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THE FIFTEEN BOOKS OF
AURELIUS AUGUSTINUS
BISHOP OF HIPPO
ON THE TRINITY
BOOK XIV.
THE TRUE WISDOM OF MAN IS TREATED OF; AND IT IS SHOWN THAT THE IMAGE OF GOD,
WHICH MAN IS IN RESPECT TO HIS MIND, IS NOT PLACED PROPERLY IN TRANSITORY THINGS,
AS IN MEMORY, UNDERSTANDING, AND LOVE, WHETHER OF FAITH ITSELF AS EXISTING
IN TIME, OR EVEN OF THE MIND AS BUSIED WITH ITSELF, BUT IN THINGS THAT ARE
PERMANENT; AND THAT THIS WISDOM IS THEN PERFECTED, WHEN THE MIND IS RENEWED
IN THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD, ACCORDING TO THE IMAGE OF HIM WHO CREATED MAN AFTER
HIS OWN IMAGE, AND THUS ATTAINS TO WISDOM, WHEREIN THAT WHICH IS CONTEMPLATED
IS ETERNAL.
CHAP. 1.--WHAT THE WISDOM IS OF WHICH WE ARE HERE TO TREAT. WHENCE THE NAME
OF PHILOSOPHER AROSE. WHAT HAS BEEN ALREADY SAID CONCERNING THE DISTINCTION
OF KNOWLEDGE AND WISDOM.
1. We
must now discourse concerning wisdom; not the wisdom of God, which without
doubt is God, for
His only-begotten
Son is called the wisdom of God;(1) but
we will speak of the wisdom of man, yet of true wisdom, which is according
to God, and is His true and chief worship, which is called in Greek by one
term, <greek>qeoseaeia</greek>. And this term, as we have already
observed, when our own countrymen themselves also wished to interpret it by
a single term, was by them rendered piety, whereas piety means more commonly
what the Greeks call <greek>eusebeia</greek>. But because <greek>qeosebeia</greek> cannot
be translated perfectly by any one word, it is better translated by two, so
as to render it rather by "the worship of God." That this is the
wisdom of man, as we have already laid down in the twelfth book(2) of this
work, is shown by the authority of Holy Scripture, in the book of God's servant
Job, where we read that the Wisdom of God said to man, "Behold piety,
that is wisdom; and to depart from evil is knowledge;"(3) or, as some
have translated the Greek word <greek>episuhmhn</greek>, "learning,"(4)
which certainly takes its name from learning,(4) whence also it may be called
knowledge. For everything is learned in order that it may be known. Although
the same word, indeed,(5) is employed in a different sense, where any one suffers
evils for his sins, that he may be corrected. Whence is that in the Epistle
to the Hebrews, "For what son is he to whom the father giveth not discipline?" And
this is still more apparent in the same epistle: "Now no chastening(6)
for the present seemeth to be joyous, but grievous: nevertheless afterward
it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto them which are exercised
thereby."(7) Therefore God Himself is the chiefest wisdom; but the worship
of God is the wisdom of man, of which we now speak. For "the wisdom of
this world is foolishness with God."(8) It is in respect to this wisdom,
therefore, which is the worship of God, that Holy Scripture says, "The
multitude of the wise is the welfare of the world."(9)
2. But
if to dispute of wisdom belongs to wise men, what shall we do? Shall we dare
indeed to profess
wisdom,
test it should be mere impudence for ourselves
to dispute about it? Shall we not be alarmed by the example of Pythagoras?--who
dared not profess to be a wise man, but answer answered hat he was a to be
a wise man, but philosopher, i.e., a lover of wisdom; whence arose the name,
that became thenceforth so much the popular name, that no matter how great
the learning wherein any one excelled, either in his own opinion or that of
others, in things pertaining to wisdom, he was still called nothing more than
philosopher. Or was it for this reason that no one, even of such as these,
dared to profess himself a wise man,--because they imagined that a wise man
was one without sin? But our Scriptures do not say this, which say, "Rebuke
a wise man, and he will love thee."(1) For doubtless he who thinks a man
ought to be rebuked, judges him to have sin. However, for my part, I dare not
profess myself a wise man even in this sense; it is enough for me to assume,
what they themselves cannot deny, that to dispute of wisdom belongs also to
the philosopher, i.e., the lover of wisdom. For they have not given over so
disputing who have professed to be lovers of wisdom rather than wise men.
3. In
disputing, then, about wisdom, they have defined it thus: Wisdom is the knowledge
of things
human and divine.
And hence, in the last book, I have
not withheld the admission, that the cognizance of both subjects, whether divine
or human, may be called both knowledge and wisdom.(2) But according to the
distinction made in the apostle's words, "To one is given the word of
wisdom, to another the word of knowledge,"(3) this definition is to be
divided, so that the knowledge of things divine shall be called wisdom, and
that of things human appropriate to itself the name of knowledge; and of the
latter I have treated in the thirteenth book, not indeed so as to attribute
to this knowledge everything whatever that can be known by man about things
human, wherein there is exceeding much of empty vanity and mischievous curiosity,
but only those things by which that most wholesome faith, which leads to true
blessedness, is begotten, nourished, defended, strengthened; and in this knowledge
most of the faithful are not strong, however exceeding strong in the faith
itself. For it is one thing to know only what man ought to believe in order
to attain to a blessed life, which must needs be an eternal one; but another
to know in what way this belief itself may both help the pious, and be defended
against the impious, which last the apostle seems to call by the special name
of knowledge. And when I was speaking of this knowledge before, my especial
business was to commend faith, first briefly distinguishing things eternal
from things temporal, and there discoursing of things temporal; but while deferring
things eternal to the present book, I showed also that faith respecting things
eternal is itself a thing temporal, and dwells in time in the hearts of believers,
and yet is necessary in order to attain the things eternal themselves.(4) I
argued also, that faith respecting the things temporal which He that is eternal
did and suffered for us as man, which manhood He bare in time and carried on
to things eternal, is profitable also for the obtaining of things eternal;
and that the virtues themselves, whereby in this temporal and mortal life men
live prudently, bravely, temperately, and justly, are not true virtues, unless
they are referred to that same faith, temporal though it is, which leads on
nevertheless to things eternal.
CHAP. 2.--THERE IS A KIND OF TRINITY IN THE HOLDING, CONTEMPLATING, AND LOVING
OF FAITH TEMPORAL, BUT ONE THAT DOES NOT YET ATTAIN TO BEING PROPERLY AN IMAGE
OF GOD.
4. Wherefore
since, as it is written, "While we are in the body, we are
absent from the Lord; for we walk by faith, not by sight;"(5) undoubtedly,
so long as the just man lives by faith,(6) howsoever he lives according to
the inner man, although he aims at truth and reaches on to things eternal by
this same temporal faith, nevertheless in the holding, contemplating, and loving
this temporal faith, we have not yet reached such a trinity as is to be called
an image of God; lest that should seem to be constituted in things temporal
which ought to be so in things eternal. For when the human mind sees its own
faith, whereby it believes what it does not see, it does not see a thing eternal.
For that will not always exist, which certainly will not then exist, when this
pilgrimage, whereby we are absent from God, in such way that we must needs
walk by faith, shall be ended, and that sight shall have succeeded it whereby
we shall see face to face;(7) just as now, because we believe although we do
not see, we shall deserve to see, and shall rejoice at having been brought
through faith to sight. For then it will be no longer faith, by which that
is believed which is not seen; but sight, by which that is seen which is believed.
And then, therefore, although we remember this past mortal life, and call to
mind by recollection that we once believed what we did not see, yet that faith
will be reckoned among things past and done with, not among things present
and always continuing. And hence also that trinity which now consists in the
remembering, contemplating, and loving this same faith while present and continuing,
will then be found to be done with and past, and not still enduring. And hence
it is to be gathered, that if that trinity is indeed an image of God, then
this image itself would have to be reckoned, not among things that exist always,
but among things transient.
CHAP. 3.--A DIFFICULTY REMOVED, WHICH LIES IN THE WAY OF WHAT HAS JUST BEEN
SAID.
But far be it from us to think, that while the nature of the soul is immortal,
and from the first beginning of its creation thenceforth never ceases to be,
yet that that which is the best thing it has should not endure [or ever with
its own immortality. Yet what is there in its nature as created; better than
that it is made after the image of its Creator?(1) We must find then what may
be fittingly called the image of God, not in the holding, contemplating, and
loving that faith which will not exist always, but in that which will exist
always.
5. Shall we then scrutinize somewhat more carefully and deeply whether the
case is really thus? For it may be said that this trinity does not perish even
when faith itself shall have passed away; because, as now we both hold it by
memory, and discern it by thought, and love it by will; so then also, when
we shall both hold in memory, and shall recollect, that we once had it, and
shall unite these two by the third, namely will, the same trinity will still
continue. Since, if it have left in its passage as it were no trace in us,
doubtless we shall not have ought of it even in our memory, whereto to recur
when recollecting it as past, and by the third, viz. purpose, coupling both
these, to wit, what was in our memory though we were not thinking about it,
and what is formed thence by conception. But he who speaks thus, does not perceive,
that when we hold, see, and love in ourselves our present faith, we are concerned
with a different trinity as now existing, from that trinity which will exist,
when we shall contemplate by recollection, not the faith itself, but as it
were the imagined trace of it laid up in the memory, and shall unite by the
will, as by a third, these two things, viz. that which was in the memory of
him who retains, and that which is impressed thence upon the vision of the
mind of him who recollects. And that we may understand this, let us take an
example from things corporeal, of which we have sufficiently spoken in the
eleventh book.(2) For as we ascend from lower to higher things, or pass inward
from outer to inner things, we first find a trinity in the bodily object which
is seen, and in the vision of the seer, which, when he sees it, is informed
thereby, and in the purpose of the will which combines both. Let us assume
a trinity like this, when the faith which is now in ourselves is so established
in our memory as the bodily object we spoke of was in place, from which faith
is formed the conception in recollection, as from that bodily object was formed
the vision of the beholder; and to these two, to complete the trinity, will
is to be reckoned as a third, which connects and combines the faith established
in the memory, and a sort of effigy of that faith impressed upon the vision
of recollection; just as in that trinity of corporeal vision, the form of the
bodily object that is seen, and the corresponding form wrought in the vision
of the beholder, are combined by the purpose of the will. Suppose, then, that
this bodily object which was beheld was dissolved and had perished, and that
nothing at all of it remained anywhere, to the vision of which the gaze might
have recourse; are we then to say, that because the image of the bodily object
thus now past and done with remains in the memory, whence to form the conception
in recollecting, and to have the two united by will as a third, therefore it
is the same trinity as that former one, when the appearance of the bodily object
posited in place was seen? Certainly not, but altogether a different one: for,
not to say that that was from without, while this is from within; the former
certainly was produced by the appearance of a present bodily object, the latter
by the image of that object now past. So, too, in the case of which we are
now treating, to illustrate which we have thought good to adduce this example,
the faith which is even now in our mind, as that bodily object was in place,
while held, looked at, loved, produces a sort of trinity; but that trinity
will exist no more, when this faith in the mind, like that bodily object in
place, shall no longer exist. But that which will then exist, when we shall
remember it to have been, but not now to be, in us, will doubtless be a different
one. For that which now is, is wrought by the thing itself, actually present
and attached to the mind of one who believes; but that which shall then be,
will be wrought by the imagination of a past thing left in the memory of one
who recollects.
CHAP. 4.--THE IMAGE OF GOD IS TO BE SOUGHT IN THE IMMORTALITY OF THE RATIONAL
SOUL, HOW A TRINITY IS DEMONSTRATED IN THE MIND.
6. Therefore
neither is that trinity an image of God, which is not now, nor is that other
an image
of God, which
then will not be; but we must find in
the soul of man, i.e., the rational or intellectual soul, that image of the
Creator which is immortally implanted in its immortality. For as the immortality
itself of the soul is spoken with a qualification; since the soul too has its
proper death, when it lacks a blessed life, which is to be called the true
life of the soul; but it is therefore called immortal, because it never ceases
to live with some life or other, even when it is most miserable;--so, although
reason or intellect is at one time torpid in it, at another appears small,
and at another great, yet the human soul is never anything save rational or
intellectual; and hence, if it is made after the image of God in respect to
this, that it is able to use reason and intellect in order to understand and
behold God, then from the moment when that nature so marvellous and so great
began to be, whether this image be so worn out as to be almost none at all,
or whether it be obscure and defaced, or bright and beautiful, certainly it
always is. Further, too, pitying the defaced condition of its dignity, divine
Scripture tells us, that "although man walks in an image, yet he disquieteth
himself in vain; he heapeth up riches, and cannot tell who shall gather them."(1)
It would not therefore attribute vanity to the image of God, unless it perceived
it to have been defaced. Yet it sufficiently shows that such defacing does
not extend to the taking away its being an image, by saying, "Although
man walks in an image." Wherefore in both ways that sentence can be truly
enunciated; in that, as it is said, "Although man walketh in an image,
yet he disquieteth himself in vain," so it may be said, "Although
man disquieteth himself in vain, yet he walketh in an image." For although
the nature of the soul is great, yet it can be corrupted, because it is not
the highest; and although it can be corrupted, because it is not the highest,
yet because it is capable and can be partaker of the highest nature, it is
a great nature. Let us seek, then, in this image of God a certain trinity of
a special kind, with the aid of Him who Himself made us after His own image.
For no otherwise can we healthfully investigate this subject, or arrive at
any result according to the wisdom which is from Him. But if the reader will
either hold in remembrance and recollect what we have said of the human soul
or mind in former books, and especially in the tenth, or will carefully re-peruse
it in the passages wherein it is contained, he will not require here any more
lengthy discourse respecting the inquiry into so great a thing.
7. We said, then, among other things in the tenth book, that the mind of man
knows itself. For the mind knows nothing so much as that which is close to
itself; and nothing is more close to the mind than itself. We adduced also
other evidences, as much as seemed sufficient, whereby this might be most certainly
proved.
CHAP. 5.--WHETHER THE MIND OF INFANTS KNOWS ITSELF.
What, then, is to be said of the mind of an infant, which is still so small,
and buried in such profound ignorance of things, that the mind of a man which
knows anything shrinks from the darkness of it? Is that too to be believed
to know itself; but that,: as being too intent upon those things which it has
begun to perceive through the bodily senses, with the greater delight in proportion
to their novelty, it is not able indeed to be ignorant of itself, but is also
not able to think of itself? Moreover, how intently it is bent upon sensible
things that are without it, may be conjectured from this one fact, that it
is so greedy of sensible light, that if any one through carelessness, or ignorance
of the possible consequences, place a light at nighttime where an infant is
lying down, on that side to which the eyes of the child so lying down can be
bent, but its neck cannot be turned, the gaze of that child will be so fixed
in that direction, that we have known some to have come to squint by this means,
in that the eyes retained that form which habit in some way impressed upon
them while tender and soft.(2) In the case, too, of the other bodily senses,
the souls of infants, as far as their age permits, so narrow themselves as
it were, and are bent upon them, that they either vehemently detest or vehemently
desire that only which offends or allures through the flesh, but do not think
of their own inward self, nor can be made to do so by admonition; because they
do not yet know the signs that express admonition, whereof words are the chief,
of which as of other things they are wholly ignorant. And that it is one thing
not to know oneself, another not to think of oneself, we have shown already
in the same book.3
8. But let us pass by the infantine age, since we cannot question it as to
what goes on within itself, while we have ourselves pretty well forgotten it.
Let it suffice only for us hence to be certain, that when man has come to be
able to think of the nature of his own mind, and to find out what is the truth,
he will find it nowhere else but in himself. And he will find, not what he
did not know, but that of which he did not think. For what do we know, if we
do not know what is in our own mind; when we can know nothing at all of what
we do know, unless by the mind?
CHAP. 6.--HOW A KIND OF TRINITY EXISTS IN THE MIND THINKING OF ITSELF. WHAT
IS THE PART OF THOUGHT IN THIS TRINITY.
The function
of thought, however, is so great, that not even the mind itself can, so to
say, place
itself in
its own sight, except when it thinks of itself;
and hence it is so far the case, that nothing is in the sight of the mind,
except that which is being thought of, that not even the mind itself, whereby
we think whatever we do think, can be in its own sight otherwise than by thinking
of itself. But in what way it is not in its own sight when it is not thinking
of itself, while it can never be without itself, as though itself were one
thing, and the sight of itself another, it is not in my power to discover.
For this is not unreasonably said of the eye of the body; for the eye itself
of the body is fixed in its own proper place in the body, but its sight extends
to things external to itself, and reaches even to the stars. And the eye is
not in its own sight, since it does not look at itself, unless by means of
a mirror, as is said above;(1) a thing that certainly does not happen when
the mind places itself in its own sight by thinking of itself. Does it then
see one part of itself by means of another part of itself, when it looks at
itself in thought, as we look at some of our members, which can be in our sight,
with other also of our members, viz. with our eyes? What can be said or thought
more absurd? For by what is the mind removed, except by itself? or where is
it placed so as to be in its own sight, except before itself? Therefore it
will not be there, where it was, when it was not in its own sight; because
it has been put down in one place, after being taken away from another. But
if it migrated in order to be beheld, where will it remain in order to behold?
Is it as it were doubled, so as to be in this and in that place at the same
time, viz. both where it can behold, and where it can be beheld; that in itself
it may be beholding, and before itself beheld? If we ask the truth, it will
tell us nothing of the sort since it is but feigned images of bodily objects
of which we conceive when we conceive thus; and that the mind is not such,
is very certain to the few minds by which the truth on such a subject can be
inquired. It appears, therefore, that the beholding of the mind is something
pertaining to its nature, and is recalled to that nature when it conceives
of itself, not as if by moving through space, but by an incorporeal conversion;
but when it is not conceiving of itself, it appears that it is not indeed in
its own sight, nor is its own perception formed from it, but yet that it knows
itself as though it were to itself a remembrance of itself. Like one who is
skilled in many branches of learning: the things which he knows are contained
in his memory, but nothing thereof is in the sight of his mind except that
of which he is conceiving; while all the rest are stored up in a kind of secret
knowledge, which is called memory. The trinity, then, which we were setting
forth, was constituted in this way: first, we placed in the memory the object
by which the perception of the percipient was formed; next, the conformation,
or as it were the image which is impressed thereby; lastly, love or will as
that which combines the two. When the mind, then, beholds itself in conception,
it understands and cognizes itself; it begets, therefore, this its own understanding
and cognition. For an incorporeal thing is understood when it is beheld, and
is cognized when understood. Yet certainly the mind does not so beget this
knowledge of itself, when it beholds itself as understood by conception, as
though it had before been unknown to itself; but it was known to itself, in
the way in which things are known which are contained in the memory, but of
which one is not thinking; since we say that a man knows letters even when
he is thinking of something else, and not of letters. And these two, the begetter
and the begotten, are coupled together by love, as by a third, which is nothing
else than will, seeking or holding fast the enjoyment of something. We held,
therefore, that a trinity of the mind is to be intimated also by these three
terms, memory, intelligence, will.
9. But since the mind, as we said near the end of the same tenth book, always
remembers itself, and always understands and loves itself, although it does
not always think of itself as distinguished from those things which are not
itself; we must inquire in what way understanding (intellectus) belongs to
conception, while the notion (notitia) of each thing that is in the mind, even
when one is not thinking of it, is said to belong only to the memory. For if
this is so, then the mind had not these three things: viz. the remembrance,
the understanding, and the love of itself; but it only remembered itself, and
afterwards, when it began to think of itself, then it understood and loved
itself.
CHAP. 7.--THE THING IS MADE PLAIN BY AN EXAMPLE, IN WHAT WAY THE MATTER IS
HANDLED IN ORDER TO HELP THE READER.
Wherefore let us consider more carefully that example which we have adduced,
wherein it was shown that not knowing a thing is different from not thinking
[conceiving] of it; and that it may so happen that a man knows something of
which he is not thinking, when he is thinking of something else, not of that.
When any one, then, who is skilled in two or more branches of knowledge is
thinking of one of them, though he is not thinking of the other or others,
yet he knows them. But can we rightly say, This musician certainly knows music,
but he does not now understand it, because he is not thinking of it; but he
does now understand geometry, for of that he is now thinking? Such an assertion,
as far as appears, is absurd. What, again, if we were to say, This musician
certainly knows music, but he does not now love it, while he is not now thinking
of it; but he does now love geometry, because of that he is now thinking,--is
not this similarly absurd? But we say quite correctly, This person whom you
perceive disputing about geometry is also a perfect musician, for he both remembers
music, and understands, and loves it; but although he both knows and loves
it, he is not now thinking of it, since he is thinking of geometry, of which
he is disputing. And hence we are warned that we have a kind of knowledge of
certain things stored up in the recesses of the mind, and that this, when it
is thought of, as it were, steps forth in public, and is placed as if openly
in the sight of the mind; for then the mind itself finds that it both remembers,
and understands, and loves itself, even although it was not thinking of itself,
when it was thinking of something else. But in the case of that of which we
have not thought for a long time, and cannot think of it unless reminded; that,
if the phrase is allowable, in some wonderful way I know not how, we do not
know that we know. In short, it is rightly said by him who reminds, to him
whom he reminds, You know this, but you do not know that you know it; I will
remind you, and you will find that you know what you had thought you did not
know. Books, too, lead to the same results, viz. those that are written upon
subjects which the reader under the guidance of reason finds to be true; not
those subjects which he believes to be true on the faith of the narrator, as
in the case of history; but those which he himself also finds to be true, either
of himself, or in that truth itself which is the light of the mind. But he
who cannot contemplate these things, even when reminded, is too deeply buried
in the darkness of ignorance, through great blindness of heart and too wonderfully
needs divine help, to be able to attain to true wisdom.
10. For this reason I have wished to adduce some kind of proof, be it what
it might, respecting the act of conceiving, such as might serve to show in
what way, out of the things contained in the memory, the mind's eye is informed
in recollecting, and some such thing is begotten, when a man conceives, as
was already in him when, before he conceived, he remembered; because it is
easier to distinguish things that take place at successive times, and where
the parent precedes the offspring by an interval of time. For if we refer ourselves
to the inner memory of the mind by which it remembers itself, and to the inner
understanding by which it understands itself, and to the inner will by which
it loves itself, where these three always are together, and always have been
together since they began to be at all, whether they were being thought of
or not; the image of this trinity will indeed appear to pertain even to the
memory alone; but because in this case a word cannot be without a thought (for
we think all that we say, even if it be said by that tuner word which belongs
to no separate language), this image is rather to be discerned in these three
things, viz. memory, intelligence, will. And I mean now by intelligence that
by which we understand in thought, that is, when our thought is formed by the
finding of those things, which had been at hand to the memory but were not
being thought of; and I mean that will, or love, or preference which Combines
this offspring and parent, and is in some way common to both. Hence it was
that I tried also, viz. in the eleventh book, to lead on the slowness of readers
by means of outward sensible things which are seen by the eyes of the flesh;
and that I then proceeded to enter with them upon that power of the tuner man
whereby he reasons of things temporal, deferring the consideration of that
which dominates as the higher power, by which he, contemplates things eternal.
And I discussed this in two books, distinguishing the two in the twelfth, the
one of them being higher and the other lower, and that the lower ought to be
subject to the higher; and in the thirteenth I discussed, with what truth and
brevity I could, the office of the lower, in which the wholesome knowledge
of things human is contained, in order that we may so act in this temporal
life as to attain that which is eternal; since, indeed, I have cursorily included
in a single book a subject so manifold and copious, and one so well known by
the many and great arguments of many and great men, while manifesting that
a trinity exists also in it, but not yet one that can be called an image of
God.
CHAP. 8.--THE TRINITY WHICH IS THE IMAGE OF GOD IS NOW TO BE SOUGHT IN THE
NOBLEST PART OF THE MIND.
11. But
we have come now to that argument in which we have undertaken to consider
the noblest part
of the
human mind, by which it knows or can know God, in order
that we may find in it the image of God. For although the human mind is not
of the same nature with God, yet the image of that nature than which none is
better, is to be sought and found in us, in that than which our nature also
has nothing better. But the mind must first be considered as it is in itself,
before it becomes partaker of God; and His image must be found in it. For,
as we have said, although worn out and defaced by losing the participation
of God, yet the image of God still remains.(1) For it is His image in this
very point, that it is capable of Him, and can be partaker of Him; which so
great good is only made possible by its being His image. Well, then, the mind
remembers, understands, loves itself; if we discern this, we discern a trinity,
not yet indeed God, but now at last an image of God. The memory does not receive
from without that which it is to hold; nor does the understanding find without
that which it is to regard, as the eye of the body does; nor has will joined
these two from without, as it joins the form of the bodyily object and that
which is thence wrought in the vision of the beholder; nor has conception,
in being turned to it, found an image of a thing seen without, which has been
somehow seized and laid up in the memory, whence the intuition of him that
recollects has been formed, will as a third joining the two: as we showed to
take place in those trinities which were discovered in things corporeal, or
which were somehow drawn within from bodily objects by the bodily sense; of
all which we have discoursed in the eleventh book.(2) Nor, again, as it took
place, or appeared to do so, when we went on further to discuss that knowledge,
which had its place now in the workings of the inner man, and which was to
be distinguished from wisdom; of which knowledge the subject-matter was, as
it were, adventitious to the mind, and either was brought thither by historical
information,--as deeds and words, which are performed in time and pass away,
or which again are established in the nature of things in their own times and
places,--or arises in the man himself not being there before, whether on the
information of others, or by his own thinking,--as faith, which we commended
at length in the thirteenth book, or as the virtues, by which, if they are
true, one so lives well in this mortality as to live blessedly in that immortality
which God promises. These and other things of the kind have their proper order
in time, and in that order we discerned more easily a trinity of memory, sight,
and love. For some of such things anticipate the knowledge of learners. For
they are knowable also before they are known, and beget in the learner a knowledge
of themselves. And they either exist in their own proper places, or have happened
in time past; although things that are past do not themselves exist, but only
certain signs of them as past, the sight or hearing of which makes it known
that they have been and have passed away. And these signs are either situate
in the places themselves, as e.g. monuments of the dead or the like; or exist
in written books worthy of credit, as is all history that is of weight and
approved authority; or are in the minds of those who already know them; since
what is already known to them is knowable certainly to others also, whose knowledge
it has anticipated, and who are able to know it on the information of those
who do know it. And all these things, when they. are learned, produce a certain
kind of trinity, viz. by their own proper species, which was knowable also
before it was known, and by the application to this of the knowledge of the
learner, which then begins to exist when he learns them, and by will as a third
which combines both; and when they are known, yet another trinity is produced
in the recollecting of them, and this now inwardly in the mind itself, from
those images which, when they were learned, were impressed upon the memory,
and from the informing of the thought when the look has been turned upon these
by recollection, and from the will which as a third combines these two. But
those things which arise in the mind, not having been there before, as faith
and other things of that kind, although they appear to be adventitious, since
they are implanted by teaching, yet are not situate without or transacted without,
as are those things which are believed; but began to be altogether within in
the mind itself. For faith is not that which is believed, but that by which
it is believed; and the former is believed, the latter seen. Nevertheless,
because it began to be in the mind, which was a mind also before these things
began to be in it, it seems to be somewhat adventitious, and will be reckoned
among things past, when sight shall have succeeded, and itself shall have ceased
to be. And it makes now by its presence, retained as it is, and beheld, and
loved, a different trinity from that which it will then make by means of some
trace of itself, which in passing it will have left in the memory: as has been
already said above.
CHAP. 9.--WHETHER JUSTICE AND THE OTHER VIRTUES CEASE TO EXIST IN THE FUTURE
LIFE.
12. There
is, however, some question raised, whether the virtues likewise by which
one lives well
in this present
mortality, seeing that they themselves
begin also to be in the mind, which was a mind none the less when it existed
before without them, cease also to exist at that time when they have brought
us to things eternal. For some have thought that they will cease, and in the
case of three--prudence, fortitude, temperance--such an assertion seems to
have something in it; but justice is immortal, and will rather then be made
perfect in us than cease to be. Yet Tullius, the great author of eloquence,
when arguing in the dialogue Hortensius, says of all four: "If we were
allowed, when we migrated from this life, to live forever in the islands of
the blessed, as fables tell, what need were there of eloquence when there would
be no trials, or what need, indeed, of the very virtues themselves? For we
should not need fortitude when nothing of either toil or danger was proposed
to us; nor justice, when there was nothing of anybody else's to be coveted;
nor temperance, to govern lasts that would not exist; nor, indeed, should we
need prudence, when there was no choice offered between good and evil. We should
be blessed, therefore, solely by learning and knowing nature, by which alone
also the life of the gods is praiseworthy. And hence we may perceive that everything
else is a matter of necessity, but this is one of free choice." This great
orator, then, when proclaiming the excellence of philosophy, going over again
all that he had learned from philosophers, and excellently and pleasantly explaining
it, has affirmed all four virtues to be necessary in this life only, which
we see to be full of troubles and mistakes; but not one of them when we shall
have migrated from this life, if we are permitted to live there where is a
blessed life; but that blessed souls are blessed only in learning and knowing,
i.e. in the contemplation of nature, than which nothing is better and more
lovable. It is that nature which created and appointed all other natures. And
if it belongs to justice to be subject to the government of this nature then
justice is certainly immortal; nor will it cease to be in that blessedness,
but will be such and so great that it cannot be more perfect or greater. Perhaps,
too, the other three virtues--prudence although no longer with any risk of
error, and fortitude without the vexation of bearing evils, and temperance
without the thwarting of lust--will exist in that blessedness: so that it maybe
the part of prudence to prefer or equal no good thing to God; and of fortitude,
to cleave to Him most steadfastly; and of temperance, to be pleased by no harmful
defect. But that which justice is now concerned with in helping the wretched,
and prudence in guarding against treachery, and fortitude in bearing troubles
patiently, and temperance in controlling evil pleasures, will not exist there,
where there will be no evil at all. And hence those acts of the virtues which
are necessary to this mortal life, like the faith to which they are to be referred,
will be reckoned among things past; and they make now a different trinity,
whilst we hold, look at, and love them as present, from that which they will
then make, when we shall discover them not to be, but to have been, by certain
traces of them which they will have left in passing in the memory; since then,
too, there will be a trinity, when that trace, be it of what sort it may, shall
be retained in the memory, and truly recognized, and then these two be joined
by will as a third.
CHAP. 10.--HOW A TRINITY IS PRODUCED BY THE MIND REMEMBERING, UNDERSTANDING,
AND LOVING ITSELF.
13. In the knowledge of all these temporal things which we have mentioned,
there are some knowable things which precede the acquisition of the knowledge
of them by an interval of time, as in the case of those sensible objects which
were already real before they were known, or of all those things that are learned
through history; but some things begin to be at the same time with the knowing
of them,--just as, if any visible object, which did not exist before at all,
were to rise up before our eyes, certainly it does not precede our knowing
it; or if there be any sound made where there is some one to hear, no doubt
the sound and the hearing that sound begin and end simultaneously. Yet none
the less, whether preceding in time or beginning to exist simultaneously, knowable
things generate knowledge, and are not generated by knowledge. But when knowledge
has come to pass, whenever the things known and laid up in memory are reviewed
by recollection, who does not see that the retaining them in the memory is
prior in time to the sight of them in recollection, and to the uniting of the
two things by will as a third? In the mind, howver, it is not so. For the mind
is not adventitious to itself, as though there came to itself already existing,
that same self not already existing, from somewhere else, or did not indeed
come from somewhere else, but that in the mind itself already existing, there
was born that same mind not already existing; just as faith, which before was
not, arises in the mind which already was. Nor does the mind see itself, as
it were, set up in its own memory by recollection subsequently to the knowing
of itself, as though it was not there before it knew itself; whereas,doubtless,
from the time when it began to be, it has never ceased to remember, to understand,
and to love itself, as we have already shown. And hence, when it is turned
to itself by thought, there arises a trinity, in which now at length we can
discern also a word; since it is formed from thought itself, will uniting both.
Here, then, we may recognize, more than we have hitherto done, the image of
which we are in search.
CHAP. 11.--WHETHER MEMORY IS ALSO OF THINGS PRESENT.
14. But
some one will say, That is not memory by which the mind, which is ever present
to itself,
is affirmed
to remember itself; for memory is of things
past, not of things present. For there are some, and among them Cicero, who,
in treating of the virtues, have divided prudence into these three--memory,
understanding, forethought: to wit, assigning memory to things past, understanding
to things present, forethought to things future; which last is certain only
in the case of those who are prescient of the future; and this is no gift of
men, unless it be granted from above, as to the prophets. And hence the book
of Wisdom, speaking of men, "The thoughts of mortals," it says, "are
fearful, and our forethought uncertain."(1) But memory of things past,
and understanding of things present, are certain: certain, I mean, respecting
things incorporeal, which are present; for things corporeal are present to
the sight of the corporeal eyes. But let any one who denies that there is any
memory of things present, attend to the language used even in profane literature,
where exactness of words was more looked for than truth of things. "Nor
did Ulysses suffer such things, nor did, the Ithacan forget himself in so great
a peril."(2) For when Virgil said that Ulysses did not forget himself,
what else did he mean, except that he remembered himself? And since he was
present to himself, he could not possibly remember himself, unless memory pertained
to things present. And, therefore, as that is called memory in things past
which makes it possible to recall and remember them; so in a thing present,
as the mind is to itself, that is not unreasonably to be called memory, i which
makes the mind at hand to itself, so that it can be understood by its own thought,
and then both be joined together by love of itself.
CHAP. 12.--THE TRINITY IN THE MIND IS THE IMAGE OF GOD, IN THAT IT REMEMBERS,
UNDERSTANDS, AND LOVES GOD, WHICH TO DO IS WISDOM.
15. This
trinity, then, of the mind is not therefore the image of God, because the
mind remembers
itself,
and understands and loves itself; but because it
can also remember, understand, and love Him by whom it was made. And in so
doing it is made wise itself. But if it does not do so, even when it remembers,
understands, and loves itself, then it is foolish. Let it then remember its
God, after whose image it is made, and let it understand and love Him. Or to
say the same thing more briefly, let it worship God, who is not made, by whom
because itself was made, it is capable and can be partaker of Him; wherefore
it is written, "Behold, the worship of God, that is wisdom."(3) And
then it will be wise, not by its own light, but by participation of that supreme
Light; and wherein it is eternal, therein shall reign in blessedness. For this
wisdom of man is so called, in that it is also of God. For then it is true
wisdom; for if it is human, it is vain. Yet not so of God, as is that wherewith
God is wise. For He is not wise by partaking of Himself, as the mind is by
partaking of God. But as we call it the righteousness of God, not only when
we speak of that by which He Himself is righteous, but also of that which He
gives to man when He justifies the ungodly, which latter righteousness the
apostle commending, says of some, that "not knowing the righteousness
of God and going about to establish their own righteousness,they are not subject
to the righteousness of God;"(4) so also it may be said of some, that
not knowing the wisdom of God and going about to establish their own wisdom,
they are not subject to the wisdom of God.
16. There
is, then, a nature not made, which made all other natures, great and small,
and is without
doubt
more excellent than those which it has made,
and therefore also than that of which we are speaking; viz. than the rational
and intellectual nature, which is the mind of man, made after the image of
Him who made it. And that nature, more excellent than the rest, is God. And
indeed "He is not far from every one of us," as the apostle says,
who adds, "For in Him we live, and are moved, and have our being."(1)
And if this were said in respect to the body, it might be understood even of
this corporeal world; for in it too in respect to the body, we live, and are
moved, and have our being. And therefore it ought to be taken in a more excellent
way, and one that is spiritual, not visible, in respect to the mind, which
is made after His image For what is there that is not in Him, of whom it is
divinely written, "For of Him, and through Him, and in Him, are all things"?(2)
If, then, all things are in Him, in whom can any possibly live that do live,
or be moved that are moved, except in Him in whom they are? Yet all are not
with Him in that way in which it is said to Him, "I am continually with
Thee."(3) Nor is He with all in that way in which we say, The Lord be
with you. And so it is the especial wretchedness of man not to be with Him,
without whom he cannot be. For, beyond a doubt, he is not without Him in whom
he is; and yet if he does not remember, and understand, and love Him, he is
not with Him. And when any one absolutely forgets a thing, certainly it is
impossible even to remind him of it.
CHAP. 13.--HOW ANY ONE CAN FORGET AND REMEMBER GOD.
17. Let
us take an instance for the purpose from visible things. Somebody whom you
do not recognize.
says
to you, You know me; and in order to remind
you, tells you where,when, and how he became known to you; and if, after the
mention of every sign by which you might be recalled to remembrance, you still
do not recognize him, then you have so come to forget, as that the whole of
that knowledge is altogether blotted out of your mind; and nothing else remains,
hut that you take his word for it who tells you that you once knew him; or
do not even do that, if you do not think the person who speaks to you to be
worthy of credit. But if you do remember him, then no doubt you return to your
own memory, and find in it that which had not been altogether blotted out by
forgetfulness. Let us return to that which led us to adduce this instance from
the intercourse of men. Among other things,the 9th Psalm says, "The wicked
shall be turned into hell, and all the nations. that forget God;"(4) and
again the 22d Psalm, "All the ends of the world shall be reminded, and
turned unto the Lord."(5) These nations, then, will not so have forgotten
God as to be unable to remember Him when reminded of Him; yet, by forgetting
God, as though forgetting their own life, they had been turned into death,
i.e. into hell.(6) But when reminded they are turned to the Lord, as though,
coming to life again by remembering their proper life which they had forgotten.
It is read also in the 94th Psalm, "Perceive now, ye who are unwise among
the people; and ye fools, when will ye be wise? He that planted the ear, shall
He not hear?" etc.(7) For this is spoken to those, who said vain things
concerning God through not understanding Him.
CHAP. 14.--THE MIND LOVES GOD IN RIGHTLY LOVING ITSELF; AND IF IT LOVE NOT
GOD, IT MUST BE SAID TO HATE ITSELF. EVEN A WEAK AND ERRING MIND IS ALWAYS
STRONG IN REMEMBERING, UNDERSTANDING, AND LOVING ITSELF. LET IT BE TURNED TO
GOD, THAT IT MAY BE BLESSED BY REMEMBERING, UNDERSTANDING, AND LOVING HIM.
18. But
there are yet more testimonies in the divine Scriptures concerning the love
of God. For
in it, those other
two [namely, memory and understanding]
are understood by consequence, inasmuch as no one loves that which he does
not remember, or of which he is wholly ignorant. And hence is that well known
and primary commandment, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God."(8) The
human mind, then, is so constituted, that at no time does it not remember,
and understand, and love itself. But since he who hates any one is anxious
to injure him, not undeservedly is the mind of man also said to hate itself
when it injures itself. For it wills ill to itself through ignorance, in that
it does not think that what it wills is prejudicial to it; but it none the
less does will ill to itself, when it wills what would be prejudicial to it.
And hence it is written, "He that loveth iniquity, hateth his own soul."(9)
He, therefore, who knows how to love himself, loves God; but he who does not
love God, even if he does love himself,--a thing implanted in him by nature,--yet
is not unsuitably said to hate himself, inasmuch as he does that which is adverse
to himself, and assails himself as though he were his own enemy. And this is
no doubt a terrible delusion, that whereas all will to profit themselves, many
do nothing but that which is most pernicious to themselves. When the poet was
describing a like disease of dumb animals, "May the gods," says he, "grant
better things to the pious, and assign, that delusion to enemies. They were
rending with bare teeth their own torn limbs."(1) Since it was a disease
of the body he was speaking of, why has he called it a delusion, unless because,
while nature inclines every animal to take all the care it can of itself, that
disease was such that those animals rent those very limbs of theirs which they
desired should be safe and sound? But when the mind loves God, and by consequence,
as has been said remembers and understands Him, then it is rightly enjoined
also to love its neighbor as itself; for it has now come to love itself rightly
and not perversely when it loves God, by partaking of whom that image not only
exists, but is also renewed so as to be no longer old, and restored so as to
be no longer defaced, and beatified so as to be no longer unhappy. For although
it so love itself, that, supposing the alternative to be proposed to it, it
would lose all things which it loves less than itself rather than perish; still,
by abandoning Him who is above it, in dependence upon whom alone it could guard
its own strength, and enjoy Him as its light, to whom it is sung in the Psalm, "I
will guard my strength in dependence upon Thee,"(2) and again, "Draw
near to Him, and be enlightened,"(3)--it has been made so weak and so
dark, that it has fallen away unhappily from itself too, to those things that
are not what itself is, and which are beneath itself, by affections that it
cannot conquer, and delusions from which it sees no way to return. And hence,
when by God's mercy now penitent, it cries out in the Psalms, "My strength
faileth me; as for the light of mine eyes, it also is gone from me."(4)
19. Yet,
in the midst of these evils of weakness and delusion, great as they are,
it could not
lose its
natural memory, understanding and love of itself.
And therefore what I quoted above(5) can be rightly said, "Although man
walketh in an image, surely he is disquieted in vain: he heapeth up treasures,
and knoweth not who shall gather them."(6) For why does he heap up treasures,
unless because his strength has deserted him, through which he would have God.
and so lack nothing? And why cannot he tell for whom he shall gather them,
unless because the light of his eyes is taken from him? And so he does not
see what the Truth saith, "Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required
of thee. Then whose shall those things be which thou hast provided?"(7)
Yet because even such a man walketh in an image, and the man's mind has remembrance,
understanding, and love of itself; if it were made plain to it that it could
not have both, while it was permitted to choose one and lose the other, viz.
either the treasures it has heaped up, or the mind; who is so utterly without
mind, as to prefer to have the treasures rather than the mind? i For treasures
commonly are able to subvert the mind, but the mind that is not subverted by
treasures can live more easily and unencumberedly without any treasures. But
who will be able to possess treasures unless it be by means of the mind? For
if an infant, born as rich as you please, although lord of everything that
is rightfully his, yet possesses nothing if his mind be unconscious, how can
any one possibly possess anything whose mind is wholly lost? But why say of
treasures, that anybody, if the choice be given him, prefers going without
them to going without a mind; when there is no one that prefers, nay, no one
that compares them, to those lights of the body, by which not one man only
here and there, as in the case of gold, but every man, possesses the very heaven?
For every one possesses by the eyes of the body whatever he gladly sees. Who
then is there, who, if he could not keep both, but must lose one, would not
rather lose his treasures than his eyes? And yet if it were put to him on the
same condition, whether he would rather lose eyes than mind, who is there with
a mind that does not see that he would rather lose the former than the latter?
For a mind without the eyes of the flesh is still human, but the eyes of the
flesh without a mind are bestial. And who would not rather be a man, even though
blind in fleshly sight, than a beast that can see?
20. I
have said thus much, that even those who are slower of understanding, to
whose eyes or ears this
book
may come, might be admonished, however briefly,
how greatly even a weak and erring mind loves itself, in wrongly loving and
pursuing things beneath itself. Now it could not love itself if it were altogether
ignorant of itself, i.e. if it did not remember itself, nor understand itself
by which image of God within itself it has such power as to be able to cleave
to Him whose image it is. For it is so reckoned in the order, not of place,
but of natures, as that there is none above it save Him. When, finally, it
shall altogether cleave to Him, then it will be one spirit, as the apostle
testifies, saying, "But he who cleaves to the Lord is one spirit."(1)
And this by its drawing near to partake of His nature, truth, and blessedness,
yet not by His increasing in His own nature, truth and blessedness. In that
nature, then, when it happily has cleaved to it, it will live unchangeably,
and will see as unchangeable all that it does see. Then, as divine Scripture
promises, "His desire will be satisfied with good things,"(2) good
things unchangeable,--the very Trinity itself, its own God, whose image it
is. And that it may not ever thenceforward suffer wrong, it will be in the
hidden place of His presence,(3) filled with so great fullness of Him, that
sin thenceforth will never delight it. But now, when it sees itself, it sees
something not unchangeable.
CHAP. 15.--ALTHOUGH THE SOUL HOPES FOR BLESSEDNESS, YET IT DOES NOT REMEMBER
LOST BLESSEDNESS, BUT REMEMBERS GOD AND THE RULES OF RIGHTEOUSNESS. THE UNCHANGEABLE
RULES OF RIGHT LIVING ARE KNOWN EVEN TO THE UNGODLY.
21. And
of this certainly it feels no doubt, that it is wretched, and longs to be
blessed nor can it
hope for
the possibility of this on any other ground
than its own changeableness for if it were not changeable, then, as it could
not become wretched after being blessed, so neither could it become blessed
after being wretched. And what could have made it wretched under an omnipotent
and good God, except its own sin and the righteousness of its Lord? And what
will make it blessed, unless its own merit, and its Lord's reward? But its
merit, too, is His grace, whose reward will be its blessedness; for it cannot
give itself the righteousness it has lost, and so has not. For this it received
when man was created, and assuredly lost it by sinning. Therefore it receives
righteousness, that on account of this it may deserve to receive blessedness;
and hence the apostle truly says to it, when beginning to be proud as it were
of its own good, "For what hast thou that thou didst not receive? Now
if thou didst receive it, why dost thou glory as if thou hadst not received
it?(4) But when it rightly remembers its own Lord, having received His Spirit,
then, because it is so taught by an inward teaching, it feels wholly that it
cannot rise save by His affection freely given, nor has been able to fall save
by its own defection freely chosen. Certainly it does not remember its own
blessedness; since that has been, but is not, and it has utterly forgotten
it, and therefore cannot even be reminded of it.(5) But it believes what the
trustworthy Scriptures of its God tell of that blessedness, which were written
by His prophet, and tell of the blessedness of Paradise,and hand down to us
historical information of that first both good and ill of man. And it remembers
the Lord its God; for He always is, nor has been and is not, nor is but has
not been; but as He never will not be, so He never was not. And He is whole
everywhere. And hence it both lives, and is moved, and is in Him;(6) had so
it can remember Him. Not because it recollects the having known Him in Adam
or anywhere else before the life of this present body, or when it was first
made in order to be implanted in this body; for it remembers nothing at all
of all this. Whatever there is of this, it has been blotted out by forgetfulness.
But it is reminded, that it may be turned to God, as though to that light by
which it was in some way touched, even when turned away from Him. For hence
it is that even the ungodly think of eternity, and rightly blame and rightly
praise many things in the morals of men. And by what rules do they thus judge,
except by those wherein they see how men ought to live, even though they themselves
do not so live? And where do they see these rules? For they do not see them
in their own [moral] nature; since no doubt these things are to be seen by
the mind, and their minds are confessedly changeable, but these rules are seen
as unchangeable by him who can see them at all; nor yet in the character of
their own mind, since these rules are rules of righteousness, and their minds
are confessedly unrighteous. Where indeed are these rules written, wherein
even the unrighteous recognizes what is righteous, wherein he discerns that
he ought to have what he himself has not? Where, then, are they written, unless
in the book of that Light which is called Truth? whence every righteous law
is copied and transferred (not by migrating to it, but by being as it were
impressed upon it) to the heart of the man that worketh righteousness; as the
impression from a ring passes into the wax, yet does not leave the ring. But
he who worketh not, and yet sees how he ought to work, he is the man that is
turned away from that light, which yet touches him. But he who does not even
see how he ought to live, sins indeed with more excuse, because he is not a
transgressor of a law that he knows; but even he too is just touched sometimes
by the splendor of the everywhere present truth, when upon admonition he confesses.
CHAP. 16.--HOW THE IMAGE OF GOD IS FORMED ANEW IN MAN.
22. But
those who, by being reminded, are turned to the Lord from that deformity
whereby they were
through worldly
lusts conformed to this world, are formed
anew from the world, when they hearken to the apostle, saying," Be not
conformed to this world, but be ye formed again in the renewing of your mind;"(1)
that that image may begin to be formed again by Him by whom it had been formed
at first. For that image cannot form itself again, as it could deform itself.
He says again elsewhere: "Be ye renewed in the spirit of your mind; and
put ye on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true
holiness."(2) That which is meant by "created after God," is
expressed in another place by "after the image of God."(3) But it
lost righteousness and true holiness by sinning, through which that image became
defaced and, tarnished; and this it recovers when it is formed again and renewed.
But when he says, "In the spirit of your mind," he does not in: tend
to be understood of two things, as though mind were one, and the spirit of
the mind another; but he speaks thus, because all mind is spirit, but all spirit
is not mind. For there is a Spirit also that is God,(4) which cannot be renewed,
because it cannot grow old. And we speak also of a spirit in man distinct from
the mind, to which spirit belong the images that are formed after the likeness
of bodies; and of this the apostle speaks to the Corinthians, where he says, "But
if I shall have prayed with a tongue, my spirit prayeth, but my understanding
is unfruitful."(5) For he speaks thus, when that which is said is not
understood; since it cannot even be said, unless the images of the corporeal
articulate sounds anticipate the oral sound by the thought of the spirit. The
soul of man is also called spirit, whence are the words in the Gospel, " And
He bowed His head, and gave up His spirit;"(6) by which the death of the
body, through the spirit's leaving it, is signified. We speak also of the spirit
of a beast, as it is expressly written in the book of Solomon called Ecclesiastes; "Who
knoweth the spirit of man that goeth upward, and the spirit of the beast that
goeth downward to the earth?"(7) It is written too in Genesis, where it
is said that by the deluge all flesh died which "had in it the spirit
of life."(8) We speak also of the spirit, meaning the wind, a thing most
manifestly corporeal; whence is that in the Psalms," Fire and hail, snow
and ice, the spirit of the I storm."(9) Since spirit, then, is a word
of so many meanings, the apostle intended to express by "the spirit of
the mind" that spirit which is called the mind. As the same apostle also,
when he says, "In putting off the body of the flesh,"(10) certainly
did not intend two things, as though flesh were one, and the body of the flesh
another; but because body is the name of many things that have no flesh (for
besides the flesh, there are many bodies celestial and bodies terrestrial),
he expressed by the body of the flesh that body which is flesh. In like manner,
therefore, by the spirit of the mind, that spirit which is mind. Elsewhere,too,he
has even more plainly called it an image, while enforcing the same thing in
other words. "Do you," he says, "putting off the old man with
his deeds, put on the new man, which is renewed in the knowledge of God after
the image of Him that created him."(11) Where the one passage reads, "Put
ye on the new man, which is created after God," the other has, "Put
ye on the new man, which is renewed after the image of Him that created him." In
the one place he says, "After God;" in the other, "After the
image of Him that created him." But instead of saying, as in the former
passages" In righteousness and true holiness," he has put in the
latter, "In the knowledge of God." This renewal, then, and forming
again of the mind, is wrought either after God, or after the image of God.
But it is said to be after God, in order that it may not be supposed to be
after another creature; and to be after the image of God, in order that this
renewing may be understood to take place in that wherein is the image of God,
i.e. in the mind. Just as we say, that he who has departed from the body a
faithful and righteous man, is dead after the body, not after the spirit. For
what do we mean by dead after the body, unless as to the body or in the body,
and not dead as to the soul or in the soul? Or if we want to say he is handsome
after the body, or strong after the body, not after the mind; what else is
this, than that he is handsome or strong in body, not in mind? And the same
is the case with numberless other instances. Let us not therefore so understand
the words, "After the image of Him that created him," as though it
were a different image after which he is renewed, and not the very same which
is itself renewed.
CHAP. 17.--HOW THE IMAGE OF GOD IN THE MIND IS RENEWED UNTIL THE LIKENESS
OF GOD IS PERFECTED IN IT IN BLESSEDNESS.
23. Certainly
this renewal does not take place in the single moment of conversion itself,
as that renewal
in baptism takes place in a single moment by the remission
of all sins; for not one, be it ever so small, remains unremitted. But as it
is one thing to be free from fever, and another to grow strong again from the
infirmity which the fever produced; and one thing again to pluck out of the
body a weapon thrust into it, and another to heal the wound thereby made by
a prosperous cure; so the first cure is to remove the cause of infirmity, and
this is wrought by the forgiving of all sins; but the second cure is to heal
the infirmity itself, and this takes place gradually by making progress in
the renewal of that image: which two things are plainly shown in the Psalm,
where we read, "Who forgiveth all thine iniquities," which takes
place in baptism; and then follows, "and healeth all thine infirmities;"(1)
and this takes place by daily additions, while this image is being renewed.(2)
And the apostle has spoken of this most expressly, saying, "And though
our outward man perish, yet the inner man is renewed day by day."(3) And "it
is renewed in the knowledge of God, i.e. in righteousness and true holiness," according
to the testimonies of the apostle cited a little before. He, then, who is day
by day renewed by making progress in the knowledge of God, and in righteousness
and true holiness, transfers his love from things temporal to things eternal,
from things visible to things intelligible, from things carnal to things spiritual;
and diligently perseveres in bridling and lessening his desire for the former,
and in binding himself by love to the latter. And he does this in proportion
as he is helped by God. For it is the sentence of God Himself, "Without
me ye can do nothing."(4) And when the last day of life shall have found
any one holding fast faith in the Mediator in such progress and growth as this,
he will be welcomed by the holy angels, to be led to God, whom he has worshipped,
and to be made perfect by Him; and so will receive in the end of the world
an incorruptible body. in order not to punishment, but to glory. For the likeness
of God will then be perfected in this image, when the sight of God shall be
perfected. And of this the Apostle Paul speaks: "Now we see through a
glass, in an enigma, but then face to face."(5) And again: "But we
with open face, beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord, are changed
into the same image, from glory to glory, even as by the spirit of the Lord."(6)
And this is what happens from day to day in those that make good progress.
CHAP. 18.--WHETHER THE SENTENCE OF JOHN IS TO BE UNDERSTOOD OF OUR FUTURE
LIKENESS WITH THE SON OF GOD IN THE IMMORTALITY ITSELF ALSO OF THE BODY.
24. But
the Apostle John says, "Beloved, now are we the sons of God;
and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when He shall
appear, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is."(7) Hence
it appears, that the full likeness of God is to take place in that image of
God at that time when it shall receive the full sight of God. And yet this
may also possibly seem to be said by the Apostle John of the immortality of
the body. For we shall be like to God in this too, but only to the Son, because
He only in the Trinity. took a body, in which He died and rose again, and which
He carried with Him to heaven above. For this, too, is called an image of the
Son of God, in which we shall have, as He has, an immortal body, being conformed
in this respect not to the image of the Father or of the Holy Spirit, but only
of the Son, because of Him alone is it read and received by a sound faith,
that "the Word was made flesh."(8) And for this reason the apostle
says, "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."(9) "The
first-born" certainly ''from the dead,"(10) according to the same
apostle; by which death His flesh was sown in dishonor, and rose again in glory.
According to this image of the Son, to which we are conformed in the body by
immortality, we also do that of which the same apostle speaks, "As we
have borne the image of the earthy, so shall we also bear the image of the
heavenly;"(1) to wit, that we who are mortal after Adam, may hold by a
true faith, and a sure and certain hope, that we shall be immortal after Christ.
For so can we now bear the same image, not yet in sight, but in faith; not
yet in fact, but in hope. For the apostle, when he said this, was speaking
of the resurrection of the body.
CHAP. 19.--JOHN IS RATHER TO BE UNDERSTOOD OF OUR PERFECT LIKENESS WITH THE
TRINITY IN LIFE ETERNAL. WISDOM IS PERFECTED IN HAPPINESS.
25. But
in respect to that image indeed, of which it is said, "Let us
make man after our image and likeness,"(2) we believe,--and, after the
utmost search we have been able to make, understand,--that man was made after
the image of the Trinity, because it is not said, After my, or After thy image.
And therefore that place too of the Apostle John must be understood rather
according to this image, when he says, "We shall be like Him, for we shall
see Him as He is;" because he spoke too of Him of whom be had said, "We
are the sons of God."(3) And the immortality of the flesh will be perfected
in that moment of the resurrection, of which the Apostle Paul says, "In
the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump; and the dead shall be raised incorruptible,
and we shall be changed."(4) For in that very twinkling of an eye, before
the judgment, the spiritual body shall rise again in power, in incorruption,
in glory, which is now sown a natural body in weakness, in corruption, in dishonor.
But the image which is renewed in the spirit of the mind in the knowledge of
God, not outwardly, but inwardly, from day to day, shall be perfected by that
sight itself; which then after the judgment shall be face to face, but now
makes progress as through a glass in an enigma.(5) And we must understand it
to be said on account of this perfection, that "we shall be like Him,
for we shall see Him as He is." For this gift will be given to us at that
time, when it shall have been said, "Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit
the kingdom prepared for you."(6) For then will the ungodly be taken away,
so that he shall not see the glory of the Lord,(7) when those on the left hand
shall go into eternal punishment, while those on the right go into life eternal.(8)
But "this is eternal life," as the Truth tells us; "to know
Thee," He says, "the one true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast
sent."(9)
26. This
contemplative wisdom, which I believe is properly called wisdom as distinct
from knowledge
in the
sacred writings; but wisdom only of man, which
yet man has not except from Him, by partaking of whom a rational and intellectual
mind can be made truly wise;--this contemplative wisdom, I say, it is that
Cicero commends, in the end of the dialogue Hortensius, when he says: "While,
then, we consider these things night and day, and sharpen our understanding,
which is the eye of the mind, taking care that it be not ever dulled, that
is, while we live in philosophy; we, I say, in so doing, have great hope that,
if, on the one hand, this sentiment and wisdom of ours is mortal and perishable,
we shall still, when we have discharged our human offices, have a pleasant
setting, and a not painful extinction, and as it were a rest from life: or
if, on the other, as ancient philosophers thought,--and those, too, the greatest
and far the most celebrated,--we have souls eternal and divine, then must we
needs think, that the more these shall have always kept in their own proper
course, i.e. in reason and in the desire of inquiry, and the less they shall
have mixed and entangled themselves in the vices and errors of men, the more
easy ascent and return they will have to heaven." And then he says, adding
this short sentence, and finishing his discourse by repeating it: "Wherefore,
to end my discourse at last, if we wish either for a tranquil extinction, after
living in the pursuit of these subjects, or if to migrate without delay from
this present home to another in no little measure better, we must bestow all
our labor and care upon these pursuits." And here I marvel, that a man
of such great ability should promise to men living in philosophy, which makes
man blessed by contemplation of truth, "a pleasant setting after the discharge
of human offices, if this our sentiment and wisdom is mortal and perishable;" as
if that which we did not love, or rather which we fiercely hated, were then
to die and come to nothing, so that its setting would be pleasant to us! But
indeed he had not learned this from the philosophers, whom he extols with great
praise; but this sentiment is redolent of that New Academy, wherein it pleased
him to doubt of even the plainest things. But from the philosophers that were
greatest and far most celebrated, as he himself confesses, he had learned that
souls are eternal. For souls that are eternal are not unsuitably stirred up
by the exhortation to be found in "their own proper course," when
the end of this life shall have come, i.e. "in reason and in the desire
of inquiry," and to mix and entangle themselves the less in the vices
and errors of men, in order that they may have an easier return to God. But
that course which consists in the love and investigation of truth does not
suffice for the wretched, i.e. for all mortals who have only this kind of reason,
and are. without faith in the Mediator; as I have. taken pains to prove, as
much as I could, in former books of this work, especially in the fourth and
thirteenth.
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