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LETTERS OF ST. AUGUSTIN
LETTERS CLXIX TO CCXI
(INCLUDING A LETTER TO BISHOP EVODIUS)
LETTER CLXIX. (A.D. 415.)
BISHOP AUGUSTIN TO BISHOP EVODIUS.
CHAP. I. -- 1. If acquaintance with the treatises which specially occupy me,
and from which I am unwilling to be turned aside to anything else, is so highly
valued by your Holiness, let some one be sent to copy them for you. For I have
now finished several of those which had been commenced by me this year before
Easter, near the beginning of Lent. For, to the three books on the City of
God, in opposition to its enemies, the worshippers of demons, I have added
two others, and in these five books I think enough has been said to answer
those who maintain that the [heathen] gods must be worshipped in order to secure
prosperity in this present life, and who are hostile to the Christian name
from an idea that that prosperity is hindered by us. In the sequel I must,
as I promised in the first book, answer those who think that the worship of
their gods is the only way to obtain that life after death with a view to obtain
which we are Christians. I have dictated also, in volumes of considerable size,
expositions of three Psalms, the 68th, the 72d, and the 78th. Commentaries
on the other Psalms -- not yet dictated, nor even entered on -- are eagerly
expected and demanded from me. From these studies I am unwilling to be called
away and hindered by any questions thrusting themselves upon me from another
quarter; yea, so unwilling, that I do not wish to turn at present even to the
books on the Trinity, which I have long had on hand and have not yet completed,
because they require a great amount of labour, and I believe that they are
of a nature to be understood only by few; on which account they claim my attention
less urgently than writings which may, I hope, be useful to very many.
2. For
the words, "He that is ignorant shall be ignored were not used
by the apostle in reference to this subject, as your letter affirms; as if
this punishment were to be inflicted on the man who is not able to discern
by the exercise of his intellect the ineffable unity of the Trinity, in the
same way as the unity of memory, understanding, and will in the soul of man
is discerned. The apostle said these words with a wholly different design.
Consult the passage and you will see that he was speaking of those things which
might be for the edification of the many in faith and holiness, not of those
which might with difficulty be comprehended by the few, and by them only in
the small degree in which the comprehension of so great a subject is attainable
in this life. The positions laid down by him were,that prophesying was to be
preferred to speaking with tongues; that these gifts should not be exercised
in a disorderly manner, as if the spirit of prophecy compelled them to speak
even against their will; that women should keep silence in the Church; and
that all things should be done decently and in order. While treating of these
things he says: "If any man think himself to be a prophet, or spiritual,
let him know the things which I write to you, for they are the commands of
the Lord. If any man be ignorant, he shall be ignored;" intending by these
words to restrain and call to order persons who were specially ready to cause
disorder in the Church, because they imagined themselves to excel in spiritual
gifts, although they were disturbing everything by their presumptions conduct. "If
any man think himself to be a prophet, or spiritual, let him know," he
says, "the things which I write to you, for they are the commands of the
Lord." If any man thinks himself to be, and in reality is not, a prophet,
for he who is a prophet undoubtedly knows and does not need admonition and
exhortation, because "he judgeth all things, and is himself judged of
no manY s Those persons, therefore, caused confusion and trouble in the Church
who thought themselves to be in the Church what they were not. He teaches these
to know the commandments of the Lord, for he is not a "God of confusion,
but of peace. But "if any one is ignorant, he shall be ignored," that
is to say, he shall be rejected; for God is not ignorant -- so far as mere
knowledge is concerned -- in regard to the persons to whom He shall one day
say, "I know you not," s but their rejection is signified by this
expression.
3. Moreover,
since the Lord says, "Blessed are the pure in heart, for
they shall see God,"6 and that sight is promised to us as the highest
reward at the last, we have no reason to fear lest, if we axe now unable to
see clearly those things which we believe concerning the nature of God, this
defective apprehension should bring us under the sentence, "He that is
ignorant shall be ignored." For when "in the wisdom of God the world
by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save
those who believed." This foolishness of preaching and "foolishness
of God which is wiser than man"1 draws many to salvation, in such a way
that not only those who are as yet incapable of perceiving with clear intelligence
the nature of God which in faith they hold, but even those who have not yet
so learned the nature of their own soul as to distinguish between its incorporeal
essence and the body as a whole with the same certainty with which they perceive
that they live, understand, and will, are not on this account shut out from
that salvation which that foolishness of preaching bestows on believers.
4. For
if Christ died for those only who with clear intelligence can discern these
things, our
labour in
the Church is almost spent in vain. But if, as
is the fact, crowds of common people, possessing no great strength of intellect,
run to the Physician m the exercise of faith, with the result of being healed
by Christ and Him crucified, that "where sin has abounded, grace may much
more abound," it comes in wondrous ways to pass, through the depths of
the riches of the. wisdom and knowledge of God and His unsearchable judgments,
that, on the one hand, some who do discern between the material and: the spiritual
in their own nature, while pluming themselves on this attainment, and despising
that foolishness of preaching by which those who believe are saved, wander
far from the only path which leads to eternal life; and, on the other hand,
because not one perishes for whom Christ died? many glorying in the cross of
Christ, and not withdrawing from that same path, attain, notwithstanding their
ignorance of those things which some with most profound subtlety investigate,
unto that eternity, truth, and love, -- that is, unto that enduring, clear,
and full felicity,in which to those who abide, and see, and love, all things
are plain.
CHAP.
II. -- 5. Therefore let us with steadfast piety believe in one God, the Father,
and the Son,
and the
Holy Spirit; let us at the same time believe
that the Son is not [the person] who is the Father, and the Father is not [the
person] who is the Son, and neither the Father nor the Son is [the person]
who is the Spirit of both the Father and the Son. Let it not be supposed that
in this Trinity there is any separation in respect of time or place, but that
these Thee are equal and co-eternal, and absolutely of one nature: and that
the creatures have been made, not some by the Father, and some by the Son,
and some by the Holy Spirit, but that each and all that have been or are now
being created subsist in the Trinity as their Creator; and that no one is saved
by the Father without the Son and the Holy Spirit, or by the Son without the
Father and the Holy Spirit, or by the Holy Spirit without the Father and the
Son, but by the ,Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, the only one, true,
and truly immortal (that is, absolutely unchangeable) God. At the same time,
we believe that many things are stated in Scripture separately concerning each
of the Three, in order to teach us that, though they are an inseparable Trinity,
yet they are a Trinity. For, just as when their names are pronounced in human
language they cannot be named simultaneously, although their existence in inseparable
union is at every moment simultaneous, even so in some places of Scripture
also, they are by certain created things presented to us distinctively and
in mutual relation to each other: for example, [at the baptism of Christ] the
Father is heard in the voice which said, "Thou art my Son;" the Son
is seen in the human nature which, in being born of the Virgin, He assumed;
the Holy Spirit is seen in the bodily form of a dove,4 -- these things presenting
the Three to our apprehension separately, indeed, but in no wise separated.
6. To present this in a form which the intellect may apprehend, we borrow
an illustration from the Memory, the Understanding, and the Will. For although
we can speak of each of these faculties severally in its own order, and at
a separate time, we neither exercise nor even mention any one of them without
the other two. It must not, however, be supposed, from our using this comparison
between these three faculties and the Trinity, that the things compared agree
in every particular, for where, in any process of reasoning, can we find an
illustration in which the correspondence between the things compared is so
exact that it admits of application in every point to that which it is intended
to illustrate? In the first place, therefore, the similarity is found to be
imperfect in this respect, i that whereas memory, understanding, and will are
not the soul, but only exist in the soul, the i Trinity does not exist in God,
but is God. In the Trinity, therefore, there is manifested a singleness [simplicitas]
commanding our astonishment, because in this Trinity it is not one thing to
exist, and another thing to understand, or do anything else which is attributed
to the nature of God; but in the soul it is one thing that it exists, and another
thing that it understands, for even when it is not using the understanding
it still exists. In the second place, who would dare to say that the Father
does not understand by Himself but by the Son, as memory does not understand
by itself but by the understanding, or, to speak more correctly, the soul in
which these faculties are understands by no other faculty than by the understanding,
as it remembers only by memory, and exercises volition only by the will? The
point, therefore, to which the illustration is intended to apply is this, --
that, whatever be the manner in which we understand, in regard to these three
faculties in the soul, that when the several names by which they are severally
represented are uttered, the utterance of each separate name is nevertheless
accomplished only in the combined operation of all the three, since it is by
an act of memory and of understanding and of will that it is spoken, -- it
is in the same manner that we understand, in regard to the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Spirit, that no created thing which may at any time be employed
to present only one of the Three to our minds is produced otherwise than by
the simultaneous, because essentially inseparable, operation of the Trinity;
and that, consequently, neither the voice of the Father, nor the body and soul
of the Son, nor the dove of the Holy Spirit, was produced in any other way
than by the combined operation of the Trinity.
7. Moreover,
that sound of a voice was certainly not made indissolubly one with the person
of the
Father, for
so soon as it was uttered it ceased to be.
Neither was that form of a dove made indissolubly one with the person of Holy
Spirit, for it also, like the bright cloud which covered the Saviour and His
three disciples on the mount, or rather like the tongues of flame which once
represented the same Holy Spirit, ceased to exist as soon as it had served
its purpose as a symbol. But it was otherwise with the body and soul in which
the Son of God was manifested: seeing that the deliverance of men was the object
for which all these things were done, the human nature in which He appeared
was, in a way marvellous and unique, assumed into real union with the person
of the Word of God, that is, of the only Son of God,-- the Word remaining unchangeably
in His own nature, wherein it is not conceivable that there should be composite
elements in union with which any mere semblance of a human soul could subsist.
We read, indeed, that "the Spirit of wisdom is manifold;"2 but it
is as properly termed simple. Manifold it is, indeed, because there are many
things which it possesses; but simple, because it is not a different thing
from what it possesses, as the Son is said to have life in Himself, and yet
He is Himself that life. The human nature came to the Word; the Word did not
come, with susceptibility of change, into the human nature; 3 and therefore,
in His union to the human nature which He has assumed, He is still properly
called the Son of God; for which reason the same person is the Son of God immutable
and co-eternal with the Father, and the Son of God who was laid in the grave,
-- the former being true of Him only as the Word, the latter true of Him only
as a man.
8. Wherefore it behoves us, in reading any statements made concerning the
Son of God, to observe in reference to which of these two natures they are
spoken. For by His assumption of the soul and body of a man, no increase was
made in the number of Persons: the Trinity remained as before. For just as
in every man, with the exception of that one whom alone He assumed into personal
union, the soul and body constitute one person, so in Christ the Word and His
human soul and body constitute one person. And as the name philosopher, for
example, is given to a man certainly with reference only to his soul, and yet
it is nothing absurd, but only a most suitable and ordinary use of language,
for us to say the philosopher was killed, the philosopher died, the philosopher
was buried, although all these events befell him in his body, not in that part
of him in which he was a philosopher; in like manner the name of God, or Son
of God, or Lord of Glory, or any other such name, is given to Christ as the
Word, and it is, nevertheless, correct to say that God was crucified, seeing
that there is no question that He suffered this death in his human nature,
not in that in which He is the Lord of Glory.4
9. As for the sound of the voice, however, and the bodily form of a dove,
and the cloven tongues which sat upon each of them, these, like the terrible
wonders wrought at Sinai,s and like the pillar of cloud by day and of fire
by night,6 were produced only as symbols, and vanished when this purpose had
been served. The thing which we must especially guard against in connection
with them is, lest any one should believe that the nature of God -- whether
of the Father, or of the Son, or of the Holy Spirit -- is susceptible of change
or transformation. And we must not be disturbed by the fact that the sign sometimes
receives the name of the thing signified, as when the Holy Spirit is said to
have descended in a bodily form as a dove and abode upon Him; for in like manner
the smitten rock is called Christ,z because it was a symbol of Christ.
CHAP.
III. -- 10. I wonder, however, that, although you believe it possible for
the sound of the voice
which said, "Thou art my Son," to have
been produced through a divine act, without the intermediate agency of a soul,
by something the nature of which was corporeal, you nevertheless do not believe
that a bodily form and movements exactly resembling those of any real living
creature whatsoever could be produced in the same way, namely, through a divine
act, without the intermediate agency of a spirit imparting life. i For if inanimate
matter obeys God without the instrumentality of an animating spirit, so as
to emit sounds such as are wont to be emited by animated bodies, in order to
bring to the human ear words articulately spoken, why should it not obey Him,
so as to present to the human eye the figure and motions of a bird, by the
same power of the Creator without the instrumentalist of any animating spirit?
The objects of both sight and hearing m the sound which strikes the ear and
the appearance which meets the eye, the articulations of the voice and the
outlines of the members, every audible and visible motion -- are both alike
produced from matter contiguous to us; is it, then, granted to the sense of
hearing, and not to the sense of sight, to tell us regarding the body which
is perceived by this bodily sense, both that it is a true body, and that it
is nothing beyond what the bodily sense perceives it to be? For in every living
creature the soul is, of course, not perceived by any bodily sense. We do not,
therefore, need to inquire how the bodily form of the dove appeared to the
eye, just as we do not need to inquire how the voice of a bodily form capable
of speech was made to fall upon the ear. For if it was possible to dispense
with the intermediate agency of a soul in the case in which a voice, not something
like a voice, is said to have been produced, how much more easily was it possible
in the case in which it is said that the Spirit descended "like a dove," a
phrase which signifies that a mere bodily form was exhibited to the eye, and
does not affirm that a real living creature was seen! In like manner, it is
said that on the day of Pentecost, "suddenly there came a sound from heaven
as of a mighty rushing wind, and there appeared to them cloven tongues like
as of fire,"1 in which something like wind and like fire, i.e. resembling
these common and familiar natural phenomena, is said to have been perceived,
but it does not seem to be indicated that these common and familiar natural
phenomena were actually produced.
11. If, however, more subtle reasoning or more thorough investigation of the
matter result in demonstrating that that which is naturally destitute of motion
both in time and in space [i.e. matter] cannot be moved otherwise than through
the intermediate agency of that which is capable of motion only in time, not
in space [i.e. spirit], it will follow from this that all those things must
have been done by the instrumentality of a living creature, as things are done
by angels, on which subject a more elaborate discussion would be tedious, and
is not necessary. To this it must be added, that there are visions which appear
to the spirit as plainly as to the senses of the body, not only in sleep or
delirium, but also to persons of sound mind in n their waking hours, -- visions
which are due not to the deceitfulness of devils mocking men, but to some spiritual
revelation accomplished by means of immaterial forms resembling bodies, and
which cannot by any means be distinguished from real objects, unless they are
by divine assistance more fully revealed and discriminated by the mind's intelligence,
which is done sometimes (but with difficulty) at the time, but for the most
part after they have disappeared. This being the case in regard to these visions
which, whether their nature be really material, or material only in appearance
but really spiritual, seem to manifest themselves to our spirit as if they
were perceived by the bodily senses, we ought not, when these things are recorded
in sacred Scripture, to conclude hastily to which of these two classes they
are to be referred, or whether, if they belong to the former, they are produced
by the intermediate agency of a spirit; while, at the same time, as to the
invisible and immutable nature of the Creator, that is, of the supreme and
ineffable Trinity, we either simply, without any doubt, believe, or, in addition
to this, with some degree of intellectual apprehension, understand that it
is wholly removed and separated both from the senses of fleshly mortals, and
from all susceptibility of being changed either for the worse or for the better,
or to anything whatever of a variable nature.
CHAP.
IV. -- 12. These things I send you in reference to two of your questions,
-- the one concerning
the
Trinity, and the other concerning the dove in which
the Holy Spirit, not in His own nature, but in a symbolical form, was manifested,
as also the Son of God, not in His eternal Sonship (of which the Father said: "Before
the morning star I have begotten Thee "but in that human nature which
He assumed from the Virgin's womb, was crucified .by the Jews: observe that
to you who are at leisure I have been able, notwithstanding immense pressure
of business, to write so much. I have not, however, deemed it necessary to
discuss everything which you have brought forward in your letter; but on these
two questions which you wished me to solve, I think I have written as much
as is exacted by Christian charity, though I may not have satisfied your vehement
desire.
13. Besides
the two books added to the first three in the City of God, and the exposition
of three
psalms,
as above mentioned,1 I have also written a
treatise to the holy presbyter Jerome concerning the origin of the soul? asking
him, in regard to the opinion which, in writing to Marcellinus of pious memory,
he avowed as his own, that a new soul is made for each individual at birth,
how this can be maintained without overthrowing that most surely established
article of the Church's faith, according to which we firmly believe that all
die in Adam,3 and are brought down under condemnation unless they be delivered
by the grace of Christ, which, by means of His sacrament, works even in infants.
I have, moreover, written to the same person to inquire his opinion as to the
sense in which the words of James, "Whosoever shall keep the whole law,
and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all," are to be understood.4
In this letter I have also stated my own opinion: in the other, concerning
the origin of the soul, I have only asked what was his opinion, submitting
the matter to his judgment, and at the same I time discussing it to some extent.
I wrote these I to Jerome because I did not wish to lose an opportunity of
correspondence afforded by a certain very pious and studious young presbyter,
Orosius, who, prompted only by burning zeal in regard to the Holy Scriptures,
came to us from I the remotest part of Spain, namely, from the shore of the
ocean, and whom I persuaded to go on from us to Jerome. In answer to certain
questions of the same Orosius, as to things which troubled him in reference
to the heresy of the Priscillianists, and some opinions of Origen which the
Church has not accepted, I have written a treatise of moderate size with as
much brevity and clearness as was in my power. I have also written a considerable
book against the heresy of Pelagius,5 being constrained to do this by some
brethren whom he had persuaded to adopt his fatal error, denying the grace
of Christ. If you wish to have all these, send some one to copy them all for
you. Allow me, however, to be free from distraction in studying and dictating
to my clerks those things which, being urgently required by many, claim in
my opinion precedence over your questions, which are of interest to very few.
LETTER CLXXII. (A.D. 416.)
TO AUGUSTIN, MY TRULY PIOUS LORD AND FATHER, WORTHY OF MY UTMOST AFFECTION
AND VENERATION, JEROME SENDS GREETING IN CHRIST.
1. That
honourable man, my brother, and your Excellency's son, the presbyter Orosius,
I have, both
on his own
account and in obedience to your request,
made welcome. But a most trying time has come upon us,6 in which I have found
it better for me to hold my peace than to speak, so that our studies have ceased,
lest what Appius calls "the eloquence of dogs" should be provoked
into exercise.7 For this reason I have not been able at the present time to
give to those two books dedicated to my name-books of profound erudition, and
brilliant with every charm of splendid eloquence -- the answer which I would
otherwise have given; not that I think anything said in them demands correction,
but because I am mindful of the words of the blessed apostle in regard to the
variety of men's judgments, "Let every man be fully persuaded in his own
mind."8 Certainly, whatever can be said on the topics there discussed,
and whatever can be drawn by commanding genius from the fountain of sacred
Scripture regarding them, has been in these letters stated in your positions,
and illustrated by your arguments. But I beg your Reverence to allow me for
a little to praise your genius. For in any discussion between us, the object
aimed at by both of us is advancement in learning. But our rivals, and especially
heretics, if they see different opinions maintained by us, will assail us with
the calumny that our differences are due to mutual jealousy. For my part, however,
I am resolved to love you, to look up to you, to reverence and admire you,
and to defend your opinions as my own. I have also in a dialogue, which I recently
published, made allusion to your Blessedness in suitable terms. Be it ours,
therefore, rather to rid the Church of that most pernicious heresy which always
feigns repentance, in order that it may have liberty to teach in our churches,
and may not be expelled and extinguished, as it would be if it disclosed its
real character in the light of day.
2. Your pious and venerable daughters, Eustochium and Paula, continue to walk
worthy of their own birth and of your counsels, and they send special salutations
to your Blessedness: in which they are joined by the whole brotherhood of those
who with us labour to serve the Lord our Saviour. As for the holy presbyter
Firmus, we sent him last year to go on business of Eustochium and Paula, first
to Ravenna, and afterwards to Africa and Sicily, and we suppose that he is
now detained somewhere in Africa. I beseech you to present my respectful salutations
to the saints who are associated with you. I have also sent to your care a
letter from me to the holy presbyter Firmus; if it reaches you, I beg you to
take the trouble of forwarding it to him. May Christ the Lord keep you in safety,
and mindful of me, my truly pious lord and most blessed father.
(As a postscript.) We suffer in this province from a grievous scarcity of
clerks acquainted with the Latin language; this is the reason why we are not
able to comply with your instructions, especially in regard to that version
of the Septuagint which is furnished with distinctive asterisks and obelisks
; for we have lost, through some one's dishonesty, the most of the results
of our earlier labour.
LETTER CLXXIII. (A.D. 416.)
TO DONATUS, A PRESBYTER OF THE DONATIST PARTY, AUGUSTIN, A BISHOP OF THE CATHOLIC
CHURCH, SENDS GREETING.
1. If you could see the sorrow of my heart and my concern for your salvation,
you would perhaps take pity on your own soul, doing that which is pleasing
to God, by giving heed to the: word which is not ours but His; and would no
longer give to His Scripture only a place in your memory, while shutting it
out from your heart. You are angry because you are being drawn to salvation,
although you have drawn so many of our fellow Christians to destruction. For
what did we order beyond this, that you should be arrested, brought before
the authorities, and guarded, in order to prevent you from perishing? As to
your having sustained bodily injury, you have yourself to blame for this, as
you would not use the horse which was immediately brought to you, and then
dashed yourself violently to the ground; for, as you well know, your companion,
who was brought along with you, arrived uninjured, not having done any harm
to himself as you did.
2. You
think, however, that even what we have done to you should not have been done,
because, in
your opinion,
no man should be compelled to that which
is good. Mark, therefore, the words of the apostle: "If a man desire the
office of a bishop, he desireth a good work," and yet, in order to make
the office of a bishop be accepted by many men, they are seized against their
will subjected to importunate persuasion, shut up and detained in custody,
and made to suffer so many things which they dislike, until a willingness to
undertake the good work is found in them. How much more, then, is it fitting
that you should be drawn forcibly away from a pernicious error, in which you
are enemies to your own souls, and brought to acquaint yourselves with the
truth, or to choose it when known, not only in order to your holding in a safe
and advantageous way the honour belonging to your office, but also in order
to preserve you from perishing miserably! You say that God has given us free
will, and that therefore no man should be compelled even to good. Why, then,
are those whom I have above referred to compelled to that which is good? Take
heed, therefore, to something which you do not wish to consider. The aim towards
which a good will compassionately devotes its efforts is to secure that a bad
will be rightly directed. For who does not know that a man is not condemned
on any other ground than because his bad will deserved it, and that no man
is saved who has not a good will? Nevertheless, it does not follow from this
that those who are loved should be cruelly left to yield themselves with impunity
to their bad will; but in so far as power is given, they ought to be both prevented
from evil and compelled to good.
3. For
if a bad will ought to be always left to its own freedom, why were the disobedient
and murmuring
Israelites
restrained from evil by such severe
chastisements, and compelled to come into the land of promise? If a bad will
ought always to be left to its own freedom, why was Paul not left to the free
use of that most perverted will with which he persecuted the Church? Why was
he thrown to the ground that he might be blinded, and struck blind that he
might be changed, and changed that he might be sent as :an apostle, and sent
that he might suffer for the truth's sake such wrongs as he had inflicted on
others when he was in error? If a bad will ought always to be left to its own
freedom, why is a father instructed in Holy Scripture not only to correct an
obstinate son by words of rebuke, but also to beat his sides, in order that,
being compelled and subdued, he may be guided to good conduct?3 For which reason
Solomon also says: "Thou shalt beat him with the rod, and shalt deliver
his soul from hell."1 If a bad will ought always to be left to its own
freedom, why are negligent pastors reproved? and why is it said to them, "Ye
have not brought back the wandering sheep, ye have not sought the perishing"?2
You also are sheep belonging to Christ, you bear the Lord's mark in the sacrament
which you have received, but you are wandering and perishing. Let us not, therefore,
incur your displeasure because we bring back the wandering: and seek the perishing;
for it is better for us! to obey the will of the Lord, who charges us to compel
you to return to His fold, than to yield consent to the will of the wandering
sheep, so as to leave you to perish. Say not, therefore, what I hear that you
are constantly saying, "I wish thus to wander; I wish thus to perish;" for
it is better that we should so far as is in our power absolutely refuse to
allow you to wander and perish.
4. When you threw yourself the other day into a well, in order to bring death
upon yourself, you did so no doubt with your free will. But how cruel the servants
of God would have been if they had left you to the fruits of this bad will,
and had not delivered you from that death ! Who would not have justly blamed
them? Who would not have justly denounced them as inhuman? And yet you, with
your own free will, threw yourself into the water that you might be drowned.
They took you against your will out of the water, that you might not be drowned.
You acted according to your own will, but with a view to your destruction;
they dealt with you against your will, but in order to your preservation. If,
therefore, mere bodily safety behoves to be so guarded that it is the duty
of those who love their neighhour to preserve him even against his own will
from harm, how much more is this! duty binding in regard to that spiritual
health i in the loss of which the consequence to be dreaded is eternal death!
At the same time let me remark, that in that death which you wished to bring
upon yourself you would have died not for time only but for eternity, because
even though force had been used to compel you -- not to accept salvation, not
to enter into the peace of the Church, the unity of Christ's body, the holy
indivisible charity, but -- to suffer some evil things, it would not have been
lawful for you to take away your own life.
5. Consider
the divine Scriptures, and examine them to the utmost of your ability, and
see whether
this was
ever done by any one of the just and faithful,
though subjected to the most grievous evils by persons who were endeavouring
to drive them, not to eternal life, to which you are being compelled by us,
but to eternal death. I have heard that you say that the Apostle Paul intimated
the lawfulness of suicide, when he said, "Though I give my body to be
burned," a supposing that because he was there enumerating all the good
things which are of no avail without charity, such as the tongues of men and
of angels, and all mysteries, and all knowledge, and all prophecy, and the
distribution of one's goods to the poor, he intended to include among these
good things the act of bringing death upon one. self. But observe carefully
and learn in what .sense Scripture says that any man may give his body to be
burned. Certainly not that any man may throw himself into the fire when he
is harassed by a pursuing enemy, but that, when he is compelled to choose between
doing wrong and suffering wrong, he should refuse to do wrong rather than to
suffer wrong, and so give his body into the power of the executioner, as those
three men did who were being compelled to worship the golden image, while he
who was compelling them threatened them with the burning fiery furnace if they
did not obey. They refused to worship the image: they did not cast themselves
into the fire, and yet of them it is written that they "yielded their
bodies, that they might not serve nor worship any god except their own God."4
This is the sense in which the apostle said, "If I give my body to be
burned."
6. Mark
also what follows: -- "If I have not charity, it profiteth me
nothing." To that charity you are called; by that charity you are prevented
from perishing: and yet you think, forsooth, that to throw yourself headlong
to destruction, by your own act, will profit you in some measure, although,
even if you suffered death at the hands of another, while you remain an enemy
to charity it would profit you nothing. Nay, more, being in a state of exclusion
from the Church, and severed from the body of unity and the bond of charity,
you would be punished with eternal misery even though you were burned alive
for Christ's name; for this is the apostle's declaration, "Though I give
my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing." Bring
your mind back, therefore, to rational reflection and sober thought; consider
carefully whether it is to error and to impiety that you are being called,
and, if you still think so, submit patiently to any hardship for the truth's
sake. If, however, the fact rather be that you are living in error and in impiety,
mad that in the Church to which you are called truth and piety are found, because
there is Christian unity and the love (charitas) of the Holy Spirit, why do
you labour any longer to be an enemy to yourself?
7. For
this end the mercy of the Lord appointed that both we and your bishops met
at Carthage in a
conference
which had repeated meetings, and was largely
attended, and reasoned together in the most orderly manner in regard to the
grounds of our separation from each other. The proceedings of that conference
were written down; our signatures are attached to the record: read it, or allow
others to read it to you, and then choose which party you prefer. I have heard
that you have said that you could to some extent discuss the statements in
that record with us if we would omit these words of your bishops: "No
case forecloses the investigation of another case, and no person compromises
the position of another person." You wish us to leave out these words,
in which, although they knew it not, the truth itself spoke by them. You will
say, indeed, that here they made a mistake, and fell through want of consideration
into a false opinion. But we affirm that here they said what was true, and
we prove this very easily by a reference to yourself. For if in regard to these
bishops of your own, chosen by the whole party of Donatus on the understanding
that they should act as representatives, and that all the rest should regard
whatever they did as acceptable and satisfactory, you nevertheless refuse to
allow them to compromise your position by what you think to have been a rash
and mistaken utterance on their part, in this refusal you confirm the truth
of their saying: "No case forecloses the investigation of another case,
and no person compromises the position of another person." And at the
same time you ought to acknowledge, that if you refuse to allow the conjoint
authority of so many of your bishops represented in these seven to compromise
Donatus, presbyter in Mutugenna, it is incomparably less reasonable that one
person, Caecilianus, even had some evil been found in him, should compromise
the position of the whole unity of Christ, the Church, which is not shut up
within the one village of Mutugenna, but spread abroad throughout the entire
world.
8. But,
behold, we do what you have desired; we treat with you as if your bishops
had not said: "No case forecloses the investigation of another
case, and no person compromises the position of another person." Discover,
if you can, what they ought, rather than this, to have said in reply, when
there was alleged against them the case and the person of Primianus,1 who,
notwithstanding his joining the rest of the bishops in passing sentence of
condemnation on those who had passed sentence of condemnation upon him, nevertheless
received back into their former honours those whom he had condemned and denounced,
and chose to acknowledge and accept rather than despise and repudiate the baptism
administered by these men while they were "dead" (for of them it
was said in the notable decree [of the Council of Bagai], that "the shores
were full of dead men"), and by so doing swept away the argument which
you are accustomed to rest on a perverse interpretation of the words: "Qui
baptizatur a mortuo quid ei prodest lavacrum ejus?"2 If, therefore, your
bishops had not said: "No case forecloses the investigation of another
case, and no person compromises the position of another person," they
would have been compelled to plead guilty in the case of Primianus; but, in
saying this, they declared the Catholic Church to be, as we mentioned, not
guilty in the case of Caecilianus.
9. However, read all the rest and examine it well. Mark whether they have
succeeded in proving any charge of evil brought against Caecilianus himself,
through whose person they attempted to compromise the position of the Church.
Mark whether they have not rather brought forward much that was in his favour,
and confirmed the evidence that his case was a good one, by a number of extracts
which, to the prejudice of their own case, they produced and read. Read these
or let them be read to you. Consider the whole matter, ponder it carefully,
and choose which you should follow: whether you should, in the peace of Christ,
in the unity of the Catholic Church, in the love of the brethren, be partaker
of our joy, or, in the cause of wicked discord, the Donatist faction and impious
schism, continue to suffer the annoyance caused to you by the measures which
out of love to you we are compelled to take.
10. I
hear that you have remarked and often quote the fact recorded in the gospels,
that the seventy
disciples
went back from the Lord, and that they
had been left to their own choice in this wicked and impious desertion, and
that to the twelve who alone remained the Lord said, "Will ye also go
away?"3 But you have neglected to remark, that at that time the Church
was only beginning to burst into life from the recently planted seed, and that
there was not yet fulfilled in her the prophecy: "All kings shall fall
down before Him; yea, all nations shall serve Him;"1 and it is in proportion
to the more enlarged accomplishment of this prophecy that the Church wields
greater power, so that she may not only invite, but even compel men to embrace
what is good. This our Lord intended then to illustrate, for although He had
great power, He chose rather to manifest His humility. This also He taught,
with sufficient plainness, in the parable of the Feast, in which the master
of the house, after He had sent a message to the invited guests, and they had
refused to come, said to his servants: "Go out quickly into the streets
and lanes of the city, and bring in hither the poor, and the maimed, and the
halt, and the blind. And the servant said, Lord, it is done as thou hast commanded,
and yet there is room. And the Lord said unto the servant, Go out into the
highways and hedges, and compel them to come in, that my house may be filled.",
Mark, now, how it was said in regard to those who came first, "bring them
in;" it was not said, "compel them to come in," -- by which
was signified the incipient condition of the Church, when it was only growing
towards the position in which it would have strength to compel men to come
in. Accordingly, because it was right that when the Church had been strengthened,
both in power and in extent, men should be compelled to come in to the feast
of everlasting salvation, it was afterwards added in the parable, "The
servant said, Lord, it is done as thou hast commanded, and yet there is room.
And the Lord said unto the servants, Go out into the highways and hedges, and
compel them to come in." Wherefore, if you were walking peaceably, absent
from this feast of everlasting salvation and of the holy unity of the Church,
we should find you, as it were, in the "highways;" but since, by
multiplied injuries and cruelties, which you perpetrate on our people, you
are, as it were, full of thorns and roughness, we find you as it were in the "hedges," and
we compel you to come in. The sheep which is compelled is driven whither it
would not wish to go, but after it has entered, it feeds of its own accord
in the pastures to which it was brought. Wherefore restrain your, perverse
and rebellious spirit, that in the true Church of Christ you may find the feast
of salvation.
LETTER CLXXX. (A.D. 416.)
TO OCEANUS, HIS DESERVEDLY BELOVED LORD AND BROTHER, HONOURED AMONG THE MEMBERS
OF CHRIST, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING.
1. I received two letters from you at the same time, in one of which you mention
a third, and state that you had sent it before the others. This letter I do
not remember having received, or, rather, I think I may say the testimony of
:my memory is, that I did not receive it; but in regard to those which I have
received, I return you many thanks for your kindness to me. To these I would
have returned an immediate answer, had I not been hurried away by a constant
succession of other matters urgently demanding attention. Having now found
a moment's leisure from these, I have chosen rather to send some reply, however
imperfect, than continue towards a friend so true and kind a protracted silence,
and become more annoying to you by saying nothing than by saying too much.
2. I already
knew the opinion of the holy Jerome as to the origin of souls, and had read
the words
which in
your letter you have quoted from his book.
The difficulty which perplexes some in regard to this question, "How God
can justly bestow souls on the offspring of persons guilty of adultery?" does
not embarrass me, seeing that not even their own sins, much less the sins of
their parents, can prove prejudicial to persons -- of virtuous lives, converted
to God, and living in faith and piety. The really difficult question is, if
it be true that a new soul !created out of nothing is imparted to each child
lot its birth, how can it be that the innumerable souls of those little ones,
in regard to whom God knew with certainty that before attaining the age of
reason, and before being able to know or understand what is right or wrong,
they were to leave the body without being baptized, are justly given over to
eternal death by Him with whom "there is no unrighteousness!"3 It
is unnecessary to say more on this subject, since you know what I intend, or
rather what I do not at present intend to say. I think what I have i said is
enough for a wise man. If, however, you have either read, or heard from the
lips of Jerome, or received from the Lord when meditating on this difficult
question, anything by which it can be solved, impart it to me, I beseech you,
that I may acknowledge myself under yet greater obligation to you.
3. As
to the question whether lying is in any case justifiable and expedient, it
has appeared to
you that it
ought to be solved by the example of our Lord's
saying, concerning the day and hour of the end of the world, "Neither
doth the Son know it." 4 When I read this, I was charmed with it as an
effort of your ingenuity; but I am by no means of opinion that a figurative
mode of expression can be rightly termed a falsehood. For it is no falsehood
to call a day joyous because it renders men joyous, or a lupine harsh because
by its bitter flavour it imparts harshness to the countenance of him who tastes
it, or to say that God knows something when He makes man know it (an instance
quoted by yourself in these words of God to Abraham, "Now I know that
thou fearest God").1 These are by no means false statements, as you yourself
readily see. Accordingly, when the blessed Hilary explained this obscure statement
of the Lord, by means of this obscure kind of figurative language, saying that
we ought to understand Christ to affirm in these words that He knew not that
day with no other meaning than that He, by concealing it, caused others not
to know it, he did not by this explanation of the statement apologize for it
as an excusable falsehood, but he showed that it was not a falsehood, as is
proved by comparing it not only with these common figures of speech, but also
with the metaphor, a mode of expression very familiar to all in daily conversation.
For who will charge the man who says that harvest fields wave and children
bloom with speaking falsely, because he sees not in these things the waves
and the flowers to which these words are literally applied?
4. Moreover,
a man of your talent and learning easily perceives how different from these
metaphorical
expressions
is the statement of the apostle, "When
I saw that they walked not uprightly, according to the truth of the gospel,
I said unto Peter before them all, If thou, being a Jew, livest after the manner
of the Gentiles, and not as do the Jews, why compellest thou the Gentiles to
live as do the Jews?"2 Here there is no obscurity of figurative language;
these are literal words of a plain statement. Surely, in addressing persons "of
whom he travailed in birth till Christ should be formed in them,"3 and
to whom, in solemnly calling God to confirm his words, he said: "The things
which I write unto you, behold, before God, I lie not,"4 the great teacher
of the Gentiles affirmed in the words above quoted either what was true or
what was false; if he said what was false, which God forbid, you see the consequences
which would follow; and Paul's own assertion of his veracity, together with
the example of wondrous humility in the Apostle Peter, may warn you to recoil
from such thoughts.5
5. But why say more? This question the venerable Father Jerome and I have
discussed fully in letters6 which we exchanged, and in his latest work, published
under the name of Critobulus, against Pelagius,7 he has maintained the same
opinion concerning that transaction and the words of the apostle which, in
accordance with the views of the blessed Cyprian,8 I myself have held. In regard
to the question as to the origin of souls, I think there is reasonable ground
for inquiry, not as to the giving of souls to the offspring of adulterous parents,
but as to the condemnation (which God forbid) of those who are innocent. If
you have learned anything from a man of such character and eminence as Jerome
which might form a satisfactory answer to those in perplexity on this subject,
I pray you not to refuse to communicate it to me. In your correspondence, you
have approved Yourself so learned and so affable that it is a privilege to
hold intercourse with you by letter.I ask you not to delay to send a certain
book by the same man of God, which the presbyter Orosius brought and gave to
you to copy, in which the resurrection of the body is treated of by him in
a manner said to merit distinguished praise. We have not asked it earlier,
because we knew that you had both to copy and to revise it; but for both of
these we think we have now given you ample time.
Live to God, and be mindful of us.
[For translation of Letter CLXXXV. to Count Boniface, containing an exhaustive
history of the Donatist schism, see Anti-Donatist Writings.]
LETTER CLXXXVIII. (A.D. 416.)
TO THE LADY JULIANA, WORTHY TO BE HONOURED IN CHRIST WITH THE SERVICE DUE
TO HER RANK, OUR DAUGHTER DESERVEDLY DISTINGUISHED, ALYPIUS AND AUGUSTIN SEND
GREETING IN THE LORD.
CHAP.
I. -- I. Lady, worthy to be honoured in Christ with the service due to your
rank, and daughter
deservedly
distinguished, it was very pleasant and
agreeable to us that your letter reached us when together at Hippo, so that
we might send this joint reply to you, to express our joy in hearing of your
welfare, and with sincere reciprocation of your love to let you know of our
welfare, in which we are sure that you take an affectionate interest. We are
well aware that you are not ignorant how great Christian affection we consider
due to you, and how much, both before God and among men, we are interested
in you. For though we knew you, at first by letter, afterwards by personal
intercourse, to be pious and Catholic, that is, true members of the body of
Christ, nevertheless, our humble ministry also was of use to you, for when
you had received the word of God from us, "you received it," as says
the apostle, "not as the word of men, but as it is in truth the word of
God." Through the grace and mercy of the Saviour, so great was the fruit
arising from this ministery of ours in your family, that when preparations
for her marriage were already completed, the holy Demetrias preferred the spiritual
embrace of that Husband who is fairer than the sons of men, and in espousing
themselves to whom virgins retain their virginity, and gain more abundant spiritual
fruitfulness. We should not, however, yet have known how this exhortation of
ours had been received by the faithful and noble maiden, as we departed shortly
before she took on her the vow of chastity, had we not learned from the joyful
announcement and reliable testimony of your letter, that this great gift of
God, planted and watered indeed by means of His servants, but owing its increase
to Himself, had been granted to us as labourers in His vineyard.
2. Since
these things are so, no one may charge us with presuming, if, on the ground
of this closer
spiritual
relation, we manifest our solicitude for
your welfare by warning you to avoid opinions opposed to the grace of God.
For though the apostle commands us in preaching the word to be "instant
in season and out of season," yet we do not reckon you among the number
of those to whom a word or a letter from us exhorting you carefully to avoid
what is inconsistent with sound doctrine would seem "out of season." Hence
it was that you received our admonition in so kindly a manner, that, in the
letter to which we are now replying, you say, "I thank you heartily for
the pious advice which your Reverence gave me, not to lend an ear to those
men who, by their mischievous writings, often corrupt our holy faith."
3. In
this letter you go on to say, "But your Reverence knows that I
and my household are entirely separated from persons of this description; and
all our family follow so strictly the Catholic faith as never at any time to
have wandered from it, or fallen into any heresy, -- I speak not of the heresy
of sects who have erred in a measure hardly admiring of expiation, but of those
whose errors seem to be trivial." This statement renders it more and more
necessary for us, in writing to you, not to pass over in silence the conduct
of those who are attempting to corrupt even those who are sound in the faith.
We consider your house to be no insignificant Church of Christ, nor indeed
is the error of those men trivial who think that we have of ourselves whatever
righteousness, temperance, piety, chastity is in us, on the ground that God
has so formed us, that beyond the revelation which He has given He imparts
to us no further aid for performing by our own choice those things which by
study we have ascertained to be our duty; declaring nature and knowledge to
be the grace of God, and the only aid for living righteously and justly. For
the possession, indeed, of a will inclined to what is good, whence proceed
the life of uprightness and that love which so far excels all other gifts that
God Himself is said to be love, and by which alone is fulfilled in us as far
as we fulfil them, the divine law and council, -- for the possession, I say,
of such a will, they hold that we are not indebted to the aid of God, but affirm
that we ourselves of our own will are sufficient for these things. Let it not
appear to you a trifling error that men should wish to profess themselves Christians,
and yet be unwilling to hear the apostle of Christ, who, having said, "The
love of God is shed abroad in our hearts," lest any one should think that
he had this love through his own free will, immediately subjoined, "by
the Holy Spirit who is given unto us." Understand, then, how greatly and
how fatally that man errs who does not acknowledge that this is the "great
gift of the Saviour," who, when He ascended on high, "led captivity
captive, and gave gifts unto men."
CHAP.
II. -- 4. How, then, could we so far conceal our true feelings as not to
warn you, in whom we
feel so
deep an interest, to beware of such doctrines,
after we had read a certain book addressed to the holy Demetrias? Whether this
book has reached you, and who is its author, we are desirous to hear in your
answer to this. In this book, were it lawful for such a one to read it, a virgin
of Christ would read that her holiness and all her spiritual riches are to
spring from no other source than herself, and thus, before she attains to the
perfection of blessedness, she would learn, -- which may God forbid! -- to
be ungrateful to God. For the words addressed to her in the said book are these:
-- "You have here, then, those things on account of which you are deservedly,
nay more, more especially to be preferred before others; for your earthly rank
and wealth are understood to be derived from your relatives, not from yourself,
but your spiritual riches no one can have conferred on you but yourself; for
these, then, you are justly to be praised, for these you are deservedly to
be preferred to others, for they can exist only from yourself, and in yourself."
5. You
see, doubtless, how dangerous is the doctrine in these words, against which
you must be on
your guard.
For the affirmation, indeed, that these spiritual
riches can exist only in yourself, is very well and truly said: that evidently
is food; but the affirmation that they cannot exist except from you is unmixed
poison. Far be it from any virgin of Christ willingly to listen to statements
like these. Every virgin of Christ understands the innate poverty of the human
heart, and therefore declines to have it adorned otherwise than by the gifts
of her Spouse. Let her rather listen to the apostle when he says: "I have
espoused you to one husband, that I may present you as a chaste virgin to Christ.
But I fear, lest by any means, as the serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty,
so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ." And
therefore in regard to these spiritual riches let her listen, not to him who
says: "No one can confer them on you except yourself, and they cannot
exist except from you and in you;" but to him who says: "We have
this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of
God, and not of us."
6. In
regard to that sacred virginal chastity, also, which does not belong to her
from herself, but is
the gift
of God, bestowed, however, on her who
is believing and willing, let her hear the same truthful and pious teacher,
who when he treats of this subject says: "I would that all men were even
as I myself: but every man hath his proper gift of God, one after this manner,
and another after that." Let her hear also Him who is the only Spouse,
not only of herself, but of the whole Church, thus speaking of this chastity
and purity: "All cannot receive this saying, save they to whom it is given;" that
she may understand that for her possession of this so great and excellent gift,
she ought rather to render thanks to our God and Lord, than to listen to the
words of any one who says that she possessed it from herself, -- words which
we may not designate as those of a flatterer seeking to please, lest we seem
to judge rashly concerning the hidden thoughts of men, but which are assuredly
those of a misguided eulogist. For "every good gift and every perfect
gift," as the Apostle James says, "is from above, and cometh down
from the Father of Lights;" from this source, therefore, cometh this holy
virginity, in which you who approve of it, and rejoice in it, have been excelled
by your daughter, who, coming after you in birth, has gone before you in conduct;
descended from you in lineage, has risen above you in honour; following you
in age, has gone beyond you in holiness; in whom also that begins to be yours
which could not be in your own person. For she did not contract an earthly
marriage, that she might be, not for herself only, but also for you, spiritually
enriched, in a higher degree than yourself, since you, even with this addition,
are inferior to her, because you contracted the marriage of which she is the
offspring. These things are gifts of God, and are yours, indeed, but are not
from yourselves; for you have this treasure in earthly bodies, which are still
frail as the vessels of the potter, that the excellency of the power may be
of God, and not of you. And be not surprised because we say that these things
are yours, and not from you, for we speak of "daily bread" as ours,
but yet add, "give it to us," test it should be thought that it was
from ourselves.
7. Wherefore
obey the precept of Scripture, "Pray without ceasing. In
everything give thanks;" for you pray in order that you may have constantly
and increasingly these gifts, you render thanks because you have them not of
yourself. For who separates you from that mass of death and perdition derived
from Adam? Is it not He "who came to seek and to save that which was lost?" Was,
then, a man, indeed, on hearing the apostle's question, "Who maketh thee
to differ?" to reply, "My own good will, my faith, my righteousness," and
to disregard what immediately follows? "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?" We are unwilling, then, yea, utterly unwilling,
that a consecrated virgin, when she hears or reads these words: "Your
spiritual riches no one can have conferred on you; for these you are justly
to be praised, for these you are deservedly to be preferred to others, for
they can exist only from yourself, and in yourself," should thus boast
of her riches as if she had not received them. Let her say, indeed, "In
me are Thy vows, O God, I will render praises unto Thee;" but since they
are in her, not from her, let her remember also to say, "Lord, by Thy
will Thou hast furnished strength to my beauty," because, though it be
from her, inasmuch as it is the acting of her own will, without which we cannot
do what is good, yet we are not to say, as he said, that it is "only from
her." For our own will, unless it be aided by the grace of God, cannot
alone be even in name good will, for, says the apostle, "it is God who
worketh in us, both to will, and to do according to good will," -- not,
as these persons think, merely by revealing knowledge, that we may know what
we ought to do, but also by inspiring Christian love, that we may also by choice
perform the things which by study we have learned.
8. For
doubtless the value of the gift of continence was known to him who said," I perceived that no man can be continent unless God bestowed the
gift." He not only knew then how great a benefit it was, and how eagerly
it ought to be coveted, but also that, unless God gave it, it could not exist;
for wisdom had taught him this for he says, "This also was a point of
wisdom, to know whose gift it was; and the knowledge did not suffice him, but
he says, "I went to the Lord and made my supplication to Him." God
then aids us in this matter, not only by making us know what is to be done,
but also by making us do through love what we already know through learning.
No one, therefore, can possess, not only knowledge, but also continence, unless
God give it to him. Whence it was that when he had knowledge he prayed that
he might have continence, that it might be in him, because he knew that it
was not from him; or if on account of the freedom of his will it was in a certain
sense from himself, yet it was not from himself alone, because no one can be
continent unless God bestow on him the gift. But he whose opinions I am censuring,
in speaking of spiritual riches, among which is doubtless that bright and beautiful
gift of continence, does not say that they may exist in you, and from yourself,
but says that they can exist only from you, and in you, in such a way that,
as a virgin of Christ has these things nowhere else than in herself, so it
can be believed possible for her to have them from no other source than from
herself, and in this way (which may a merciful God avert from her heart!) she
shall so boast as if she had not received them!
CHAP.
III. -- 9. We indeed hold such an opinion concerning the training of this
holy virgin, and the
Christian
humility in which she was nourished and
brought up, as to be assured that when she read these words, if she did read,
them, she would break out into lamentations, and humbly smite her breast, and
perhaps burst into tears, and pray in faith to the Lord to whose service she
was dedicated and by whom she was sanctified, pleading with Him that these
were not her own words, but another's, and asking that her faith might not
be such as to believe that she had anything whereof to glory in herself and
not in the Lord. For her glory is in herself, not in the words of another,
as the apostle says: "Let every man prove his own work, and then shall
he have glory (rejoicing) in himself alone, and not in another." But God
forbid that her glory should be in herself, and not in Him to whom the Psalmist
says, "Thou art my glory, and the lifter up of mine head." For her
glory is then profitably in herself, when God, who is in her, is Himself her
glory, from whom she has every good, by which she is good, and shall have all
things by which she shall be made better, in as far as she may become better
in this life, and by which she shall be made perfect when rendered so by divine
grace, not by human praise. "For her soul shall be praised in the Lord," "who
satisfieth her desire with good things," because He Himself has inspired
this desire, that His virgin should not boast of any good, as if she had not
received it.
10. Inform us, then, in reply to this letter, whether we have judged truly
in supposing these to be your daughter's sentiments. For we know well that
you and all your family are, and have been, worshippers of the indivisible
Trinity. But human error insinuates itself in other forms than in erroneous
opinions concerning the indivisible Trinity. There are other subjects also,
in regard to which men fall into very dangerous errors. As, for example, that
of which we have spoken in this letter at greater length, perhaps, than might
have sufficed to a person of your stedfast and pure wisdom. And yet we know
not to whom, except to God, and therefore to the Trinity, wrong is done by
the man who denies that the good that comes from God is from God; which evil
may God avert from you, as we believe He does! May God altogether forbid that
the book out of which we have thought it our duty to extract some words, that
they might be more easily understood, should produce any such impression, we
do not say on your mind, or on that of the holy virgin your daughter, but on
the mind of the least deserving of your male or female servants.
11. But if you study more carefully even those words in which the writer appears
to speak in favour of grace or the aid of God, you will find them so ambiguous
that they may have reference either to nature or to knowledge, or to forgiveness
of sins. For even in regard to that which they are forced to acknowledge, that
we ought to pray that we may not enter into temptation, they may consider that
the words mean that we are so far helped to it that, by our praying and knocking,
the knowledge of the truth is so revealed to us that we may learn what it is
our duty to do, not so far as that our will receives strength, whereby we may
do that which we learn to be our duty; and as to their saying that it is by
the grace or help of God that the Lord Christ has been set before us as an
example of holy living, they interpret this so as to teach the same doctrine,
affirming, namely, that we learn by His example how we ought to live, but denying
that we are so aided as to do through love what we know by learning.
12. Find
in this book, if you can, anything in which, excepting nature and the freedom
of the will
(which pertains
to the same nature), and the remission
of sin and the revealing of doctrine, any such aid of God is acknowledged as
that which he acknowledges who said: "When I perceived that no man can
be continent unless God bestow the gift, and that this also is a point of wisdom
to know whose gift it is, I went to the Lord, and made my supplication to Him." For
he did not desire to receive, in answer to his prayer, the nature in which
he was made; nor was he solicitous to obtain the natural freedom of the will
with which he was made; nor did he crave the remission of sins, seeing that
he prayed rather for continence, that he might not sin; nor did he desire to
know what he ought to do, seeing that he already confessed that he knew whose
gift this continence was; but he wished to receive from the Spirit of wisdom
such strength of will, such ardour of love, as should suffice for fully practising
the great virtue of continence. If, therefore, you succeed in finding any such
statement in that book, we will heartily thank you if, in your answer, you
deign to inform us of it.
13. It
is impossible for us to tell how greatly we desire to find in the writings
of these men, whose
works
are read by very many for their pungency and eloquence,
the open confession of that grace which the apostle vehemently commends, who
says that "God has given to every man the measure of faith," "without
which it is impossible to please God," "by which the just live," "which
worketh by love," before which and without which no works of any man are
in any respect to be reckoned good, since "whatsoever is not of faith
is sin." He affirms that God distributes to every man, and that we receive
divine assistance to live piously and justly, not only by the revelation of
that knowledge which without charity "puffeth up," but by our being
inspired with that "love which is the fulfilling of the law," and
which so edifies our heart that knowledge does not puff it up. But hitherto
I have failed to find any such statements in the writings of these men.
14. But especially we should wish that these sentiments should be found in
that book from which we have quoted the words in which the author, praising
a virgin of Christ as if no one except herself could confer on her spiritual
riches, and as if these could not exist except from herself, does not wish
her to glory in the Lord, but to glory as if she had not received them. In
this book, though it contain neither his name nor your own honoured name, he
nevertheless mentions that a request had been made to him by the mother of
the virgin to write to her. In a certain epistle of his, however, to which
he openly attaches his name, and does not conceal the name of the sacred virgin,
the same Pelagius says that he had written to her, and endeavours to prove,
by appealing to the said work, that he most openly confessed the grace of God,
which he is alleged to have passed over in silence, or denied. But we beg you
to condescend to inform us, in your reply, whether that be the very book in
which he has inserted these words about spiritual riches, and whether it has
reached your Holiness.
LETTER CLXXXIX. (A.D. 418.)
TO BONIFACE,10 MY NOBLE LORD AND JUSTLY DISTINGUISHED AND HONOURABLE SON,
AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. I had already written a reply to your Charity, but while I was waiting
for an opportunity of forwarding the letter, my beloved son Faustus arrived
here on his way to your Excellency. After he had received the letter which
I had intended to be carried by him to your Benevolence, he stated to me that
you were very desirous that I should write you something which might build
you up unto the eternal salvation of which you have hope in Christ Jesus our
Lord. And, although I was busily occupied at the time, he insisted, with an
earnestness corresponding to the love which, as you know, he bears to you,
that I should do this without delay. To meet his convenience, therefore, as
he was in haste to depart, I thought it better to write, though necessarily
without much time for reflection, rather than put off the gratification of
your pious desire, my noble lord and justly distinguished and honourable son.
2. All
is contained in these brief sentences: "Love the Lord thy God
with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength: and love
thy neighbour as thyself;" for these are the words in which the Lord,
when on earth, gave an epitome of religion, saying in the gospel, "On
these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets." Daily advance,
then, in this love, both by praying and by well-doing, that through the help
of Him, who enjoined it on you, and whose gift it is, it may be nourished and
increased, until, being perfected, it render you perfect. "For this is
the love which," as the apostle says, "is shed abroad in our hearts
by the Holy Ghost, which is given unto us." This is "the fulfilling
of the law;" this is the same love by which faith works, of which he says
again, "Neither circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircumcision; but
faith, which worketh by love."
3. In
this love, then, all our holy fathers, patriarchs, prophets, and apostles
pleased God. In
this all
true martyrs contended against the devil even to the
shedding of blood, and because in them it neither waxed cold nor failed, they
became conquerors. In this all true believers daily make progress, seeking
to acquire not an earthly kingdom, but the kingdom of heaven; not a temporal,
but an eternal inheritance; not gold and silver, but the incorruptible riches
of the angels; not the good things of this life, which are enjoyed with trembling,
and which no one can take with him when he dies, but the vision of God, whose
grace and power of imparting felicity transcend all beauty of form in bodies
not only on earth but also in heaven, transcend all spiritual loveliness in
men, however just and holy, transcend all the glory of the angels and powers
of the world above, transcend not only all that language can express, but all
that thought can imagine concerning Him. And let us not despair of the fulfilment
of such a great promise because it is exceeding great, but rather believe that
we shall receive it because He who has promised it is exceeding great, as the
blessed Apostle John says: "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."
4. Do
not think that it is impossible for any one to please God while engaged in
active military
service. Among
such persons was the holy David, to whom
God gave so great a testimony; among them also were many righteous men of that
time; among them was also that centurion who said to the Lord: "I am not
worthy that Thou shouldest come under my roof, but speak the word only, and
my servant shall be healed: for I am a man under authority, having soldiers
under me: and I say to this man, Go, and he goeth; and to another, Come, and
he cometh; and to my servant, Do this, and he doeth it;" and concerning
whom the Lord said: "Verily, I say unto you, I have not found so great
faith, no, not in Israel." Among them was that Cornelius to whom an angel
said: "Cornelius, thine alms are accepted, and thy prayers are heard," when
he directed him to send to the blessed Apostle Peter, and to hear from him
what he ought to do, to which apostle he sent a devout soldier, requesting
him to come to him. Among them were also the soldiers who, when they had come
to be baptized by John, -- the sacred forerunner of the Lord, and the friend
of the Bridegroom, of whom the Lord says: "Among them that are born of
women there hath not arisen a greater than John the Baptist," -- and had
inquired of him what they should do, received the answer, "Do violence
to no man, neither accuse any falsely; and be content with your wages." Certainly
he did not prohibit them to serve as soldiers when he commanded them to be
content with their pay for the service.
5. They
occupy indeed a higher place before God who, abandoning all these secular
employments,
serve Him
with the strictest chastity; but "every
one," as the apostle says, "hath his proper gift of God, one after
this manner, and another after that." Some, then, in praying for you,
fight against your invisible enemies; you, in fighting for them, contend against
the barbarians, their visible enemies. Would that one faith existed in all,
for then there would be less weary struggling, and the devil with his angels
would be more easily conquered; but since it is necessary in this life that
the citizens of the kingdom of heaven should be subjected to temptations among
erring and impious men, that they may be exercised, and "tried as gold
in the furnace," we ought not before the appointed time to desire to live
with those alone who are holy and righteous, so that, by patience, we may deserve
to receive this blessedness in its proper time.
6. Think,
then, of this first of all, when you are arming for the battle, that even
your bodily strength
is
a gift of God; for, considering this, you
will not employ the gift of God against God. For, when faith is pledged, it
is to be kept even with the enemy against whom the war is waged, how much more
with the friend for whom the battle is fought! Peace should be the object of
your desire; war should be waged only as a necessity, and waged only that God
may by it deliver men from the necessity and preserve them in peace. For peace
is not sought in order to the kindling of war, but war is waged in order that
peace may be obtained. Therefore, even in waging war, cherish the spirit of
a peacemaker, that, by conquering those whom you attack, you may lead them
back to the advantages of peace; for our Lord says: "Blessed are the peacemakers;
for they shall be called the children of God." If, however, peace among
men be so sweet as procuring temporal safety, how much sweeter is that peace
with God which procures for men the eternal felicity of the angels! Let necessity,
therefore, and not your will, slay the enemy who fights against you. As violence
is used towards him who rebels and resists, so mercy is due to the vanquished
or the captive, especially in the case in which future troubling of the peace
is not to be feared.
7. Let
the manner of your life be adorned by chastity, sobriety, and moderation;
for it is exceedingly
disgraceful
that lust should subdue him whom man finds
invincible, and that wine should overpower him whom the sword assails in vain.
As to worldly riches, if you do not possess them, let them not be sought after
on earth by doing evil; and if you possess them, let them by good works be
laid up in heaven. The manly and Christian spirit ought neither to be elated
by the accession, nor crushed by the loss of this world's treasures. Let us
rather think of what the Lord says: "Where your treasure is, there will
your heart be also;" and certainly, when we hear the exhortation to lift
up our hearts, it is our duty to give unfeignedly the response which you know
that we are accustomed to give.
8. In
these things, indeed, I know that you are very careful, and the good report
which I hear of you
fills
me with great delight, and moves me to congratulate
you on account of it in the Lord. This letter, therefore, may serve rather
as a mirror in which you may see what you are, than as a directory from which
to learn what you ought to be: nevertheless, whatever you may discover, either
from this letter or from the Holy Scriptures, to be still wanting to you in
regard to a holy life, persevere in urgently seeking it both by effort and
by prayer; and for the things which you have, give thanks to God as the Fountain
of goodness, whence you have received them; in every good action let the glory
be given to God, and humility be exercised by you, for, as it is written, "Every
good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father
of lights." But however much you may advance in the love of God and of
your neighbour, and in true piety, do not imagine, as long as you are in this
life, that you are without sin, for concerning this we read in Holy Scripture: "Is
not the life of man upon earth a life of temptation?" Wherefore, since
always, as long as you are in this body, it is necessary for you to say in
prayer, as the Lord taught us: "Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our
debtors," remember quickly to forgive, if any one shall do you wrong and
shall ask pardon from you, that you may be able to pray sincerely, and may
prevail in seeking pardon for your own sins.
These things, my beloved friend, I have written to you in haste, as the anxiety
of the bearer to depart urged me not to detain him; but I thank God that I
have in some measure complied with your pious wish. May the mercy of God ever
protect you, my noble lord and justly distinguished son.
LETTER CXCI. (A.D. 418.)
TO MY VENERABLE LORD AND PIOUS BROTHER AND CO-PRESBYTER SIXTUS,8 WORTHY OF
BEING RECEIVED IN THE LOVE OF CHRIST, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. Since the arrival of the letter which, in my absence, your Grace forwarded
by our holy brother the presbyter Firmus, and which I read on my return to
Hippo, but not until after the bearer had departed, the present is my first
opportunity of sending to you any reply, and it is with great pleasure that
I entrust it to our very dearly beloved son, the acolyte Albinus. Your letter,
addressed to Alypius and myself jointly, came at a time when we were not together,
and this is the reason why you will now receive a letter from each of us, instead
of one from both, in reply. For the bearer of this letter has just gone, meanwhile,
from me to visit my venerable brother and co-bishop Alypius, who will write
a reply for himself to your Holiness, and he has carried with him your letter,
which I had already perused. As to the great joy with which that letter filled
my heart, why should a man attempt to say what it is impossible to express?
Indeed, I do not think that you yourself have any adequate idea of the amount
of good done by your sending that letter to us; but take our word for it, for
as you bear witness to your feelings, so do we bear witness to ours, declaring
how profoundly we have been moved by the perfectly transparent soundness of
the views declared in that letter. For if, when you sent a very short letter
on the same subject to the most blessed aged Aurelius, by the acolyte Leo,
we transcribed it with joyful alacrity, and read it with enthusiastic interest
to all who were within our reach, as an exposition of your sentiments, both
in regard to that most fatal dogma [of Pelagius], and in regard to the grace
of God freely given by Him to small and great, to which that dogma is diametrically
opposed; how great, think you, is the joy with which we have read this more
extended statement in your writing, how great the zeal with which we take care
that it be read by all to whom we have been able already or may yet be able
to make it known! For what could be read or heard with greater satisfaction
than so clear a defence of the grace of God against its enemies, from the mouth
of one who was before this proudly claimed by these enemies as a mighty supporter
of their cause? Or is there anything for which we ought to give more abundant
thanksgivings to God, than that His grace is so ably defended by those to whom
it is given, against those to whom it is not given, or by whom, when given,
it is not accepted, because in the secret and just judgment of God the disposition
to accept it is not given to them?
2. Wherefore,
my venerable lord, and holy brother worthy of being received in the love
of Christ, although
you render a most excellent service when you
thus write on this subject to brethren before whom the adversaries are wont
to boast themselves of your being their friend, nevertheless, there remains
upon you the yet greater duty of seeing not only that those be punished with
wholesome severity who dare to prate more openly their declaration of that
error, most dangerously hostile to the Christian name, but also that with pastoral
vigilance, on behalf of the weaker and simpler sheep of the Lord, most strenuous
precautions be used against those who more covertly, indeed, and timidly, but
perseveringly, and in whispers, as it were, teach this error, "creeping
into houses," as the apostle says, and doing with practised impiety all
those other things which are mentioned immediately afterwards in that passage.
Nor ought those to be overlooked who under the restraint of fear hide their
sentiments under the most profound silence, yet have not ceased to cherish
the same perverse opinions as before. For some of their party might be known
to you before that pestilence was denounced by the most explicit condemnation
of the apostolic see, whom you perceive to have now become suddenly silent;
nor can it be ascertained whether they have been really cured of it, otherwise
than through their not only forbearing from the utterance of these false dogmas,
but also defending the truths which are opposed to their former errors with
the same zeal as they used to show on the other side. These are, however, to
be more gently dealt with; for what need is there for causing further terror
to those whom their silence itself proves to be sufficiently terrified already?
At the same time, though they should not be frightened, they should be taught;
and in my opinion they may more easily, while their fear of severity assists
the teacher of the truth, be so taught that by the Lord's help, after they
have learned to understand and love His grace, they may speak out as antagonists
of the error which meanwhile they dare not confess.
LETTER CXCII. (A.D. 418.)
TO MY VENERABLE LORD AND HIGHLY ESTEEMED AND HOLY BROTHER, CAELESTINE,3 AUGUSTIN
SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. I was at a considerable distance from home when the letter of your Holiness
addressed to me at Hippo arrived by the hands of the clerk Projectus. When
I had returned home, and, having read your letter, felt myself to be owing
you a reply, I was still waiting for some means of communicating with you,
when, lo! a most desirable opportunity presented itself in the departure of
our very dear brother the acolyte Albinus, who leaves us immediately. Rejoicing,
therefore, in your health, which is most earnestly desired by me, I return
to your Holiness the salutation which I was owing. But I always owe you love,
the only debt which, even when it has been paid, holds him who has paid it
a debtor still. For it is given when it is paid, but it is owing even after
it has been given, for there is no time at which it ceases to be due. Nor when
it is given is it lost, but it is rather multiplied by giving it; for in possessing
it, not in parting with it, it is given. And since it cannot be given unless
it is possessed, so neither can it be possessed unless it is given; nay, at
the very time when it is given by a man it increases in that man, and, according
to the number of persons to whom it is given, the amount of it which is gained
becomes greater. Moreover, how can that be denied to friends which is due even
to enemies? To enemies, however, this debt is paid with caution, whereas to
friends it is repaid with confidence. Nevertheless, it uses every effort to
secure that it receives back what it gives, even in the case of those to whom
it renders good for evil. For we wish to have as a friend the man whom, as
an enemy, we truly love, for we do not sincerely love him unless we wish him
to be good, which he cannot be until he be delivered from the sin of cherished
enmities.
2. Love, therefore, is not paid away in the same manner as money; for, whereas
money is diminished, love is increased by paying it away. They differ also
in this, -- that we give evidence of greater goodwill to the man to whom we
may have given money if we do not seek to have it returned; but no one can
be a true donor of love unless he lovingly insist on its repayment. For money,
when it is received, accrues to him to whom it is given, but forsakes him by
whom it is given; love, on the contrary, even when it is not repaid, nevertheless
increases with the man who insists on its repayment by the person whom he loves;
and not only so, but the person by whom it is returned to him does not begin
to possess it till he pays it back again.
Wherefore,
my lord and brother, I willingly give to you, and joyfully receive from you,
the love
which we
owe to each other. The love which I receive I still
claim, and the love which I give I still owe. For we ought to obey with docility
the precept of the One Master, whose disciples we both profess to be, when
He says to us by His apostle: "Owe no man anything, but to love one another."
LETTER CXCV. (A.D. 418.)
TO HIS HOLY LORD AND MOST BLESSED FATHER,2 AUGUSTIN, JEROME SENDS GREETING.
At all
times I have esteemed your Blessedness with becoming reverence and honour,
and have loved the Lord
and
Saviour dwelling in you. But now we add,
if possible, something to that which has already reached a climax, and we heap
up what was already full, so that we do not suffer a single hour to pass without
the mention of your name, because you have, with the ardour of unshaken faith,
stood your ground against opposing storms, and preferred, so far as this was
in your power, to be delivered from Sodom, though you should come forth alone,
rather than linger behind with those who are doomed to perish. Your wisdom
apprehends what I mean to say. Go on and prosper! You are renowned throughout
the whole world; Catholics revere and look up to you as the restorer of the
ancient faith, and -- which is a token of yet more illustrious glory -- all
heretics abhor you. They persecute me also with equal hatred, seeking by imprecation
to take away the life which they cannot reach with the sword. May the mercy
of Christ the Lord preserve you in safety and mindful of me, my venerable lord
and most blessed father."3
LETTER CCI. (A.D. 419.)
THE EMPERORS HONORIUS AUGUSTUS AND THEODOSIUS AUGUSTUS TO BISHOP AURELIUS
SEND GREETING.
1. It had been indeed long ago decreed that Pelagius and Celestius, the authors
of an execrable heresy, should, as pestilent corruptors of the Catholic truth,
be expelled from the city of Rome, lest they should, by their baneful influence,
pervert the minds of the ignorant. In this our clemency followed up the judgment
of your Holiness, according to which it is beyond all question that they were
unanimously condemned after an impartial examination of their opinions. Their
obstinate persistence in the offence having, however, made it necessary to
issue the decree a second time, we have enacted further by a recent edict,
that if any one, knowing that they are concealing themselves in any part of
the provinces, shall delay either to drive them out or to inform on them, he,
as an accomplice, shall be liable to the punishment prescribed.
2. To secure, however, the combined efforts of the Christian zeal of all men
for the destruction of this preposterous heresy, it will be proper, most dearly
beloved father, that the authority of your Holiness be applied to the correction
of certain bishops, who either support the evil reasonings of these men by
their silent consent, or abstain from assailing them with open opposition.
Let your Reverence, then, by suitable writings, cause all bishops to be admonished
(as soon as they shall know, by the order of your Holiness, that this order
is laid upon them) that whoever shall, through impious obstinacy, neglect to
vindicate the purity of their doctrine by subscribing the condemnation of the
persons before mentioned, shall, after being punished by the loss of their
episcopal office, be cut off by excommunication and banished for life from
their sees. For as, by a sincere confession of the truth, we ourselves, in
obedience to the Council of Nice, worship God as the Creator of all things,
and as the Fountain of our imperial sovereignty, your Holiness will not suffer
the members of this odious sect, inventing, to the injury of religion, notions
new and strange, to hide in writings privately circulated an error condemned
by public authority. For, most beloved and loving father, the guilt of heresy
is in no degree less grievous in those who either by dissimulation lend the
error their secret support, or by abstaining from denouncing it extend to it
a fatal approbation.
(In another hand.) May the Divinity preserve you in safety for many years!
Given at Ravenna, on the 9th day of June, in the Consulship of Monaxius and
Plinta.
A letter, in the same terms, was also sent to the holy Bishop Augustin.
LETTER CCII. (A.D. 419.)
TO THE BISHOPS ALYPIUS AND AUGUSTIN, MY LORDS TRULY HOLY, AND DESERVEDLY LOVED
AND REVERENCED, JEROME SENDS GREETING IN CHRIST.
CHAP. I. -- 1. The holy presbyter Innocentius, who is the bearer of this letter,
did not last year take with him a letter from me to your Eminences, as he had
no expectation of returning to Africa. We thank God, however, that it so happened,
as it afforded you an opportunity of overcoming [evil with good in requiting]
our silence by your letter. Every opportunity of writing to you, revered fathers,
is most acceptable to me. I call God to witness that, if it were possible,
I would take the wings of a dove and fly to be folded in your embrace. Loving
you, indeed, as I have always done, from a deep sense of your worth, but now
especially because your co-operation and your leadership have succeeded in
strangling the heresy of Celestius, a heresy which has so poisoned the hearts
of many, that, though they felt they were vanquished and condemned, yet they
did not lay aside their venomous sentiments, and, as the only thing that remained
in their power, hated us by whom they imagined that they had lost the liberty
of teaching heretical doctrines.
CHAP. II. -- 2. As to your inquiry whether I have written in opposition to
the books of Annianus, this pretended deacon2 of Celedae, who is amply provided
for in order that he may furnish frivolous accounts of the blasphemies of others,
know that I received these books, sent in loose sheets by our holy brother,
the presbyter Eusebius, not long ago. Since then I have suffered so much through
the attacks of disease, and through the falling asleep of your distinguished
and holy daughter Eustochium, that I almost thought of passing over these writings
with silent contempt. For he flounders from beginning to end in the same mud,
and, with the exception of some jingling phrases which are not original, says
nothing he had not said before. Nevertheless, I have gained much in the fact,
that in attempting to answer my letter he has declared his opinions with less
reserve, and has published to all men his blasphemies; for every error which
he disowned in the wretched synod of Diospolis he in this treatise openly avows.
It is indeed no great thing to answer his superlatively silly puerilities,
but if the Lord spare me, and I have a sufficient staff of amanuenses, I will
in a few brief lucubrations answer him, not to refute a defunct heresy, but
to silence his ignorance and blasphemy by arguments: and this your Holiness
could do better than I, as you would relieve me from the necessity of praising
my own works in writing to the heretic. Our holy daughters Albina and Melania,
and our son Pinianus, salute you cordially. I give to our holy presbyter Innocentius
this short letter to convey to you from the holy place Bethlehem. Your niece
Paula piteously entreats you to remember her, and salutes you warmly. May the
mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ preserve you safe and mindful of me, my lords
truly holy, and fathers deservedly loved and reverenced.
LETTER CCIII. (A.D. 420.)
TO MY NOBLE LORD AND MOST EXCELLENT AND LOVING SON, LARGUS, AUGUSTIN SENDS
GREETING IN THE LORD.
I received the letter of your Excellency, in which you ask me to write to
you. This assuredly you would not have done unless you had esteemed acceptable
and pleasant that which you suppose me capable of writing to you. other words,
I assume that, having desired the vanities of this life when you had not tried
them, now, after the trial has been made, you despise them, because in them
the pleasure is deceitful, the labour fruitless, the anxiety perpetual, the
elevation dangerous. Men seek them at first through imprudence, and give them
up at last with disappointment and remorse. This is true of all the things
which, in the cares of this mortal life, are coveted with more eagerness than
wisdom by the uneasy solicitude of the men of the world. But it is wholly otherwise
with the hope of the pious: very different is the fruit of their labours, very
different the reward of their dangers. Fear and grief, and labour and danger
are unavoidable, so long as we live in this world; but the great question is,
for what cause, with what expectation, with what aim a man endures these things.
When, indeed, I contemplate the lovers of this world, I know not at what time
wisdom can most opportunely attempt their moral improvement; for when they
have apparent prosperity, they reject disdainfully her salutary admonitions,
and regard them as old wives fables; when, again, they are in adversity, they
think rather of escaping merely from present suffering than of obtaining the
real remedy by which they may be made whole, and may arrive at that place where
they shall be altogether exempt from suffering. Occasionally, however, some
open their ears and hearts to the truth, -- rarely in prosperity, more frequently
in adversity. These are indeed the few, for such it is predicted that they
shall be. Among these I desire you to be, because I love you truly, my noble
lord and most excellent and loving son. Let this counsel be my answer to your
letter, because though I am unwilling that you should henceforth suffer such
things as you have endured, yet I would grieve still more if you were found
to have suffered these things without any change for the better in your life.
LETTER CCVIII. (A.D. 423.)
TO THE LADY FELICIA, HIS DAUGHTER IN THE FAITH, AND WORTHY OF HONOUR AMONG
THE MEMBERS OF CHRIST, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. I do
not doubt, when I consider both your faith and the weakness or wickedness
of others, that
your mind
has been disturbed, for even a holy apostle, full
of compassionate love, confesses a similiar experience, saying, "Who is
weak, and I am not weak? who is offended, and I burn not?" Wherefore,
as I myself share your pain, and am solicitous for your welfare in Christ,
I have thought it my duty to address this letter, partly consolatory, partly
hortatory, to your Holiness, because in the body of our Lord Jesus Christ,
in which all His members are one, you are very closely related to us, being
loved as an honourable member in that body, and partaking with us of life in
His Holy Spirit.
2. I exhort
you, therefore, not to be too much troubled by those offences which for this
very reason
were
foretold as destined to come, that when they
came we might remember that they had been foretold, and not be greatly disconcerted
by them. For the Lord Himself in His gospel foretold them, saying, "Woe
unto the world because of offences! for it must needs be that offences come;
but woe unto that man by whom the offence cometh!" These are the men of
whom the apostle said, "They seek their own, not the things that are Jesus
Christ's." There are, therefore, some who hold the honourable office of
shepherds in order that they may provide for the flock of Christ; others occupy
that position that they may enjoy the temporal honours and secular advantages
connected with the office. It must needs happen that these two kinds of pastors,
some dying, others succeeding them, should continue in the Catholic Church
even to the end of time, and the judgment of the Lord. If, then, in the times
of the apostles there were men such that Paul, grieved by their conduct, enumerates
among his trials, "perils among false brethren," and yet he did not
haughtily cast them out, but patiently bore with them, how much more must such
arise in our times, since the Lord most plainly says concerning this age which
is drawing to a close, "that because iniquity shall abound the love of
many shall wax cold." The word which follows, however, ought to console
and exhort us, for He adds, "He that shall endure to the end, the same
shall be saved."
3. Moreover,
as there are good shepherds and bad shepherds, so also in flocks there are
good and
bad. The
good are represented by the name of sheep, but
the bad are called goats: they feed, nevertheless, side by side in the same
pastures, until the Chief Shepherd, who is called the One Shepherd, shall come
and separate them one from another according to His promise, "as a shepherd
divideth the sheep from the goats." On us He has laid the duty of gathering
the flock; to Himself He has reserved the work of final separation, because
it pertains properly to Him who cannot err. For those presumptuous servants,
who have lightly ventured to separate before the time which the Lord has reserved
in His own hand, have, instead of separating others, only been separated themselves
from Catholic unity; for how could those have a clean flock who have by schism
become unclean ?
4. In order, therefore, that we may remain in the unity of the faith, and
not, stumbling at the offences occasioned by the chaff, desert the threshing-floor
of the Lord, bu