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ST. AUGUSTIN
ON THE CATECHISING OF THE UNINSTRUCTED
IN ONE BOOK.
CHAP. 1.--HOW AUGUSTIN WRITES IN ANSWER TO A FAVOR ASKED BY A DEACON OF CARTHAGE.
1. You have requested me, brother Deogratias, to send you in writing something
which might be of service to you in the matter of catechising the uninstructed.
For you have informed me that in Carthage, where you hold the position of a
deacon, persons, who have to be taught the Christian faith from its very rudiments,
are frequently brought to you by reason of your enjoying the reputation of
possessing a rich gift in catechising, due at once to an intimate acquaintance
with the faith, and to an attractive method of discourse;(2) but that you almost
always find yourself in a difficulty as to the manner in which a suitable declaration
is to be made of the precise doctrine, the belief of which constitutes us Christians:
regarding the point at which our statement of the same ought to commence, and
the limit to which it should be allowed to proceed: and with respect to the
question whether, when our narration is concluded, we ought to make use of
any kind of exhortation, or simply specify those precepts in the observance
of which the person to whom we are discoursing may know the Christian life
and profession to be maintained.(3) At the same time, you have made the confession
and complaint that it has often befallen you that in the course of a lengthened
and languid address you have become profitless and distasteful even to yourself,
not to speak of the learner whom you have been endeavoring to instruct by your
utterance, and the other parties who have been present as hearers; and that
you have been constrained by these straits to put upon me the constraint of
that love which I owe to you, so that I may not feel it a burdensome thing
among all my engagements to write you something on this subject.
2. As for myself then, if, in the exercise of those capacities which through
the bounty of our Lord I am enabled to present, the same Lord requires me to
offer any manner of aid to those whom He has made brethren to me, I feel constrained
not only by that love and service which is due from me to you on the terms
of familiar friendship, but also by that which I owe universally to my mother
the Church, by no means to refuse the task, but rather to take it up with a
prompt and devoted willingness. For the more extensively I desire to see the
treasure of the Lord(4) distributed, the more does it become my duty, if I
ascertain that the stewards, who are my fellow-servants, find any difficulty
in laying it out, to do all that lies in my power to the end that they may
be able to accomplish easily and expeditiously what they sedulously and earnestly
aim at.
CHAP. 2.--HOW IT OFTEN HAPPENS THAT A DISCOURSE WHICH GIVES PLEASURE TO THE
HEARER IS DISTASTEFUL TO THE SPEAKER; AND WHAT EXPLANATION IS TO BE OFFERED
OF THAT FACT.
3. But as regards the idea thus privately entertained by yourself in such
efforts, I would not have you to be disturbed by the consideration that you
have often appeared to yourself to be delivering a poor and wearisome discourse.
For it may very well be the case that the matter has not so presented itself
to the person whom you were trying to instruct, but that what you were uttering
seemed to you to be unworthy of the ears of others, simply because it was your
own earnest desire that there should be something better to listen to. Indeed
with me, too, it is almost always the fact that my speech displeases myself.
For I am covetous of something better, the possession of which I frequently
enjoy within me before I commence to body it forth in intelligible words:(1)
and then when my capacities of expression prove inferior to my inner apprehensions,
I grieve over the inability which my tongue has betrayed in answering to my
heart. For it is my wish that he who hears me should have the same complete
understanding of the subject which I have myself; and I perceive that I fail
to speak in a manner calculated to effect that, and that this arises mainly
from the circumstance that the intellectual apprehension diffuses itself through
the mind with something like a rapid flash, whereas the utterance is slow,
and occupies time, and is of a vastly different nature, so that, while this
latter is moving on, the intellectual apprehension has already withdrawn itself
within its secret abodes. Yet, in consequence of its having stamped certain
impressions of itself in a marvellous manner upon the memory, these prints
endure with the brief pauses of the syllables;(2) and as the outcome of these
same impressions we form intelligible signs,(3) which get the name of a certain
language, either the Latin, or the Greek, or the Hebrew, or some other. And
these signs may be objects of thought, or they may also be actually uttered
by the voice. On the other hand however, the impressions themselves are neither
Latin, nor Greek, nor Hebrew, nor peculiar to any other race whatsoever, but
are made good in the mind just as looks are in the body. For anger is designated
by one word in Latin, by another in Greek, and by different terms in other
languages, according to their several diversities. But the look of the angry
man is neither (peculiarly) Latin nor (peculiarly) Greek. Thus it is that when
a person says Iratus sum,(4) he is not understood by every nation, but only
by the Latins; whereas, if the mood of his mind when it is kindling to wrath
comes forth upon the face and affects the look, all who have the individual
within their view understand that he is angry. But, again, it is not in our
power to bring out those impressions which the intellectual apprehension stamps
upon the memory, and to hold them forth, as it were, to the perception of the
hearers by means of the sound of the voice, in any manner parallel to the clear
and evident form in which the look appears. For those former are within in
the mind, while this latter is without in the body. Wherefore we have to surmise
how far the sound of our mouth must be from representing that stroke of the
intelligence, seeing that it does not correspond even with the impression produced
upon the memory. Now, it is a common occurrence with us that, in the ardent
desire to effect what is of profit to our hearer, our aim is to express ourselves
to him exactly as our intellectual apprehension is at the time, when, in the
very effort, we are failing in the ability to speak; and then, because this
does not succeed with us, we are vexed, and we pine in weariness as if we were
applying ourselves to vain labors; and, as the result of this very weariness,
our discourse becomes itself more languid and pointless even than it was when
it first induced such a sense of tediousness.
4. But
ofttimes the earnestness of those who are desirous of hearing me shows me
that my utterance is not
so frigid as it seems i to myself to be. From the
delight, too, which they exhibit, I gather that they derive some profit from
it. And I occupy myself sedulously with the endeavor not to fail in putting
before them a service in which I perceive them to take in such good part what
is put before them. Even, so, on your side also, the very fact that persons
who require to be instructed in the faith are brought so frequently to you,
ought to help you to understand that your discourse is not displeasing to others
as it is displeasing to yourself; and you ought not to consider yourself unfruitful,
simply because you do not succeed in setting forth in such a manner as you
desire the things which you discern; for, perchance, you may be just as little
able to discern them in the way you wish. For in this life who sees except
as "in an enigma and through a glass"?(5) Neither is love itself
of might sufficient to rend the darkness of the flesh, and penetrate into that
eternal calm from which even things which pass away derive the light in which
they shine. But inasmuch as day by day the good are making advances towards
the vision of that day, independent of the rolling sky,(1) and without the
invasion of the night, "which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither
hath it entered into the heart of man,"(2) there is no greater reason
why our discourse should become valueless in our own estimate, when we are
engaged in teaching the uninstructed, than this,--namely, that it is a delight
to us to discern in an extraordinary fashion, and a weariness to speak in an
ordinary. And in reality we are listened to with much greater satisfaction,
indeed, when we ourselves also have pleasure in the same work; for the thread
of our address is affected by the very joy of which we ourselves are sensible,
and it proceeds from us with greater ease and with more acceptance. Consequently,
as regards those matters which are recommended as articles of belief, the task
is not a difficult one to lay down injunctions, with respect to the points
at which the narration should be commenced and ended, or with respect to the
method in which the narration is to be varied, so that at one time it may be
briefer, at another more lengthened, and yet at all times full and perfect;
and, again, with respect to the particular occasions on which it may be right
to use the shorter form, and those on which it will be proper to employ the
longer. But as to the means by which all is to be done, so that every one may
have pleasure in his work when he catechises (for the better he succeeds in
this the more attractive will he be),--that is what requires the greatest consideration.
And yet we have not far to seek for the precept which will rule in this sphere.
For if, in the matter of carnal means, God loves a cheerful giver,(3) how much
more so in that of the spiritual? But our security that this cheerfulness may
be with us at the seasonable hour, is something dependent upon the mercy of
Him who has given us such precepts. Therefore, in accordance with my understanding
of what your own wish is, we shall discuss in the first place the subject of
the method of narration, then that of the duty of delivering injunction and
exhortation, and afterwards that of the attainment of the said cheerfulness,
so far as God may furnish us with the ideas.
CHAP. 3.--OF THE FULL NARRATION TO BE EMPLOYED IN CATECHISING.
5. The
narration is full when each person is catechised in the first instance from
what is written
in the text, "In the beginning God created the heaven
and the earth,"(4) on to the present times of the Church. This does not
imply, however, either that we ought to repeat by memory the entire Pentateuch,
and the entire Books of Judges, and Kings, and Esdras,(5) and the entire Gospel
and Acts of the Apostles, if we have learned all these word for word; or that
we should put all the matters which are contained in these volumes into our
own words, and in that manner unfold and expound them as a whole. For neither
does the time admit of that, nor does any necessity demand it. But what we
ought to do is, to give a comprehensive statement of all things, summarily
and generally, so that certain of the more wonderful facts may be selected
which are listened to with superior gratification, and which have been ranked
so remarkably among the exact turning-points (of the history);(6) that, instead
of exhibiting them to view only in their wrappings, if we may so speak, and
then instantly snatching them from our sight, we ought to dwell on them for
a certain space, and thus, as it were, unfold them and open them out to vision,
and present them to the minds of the hearers as things to be examined and admired.
But as for all other details, these should be passed over rapidly, and thus
far introduced and woven into the narrative. The effect of pursuing this plan
is, that the particular facts which we wish to see specially commended to attention
obtain greater prominence in consequence of the others being made to yield
to them; while, at the same time, neither does the learner, whose interest
we are anxious to stimulate by our statement, come to these subjects with a
mind already exhausted, nor is confusion induced upon the memory of the person
whom we ought to be instructing by our teaching.
6. In
all things, indeed, not only ought our own eye to be kept fixed upon the
end of the commandment,
which
is "charity, out of a pure heart, and
a good conscience, and faith unfeigned,"(7) to which we should make all
that we utter refer; but in like manner ought the gaze of the person whom we
are instructing by our utterance to be moved(8) toward the same, and guided
in that direction. And, in truth, for no other reason were all those things
which we read in the Holy Scriptures written, previous to the Lord's advent,
but for this,--namely, that His advent might be pressed upon the attention,
and that the Church which was to be, should be intimated beforehand, that is
to say, the people of God throughout all nations; which Church is His body,
wherewith also are united and numbered all the saints who lived in this world,
even before His advent, and who believed then in His future coming, just as
we believe in His past coming. For (to use an illustration) Jacob, at the time
when he was being born, first put forth from the womb a hand, with which also
he held the foot of the brother who was taking priority of him in the act of
birth; and next indeed the head followed, and thereafter, at last, and as matter
of course, the rest of the members:(1) while, nevertheless the head in point
of dignity and power has precedence, not only of those members which followed
it then, but also of the very hand which anticipated it in the process of the
birth, and is really the first, although not in the matter of the time of appearing,
at least in the order of nature. And in an analogous manner, the Lord Jesus
Christ, previous to His appearing in the fiesta, and coming forth in a certain
manner out of the womb of His secrecy, before the eyes of men as Man, the Mediator
between God and men,(2) "who is over all, God blessed for ever,"(3)
sent before Him, in the person of the holy patriarchs and prophets, a certain
portion of His body, wherewith, as by a hand, He gave token beforetime of His
own approaching birth, and also supplanted(4) the people who were prior to
Him in their pride, using for that purpose the bonds of the law, as if they
were His five fingers. For through five epochs of times(5) there was no cessation
in the foretelling and prophesying of His own destined coming; and in a manner
consonant with this, he through whom the law was given wrote five books; and
proud men, who were carnally minded, and sought to "establish their own
righteousness,"(6) were not filled with blessing by the open hand of Christ,
but were debarred from such good by the hand compressed and closed; and therefore
their feet were tied, and "they fell, while we are risen, and stand upright."(7)
But although, as I have said, the Lord Christ did thus send before Him a certain
portion of His body, in the person of those holy men who came before Him as
regards the time of birth, nevertheless He is Himself the Head of the body,
the Church,(8) and all these have been attached to that same body of which
He is the head, in virtue of their believing in Him whom they announced prophetically.
For they were: not sundered (from that body) in consequence of fulfilling their
course before Him, but rather were they made one with the same by reason of
their obedience. For although the hand may be put forward away before the head,
still it has its connection beneath the head. Wherefore all things which were
written aforetime were written in order that we might be taught thereby,(9)
and were our figures, and happened in a figure in the ease of these men. Moreover
they were written for our sakes, upon whom the end of the ages has come.(10)
CHAP. 4.--THAT THE GREAT REASON FOR THE ADVENT OF CHRIST WAS THE COMMENDATION
OF LOVE.
7. Moreover,
what greater reason is apparent for the advent of the Lord than that God
might show His
love
in us, commending it powerfully, inasmuch as "while
we were yet sinners, Christ died for us"?(11) And furthermore, this is
with the intent that, inasmuch as charity is "the end of the commandment,"(12)
and "the fulfilling of the law,"(13) we also may love one another
and lay down our life for the brethren, even as He laid down His life for us.(14)
And with regard to God Himself, its object is that, even if it were an irksome
task to love Him, it may now at least cease to be irksome for us to return
His love, seeing that" He first loved us,"(15) and "spared not
His own only Son, but delivered Him up for us all."(16) For their is no
mightier invitation to love than to anticipate in loving; and that soul is
over hard which, supposing it unwilling indeed to give love, is unwilling also
to give the return of love. But if, even in the case of criminal and sordid
loves, we see how those who desire to be loved in return make it their special
and absorbing business, by such proofs as are within their power, to render
the strength of the love which they themselves bear plain and patent; if we
also perceive how they affect to put forward an appearance of justice in what
they thus offer, such as may qualify them in some sort to demand that a response
be made in all fairness to them on the part of those souls which they are laboring
to beguile; if, further, their own passion burns more vehemently when they
observe that the minds which they are eager to possess are also moved now by
the same fire: if thus, I say, it happens at once that the soul which before
was torpid is excited so soon as it feels itself to be loved, and that the
soul which was enkindled already becomes the more inflamed so soon as it is
made cognizant of the return of its own love, it is evident that no greater
reason is to be found why love should be either originated or enlarged, than
what appears in the occasion when one who as yet loves not at all comes to
know himself to be the object of love, or when one who is already a lover either
hopes that he may yet be loved in turn, or has by this time the evidence of
a response to his affection. And if this holds good even in the case of base
loves, how much more(1) in (true) friendship? For what else have we carefully
to attend to in this question touching the injuring of friendship than to this,
namely, not to give our friend cause to suppose either that we do not love
him at all, or that we love him less than he loves us? If, indeed, he is led
to entertain this belief, he will be cooler in that love in which men enjoy
the interchange of intimacies one with another; and if he is not of that weak
type of character to which such an offense to affection will serve as a cause
of freezing off from love altogether, he yet confines himself to that kind
of affection in which he loves, not with the view of enjoyment to himself,
but with the idea of studying the good of others. But again it is worth our
while to notice how,--although superiors also have the wish to be loved by
their inferiors, and are gratified with the zealous attention(2) paid to them
by such, and themselves cherish greater affection towards these inferiors the
more they become cognizant of that,--with what might of love, nevertheless,
the inferior kindles so soon as he learns that he is beloved by his superior.
For there have we love in its more grateful aspect, where it does not consume
itself(3) in the drought of want, but flows forth in the plenteousness of beneficence.
For the former type of love is of misery, the latter of mercy.(4) And furthermore,
if the inferior was despairing even of the possibility of his being loved by
his superior, he will now be inexpressibly moved to love if the superior has
of his own will condescended to show how much he loves this person who could
by no means be bold enough to promise himself so great a good. But what is
there superior to God in the character of Judge? and what more desperate than
man in the character of sinner?--than man, I ask, who had given himself all
the more unreservedly up to the wardship and domination of proud powers which
are unable to make him blessed, as he had come more absolutely to despair of
the possibility of his being an object of interest to that power which wills
not to be exalted in wickedness, but is exalted in goodness.
8. If, therefore, it was mainly for this purpose that Christ came, to wit,
that man might learn how much God loves him; and that he might learn this,
to the intent that he might be kindled to the love of Him by whom he was first
loved, and might also love his neighbor at the command and showing of Him who
became our neighbor, in that He loved man when, instead of being a neighbor
to Him, he was sojourning far apart: if, again, all divine Scripture, which
was written aforetime, was written with the view of presignifying the Lord's
advent; and if whatever has been committed to writing in times subsequent to
these, and established by divine authority, is a record of Christ, and admonishes
us of love, it is manifest that on those two commandments of love to God and
love to our neighbor(5) hang not only all the law and the prophets, which at
the time when the Lord spoke to that effect were as yet the only Holy Scripture,
but also all those books of the divine literature which have been written(6)
at a later period for our health, and consigned to remembrance. Wherefore,
in the Old Testament there is a veiling of the New, and in the New Testament
there is a revealing of the Old. According to that veiling, carnal men, understanding
things in a carnal fashion, have been under the dominion, both then and now,
of a penal fear. According to this revealing, on the other hand, spiritual
men,--among whom we reckon at once those then who knocked in piety and found
even hidden things opened to them, and others now who seek in no spirit of
pride, lest even things uncovered should be closed to them,--understanding
in a spiritual fashion, have been made free through the love wherewith they
have been gifted. Consequently, inasmuch as there is nothing more adverse to
love than envy, and as pride is the mother of envy, the same Lord jesus Christ,
God-man, is both a manifestation of divine love towards us, and an example
of human humility with us, to the end that our great swelling might be cured
by a greater counteracting remedy. For here is great misery, proud man! But
there is greater mercy, a humble God! Take this love, therefore, as the end
that is set before you, to which you are to refer all that you say, and, whatever
you narrate, narrate it in such a manner that he to whom you are discoursing
on hearing may believe, on believing may hope, on hoping may love.
CHAP. 5.--THAT THE PERSON WHO COMES FOR CATECHETICAL INSTRUCTION IS TO BE
EXAMINED WITH RESPECT TO HIS VIEWS, ON DESIRING TO BECOME A CHRISTIAN.
9. Moreover, it is on the gound of that very severity of God,(1) by which
the hearts of mortals are agitated with a most wholesome terror,that love is
to be built up; so that, rejoicing that he is loved by Him whom he fears, man
may have boldness to love Him in return, and yet at the same time be afraid
to displease His love toward himself, even should he be able to do so with
impunity. For certainly it very rarely happens, nay, I should rather say, never,
that any one approaches us with the wish to become a Christian who has not
been smitten with some sort of fear of God. For if it is in the expectation
of some advantage from men whom he deems himself unlikely to please in any
other way, or with the idea of escaping any disadvantage at the hands of men
of whose displeasure or hostility he is seriously afraid, that a man wishes
to become a Christian, then his wish to become one is not so earnest as his
desire to feign one.(2) For faith is not a matter of the body which does obeisance,(3)
but of the mind which believes. But unmistakeably it is often the case that
the mercy of God comes to be present through the ministry of the catechiser,
so that, affected by the discourse, the man now wishes to become in reality
that which he had made up his mind only to feign. And so soon as he begins
to have this manner of desire, we may judge him then to have made a genuine
approach to us. It is true, indeed, that the precise time when a man, whom
we perceive to be present with us already in the body, comes to us in reality
with his mind,(4) is a thing hidden from us. But, notwithstanding that, we
ought to deal with him in such a manner that this wish may be made to arise
within him, even should it not be there at present. For no such labor is lost,
inasmuch as, if there is any wish at all, it is assuredly strengthened by such
action on our part, although we may be ignorant of the time or the hour at
which it began. It is useful certainly, if it can be done, to get from those
who know the man some idea beforehand of the state of mind in which he is,
or of the causes which have induced him to come with the view of embracing
religion. But if there is no other person available from whom we may gather
such information, then, indeed, the man himself is to be interrogated, so that
from what he says in reply we may draw the beginning of our discourse. Now
if he has come with a false heart, desirous only of human advantages or thinking
to escape disadvantages, he will certainly speak what is untrue. Nevertheless,
the very untruth which he utters should be made the point from which we start.
This should not be done, however, with the (open) intention of confuting his
falsehood, as if that were a settled matter with you; but, taking it for granted
that he has professed to have come with a purpose which is really worthy of
approbation (whether that profession be true or false), it should rather be
our aim to commend and praise such a purpose as that with which, in his reply,
he has declared himself to have come; so that we may make him feel it a pleasure
to be the kind of man actually that he wishes to seem to be. On the other hand,
supposing him to have given a declaration of his views other than what ought
to be before the mind of one who is to be instructed in the Christian faith,
then by reproving him with more than usual kindness and gentleness, as a person
uninstructed and ignorant, by pointing out and commending, concisely and in
a grave spirit the end of Christian doctrine in its genuine reality, and by
doing all this in such a manner as neither to anticipate the times of a narration,
which should be given subsequently, nor to venture to impose that kind of statement
upon a mind not previously set for it, you may bring him to desire that which,
either in mistake or in dissimulation, he has not been desiring up to this
stage.
CHAP. 6.--OF THE WAY TO COMMENCE THE CATECHETICAL INSTRUCTION, AND OF THE
NARRATION OF FACTS FROM THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD'S CREATION ON TO THE PRESENT
TIMES OF THE CHURCH.
10. But if it happens that his answer is to the effect that he has met with
some divine warning, or with some divine terror, prompting him to become a
Christian, this opens up the way most satisfactorily for a commencement to
our discourse, by suggesting the greatness of God's interest in us. His thoughts,
however, ought certainly to be turned away from this line of things, whether
miracles or dreams, and directed to the more solid path and the surer oracles
of the Scriptures; so that he may also come to understand how mercifully that
warning was administered to him in advance,(1) previous to his giving himself
to the Holy Scriptures. And assuredly it ought to be pointed out to him, that
the Lord Himself would neither thus have admonished him and urged him on to
become a Christian, and to be incorporated into the Church, nor have taught
him by such signs or revelations, had it not been His will that, for his greater
safety and security, he should enter upon a pathway already prepared in the
Holy Scriptures, in which he should not seek after visible miracles, but learn
the habit of hoping for things invisible, and in which also he should receive
monitions not in sleep but in wakefulness. At this point the narration ought
now to be commenced,which should start with the fact that God made all things
very good,(2) and which should be continued, as we have said, on to the present
times of the Church. This should be done in such a manner as to give, for each
of the affairs and events which we relate, causes and reasons by which we may
refer them severally to that end of love from which neither the eye of the
man who is occupied in doing anything, nor that of the man who is engaged in
speaking, ought to be turned away. For if, even in handling the fables of the
poets, which are but fictitious creations and things devised for the pleasure(3)
of minds whose food is found in trifles, those grammarians who have the reputation
and the name of being good do nevertheless endeavor to bring them to bear upon
some kind of (assumed) use, although that use itself may be only something
vain and grossly bent upon the coarse nutriment of this world:(4) how much
more careful does it become us to be, not to let those genuine verities which
we narrate, in consequence of any want of a well-considered account of their
causes, be accepted either with a gratification which issues in no practical
good, or, still less, with a cupidity which may prove hurtful! At the same
time, we are not to set forth these causes in such a manner as to leave the
proper course of our narration, and let our heart and our tongue indulge in
digressions into the knotty questions of more intricate discussion. But the
simple truth of the explanation which we adduce(5) ought to be like the gold
which binds together a row of gems, and yet does not interfere with the choice
symmetry of the ornament by any undue intrusion of itself.(6)
CHAP. 7.--OF THE EXPOSITION OF THE RESURRECTION, THE JUDGMENT, AND OTHER SUBJECTS,
WHICH SHOULD FOLLOW THIS NARRATION.
11. On
the completion of this narration, the hope of the resurrection should be
set forth, and,
so far as the capacity
and strength of the hearer will bear
it, and so far also as the measure of time at our disposal will allow, we ought
to handle our arguments against the vain scoffings of unbelievers on the subject
of the resurrection of the body, as well as on that of the future judgment,
with its goodness in relation to the good, its severity in relation to the
evil, its truth in relation to all. And after the penalties of the impious
have thus been declared with detestation and horror, then the kingdom of the
righteous and faithful, and that supernal city and its joy, should form the
next themes for our discourse. At this point, moreover, we ought to equip and
animate the weakness of man in withstanding temptations and offenses, whether
these emerge without or rise within the church itself; without, as in opposition
to Gentiles, or Jews, or heretics; within, on the other hand, as in opposition
to the chaff of the Lord's threshing-floor. It is not meant, however, that
we are to dispute against each several type of perverse men, and that all their
wrong opinions are to be refuted by set arrays of argumentations: but, in a
manner suitable to a limited allowance of time, we ought to show how all this
was foretold, and to point out of what service temptations are in the training
of the faithful, and what relief(7) there is in the example of the patience
of God, who has resolved to permit them even to the end. But, again, while
he is being furnished against these (adversaries), whose perverse multitudes
fill the churches so far as bodily presence is concerned, the precepts of a
Christian and honorable manner of life should also be briefly and befittingly
detailed at the same time, to the intent that he may neither allow himself
to be easily led astray in this way, by any who are drunkards, covetous, fraudulent,
gamesters, adulterers, fornicators, lovers of public spectacles, wearers of
unholy charms, sorcerers, astrologers, or diviners practising any sort of vain
and wicked arts, and all other parties of a similar character; nor to let himself
fancy that any such course may be followed with impunity on his part, simply
because he sees many who are called Christians loving these things, and engaging
themselves with them, and defending them, and recommending them, and actually
persuading others to their use. For as to the end which is appointed for those
who persist in such a mode of life, and as to the method in which they are
to be borne with in the church itself, out of which they are destined to be
separated in the end,--these are subjects in which the learner ought to be
instructed by means of the testimonies of the divine books. He should also,
however, be informed beforehand that he will find in the church many good Christians,
most genuine citizens of the heavenly Jerusalem, if he sets about being such
himself. And, finally, he must be sedulously warned against letting his hope
rest on man. For it is not a matter that can be easily judged by man, what
man is righteous. And even were this a matter which could be easily done, still
the object with which the examples of righteous men are set before us is not
that we may be justified by them, but that, as we imitate them, we may understand
how we ourselves also are justified by their Justifier. For the issue of this
will be something which must merit the highest approval,--namely this, that
when the person who is hearing us, or rather, who is hearing God by us, has
begun to make some progress in moral qualities and in knowledge, and to enter
upon the way of Christ with ardor, he will not be so bold as to ascribe the
change either to us or to himself; but he will love both himself and us, and
whatever other persons he loves as friends, in Him, and for His sake who loved
him when he was an enemy, in order that He might justify him and make him a
friend. And now that we have advanced thus far, I do not think that you need
any preceptor to tell you how you should discuss matters briefly, when either
your own time or that of those who are hearing you is occupied; and how, on
the other hand, you should discourse at greater length when there is more time
at your command. For the very necessity of the case recommends this, apart
from the counsel of any adviser.
CHAP. 8.--OF THE METHOD TO BE PURSUED IN CATECHISING THOSE WHO HAVE HAD A
LIBERAL EDUCATION.
12. But
there is another case which evidently must not be overlooked. I mean the
case of one coming
to you to
receive catchetical instruction who has cultivated
the field of liberal studies, who has already made up his mind to be a Christian,
and who has betaken himself to you for the express purpose of becoming one.
It can scarcely fail to be the fact that a person of this character has already
acquired a considerable knowledge of our Scriptures and literature; and, furnished
with this, he may have come now simply with the view of being made a partaker
in the sacraments. For it is customary with men of this class to inquire carefully
into all things, not at the very time when they are made Christians, but previous
to that, and thus early also to communicate and reason, with any whom they
can reach, on the subject of the feelings of their own minds. Consequently
a brief method of procedure should be adopted with these, so as not to inculcate
on them, in an odious fashion,(1) things which they know already, but to pass
over these with a light and modest touch. Thus we should say how we believe
that they are already familiar with this and the other subject, and that we
therefore simply reckon up m a cursory manner all those facts which require
to be formally urged upon the attention of the uninstructed and unlearned.
And we should endeavor so to proceed, that, supposing this man of culture to
have been previously acquainted with any one of our themes, he may not hear
it now as from a teacher; and that, in the event of his being still ignorant
of any of them, he may yet learn the same while we are going over the things
with which we understand him to be already familiar. Moreover, it is certainly
not without advantage to interrogate the man himself as to the means by which
he was induced to desire to be a Christian; so that, if you discover him to
have been moved to that decision by books, whether they be the canonical writings
or the compositions of literary men worth the studying,(2) you may say something
about these at the outset, expressing your approbation of them in a manner
which may suit the distinct merits which they severally possess, in respect
of canonical authority and of skillfully applied diligence on the part of these
expounders;(3) and, in the case of the canonical Scriptures, commending above
all the most salutary modesty (of language) displayed alongside their wonderful
loftiness (of subject); while, in those other productions you notice, in accordance
with the characteristic faculty of each several writer, a style of a more sonorous
and, as it were more rounded eloquence adapted to minds that are prouder, and,
by reason thereof weaker. We should certainly also elicit from him some account
of himself, so that he may give us to understand what writer he chiefly perused,
and with what books he was more familiarly conversant, as these were the means
of moving him to wish to be associated with the church. And when he has given
us this information, then if the said books are known to us, or if we have
at least ecclesiastical report as our warrant for taking them to have been
written by some catholic man of note, we should joyfully express our approbation.
But if, on the other hand, he has fallen upon the productions of some heretic
and in ignorance, it may be, has retained in his mind anything which(1) the
true faith condemns, and yet supposes it to be catholic doctrine, then we must
set ourselves sedulously to teach him, bringing before him (in its rightful
superiority) the authority of the Church universal, and of other most learned
men reputed both for their disputations and for their writings in (the cause
of) its truth. (2) At the same time, it is to be admitted that even those who
have departed this life as genuine catholics, and have left to posterity some
Christian writings, in certain passages of their small works, either in consequence
of their failing to be understood, or (as the way is with human infirmity)
because they lack ability to pierce into the deeper mysteries with the eye
of the mind, and in (pursuing) the semblance of what is true, wander from the
truth itself, have proved an occasion to the presumptuous and audacious for
constructing and generating some heresy. This, however, is not to be wondered
at, when, even in the instance of the canonical writings themselves, where
all things have been expressed in the soundest manner, we see how it has happened,--not
indeed through merely taking certain passages in a sense different from that
which the writer had in view or which is consistent with the truth itself,
(for if this were all, who would not gladly pardon human infirmity, when it
exhibits a readiness to accept correction?), but by persistently defending,
with the bitterest vehemence and in impudent arrogance, opinions which they
have taken up in perversity and error,--many have given birth to many pernicious
dogmas at the cost of rending the unity of the (Christian) communion. All these
subjects we should discuss in modest conference with the individual who makes
his approach to the society of the Christian people, not in the character of
an uneducated man,(3) as they say, but in that of one who has passed through
a finished culture and training in the books of the learned. And in enjoining
him to guard against the errors of presumption, we should assume only so much
authority as that humility of his, which induced him to come to us, is now
felt to admit of. As to other things, moreover, in accordance with the rules
of saving doctrine, which require to be narrated or discussed, whether they
be matters relating to the faith, or questions bearing on the moral life, or
others dealing with temptations, all these should be gone through in the manner
which I have indicated, and ought therein to be referred to the more excellent
way (already noticed).(4)
CHAP. 9.--OF THE METHOD IN WHICH GRAMMARIANS AND PROFESSIONAL SPEAKERS ARE
TO BE DEALT WITH.
13. There
are also some who come from the commonest schools of the grammarians and
professional speakers,
whom you may not venture to reckon either among
the uneducated or among those very learned classes whose minds have been exercised
in questions of real magnitude. When such persons, therefore, who appear to
be superior to the rest of mankind, so far as the art of speaking is concerned,
approach you with the view of becoming Christians, it will be your duty in
your communications with them, in a higher degree than in your dealings with
those other illiterate hearers, to make it plain that they are to be diligently
admonished to clothe themselves with Christian humility, and learn not to despise
individuals whom they may discover keeping themselves free from vices of conduct
more carefully than from faults of language; and also that they ought not to
presume so much as to compare with a pure heart the practised tongue which
they were accustomed even to put in preference. But above all, such persons
should be taught to listen to the divine Scriptures, so that they may neither
deem solid eloquence to be mean, merely because it is not inflated, nor suppose
that the words or deeds of men, of which we read the accounts in those books,
involved and covered as they are in carnal wrappings,(2) are not to be drawn
forth and unfolded with a view to an (adequate) understanding of them, but
are to be taken merely according to the sound of the letter. And as to this
same matter of the utility of the hidden meaning, the existence of which is
the reason why they are called also mysteries, the power wielded by these intricacies
of enigmatical utterances in the way of sharpening our love for the truth,
and shaking off the torpor of weariness, is a thing which the persons in question
must have made good to them by actual experience, when some subject which failed
to move them when it was placed baldly before them, has its significance elicited
by the detailed working out of an allegorical sense. For it is in the highest
degree useful to such men to come to know how ideas are to be preferred to
words, just as the soul is preferred to the body. And from this, too, it follows
that they ought to have the desire to listen to discourses remarkable for their
truth, rather than to those which are notable for their eloquence; just as
they ought to be anxious to have friends distinguished for their wisdom, rather
than those whose chief merit is their beauty. They should also understand thai
there is no voice for the ears of God save the affection of the soul. For thus
they will not act the mocker if they happen to observe any of the prelates
and ministers of the Church either calling upon God in language marked by barbarisms
and solecisms, or failing in understanding correctly the very words which they
are pronouncing, and making confused pauses.(2) It is not meant, of course,
that such faults are not to be corrected, so that the people may say "Amen" to
something which they plainly understand; but what is intended is, that such
things should be piously borne with by those who have come to understand how,
as in the forum it is in the sound, so in the church it is in the desire that
the grace of speech resides.(3) Therefore that of the forum may sometimes be
called good speech, but never gracious speech.(4) Moreover, with respect to
the sacrament which they are about to receive, it is enough for the more intelligent
simply to hear what the thing signifies. But with those of slower intellect,
it will be necessary to adopt a somewhat more detailed explanation, together
with the use of similitudes, to prevent them from despising what they see.
CHAP. 10.--OF THE ATTAINMENT OF CHEERFULNESS IN THE DUTY OF CATECHISING, AND
OF VARIOUS CAUSES PRODUCING WEARINESS IN THE CATECHUMEN.
14. At
this point you perhaps desiderate some example of the kind of discourse intended,
so that
I may show you by
an actual instance how the things which
I have recommended are to be done. This indeed I shall do, so far as by God's
help I shall be able. But before proceeding to that, it is my duty, in consistency
with what I have promised, to speak of the acquisition of the cheerfulness
(to which I have alluded). For as regards the matter of the rules in accordance
with which your discourse should be set forth, in the case of the catechetical
instruction of a person who comes with the express view of being made a Christian,
I have already made good, as far as has appeared sufficient, the promise which
I made. And surely I am under no obligation at the same time to do myself in
this volume that which I enjoin as the right thing to be done. Consequently,
if I do that, it will have the value of an overplus. But how can the overplus
be super-added by me before I have filled up the measure of what is due? Besides,
one thing which I have heard you make the subject of your complaint above all
others, is the fact that your discourse seemed to yourself to be poor and spiritless
when you were instructing any one in the Christian name. Now this, I know,
results not so much from want of matter to say, with which I am well aware
you are sufficiently provided and furnished, or from poverty of speech itself,
as rather from weariness of mind. And that may spring either from the cause
of which I have already spoken, namely, the fact that our intelligence is better
pleased and more thoroughly arrested by that which we perceive in silence in
the mind, and that we have no inclination to have our attention called off
from it to a noise of words coming far short of representing it; or from the
circumstance that even when discourse is pleasant, we have more delight in
hearing or reading things which have been expressed in a superior manner, and
which are set forth without any care or anxiety on our part, than in putting
together, with a view to the comprehension of others, words suddenly conceived,
and leaving it an uncertain issue, on the one hand, whether such terms occur
to us as adequately represent the sense, and on the other, whether they be
accepted in such a manner as to profit; or yet again, from the consideration
that, in consequence of their being now thoroughly familiar to ourselves, and
no longer necessary to our own advancement, it becomes irksome to us to be
recurring very frequently to those matters which are urged upon the uninstructed,
and our mind, as being by this time pretty well matured, moves with no manner
of pleasure in the circle of subjects so well-worn, and, as it were, so childish.
A sense of weariness is also induced upon the speaker when he has a hearer
who remains unmoved, either in that he is actually not stirred by any feeling,
or in that he does not indicate by any motion of the body that he understands
or that he is pleased with what is said.1 Not that it is a becoming disposition
in us to he greedy of the praises of men, but that the things which we minister
are of God; and the more we love those to whom we discourse, the more desirous
are we that they should he pleased with the matters which are held forth for
their salvation: so that if we do not succeed in this, we are pained, and we
are weakened, and become broken-spirited in the midst of our course, as if
we were wasting our efforts to no purpose. Sometimes, too, when we are drawn
off from some matter which we are desirous to go on with, and the transaction
of which was a pleasure to us, or appeared to be more than usually needful,
and when we are compelled, either by the command of a person whom we are unwilling
to offend, or by the importunity of some parties that we find it impossible
to get rid of, to instruct any one catechetically, in such circumstances we
approach a duty for which great calmness is indispensable with minds already
perturbed, and grieving at once that we are not permitted to keep that order
which we desire to observe in our actions, and that we cannot possibly be competent
for all things; and thus out of very heaviness our discourse as it advances
is less of an attraction, because, starting from the arid soil of dejection,
it goes on less flowingly. Sometimes, too, sadness has taken possession of
our heart in consequence of some offense or other, and at that very time we
are addressed thus: "Come, speak with this person; he desires to become
a Christian." For they who thus address us do it in ignorance of the hidden
trouble which is consuming us within. So it happens that, if they are not the
persons to whom it befits us to open up our feelings, we undertake with no
sense of pleasure what they desire; and then, certainly, the discourse will
be languid and unenjoyable which is transmitted through the agitated and fuming
channel of a heart in that condition. Consequently, seeing there are so many
causes serving to cloud the calm serenity of our minds, in accordance with
God's will we must seek remedies for them, such as may bring us relief from
these feelings of heaviness, and help us to rejoice in fervor of spirit, and
to be jocund in the tranquility of a good work. "For God loveth a cheerful
giver."2
15. Now
if the cause of our sadness lies in the circumstance that our hearer does
not apprehend what
we mean,
so that we have to come down in a certain
fashion from the elevation of our own conceptions, and are under the necessity
of dwelling long in the tedious processes of syllables which come far beneath
the standard of our ideas, and have anxiously to consider how that which we
ourselves take in with a most rapid draught of mental apprehension is to be
given forth by the mouth of flesh in the long and perplexed intricacies of
its method of enunciation; and if the great dissimilarity thus felt (between
our utterance and our thought) makes it distasteful to us to speak, and a pleasure
to us to keep silence, then let us ponder what has been set before us by Him
who has "showed us an example that we should follow His steps."3
For however much our articulate speech may differ from the vivacity of our
intelligence, much greater is the difference of the flesh of mortality from
the equality of God. And, neverless, "although He was in the same form,
He emptied Himself, taking the form of a servant,"--and so on down to
the words "the death of the cross."4 What is the explanation of this
but that He made Himself "weak to the weak, in order that He might gain
the weak?"5 Listen to His follower as he expresses himself also in another
place to this effect: "For whether we be beside ourselves, it is to God;
or whether we be sober, it is for your cause. For the love of Christ constraineth
us, because we thus judge that He died for all."6 And how, indeed, should
one be ready to be spent for their souls,7 if he should find it irksome to
him to bend himself to their ears? For this reason, therefore, He became a
little child in the midst of us, (and) like a nurse cherishing her children.(1)
For is it a pleasure to lisp shortened and broken words, unless love invites
us? And yet men desire to have infants to whom they have to do that kind of
service; and it is a sweeter thing to a mother to put small morsels of masticated
food into her little son's mouth, than to eat up and devour larger pieces herself.
In like manner, accordingly, let not the thought of the hen(2) recede from
your heart, who covers her tender brood with her drooping feathers, and with
broken voice calls her chirping young ones to her, while they that turn away
from her fostering wings in their pride become a prey to birds. For if intelligence
brings delights in its purest recesses, it should also be a delight to us to
have an intelligent understanding of the manner in which charity, the more
complaisantly it descends to the lowest objects, finds its way back, with all
the greater vigor to those that are most secret, along the course of a good
conscience which witnesses that it has sought nothing from those to whom it
has descended except their everlasting salvation.
CHAP. 11.--OF THE REMEDY FOR THE SECOND SOURCE OF WEARINESS.
16. If,
however, it is rather our desire to read or hear such things as are already
prepared for
our use and
expressed in a superior style, and if the
consequence is that we feel it irksome to put together, at the time and with
an uncertain issue, the terms of discourse on our own side, then, provided
only that our mind does not wander off from the truth of the facts themselves,
it is an easy matter for the hearer, if he is offended by anything in our language,
to come to see in that very circumstance how little value should be set, supposing
the subject itself to be rightly understood, upon the mere fact that there
may have been some imperfection or some inaccuracy in the literal expressions,
which were employed indeed simply with the view of securing a correct apprehension
of the subject-matter. But if the bent of human infirmity has wandered off
from the truth of the facts themselves,--although in the catechetical instruction
of the unlearned, where we have to keep by the most beaten track, that cannot
occur very readily,--still, lest haply it should turn out that our hearer finds
cause of offence even in this direction, we ought not to deem this to have
come upon us in any other way than as the issue of God's own wish to put us
to the test with respect to our readiness to receive correction in calmness
of mind, so as not to rush headlong, in the course of a still greater error,
into the defense of our error. But if, again, no one has told us of it, and
if the thing has altogether escaped our own notice, as well as the observation
of our hearers, then there is nothing to grieve over, provided only the same
thing does not occur a second time. For the most part, however, when we recall
what we have said, we ourselves discover something to find fault with, and
are ignorant of the manner in which it was received when it was uttered; and
so when charity is fervent within us, we are the more vexed if the thing, while
really false, has been received with unquestioning acceptance. This being the
case, then, whenever an opportunity occurs, as we have been finding fault with
ourselves in silence, we ought in like manner to see to it that those persons
be also set right on the subject in a considerate method, who have fallen into
some sort of error, not by the words of God, but plainly by those used by us.
If, on the other hand, there are any who, blinded by insensate spite, rejoice
that we have committed a mistake, whisperers as they are, and slanderers, and "hateful
to God,"(3) such characters should afford us matter for the exercise of
patience with pity, inasmuch as also the "patience of God leadeth them
to repentance."(4) For what is more detestable, and what more likely to "treasure
up wrath in the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God,"(5)
than to rejoice, after the evil likeness and pattern of the devil, in the evil
of another? At times, too, even when all is correctly and truly spoken, either
something which has not been understood, or something which, as being opposed
to the idea and wont of an old error, seems harsh in its very novelty, offends
and disturbs the hearer. But if this becomes apparent, and if the person shows
himself capable of being set right, he should be set right without any delay
by the use of abundance of authorities and reasons. On the other hand, if the
offense is tacit and hidden, the medicine of God is the effective remedy for
it. And if, again, the person starts back and declines to be cured, we should
comfort ourselves with that example of our Lord, who, when men were offended
at His word, and shrank from it as a hard saying, addressed Himself at the
same time to those who had remained, in these terms, "Will ye also go
away?"(6) For it ought to be retained as a thoroughly "fixed and
immovable" position in our heart, that Jerusalem which is in captivity
is set free from the Babylon of this world when the times have run their course,
and that none belonging to her shall perish: for whoever may perish was not
of her. "For the foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal, The
Lord knoweth them that are His; and, let every one that nameth the name of
Christ depart from iniquity."(1) If we ponder these things, and call upon
the Lord to come into our heart, we shall be less apprehensive of the uncertain
issues of our discourse, consequent on the uncertain feelings of our hearers;
and the very endurance of vexations in the cause of a work of mercy will also
be something pleasant to us, if we seek not our own glory in the same. For
then is a work truly good, when the aim of the doer gets its impetus from charity,(2)
and, as if returning to its own place, rests again in charity. Moreover, the
reading which delights us, or any listening to an eloquence superior to our
own, the effect of which is to make us inclined to set a greater value upon
it than upon the discourse which we ourselves have to deliver, and so to lead
us to speak with a reluctant or tedious utterance, will come upon us in a happier
spirit, and will be found to be more enjoyable after labor. Then, too, with
a stronger confidence shall we pray to God to speak to us as we wish, if we
cheerfully submit to let Him speak by us as we are able. Thus is it brought
about that all things come together for good to them that love God.(3)
CHAP. 12.--OF THE REMEDY FOR THE THIRD SOURCE OF WEARINESS.
17. Once more, however, we often feel it very wearisome to go over repeatedly
matters which are thoroughly familiar, and adapted (rather) to children. If
this is the case with us, then we should endeavor to meet them with a brother's,
a father's, and a mother's love; and, if we are once united with them thus
in heart, to us no less than to them will these things seem new. For so great
is the power of a sympathetic disposition of mind, that, as they are affected
while we are speaking, and we are affected while they are learning, we have
our dwelling in each other; and thus, at one and the same time, they as it
were in us speak what they hear, and we in them learn after a certain fashion
what we teach. Is it not a common occurrence with us, that when we show to
persons, who have never seen them, certain spacious and beautiful tracts, either
in cities or in fields, which we have been in the habit of passing by without
any sense of pleasure, simply because we have become so accustomed to the sight
of them, we find our own enjoyment renewed in their enjoyment of the novelty
of the scene? And this is so much the more our experience in proportion to
the intimacy of our friendship with them; because, just as we are in them in
virtue of the bond of love, in the same degree do things become new to us which
previously were old. But if we ourselves have made any considerable progress
in the contemplative study of things, it is not our wish that those whom we
love should simply be gratified and astonished as they gaze upon the works
of men's hands; but it becomes our wish to lift them to (the contemplation
of) the very skill(4) or wisdom of their author, and from this to (see them)
rise to the admiration and praise of the all-creating God, with whom(5) is
the most fruitful end of love. How much more, then, ought we to be delighted
when men come to us with the purpose already formed of obtaining the knowledge
of God Himself, with a view to (the knowledge of) whom all things should be
learned which are to be learned! And how ought we to feel ourselves renewed
in their newness (of experience), so that if our ordinary preaching is somewhat
frigid, it may rise to fresh warmth under (the stimulus of) their extraordinary
hearing! There is also this additional consideration to help us in the attainment
of gladness, namely, that we ponder and bear in mind out of what death of error
the man is passing over into the life of faith. And if we walk through streets
which are most familiar to us, with a beneficent cheerfulness, when we happen
to be pointing out the way to some individual who had been in distress in consequence
of missing his direction, how much more should be the alacrity of spirit, and
how much greater the joy with which, in the matter of saving doctrine, we ought
to traverse again and again even those tracks which, so far as we are ourselves
concerned, there is no need to open up any more; seeing that we are leading
a miserable soul, and one worn out with the devious courses of this world,
through the paths of peace, at the command of Him who made that peace(6) good
to us!
CHAP. 13.--OF THE REMEDY FOR THE FOURTH SOURCE OF WEARINESS.
18. But in good truth it is a serious demand to make upon us, to continue
discoursing on to the set limit when we fall to see our hearer in any degree
moved; whether it be that, under the restraints of the awe of religion, he
has not the boldness to signify his approval by voice or by any movement of
his body, or that he is kept back by the modesty proper to man,(1) or that
he does not understand our sayings, or that he counts them of no value. Since,
then, this must be a matter of uncertainty to us, as we cannot discern his
mind, it becomes our duty in our discourse to make trial of all things which
may be of any avail in stirring him up and drawing him forth as it were from
his place of concealment. For that sort of fear which is excessive, and which
obstructs the declaration of his judgment, ought to be dispelled by the force
of kindly exhortation; and by bringing before him the consideration of our
brotherly affinity, we should temper his reverence for us; and by questioning
him, we should ascertain whether he understands what is addressed to him; and
we should impart to him a sense of confidence, so that he may give free expression
to any objection which suggests itself to him. We should at the same time ask
him whether he has already listened to such themes on some previous occasion,
and whether perchance they fail to move him now in consequence of their being
to him like things well known and commonplace. And we ought to shape our course
in accordance with his answer, so as either to speak in a simpler style and
with greater detail of explanation, or to refute some antagonistic opinion,
or, instead of attempting any more diffuse exposition of the subjects which
are known to him, to give a brief summary of these, and to select some of those
matters which are handled in a mystical manner in the holy books, and especially
in the historical narrative, the unfolding and setting forth of which may make
our addresses more attractive. But if the man is of a very sluggish disposition,
and if he is senseless, and without anything in common with all such sources
of pleasure, then we must simply bear with him in a compassionate spirit; and,
after briefly going over other points, we ought to impress upon him, in a manner
calculated to inspire him with awe, the truths which are most indispensable
on the subject of the unity of the Catholic Church,(2) on that of temptation,
on that of a Christian conversation in view of the future judgment; and we
ought rather to address ourselves to God for him than address much to him concerning
God.
19. It
is likewise a frequent occurrence that one who at first listened to us with
all readiness, becomes
exhausted
either by the effort of hearing or
by standing, and now no longer commends what is said, but gapes and yawns,
and even unwillingly exhibits a disposition to depart. When we observe that,
it becomes our duty to refresh his mind by saying something seasoned with an
honest cheerfulness and adapted to the matter which is being discussed, or
something of a very wonderful and amazing order, or even, it may be, something
of a painful and mournful nature. Whatever we thus say may be all the better
if it affects himself more immediately, so that the quick sense of self-concern
may keep his attention on the alert. At the same time, however, it should not
be of the kind to offend his spirit of reverence by any harshness attaching
to it; but it should be of a nature fitted rather to conciliate him by the
friendliness which it breathes. Or else, we should relieve him by accommodating
him with a seat, although unquestionably matters will be better ordered if
from the outset, whenever that can be done with propriety, he sits and listens.
And indeed in certain of the churches beyond the sea, with a far more considerate
regard to the fitness of things, not only do the prelates sit when they address
the people, but they also themselves put down seats for the people, lest any
person of enfeebled strength should become exhausted by standing, and thus
have his mind diverted from the most wholesome purport (of the discourse),
or even be under the necessity of departing. And yet it is one thing if it
be simply some one out of a great multitude who withdraws in order to recruit
his strength, he being also already under the obligations which result from
participation in the sacraments; and it is quite another thing if the person
withdrawing is one (inasmuch as it is usually the case in these circumstances
that the man is unavoidably urged to that course by the fear that he should
even fall, overcome by internal weakness) who has to be initiated in the first
sacraments; for a person in this position is at once restrained by the sense
of shame from stating the reason of his going, and not permitted to stand through
the force of his weakness. This I speak from experience. For this was the case
with a certain individual, a man from the country, when I was instructing him
catechetically: and from his instance I have learned that this kind of thing
is carefully to be guarded against. For who can endure our arrogance when we
fail to make men who are our brethren,(1) or even those who are not yet in
that relation to us (for our solicitude then should be all the greater to get
them to become our brethren), to be seated in our presence, seeing that even
a woman sat as she listened to our Lord Himself, in whose service the angels
stand alert?(2) Of course if the address is to be but short, or if the place
is not well adapted for sitting, they should listen standing. But that should
be the case only when there are many hearers, and when they are not to be formally
admitted(3) at the time. For when the audience consists only of one or two,
or a few, who have come with the express purpose of being made Christians,
there is a risk in speaking to them standing. Nevertheless, supposing that
we have once begun in that manner, we ought at least, whenever we observe signs
of weariness on the part of the hearer, to offer him the liberty of being seated;
nay more, we should urge him by all means to sit down, and we ought to drop
some remark calculated at once to refresh him and to banish from his mind any
anxiety which may have chanced to break in upon him and draw off his attention.
For inasmuch as the reasons why he remains silent and declines to listen cannot
be certainly known to us, now that he is seated we may speak to some extent
against the incidence of thoughts about worldly affairs, delivering ourselves
either in the cheerful spirit to which I have already adverted, or in a serious
vein; so that, if these are the particular anxieties which have occupied his
mind, they may be made to give way as if indicted by name: while, on the other
hand, supposing them not to be the special causes (of the loss of interest),
and supposing him to be simply worn out with listening, his attention will
be relieved of the pressure of weariness when we address to him some unexpected
and extraordinary strain of remark on these subjects, in the mode of which
I have spoken, as if they were the particular anxieties,--for indeed we are
simply ignorant (of the true causes). But let the remark thus made be short,
especially considering that it is thrown in out of order, lest the very medicine
even increase the malady of weariness which we desire to relieve; and, at the
same time, we should go on rapidly with what remains, and promise and present
the prospect of a conclusion nearer than was looked for.
CHAP. 14.--OF THE REMEDY AGAINST THE FIFTH AND SIXTH SOURCES OF WEARINESS.
20. If,
again, your spirit has been broken by the necessity of giving up some other
employment, on which,
as the more requisite, you were now bent; and if
the sadness caused by that constraint makes you catechise in no pleasant mood,
you ought to ponder the fact that, excepting that we know it to be our duty,
in all our dealings with men, to act in a merciful manner, and in the exercise
of the sincerest charity,--with this one exception, I say, it is quite uncertain
to us what is the more profitable thing for us to do, and what the more opportune
thing for us either to pass by for a time or altogether to omit. For inasmuch
as we know not how the merits of men, on whose behalf we are acting, stand
with God, the question as to what is expedient for them at a certain time is
something which, instead of being able to comprehend, we can rather only surmise,
without the aid of any (clear) inferences, or (at best) with the slenderest
and the most uncertain. Therefore we ought certainly to dispose the matters
with which we have to deal according to our intelligence; and then, if we prove
able to carry them out in the manner upon which we have resolved, we should
rejoice, not indeed that it was our will, but that it was God's will, that
they should thus be accomplished. But if anything unavoidable happens, by which
the disposition thus proposed by us is interfered with, we should bend ourselves
to it readily, lest we be broken; so that the very disposition of affairs which
God has preferred to ours may also be made our own. For it is more in accordance
with propriety that we should follow His will than that He should follow ours.
Besides, as regards this order in the doing of things, which we wish to keep
in accordance with our own judgment, surely that course is to be approved of
in which objects that are superior have the precedence. Why then are we aggrieved
that the precedence over men should be held by the Lord God in His vast superiority
to us men, so that in the said love which we entertain for our own order, we
should thus (exhibit the disposition to) despise order? For "no one orders
for the better" what he has to do, except the man who is rather ready
to leave undone what he is prohibited from doing by the divine power, than
desirous of doing that which he meditates in his own human cogitations. For "there
are many devices in a man's heart; nevertheless, the counsel of the Lord stands
for ever."(4)
21. But if our mind is agitated by some cause of offense, so as not to be
capable of delivering a discourse of a calm and enjoyable strain, our charity
towards those for whom Christ died, desiring to redeem them by the price of
His own blood from the death of the errors of this world, ought to be so great,
that the very circumstance of intelligence being brought us in our sadness,
regarding the advent of some person who longs to become a Christian, ought
to be enough to cheer us and dissipate that heaviness of spirit, just as the
delights of gain are wont to soften the pain of losses. For we are not (fairly)
oppressed by the offense of any individual, unless it be that of the man whom
we either perceive or believe to be perishing himself, or to be the occasion
of the undoing of some weak one. Accordingly, one who comes to us with the
view of being formally admitted, in that we cherish the hope of his ability
to go forward, should wipe away the sorrow caused by one who fails us. For
even if the dread that our proselyte may become the child of hell(1) comes
into our thoughts, as, there are many such before our eyes, from whom those
offenses arise by which we are distressed, this ought to operate, not in the
way of keeping us back, but rather in the way of stimulating us and spurring
us on. And in the same measure we ought to admonish him whom we are instructing
to be on his guard against imitating those who are Christians only in name
and not in very truth, and to take care not to suffer himself to be so moved
by their numbers as either to be desirous of following them, or to be reluctant
to follow Christ on their account, and either to be unwilling to be in the
Church of God, where they are, or to wish to be there in such a character as
they bear. And somehow or other, in admonitions of this sort, that address
is the more glowing to which a present sense of grief supplies the fuel; so
that instead of being duller, we utter with greater fire and vehemence under
such feelings things which, in times of greater ease, we would give forth in
a colder and less energetic manner. And this should make us rejoice that an
opportunity is afforded us under which the emotions of our mind pass not away
without yielding some fruit.
22. If,
however, grief has taken possession of us on account of something in which
we ourselves
have erred
or sinned, we should bear in mind not only
that a "broken spirit is a sacrifice to God,"(3) but also the saying, "Like
as water quencheth fire, so alms sin;"(5) and again, "I will have
mercy," saith He, "rather than sacrifice."(4) Therefore, as
in the event of our being in peril from fire we would certainly run to the
water in order to get the fire extinguished, and we would be grateful if any
person were to offer it in the immediate vicinity; so, if some flame of sin
has risen from our own stack,(5) and if we are troubled on that account, when
an opportunity has been given for a most merciful work, we should rejoice in
it, as if a fountain were offered us in order that by it the conflagration
which had burst forth might be extinguished. Unless haply we are foolish enough
to think that we ought to be readier in running with bread, wherewith we may
fill the belly of a hungry man, than with the word of God, wherewith we may
instruct the mind of the man who feeds on it.(6) There is this also to consider,
namely, that if it would only be of advantage to us to do this thing, and entail
no disadvantage to leave it undone, we might despise a remedy offered in an
unhappy fashion in the time of peril with a view to the safety, not now of
a neighbor, but of ourselves. But when from the mouth of the Lord this so threatening
sentence is heard, "Thou wicked and slothful servant, thou oughtest to
give my money to the exchangers,"(7) what madness, I pray thee, is it
thus, seeing that our sin pains us, to be minded to sin again, by refusing
to give the Lord's money to one who desires it and asks it! When these and
such like considerations and reflections have succeeded in dispelling the darkness
of weary feelings, the bent of mind is rendered apt for the duty of catechising,
so that that is received in a pleasant manner which breaks forth vigorously
and cheerfully from the rich vein of charity. For these things indeed which
are uttered here are spoken, not so much by me to you, as rather to us all
by that very "love which is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit
that is given to us."(8)
CHAP. 15.--OF THE METHOD IN WHICH OUR ADDRESS SHOULD BE ADAPTED TO DIFFERENT
CLASSES OF HEARERS.
23. But
now, perhaps, you also demand of me as a debt that which, previous to the
promise which
I made,
I was under no obligation to give, namely, that
I should not count it burdensome to unfold some sort of example of the discourse
intended, and to set it before you for your study, just as if I were myself
engaged in catechising some individual. Before I do that, however, I wish you
to keep in mind the fact that the mental effort is of one kind in the case
of a person who dictates, with a future reader in his view, and that it is
of quite another kind in the case of a person who speaks with a present hearer
to whom to direct his attention. And further, it is to be remembered that,
in this latter instance in particular, the effort is of one kind when one is
admonishing in private, and when there is no other person at hand to pronounce
judgment on us; whereas it is of a different order when one is conveying any
instruction in public, and when there stands around him an audience of persons
holding dissimilar opinions; and again, that in this exercise of teaching,
the effort will be of one sort when only a single individual is being instructed,
while all the rest listen, like persons judging or attesting things well known
to them, and that it will be different when all those who are present wait
for what we have to deliver to them; and once more, that, in this same instance,
the effort will be one thing when all are seated, as it were, in private conference
with a view to engaging in some discussion, and that it will be quite another
thing when the people sit silent and intent on giving their attention to some
single speaker who is to address them from a higher position. It will likewise
make a considerable difference, even when we are discoursing in that style,
whether there are few present or many, whether they are learned or unlearned,
or made up of both classes combined; whether they are city-bred or rustics,
or both the one and the other together; or whether, again, they are a people
composed of all orders of men in due proportion. For it is impossible but that
they will affect in different ways the person who has to speak to them and
discourse with them, and that the address which is delivered will both bear
certain features, as it were, expressive of the feelings of the mind from which
it proceeds, and also influence the hearers in different ways, in accordance
with that same difference (in the speaker's disposition), while at the same
time the hearers themselves will influence one another in different ways by
the simple force of their presence with each other. But as we are dealing at
present with the matter of the instruction of the unlearned, I am a witness
to you, as regards my own experience, that I find myself variously moved, according
as I see before me, for the purposes of catechetical instruction, a highly
educated man, a dull fellow, a citizen, a foreigner, a rich man, a poor man,
a private individual, a man of honors, a person occupying some position of
authority, an individual of this or the other nation, of this or the other
age or sex, one proceeding from this or the other sect, from this or the other
common error,--and ever in accordance with the difference of my feelings does
my discourse itself at once set out, go on, and reach its end. And inasmuch
as, although the same charity is due to all, yet the same medicine is not to
be administered to all, in like manner charity itself travails with some, is
made weak together with others; is at pains to edify some, tremblingly apprehends
being an offense to others; bends to some, lifts itself erect to others; is
gentle to some, severe to others; to none an enemy, to all a mother. And when
one, who has not gone through the kind of experience to which I refer in the
same spirit of charity, sees us attaining, in virtue of some gift which has
been conferred upon us, and which carries the power of pleasing, a certain
repute of an eulogistic nature in the mouth of the multitude, he counts us
happy on that account. But may God, into whose cognizance the "groaning
of them that are bound enters,"(1) look upon our humility, and our labor,
and forgive us all our sins.(2) Wherefore, if anything in us has so far pleased
you as to make you desirous of hearing from us some remarks on the subject
of the form of discourse which you ought to follow,(2) you should acquire a
more thorough understanding of the matter by contemplating us, and listening
to us when we are actually engaged with these topics, than by a perusal when
we are only dictating them.
CHAP. 16.--A SPECIMEN OF A CATECHETICAL ADDRESS; AND FIRST, THE CASE OF A
CATECHUMEN WITH WORTHY VIEWS.
24. Nevertheless,
however that may be, let us here suppose that some one has come to us who
desires
to be
made a Christian, and who belongs indeed to the
order of private persons,(4) and yet not to the class of rustics, but to that
of the city-bred, such as those whom you cannot fail to come across in numbers
in Carthage. Let us also suppose that, on being asked whether the inducement
leading him to desire to be a Christian is any advantage looked for in the
present life, or the rest which is hoped for after this life, he has answered
that his inducement has been the rest that is yet to come. Then perchance such
a person might be instructed by us in some such strain of address as the following: "Thanks
be to God, my brother; cordially do I wish you joy, and I am glad on your account
that, amid all the storms of this world, which are at once so great and so
dangerous, you have bethought yourself of some true and certain security. For
even in this life men go in quest of rest and security at the cost: of heavy
labors, but they fail to find such in consequence of their wicked lusts. For
their thought is to find rest in things which are unquiet, and which endure
not. And these objects, inasmuch as they are withdrawn from them and pass away
in the course of time, agitate them by fears and griefs, and suffer them not
to enjoy tranquillity. For if it be that a man seeks to find his rest in wealth,
he is rendered proud rather than at ease. Do we not see how many have lost
their riches on a sudden,--how many, too, have been undone by reason of them,
either as they have been coveting to possess them, or as they have been borne
down and despoiled of them by others more covetous than themselves? And even
should they remain with the man all his life long, and never leave their lover,
yet would he himself (have to) leave them at his death. For of what measure
is the life of man, even if he lives to old age? Or when men desire for themselves
old age, what else do they really desire but long infirmity? So, too, with
the honors of this world,--what are they but empty pride and vanity, and peril
of ruin? For holy Scripture speaks in this wise: 'All flesh is grass, and the
glory of man is as the flower of grass. The grass withereth, the flower thereof
falleth away; but the word of the Lord endureth for ever.(1) Consequently,
if any man longs for true rest and true felicity, he ought to lift his hope
off things which are mortal and transitory, and fix it on the word of the Lord;
so that, cleaving to that which endures for ever, he may himself together with
it endure for ever.
25. "There
are also other men who neither crave to be rich nor go about seeking the
vain pomps
of honors,
but who nevertheless are minded to find their
pleasure and rest in dainty meats, and in fornications, and in those theatres
and spectacles which are at their disposal in great cities for nothing. But
it fares with these, too, in the same way; or they waste their small means
in luxury, and subsequently, under pressure of want, break out into thefts
and burglaries, and at times even into highway robberies, and so they are suddenly
filled with fears both numerous and great; and men who a little before were
singing in the house of revelry, are now dreaming of the sorrows of the prison.
Moreover, in their eager devotion to the public spectacles, they come to resemble
demons, as they incite men by their cries to wound each other, and instigate
those who have done them no hurt to engage in furious contests with each other,
while they seek to please an insane people. And if they perceive any such to
be peaceably disposed, they straightway hate them and persecute them, and raise
an outcry, asking that they should be beaten with clubs, as if they had been
in collusion to cheat them; and this iniquity they force even the judge, who
is the (appointed) avenger of iniquities, to perpetrate. On the other hand,
if they observe such men exerting themselves in horrid hostilities against
each other, whether they be those who are called sintoe,(2) or theatrical actors
and players,(3) or charioteers, or hunters,--those wretched men whom they engage
in conflicts and struggles, not only men with men, but even men with beasts,--then
the fiercer the fury with which they perceive these unhappy creatures rage
against each other, the better they like them, and the greater the enjoyment
they have in them; and they favor them when thus excited,(4) and by so favoring
them they excite them all the more, the spectators themselves striving more
madly with each other, as they espouse the cause of different combatants, than
is the case even with those very men whose madness they madly provoke, while
at the same time they also long to be spectators of the same in their mad frenzy.(5)
How then can that mind keep the soundness of peace which feeds on strifes and
contentions? For just as is the food which is received, such is the health
which results. In fine, although mad pleasures are no pleasures, nevertheless
let these things be taken as they are, and it still remains the case that,
whatever their nature may be, and whatever the measure of enjoyment yielded
by the boasts of riches, and the inflation of honors, and the spendthrift pleasures
of the taverns, and the contests of the theatres, and the impurity of fornications,
and the pruriency of the baths, they are all things of which one little fever
deprives us, while, even from those who still survive, it takes away the whole
false happiness of their life. Then there remains only a void and wounded conscience,
destined to apprehend that God as a Judge whom it refused to have as a Father,
and destined also to find a severe Lord in Him whom it scorned to seek and
love as a tender Father. But thou, inasmuch as thou seekest that true rest
which is promised to Christians after this life, wilt taste the same sweet
and pleasant rest even here among the bitterest troubles of this life, if thou
continuest to love the commandments of Him who hath promised the same. For
quickly wilt thou feel that the fruits of righteousness are sweeter than those
of unrighteousness, and that a man finds a more genuine and pleasurable joy
in the possession of a good conscience in the midst of troubles than in that
of an evil conscience in the midst of delights. For thou hast not come to be
united to the Church of God with the idea of seeking from it any temporal advantage.
CHAP. 17.--THE SPECIMEN OF CATECHETICAL DISCOURSE CONTINUED, IN REFERENCE
SPECIALLY TO THE REPROVAL OF FALSE AIMS ON THE CATECHUMEN'S PART.
26. "For
there are some whose reason for desiring to become Christians is either that
they may
gain the
favor of men from whom they look for temporal
advantages, or that they are reluctant to offend those whom they fear. But
these are reprobate; and although the church bears them for a time, as the
threshing-floor bears the chaff until the period of winnowing, yet if they
fail to amend and begin to be Christians in sincerity in view of the everlasting
rest which is to come, they will be separated from it in the end. And let not
such flatter themselves, because it is possible for them to be in the threshing-floor
along with the grain of God. For they will not be together with that in the
barn, but are destined for the fire, which is their due. There are also others
of better hope indeed, but nevertheless in no inferior danger. I mean those
who now fear God, and mock not the Christian name, neither enter the church
of God with an assumed heart, but still look for their felicity in this life,
expecting to have more felicity in earthly things than those enjoy who refuse
to worship God. And the consequence of this false anticipation is, that when
they see some wicked and impious men strongly established and excelling in
this worldly prosperity, while they themselves either possess it in a smaller
degree or miss it altogether, they are troubled with the thought that they
are serving God without reason, and so they readily fall away from the faith.
27. "But
as to the man who has in view that everlasting blessedness and perpetual
rest which
is promised
as the lot destined for the saints after this
life, and who desires to become a Christian, in order that he may not pass
into eternal fire with the devil, but enter into the eternal kingdom together
with Christ,(1) such an one is truly a Christian; (and he will be) on his guard
in every temptation, so that he may neither be corrupted by prosperity nor
be utterly broken in spirit by adversity, but remain at once modest and temperate
when the good things of earth abound with him, and brave and patient when tribulations
overtake him. A person of this character will also advance in attainments until
he comes to that disposition of mind which will make him love God more than
he fears hell; so that even were God to say to him, 'Avail yourself of carnal
pleasures for ever, and sin as much as you are able, and you shall neither
die nor be sent into hell, but you will only not be with me, he would be terribly
dismayed, and would altogether abstain from sinning, not now (simply) with
the purpose of not falling into that of which he was wont to be afraid, but
with the wish not to offend Him whom he so greatly loves: in whom alone also
there is the rest which eye hath not seen, neither hath ear heard, neither
hath it entered into the heart of man (to conceive),--the rest which God hath
prepared for them that love Him.(2)
28. "Now, on the subject of this rest Scripture is significant, and refrains
not to speak, when it tells us how at the beginning of the world, and at the
time when God made heaven and earth and all things which are in them, He worked
during six days, and rested on the seventh day.(3) For it was in the power
of the Almighty to make all things even in one moment of time. For He had not
labored in the view that He might enjoy (a needful) rest, since indeed "He
spake, and they were made; He commanded, and they were created;"(4) but
that He might signify how, after six ages of this world, in a seventh age,
as on the seventh day, He will rest in His saints; inasmuch as these same saints
shall rest also in Him after all the good works in which they have served Him,--which
He Himself, indeed, works in them, who calls them, and instructs them, and
puts away the offenses that are past, and justifies the man who previously
was ungodly. For as, when by His gift they work that which is good, He is Himself
rightly said to work (that in them), so, when they rest in Him, He is rightly
said to rest Himself. For, as regards Himself, He seeks no. cessation, because
He feels no labor Moreover He made all things by His Word; and His Word is
Christ Himself, in whom the angels and all those purest spirits of heaven rest
in holy silence. Man, however in that he fell by sin, has lost the rest which
he possessed in His divinity, and receives it again (now) in His humanity;
and for this purpose He became man, and was born of a woman, at the seasonable
time at which He Himself knew it behoved it so to be fulfilled And from the
flesh assuredly He could not sustain any contamination, being Himself rather
destined to purify the flesh. Of His future coming the ancient saints, in the
revelation of the Spirit, had knowledge, and prophesied. And thus were they
saved by believing that He was to come, even as we are saved by believing that
He has come. Hence ought we to love God who has so loved us as to have sent
His only Son, in order that He might endue Himself with the lowliness(1) of
our mortality, and die both at the hands of sinners and on behalf of Sinners.
For even in times of old, and in the opening ages, the depth of this mystery
ceases not to be prefigured and prophetically announced.
CHAP. 18.--OF WHAT IS TO BE BELIEVED ON THE SUBJECT OF THE CREATION OF MAN
AND OTHER OBJECTS.
29. "Whereas,
then, the omnipotent God, who is also good and just and merciful, who made
all
things,--whether
they be great or small, whether they
be highest or lowest, whether they be things which are seen, such as are the
heavens and the earth and the sea, and in the heavens, in particular, the sun
and the moon and other luminaries, and in the earth and the sea, again, trees
and shrubs and animals each after their kind, and all bodies celestial or terrestrial
alike, or whether they be things which are not seen, such as are those spirits
whereby bodies are animated and endowed with life,--made also man after His
own image, in order that, as He Himself, in virtue of His omnipotence, presides
over universal creation, so man, in virtue of that intelligence of his by which
he comes to know even his Creator and worships Him, might preside over all
the living creatures of earth: Whereas, too, he made the woman to be an helpmeet
for him: not for carnal concupiscence,--since, indeed, they had not corruptible
bodies at that period, before the punishment of sin invaded them in the form
of mortality,--but for this purpose, that the man might at once have glory
of the woman in so far as he went before her to God, and present in himself
an example to her for imitation in holiness and piety, even as he himself was
to be the glory of God in so far as he followed his wisdom:
30. "Therefore
did he place them in a certain locality of perpetual blessedness, which the
Scripture
designates Paradise: and he gave them a commandment, on
condition of not violating which they were to continue for ever in that blessedness
of immortality; while, on the other hand, if they transgressed it, they were
to sustain the penalties of mortality. Now God knew beforehand that they would
trangress it. Nevertheless, in that He is the author and maker of everything
good, He chose rather to make them, as He also made the beasts, in order that
He might replenish the earth with the good things proper to earth. And certainly
man, even sinful man, is better than a beast. And the commandment, which they
were not to keep, He yet preferred to give them, in order that they might be
without excuse when He should begin to vindicate Himself against them. For
whatever man may have done, he finds God worthy to be praised in all His doings:
if he shall have acted rightly, he finds Him worthy to be praised for the righteousness
of His rewards: if he shall have sinned, he finds Him worthy to be praised
for the righteousness of His punishments: if he shall have confessed his sins
and returned to an upright life, he finds Him worthy to be praised for the
mercy of His pardoning favors. Why, then, should God not make man, although
He foreknew that he would sin, when He might crown him if he stood, and set
him right if he fell, and help him if he rose, Himself being always and everywhere
glorious in goodness, righteousness, and clemency? Above all, why should He
not do so, since He also foreknew this, namely, that from the race of that
mortality there would spring saints, who should not seek their own, but give
glory to their Creator; and who, obtaining deliverance from every corruption
by worshipping Him, should be counted worthy to live for ever, and to live
in blessedness with the holy angels? For He who gave freedom of will to men,
in order that they might worship God not of slavish necessity but with ingenuous
inclination, gave it also to the angels; and hence neither did the angel, who,
in company with other spirits who were his satellites, forsook in pride the
obedience of God and became the devil, do any hurt to God, but to himself.
For God knoweth how to dispose of souls(1) that leave Him, and out of their
righteous misery to furnish the inferior sections of His creatures with the
most appropriate and befitting laws of His wonderful dispensation. Consequently,
neither did the devil in any manner harm God, whether in falling himself, or
in seducing man to death; nor did man himself in any degree impair the truth,
or power, or blessedness(2) of His Maker, in that, when his partner was seduced
by the devil, he of his own deliberate inclination consented unto her in the
doing of that which God had forbidden. For by the most righteous laws of God
all were condemned, God Himself being glorious in the equity of retribution,
while they were shamed through the degradation of punishment: to the end that
man, when he turned away from his Creator, should be overcome by the devil
and made his subject, and that the devil might be set before man as an enemy
to be conquered, when he turned again to his Creator; so that whosoever should
consent unto the devil even to the end, might go with him into eternal punishments;
whereas those who should humble themselves to God, and by His grace overcome
the devil, might be counted worthy of eternal rewards.
CHAP. 19.--OF THE CO-EXISTENCE OF GOOD AND EVIL IN THE CHURCH, AND THEIR FINAL
SEPARATION.
31. "Neither
ought we to be moved by the consideration that many consent unto the devil,
and
few follow
God; for the grain, too, in comparison with
the chaff, has greatly the defect in number. But even as the husbandman knows
what to do with the mighty heap of chaff, so the multitude of sinners is nothing
to God, who knows what to do with them, so as not to let the administration
of His kingdom be disordered and dishonored in any part. Nor is the devil to
be supposed to have proved victorious for the mere reason of his drawing away
with him more than the few by whom he may be overcome. In this way there are
two communities--one of the ungodly, and another of the holy--which are carried
down from the beginning of the human race even to the end of the world, which
are at present commingled in respect of bodies, but separated in respect of
wills, and which, moreover, are destined to be separated also in respect of
bodily presence in the day of judgment. For all men who love pride and temporal
power with vain elation and pomp of arrogance, and all spirits who set their
affections on such things and seek their own glory in the subjection of men,
are bound fast together in one association; nay, even although they frequently
fight against each other on account of these things, they are nevertheless
precipitated by the like weight of lust into the same abyss, and are united
with each other by similarity of manners and merits. And, again, all men and
all spirits who humbly seek the glory of God and not their own, and who follow
Him in piety, belong to one fellowship. And, notwithstanding this, God is most
merciful and patient with ungodly men, and offers them a place for penitence
and amendment.
32. "For
with respect also to the fact that He destroyed all men in the flood, with
the exception
of
one righteous man together with his house, whom
He willed to be saved in the ark, He knew indeed that they would not amend
themselves; yet, nevertheless, as the building of the ark went on for the space
of a hundred years, the wrath of God which was to come upon them was certainly
preached to them:(3) and if they only would have turned to God, He would have
spared them, as at a later period He spared the city of Nineveh when it repented,
after He had announced to it, by means of a prophet, the destruction that was
about to overtake it.(4) Thus, moreover, God acts, granting a space for repentance
even to those who He knows will persist in wickedness, in order that He may
exercise and instruct our patience by His own example; whereby also we may
know how greatly it befits us to bear with the evil in long-suffering, when
we know not what manner of men they will prove hereafter, seeing that He, whose
cognizance nothing that is yet to be escapes, spares them and suffers them
to live. Under the sacramental sign of the flood, however, in which the righteous
were rescued by the wood, there was also a fore-announcement of the Church
which was to be, which Christ, its King and God, has raised on high; by the
mystery of His cross, in safety from the submersion of this world. Moreover,
God was not ignorant of the fact that, even of those who had been saved in
the ark, there would be born wicked men, who would cover the face of the earth
a second time with iniquities. But, nevertheless, He both gave them a pattern
of the future judgment, and fore-announced the deliverance of the holy by the
mystery of the wood. For even after these things wickedness did not cease to
sprout forth again through pride, and lusts, and illicit impieties, when men,
forsaking their Creator, not only fell to the (standard of the) creature which
God made, so as to worship instead of God that which God made, but even bowed
their souls to the works of the hands of men and to the contrivances of craftsmen,
wherein a more shameful triumph was to be won over them by the devil, and by
those evil spirits who rejoice in finding themselves adored and reverenced
in such false devices, while they feed(1) their own errors with the errors
of men.
33. "But
in truth there were not wanting in those times righteous men also of the
kind to seek
God piously
and to overcome the pride of the devil,
citizens of that holy community, who were made whole by the humiliation of
Christ, which was then only destined to enter, but was revealed to them by
the Spirit. From among these, Abraham, a pious and faithful servant of God,
was chosen, in order that to him might be shown the sacrament of the Son of
God, so that thus, in virtue of the imitation of his faith, all the faithful
of all nations might be called his children in the future. Of him was born
a people, by whom the one true God who made heaven and earth should be worshipped
when all other nations did service to idols and evil spirits. In that people,
plainly, the future Church was much more evidently prefigured. For in it there
was a carnal multitude that worshipped God with a view to visible benefits.
But in it there were also a few who thought of the future rest, and looked
longingly for the heavenly fatherland, to whom through prophecy was revealed
the coming humiliation of God in the person of our King and Lord Jesus Christ,
in order that they might be made whole of all pride and arrogance through that
faith. And with respect to these saints who in point of time had precedence
of the birth of the Lord, not only their speech, but also their life, and their
marriages, and their children, and their doings, constituted a prophecy of
this time, at which the Church is being gathered together out of all nations
through faith in the passion of Christ. By the instrumentality of those holy
patriarchs and prophets this carnal people of Israel, who at a later period
were also called Jews, had ministered unto them at once those visible benefits
which they eagerly desired of the Lord in a carnal manner, and those chastisements,
in the form of bodily punishments, which were intended to terrify them for
the time, as was befitting for their obstinacy. And in all these, nevertheless,
there were also spiritual mysteries signified, such as were meant to bear upon
Christ and the Church; of which Church those saints also were members, although
they existed in this life previous to the birth of Christ, the Lord, according
to the flesh. For this same Christ, the only-begotten Son of God, the Word
of the Father, equal and co-eternal with the Father, by whom all things were
made, was Himself also made man for our sakes, in order that of the whole Church,
as of His whole body, He might be the Head. But just as when the whole man
is in the process of being born, although he may put the hand forth first in
the act of birth, yet is that hand joined and compacted together with the whole
body under the bead, even as also among these same patriarchs some were born(2)
with the hand put forth first as a sign of this very thing: so all the saints
who lived upon the earth previous to the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ, although
they were born antecedently, were nevertheless united under the Head with that
universal body of which He is the Head.
CHAP. 20.--OF ISRAEL'S BONDAGE IN EGYPT, THEIR DELIVERANCE, AND THEIR PASSAGE
THROUGH THE RED SEA.
34. "That people, then, having been brought down into Egypt, were in
bondage to the harshest of kings; and, taught by the most oppressive labors,
they sought their deliverer in God; and there was sent to them one belonging
to the people themselves, Moses, the holy servant of God, who, in the might
of God, terrified the impious nation of the Egyptians in those days by great
miracles, and led forth the people of God out of that land through the Red
Sea, where the water parted and opened up a way for them as they crossed it,
whereas, when the Egyptians pressed on in pursuit, the waves returned to their
channel and overwhelmed them, so that they perished. Thus, then, just as the
earth through the agency of the flood was cleansed by the waters from the wickedness
of the sinners, who in those times were destroyed in their inundation, while
the righteous escaped by means of the wood; so the people of God, when they
went