizens,—from whom I unconsciously stood
exiled,—I used flippantly and foolishly to ask, “Why, then, doth the soul which
God created err?” But I would not permit any one to ask me, “Why, then, doth
God err?” And I contended that Thy immutable substance erred of constraint,
rather than admit that my mutable substance had gone astray of free will and
erred as a punishment.
27. I was about six or seven and twenty years of age when I
wrote those volumes—meditating upon corporeal fictions, which clamoured in the
ears of my heart. These I directed; O sweet Truth, to Thy inward melody,
pondering on the “fair and fit,” and longing to stay and listen to Thee, and to
rejoice greatly at the Bridegroom’s voice, and I could not; for by the voices
of my own errors was I driven forth, and by the weight of my own pride was I
sinking into the lowest pit. For Thou didst not “make me to hear joy and
gladness;” nor did the bones which were not yet humbled rejoice.
Chapter XVI.—He Very Easily Understood the Liberal Arts and the Categories of Aristotle, But Without True Fruit.
28. And what did it profit me that, when scarce twenty years old, a book of Aristotle’s, entitled The Ten Predicaments, fell into my hands,—on whose very name I hung as on something great and divine, when my rhetoric master of Carthage, and others who were esteemed learned, referred to it with cheeks swelling with pride,—I read it alone and understood it? And on my conferring with others, who said that with the assistance of very able masters—who not only explained it orally, but drew many things in the dust—they scarcely understood it, and could tell me no more about it than I had acquired in reading it by myself alone? And the book appeared to me to speak plainly enough of substances, such as man is, and of their qualities,—such as the figure of a man, of what kind it is; and his stature, how many feet high; and his relationship, whose brother he is; or where placed, or when born; or whether he stands or sits, or is shod or armed, or does or suffers anything; and whatever innumerable things might be classed under these nine categories,—of which I have given some examples,—or under that chief category of substance.
29. What did all this profit me, seeing it even hindered me,
when, imagining that whatsoever existed was comprehended in those ten
categories, I tried so to understand, O my God, Thy wonderful and unchangeable
unity as if Thou also hadst been subjected to Thine own greatness or beauty, so
that they should exist in Thee as their subject, like as in bodies, whereas
Thou Thyself art Thy greatness and beauty? But a body is not great or fair
because it is a body, seeing that, though it were less great or fair, it should
nevertheless be a body. But that which I had conceived of Thee was falsehood,
not truth,—fictions of my misery, not the supports of Thy blessedness. For Thou
hadst commanded, and it was done in me, that the earth should bring forth
briars and thorns to me, and that with labour I should get my bread.
30. And what did it profit me that I, the base slave of vile
affections, read unaided, and understood, all the books that I could get of the
so-called liberal arts? And I took delight in them but knew not whence came
whatever in them was true and certain. For my back then was to the light, and
my face towards the things enlightened; whence my face, with which I discerned
the things enlightened, was not itself enlightened. Whatever was written either
on rhetoric or logic, geometry, music, or arithmetic, did I, without any great
difficulty, and without the teaching of any man, understand, as Thou knowest, O
Lord my God, because both quickness of comprehension and acuteness of
perception are Thy gifts. Yet did I not thereupon sacrifice to Thee. So, then,
it served not to my use, but rather to my destruction, since I went about to
get so good a portion of my substance into my own power; and I kept not my
strength for Thee, but went away from Thee into a far country, to waste it upon
harlotries. For what did good abilities profit me, if I did not employ them to
good uses? For I did not perceive that those arts were acquired with great
difficulty, even by the studious and those gifted with genius, until I
endeavoured to explain them to such; and he was the most proficient in them who
followed my explanations not too slowly.
31. But what did this profit me, supposing that Thou, O Lord
God, the Truth, wert a bright and vast body, and I a piece of that body?
Perverseness too great! But such was I. Nor do I blush, O my God, to confess to
Thee Thy mercies towards me, and to call upon Thee—I, who blushed not then to
avow before men my blasphemies, and to bark against Thee. What profited me then
my nimble wit in those sciences and all those knotty volumes, disentangled by
me without help from a human master, seeing that I erred so odiously, and with
such sacrilegious baseness, in the doctrine of piety? Or what impediment was it
to Thy little ones to have a far slower
wit, seeing that they departed not far from Thee, that in the nest of Thy
Church they might safely become fledged, and nourish the wings of charity by
the food of a sound faith? O Lord our God, under the shadow of Thy wings let us
hope, defend us, and carry us. Thou wilt carry us both when little, and even to
grey hairs wilt Thou carry us; for our firmness, when it is Thou, then is it
firmness; but when it is our own, then it is infirmity. Our good lives always
with Thee, from which when we are averted, we are perverted. Let us now, O
Lord, return, that we be not overturned, because with Thee our good lives
without any eclipse, which good Thou Thyself art. And we need not fear lest we
should find no place unto which to return because we fell away from it; for
when we were absent, our home—Thy Eternity—fell not.