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ST.
AUGUSTIN
CONCERNING
FAITH OF THINGS NOT SEEN
DE FIDE RERUM QUAE NON VIDENTUR
1. THERE are those who think that the Christian religion is what we should
smile at rather than hold fast, for this reason, that, in it, not what may
be seen, is shown, but men are commanded faith of things which are not seen.
We therefore, that we may refute these, who seem to themselves through prudence
to be unwilling to believe what they cannot see, although we are not able to
show unto human sight those divine things which we believe, yet do show unto
human minds that even those things which are not seen are to be believed. And
first they are to be admonished, (whom folly hath so made subject to their
carnal eyes, as that, whatsoever they see not through them, they think not
that they are to believe,) how many things they not only believe but also know,
which cannot be seen by such eyes. Which things being without number in our
mind itself, (the nature of which mind is incapable of being seen,) not to
mention others, the very faith whereby we believe, or the thought whereby we
know that we either believe any thing, or believe not, being as it is altogether
alien from the sight of those eyes; what so naked, so clear, what so certain
is there to the inner eyes of our minds? How then are we not to believe what
we see not with the eyes of the body, whereas, either that we believe, or that
we believe not, in a case where we cannot apply the eyes of the body, we without
any doubt see?
2. But, say they, those things which are in the mind, in that we can by the
mind itself discern them, we have no need to know through the eyes of the body;
but those things, which you say unto us that we should believe, you neither
point to without, that through the eyes of the body we may know them; nor are
they within, in our own mind, that by exercising thought we may see them. And
these things they so say, as though any one would be bidden to believe, if
that, which is believed, he could already see set before him. Therefore certainly
ought we to believe certain temporal things also, which we see not, that we
may merit(1) to see eternal things also, which we believe. But, whosoever thou
art who wilt not believe save what thou seest, lo, bodies that are present
thou seest with the eyes of the body, wills and thoughts of thine own that
are present, because they are in thine own mind, thou seest by the mind itself;
tell me, I pray thee, thy friend's will towards thee by what eyes seest thou?
For no will can be seen by the eyes of the body. What? see you in your own
mind this also which is going on in the mind of another? But if you see it
not, how do you repay in turn the good will of your friend, if what you cannot
see, you believe not? Will you haply say that you see the will of another through
his works? Therefore you will see acts, and hear words, butt concerning your
friend's will, that which cannot be seen and heard you will believe. For that
will is not color or figure, so as to be thrown upon the eyes; or sound or
strain, so as to glide into the ears nor indeed is it your own, so as to be
perceived by the motion(1) of your own heart. It remains therefore that, being
neither seen, nor heard, nor beheld within thyself, it be believed, that thy
life be not left deserted without any friendship, or affection bestowed upon
thee be not repaid by thee in return. Where then is that which thou saidest,
that thou oughtest not to believe, save what thou sawest either outwardly in
the body, or inwardly in the heart? Lo, out of thine own heart, thou believest
an heart not thine own; and lendest thy faith, where thou dost not direct the
glance of thy body or of thy mind. Thy friend's face thou discernest by thy
own body, thy own faith thou discernest by thine own mind; but thy friend's
faith is not loved by thee, unless there be in thee in return that faith, whereby
thou mayest believe that which m him thou seest not. Although a man may also
deceive by feigning good will, and hiding malice: or, if he have no thought
to do harm, yet by expecting some benefit from thee, feigns, because he has
not, love.
3. But you say, that you therefore believe your friend, whose heart you cannot
see, because you have proved him in your trials, and have come to know of what
manner of spirit he was towards you in your dangers, wherein he deserted you
not. Seemeth it therefore to you that we must wish for our own affliction,
that our friend's love towards us may be proved? And shall no man be happy
in most sure friends, unless he shall be unhappy through adversity? so that,
forsooth, he enjoy not the tried love of the other, unless he be racked by
pain and fear of his own? And how in the having of true friends can that happiness
be wished for, and not rather feared, which nothing save unhappiness can put
to the proof? And yet it is true that a friend may be had also in prosperity,
but proved more surely in adversity. But assuredly in order to prove him, neither
would you commit yourself to dangers of your own, unless you believed; and
thus, when you commit yourself in order to prove, you believe before you prove.
For surely, if we ought not to believe things not seen,(2) since indeed we
believe the hearts of our friends, and that, not yet surely proved; and, after
we shall have proved them good by our own ills, even then we believe rather
than see their good will towards us: except that so great is faith, that, not
unsuitably, we judge that we see, with certain eyes of it, that which we believe,
whereas we ought therefore to believe, because we cannot see.
4. If this faith be taken away from human affairs, who but must observe how
great disorder in them, and how fearful confusion must follow? For who will
be loved by any with mutual affection, (being that the loving(3) itself is
invisible,) if what I see not, I ought not to believe? Therefore will the whole
of friendship perish, in that it consists not save of mutual love. For what
of it will it be able to receive from any, if nothing of it shall be believed
to be shown? Further, friendship perishing, there will be preserved in the
mind the bonds neither of marriages, nor of kindreds and relations; because
in these also there is assuredly a friendly union of sentiment. Spouse therefore
will not be able to love spouse in turn, inasmuch as each believes not the
other's love, because the love itself cannot be seen. Nor will they long to
have sons, who they believe not will make them a return. And if these be born
and grow up, much less will the parents themselves love their own children,
whose love towards themselves in those children's hearts they will not see,
it being invisible; if it be not praiseworthy faith, but blameable rashness,
to believe those things which are not seen. Why should I now speak of the other
connections, of brothers, sisters, sons-in-law, and fathers-in-law, and of
them who are joined together by any kindred or affinity, if love is uncertain,
and the will suspected, that of parents by sons, and that of sons by parents,
whilst due benevolence is not rendered; because neither is it thought to be
due, that which is not seen in another not being thought to exist. Further,
if this caution be not a mark of ability,(4) but be hateful, wherein we believe
not that we are loved, because we see not the love of them who love, and repay
not them, unto whom we think not that we owe a return; to that degree are human
affairs thrown into disorder, if what we see not we believe not, as to be altogether
and utterly overthrown, if we believe no wills of men, which assuredly we cannot
see. I omit to mention in how many things they, who find fault with us because
we believe what we see not, believe report or history; or concerning places
where they have not themselves been; and say not, we believe not, because we
have not seen. Since if they say this, they are obliged to confess that their
own parents are not surely known to them: because on this point also they have
believed the accounts of others telling of it, who yet are unable to show it,
because it is a thing already past; retaining themselves no sense of that time,
and yet yielding assent without any doubting to others speaking of that time:
and unless this be done, there must of necessity be incurred a faithless impiety
towards parents, whilst we are, as it were, showing a rashness of belief in
those things which we cannot see Since therefore, if we believe not those things
which we cannot see, human society itself, through concord perishing, will
not stand how much more is faith to be applied to divine things, although they
be not seen; failing the application of which, it is not the friendship of
some men or other, but the very thiefest bond of piety(1) that is violated,
so as for the chiefest misery to follow.
5. But
you will say, the good will of a friend towards me, although I cannot see
it, yet can I trace
it out
by many proofs; but you, what things you will
us to believe not being seen, you have no proofs whereby to show them. In the
mean time it is no slight thing, that you confess that by reason of the clearness
of certain proofs, some things, even such as are not seen, ought to be believed:
for even thus it is agreed, that not all things which are not seen, are not
to be believed; and that saying, "that we ought not to believe things
which we see not," falls to the ground, cast away, and refuted. But they
are much deceived, who think that we believe in Christ without any proofs concerning
Christ. For what are there clearer proofs than those things, which we now see
to have been foretold and fulfilled? Wherefore do ye, who think that there
are no proofs why ye ought to believe concerning Christ those things which
ye have not seen, give heed to what things ye see. The Church herself addresses
you out of the mouth of a mother's love: "I, whom ye view with wonder
throughout the whole world, bearing fruit and increasing, was not once such
as ye now behold me." But, "In thy Seed shall all nations be blessed."(2)
When God blessed Abraham, He gave the promise of me; for throughout all nations
in the blessing of Christ am I shed abroad. That Christ is the Seed of Abraham,
the order of successive generations bears witness, Shortly to sum up which,
Abraham begat Isaac, Isaac begat Jacob, Jacob begat twelve sons, of whom sprung
the people Israel. For Jacob himself was called israel. Among these twelve
sons he begat Judah, whence the Jews have their name, of whom was born the
Virgin Mary, who bore Christ. And, lo, in Christ, that is, in the seed of Abraham,
that all the nations are blessed, ye see and are amazed: and do ye still fear
to believe in Him, in Whom ye ought rather to have feared not to believe? What?
doubt ye, or refuse ye to believe, the travail of a Virgin, whereas ye ought
rather to believe that it was fitting that so God should be born Man. For this
also receive ye to have been foretold by the Prophet;(3) "Behold, a Virgin
shall conceive in the womb, and shall bring forth a Son, and they shall call
His Name Emmanuel, which is, being interpreted, God with us." Ye will
not therefore doubt of a Virgin bringing forth, if ye be willing to believe
of a God being born; leaving not the governance of the world, and coming unto
men in the flesh; unto His Mother bringing fruitfulness, not taking away maidenhood.
For thus behoved it that He should be born as Man, albeit(4) He was ever(5)
God, by which birth He might become a God unto us. Hence again the Prophet
says concerning Him, "Thy Throne, O God, is for ever and ever; a sceptre
of right, the sceptre of Thy Kingdom. Thou hast loved righteousness, and hated
iniquity; therefore God, Thy God, hath anointed Thee with the oil of gladness
above Thy fellows."(6) This anointing is spiritual, wherewith God anointed
God, the Father, that is, the Son: whence called from the "Chrism," that
is, from the anointing, we know Him as Christ. I am the Church, concerning
whom it is said unto Him in the same Psalm, and what was future foretold as
already done; "There stood at Thy right hand the Queen, in a vesture of
gold, in raiment of divers colors;" that is, in the mystery of wisdom, "adorned
with divers tongues." There it said unto me, "Hearken, O daughter,
and see, and incline thine ear, and forget thy own people and thy father's
house: for the King hath desired thy beauty: seeing that He is the Lord thy
God: and the daughters of Tyre shall worship Him with gifts, thy face shall
all the rich of the people entreat. All the glory of that King's daughter is
within, in fringes of gold, with raiment of divers colors. There shall be brought
unto the King the maidens after her; her companions shall be brought unto Thee.
They shall be brought with joy and gladness, they shall be brought into the
Temple of the King. Instead of thy fathers, there are born unto thee sons,
thou shall set them as princes over the whole earth. They shall be mindful
of thy name, even from generation to generation. Therefore shall the people
confess unto thee for ever, and for ever and ever.
6. If
this Queen ye see not, now rich also with royal progeny. If she see not that
fulfilled which
she heard
to have been promised, she, unto whom it
was said, "Hear, O daughter, and see." If she hath not left the ancient
rites of the world, she, unto whom it was said, "Forget thy own people
and thy Father's house." If she confesses not every where Christ the Lord,
she, unto whom it was said, "The King hath desired thy beauty, for He
is the Lord thy God." If she sees not the cities of the nations pour forth
prayers and offer gifts unto Christ, concerning. Whom it was said unto her, "There
shall worship Him the daughters of Tyre with gifts." If the pride also
of the rich is not laid aside, and they do not entreat help of the Church,
unto whom it was said, "Thy face shall all the rich of the people entreat." If
He acknowledges not the King's daughter, unto Whom she was bidden to say, "Our
Father Who art in Heaven;"(1) and in her saints in the inner man she is
not renewed from day to day, concerning whom it was said, "All the glory
of that King's daughter is within:" although she strike upon the eyes
of them also that are without with the blaze(2) of the fame of her preachers,
in diversity of tongues, as "in fringes of gold, and raiment of divers
colors." If there be not, now that His fame is spread abroad in every
place by His good odor,(3) virgins also brought unto Christ to be consecrated,
of Whom it is said, and to Whom it is said, "There shall be brought unto
the King the virgins after her, her companions shall be brought unto Thee." And
that they might not seem to be brought like captives, into some, as it were,
prison, be says, "They shall be brought in joy and gladness, they shall
be brought into the King's temple." If she brings not forth sons, that
of them she may have, as it were, fathers, whom she may appoint unto herself
every where as rulers, she, unto whom it is said, "Instead of thy fathers
there are born unto thee sons, thou shall set them as princes over the whole
earth:" unto whose prayers their mother both preferred and made subject,
commends herself, "They shall be mindful of thy name, even from generation
to generation." If, by reason of the preaching of those same fathers,
wherein they have without ceasing made mention of her name, there are not so
great multitudes in her gathered together, and without end in their own tongues
unto her confess the praise of grace, unto whom it is said, "Therefore
shall the people confess unto thee for ever, and for ever and ever." If
these things are not so shown to be clear, as that the eyes of enemies find
not in what direction to turn aside, where the same clearness strikes them
not, so as by it to be obliged to confess what is evident: you perhaps assert
with reason, that no proofs are shown to you, by seeing which you may believe
those things also which you see not. But if those things, which you see, both
have been foretold long before, and are so clearly fulfilled; if the truth
itself makes itself clear to you, by effects(4) going before and following
after, O remnant of unbelief, that ye may believe the things which you see
not, blush at those things which ye see.
7. "Give heed unto me," the Church says unto you; give heed unto
me, whom ye see, although to see ye be unwilling. For the faithful, who were
in those times in the land of Judaea, were present at, and learnt as present,
Christ's wonderful birth of a virgin, and His passion, resurrection, ascension;
all His divine words and deeds. These things ye have not seen, and therefore
ye refuse to believe. Therefore behold these things, fix your eyes on these
things, these things which ye see reflect on, which are not told you as things
past, nor foretold you as things future, but are shown you as things present.
What? seemeth it to you a vain or a light thing. and think you it to be none,
or a little, divine miracle, that in the name of One Crucified the whole human
race runs? Ye saw not what was foretold and fulfilled concerning the human
birth of Christ, "Behold, a Virgin shall conceive in the womb, and shall
bear a Son;"(5) but you see the Word of God which was foretold and fulfilled
unto Abraham, "In thy seed shall all nations be blessed."(6) Ye saw
not what was foretold concerning the wonderful works of Christ, "Come
ye, and see the works of the Lord, what wonders He hath set upon the earth:"(7)
but ye see that which was foretold, "The Lord said unto Me, My Son art
Thou, I have this day begotten Thee; demand of Me and I will give Thee nations
as Thy inheritance, and as Thy possession the bounds of the earth."(1)
Ye saw not that which was foretold and fulfilled concerning the Passion of
Christ, "They pierced My hands and My feet, they numbered all My bones;
but they themselves regarded and beheld Me; they divided among them My garments,
and upon My vesture they cast the lot;"(2) but ye see that which was in
the same Psalm foretold, and now is clearly fulfilled; "All the ends of
the earth shall remember and be turned unto the Lord, and all the kindreds
of the nations shall worship in His sight; for the kingdom is the Lord's, and
He shall rule over the nations."(3) Ye saw not what was foretold and fulfilled
concerning the Resurrection of Christ, the Psalm speaking, in His Person, first
concerning His betrayer and persecutors: "They went forth out of doors,
and spake together: against Me whispered all My enemies, against Me thought
they evil for Me;" they set in order an unrighteous word against Me.(4)
Where, to show that they avalled nothing by slaying Him Who was about to rise
again, He adds and says; "What? will not He, that sleeps, add this, that
He rise again?" And a little after, when He had foretold, by means of
the same prophecy, concerning His betrayer himself, that which is written in
the Gospel also, "He that did eat of My bread, enlarged his heel upon
Me,"(5) that is, trampled Me under foot: He straightway added, "But
do Thou, O Lord, have mercy upon Me, and raise Thou Me up again, and I shall
repay them." This was fulfilled, Christ slept and awoke, that is, rose
again: Who through the same prophecy in another Psalm says, "I slept and
took my rest; and I rose again, for the Lord will uphold Me."(6) But this
ye saw not, but ye see His Church, concerning whom it is written in like manner,
and fulfilled, "O Lord My God, the nations shall come unto Thee from the
extremity of the earth and shall say, Truly our fathers worshipped lying images,
and there is not in them any profit."(7) This certainly, whether ye will
or no, ye behold; even although ye yet believe, that there either is, or was,
in those idols some profit; yet certainly unnumbered peoples of the nations,
after having left, or cast away, or broken in pieces such like vanities, ye
have heard say, "Truly our fathers worshipped lying images, and there
is not in them any profit; shall a man make gods, and, lo, they are no gods?"(8)
Nor think that it was foretold that the nations should come unto some one place
of God, in that it was said, "Unto Thee shall the nations come from the
extremity of the earth." Understand, if you can, that unto the God of
the Christians, Who is the Supreme and True God, the peoples of the nations
come, not by walking but by believing. For the same thing was by another prophet
thus foretold, "The Lord," saith he, "shall prevail against
them, and shall utterly destroy all the gods of the nations of the earth: and
all the isles of the nations shall worship Him, each man from his place."(9)
Whereas the one says, "Unto Thee all nations shall come;" this the
other says, "They shall worship Him, each man from his place." Therefore
they shall come unto Him, not departing from their own place, because believing
in Him they shall find Him in their hearts. Ye saw not what was foretold and
fulfilled concerning the ascension of Christ; "Be Thou exalted above the
Heavens, O God;"(10) but ye see what follows immediately after, "And
above all the earth Thy Glory." Those things concerning Christ already
done and past, all of them ye have not seen; but these things present in His
Church ye deny not that ye see. Both things we point out to you as foretold;
but the fulfillment of both we are therefore unable to point out for you to
see, because we cannot bring back into sight things past.
8. But as the wills of friends, which are not seen, are believed through tokens
which are seen; thus the Church, which is now seen, is, of all things which
are not seen, but which are shown forth in those writings wherein itself also
is foretold, an index of the past, and a herald of the future. Because both
things past, which cannot now be seen, and things present which cannot be seen
all of them, at the time at which they were foretold, no one of these could
then be seen. Therefore, since they have begun to come to pass as they were
foretold, from those things which have come to pass unto those which are coming
to pass, those things which were foretold concerning Christ and the Church
have run on in an ordered series: unto which series these pertain concerning
the day of Judgment, concerning the resurrection of the dead, concerning the
eternal damnation of the ungodly with the devil, and concerning the eternal
recompense of the godly with Christ, things which, foretold in like manner,
are yet to come. Why therefore should we not believe the first and the last
things which we see not, when we have, as witnesses of both, the things between,
which we see, and in the books of the Prophets either hear or read both the
first things, and the things between, and the last things, foretold before
they came to pass? Unless haply unbelieving men judge those things to have
been written by Christians, in order that those things which they already believed
might have greater weight of authority, if they should be thought to have been
promised before they came.
9. If
they suspect this, let them examine carefully the copies(1) of our enemies
the Jews. There let
them read
those things of which we have made mention, foretold
concerning Christ in Whom we believe, and the Church whom we discern from the
toilsome beginning of faith even unto the eternal blessedness of the kingdom.
But, whilst they read, let them not wonder that they, whose are the, books,
understand not by reason of the darkness of enmity. For that they would not
Understand was foretold beforehand by the same Prophets; which it behoved should
be fulfilled in like manner as the rest, and that by the secret and just judgment
of Coda due punishment should be rendered to their deserts. He indeed, Whom
they crucified, and unto Whom they gave gall and vinegar, although when hanging
upon the Tree, by reason of those whom He had been about to lead forth from
darkness into light, He said unto the Father, "Forgive them, for they
know not what they do;"(2) yet by reason of those whom through more hidden
causes He had been about to desert, by the Prophet so long before foretold, "They
gave Me gall for My meat, and in My thirst they gave Me vinegar to drink; let
their table become a snare before them, and a recompense, and a stumbling-block:
let their eyes be darkened that they see not, and ever bow Thou down their
back."(3) Thus, having with them the clearest testimonies of our cause,
they walk round about with eyes darkened, that by their means those testimonies
may be proved, wherein they themselves are disapproved. Therefore was it brought
to pass, that they should not be so blotted out, as that this same sect should
altogether exist not: but it was scattered abroad upon the earth, in order
that, carrying with it the prophecies of the grace conferred upon us, more
surely to convince unbelievers, it might every where profit us. And this very
thing which I assert, receive ye after what manner it was prophesied of: "Slay
them not," saith He, "lest at any time they forget Thy law, but scatter
them abroad in Thy might."(4) Therefore they were not slain, in that they
forgot not those things which were read and heard among them. For if they were
altogether to forget, albeit they understand not, the Holy Scriptures, they
would be slain in the Jewish ritual itself; because, when the Jews should know
nothing of the Law and of the Prophets, they would be unable to profit us.
Therefore they were not slain, but scattered abroad; in order that, although
they should not have in faith, whence they might be saved; yet they should
retain in their memory, whence we might be helped; in their books our supporters,
in their hearts our enemies, in their copies our witnesses.
10. Although,
even if there went before no testimonies concerning Christ and the Church,
whom ought
it not
to move unto belief, that the Divine brightness
hath on a sudden shone on the human race, when we see, (the false gods now
abandoned, and their images every where broken in pieces, their temples overthrown
or changed into other uses, and so many vain rites plucked out by the roots
from the most inveterate usage of men,) the One True God invoked by all? And
that this hath been brought to pass-by One Man, by men mocked, seized, bound,
scourged, smitten with the palms of the hand, reviled, crucified, slain: His
disciples, (whom He chose common men,(5) and unlearned, and fishermen, and
publicans, that by their means His teaching might be set forth,) proclaiming
His Resurrection, His Ascension, which they asserted that they had seen, and
being filled with the Holy Ghost, sounded forth this Gospel, in all tongues
which they had not learned. And of them who heard them, part believed, part,
believing not, fiercely withstood them who preached. Thus while they were faithful
even unto death for the truth, strove not by returning evil, but by enduring,
overcame not by killing, but by dying; thus was the world changed unto this
religion, thus unto this Gospel were the hearts of mortals turned, of men and
women, of small and great, of learned and unlearned, of wise and foolish, of
mighty and weak, of noble and ignoble, of high and low, and, throughout all
nations the Church shed abroad so increased, that even against the Catholic
faith itself there arises not any perverse sect, any kind of error, which is
found so to oppose itself to Christian truth, as that it affect not and go
not about to glory in the name of Christ: which very error would not be suffered
to spring up throughout the earth, were it riot that the very gainsaying exercised
an wholesome discipline. How(6) would The Crucified have availed so greatly,
had He not been God that took upon Him Man, even if He had through the Prophet
foretold no such things to come? But when now this so great mystery of godliness
hath had its prophets and heralds going before, by whose divine voices it was
afore proclaimed; and when it hath come in such manner as it was afore proclaimed,
who is there so mad as to assert that the Apostles lied concerning Christ,
of Whom they preached that He was come in such manner as the Prophets foretold
afore that He should come, which Prophets were not silent as to true things
to come concerning the Apostles themselves? For concerning these they had said, "There
is neither speech nor language, whereof their voices are not heard; their sound
went out into all the earth, and their words unto the ends of the world."(1)
And this at any rate we see fulfilled in the world, although we have not yet
seen Christ in the flesh. Who therefore, unless blinded by amazing madness,
or hard and Steeled by amazing obstinacy, would be unwilling to put faith in
the sacred Scriptures, which have foretold the faith of the whole world?
11. But
you, beloved, who possess this faith, or who have begun now newly to have
it, let it be
nourished and
increase in you. For as things temporal
have come, so long before foretold, so will things eternal also come, which
are promised. Nor let them deceive you, either the vain heathen, or the false
Jews, or the deceitful heretics, or also within the Catholic (Church) itself
evil Christians, enemies by so much the more hurtful, as they are the more
within us. For, lest on this subject also the weak should be troubled, divine
prophecy hath not been silent, where in the Song of Songs the Bridegroom speaking
unto the Bride, that is, Christ the Lord unto the Church, saith, "As a
lily in the midst of thorns, so is my best Beloved(2) in the midst of the daughters."(3)
He said not, in the midst of them that are without; but, "in the midst
of daughters. Whoso hath ears to hear, let him hear:"(4) and whilst the
net which is cast into the sea,(5) and gathers together all kinds of fishes,
as saith the holy Gospel, is being drawn unto the shore, that is, unto the
end of the world, let him separate himself from the evil fishes, in heart,
not in body; by changing evil habits, not by breaking sacred nets; lest they
who now seem being approved to be mingled with the reprobate, find, not life,
but punishment everlasting,(6) when they shall begin on the shore to be separated.
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