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THE FIFTEEN BOOKS OF
AURELIUS AUGUSTINUS
BISHOP OF HIPPO
ON THE TRINITY
BOOK XIII.
THE INQUIRY IS PROSECUTED RESPECTING KNOWLEDGE, IN WHICH, AS DISTINGUISHED
FROM WISDOM, AUGUSTIN HAD BEGUN IN THE FORMER BOOK TO LOOK FOR A KIND OF TRINITY.
AND OCCASION IS TAKEN OF COMMENDING CHRISTIAN FAITH, AND OF EXPLAINING HOW
THE FAITH OF BELIEVERS IS ONE AND COMMON. NEXT, THAT ALL DESIRE BLESSEDNESS,
YET THAT ALL HAVE NOT THE FAITH WHEREBY WE ARRIVE AT BLESSEDNESS; AND THAT
THIS FAITH IS DEFINED IN CHRIST, WHO IN THE FLESH ROSE FROM THE DEAD; AND THAT
NO ONE IS SET FREE FROM THE DOMINION OF THE DEVIL THROUGH FORGIVENESS OF SINS,
SAVE THROUGH HIM. IT IS SHOWN ALSO AT LENGTH THAT IT WAS NEEDFUL THAT THE DEVIL
SHOULD BE CONQUERED BY CHRIST, NOT BY POWER, BUT BY RIGHTEOUSNESS. FINALLY,
THAT WHEN THE WORDS OF THIS FAITH ARE COMMITTED TO MEMORY, THERE IS IN THE
MIND A KIND OF TRINITY, SINCE THERE ARE, FIRST, IN THE MEMORY THE SOUNDS OF
THE WORDS, AND THIS EVEN WHEN THE MAN IS NOT THINKING OF THEM; AND NEXT, THE
MIND'S EYE OF HIS RECOLLECTION IS FORMED THEREUPON WHEN HE THINKS OF THEM;
AND, LASTLY, THE WILL, WHEN HE SO THINKS AND REMEMBERS, COMBINES BOTH.
CHAP. 1.--THE ATTEMPT IS MADE TO DISTINGUISH OUT OF THE SCRIPTURES THE OFFICES
OF WISDOM AND OF KNOWLEDGE. THAT IN THE BEGINNING OF JOHN SOME THINGS THAT
ARE SAID BELONG TO WISDOM, SOME TO KNOWLEDGE. SOME THINGS THERE ARE ONLY KNOWN
BY THE HELP OF FAITH. HOW WE SEE THE FAITH THAT IS IN US. IN THE SAME NARRATIVE
OF JOHN, SOME THINGS ARE KNOWN BY THE SENSE OF THE BODY, OTHERS ONLY BY THE
REASON OF THE MIND.
1. IN the book before this, viz. the twelfth of this work, we have done enough
to distinguish the office of the rational mind in temporal things, wherein
not only our knowing but our action is concerned, from the more excellent office
of the same mind, which is employed in contemplating eternal things, and is
limited to knowing alone. But I think it more convenient that I should insert
somewhat out of the Holy Scriptures, by which the two may more easily be distinguished.
2. John
the Evangelist has thus begun his Gospel: "In the beginning was
the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in
the beginning with God. All things were made by Him; and without was Him not
anything made that was made. In Him was life; and the life was the light of
men. And the light shineth in darkness; and the darkness comprehended it not.
There was a man sent from God, whose name was John. The same came for a witness,
to bear witness of the Light, that all men through Him might believe. He was
not that Light, but was sent to bear witness of that Light. That was the true
Light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world. He was in the world,
and the world was made by Him, and the world knew Him not. He came unto His
own, and His own received Him not. But as many as received Him, to them gave
He power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on His name:
which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will
of man, but of God. And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us (and we
beheld His glory, the glory as of the only-begotten of the Father), full of
grace and truth."(1) This entire passage, which I have here taken from
the Gospel, contains in its earlier portions what is immutable and eternal,
the contemplation of which makes us blessed; but in those which follow, eternal
things are mentioned in conjunction with temporal things. And hence some things
there belong to knowledge, some to wisdom, according to our previous distinction
in the twelfth book. For the words,--" In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning
with God. All things were made by Him; and without Him was not anything made
that was made. In Him was life; and the life was the light of men. And the
light shineth in darkness, and the darkness comprehended it not: "--require
a contemplative life, and must be discerned by the intellectual mind; and the
more any one has profiled in this, the wiser without doubt will he become.
But on account of the verse, "The light shineth in darkness, and the darkness
comprehended it not," faith certainly was necessary, whereby that which
was not seen might be believed. For by "darkness" he intended to
signify the hearts of mortals turned away from light of this kind, and hardly
able to behold it; for which reason he subjoins. "There was a man sent
from God, whose name was John. The same came for a witness, to bear witness
of the Light, that all men through Him might believe." But here we come
to a thing that was done in time, and belongs to knowledge, which is comprised
in the cognizance of facts. And we think of the man John under that phantasy
which is impressed on our memory from the notion of human nature. And whether
men believe or not, they think this in the same manner. For both alike know
what man is, the outer part of whom, that is, his body, they have learned through
the eyes of the body; but of the inner, that is, the soul, they possess the
knowledge in themselves, because they also themselves are men, and through
intercourse with men; so that they are able to think what is said, "There
was a man, whose name was John," because they know the names also by interchange
of speech. But that which is there also, viz. "sent from God," they
who hold at all, hold by faith; and they who do not hold it by faith, either
hesitate through doubt, or deride it through unbelief. Yet both, if they are
not in the number of those over-foolish ones, who say in their heart "There
is no God,"(1) when they, hear these words, think both things, viz. both
what God is, and what it is to be sent from God; and if they do not do this
as the things themselves really are, they do it at any rate as they can.
3. Further, we know from other sources the faith itself which a man sees to
be in his own heart, if he believes, or not to be there, if he does not believe:
but not as we know bodies, which we see with the bodily eyes, and think of
even when absent through the images of themselves which we retain in memory;
nor yet as those things which we have not seen, and which we frame howsoever
we can in thought from those which we have seen, and commit them to memory,
that we may recur to them when we will, in order that therein we may similarly
by recollection discern them, or rather discern the images of them, of what
sort soever these are which we have fixed there; nor again as a living man,
whose soul we do not indeed see, but conjecture from our own, and from corporeal
motions gaze also in thought upon the living man, as we have learnt him by
sight. Faith as not so seen in the heart in which it is, by him whose it is;
but most certain knowledge holds it fast, and conscience proclaims it. Although
therefore we are bidden to believe on this account, because we cannot see what
we are bidden to believe; nevertheless we see faith itself in ourselves, when
that faith is in us; because faith even in absent things is present, and faith
in things which are without us is within, and faith in things which are not
seen is itself seen, and itself none the less comes into the hearts of men
in time; and if any cease to be faithful and become unbelievers, then it perishes
from them. And sometimes faith is accommodated even to falsehoods; for we sometimes
so speak as to say, I put faith in him, and he deceived me. And this kind of
faith, if indeed it too is to be called faith, perishes from the heart without
blame, when truth is found and expels it. But faith in things that are true,
passes, as one should wish it to pass, into the things themselves. For we must
not say that faith perishes, when those things which were believed are seen.
For is it indeed still to be called faith, when faith, according to the definition
in the Epistle to the Hebrews, is the evidence of things not seen?(2)
4. In
the words which follow next, "The same came for a witness, to hear
witness of the Light, that all men through him might believe;" the action,
as we have said, is one done in time. For to bear witness even to that which
is eternal, as is that light that is intelligible, is a thing done in time.
And of this it was that John came to bear witness who "was not that Light,
but was sent to bear witness of that Light." For he adds "That was
the true Light that lighteth every man that cometh into the world. He was in
the world, and the world was made by Him, and the world knew Him not. He came
unto His own, and His own received Him not." Now they who know the Latin
language, understand all these words, from those things which they know: and
of these, some have become known to us through the senses of the body, as man,
as the world itself, of which the greatness is so evident to our sight; as
again the sounds of the words themselves, for hearing also is a sense of the
body; and some through the reason of the mind, as that which is said, "And
His own received Him not;" for this means, that they did not believe in
Him; and what belief is, we do not know by any sense of the body, but by the
reason of the mind. We have learned, too, not the sounds, but the meanings
of the words themselves, partly through the sense of the body, partly through
the reason of the mind. Nor have we now heard those words for the first time,
but they are words we had heard before. And we were retaining in our memory
as things known, and we here recognized, not only the words themselves, but
also what they meant. For when the bisyllabic word mundus is uttered, then
something that is certainly corporeal, for it is a sound, has become known
through the body, that is, through the ear. But that which it means also, has
become known through the body, that is, through the eyes of the flesh. For
so far as the world is known to us at all, it is known through sight. But the
quadri-syllabic word crediderunt reaches us, so far as its sound, since that
is a corporeal thing, through the ear of the flesh; but its meaning is discoverable
by no sense of the body, but by the reason of the mind. For unless we knew
through the mind what the word crediderunt meant, we should not understand
what they did not do, of whom it is said, "And His own received Him not." The
sound then of the word rings upon the ears of the body from without, and reaches
the sense which is called hearing. The species also of man is both known to
us in ourselves, and is presented to the senses of the body from without, in
other men; to the eyes, when it is seen; to the ears, when it is heard; to
the touch, when it is held and touched; and it has, too, its image in our memory,
incorporeal indeed, but like the body. Lastly, the wonderful beauty of the
world itself is at hand from without, both to our gaze, and to that sense which
is called touch, if we come in contact with any of it: and this also has its
image within in our memory, to which we revert, when we think of it either
in the enclosure of a room, or again in darkness. But we have already sufficiently
spoken in the eleventh book of these images of corporeal things; incorporeal
indeed, yet having the likeness of bodies, and belonging to the life of the
outer man. But we are treating now of the inner man, and of his knowledge,
namely, that knowledge which is of things temporal and changeable; into the
purpose and scope of which, when anything is assumed, even of things belonging
to the outer man, it must be assumed for this end, that something may thence
be taught which may help rational knowledge. And hence the rational use of
those things which we have in common with irrational animals belongs to the
inner man; neither can it rightly be said that this is common to us with the
irrational animals.
CHAP. 2.--FAITH A THING OF THE HEART, NOT OF THE BODY; HOW IT IS COMMON AND
ONE AND THE SAME IN ALL BELIEVERS. THE FAITH OF BELIEVERS IS ONE, NO OTHERWISETHAN
THE WILL OF THOSE WHO WILL IS ONE.
5. But
faith, of which we are compelled, by reason of the arrangement of our subject,
to dispute
somewhat more at
length in this book: faith I say, which
they who have are called the faithful, and they who have not, unbelievers,
as were those who did not receive the Son of God coming to His own; although
it is wrought in us by hearing, yet does not belong to that sense of the body
which is called hearing, since it is not a sound; nor to the eyes of this our
flesh, since it is neither color nor bodily form; nor to that which is called
touch, since it has nothing of bulk; nor to any sense of the body at all, since
it is a thing of the heart, not of the body; nor is it without apart from us,
but deeply seated within us; nor does any man see it in another, but each one
in himself. Lastly, it is a thing that can both be feigned by pretence, and
be thought to be in him in whom it is not. Therefore every one sees his own
faith in himself; but does not see, hut believes, that it is in another; and
believes this the more firmly, the more he knows the fruits of it, which faith
is wont to work by love.(1) And therefore this faith is common to all of whom
the evangelist subjoins, "But as many as received Him, to them gave He
power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on His name: which
were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man,
but of God;" common I say, not as any form of a bodily object is common,
as regards sight, to the eyes of all to whom it is present, for in some way
the gaze of all that behold it is informed by the same one form; but as the
human countenance can be said to be common to all men; for this is so said
that yet each certainly has his own. We say certainly with perfect truth, that
the faith of believers is impressed from one doctrine upon the heart of each
several person who believes the same thing. But that which is believed is a
different thing from the faith by which it is believed. For the former is in
things which are said either to be, or to have been or to be about to be; but
the latter is in the mind of the believer, and is visible to him only whose
it is; although not indeed itself but a faith like it, is also in others. For
it is not one in number, but in kind; yet on account of the likeness, and the
absence of all difference, we rather call it one than many. For when, too,
we see two men exceedingly alike, we wonder, and say that both have one countenance.
It is therefore more easily said that the souls were many,--a several soul,
of course, for each several person--of whom we read in the Acts of the Apostles,
that they were of one soul,(1)--than it is, where the apostle speaks of "one
faith,"(2) for any one to venture to say that there are as many faiths
as there are faithful. And yet He who says, "O woman, great is thy faith;"(3)
and to another, "O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt?(4)
intimates that each has his own faith. But the like faith of believers is said
to be one, in the same way as a like will of those who will is said to be one;
since in the case also of those who have the same will, the will of each is
visible to himself, but that of the other is not visible, although he wills
the same thing; and if it intimate itself by any signs, it is believed rather!
than seen. But each being conscious of his own mind certainly does not believe,
but manifestly sees outright, that this is his own will.
CHAP. 3.--SOME DESIRES BEING THE SAME IN ALL, ARE KNOWN TO EACH. THE POET
ENNIUS.
6. There
is, indeed, so closely conspiring a harmony in the same nature living and
using reason,
that although
one knows not what the other wills, yet there
are some wills of all which are also known to each; and although each man does
not know what any other one man wills, yet in some things he may know what
all will. And hence comes that story of the comic actor's witty joke, who promised
that he would say in the theatre, in some other play, what all had in their
minds, and what all willed; and when a still greater crowd had come together
on the day appointed, with great expectation, all being in suspense and silent,
is affirmed to have said: You will to buy cheap, and sell dear. And mean actor
though he was, yet all in his words recognized what themselves were conscious
of, and applauded him with wonderful goodwill, for saying before the eyes of
all what was confessedly true, yet what no one looked for. And why was so great
expectation raised by his promising that he would say what was the will of
all, unless because no man knows the wills of other men ? But did not he know
that will? Is there any one who does not know it? Yet why, unless because there
are some things which not unfitly each conjectures from himself to be in others,
through sympathy or agreement either in vice or virtue? But it is one thing
to see one's own will; another to conjecture, however certainly, what is another's.
For, in human affairs, I am as certain that Rome was built as that Constantinople
was, although I have seen Rome with my eyes, but know nothing of the other
city, except what I have believed on the testimony of others. And truly that
comic actor believed it to be common to all to will to buy cheap and sell dear,
either by observing himself or by making experiment also of others. But since
such a will is in truth a fault, every one can attain the counter virtue, or
run into the mischief of some other hull which is contrary to it, whereby to
resist and conquer it. For I myself know a case where a manuscript was offered
to a man for purchase, who perceived that the vendor was ignorant of its value,
and was therefore asking something very small, and who thereupon gave him,
though not expecting it, the just price, which was much more. Suppose even
the case of a man possessed with wickedness so great as to sell cheap what
his parents left to him, and to buy dear, in order to waste it on his own lusts?
Such wanton extravagance, I fancy, is not incredible; and if such men are sought,
they may be found, or even fail in one's way although not sought; who, by a
wickedness more than that of the theatre, make a mock of the theatrical proposition
or declaration, by buying dishonor at a great price, while selling lands at
a small one. We have heard, too, of persons that, for the sake of distribution,
have bought corn at a higher price, and sold it to their fellow-citizens at
a lower one. And note also what the old poet Ennius has said: that "all
mortals wish themselves to be praised;" wherein, doubtless, he conjectured
what was in others, both by himself, and by those whom he knew by experience;
and so seems to have declared what it is that all men will. Lastly, if that
comic actor himself, too, had said, You all will to be praised, no one of you
wills to be abused; he would have seemed in like manner to have expressed what
all will. Yet there are some who hate their own faults, and do not desire to
be praised by others for that for which they are displeased with themselves;
and who thank the kindness of those who rebuke them, when the purpose of that
rebuke is their own amendment. But if he had said, You all will to be blessed,
you do not will to be wretched; he would have said something which there is
no one that would not recognize in his own will. For whatever else a man may
will secretly, he does not withdraw from that will, which is well known to
all men, and well known to be in all men.
CHAP. 4.--THE WILL TO POSSESS BLESSEDNESS IS ONE IN ALL, BUT THE VARIETY OF
WILLS IS VERY GREAT CONCERNING THAT BLESSEDNESS ITSELF.
7. It is wonderful, however, since the will to obtain and retain blessedness
is one in all, whence comes, on the other hand, such a variety and diversity
of wills concerning that blessedness itself; not that any one is unwilling
to have it, but that all do not know it. For if all knew it, it would not be
thought by some to be in goodness of mind; by others, in pleasure of body;
by others, in both; and by some in one thing, by others in another. For as
men find special delight in this thing or that, so have they placed in it their
idea of a blessed life. How, then, do all love so warmly what not all know?
Who can love what he does not know?--a subject which I have already discussed
in the preceding books.(1) Why, therefore, is blessedness loved by all, when
it is not known by all? Is it perhaps that all know what it is itself, but
all do not know where it is to be found, and that the dispute arises from this?--as
if, forsooth, the business was about some place in this world, where every
one ought to will to live who wills to live blessedly; and as if the question
where blessedness is were not implied in the question what it is. For certainly,
if it is in the pleasure of the body, he is blessed who enjoys the pleasure
of the body; if in goodness of mind, he has it who enjoys this; if in both,
he who enjoys both. When, therefore, one says, to live blessedly is to enjoy
the pleasure of the body; but another, to live blessedly is to enjoy goodness
of mind; is it not, that either both know, or both do not know, what a blessed
life is? How, then, do both love it, if no one can love what he does not know?
Or is that perhaps false which we have assumed to be most true and most certain,
viz. that all men will to live blessedly? For if to live blessedly is, for
argument's sake, to live according to goodness of mind, how does he will to
live blessedly who does not will this? Should we not say more truly, That man
does not will to live blessedly, because he does not wish to live according
to goodness, which alone is to live blessedly? Therefore all men do not will
to live blessedly; on the contrary, few wish it; if to live blessedly is nothing
else but to live according to goodness of mind, which many do not will to do.
Shall we, then, hold that to be false of which the Academic Cicero himself
did not doubt (although Academics doubt every thing), who, when he wanted in
the dialogue Hortensius to find some certain thing, of which no one doubted,
from which to start his argument, says, We certainly all will to be blessed?
Far be it from me to say this is false. But what then? Are we to say that,
although there is no other way of living blessedly than living according to
goodness of mind, yet even he who does not will this, wills to live blessedly?
This, indeed, seems too absurd. For it is much as if we should say, Even he
who does not will to live blessedly, wills to live blessedly. Who could listen
to, who could endure, such a contradiction? And yet necessity thrusts us into
this strait, if it is both true that all will to live blessedly, and yet all
do not will to live in that way in which alone one can live blessedly.
CHAP. 5.--OF THE SAME THING.
8. Or
is, perhaps, the deliverance from our difficulties to be found in this, that,
since we have
said that
every one places his idea of a blessed life in
that which has most pleased him, as pleasure pleased Epicurus, and goodness
Zeno, and something else pleased other people, we say that to live blessedly
is nothing else but to live according to one's own pleasure: so that it is
not false that all will to live blessedly, because all will that which pleases
each? For if this, too, had been proclaimed to the people in the theatre, all
would have found it in their own wills. But when Cicero, too, had propounded
this in opposition to himself, he so refuted it as to make them blush who thought
so. For he says: "But, behold! people who are not indeed philosophers,
but who yet are prompt to dispute, say that all are blessed, whoever live as
they will;" which is what we mean by, as pleases each. But by and by he
has subjoined: "But this is indeed false. For to will what is not fitting,
is itself most miserable; neither is it so miserable not to obtain what one
wills, as to will to obtain what one ought not." Most excellently and
altogether most truly does he speak. For who can be so blind in his mind, so
alienated from all light of decency, and wrapped up in the darkness of indecency,
as to call him blessed, because he lives as he will, who lives wickedly and
disgracefully; and with no one restraining him, no one punishing, and no one
daring even to blame him, nay more, too, with most people praising him, since,
as divine Scripture says, "The wicked is praised in his heart's desire:
and he who works iniquity is blessed,"(1) gratifies all his most criminal
and flagitious desires; when, doubtless, although even so he would be wretched,
yet he would be less wretched, if he could have had nothing of those things
which he had wrongly willed? For every one is made wretched by a wicked will
also, even though it stop short with will but more wretched by the power by
which the longing of a wicked will is fulfilled. And, therefore, since it is
true that all men will to be blessed, and that they seek for this one thing
with the most ardent love, and on account of this seek everything which they
do seek; nor can any one love that of which he does not know at all what or
of what sort it is, nor can be ignorant what that is which he knows that he
wills; it follows that all know a blessed life. But all that are blessed have
what they will, although not all who have what they will are forewith blessed.
But they are forewith wretched, who either have not what they will, or have
that which they do not rightly will. Therefore he only is a blessed man, who
both has all things which he wills, and wills nothing ill.
CHAP. 6.--WHY, WHEN ALL WILL TO BE BLESSED, THAT IS RATHER CHOSEN BY WHICH
ONE WITHDRAWS FROM BEING SO.
9. Since, then, a blessed life consists of these two things, and is known
to all, and dear to all; what can we think to be the cause why, when they cannot
have both, men choose, out of these two, to have all things that they will,
rather than to will all things well, even although they do not have them? Is
it the depravity itself of the human race, in such wise that, while they are
not unaware that neither is he blessed who has not what he wills, nor he who
has what he wills wrongly, but he who both has whatsoever good things he wills,
and wills no evil ones, yet, when both are not granted of those two things
in which the blessed life consists, that is rather chosen by which one is withdrawn
the more from a blessed life (since he certainly is further from it who obtains
things which he wickedly desired, than he who only does not obtain the things
which he desired); whereas the good will ought rather to be chosen, and to
be preferred, even if it do not obtain the things which it seeks? For he comes
near to being a blessed man, who wills well whatsoever he wills, and wills
things, which when he obtains, he will be blessed. And certainly not bad things,
but good, make men blessed, when they do so make them. And of good things he
already has something, and that, too, a something not to be lightly esteemed,--namely,
the very good will itself; who longs to rejoice in those good things of which
human nature is capable, and not in the performance or the attainment of any
evil; and who follows diligently, and attains as much as he can, with a prudent,
temperate, courageous, and right mind, such good things as are possible in
the present miserable life; so as to be good even in evils, and when all evils
have been put an end to, and all good things fulfilled, then to be blessed.
CHAP. 7. --FAITH IS NECESSARY, THAT MAN MAY AT SOME TIME BE BLESSED, WHICH
HE WILL ONLY ATTAIN IN THE FUTURE LIFE.THE BLESSEDNESS OF PROUD PHILOSOPHERS
RIDICULOUS AND PITIABLE.
10. And
on this account, faith, by which men believe in God, is above all things
necessary in this
mortal
life, most full as it is of errors and hardships.
For there are no good things whatever, and above all, not those by which any
one is made good, or those by which he will become blessed, of which any other
source can be found whence they come to man, and are added to man, unless it
be from God. But when he who is good and faithful in these miseries shall have
come from this life to the blessed life, then will truly come to pass what
now is absolutely impossible,--namely, that a man may live as he will.(2) For
he will not will to live badly in the midst of that felicity, nor will he will
anything that will be wanting, nor will there be wanting anything which he
shall have willed. Whatever shall be loved, will be present; nor will that
be longed for, which shall not be present. Everything which will be there will
be good, and the supreme God will be the supreme good and will be present for
those to enjoy who love Him; and what altogether is most blessed, it will be
certain that it will be so forever. But now, indeed, philosophers have made
for themselves, according to the pleasure of each, their own ideals of a blessed
life; that they might be able, as it were by their own power, to do that, which
by the common conditions of mortals they were not able to do,--namely, to live
as they would. For they felt that no one could be blessed otherwise than by
having what he would, and by suffering nothing which he would not. And who
would not will, that the life whatsoever it be, with which he is delighted,
and which he therefore calls blessed, were so in his own power, that he could
have it continually? And yet who is in this condition? Who wills to suffer
troubles in order that he may endure them manfully, although he both wills
and is able to endure them if he does suffer them? Who would will to live in
torments, even although he is able to live laudably by holding fast to righteousness
in the midst of them through patience? They who have endured these evils, either
in wishing to have or in fearing to lose what they loved, whether wickedly
or laudably, have thought of them as transitory. For many have stretched boldly
through transitory evils to good things which will last. And these, doubtless,
are blessed through hope, even while actually suffering such transitory evils,
through which they arrive at good things which will not be transitory. But
he who is blessed through hope is not yet blessed: for he expects, through
patience, a blessedness which he does not yet grasp. Whereas he, on the other
hand, who is tormented without any such hope, without any such reward, let
him use as much endurance as he pleases, is not truly blessed, but bravely
miserable. For he is not on that account not miserable, because he would be
more so if he also bore misery impatiently. Further, even if he does not suffer
those things which he would not will to suffer in his own body, not even then
is he to be esteemed blessed, inasmuch as he does not live as he wills. For
to omit other things, which, while the body remains unhurt, belong to those
annoyances of the mind, without which we should will to live, and which are
innumerable; he would will, at any rate, if he were able, so to have his body
safe and sound, and so to suffer no inconveniences from it, as to have it within
his own control, or even to have it with an imperishableness of the body itself;
and because he does not possess this, and hangs in doubt about it, he certainly
does not live as he wills. For although he may be ready from fortitude to accept,
and bear with an equal mind, whatever adversities may happen to him, yet he
had rather they should not happen, and prevents them if he is able; and he
is in such way ready for both alternatives, that, as much as is in him, he
wishes for the one and shuns the other; and if he have fallen into that which
he shuns, he therefore bears it willingly, because that could not happen which
he willed. He bears it, therefore, in order that he may not be crushed; but
he would not willingly be even burdened. How, then, does he live as he wills?
Is it because he is willingly strong to bear what he would not will to be put
upon him? Then he only wills what he can, because he cannot have what he wills.
And here is the sum-total of the blessedness of proud mortals, I know not whether
to be laughed at, or not rather to be pitied, who boast that they live as they
will, because they willingly bear • patiently what they are unwilling
should happen to them. For this, they say, is like Terence's wise saying,--
"Since that cannot be which you will, will that which thou canst."(1)
That this is aptly said, who denies? But it is advice given to the miserable
man, that he may not be more miserable. And it is not rightly or truly said
to the blessed man, such as all wish themselves to be, That cannot be which
you will. For if he is blessed, whatever he wills can be; since he does not
will that which cannot be. But such a life is not for this mortal state, neither
will it come to pass unless when immortality also shall come to pass. And if
this could not be given at all to man, blessedness too would be sought in vain,
since it cannot be without immortality.
CHAP. 8.--BLESSEDNESS CANNOT EXIST WITHOUT IMMORTALITY.
11. As, therefore, all men will to be blessed, certainly. if they will truly,
they will also to be immortal; for otherwise they could not be blessed. And
further, if questioned also concerning immortality, as before concerning blessedness,
all reply that they will it. But blessedness of what quality soever, such as
is not so, but rather is so called, is sought, nay indeed is feigned in this
life, whilst immortality is despaired of, without which true blessedness cannot
be. Since he lives blessedly, as we have already said before, and have sufficiently
proved and concluded, who lives as he wills, and wills nothing wrongly. But
no one wrongly wills immortality, if human nature is by God's gift capable
of it; and if it is not capable of it, it is not capable of blessedness. For,
that a man may live blessedly, he must needs live. And if life quits him by
his dying, how can a blessed life remain with him? And when it quits him, without
doubt it either quits him unwilling, or willing, or neither. If unwilling,
how is the life blessed which is so within his will as not to be within his
power? And whereas no one is blessed who wills something that he does not have,
how much less is he blessed who is quitted against his will, not by honor,
nor by possessions, nor by any other thing, but by the blessed life itself,
since he will have no life at all? And hence, although no feeling is left for
his life to be thereby miserable (for the blessed life quits him, because life
altogether quits him), yet he is wretched as long as he feels, because he knows
that against his will that is being destroyed for the sake of which he loves
all else, and which he loves beyond all else. A life therefore cannot both
be blessed, and yet quit a man against his will, since no one becomes blessed
against his will; and hence how much more does it make a man miserable by quitting
him against his will, when it would make him miserable if he had it against
his will! But if it quit him with his will, even so how was that a blessed
life, which he who had it willed should perish? It remains then for them to
say, that neither of these is in the mind of the blessed man; that is, that
he is neither unwilling nor willing to be quitted by a blessed life, when through,
death life quits him altogether; for that he stands firm with an even heart,
prepared alike for either alternative. But neither is that a blessed life which
is such as to be unworthy of his love whom it makes blessed. For how is that
a blessed life which the blessed man does not love? Or how is that loved, of
which it is received indifferently, whether it is to flourish or to perish?
Unless perhaps the virtues, which we love in this way on account of blessedness
alone, venture to persuade us that we do not love blessedness itself. Yet if
they did this. we should certainly leave off loving the virtues themselves,
when we do not love that on account of which alone we loved them. And further,
how will that opinion be true, which has been so tried, and sifted, and thoroughly
strained, and is so certain, viz. that all men will to be blessed, if they
themselves who are already blessed neither will nor do not will to be blessed?
Or if they will it, as truth proclaims, as nature constrains, in which indeed
the supremely good and unchangeably blessed Creator has implanted that will:
if, I say, they will to be blessed who are blessed, certainly they do no will
to be not blessed. But if they do not will not to be blessed, without doubt
they do not will to be annihilated and perish in regard to their blessedness.
But they cannot be blessed except they are alive; therefore they do not will
so to perish in regard to their life. Therefore, whoever are either truly blessed
or desire to be so, will to be immortal. But he does not live blessedly who
has not that which he wills. Therefore it follows that in no way can life be
truly blessed unless it be eternal.
CHAP. 9.--WE SAY THAT FUTURE BLESSEDNESS IS TRULY ETERNAL, NOT THROUGH HUMAN
REASONINGS, BUT BY THE HELP OF FAITH. THE IMMORTALITY OF BLESSEDNESS BECOMES
CREDIBLE FROM THE Incarnation OF THE SON OF GOD.
12. Whether
human nature can receive this, which yet it confesses to be desirable, is
no small question.
But if
faith be present, which is in those to whom Jesus
has given power to become the sons of God, then there is no question. Assuredly,
of those who endeavor to discover it from human reasonings, scarcely a few,
and they endued with great abilities, and abounding in leisure, and learned
with the most subtle learning, have been able to attain to the investigation
of the immortality of the soul alone. And even for the soul they have not found
a blessed life that is stable, that is, true; since they have said that it
returns to the miseries of this life even after blessedness. And they among
them who are ashamed of this opinion, and have thought that the purified soul
is to be placed in eternal happiness without a body, hold such opinions concerning
the past eternity of tim world, as to confute this opinion of theirs concerning
the soul; a thing which here it is too long to demonstrate; but it has been,
as I think, sufficiently explained by us in the twelfth book of the City of
God.(1) But that faith promises, not by human reasoning, but by divine authority,
that the whole man, who certainly consists of soul and body, shall be immortal,
and on this account truly blessed. And so, when it had been said in the Gospel,
that Jesus has given "power to become the sons of God to them who received
Him;" and what it is to have received Him had been shortly explained by
saying, "To them that believe on His name;" and it was further added
in what way they are to become sons of God, viz., "Which were born not
of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God;"--lest
that infirmity of men which we all see and bear should despair of attaining
so great excellence, it is added in the same place, "And the Word was
made flesh, and dwelt among us;"(1) that, on the contrary, men might be
convinced of that which seemed incredible. For if He who is by nature the Son
of God was made the Son of man through mercy for the sake of the sons of men,--for
this is what is meant by "The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us" men,--how
much more credible is it that the sons of men by nature should be made the
sons of God by the grace of God, and should dwell in God, in whom alone and
from whom alone the blessed can be made partakers of that immortality; of which
that we might be convinced, the Son of God was made partaker of our mortality?
CHAP. 10.--THERE WAS NO OTHER MORE SUITABLE WAY OF FREEING MAN FROM THE MISERY
OF MORTALITY THAN THE, INCARNATION OF THE WORD. THE MERITS WHICH ARE CALLED
OURS ARE THE GIFTS OF GOD.
13. Those then who say, What, had God no other way by which He might free
men from the misery of this mortality, that He should will the only-begotten
Son, God co-eternal with Himself, to become man, by putting on a human soul
and flesh, and being made mortal to endure death?--these, I say, it is not
enough so to refute, as to assert that that mode by which God deigns to free
us through the Mediator of God and men, the man Christ Jesus, is good and suitable
to the dignity of God; but we must show also, not indeed that no other mode
was possible to God, to whose power all things are equally subject, but that
there neither was nor need have been any other mode more appropriate for curing
our misery. For what was so necessary for the building up of our hope, and
for the freeing the minds of mortals cast down by the condition of mortality
itself, from despair of immortality, than that it should be demonstrated to
us at how great a price God, rated us, and how greatly He loved us? But what
is more manifest and evident in this so great proof hereof, than that the Son
of God, unchangeably good, remaining what He was in Himself, and receiving
from us and for us what He was not, apart from any loss of His own nature,
and deigning to enter into the fellowship of ours, should first, without any
evil desert of His own, bear our evils; and so with unobligated munificence
should bestow His own gifts upon us, who now believe how much God loves us,
and who now hope that of which we used to despair, without any good deserts
of our own, nay, with our evil deserts too going before?
14. Since
those also which are called our deserts, are His gifts. For, that faith may
work by love,(2) "the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts
by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us."(3) And He was then given, when
Jesus was glorified by the resurrection. For then He promised that He Himself
would send Him, and He sent Him;(4) because then, as it was written and foretold
of Him, "He ascended up on high, He led captivity captive, and gave gifts
unto men."(5) These gifts constitute our deserts, by which we arrive at
the chief good of an immortal blessedness. "But God," says the apostle, "commendeth
His love towards as, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.
Much more, then, being now justified by His blood, we shall be saved from wrath
through Him." To this he goes on to add, "For if, when we were enemies,
we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son; much more, being reconciled,
we shall be saved by His life." Those whom he first calls sinners he afterwards
calls the enemies of God; and those whom he first speaks of as justified by
His blood, he afterwards speaks of as reconciled by the death of the Son of
God; and those whom he speaks of first as saved from wrath through Him, he
afterwards speaks of as saved by His life. We were not, therefore, before that
grace merely anyhow sinners, but in such sins that we were enemies of God.
But the same apostle calls us above several times by two appellations, viz.
sinners and enemies of God,--one as if the most mild, the other plainly the
most harsh,--saying, "For if when we were yet weak, in due time Christ
died for the ungodly."(6) Those whom he called weak, the same he called
ungodly. Weakness seems something slight; but sometimes it is such as to be
called impiety. Yet except it were weakness, it would not need a physician,
who is in the Hebrew Jesus, in the Greek <greek>Swthr</greek>,
but in our speech Saviour. And this word the Latin language had not previously,
but could have seeing that it could have it when it wanted it. And this foregoing
sentence of the apostle, where he says, "For when we were yet weak, in
due time He died for the ungodly," coheres with those two following sentences;
in the one of which he spoke of sinners, in the other of enemies of God, as
though he referred each severally to each, viz. sinners to the weak, the enemies
of God to the ungodly.
CHAP. 11.--A DIFFICULTY, HOW WE ARE JUSTITIFIED IN THE BLOOD OF THE SON OF
GOD.
15. But
what is meant by "justified in His blood?" What power is
there in this blood, I beseech you, that they who believe should be justified
in it? And what is meant by "being reconciled by the death of His Son?" Was
it indeed so, that when God the Father was wroth with us, He saw the death
of His Son for us, and was appeased towards us? Was then His Son already so
far appeased towards us, that He even deigned to die for us; while the Father
was still so far wroth, that except His Son died for us, He would not be appeased?
And what, then, is that which the same teacher of the Gentiles himself says
in another place: "What shall we then say to these things? If God be for
us, who can be against us? He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him
up for us all; how has He not with Him also freely given us all things?"(1)
Pray, unless the Father had been already appeased, would He have delivered
up His own Son, not sparing Him for us? Does not this opinion seem to be as
it were contrary to that? In the one, the Son dies for us, and the Father is
reconciled to us by His death; in the other, as though the Father first loved
us, He Himself on our account does not spare the Son, He Himself for us delivers
Him up to death. But I see that the Father loved us also before, not only before
the Son died for us, but before He created the world; the apostle himself being
witness, who says, "According as He hath chosen us in Him before the foundation
of the world."(2) Nor was the Son delivered up for us as it were unwillingly,
the Father Himself not sparing Him; for it is said also concerning Him, "Who
loved me, and delivered up Himself for me."3 Therefore together both the
Father and the Son, and the Spirit of both, work all things equally and harmoniously;
yet we are justified in the blood of Christ, and we are reconciled to God by
the death of His Son. And I will explain, as I shall be able, here also, how
this was done, as much as may seem sufficient.
CHAP. 12.--ALL, ON ACCOUNT OF THE SIN OF ADAM, WERE DELIVERED INTO THE POWER
OF THE DEVIL.
16. By
the justice of God in some sense, the human race was delivered into the power
of the devil;
the sin
of the first man passing over originally into
all of both sexes in their birth through conjugal union, and the debt of our
first parents binding their whole posterity. This delivering up is first signified
in Genesis, where, when it had been said to the serpent, "Dust shalt thou
eat," it was said to the man, "Dust thou art, and unto dust thou
shall return."(4) In the words, "Unto dust shalt thou return," the
death of the body is fore-announced, because he would not have experienced
that either, if he had continued to the end upright as he was made; but in
that it is said to him whilst still living, "Dust thou art," it is
shown that the whole man was changed for the worse. For "Dust thou art" is
much the same as, "My spirit shall not always remain in these men, for
that they also are flesh."(5) Therefore it was at that time shown, that
he was delivered to him, in that it had been said to him, "Dust shall
thou eat." But the apostle declares this more clearly, where he says: "And
you who were dead in trespasses and sins, wherein in time past ye walked according
to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air,
the spirit that now worketh in the children of unfaithfulness; among whom we
also had. our conversation in times past, in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling
the desires of the flesh and of the mind; and were by nature the children of
wrath, even as others."(6) The "children of unfaithfulness" are
the unbelievers; and who is not this before he becomes a believer? And therefore
all men are originally under the prince of the power of the air, "who
worketh in the children of unfaithfulness." And that which I have expressed
by "originally" is the same that the apostle expresses when he speaks
of themselves who "by nature" were as others; viz. by nature as it
has been depraved by sin, not as it was created upright from the beginning.
But the way in which man was thus delivered into the power of the devil, ought
not to be so understood as if God did this, or commanded it to be done; but
that He only permitted it, yet that justly. For when He abandoned the sinner,
the author of the sin immediately entered. Yet God did not certainly so abandon
His own creature as not to show Himself to him as God creating and quickening,
and among penal evils bestowing also many good things upon the evil. For He
hath not in anger shut up His tender mercies.(1) Nor did He dismiss man from
the law of His own power, when He permitted him to be in the power of the devil;
since even the devil himself is not separated from the power of the Omnipotent,
as neither from His goodness. For whence do even the evil angels subsist in
whatever manner of life they have, except through Him who quickens all things?
If, therefore, the commission of sins through the just anger of God subjected
man to the devil, doubtless the remission of sins through the merciful reconciliation
of God rescues man from the devil.
CHAP. 13.--MAN WAS TO BE RESCUED FROM THE POWER OF THE DEVIL, NOT BY POWER,
BUT BY RIGHTEOUSNESS.
17. But
the devil was to be overcome, not by the power of God, but by His righteousness.
For what
is more powerful
than the Omnipotent? Or what creature
is there of which the power can be compared to the power of the Creator? But
since the devil, by the fault of his own perversity, was made a lover of power,
and a forsaker and assailant of righteousness,--for thus also men imitate him
so much the more in proportion as they set their hearts on power, to the neglect
or even hatred of righteousness, and as they either rejoice in the attainment
of power, or are inflamed by the lust of it,--it pleased God, that in order
to the rescuing of man from the grasp of the devil, the devil should be conquered,
not by power, but by righteousness; and that so also men, imitating Christ,
should seek to conquer the devil by righteousness, not by: power. Not that
power is to be shunned as as though it were something evil; but the order must
be preserved, whereby righteousness is before it. For how great can be the
power of mortals? Therefore let mortals cleave to righteousness; power will
be given to immortals. And compared to this, the power, how great soever, of
those men who are called powerful on earth, is found to be ridiculous weakness,
and a pitfall is dug there for the sinner, where the wicked seem to be most
powerful. And the righteous man says in his song, "Blessed is the man
whom Thou chasteneth, O Lord, and teachest him out of Thy law: that Thou mayest
give him rest from the days of adversity, until the pit be digged for the wicked.
For the Lord will not cast off His people, neither will He forsake His inheritance,
until righteousness return unto judgment, and all who follow it are upright
in heart."(2) At this present time, then, in which the might of the people
of God is delayed, "the Lord will not cast off His. people, neither will
He forsake His inheritance," how bitter and unworthy things so-ever it
may suffer in its humility and weakness; '' until the righteousness," which
the weakness of the pious now possesses, "shall return to judgment," that
is, shall receive the power of judging; which is preserved in the end for the
righteous when power in its due order shall have followed after righteousness
going before. For power joined to righteousness, or righteousness added to
power, constitutes a judicial authority. But righteousness belongs to a good
will; whence it was said by the angels when Christ was born: "Glory to
God in the highest, and on earth peace to men of good will,"(3) But power
ought to follow righteousness, not to go before it; and accordingly it is placed
in "second," that is, prosperous fortune; and this is called "second,"(4)
from "following." For whereas two things make a man blessed, as we
have argued above, to will well, and to be able to do what one wills, people
ought not to be so perverse, as has been noted in the same discussion, as that
a man should choose from the two things which make him blessed, the being able
to do what he wills, and should neglect to will what he ought; whereas he ought
first to have a good will, but great power afterwards. Further, a good will
must be purged from vices, by which if a man is overcome, he is in such wise
overcome as that he wills evil; and then how will his will be still good? It
is to be wished, then, that power may now be given, but power against vices,
to conquer which men do not wish to be powerful, while they wish to be so in
order to conquer men; and why is this, unless that, being in truth conquered,
they feignedly conquer, and are conquerors not in truth, but in opinion? Let
a man will to be prudent, will to be strong, will to he temperate, will to
be just; and that he may be able to have these things truly, let him certainly
desire power, and seek to be powerful in himself, and (strange though it be)
against himself for himself. But all the other things which he wills rightly,
and yet is not able to have, as, for instance, immortality and true and full
felicity, let him not cease to long for, and let him patiently expect.
CHAP. 14.--THE UNOBLIGATED DEATH OF CHRIST HAS FREED THOSE WHO WERE LIABLE
TO DEATH,
18. What,
then, is the righteousness by which the devil was conquered? What,except
the righteousness
of Jesus
Christ? And how was he conquered? Because, when
he found in Him nothing worthy of death, yet he slew Him. And certainly it
is just, that we whom he held as debtors, should be dismissed free by believing
in Him whom he slew without any debt. In this way it is that we are said to
be justified in the blood of Christ.(1) For so that innocent blood was shed
for the remission of our sins. Whence He calls Himself in the Psalms, "Free
among the dead."(2) For he only that is dead is free from the debt of
death. Hence also in another psalm He says, "Then I restored that which
I seized not;"(3) meaning sin by the thing seized, because sin is laid
hold of against what is lawful. Whence also He says, by the mouth of His own
Flesh, as is read in the Gospel: "For the prince of this world cometh,
and hath nothing in me," that is, no sin; but "that the world may
know," He says, "that I do the commandment of the Father; arise,
let us go hence."(4) And hence He proceeds to His passion, that He might
pay for us debtors that which He Himself did not owe. Would then the devil
be conquered by this most just right, if Christ had willed to deal with him
by power, not by righteousness? But He held back what was possible to Him,
in order that He might first do what was fitting. And hence it was necessary
that He should be both man and God. For unless He had been man, He could not
have been slain; unless He had been God. men would not have believed that He
would not do what He could, but that He could not do what He would; nor should
we have thought that righteousness was preferred by Him to power, but that
He lacked power. But now He suffered for us things belonging to man, because
He was man; but if He had been unwilling, it would have been in His power to
not so to suffer, because He was also God. And righteousness was therefore
made more acceptable in humility, because so great power as was in His Divinity,
if He had been unwilling, would have been able not to suffer humility; and
thus by Him who died, being thus powerful, both righteousness was commended,
and power promised, to us, weak mortals. For He did one of these two things
by dying, the other by rising again. For what is more righteous, than to come
even to the death of the cross for righteousness? And what more powerful, than
to rise from the dead, and to ascend into heaven with that very flesh in which
He was slain? And therefore He conquered the devil first by righteousness,
and afterwards by power: namely, by righteousness, because He had no sin, and
was slain by him most unjustly; but by power, because having been dead He lived
again, never afterwards to die.(5) But He would have conquered the devil by
power, even though He could not have been slain by him: although it belongs
to a greater power to conquer death itself also by rising again, than to avoid
it by living. But the reason is really a different one, why we are justified
in the blood of Christ, when we are rescued from the power of the devil through
the remission of sins: it pertains to this, that the devil is conquered by
Christ by righteousness, not by power. For Christ was crucified, not through
immortal power, but through the weakness which He took upon Him in mortal flesh;
of which weakness nevertheless the apostle says, "that the weakness of
God is stronger than men."(6)
CHAP. 15 --OF THE SAME SUBJECT.
19. It
is not then difficult to see that the devil was conquered, when he who was
slain by Him rose again.
It is something more, and more profound of
comprehension, to see that the devil was conquered when he thought himself
to have conquered, that is, when Christ was slain. For then that blood, since
it was His who had no sin at all, was poured out for the remission of our sins;
that, because the devil deservedly held those whom, as guilty of sin, he bound
by the condition of death,he might deservedly loose them through Him, whom,
as guilty of no sin, the punishment of death undeservedly affected. The strong
man was conquered by this righteousness, and bound with this chain, that his
vessels might be spoiled,(7) which with himself and his angels had been vessels
of wrath while with him, and might be turned into vessels of mercy.(8) For
the Apostle Paul tells us, that these words of our Lord Jesus Christ Himself
were spoken from heaven to him when he was first called. For among the other
things which he heard, he speaks also of this as said to him thus: "For
I have appeared unto thee for this purpose, to make thee a minister and a witness
both of these things which thou hast seen from me, and of those things in the
which I will appear unto thee; delivering thee from the people, and from the
Gentiles, unto whom now I send thee,to open the eyes of the blind, and to turn
them from darkness [to light], and from the power of Satan unto God, that they
may receive forgiveness of sins, and inheritance among them which are sanctified,
and faith that is in me."(1) And hence the same apostle also, exhorting
believers to the giving of thanks to God the Father, says: "Who hath delivered
us from the power of darkness and hath translated us into the kingdom of His
dear Son: in whom we have redemption, even the forgiveness of sins."(2)
In this redemption, the blood of Christ was given, as it were, as a price for
us, by accepting which the devil was not enriched, but bound:(3) that we might
be loosened from his bonds, and that he might not with himself involve in the
meshes of sins, and so deliver to the destruction of the second and eternal
death, (4) any one of those whom Christ, free from all debt, had redeemed by
pouring out His own blood unindebtedly; but that they who belong to the grace
of Christ, foreknown, and predestinated, and elected before the foundation
of the world? should only so far die as Christ Himself died for them, i.e.
only by the death of the flesh, not of the spirit.
CHAP. 16.--THE REMAINS OF DEATH AND THE EVIL THINGS OF THE WORLD TURN TO GOOD
FOR THE ELECT. HOW FITLY THE DEATH OF CHRIST WAS CHOSEN, THAT WE MIGHT BE JUSTIFIED
IN HI$ BLOOD. WHAT THE ANGER OF GOD IS.
20. For
although the death, too, of the flesh itself came originally from the sin
of the first man, yet
the
good use of it has made most glorious martyrs.
And so not only that death itself, bat all the evils of this world, and the
griefs and labors of men, although they come from the deserts of sins, and
especially of original sin, whence life itself too became bound by the bond
of death, yet have fitly remained, even when sin is forgiven; that man might
have wherewith to contend for truth, and whereby the goodness of the faithful
might be exercised; in order that the new man through the new covenant might
be made ready among the evils of this world for a new world, by bearing wisely
the misery which this condemned life deserved, and by rejoicing soberly because
it will be finished, but expecting faithfully and patiently the blessedness
which the future life, being set free, will have for ever. For the devil being
cast forth from his dominion, and from the hearts of the faithful, in the condemnation
and faithlessness of whom he, although himself also condemned, yet reigned,
is only so far permitted to be an adversary according to the condition of this
mortality, as God knows to be expedient for them: concerning which the sacred
writings speak through the mouth of the apostle: "God is faithful, who
will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able; but will with the
temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able to bear it."(6)
And those evils which the faithful endure piously, are of profit either for
the correction of sins, or for the exercising and proving of righteousness,
or to manifest the misery of this life, that the life where will be that true
and perpetual blessedness may be desired more ardently, and sought out more
earnestly. But it is on their account that these evils are still kept in being,
of whom the apostle says: "For we know that all things work together for
good to them that love God, to them who are called to be holy according to
His purpose. For whom He did foreknow, He also did predestinate to be conformed
to the image of His Son, that He might be the first-born among many brethren.
Moreover, whom He did predestinate, them He also called; and whom He called,
them He also justified; and whom He justified, them He also glorified." It
is of these who are predestinated, that not one shall perish with the devil;
not one shall remain even to death under the power of the devil. And then follows
what I have already cited above:(7) "What shall we then say to these things?
If God be for us, who can be against us? He that spared not His own Son, but
delivered Him up for us all; how has He not with Him also freely given us all
things ?"(8)
21. Why
then should the death of Christ not have come to pass? Nay, rather, why should
not that death
itself
have been chosen above all else to be brought
to pass, to the passing by of the other innumerable ways which He who is omnipotent
could have employed to free us; that death, I say, wherein neither was anything
diminished or changed from His divinity, and so great benefit was conferred
upon men, from the humanity which He took upon Him, that a temporal death,
which was not due, was rendered by the eternal Son of God, who was also the
Son of man, whereby He might free them from an eternal death which was due?
The devil was holding fast our sins, and through them was fixing us deservedly
in death. He discharged them, who had none of His own, and who was led by him
to death undeservedly. That blood was of such price, that he who even slew
Christ for a time by a death which was not due, can as his due detain no one,
who has put on Christ, in the eternal death which was due. Therefore "God
commendeth His love towards us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ
died for us. Much more then, being now justified in His blood, we shall be
saved from wrath through Him." Justified, he says, in His blood,--justified
plainly, in that we are freed from all sin; and freed from all sin, because
the Son of God, who knew no sin, was slain for us. Therefore "we shall
be saved from wrath through Him;" from the wrath certainly of God, which
is nothing else but just retribution. For the wrath of God is not, as is that
of man, a perturbation of the mind; but it is the wrath of Him to whom Holy
Scripture says in another place, "But Thou, O Lord, mastering Thy power,
judgest with calmness."(1) If, therefore, the just retribution of God
has received such a name, what can be the right understanding also of the reconciliation
of God, unless that then such wrath. comes to an end? Neither were we enemies
to God, except as sins are enemies to righteousness; which being forgiven,
suchenmities come to an end, and they whom He Himself justifies are reconciled
to the Just One. And yet certainly He loved them even while still enemies,
since "He spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all," when
we were still enemies. And therefore the apostle has rightly added.: "For
if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son," by
which that remission of sins was made, "much more, being reconciled, we
shall be saved in His life." Saved in life, who were reconciled by death.
For who can doubt that He will give His life for His friends, for whom, when
enemies, He gave His death? "And not only so," he says, "but
we also joy in God, through our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom we have now received
the atonement." "Not only," he says, "shall we be saved," but "we
also joy;" and not in ourselves, but "in God;" nor through ourselves, "but
through our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom we have now received the atonement," as
we have argued above. Then the apostle adds, "Wherefore, as by one man
sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all
men, in whom all have sinned;"(2) etc.: in which he disputes at some length
concerning the two men; the one the first Adam, through whose sin and death
we, his descendants, are bound by, as it were, hereditary evils; and the other
the second Adam, who is not only man, but also God, by whose payment for us
of what He owed not, we are freed from the debts both of our first father and
of ourselves. Further, since on account of that one the devil held all who
were begotten through his corrupted carnal concupiscence, it is just that on
account of this one he should loose all who are regenerated through His immaculate
spiritual grace.
CHAP. 17.--OTHER ADVANTAGES OF THE INCARNATION.
22. There
are many other things also in the incarnation of Christ, displeasing as it
is to the proud,
that
are to be observed and thought of advantageously.
And one of them is, that it has been demonstrated to man what place he has
in the things which God has created; since human nature could so be joined
to God, that one person could be made of two substances, and thereby indeed
of three--God, soul, and flesh: so that those proud malignant spirits, who
interpose themselves as mediators to deceive, although as if to help, do not
therefore dare to place themselves above man because they have not flesh; and
chiefly because the Son of God deigned to die also in the same flesh, lest
they, because they seem to be immortal, should therefore succeed in getting
themselves worshipped as gods. Further, that the grace of God might be commended
to us in the man Christ without any precedent merits; because not even He Himself
obtained by any precedent merits that He should be joined in such great unity
with the true God, and should become the Son of God, one Person with Him; but
from the time when He began to be man, from that time He is also God; whence
it is said, "The Word was made flesh."(3) Then, again, there is this,
that the pride of man, which is the chief hindrance against his cleaving to
God, can be confuted and healed through such great humility of God. Man learns
also how far he has gone away from God; and what it is worth to him as a pain
to cure him, when he returns through such a Mediator, who both as God assists
men by His divinity, and as man agrees with men by His weakness. For what greater
example of obedience could be given to us, who had perished through disobedience,
than God the Son obedient to God the Father, even to the death of the cross?(1)
Nay, wherein could the reward of obedience itself be better shown, than in
the flesh of so great a Mediator, which rose again to eternal life? It belonged
also to the justice and goodness of the Creator, that the devil should be conquered
by the same rational creature which he rejoiced to have conquered, and by one
that came from that same race which, by the corruption of its origin through
one, he held altogether.
CHAP. 18.--WHY THE SON OF GOD TOOK MAN UPON HIMSELF FROM THE RACE OF ADAM,
AND FROM A VIRGIN.
23. For
assuredly God could have taken upon Himself to be man, that in that manhood
He might be
the Mediator
between God and men, from some other source,
and not from the race of that Adam who bound the human race by his sin; as
He did not create him whom He first created, of the race of some one else.
Therefore He was able, either so, or in any other mode that He would, to create
yet one other, by whom the conqueror of the first might be conquered. But God
judged it better both to take upon Him man through whom to conquer the enemy
of the human race, from the race itself that had been conquered; and yet to
do this of a virgin, whose conception, not flesh but spirit, not lust but faith,
preceded.(2) Nor did that concupiscence of the flesh intervene, by which the
rest of men, who derive original sin, are propagated and conceived; but holy
virginity became pregnant, not by conjugal intercourse, but by faith,--lust
being utterly absent,--so that that which was born from the root of the first
man might derive only the origin of race, not also of guilt. For there was
born, not a nature corrupted by the contagion of transgression, but the one
only remedy of all such corruptions. There was born, I say, a Man having nothing
at all, and to have nothing at all, of sin; through whom they were to be born
again so as to be freed from sin, who could not be born without sin. For although
conjugal chastity makes a right use of the carnal concupiscence which is in
our members; yet it is liable to motions not voluntary, by which it shows either
that it could not have existed at all in paradise before sin, or if it did,
that it was not then such as that sometimes it should resist the will. But
now we feel it to be such, that in opposition to the law of the mind, and even
if there is no question of begetting, it works in us the incitement of sexual
intercourse; and if in this men yield to it, then it is satisfied by an act
of sin; if they do not, then it is bridled by an act of refusal: which two
things who could doubt to have been alien from paradise before sin? For neither
did the chastity that then was do anything indecorous, nor did the pleasure
that then was suffer anything unquiet. It was necessary, therefore, that this
carnal concupiscence should be entirely absent, when the offspring of the Virgin
was conceived; in whom the author of death was to find nothing worthy of death,
and yet was to slay Him in order that he might be conquered by the death of
the Author of life: the conqueror of the first Adam, who held fast the human
race, conquered by the second Adam, and losing the Christian race, freed out
of the human race from human guilt, through Him who was not in the guilt, although
He was of the race; that that deceiver might be conquered by that race which
he had conquered by guilt. And this was so done, in order that man may not
be lifted up, but "that he that glorieth should glory in the Lord."(3)
For he who was conquered was only man; and he was therefore conquered, because
he lusted proudly to be a god. But He who conquered was both man and God; and
therefore He so conquered, being born of a virgin, because God in humility
did not, as He governs other saints, so govern that Man, but bare Him [as a
Son]. These so great gifts of God, and whatever else there are, which it is
too long for us now upon this subject both to inquire and to discuss, could
not exist unless the Word had been made flesh.
CHAP. 19.--WHAT IN THE INCARNATE WORD BELONGS TO KNOWLEDGE, WHAT TO WISDOM.
24. And
all these things which the Word made flesh did and bare for us in time and
place, belong,
according
to the distinction which we have undertaken
to demonstrate, to knowledge, not to wisdom. And as the Word is without time
and without place, it is co-eternal with the Father, and in its wholeness everywhere;
and if any one can, and as much as he can, speak truly concerning this Word,
then his discourse will pertain to wisdom. And hence the Word made flesh, which
is Christ Jesus, has the treasures both of wisdom and of knowledge. For the
apostle, writing to the Colossians, says: "For I would that ye knew what
great conflict I have for you, and for them at Laodicea, and for as many as
have not seen my face in the flesh; that their hearts might be comforted, being
knit together in love, and unto all riches of the full assurance of understanding,
to the acknowledgment of the mystery of God which is Christ Jesus: in whom
are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge."(1) To what extent
the apostle knew all those treasures, how much of them he had penetrated, and
in them to how great things he had reached, who can know? Yet, for my part,
according to that which is written, "But the manifestation of the Spirit
is given to every man to profit withal; for to one is given by the Spirit the
word of wisdom, to another the word of knowledge by the same Spirit;"(2)
if these two are in such way to be distinguished from each other, that wisdom
is to be assigned to divine things, knowledge to human, I acknowledge both
in Christ, and so with me do all His faithful ones. And when I read, "The
Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us," I understand by the Word the
true Son of God, I acknowledge in the flesh the true Son of man, and both together
joined into one Person of God and man, by an ineffable copiousness of grace.
And on account of this, the apostle goes on to say, "And we beheld His
glory, the glory as of the Only-begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth."(3)
If we refer grace to knowledge, and truth to wisdom, I think we shall not swerve
from that distinction between these two things which we have commended. For
in those things that have their origin in time, this is the highest grace,
that man is joined with God in unity of person; but in things eternal the highest
truth is rightly attributed to the Word of God. But that the same is Himself
the Only-begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth,--this took place,
in order that He Himself in things done for us in time should be the same for
whom we are cleansed by the same faith, that we may contemplate Him steadfastly
in things eternal. And those distinguished philosophers of the heathen who
have been able to understand and discern the invisible things of God by those
things which are made, have yet, as is said of them, "held down the truth
in iniquity;"(4) because they philosophized without a Mediator, that is,
without the man Christ, whom they neither believed to be about to come at the
word of the prophets, nor to have come at that of the apostles. For, placed
as they were in these lowest things, they could not but seek some media through
which they might attain to those lofty things which they had understood; and
so they fell upon deceitful spirits, through whom it came to pass, that "they
changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible
man, and to birds, and four-fooled beasts, and creeping things."(5) For
in such forms also they set up or worshipped idols. Therefore Christ is our
knowledge, and the same Christ is also our wisdom. He Himself implants in us
faith concerning temporal things, He Himself shows forth the truth concerning
eternal things. Through Him we reach on to Himself: we stretch through knowledge
to wisdom; yet we do not withdraw from one and the same Christ, "in whom
are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and of knowledge." But now we speak
of knowledge, and will hereafter speak of wisdom as much as He Himself shall
grant. And let us not so take these two things, as if it were not allowable
to speak either of the wisdom which is in human things, or of the knowledge
which is in divine. For after a laxer custom of speech, both can be called
wisdom, and both knowledge. Yet the apostle could not in any way have written," To
one is given the word of wisdom, to another the word of knowledge," except
also these several things had been properly called by the several names, of
the distinction between which we are now treating.
CHAP. 20.--WHAT HAS BEEN TREATED OF IN THIS BOOK. HOW WE HAVE REACHED BY STEPS
TO A CERTAIN TRINITY, WHICH IS FOUND IN PRACTICAL KNOWLEDGE AND TRUE FAITH.
25. Now, therefore, let us see what this prolix discourse has effected, what
it has gathered, whereto it has reached. It belongs to all men to will to be
blessed; yet all men have not faith, whereby the heart is cleansed, and so
blessedness is reached. And thus it comes to pass, that by means of the faith
which not all men will, we have to reach on to the blessedness which every
one wills. All see in their own heart that they will to be blessed; and so
great is the agreement of human nature on this subject, that the man is not
deceived who conjectures this concerning another's mind, out of his own: in
short, we know ourselves that all will this. But many despair of being immortal,
although no otherwise can any one be that which all will, that is, blessed.
Yet they will also to be immortal if they could; but through not believing
that they can, they do not so live that they can. Therefore faith is necessary,
that we may attain blessedness in all the good things of human nature, that
is, of both soul and body. But that same faith requires that this faith be
limited in Christ, who rose in the flesh from the dead, not to die any more;
and that no one is freed from the dominion of the devil, through the forgiveness
of sins, save by Him; and that in the abiding place of the devil, life must
needs be at once miserable and never-ending, which ought rather to be called
death than life. All which I have also argued, so far as space permitted, in
this book, while I have already said much on the subject in the fourth book
of this work as well;(1) but in that place for one purpose, here for another,--namely,
there, that I might show why and how Christ was sent in the fullness of time
by the Father,(2) on account of those who say that He who sent and He who was
sent cannot be equal in nature; but here, in order to distinguish practical
knowlege from contemplative wisdom.
26. For we wished to ascend, as it were, by steps, and to seek in the inner
man, both in knowledge and in wisdom, a sort of trinity of its own special
kind, such as we sought before in the outer man; in order that we may come,
with a mind more practised in these lower things, to the contemplation of that
Trinity which is God, according to our little measure, if indeed, we can even
do this, at least in a riddle and as through a glass.(3) If, then, any one
have committed to memory the words of this faith in their sounds alone, not
knowing what they mean, as they commonly who do not know Greek hold in memory
Greek words, or similarly Latin ones, or those of any other language of which
they are ignorant, has not he a sort of trinity in his mind? because, first,
those sounds of words are in his memory, even when he does not think thereupon;
and next, the mental vision (acies) of his act of recollection is formed thence
when he conceives of them; and next, the will of him who remembers and thinks
unites both. Yet we should by no means say that the man in so doing busies
himself with a trinity of the interior man, but rather of the exterior; because
he remembers, and when he wills, contemplates as much as he wills, that alone
which belongs to the sense of the body, which is called hearing. Nor in such
an act of thought does he do anything else than deal with images of corporeal
things, that is, of sounds. But if he holds and recollects what those words
signify, now indeed something of the inner man is brought into action; not
yet, however, ought he to be said or thought to live according to a trinity
of the tuner man, if he does not love those things which are there declared,
enjoined, promised. For it is possible for him also to hold and conceive these
things, supposing them to be false, in order that he may endeavor to disprove
them. Therefore that will, which in this case unites those things which are
held in the memory with those things which are thence impressed on the mind's
eye in conception, completes, indeed, some kind of trinity, since itself is
a third added to two others; but the man does not live according to this, when
those things which are conceived are taken to be false, and are not accepted.
But when those things are believed to be true, and those things which therein
ought to be loved, are loved, then at last the man does live according to a
trinity of the inner man; for every one lives according to that which he loves.
But how can things be loved which are not known, but only believed? This question
has been already treated of in former books;(4) and we found, that no one loves
what he is wholly ignorant of, but that when things not known are said to be
loved, they are loved from those things which are known. And now we so conclude
this book, that we admonish the just to live by faith,(5) which faith worketh
by love,(6) so that the virtues also themselves, by which one lives prudently,
boldly, temperately, and justly, be all referred to the same faith; for not
otherwise can they be true virtues. And yet these in this life are not of so
great worth, as that the remission of sins, of some kind or other, is not sometimes
necessary here; and this remission comes not to pass, except through Him, who
by His own blood conquered the prince of sinners. Whatsoever ideas are in the
mind of the faithful man from this faith, and from such a life, when they are
contained in the memory, and are looked at by recollection, and please the
will, set forth a kind of trinity of its own sort.? But the image of God, of
which by His help we shall afterwards speak, is not yet in that trinity; a
thing which will then be more apparent, when it shall have been shown where
it is, which the reader may expect in a succeeding book.
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