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THE FIFTEEN BOOKS OF
AURELIUS AUGUSTINUS
BISHOP OF HIPPO
ON THE TRINITY
BOOK IX.
THAT A KIND OF TRINITY EXISTS IN MAN, WHO IS THE IMAGE OF GOD, VIZ. THE MIND,
AND THE KNOWLEDGE WHEREWITH THE MIND KNOWS ITSELF, AND THE LOVE WHEREWITH IT
LOVES BOTH ITSELF AND ITS OWN KNOWLEDGE; AND THESE THREE ARE SHOWN TO BE MUTUALLY
EQUAL, AND OF ONE ESSENCE.
CHAP. 1.--IN WHAT WAY WE MUSTINQUIRE CONCERNING THE TRINITY.
1. WE
certainly seek a trinity,--not any trinity, but that Trinity which is God,
and the true and
supreme and
only God. Let my hearers then wait, for we
are still seeking. And no one justly finds fault with such a search, if at
least he who seeks that which either to know or to utter is most difficult,
is steadfast in the faith. But whosoever either sees or teaches better, finds
fault quickly and justly with any one who confidently affirms concerning it. "Seek
God," he says, "and your heart shall live;"(1) and lest any
one should rashly rejoice that he has, as it were, apprehended it, "Seek," he
says, "His face evermore."(2) And the apostle: "if any man," he
says, "think that he knoweth anything, he knoweth nothing yet as he ought
to know. But if any man love God, the same is known of Him."(3) He has
not said, has known Him, which is dangerous presumption, but "is known
of Him." So also in another place, when he had said, "But now after
that ye have known God:" immediately correcting himself, he says, "or
rather are known of God."(4) And above all in that other place, "Brethren," he
says, "I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing I do,
forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things
which are before, I press in purpose(5) toward the mark, for the prize of the
high calling of God in Christ Jesus. Let us therefore, as many as be perfect,
be thus minded."(6) Perfection in this life, he tells us, is nothing else
than to forget those things which are behind, and to reach forth and press
in purpose toward those things which are before. For he that seeks has the
safest purpose, [who seeks] until that is taken hold of whither we are tending,
and for which we are reaching forth. But that is the right purpose which starts
from faith. For a certain faith is in some way the starting-point of knowledge;
but a certain knowledge will not be made perfect, except after this life, when
we shall see face to face.(7) Let us therefore be thus minded, so as to know
that the disposition to seek the truth is more safe than that which presumes
things unknown to be known. Let us therefore so seek as if we should find,
and so find as if we were about to seek. For "when a man hath done, then
he beginneth."(8) Let us doubt without unbelief of things to be believed;
let us affirm without rashness of things to be understood: authority must be
held fast in the former, truth sought out in the latter. As regards this question,
then, let us believe that the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit is one
God, the Creator and Ruler of the whole creature; and that the Father is not
the Son, nor the Holy Spirit either the Father or the Son, but a trinity of
persons mutually interrelated, and a unity of an equal essence. And let us
seek to understand this, praying for help from Himself, whom we wish to understand;
and as much as He grants, desiring to explain what we understand with so much
pious care and anxiety, that even if in any case we say one thing for another,
we may at least say nothing unworthy. As, for the sake of example, if we say
anything concerning the Father that does not properly belong to the Father,
or does belong to the Son, or to the Holy Spirit, or to the Trinity itself;
and if anything of the Son which does not properly suit with the Son, or at
all events which does suit with the Father, or with the Holy Spirit, or with
the Trinity; or if, again, anything concerning the Holy Spirit, which is not
fitly a property of the Holy Spirit, yet is not alien from the Father, or from
the Son, or from the one God the Trinity itself. Even as now our wish is to
see whether the Holy Spirit is properly that love which is most excellent which
if He is not, either the Father is love, or the Son, or the Trinity itself;
since we cannot withstand the most certain faith and weighty authority of Scripture,
saying, "God is love."(1) And yet we ought not to deviate into profane
error, so as to say anything of the Trinity which does not suit the Creator,
but rather the creature, or which is feigned outright by mere empty thought.
CHAP. 2.--THE THREE THINGS WHICH ARE FOUND IN LOVE MUST BE CONSIDERED.(2)
2. And this being so, let us direct our attention to those three things which
we fancy we have found. We are not yet speaking of heavenly things, nor yet
of God the Father, and Son, and Holy Spirit, but of that inadequate image,
which yet is an image, that is, man; for our feeble mind perhaps can gaze upon
this more familiarly and more easily. Well then, when I, who make this inquiry,
love anything, there are three things concerned--myself, and that which I love,
and love itself. For I do not love love, except I love a lover; for there is
no love where nothing is loved. Therefore there are three things--he who loves,
and that which is loved, and love. But what if I love none except myself? Will
there not then be two things--that which I love, and love? For he who loves
and that which is loved are the same when any one loves himself; just as to
love and to be loved, in the same way, is the very same thing when any one
loves himself. Since the same thing is said, when it is said, he loves himself,
and he is loved by himself. For in that case to love and to be loved are not
two different things: just as he who loves and he who is loved are not two
different persons. But yet, even so, love and what is loved are still two things.
For there is no love when any one loves himself, except when love itself is
loved. But it is one thing to love one's self, another to love one's own love.
For love is not loved, unless as already loving something; since where nothing
is loved there is no love. Therefore there are two things when any one loves
himself--love, and that which is loved. For then he that loves and that which
is loved are one. Whence it seems that it does not follow that three things
are to be understood wherever love is. For let us put aside from the inquiry
all the other many things of which a man consists; and in order that we may
discover clearly what we are now seeking, as far as in such a subject is possible,
let us treat of the mind alone. The mind, then, when it loves itself, discloses
two things--mind and love. But what is to love one's self, except to wish to
he!p one's self to the enjoyment of self? And when any one wishes himself to
be just as much as he is, then the will is on a par with the mind, and the
love is equal to him who loves. And if love is a substance, it is certainly
not body, but spirit; and the mind also is not body, but spirit. Yet love and
mind are not two spirits, but one spirit; nor yet two essences, but one: and
yet here are two things that are one, he that loves and love; or, if you like
so to put it, that which is loved and love. And these two, indeed, are mutually
said relatively. Since he who loves is referred to love, and love to him who
loves. For he who loves, loves with some love, and love is the love of some
one who loves. But mind and spirit are not said relatively, but express essence.
For mind and spirit do not exist because the mind and spirit of some particular
man exists. For if we subtract the body from that which is man, which is so
called with the conjunction of body, the mind and spirit remain. But if we
subtract him that loves, then there is no love; and if we subtract love, then
there is no one that loves. And therefore, in so far as they are mutually referred
to one another, they are two; but whereas they are spoken in respect to themselves,
each are spirit, and both together also are one spirit; and each are mind,
and both together one mind. Where, then, is the trinity? Let us attend as much.
as we can, and let us invoke the everlasting light, that He may illuminate
our darkness, and that we may see in ourselves, as much as we are permitted,
the image of God.
CHAP. 3.--THE IMAGE OF THE TRINITY IN THE MIND OF MAN WHO KNOWS HIMSELF AND
LOVES HIMSELF. THE MIND KNOWS ITSELF THROUGH ITSELF.
3. For the mind cannot love itself, except also it know itself; for how can
it love what it does not know? Or if any body says that the mind, from either
general or special knowledge, believes itself of such a character as it has
by experience found others to be and therefore loves itself, he speaks most
foolishly. For whence does a mind know another mind, if it does not know itself?
For the mind does not know other minds and not know itself, as the eye of the
body sees other eyes and does not see itself; for we see bodies through the
eyes of the body, because, unless we are looking into a mirror, we cannot refract
and reflect the rays into themselves which shine forth through those eyes,
and touch whatever we discern,--a subject, indeed, which is treated of most
subtlely and obscurely, until it be clearly demonstrated whether the fact be
so, or whether it be not. But whatever is the nature of the power by which
we discern through the eyes, certainly, whether it be rays or anything else,
we cannot discern with the eyes that power itself; but we inquire into it with
the mind, and if possible, understand even this with the mind. As the mind,
then, itself gathers the knowledge of corporeal things through the senses of
the body, so of incorporeal things through itself. Therefore it knows itself
also through itself, since it is incorporeal; for if it does not know itself,
it does not love itself.
CHAP. 4.--THE THREE ARE ONE, AND ALSO EQUAL, VIZ. THE MIND ITSELF, AND THE
LOVE, AND THE KNOWLEDGE OF IT. THAT THE SAME THREE EXIST SUBSTANTIALLY, AND
ARE PREDICATED RELATIVELY. THAT THE SAME THREE ARE INSEPARABLE. THAT THE SAME
THREE ARE NOT JOINED AND COMMINGLED LIKE PARTS, BUT THAT THEY ARE OF ONE ESSENCE,
AND ARE RELATIVES.
4. But as there are two things (duo quaedam), the mind and the love of it,
when it loves itself; so there are two things, the mind and the knowledge of
it, when it knows itself, Therefore the mind itself, and the love of it, and
the knowledge of it, are three things (tria quaedam), and these three are one;
and when they are perfect they are equal. For if one loves himself less than
as he is,--as for example, suppose that the mind of a man only loves itself
as much as the body of a man ought to be loved, whereas the mind is more than
the body,--then it is in fault, and its love is not perfect. Again, if it loves
itself more than as it is,--as if, for instance, it loves itself as much as
God is to be loved, whereas the mind is incomparably less than God,--here also
it is exceedingly in fault, and its love of self is not perfect. But it is
in fault more perversely and wrongly still, when it loves the body as much
as God is to be loved. Also, if knowledge is less than that thing which is
known, and which can be fully known, then knowledge is not perfect; bill if
it is greater, then the nature which knows is above that which is known, as
the knowledge of the body is greater than the body itself, which is known by
that knowledge. For knowledge is a kind of life in the reason of the knower,
but the body is not life; and any life is greater than any body, not in bulk,
but in power. But when the mind knows itself, its own knowledge does not rise
above itself, because itself knows, and itself is known. When, therefore, it
knows itself entirely, and no other thing with itself, then its knowledge is
equal to itself; because its knowledge is not from another nature, since it
knows itself. And when it perceives itself entirely, and nothing more, then
it is neither less nor greater. We said therefore rightly, that these three
things, [mind, love, and knowledge], when they are perfect, are by consequence
equal.
5. Similar reasoning suggests to us, if indeed we can any way understand the
matter, that these things [i.e. love and knowledge] exist in the soul, and
that, being as it were involved in it, they are so evolved from it as to be
perceived and reckoned up substantially, or, so to say, essentially. Not as
though in a subject; as color, or shape, or any other quality or quantity,
are in the body. For anything of this [material] kind does not go beyond the
subject in which it is; for the color or shape of this particular body cannot
be also those of another body. But the mind can also love something besides
itself, with that love with which it loves itself. And further, the mind does
not know itself only, but also many other things. Wherefore love and knowledge
are not contained in the mind as in a subject, but these also exist substantially,
as the mind itself does; because, even if they are mutually predicated relatively,
yet they exist each severally in their own substance. Nor are they so mutually
predicated relatively as color and the colored subject are; so that color is
in the colored subject, but has not any proper substance in itself, since colored
body is a substance, but color is in a substance; but as two friends are also
two men, which are substances, while they are said to be men not relatively,
but friends relatively.
6. But, further, although one who loves or one who knows is a substance, and
knowledge is a substance, and love is a substance, but he that loves and love,
or, he that knows and knowledge, are spoken of relatively to each other, as
are friends: yet mind or spirit are not relatives, as neither are men relatives:
nevertheless he that loves and love, or he that knows and knowledge, cannot
exist separately from each other, as men can that are friends. Although it
would seem that friends, too, can be separated in body, not in mind, in as
far as they are friends: nay, it can even happen that a friend may even also
begin to hate a friend and on this account cease to be a friend while the other
does not know it, and still loves him. But if the love with which the mind
loves itself ceases to be, then the mind also will at the same time cease to
love. Likewise, if the knowledge by which the mind knows itself ceases to be,
then the mind will also at the same time cease to know itself. just as the
head of anything that has a head is certainly a head, and they are predicated
relatively to each other, although they are also substances: for both a head
is a body, and so is that which has a head; and if there be no head, then neither
will there be that which has a head. Only these things can be separated from
each other by cutting off, those cannot.
7. And even if there are some bodies which cannot be wholly separated and
divided, yet they would not be bodies unless they consisted of their own proper
parts. A part then is predicated relatively to a whole, since every part is
a part of some whole, and a whole is a whole by having all its parts. But since
both part and whole are bodies, these things are not only predicated relatively,
but exist also substantially. Perhaps, then, the mind is a whole, and the love
with which it loves itself, and the knowledge with which it knows itself, are
as it were its parts, of which two parts that whole consists. Or are there
three equal parts which make up the one whole? But no part embraces the whole,
of which it is a part; whereas, when the mind knows itself as a whole, that
is, knows itself perfectly, then the knowledge of it extends through the whole
of it; and when it loves itself perfectly, then it loves itself as a whole,
and the love of it extends through the whole of it. Is it, then, as one drink
is made from wine and water and honey, and each single part extends through
the whole, and yet they are three things (for there is no part of the drink
which does not contain these three things; for they are not joined as if they
were water and oil, but are entirely commingled: and they are all substances,
and the whole of that liquor which is composed of the three is one substance),--is
it, I say, in some such way as this we are to think these three to be together,
mind, love, and knowledge? But water, wine, and honey are not of one substance,
although one substance results in the drink made from the commingling of them.
And I cannot see how those other three are not of the same substance. since
the mind itself loves itself, and itself knows itself; and these three so exist,
as that the mind is neither loved nor known by any other thing at all. These
three, therefore, must needs be of one and the same essence; and for that reason,
if they were confounded together as it were by a commingling, they could not
be in any way three, neither could they be mutually referred to each other.
Just as if you were to make from one and the same gold three similar rings,
although connected with each other, they are mutually referred to each other,
because they are similar. For everything similar is similar to something, and
there is a trinity of rings, and one gold. But if they are blended with each
other, and each mingled with the other through the whole of their own bulk,
then that trinity will fall through, and it will not exist at all; and not
only will it be called one gold, as it was called in the case of those three
rings, but now it will not be called three things of gold at all.
CHAP. 5.--THAT THESE THREE ARE SEVERAL IN THEMSELVES, AND MUTUALLY ALL IN
ALL.
8. But in these three, when the mind knows itself and loves itself, there
remains a trinity: mind, love, knowledge; and this trinity is not confounded
together by any commingling: although they are each severally in themselves
and mutually all in all, or each severally in each two, or each two in each.
Therefore all are in all. For certainly the mind is in itself, since it is
called mind in respect to itself: although it is said to be knowing, or known,
or knowable, relatively to its own knowledge; and although also as loving,
and loved, or lovable, it is referred to love, by which it loves itself. And
knowledge, although it is referred to the mind that knows or is known, nevertheless
is also predicated both as known and knowing in respect to itself: for the
knowledge by which the mind knows itself is not unknown to itself. And although
love is referred to the mind that loves, whose love it is; nevertheless it
is also love in respect to itself, so as to exist also in itself: since love
too is loved, yet cannot be loved with anything except with love, that is with
itself. So these things are severally in themselves. But so are they in each
other; because both the mind that loves is in love, and love is in the knowledge
of him that loves, and knowledge is in the mind that knows. And each severally
is in like manner in each two, because the mind which knows and loves itself,
is in its own love and knowledge: and the love of the mind that loves and knows
itself, is in the mind and in its knowledge: and the knowledge of the mind
that knows and loves itself is in the mind and in its love, because it loves
itself that knows, and knows itself that loves. And hence also each two is
in each severally, since the mind which knows and loves itself, is together
with its own knowledge in love, and together with its own love in knowledge;
and love too itself and knowledge are together in the mind, which loves and
knows itself. But in what way all are in all, we have already shown above;
since the mind loves itself as a whole, and knows itself as a whole, and knows
its own love wholly, and loves its own knowledge wholly, when these three things
are perfect in respect to themselves. Therefore these three things are marvellously
inseparable from each other, and yet each of them is severally a substance,
and all together are one substance or essence, whilst they are mutually predicated
relatively.(1)
CHAP. 6.--THERE IS ONE KNOWLEDGE OF THE THING IN THE THING ITSELF, AND ANOTHER
IN ETERNAL TRUTH ITSELF. THAT CORPOREAL THINGS, TOO, ARE TO BE JUDGED THE RULES
OF ETERNAL TRUTH.
9. But when the human mind knows itself and loves itself, it does not know
and love anything unchangeable: and each individual man declares his own particular
mind by one manner of speech, when he considers what takes place in himself;
but defines the human mind abstractly by special or general knowledge. And
so, when he speaks to me of his own individual mind, as to whether he understands
this or that, or does not understand it, or whether he wishes or does not wish
this or that, I believe; but when he speaks the truth of the mind of man generally
or specially, I recognize and approve. Whence it is manifest, that each sees
a thing in himself, in such way that another person may believe what he says
of it, yet may not see it; but another [sees a thing] in the truth itself,
in such way that another person also can gaze upon it; of which the former
undergoes changes at successive times, the latter consists in an unchangeable
eternity. For we do not gather a generic or specific knowledge of the human
mind by means of resemblance by seeing many minds with the eyes of the body:
but we gaze upon indestructible truth, from which to define perfectly, as far
as we can, not of what sort is the mind of any one particular man, but of what
sort it ought to be upon the eternal plan.
10. Whence also, even in the case of the images of things corporeal which
are drawn in through the bodily sense, and in some way infused into the memory,
from which also those things which have not been seen are thought under a fancied
image, whether otherwise than they really are, or even perchance as they are;--even
here too, we are proved either to accept or reject, within ourselves, by other
rules which remain altogether unchangeable above our mind, when we approve
or reject anything rightly. For both when recall the walls of Carthage which
I have seen, and imagine to myself the walls of Alexandria which I have not
seen, and, in preferring this to that among forms which in both cases are imaginary,
make that preference upon grounds of reason; the judgment of truth from above
is still strong and clear, and rests firmly upon the utterly indestructible
rules of its own right; and if it is covered as it were by cloudiness of corporeal
images, yet is not wrapt up and confounded in them.
11. But it makes a difference, whether, under that or in that darkness, I
am shut off as it were from the clear heaven; or whether (as usually happens
on lofty mountains), enjoying the free air between both, I at once look up
above to the calmest light, and down below upon the densest clouds. For whence
is the ardor of brotherly love kindled in me, when I hear that some man has
borne bitter torments for the excellence and steadfastness of faith? And if
that man is shown to me with the finger, I am eager to join myself to him,
to become acquainted with him, to bind him to myself in friendship. And accordingly,
if opportunity offers, I draw near, I address him, I converse with him, I express
my goodwill towards him in what words I can, and wish that in him too in turn
should be brought to pass and expressed goodwill towards me; and I endeavor
after a spiritual embrace in the way of belief, since I cannot search out so
quickly and discern altogether his innermost heart. I love therefore the faithful
and courageous man with a pure and genuine love. But if he were to confess
to me in the course of conversation, or were through unguardedness to show
in any way, that either he believes something unseemly of God, and desires
also something carnal in Him, and that he bore these torments on behalf of
such an error, or from the desire of money for which he hoped, or from empty
greediness of human praise: immediately it follows that the love with which
I was borne towards him, displeased, and as it were repelled, and taken away
from an unworthy man, remains in that form, after which, believing him such
as I did, I had loved him; unless perhaps I have come to love him to this end,
that he may become such, while I have found him not to be such in fact. And
in that man, too, nothing is changed: although it can be changed, so that he
may become that which I had believed him to be already. But in my mind there
certainly is something changed, viz., the estimate I had formed of him, which
was before of one sort, and now is of another: and the same love, at the bidding
from above of unchangeable righteousness, is turned aside from the purpose
of enjoying, to the purpose of taking counsel. But the form itself of unshaken
and stable truth, wherein I should have enjoyed the fruition of the man, believing
him to be good, and wherein likewise I take counsel that he may be good, sheds
in an immoveable eternity the same light of incorruptible and most sound reason,
both upon the sight of my mind, and upon that cloud of images, which I discern
from above, when I think of the same man whom I had seen. Again, when I call
back to my mind some arch, turned beautifully and symmetrically, which, let
us say, I saw at Carthage; a certain reality that had been made known to the
mind through the eyes, and transferred to the memory, causes the imaginary
view. But I behold in my mind yet another thing, according to which that work
of art pleases me; and whence also, if it displeased me, I should correct it.
We judge therefore of those particular things according to that [form of eternal
truth], and discern that form by the intuition of the rational mind. But those
things themselves we either touch if present by the bodily sense, or if absent
remember their images as fixed in our memory, or picture, in the way of likeness
to them, such things as we ourselves also, if we wished and were able, would
laboriously build up: figuring in the mind after one fashion the images of
bodies, or seeing bodies through the body; but after another, grasping by simple
intelligence what is above the eye of the mind, viz., the reasons and the unspeakably
beautiful skill of such forms.
CHAP. 7.--WE CONCEIVE AND BEGET THE WORD WITHIN, FROM THE THINGS WE HAVE BEHELD
IN THE ETERNAL TRUTH. THE WORD, WHETHER OF THE CREATURE OR OF THE CREATOR,
IS CONCEIVED BY LOVE.
12. We behold, then, by the sight of the mind, in that eternal truth from
which all things temporal are made, the form according to which we are, and
according to which we do anything by true and right reason, either in ourselves,
or in things corporeal; and we have the true knowledge of things, thence conceived,
as it were as a word within us, and by speaking we beget it from within; nor
by being born does it depart from us. And when we speak to others, we apply
to the word, remaining within us, the ministry of the voice or of some bodily
sign, that by some kind of sensible remembrance some similar thing may be wrought
also in the mind of him that hears,--similar, I say, to that which does not
depart from the mind of him that speaks. We do nothing, therefore, through
the members of the body in our words and actions, by which the behavior of
men is either approved or blamed, which we do not anticipate by a word uttered
within ourselves. For no one willingly does anything, which he has not first
said in his heart.
13. And this word is conceived by love, either of the creature or of the Creator,
that is, either of changeable nature or of unchangeable truth.(1)
CHAP. 8.--IN WHAT DESIRE AND LOVE DIFFER.
[Conceived] therefore, either by desire or by love: not that the creature
ought not to be loved; but if that love [of the creature] is referred to the
Creator, then it will not be desire (cupiditas), but love (charitas). For it
is desire when the creature is loved for itself. And then it does not help
a man through making use of it, but corrupts him in the enjoying it. When,
therefore, the creature is either equal to us or inferior, we must use the
inferior in order to God, but we must enjoy the equal duly in God. For as thou
oughtest to enjoy thyself, not in thyself, but in Him who made thee, so also
him whom thou lovest as thyself. Let us enjoy, therefore, both ourselves and
our brethren in the Lord; and hence let us not dare to yield, and as it were
to relax, ourselves to ourselves in the direction downwards. Now a word is
born, when, being thought out, it pleases us either to the effect of sinning,
or to that of doing right. Therefore love, as it were a mean, conjoins our
word and the mind from which it is conceived, and without any confusion binds
itself as a third with them, in an incorporeal embrace.
CHAP. 9.--IN THE LOVE OF SPIRITUAL THINGS THE WORD BORN IS THE SAME AS THE
WORD CONCEIVED. IT IS OTHERWISE IN THE LOVE OF CARNAL THINGS.
14. But
the word conceived and the word born are the very same when the will finds
rest in knowledge
itself,
as is the case in the love of spiritual things.
For instance, he who knows righteousness perfectly, and loves it perfectly,
is already righteous; even if no necessity exist of working according to it
outwardly through the members of the body. But in the love of carnal and temporal
things, as in the offspring of animals, the conception of the word is one thing,
the bringing forth another. For here what is conceived by desiring is born
by attaining. Since it does; not suffice to avarice to know and to love gold,
except it also have it; nor to know and love to eat, or to lie with any one,
unless also one does it; nor to know and love honors and power, unless they
actually come to pass. Nay, all these things, even if obtained, do not suffice. "Whosoever
drinketh of this water," He says, "shall thirst again."(1) And
so also the Psalmist, "He hath conceived pain and brought forth iniquity."(2)
And he speaks of pain or labor as conceived, when those things are conceived
which it is not sufficient to know and will, and when the mind burns and grows
sick with want, until it arrives at those things, and, as it were, brings them
forth. Whence in the Latin language we have the word "parta" used
elegantly for both "reperta" and "comperta," which words
sound as if derived from bringing forth.(3) Since "lust, when it hath
conceived, bringeth forth sin."(4) Wherefore the Lord proclaims, "Come
unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden;"(5) and in another place "Woe
unto them that are with child, and to them that give suck, in those days!"(6)
And when therefore He referred all either right actions or sins to the bringing
forth of the word, "By thy mouth,"(7) He says, "thou shalt be
justified, and by thy mouth(8) thou shalt be condemned,"(9) intending
thereby not the visible mouth, but that which is within and invisible, of the
thought and of the heart.
CHAP. 10.--WHETHER ONLY KNOWLEDGE THAT IS LOVED IS THE WORD OF THE MIND.
15. It
is rightly asked then, whether all knowledge is a word, or only knowledge
that is loved. For
we also know
the things which we hate; but what we do not
like, cannot be said to be either conceived or brought forth by the mind. For
not all things which in anyway touch it, are conceived by it; but some only
reach the point of being known, but yet are not spoken as words, as for instance
those of which we speak now. For those are called words in one way, which occupy
spaces of time by their syllables, whether they are pronounced or only thought;
and in another way, all that is known is called a word imprinted on the mind,
as long as it can be brought forth from the memory and defined, even though
we dislike the thing itself; and in another way still, when we like that which
is conceived in the mind. And that which the apostle says, must be taken according
to this last kind of word, "No man can say that Jesus is the Lord, but
by the Holy Ghost;"(10) since those also say this, but according to another
meaning of the term "word," of whom the Lord Himself says, "Not
every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven."(11)
Nay, even in the case of things which we hate, when we rightly dislike and
rightly censure them, we approve and like the censure bestowed upon them, and
it becomes a word. Nor is it the knowledge of vices that displeases us, but
the vices themselves. For I like to know and define what intemperance is; and
this is its word. Just as there are known faults in art, and the knowledge
of them is rightly approved, when a connoisseur discerns the species or the
privation of excellence, as to affirm and deny that it is or that it is not;
yet to be without excellence and to fall away into fault, is worthy of condemnation.
And to define intemperance, and to say its word, belongs to the art of morals;
but to be intemperate belongs to that which that art censures. Just as to know
and define what a solecism is, belongs to the art of speaking; but to be guilty
of one, is a fault which the same art reprehends. A word, then, which is the
point we wish now to discern and intimate, is knowledge together with love.
Whenever, then, the mind knows and loves itself, its word is joined to it by
love. And since it loves knowledge and knows love, both the word is in love
and love is in the word, and both are in him who loves and speaks.(1)
CHAP. 11.--THAT THE IMAGE OR BEGOTTEN WORD OF THE MIND THAT KNOWS ITSELF IS
EQUAL TO THE MIND ITSELF.
16. But all knowledge according to species is like the thing which it knows.
For there is another knowledge according to privation, according to which we
speak a word only when we condemn. And this condemnation of a privation is
equivalent to praise of the species, and so is approved. The mind, then, contains
some likeness to a known species, whether when liking that species or when
disliking its privation. And hence, in so far as we know God, we are like Him,
but not like to the point of equality, since we do not know Him to the extent
of His own being. And as, when we speak of bodies by means of the bodily sense,
there arises in our mind some likeness of them, which is a phantasm of the
memory; for the bodies themselves are not at all in the mind, when we think
them, but only the likenesses of those bodies; therefore, when we approve the
latter for the former, We err, for the approving of one thing for another is
an error; yet the image of the body in the mind is a thing of a better sort
than the species of the body itself, inasmuch as the former is in a better
nature, viz.. in a living substance, as the mind is: so when we know God, although
we are made better than we were before we knew Him, and above all when the
same knowledge being also liked and worthily loved becomes a word, and so that
knowledge becomes a kind of likeness of God; yet that knowledge is of a lower
kind, since it is in a lower nature; for the mind is creature, but God is Creator.
And from this it may be inferred, that when the mind knows and approves itself,
this same knowledge is in such way its word, as that it is altogether on a
par and equal with it, and the same; because it is neither the knowledge of
a lower essence, as of the body, nor of a higher, as of God. And whereas knowledge
bears a likeness to that which it knows, that is, of which it is the knowledge;
in this case it has perfect and equal likeness, when the mind itself, which
knows, is known. And so it is both image and word; because it is uttered concerning
that mind to which it is equalled in knowing, and that which is begotten is
equal to the begetter.
CHAP. 12.--WHY LOVE IS NOT THE OFFSPRING OF THE MIND, AS KNOWLEDGE IS SO.
THE SOLUTION OF THE QUESTION. THE MIND WITH THE KNOWLEDGE OF ITSELF AND THE
LOVE OF ITSELF IS THE IMAGE OF THE TRINITY.
17. What then is love? Will it not be an image? Will it not be a word? Will
it not be begotten? For why does the mind beget its knowledge when it knows
itself, and not beget its love when it loves itself? For if it is the cause
of its own knowing, for the reason that it is knowable, it is also the cause
of its own love because it is lovable. It is hard, then, to say why it does
not beget both. For there is a further question also respecting the supreme
Trinity itself, the omnipotent God the Creator, after whose image man is made,
which troubles men, whom the truth of God invites to the faith by human speech;
viz.. why the Holy Spirit is not also to be either believed or understood to
be begotten by God the Father, so that He also may be called a Son. And this
question we are endeavoring in some way to investigate in the human mind, in
order that from a lower image, in which our own nature itself as it were answers,
upon being questioned, in a way more familiar to ourselves, we may be able
to direct a more practised mental vision from the enlightened creature to the
unchangeable light; assuming, however, that the truth itself has persuaded
us, that as no Christian doubts the Word of God to be the Son, so that the
Holy Spirit is love. Let us return, then, to a more careful questioning and
consideration upon this subject of that image which is the creature, that is,
of the rational mind; wherein the knowledge of some things coming into existence
in time, but which did not exist before, and the love of some things which
were not loved before, opens to us more clearly what to say: because to speech
also itself, which must be disposed in time, that thing is easier of explanation
which is comprehended in the order of time.
18. First,
therefore, it is clear that a thing may possibly be knowable, that is, such
as can be
known, and
yet that it may be unknown; but that it is not
possible for that to be known which is not knowable. Wherefore it must be clearly
held that everything whatsoever that we know begets at the same time in us
the knowledge of itself; for knowledge is brought forth from both, from the
knower and from the thing known. When, therefore, the mind knows itself, it
alone is the parent of its own knowledge; for it is itself both the thing known
and the knower of it. But it was knowable to itself also before it knew itself,
only the knowledge of itself was not in itself so long as it did not know itself.
In knowing itself, then, it begets a knowledge of itself equal to itself; since
it does not know itself as less than itself is, nor is its knowledge the knowledge
of the essence of some one else, not only because itself knows, but also because
it knows itself, as we have said above What then is to be said of love; why,
when the mind loves itself, it should not seem also to have begotten the love
of itself? For it was lovable to itself even before it loved itself since it
could love itself; just as it was knowable to itself even before it knew itself,
since it could know itself. For if it were not knowable to itself, it never
could have known itself; and so, if it were not lovable to itself, it never
could have loved itself. Why therefore may it not be said by loving itself
to have begotten its own love, as by knowing itself it has begotten its own
knowledge? Is it because it is thereby indeed plainly shown that this is the
principle of love, whence it proceeds? for it proceeds from the mind itself,
which is lovable to itself before it loves itself, and so is the principle
of its own love by which it loves itself: but that this love is not therefore
rightly said to be begotten by the mind, as is the knowledge of itself by which
the mind knows itself, because in the case of knowledge the thing has been
found already, which is what we call brought forth or discovered;(1) and this
is commonly preceded by an inquiry such as to find rest when that end is attained.
For inquiry is the desire of finding, or, what is the same thing, of discovering.(2)
But those things which are discovered are as it were brought forth, whence
they are like offspring; but wherein, except in the case itself of knowledge?
For in that case they are as it were uttered and fashioned. For although the
things existed already which we found by seeking, yet the knowledge of them
did not exist, which knowledge we regard as an offspring that is born. Further,
the desire (appetitus) which there is in seeking proceeds from him who seeks,
and is in some way in suspense, and does not rest in the end whither it is
directed, except that which is sought be found and conjoined with him who seeks.
And this desire, that is, inquiry,--although it does not seem to be love, by
which that which is known is loved, for in this case we are still striving
to know,--yet it is something of the same kind. For it can be called will (voluntas),
since every one who seeks wills (vult) to find; and if that is sought which
belongs to knowledge, every one who seeks wills to know. But if he wills ardently
and earnestly, he is said to study (studere): a word that is most commonly
employed in the case of pursuing and obtaining any branches of learning. Therefore,
the bringing forth of the mind is preceded by some desire, by which, through
seeking and finding what we wish to know, the offspring, viz. knowledge itself,
is born. And for this reason, that desire by which knowledge is conceived and
brought forth, cannot rightly be called the bringing forth and the offspring;
and the same desire which led us to long for the knowing of the thing, becomes
the love of the thing when known, while it holds and embraces its accepted
offspring, that is, knowledge, and unites it to its begetter. And so there
is a kind of image of the Trinity in the mind itself, and the knowledge of
it, which is its offspring and its word concerning itself, and love as a third,
and these three are one, and one substance.(3) Neither is the offspring less,
since the mind knows itself according to the measure of its own being; nor
is the love less, since it loves itself according to the measure both of its
own knowledge and of its own being.
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