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LETTERS OF ST. AUGUSTIN
LETTERS CCXII TO CCLXIX
(INCLUDES FOURTH DIVISION)
LETTER CCXII. (A.D. 423.)
TO QUINTILIANUS, MY LORD MOST BLESSED AND BROTHER AND FELLOW BISHOP DESERVEDLY
VENERABLE, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING.
Venerable father, I commend to you in the love of Christ these honourable
servants of God and precious members of Christ, Galla, a widow (who has taken
on herself sacred vows), and her daughter Simplicia, a consecrated virgin,
who is subject to her mother by reason of her age, but above her by reason
of her holiness. We have nourished them as far as we have been able with the
word of God; and by this epistle, as if it were with my own hand, I commit
them to you, to be comforted and aided in every way which their interest or
necessity requires. This duty your Holiness would doubtless have undertaken
without any recommendation from me; for if it is our duty on account of the
Jerusalem above, of which we are all citizens, and in which they desire to
have a place of distinguished holiness, to cherish towards them not only the
affection due to fellow-citizens, but even brotherly love, how much stronger
is their claim on you, who reside in the same country in this earth in which
these ladies, for the love of Christ, renounced the distinctions of this world
I also ask you to condescend to receive with the same love with which I have
offered it my official salutation, and to remember me in your prayers. These
ladies carry with them relics of the most blessed and glorious martyr Stephen:
your Holiness knows how to give due honour to these, as we have done.3
LETTER CCXIII. (SEPTEMBER 26TH, A.D. 426.)
RECORD, PREPARED BY ST. AUGUSTIN, OF THE PROCEEDINGS ON THE OCCASION OF HIS
DESIGNATING ERACLIUS TO SUCCEED HIM IN THE EPISCOPAL CHAIR, AND TO RELIEVE
HIM MEANWHILE IN HIS OLD AGE OF A PART OF HIS RESPONSIBILITIES.
In the Church of Peace in the district of Hippo Regius, on the 26th day of
September in the year of the twelfth consulship of the most renowned Theodosius,
and of the second consulship of Valentinian Augustus: -- Bishop Augustin having
taken his seat along with bedfellow bishops Religianus and Martinianus, there
being present Saturninus, Leporius, Barnabas, Fortunatianus, Rusticus, Lazarus,
and Eraclius, -- presbyters, -- while the clergy and a large congregation of
laymen stood by, -- Bishop Augustin said: --
"The
business which I brought before you yesterday, my beloved, as one in connection
with which
I wished
you to attend, as see you have done in greater
numbers than usual, must be at once disposed of. For while your minds are anxiously
preoccupied with it, you would scarcely listen to me if I were to speak of
any other subject. We all are mortal, and the day which shall be the last of
life on earth is to every man at all times uncertain; but in infancy there
is hope of entering on boyhood, and so our hope goes on, looking forward from
boyhood to youth, from youth to manhood, and from manhood to old age: whether
these hopes may be realized or not is uncertain, but there is in each case
something which may be hoped for. But old age has no other period of this life
to look forward to with expectation: how long old age may in any case be prolonged
is uncertain, but it is certain that no other age destined to take its place
lies beyond. I came to this town -- for such was the will of God -- when I
was in the prime of life. I was young then, but now I am old. I know that churches
are wont to be disturbed after the decease of their bishops by ambitious or
contentious parties, and I feel it to be my duty to take measures to prevent
this community from suffering, in connection with my decease, that which I
have often observed and lamented elsewhere. You are aware, my beloved, that
I recently visited the Church of Milevi; for certain brethren, and especially
the servants of God there, requested me to come, because some disturbance was
apprehended after the death of my brother and fellow bishop Severus, of blessed
memory. I went accordingly, and the Lord was in mercy pleased so to help us
that they harmoniously accepted as bishop the person designated by their former
bishop his lifetime; for when this designation had become known to them, they
willingly acquiesced in the choice which he had made. An omission, however,
had occurred by which some were dissatisfied; for brother Severus, believing
that it might be sufficient for him to mention to the clergy the name of his
successor, did not s. peak of the matter to the people, which gave rise to
dissatisfaction in the minds of some. But why should I say more? By the good
pleasure of God, the dissatisfaction was removed, joy took its place in the
minds of all, and he was ordained as bishop whom Severus had proposed. To obviate
all such occasion of complaint in this case, I now intimate to all here my
desire, which I believe to be also the will of God: I wish to have for my successor
the presbyter Eraclius."
The people
shouted, "To God be thanks! To Christ be praise" ( this
was repeated twenty-three times). "O Christ, hear us; may Augustin live
long!" (repeated sixteen times). "We will have thee as our father,
thee as our bishop" (repealed eight times).
2. Silence having been obtained, Bishop Augustin said: --
"It
is unnecessary for me to say anything in praise of Eraclius; I esteem his
wisdom and spare
his
modesty; it is enough that you know him: and I declare
that I desire in regard to him what I know you also to desire, and if I had
not known it before, I would have had proof of it today. This, therefore, I
desire; this I ask from the Lord our God in prayers, the warmth of which is
not abated by the chili of age; this I exhort, admonish, and entreat you also
to pray for along with me, --that God may confirm that, which He has wrought
in us by blending and fusing together the minds of all in the peace of Christ.
May He who has sent him to me preserve him! preserve him safe, preserve him
blameless, that as he gives me joy while I live, he may fill my place when
I die.
"The
notaries of the church are, as you observe, recording what I say, and recording
what
you say; both
my address and your acclamations are not allowed
to fall to the ground. To speak more plainly, we are making up an ecclesiastical
record of this day's proceedings; for I wish them to be in this way confirmed
so far as pertains to men."
The people
shouted thirty-six times, "To God be thanks! To Christ be
praise!" O Christ, hear us; may Augustin live long!" was said thirteen
times. "Thee, our father! thee, our bishop!" was said eight times. "He
is worthy and just," was said twenty times. "Well deserving, well
worthy!" was said five times. "He is worthy and just!" was said
six times.
3. Silence having been obtained, Bishop Augustin said: --
"It
is my wish, as I was just now saying, that my desire and your desire be confirmed,
so far
as pertains
to men, by being placed on an ecclesiastical
record; but so far as pertains to the will of the Almighty, let us all pray,
as I said before, that God would confirm that which He has wrought in us."
The people
shouted, saying sixteen times, "We give thanks for your decision:" then
twelve times, "Agreed! Agreed!" and then sixtimes, "Thee,our
father! Eraclius, ourbishop!"
4. Silence having been obtained, Bishop Augustin said : --
"I
approve of that of which you also express your approval;1 but I do not wish
that to be done
in regard
to him which was done in my own case. What
was done many of you know; in fact, all of you, excepting only those who at
that time were not born, or had not attained to the years of understanding.
When my father and bishop, the aged Valerius, of blessed memory, was still
living, I was ordained bishop and occupied the episcopal see along with him
which I did not know to have been forbidden by the Council of Nice; and he
was equally ignorant of the prohibition. I do not wish to have my son here
exposed to the same censure as was incurred in my own case."
The people
shouted, saying thirteen times, "To Gad be thanks! To Christ
be praise!"
5. Silence having been obtained, Bishop Augustin said: --
"He
shall be as he now is, a presbyter, meanwhile; but afterwards, at such time
as may please
God, your
bishop. But now I will assuredly begin to
do, as the compassion of Christ may enable me, what I have not hitherto done.
You know what for several years I would have done, had you permitted me. It
was agreed between you and me that no one should intrude on me for five days
of each week, that I might discharge the duty in the study of Scripture which
my brethren and fathers the co-bishops were pleased to assign to me in the
two councils of Numidia and Carthage. The agreement was duly recorded, you
gave your consent, you signified it by acclamations. The record of your consent
and of your acclamations, was read aloud to you. For a short time the agreement
was observed by you; afterwards, it was violated without consideration, and
I am not permitted to have leisure for the work which I wish to do: forenoon
and afternoon alike, I am involved in the affairs of other people demanding
my attention. I now beseech you, and solemnly engage you, for Christ's sake,
to suffer me to devolve the burden of this part of my labours on this young
man, I mean on Eraclius, the presbyter, whom today I designate in the name
of Christ as my successor in the office of bishop."
The people
shouted, saying twenty-six times, "We give thanks for your
decision."
6. Silence having been obtained, Bishop Augustin said: --
"I
give thanks before the Lord our God for your love and your goodwill; yes,
I give thanks to God
for
these. Wherefore, henceforth, my brethren, let
everything which was wont to be brought by you to me be brought to him. In
any case in which he may think my advice necessary, I will not refuse it; far
be it from me to withdraw this: nevertheless, let everything be brought to
him which used to be brought to me. Let Eraclius himself, if in any case, perchance,
he be at a loss as to what should be done, either consult me, or claim an assistant
in me, whom he has known as a father. By this arrangement you will, on the
one hand, suffer no disadvantage, and I will at length, for the brief space
during which God may prolong my life, devote the remainder of my days, be they
few or many, not to idleness nor to the indulgence of a love of ease, but,
so far as Eraclius kindly gives me leave, to the study of the sacred Scriptures:
this also will be of service to him, and through him to you likewise. Let no
one therefore grudge me this leisure, for I claim it only in order to do important
work.
"I
see that I have now transacted with you all the business necessary in the
matter for which
I called you
together. The last thing I have to ask
is, that as many of you as are able be pleased to subscribe your names to this
record. At this point I require a response from you. Let me have it: show ),our
assent by some acclamations."
The people
shouted, saying twenty-five times, "Agreed! agreed!" then
twenty-eight times, "It is worthy, it is just!" then fourteen times, "Agreed!
agreed!" then twenty-five times, "He has long been worthy, he has
long been deserving!" then thirteen times, "We give thanks for your
decision!" then eighteen times, "O Christ, hear us; preserve Eraclius!"
7. Silence having been obtained, Bishop Augustin said: --
"It
is well that we are able to transact around His sacrifice those things which
belong to
God; and in
this hour appointed for our supplications, I especially
exhort you, beloved, to suspend all your occupations and business, and pour
out before the Lord your petitions for this church, and for me, and for the
presbyter Eraclius."
LETTER CCXVIII. (A.D. 426.)
TO PALATINUS, MY WELL-BELOVED LORD AND SON, MOST TENDERLY LONGED FOR, AUGUSTIN
SENDS GREETING.
1. Your
life of eminent fortitude and fruitfulness towards the Lord our God has brought
to us great
joy. For "you have made choice of instruction
from your youth upwards, that you may still find wisdom even to grey hairs;"1
for "wisdom is the grey hair unto men, and an unspotted life is old age;"2
which may the Lord, who knoweth how to give good gifts unto His children, give
to you asking, seeking, knocking.3 Although you have many counsellors and many
counsels to direct you in the path which leads to eternal glory, and although,
above all, you have the grace of Christ, which has so effectually spoken in
saving power in your heart, nevertheless we also, as in duty bound by the love
which we owe to you, offer to you, in hereby reciprocating your salutation,
some words of counsel, designed not to awaken you as one hindered by sloth
or sleep, but to stimulate and quicken you in the race which you are already
running.
2. You
require wisdom, my son, for stedfastness in this race, as it was under the
influence of wisdom
that
you entered on it at first. Let this then be "a
part of your wisdom, to know whose gift it is." 4 "Commit thy way
unto the Lord; trust also in Him, and He shall bring it to pass: and He shall
bring forth thy righteousness as the light, and thy judgment as the noonday."5 "He
will make straight thy path, and guide thy steps in peace." 6 As you despised
your prospects of greatness in this world, lest you should glory in the abundance
of riches which you had begun to covet after the manner of the children of
this world, so now, in taking up the yoke of the Lord and His burden, let not
your confidence be in your own strength; so shall "His yoke be easy, and
His burden light."7 For in the book of Psalms those are alike censured "who
trust in their strength," and "who boast themselves in the multitude
of their riches." s Therefore, as formerly you did not seek glory in riches,
but most wisely despised that which you had begun to desire, so now be on your
guard against insidious temptation to trust in your strength; for you are but
man, and "cursed is every one that trusteth in man." 9 But by all
means trust in God with your whole heart, and He will Himself be your strength,
wherein you may trust with piety and thankfulness, and to Him you may say with
humility and boldness, "I will love thee, O Lord, my strength; 10 because
even the love of God, which, when it is perfect, "casteth out fear,"" is
shed abroad in our hearts, not by our strength, that is, by any human power,
but, as the apostle says, "by the Holy Ghost, which is given unto us."12
3. "Watch, therefore, and pray that you enter not into temptation."13
Such prayer is indeed in itself an admonition to you that you need the help
of the Lord, and that you ought not to rest upon yourself your hope of living
well. For now you pray, not that you may obtain the riches and honours of this
present world, or any unsubstantial human possession, but that you may not
enter into temptation, a thing which would not be asked in prayer if a man
could accomplish it for himself by his own will. Wherefore we would not pray
that we may not enter into temptation if our own will sufficed for our protection
and yet if the will to avoid temptation were wanting to us, we could not so
pray. It may, therefore, be present with us to will,14 when we have through
his own gift been made wise, but we must pray that we may be able to perform
that which we have so willed. In the fact that you have begun to exercise this
true wisdom, you have reason to give thanks. "For what have you which
you have not received? But if you have received it, beware that you boast not
as if you had not received it,"15 that is, as if you could have had it
of yourself. Knowing, however, whence you have received it, ask Him by whose
gift it was begun to grant that it may be perfected. "Work out your own
salvation with fear and trembling: for it is God that worketh in you, both
to will and to do, of His good pleasure;"16 for "the will is prepared
by God,"17 and "the steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord,
and He delighteth in his way."18 Holy meditation on these things will
preserve you, so that your wisdom shall be piety, that is, that by God's gift
you shall be good, and not ungrateful for the grace of Christ.
4. Your parents, unfeignedly rejoicing with you in the better hope which in
the Lord you have begun to cherish, are longing earnestly for your presence.
But whether you be absent from us or present with us in the body, we desire
to have you with us in the one Spirit by whom love is shed abroad in our hearts,
so that, in whatever place our bodies may sojourn, our spirits may be in no
degree sundered from each other.
We have most thankfully received the cloaks of goat's-hair cloth1 which you
sent to us, in which gift you have yourself anticipated me in admonition as
to the duty of being often engaged in prayer, and of practising humility in
our supplications.
LETTER CCXIX. (A.D. 436.)
TO PROCULUS AND CYLINUS, BRETHREN MOST BELOVED AND HONOURABLE, AND PARTNERS
IN THE SACERDOTAL OFFICE, AUGUSTIN, FLORENTIUS AND SECUNDINUS SEND GREETING
IN THE LORD.
1. When
our son Leporius, whom for his obstinacy in error you had justly and fitly
rebuked, came to
us after
he had been expelled by you, we received him
as one afflicted for his good, whom we should, if possible, deliver from error
and restore to spiritual health. For, as you obeyed in regard to him the apostolic
precept, "Warn the unruly," so it was our part to obey the precept
immediately annexed, "Comfort the feeble-minded, and support the weak." 2
His error was indeed not unimportant, seeing that he neither approved what
is right nor perceived what is true in some things relating to the only-begotten
Son of God, of whom it is written that, "In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God, and the Word was God," but that when the fulness
of time had come, "the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us;"3
for he denied that God became man, regarding it as a doctrine from which it
must follow necessarily that the divine substance in which He is equal to the
Father suffered some unworthy change or corruption, and not seeing that he
was thus introducing into the Trinity a fourth person, which is utterly contrary
to the sound doctrine of the Creed and of Catholic truth. Since, however, dearly
beloved and honourable brethren, he had as a fallible man" been overtaken" in
this error, we did our utmost, the Lord helping us, to instruct him "in
the spirit of meekness," especially remembering that when the "chosen
vessel "gave this command to which we refer, he added, "Considering
thyself, lest thou also be tempted," -- test some, perchance, should so
rejoice in the measure of spiritual progress as to imagine that they could
no longer be tempted like other men, -- and joined with it the salutary and
peace-promoting sentence, "Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfil
the law of Christ. For if a man think himself to be something, when he is nothing,
he deceiveth himself."4
2. This
restoration of Leporius we could perhaps in nowise have accomplished, had
you not previously
censured
and punished those things in him which required
correction. So then the same Lord, our Divine Physician, using His own instruments
and servants, has by you wounded him when he was proud, and by us healed him
when he was penitent, according to his own saying, "I wound, and I heal." s
The same Divine Ruler and Overseer of His own house has by you thrown down
what was defective in the building, and has by us replaced with a well-ordered
structure what he had removed. The same Divine Husbandman has in His careful
diligence by you rooted up what was barren and noxious in His field, and by
us planted what is useful and fruitful. Let us not, therefore, ascribe glory
to ourselves, but to the mercy of Him in whose hand both we and all our words
are. And as we humbly praise the work which you have done as His ministers
in the case of our son aforesaid, so do you rejoice with holy joy in the work
performed by us. Receive, then, with the love of fathers and of brethren, him
whom we have with merciful severity corrected. For although one part of the
work was done by you and another part by us, both parts, being indispensable
to our brother's salvation, were done by the same love. The same God was therefore
working in both, for "God is love."6
3. Wherefore, as he has been welcomed into fellowship by us on the ground
of his repentance, let him be welcomed by you on the ground of his letter?
to which letter we have thought it right to adhibit our signatures attesting
its genuiness. We have not the least doubt that you, in the exercise of Christian
love, will not only hear with pleasure of his amendment, but also make it known
to those to whom his error was a stumbling-block. For those who came with him
to us have also been corrected and restored along with him, as is declared
by their signatures, which have been adhibited to the letter in our presence.
It remains only that you, being made joyful by the salvation of a brother,
condescend to make us joyful in our turn by sending a reply to our communication.
Farewell in the Lord, most beloved and honourable brethren; such is our desire
on your behalf: remember us.
LETTER CCXX. (A.D. 427.)
TO MY LORD BONIFACE,1 MY SON COMMENDED TO THE GUARDIANSHIP AND GUIDANCE OF
DIVINE MERCY, FOR PRESENT AND ETERNAL SALVATION AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING.
1. Never
could I have found a more trustworthy man, nor one who could have more ready
access to
your ear when
bearing a letter from me, than this servant
and minister of Christ, the deacon Paulus, a man very dear to both of us, whom
the Lord has now brought to me in order that I may have the opportunity of
addressing you, not in reference to your power and the honour which you hold
in this evil world, nor in reference to the preservation of your corruptible
and mortal body, -- because this also is destined to pass away, and how soon
no one can tell, -- but in reference to that salvation which has been promised
to us by Christ, who was here on earth despised and crucified in order that
He might teach us rather to despise than to desire the good things of this
world, and to set our affections and our hope on that world which He has revealed
by His resurrection. For He has risen from the dead, and now "dieth no
more; death hath no more dominion over Him."2
2. I know that you have no lack of friends, who love you so far as life in
this world is concerned, and who in regard to it give you counsels, sometimes
useful, sometimes the reverse; for they are men, and therefore, though they
use their wisdom to the best of their ability in regard to what is present,
they know not what may happen on the morrow. But it is not easy for any one
to give you counsel in reference to God, to prevent the perdition of your soul,
not because you lack friends who would do this, but because it is difficult
for them to find an opportunity of speaking with you on these subjects. For
I myself have often longed for this, and never found place or time in which
I might deal with you as I ought to deal with a man whom I ardently love in
Christ. You know besides in what state you found me at Hippo, when you did
me the honor to come to visit me, -- how I was scarcely able to speak, being
prostrated by bodily weakness. Now, then, my son, hear me when I have this
opportunity of addressing you at least by a letter, -- a rare opportunity,
for it was not in my power to send such communication to you in the midst of
your dangers, both because I apprehended danger to the bearer, and because
I was afraid lest my letter should reach persons into whose hands I was unwilling
that it should fall. Wherefore I beg you to forgive me if you think that I
have been more afraid than I should have been; however this may be, I have
stated what I feared.
3. Hear
me, therefore; nay, rather hear the Lord our God snaking by me, His feeble
servant. Call
to remembrance
what manner of man you were while your
former wife, of hallowed memory, still lived, and how under the stroke of her
death, while that event was yet recent, the vanity of this world made you recoil
from it, and how you earnestly desired to enter the service of God. We know
and we can testify what you said as to your state of mind and your desires
when you conversed with us at Tubunae. My brother Alypius and I were alone
with you. [I beseech you, then, to call to remembrance that conversation],
for I do not think that the worldly cares with which you are now engrossed
can have such power over you as to have effaced this wholly from your memory.
You were then desirous to abandon all the public business in which you were
engaged, and to withdraw into sacred retirement, and live like the servants
of God who have embraced a monastic life. And what was it that prevented you
from acting according to these desires? Was it not that you were influenced
by considering, on our representation of the matter, how much service the work
which then occupied you might render to the churches of Christ if you pursued
it with this single aim, that they, protected from all disturbance by barbarian
hordes, might live "a quiet and peaceable life," as the apostle says, "in
all godliness and honesty;"3 resolving at the same time for your own part
to seek no more from this world than would suffice for the support of yourself
and those dependent on you, wearing as your girdle the cincture of a perfectly
chaste self-restraint, and having underneath the accoutrements of the soldier
the surer and stronger defence of spiritual armour.
4. At
the very time when we were full of joy that you had formed this resolution,
you embarked on
a voyage
and you married a second wife. Your embarkation was
an act of the obedience due, as the apostle has taught us, to the "higher
powers;" 4 but you would not have married again had you not, abandoning
the continence to which you had devoted yourself, been overcome by concupiscence.
When I learned this, I was, I must confess it, dumb with amazement; but, in
my sorrow, I was in some degree comforted by hearing that you refused to marry
her unless she became a Catholic before the marriage, and yet the heresy of
those who refuse to believe in the true Son of God has so prevailed in your
house, that by these heretics your daughter was baptized. Now, if the report
be true (would to God that it were false!) that even some who were dedicated
to God as His handmaids have been by these heretics re-baptized, with what
floods of tears ought this great calamity to be bewailed by us ! Men are saying,
moreover,perhaps it is an unfounded slander, -- that one wife does not satisfy
your passions, and that you have been defiled by consorting with some other
women as concubines.
5. What
shall I say regarding these evils -- so patent to all, and so great in magnitude
as well as number
--
of which you have been, directly or indirectly,
the cause since the time of your being married? You are a Christian, you have
a conscience, you fear God; consider, then, for yourself some things which
I prefer to leave unsaid, and you will find for how great evils you ought to
do penance; and I believe that it is to afford you an opportunity of doing
this in the way in which it ought to be done, that the Lord is now sparing
you and delivering you from all dangers. But if you will listen to the counsel
of Scripture, I pray you, "make no tarrying to turn to the Lord, and put
not off from day to day."1 You allege, indeed, that you have good reason
for what you have done, and that I cannot be a judge of the sufficiency of
that reason, because I cannot hear both sides of the question; 2 but, whatever
be your reason, the nature of which it is not necessary at present either to
investigate or to discuss, can you, in the presence of God, affirm that you
would ever have come into the embarrassments of your present position had you
not loved the good things of this world, which, being a servant of God, such
as we knew you to be formerly, it was your duty to have utterly despised and
esteemed as of no value, -- accepting, indeed, what was offered to you, that
you might devote it to pious uses, but not so coveting that which was denied
to you, or was entrusted to your care, as to be brought on its account into
the difficulties of your present position, in which, while good is loved, evil
things are perpetrated, -- few, indeed, by you, but many because of you, and
while things are dreaded which, if hurtful, are so only for a short time, things
are done which are really hurtful for eternity?
6. To
mention one of these things, -- who can help seeing that many persons follow
you for the purpose
of defending
your power or safety, who, although
they may be all faithful to you, and no treachery is to be apprehended from
any of them, are desirous of obtaining through you certain advantages which
they also covet, not with a godly desire, but from worldly motives? And in
this way you, whose duty it is to curb and check your own passions, are forced
to satisfy those of others. To accomplish this, many things which are displeasing
to God must be done; and yet, after all, these passions are i not thus satisfied,
for they are more easily mortified finally in those who love God, than satisfied
even for a time in those who love the world. Therefore the Divine Scripture
says: "Love not the world, nor the things that are in the world. If any
man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in
the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and pride of life,
is not of the Father, but is of the world. And the world passeth away, and
the lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever, as God
abideth for ever."3 Associated, therefore, as you are with such multitudes
of armed men, whose passions must be humoured, and whose cruelty is dreaded,
how can the desires of these men who love the world ever be, I do not say satiated,
but even partially gratified by you, in your anxiety to prevent still greater
widespread evils, unless you do that which God forbids, and in so doing become
obnoxious to threatened judgment? So complete has been the havoc wrought in
order to indulge their passions, that it would be difficult now to find anything
for the plunderer to carry away.
7. But what shall I say of the devastation of Africa at this hour by hordes
of African barbarians, to whom no resistance is offered, while you are engrossed
with such embarrassments in your own circumstances, and are taking no measures
for averting this calamity? Who would ever have believed, who would have feared,
after Boniface had become a Count of the Empire and of Africa, and had been
placed in command in Africa with so large an army and so great authority, that
the same man who formerly, as Tribune, kept all these barbarous tribes in peace,
by storming their strongholds, and menacing them with his small band of brave
confederates, should now have suffered the barbarians to be so bold, to encroach
so far, to destroy and plunder so much, and to turn into deserts such vast
regions once densely peopled? Where were any found that did not predict that,
as soon as you obtained the authority of Count, the African hordes would be
not only checked, but made tributaries to the Roman Empire? And now, how completely
the event has disappointed men's hopes you yourself perceive; in fact, I need
say nothing more on this subject, because your own reflection must suggest
much more than I can put in words.
8. Perhaps you defend yourself by replying that the blame here ought rather
to rest on persons who have injured you, and, instead of justly requiting the
services rendered by you in your office, have returned evil for good. These
matters I am not able to examine and judge. I beseech you rather to contemplate
and inquire into the matter, in which you know that you have to do not with
men at all, but with God; living in Christ as a believer, you are bound to
fear lest you offend Him. For my attention is more engaged by higher causes,
believing that men ought to ascribe Africa's great calamities to their own
sins. Nevertheless, I would not wish you to belong to the number of those wicked
and unjust men whom God uses as instruments in inflicting temporal punishments
on whom He pleases; for He who justly employs their malice to inflict temporal
judgments on others, reserves eternal punishments for the unjust themselves
if they be not reformed. Be it yours to fix your thoughts on God, and to look
to Christ, who has conferred on you so great blessings and endured for you
so great sufferings. Those who desire to belong to His kingdom, and to live
for ever happily with! Him and under Him, love even their enemies do good to
them that hate them, and pray for those from whom they suffer persecution;1
and if, at any time, in the way of discipline they use irksome severity, yet
they never lay aside the sincerest love. If these benefits, though earthly
and transitory, are conferred on you by the Roman Empire, -- for that empire
itself is earthly, not heavenly, and cannot bestow what it has not in its power,
-- if, I say, benefits are conferred on you, return not evil for good; and
if evil be inflicted on you, return not evil for evil. Which of these two has
happened in your case I am unwilling to discuss, I am unable to judge. I speak
to a Christian return not either evil for good, nor evil for evil.
9. You
say to me, perhaps: In circumstances so difficult, what do you wish me to
do ? If you ask counsel
of me in a worldly
point of view how your safety
in this transitory life may be secured, and the power and wealth belonging
to you at present may be preserved or even increased, I know not what to answer
you, for any counsel regarding things so uncertain as these must partake of
the uncertainty inherent in them. But i if you consult me regarding your relation
to God and the salvation of your soul, and if you fear the word of truth which
says: "What is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose
his own soul?"2 I have a plain answer to give. I am prepared with advice
to which you may well give heed. But what need is there for my saying anything
else than what I have already said. "Love not the world, neither the things,
that are in the world. If any man love the world, he love of the Father is
not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust
of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world.
And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the will
of God abideth forever." 3 Here is counsel ! Seize it and act on it. Show
that you are a brave man. Vanquish the desires with which the world is loved.
Do penance for the evils of your past life, when, vanquished by your passions,
you were drawn away by sinful desires. If you receive this counsel, and hold
it fast, and act on it, you will both attain to those blessings which are certain,
and occupy yourself in the midst of these uncertain things without forfeiting
the salvation of your soul.
10. But
perhaps you again ask of me how you can do these things, entangled as you
are with so great
worldly
difficulties. Pray earnestly, and say to God,
in the words of the Psalm: "Bring Thou me out of my distresses," 4
for these distresses terminate when the passions in which they originate are
vanquished. He who has heard your prayer and ours on your behalf, that you
might be delivered from the numerous and great dangers of visible wars in which
the body is exposed to the danger of losing the life which sooner or later
must end, but in which the soul perishes not unless it be held captive by evil
passions, -- He, I say, will hear your prayer that you may, in an invisible
and spiritual conflict, overcome your inward and invisible enemies, that is
to say, your passions themselves, and may so use the world, as not abusing
it, so that with its good things you may do good, not become bad through possessing
them. Because these things are in themselves good, and are not given to men
except by Him who has power over all things in heaven and earth. Lest these
gifts of His should be reckoned bad, they are given also to the good; at the
same time, lest they should be reckoned great, or the supreme good, they are
given also to the bad. Further, these things are taken away from the good for
their trial, and from the bad for their punishment.
11. For who is so ignorant, who so foolish, as not to see that the health
of this mortal body, and the strength of its corruptible members, and victory
over men who are our enemies, and temporal honours and power, and all other
mere earthly advantages are given both to the good and to the bad, and are
taken away both from the good and from the bad alike ? But the salvation of
the soul, along with immortality of the body, and the power of righteousness,
and victory over hostile passions, and glory, and honour, and everlasting peace,
are not given except to the good. Therefore love these things, covet these
things, and seek them by every means in your power. With a view to acquire
and retain these things, give alms, pour forth prayers, practise fasting as
far as you can without injury to your body. But do not love these earthly goods,
how much soever they may abound to you. So use them as to do many good things
by them, but not one evil thing for their sake. For all such things will perish;
but good works, yea, even those good works which are performed by means of
the perishable good things of this world, shall never perish.
12. If
you had not now a wife, I would say to you what we said at Tubunae, that
you should live
in the holy
state of continence, and would add that you
should now do what we prevented you from doing at that time, namely, withdraw
yourself so far as might be possible without: prejudice to the public welfare
from the labours of military service, and take to yourself the leisure which
you then desired for that life in the society of the saints in which the soldiers
of Christ fight in silence, not to kill men, but to "wrestle against principalities
and powers, and spiritual wickedness,"1 that is, the devil and his angels.
For the saints gain their victories over enemies whom they cannot see, and
yet they gain the victory over these unseen enemies by gaining the victory
over things which are the objects of sense. I am, however, prevented from exhorting
you to that mode of life by your having a wife, since without her consent it
is not lawful for you to live under a vow of continence; because, although
you did wrong in marrying again after the declaration which you made at Tubunae,
she, being not aware of this became your wife innocently and without restrictions.
Would that you could persuade her to agree to a vow of continence, that you
might without hindrance render to God what you know to be due to Him! If, however,
you cannot make this agreement with her, guard carefully by all means conjugal
chastity, and pray to God, who will deliver you out of difficulties, that you
may at some future time be able to do what is meanwhile impossible. This, however,
does not affect your obligation to love God and not to love the world, to hold
the faith stedfastly even in the cares of war, if you must still be engaged
in them, and to seek peace; to make the good things of this world serviceable
in good works, and not to do what is evil in labouring to obtain these earthly
good things, -- in all these duties your wife is not, or, if she is, ought
not to be, a hindrance to you.
These
things I have written, my dearly beloved son, at the bidding of the love
with which I love you with
regard not to this world, but to God; and because,
mindful of the words of Scripture, "Reprove a wise man, and he will love
thee; reprove a fool, and he will hate thee more,"2 I was bound to think
of you as certainly not a fool but a wise man.
LETTER CCXXVII. (A.D. 428 or 429.)
TO THE AGED ALYPIUS, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING.
Brother Paulus has arrived here safely: he reports that the pains devoted
to the business which engaged him have been rewarded with success .; the Lord
will grant that with these his trouble in that matter may terminate. He salutes
you warmly, and tells us tidings concerning Gabinianus which give us joy, namely,
that having by God's mercy obtained a prosperous issue in his case, he is now
not only in name a Christian, but in sincerity a very excellent convert to
the faith, and was baptized recently at Easter, having both in his heart and
on his lips the grace which he received. How much I long for him I can never
express; but you know that I love him.
The president
of the medical faculty? Dioscorus, has also professed the Christian faith,
having obtained
grace
at the same time. Hear the manner of his conversion,
for his stubborn neck and his bold tongue could not be subdued without some
miracle. His daughter, the only comfort of his life, was sick, and her sickness
became so serious that her life was, according even to her father's own admission,
despaired of. It is reported, and the truth of the report is beyond question,
for even before brother Paul's return the fact was mentioned to me by Count
Peregrinus, a most respectable and truly Christian man, who was baptized at
the same time with Dioscorus and Gabinianus, -- it is reported, I say, that
the old man, feeling himself at last constrained to implore the compassion
of Christ, bound himself by a vow that he would become a Christian if he saw
her restored to health. She recovered, but he perfidiously drew back from fulfilling
his vow. Nevertheless the hand of the Lord was still stretched forth, for suddenly
he is smitten with blindness, and immediately the cause of this calamity was
impressed upon his mind. He confessed his fault aloud, and vowed again that
if his sight were given back he would perform i what he had vowed. He recovered
his sight, fulfilled his vow, and still the hand of God was stretched forth.
He had not committed the Creed to memory, or perhaps had refused to commit
it, and had excused himself on the plea of inability. God had seen this. Immediately
after all the ceremonies of his reception he is seized with paralysis, affecting
many, indeed almost all his members, and even his tongue. Then, being warned
by a dream, he confesses in writing that it had been told to him that this
had happened because be had not repeated the Creed. After that confession the
use of all his members was restored to him, except the tongue alone; nevertheless
he, being still under this affliction, made manifest by writing that he had,
notwithstanding, learned the Creed, and still retained it in his memory; and
so that frivolous loquacity which, as you know, blemished his natural kindliness,
and made him, when he mocked Christians, exceedingly profane, was altogether
destroyed in him, What shall I say, but, "Let us sing a hymn to the Lord,
and highly exalt Him for ever ! Amen."
LETTER CCXXVIII. (A.D. 428 or 429.)
TO HIS HOLY BROTHER AND CO-BISHOP HONORATUS,1 AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE
LORD.
1. I thought
that by sending to your Grace a copy of the letter which I wrote to our brother
and co-bishop
Quodvultdeus,2 I had earned exemption from the
burden which you have imposed upon me, by asking my advice as to what you ought
to do in the midst of the dangers which have befallen us in these times. For
although I wrote briefly, I think that I did not pass over anything that was
necessary either to be said by me or heard by my questioner in correspondence
on the subject: for I said that, on the one hand, those who desire to remove,
if they can, to fortified places are not to be forbidden to do so; and, on
the other hand, we ought not to break the ties by which the love of Christ
has bound us as ministers not to forsake the churches which it is our duty
to serve. The words which I used in the letter referred to were: "Therefore,
however small may be the congregation of God's people among whom we are, if
our ministry is so necessary to them that it is a clear duty not to withdraw
it from them, it remains for us to say to the Lord, 'Be Thou to us a God of
defence, and a strong fortress.'"3
2. But
this counsel does not commend itself to you, because, as you say in your
letter, it does not
become us
to endeavour to act in opposition to the
preceptor example of the Lord, admonishing us that we should flee from one
city to another. We remember, indeed, the words of the Lord, "When they
persecute you in one city, flee to another;"4 but who can believe that
the Lrod wished this to be done in cases in which the flocks which He purchased
with His own blood are by the desertion of their pastors left without that
necessary ministry which is indispensable to their life? Did Christ do this
Himself, when, carried by His parents, He fled into Egypt in His infancy? No;
for He had not then gathered churches which we could affirm to have been deserted
by Him. Or, when the Apostle Paul was "let down in a basket through a
window," to prevent his enemies from seizing him, and so escaped their
hands, s was the church in Damascus deprived of the necessary labours of Christ's
servants? Was not all the service that was requisite supplied after his departure
by other brethren settled in that city? For the apostle had done this at their
request, in order that he might preserve for the Church's good his life, which
the persecutor on that occasion specially sought to destroy. Let those, therefore,
who are servants of Christ, His ministers in word and sacrament, do what he
has commanded or permitted. When any of them is specially sought for by persecutors,
let him by all means flee from one city to another, provided that the Church
is not hereby deserted, but that others who are not specially sought after
remain to supply spiritual food to their fellow-servants, whom they know to
be unable otherwise to maintain spiritual life. When, however, the danger of
all, bishops, clergy, and laity, is alike, let not those who depend upon the
aid of others be deserted by those on whom they depend. In that case, either
let all remove together to fortified places, or let those who must remain be
not deserted by those through whom in things pertaining to the Church their
necessities must be provided for; and so let them share life in common, or
share in common that which the Father of their family appoints them to suffer.
3. But
if it shall happen that all suffer, whether some suffer less, and others
more, or all suffer
equally,
it is easy to see who among them are suffering
for the sake of others: they are obviously those who, although they might have
freed themselves from such evils by flight, have chosen to remain rather than
abandon others to whom they are necessary. By such conduct especially is proved
the love commended by the Apostle John in the words: "Christ laid down
His life for us: and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren." 6
For those who betake themselves to flight, or are prevented from doing so only
by circumstances thwarting their design, if they be seized and made to suffer,
endure this suffering only for themselves;not for their brethren; but those
who are involved in suffering because of their resolving not to abandon others,
whose Christian welfare depended on them, are unquestionably "laying down
their lives for the! brethren."
4. For
this reason, the saying which we have heard attributed to a certain bishop,
namely: "If the Lord has commanded us to flee, in those persecutions
in which we may reap the fruit of martyrdom, how much more ought we to escape
by flight, if we can, from barren sufferings inflicted by the hostile incursions
of barbarians !" is a saying true and worthy of acceptation, but applicable
only to those who are not confined by the obligations of ecclesiastical office.
For the man who, having it in his power to escape from the violence of the
enemy, chooses not to flee from it, lest in so doing he should abandon the
ministry of Christ, without which men can neither become Christians nor live
as such, assuredly finds a greater reward of his love, than the man who, fleeing
not for his brethren's sake but for his own, is seized by persecutors, and,
refusing to deny Christ, suffers martyrdom.
5. What,
then, shall we say to the position which you thus state in your former epistle:
-- "I do not see what good we can do to ourselves or to the people
by continuing to remain in the churches, except to see before our eyes men
slain, women outraged, churches burned, ourselves expiring amid torments applied
in order to extort from us what we do not possess"? God is powerful to
hear the prayers of His children and to avert those things which they fear;
and we ought not, on account of evils that are uncertain, to make up our minds
absolutely to the desertion of that ministry, without which the people must
certainly suffer ruin, not in the affairs of this life, but of that other life
which ought to be cared for with incomparably greater diligence and solicitude.
For if those evils which are apprehended, as possibly visiting the places in
which we are, were certain, all those for whose sake it was our duty to remain
would take flight before us, and would thus exempt us from the neccessity of
remaining; for no one says that ministers are under obligation to remain in
any place where none remain to whom their ministry is necessary. In this way
some holy bishops fled from Spain when their congregations had, before their
flight, been annihilated, the members having either fled, or died by the sword,
or perished in the siege of their towns, or gone into captivity: but many more
of the bishops of that country remained in the midst of these abounding dangers,
because those for whose sakes they remained were still remaining there. And
if some have abandoned their flocks, this is what we say ought not to be done,
for they were not taught to do so by divine authority, but were, through human
infirmity, either deceived by an error or overcome by fear.
6. [We
maintain, as one alternative, that they were deceived by an error,] for why
do they think
that indiscriminate
compliance must be given to the precept
in which they read of fleeing from one city to another, and not shrink with
abhorrence from the character of the "hireling," who "seeth
the wolf coming, and fleeth, because he careth not for the sheep"?1 Why
do they not honour equally both of these true sayings of the Lord, the one
in which flight is permitted or enjoined, the other in which it is rebuked
and censured, by taking pains so to understand them as to find that they are,
as is indeed the case, not opposed to each other? And how is their reconciliation
to be found, unless that which I have above proved be borne in mind, that under
pressure of persecution we who are ministers of Christ ought to flee from the
places in which we are only in one or other of two cases, namely, either that
there is no congregation to which we may minister, or that there is a congregation,
but that the ministry necessary for it can be supplied by others who have not
the same reason for flight as makes it imperative on us ? Of which we have
one example, as already mentioned, in the Apostle Paul escaping by being let
down from the wall in a basket, when he was personally sought by the persecutor,
there being others on the spot who had not the same necessity for flight, whose
remaining would prevent the Church from being destitute of the service of ministers.
Another example we have in the holy Athanasius, Bishop of Alexandria, who fled
when the Emperor Constantius wished to seize him specially, the Catholic people
who remained in Alexandria not being abandoned by the other servants of God.
But when the people remain and the servants of God flee, and their service
is withdrawn, what is this but the guilty flight of the "hireling" who
careth not for the sheep? For the wolf will come, -- not man, but the devil,
who has very often perverted to apostasy believers to whom the daily ministry
of the Lord's body was wanting; and so, not "through thy knowledge," but
through thine ignorance, "shall the weak brother perish for whom Christ
died."2
7. As
for those, however, who flee not because they are deceived by an error, but,because
they have
been overcome
by fear, why do they not rather, by the
compassion and help of the Lord bestowed on them, bravely fight against their
fear, lest evils incomparably heavier and much more to be dreaded befall them?
This victory over fear is won wherever the flame of the love of God, without
the smoke of worldliness, burns in the heart. For love says, "Who is weak,
and I am not weak ? who is offended, and I burn not?"1 But love is from
God. Let us, therefore, beseech Him who requires it of us to bestow it on us,
and under its influence let us fear more lest the sheep of Christ should be
slaughtered by the sword of spiritual wickedness reaching the heart, than lest
they should fall under the sword that can only harm that body in which men
are destined at any rate, at some time, and in some way or other, to die. Let
us fear more lest the purity of faith should perish through the taint of corruption
in the inner man, than lest our women should be subjected by violence to outrage;
for if chastity is preserved in the spirit, it is not destroyed by such violence,
since it is not destroyed even in the body when there is no base consent of
the sufferer to the sin, but only a submission without the consent of the will
to that which another does. Let us fear more lest the spark of life in "living
stones" be quenched through our absence, than lest the stones and timbers
of our earthly buildings be burned in our presence. Let us fear more lest the
members of Christ's body should die for want of spiritual food, than lest the
members of our own bodies, being overpowered by the violence of enemies, should
be racked with torture. Not because these are things which we ought not to
avoid when this is in our power, but because we ought to prefer to suffer them
when they cannot be avoided without impiety, unless, perchance, any one be
found to maintain that that servant is not guilty of impiety who withdraws
the service necessary to piety at the very time when it is peculiarly necessary.
8. Do
we forget how, when these dangers have reached their extremity, and there
is no possibility of
escaping
from them by flight, an extraordinary crowd
of persons, of both sexes and of all ages, is wont to assemble in the church,
-- some urgently asking baptism, others reconciliation, others even the doing
of penance, and all calling for consolation and strengthening through the administration
of sacraments? If the ministers of God be not at their posts at such a time,
how great perdition overtakes those who depart from this life either not regenerated
or not loosed from their sins !2 How deep also is the sorrow of their believing
kindred, who shall not have these lost ones with them in the blissful rest
of eternal life ! In fine, how loud are the cries of all, and the indignant
imprecations of not a few, because of the want of ordinances and the absence
of those who should have dispensed them! See what the fear of temporal calamities
may effect, and of how great a multitude of eternal calamities it may be the
procuring cause. But if the ministers be at their posts, through the strength
which God bestows upon them, all are aided,-- some are baptized, others reconciled
to the Church. None are defrauded of the communion of the Lord's body; all
are consoled, edified, and exhorted to ask of God, who is able to do so, to
avert all things which are feared, -- prepared for both alternatives, so that "if
the cup may not pass" from them, His will may be done who cannot will
anything that is evil.
9. Assuredly
you now see (what, according to your letter, you did not see before) how
great advantage
the
Christian people may obtain if, in the presence
of calamity, the presence of the servants of Christ be not withdrawn from them.
You see, also, how much harm is done by their absence, when "they seek
their own, not the things that are Jesus Christ's,"4 and are destitute
of that charity of which it is said, "it seeketh not her own,"5 and
fail to imitate him who said, "I seek not mine own profit, but the profit
of many, that they may be saved,"6 and who, moreover, would not have fled
from the insidious attacks of the imperial persecutor, had he not wished to
save himself for the sake of others to whom he was necessary; on which account
he says, "I am in a strait betwixt two, having a desire to depart, and
to be with Christ; which is far better: nevertheless to abide in the flesh
is more needful for you."7
10. Here,
perhaps, some one may say that the servants of God ought to save their lives
by flight
when such
evils are impending, in order that they may
reserve themselves for the benefit of the Church in more peaceful times. This
is rightly done by some, when others are not wanting by whom the service of
the Church may be supplied, and the work is not deserted by all, as we have
stated above that Athanasius did; for the whole Catholic world knows how necessary
it was to the Church that he should do so, and how useful was the prolonged
life of the man who by his word and loving service defended her against the
Arian heretics. But this ought by no means to be done when the danger is common
to all; and the thing to be dreaded above all is, lest any one should be supposed
to do this not from a desire to secure the welfare of others, but from fear
of losing his own life, and should therefore do more harm by the example of
deserting the post of duty than all the good that he could do by the preservation
of his life for future service. Finally, observe how the holy David acquiesced
in the urgent petition of his people, that he should not expose himself to
the dangers of battle, and, as it is said in the narrative, "quench the
light of Israel,"1 but was not himself the first to propose it; for had
he been so, he would have made many imitate the cowardice which they might
have attributed to him, supposing that he had been prompted to this not through
regard to the advantage of others, but under the agitation of fear as to his
own life.
11. Another question which we must not regard as unworthy of notice is suggested
here. For if the interests of the Church are not to be lost sight of, and if
these make it necessary that when any great calamity is impending some ministers
should flee, in order that they may survive to minister to those whom they
may find remaining after the calamity is passed, -- the question arises, what
is to be done when it appears that, unless some flee, all must perish together?
what if the fury of the destroyer were so restricted as to attack none but
the ministers of the Church ? What shall we reply ? Is the Church to be deprived
of the service of her ministers because of fleeing from their work through
fear lest she should be more unhappily deprived of their service because of
their dying in the midst of their work ? Of course, if the laity are exempted
from the persecution, it is in their power to shelter and conceal their bishops
and clergy in some way, as He shall help them under whose dominion all things
are, and who, by His wondrous power, can preserve even one who does not flee
from danger. But the reason for our inquiring what is the path of our duty
in such circumstances is, that we may not be chargeable with tempting the Lord
by expecting divine miraculous interposition on every occasion.
There is, indeed, a difference in the severity of the tempest of calamity
when the danger is common to both laity and clergy, as the perils of stormy
weather are common to both merchants and sailors on board of the same ship.
But far be it from us to esteem this ship of ours so lightly as to admit that
it would be right for the crew, and especially for the pilot, to abandon her
in the hour of peril, although they might have it in their power to escape
by leaping into a small boat, or even swimming ashore. For in the case of those
in regard to whom we fear lest through our deserting our work they should perish,
the evil which we fear is not temporal death, which is sure to come at one
time or other, but eternal death, which may come or may not come, according
as we neglect or adopt measures whereby it may be averted. Moreover, when the
lives of both laity and clergy are exposed to common danger, what reason have
we for thinking that in every place which the enemy may invade all the clergy
are likely to be put to death, and not that all the laity shall also die, in
which event the clergy, and those to whom they are necessary, would pass from
this life at the same time ? Or why may we not hope that, as some of the laity
are likely to survive, some of the clergy may also be spared, by whom the necessary
ordinances may be dispensed to them?
12. Oh
that in such circumstances the question debated among the servants of God
were which of their number
should remain, that the Church might not
be left destitute by all fleeing from danger, and which of their number should
flee, that the Church might not left destitute by all perishing in the danger.
Such a contest will arise among the brethren who are all alike glowing with
love and satisfying the claims of love. And if it were in any case impossible
otherwise to terminate the debate, it appears to me that the persons who are
to remain and who are to flee should be chosen by lot. For those who say that
they, in preference to others, ought to flee, will appear to be chargeable
either with cowardice, as persons unwilling to face impending danger, or with
arrogance, as esteeming their own lives more necessary to be preserved for
the good of the Church than those of other men. Again, perhaps, those who are
better will be the first to choose to lay down their lives for the brethren;
and so preservation by flight will be given to men whose life is less valuable
because their skill in counselling and ruling the Church is less; yet these,
if they be pious and wise, will resist the desires of men in regard to whom
they see, on the one hand, that it is more important for the Church that they
should live, and on the other hand, that they would rather lose their lives
than flee from danger. In this case, as it is written, "the lot causeth
contentions to cease, and parteth between the mighty;" for, in difficulties
of this kind, God judges better than men, whether it please Him to call the
better among His servants to the reward of suffering, and to spare the weak,
or to make the weak stronger to endure trials, and then to withdraw them from
this life, as persons whose lives could not be so serviceable to the Church
as the lives of the others who are stronger than they. If such an appeal to
the lot be made, it will be, I admit, an unusual proceeding, but if it is done
in any case, who will dare to find fault with it? Who but the ignorant or the
prejudiced will hesitate to praise with the approbation which it deserves?
If, however, the use of the lot is not adopted because there is no precedent
for such an appeal, let it by all means be secured that the Church be not,
through the flight of any one, left destitute of that ministry which is more
especially necessary and due to her in the midst of such great dangers. Let
no one hold himself in such esteem because of apparent superiority in any grace
as to say that he is more worthy of life than others, and therefore more entitled
to seek safety in flight. For whoever thinks this is too self-satisfied, and
whoever utters this must make all dissatisfied with him.
13. There
are some who think that bishops and clergy may, by not fleeing but remaining
in such dangers,
cause
the people to be misled, because, when they
see those who are set over them remaining, this makes them not flee from danger.
It is easy for them, however, to obviate this objection, and the reproach of
misleading others, by addressing their congregations, and saying: "Let
not the fact that we are not fleeing from this place be the occasion of misleading
you, for we remain here not for our own sakes but for yours, that we may continue
to minister to you whatever we know to be necessary to your salvation, which
is in Christ; therefore, if you choose to flee, you thereby set us also at
liberty from the obligations by which we are bound to remain." This, I
think, ought to be said, when it seems to be truly advantageous to remove to
places of greater security. If, after such words have been spoken in their
hearing, either all or some shall say: "We are at His disposal from whose
anger none can escape whithersoever they may go, and whose mercy may be found
wherever their lot is cast by those who, whether hindered by known insuperable
difficulties, or unwilling to toil after unknown refuges, in which perils may
be only changed not finished, prefer not to go away elsewhere," -- most
assuredly those who thus resolve to remain ought not to be left destitute of
the service of Christian ministers. If, on the other hand after hearing their
bishops and clergy speak as above, the people prefer to leave the place, to
remain behind them is not now the duty of those who were only remaining for
their sakes, because none are left there on whose account it would still be
their duty to remain.
14. Whoever,
therefore, flees from danger in circumstances in which the Church is not
deprived, through
his
flight, of necessary service, is doing that which
the Lord has commanded or permitted. But the minister who flees when the consequence
of his flight is the withdrawal from Christ's flock of that nourishment by
which its spiritual life is sustained, is an "hireling who seeth the wolf
coming, and fleeth because he careth not for the sheep."
With love, which I know to be sincere, I have now written what I believe to
be true on this question, because you asked my opinion, my dearly beloved brother;
but I have not enjoined you to follow my advice, if you can find any better
than mine. Be that as it may, we cannot find anything better for us to do in
these dangers than continually beseech the Lord our God to have compassion
on us. And as to the matter about which I have written, namely, that ministers
should not desert the churches of God, some wise and holy men have by the gift
of God been enabled both to will and to do this thing, and have not in the
least degree faltered in the determined prosecution of their purpose, even
though exposed to the attacks of slanderers.
LETTER CCXXIX. (A.D. 429.)
TO DARIUS,1 HIS DESERVEDLY ILLUSTRIOUS AND VERY POWERFUL LORD AND DEAR SON
CHRIST, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. Your
character and rank I have learned from my holy brothers and co-bishops, Urbanus
and Novatus.
The former
of these became acquainted with you near Carthage,
in the town of Hilari, and more recently in the town of Sicca; the latter at
Sitifis. Through them it has come to pass that I cannot regard you as unknown
to me. For though my bodily weakness and the chill of age do not permit me
to converse with you personally, it cannot on this account be said that I have
not seen you; for the conversation of Urbanus, when he kindly visited me, and
the letters of Novatus, so described to me the features, not of your face but
of your mind, that I have seen you, and have seen you with all the more pleasure,
because l have seen not the outward appearance but the inner man. These features
of your character are joyfully seen both by us, and through the mercy of God
by yourself also, as in a mirror in the holy Gospel, in which it is written
in words uttered by Him who is truth: "Blessed are the peacemakers: for
they shall be called the children of God."2
2. Those
warriors are indeed great and worthy of singular honour, not only for their
consummate
bravery, but
also (which is a higher praise) for their
eminent fidelity, by whose labours and dangers, along with the blessing of
divine protection and aid, enemies previously unsubdued are conquered, and
peace obtained for the State, and the provinces reduced to subjection. But
it is a higher glory still to stay war itself with a word, than to slay men
with the sword, and to procure or maintain peace by peace, not by war. For
those who fight, if they are good men, doubtless seek for peace; nevertheless
it is through blood. Your mission, however, is to prevent the shedding of blood.
Yours, therefore, is the privilege of averting that calamity which others are
under the necessity of producing. Therefore, my deservedly illustrious and
very powerful lord and very dear son in Christ, rejoice in this singularly
great and real blessing vouchsafed to you, and enjoy it in God, to whom you
owe that you are what you are, and that you undertook the accomplishment of
such a work. May God "strengthen that which He hath wrought for us through
you."1 Accept this our salutation, and deign to reply. From the letter
of my brother Novatus, I see that he has taken pains that your learned Excellency
should become acquainted with me also through my works. If, then, you have
read what he has given you, I also shall have become known to your inward perception.
As far as I can judge, they will not greatly displease you if you have read
them in a loving rather than a critical spirit. It is not much to ask, but
it will be a great favour, if for this letter and my works you send us one
letter in reply. I salute with due affection the pledge of peace,2 which through
the favour of our Lord and God you have happily received.
LETTER CCXXXI. (A.D. 429.)
TO DARIUS, HIS SON, AND A MEMBER OF CHRIST, AUGUSTIN, A SERVANT OF CHRIST
AND OF THE MEMBERS OF CHRIST, SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. You requested an answer from me as a proof that I had gladly received your
letter. Behold, then, I write again; and yet I cannot express the pleasure
I felt, either by this answer or by any other, whether I write briefly or at
the utmost length, for neither by few words nor by many is it possible for
me to express to you what words can never express. I, indeed, am not eloquent,
though ready in speech; but I could by no means allow any man, however eloquent,
even though he could see as well into my mind as I do myself, to do that which
is beyond my own power, viz. to describe in a letter, however able and however
long, the effect which your epistle had on my mind. It remains, then, for me
so to express to you what you wished to know, that you may understand as being
in my words that which they do not express. What, then, shall I say? That I
was delighted with your letter, exceedingly delighted ; -- the repetition of
this word is not a mere repetition, but, as it were, a perpetual affirmation;
because it was impossible to be always saying it, therefore it has been at
least once repeated, for in this way perhaps my feelings may be expressed.
2. If
some one inquire here what after all delighted me so exceedingly in your
letter, -- "Was it its eloquence?" I will answer, No; and he,
perhaps, will reply, "Was it, then, the praises bestowed on yourself?" but
again I will reply, No; and I shall reply thus not because these things are
not in that letter, for the eloquence in it is so great that it is very clearly
evident that you are naturally endowed with the highest talents, and that you
have been most carefully educated; and your letter is undeniably full of my
praises. Some one then may say, "Do not these things delight you?" Yes,
truly, for "my heart is not," as the poet says, "of horn,"4
so that I should either not observe these things or observe them without delight.
These things do delight; but what have these things to do with that with which
I said I was highly delighted? Your eloquence delights me since it is at once
genial in sentiment and dignified in expression; and though assuredly I am
not delighted with all sorts of praise from all sorts of persons, but only
with such praises as you have thought me worthy of, and only coming from those
who are such as you are -- that is, from persons who, for Christ's sake, love
His servants, I cannot deny that I am delighted with the praises bestowed upon
me in your letter.
3. Thoughtful
and experienced men will be at no loss as to the opinion which they should
form of Themistocles
(if I remember the name rightly), who, having
refused at a banquet to play on the lyre, a thing which the distinguished and
learned men of Greece were accustomed to do, and having been on that account
regarded as uneducated, was asked, when he expressed his contempt for that
sort of amusement, "What, then, does it delight you to hear?" and
is reported to have answered: "My own praises." Thoughtful and experienced
men will readily see with what design and in what sense these words must have
been used by him, or must be understood by them, if they are to believe that
he uttered them; for he was in the affairs of this world a most remarkable
man, as may be illustrated by the answer which he gave when he was further
pressed with the question: "What, then, do you know? "I know," he
replied, "how to make a small republic great." As to the thirst for
praise spoken of by Ennius in the words: "All men greatly desire to be
praised," I am of opinion that it is partly to be approved of, partly
guarded against. For as, on the one hand, we should vehemently desire the truth,
which is undoubtedly to be eagerly sought after as alone worthy of praise,
even though it be not praised: so, on the other hand, we must carefully shun
the vanity which readily insinuates itself along with praise from men: and
this vanity is present in the mind when either the things which are worthy
of praise are not reckoned worth having unless the man be praised for them
by his fellow-men, or things on account of possessing which any man wishes
to be much praised are deserving either of small praise, or it may be of severe
censure. Hence Horace, a more careful observer than Ennius, says: "Is
fame your passion? Wisdom's powerful charm if thrice read over shall its power
disarm."1
4. Thus
the poet thought that the malady arising from the love of human praise, which
was thoroughly
attacked
with his satire, was to he charmed away by words
of healing power. The great Teacher has accordingly taught us by His apostle,
that we ought not to do good with a view to be praised by men, that is, we
ought not to make the praises of men the motive for our well-doing; and yet,
for the sake of men themselves, He teaches us to seek their approbation. For
when good men are praised, the praise does not benefit those on whom it is
bestowed, but those who bestowed it. For to the good, so far as they are themselves
concerned, it is enough that they are good; but those are to be congratulated
whose interest it is to imitate the good when the good are praised by them,
since they thus show that the persons whom they sincerely praise are persons
whose conduct they appreciate. The apostle says in a certain place, "If
I yet pleased men, I should not be the servant of Christ;"2 and the same
apostle says in another place, "I please all men in all things," and
adds the reason, "Not seeking mine own profit, but the profit of many,
that they may be saved."3 Behold what he sought in the praise of men,
as it is declared in these words: "Finally, my brethren, whatsoever things
are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever
things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good
report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these
things. Those things, which ye have both learned, and received, and heard,
and seen in me, do: and the God of peace shall be with you."4 All the
other things which I have named above, he summed up under the name of Virtue,
saying, "If there be any virtue;" but the definition which he subjoined, "Whatsoever
things are of good report," he followed up by another suitable word, "If
there be any praise." What the apostle says, then, in the first of these
passages, "If I yet pleased men, I should not be the servant of Christ," is
to be understood as if he said, If the good things which I do were done by
me with human praise as my motive, if I were puffed up with the love of praise,
I should not be the servant of Christ. The apostle, then, wished to please
all men, and rejoiced in pleasing them, not that he might himself be inflated
with their praises, but that he being praised might build them up in Christ.
Why, then, should it not delight me to be praised by you, since you are too
good a man to speak insincerely, and you bestow your praise on things which
you love, and which it is profitable and wholesome to love, even though they
be not in me ? This, moreover, does not benefit you alone, but also me. For
if they are not in me, it is good for me that I am put to the blush, and am
made to burn with desire to possess them. And in regard to anything in your
praise which I recognise as in my possession, I rejoice that I possess it,
and that such things are loved by you, and that I am loved for their sake.
And in regard to those things which I do not recognise as belonging to me,
I not only desire to obtain them, that I may possess them for myself, but also
that those who love me sincerely may not always be mistaken in praising me
for them.
5. Behold how many things I have said, and still I have not yet spoken of
that in your letter which delighted me more than your eloquence, and far more
than the praises you bestowed on me. What do you think, O excellent man, that
this can be ? It is that I have acquired the friendship of so distinguished
a man as you are, and that without having even seen you; if, indeed, I ought
to speak of one as unseen whose soul I have seen in his own letters, though
I have not seen his body. In which letters I rest my opinion concerning you
on my own knowledge, and not, as formerly, on the testimony of my brethren.
For what your character was I had already heard, but how you stood affected
to me I knew not until now. From this, your friendship to me, I doubt not that
even the praises bestowed on me, which give me pleasure for a reason about
which I have already said enough, will much more abundantly benefit the Church
of Christ, since the fact that you possess, and study, and love, and commend
my labours in defence of the gospel against the remnant of impious idolaters,
secures for me a wider influence in these writings in proportion to the high
position which you occupy; for, illustrious yourself, you insensibly shed a
lustre upon them. You, being celebrated, give celebrity to them, and wherever
you shall see that the circulation of them might do good, you will not suffer
them to remain altogether unknown. If you ask me how I know this, my reply
is, that such is the impression concerning you produced on me by reading your
letters. Herein you will now see how great delight your letter could impart
to me, for if your opinion of me be favourable, you are aware how great delight
is given to me by gain to the cause of Christ. Moreover, when you tell me concerning
yourself that, although, as you say, you belong to a family which not for one
or two generations, but even to remote ancestors, has been known as able to
accept the doctrine of Christ, you have nevertheless been aided by my writings
against the Gentile rites so to understand these as you never had done before,
can I esteem it a small matter how great benefit our writings, commended and
circulated by you, may confer upon others, and to how many and how illustrious
persons your testimony may bring them, and how easily and profitably through
these persons they may reach others? Or, reflecting on this, can the joy diffused
in my heart be small or moderate in degree?
6. Since,
then, I cannot in words express how great delight I have received from your
letter, I have
spoken
of the reason why it delight me, and may that
which I am unable adequately to utter on this subject I leave to you to conjecture.
Accept, then, my son -- accept, O excellent man, Christian not by outward profession
merely, but by Christian love -- accept, I say, the books containing my "Confessions," which
you desired to have. In these behold me, that you may not praise me beyond
what I am; in these believe what is said of me, not by others, but by myself;
in these contemplate me, and see what I have been in myself, by myself; and
if anything in me please you, join me, because of it, in praising Him to whom,
and not to myself, I desire praise to be given. For "He hath made us,
and not we ourselves;"1 indeed, we had destroyed ourselves, but He who
made us has made us anew. When, however, you find me in these books, pray for
me that I may not fail, but be perfected. Pray, my son; pray. I feel what I
say; I know what I ask. Let it not seem to you a thing unbecoming, and, as
it were, beyond your merits. You will defraud me of a great help if you do
not do so. Let not only you yourself, but all also who by your testimony shall
come to love me, pray for me. Tell them that I have entreated this, and if
you think highly of us, consider that we command what we have asked; in any
case, whether as granting a request or obeying a command, pray for us. Read
the Divine Scriptures, and you will find that the apostles themselves, the
leaden of Christ,s flock, requested this from their sons, or enjoined it on
their hearers. I certainly, since you ask it of me, will do this for you as
far as I can. He sees this who is the Hearer of prayer, and who saw that I
prayed for you before you asked me; but let this proof of love be reciprocated
by you. We are placed over you; you are the flock of God. Consider and see
that our dangers are greater than yours, and pray for us, for this becomes
both us and you, that we may give a good account of you to the Chief Shepherd
and Head over us all, and may escape both from the trials of this world and
its allurements, which are still more dangerous, except when the peace of this
world has the effect for which the apostle has directed us to pray, "That
we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty."2
For if godliness and honesty be wanting, what is a quiet and peaceful exemption
from the evils of the world but an occasion either of inviting men to enter,
or assisting men to follow, a course of self-indulgence and perdition? Do you,
then, ask for us what we ask for you, that we may lead a quiet and peaceable
life in all godliness and honesty. Let us ask this for each other wherever
you are and wherever we are, for He whose we are is everywhere present.
7. I have sent you also other books which you did not ask, that I might not
rigidly restrict myself to what you asked: -- my works on Faith in Things Unseen,
on Patience, on Continence, on Providence, and a large work on Faith, Hope,
and Charity. If, while you are in Africa, you shall read all these, either
send your opinion of them to me, or let it be sent to some place whence it
may be sent us by my lord and brother Aurelius, though wherever you shall be
we hope to have letters from you; and do you expect letters from us as long
as we are able. I most gratefully received the things you sent to me, in which
you deigned to aid me both in regard to my bodily health,3 since you desire
me to be free from the hindrance of sickness in devoting my time to God, and
in regard to my library, that I may have the means to procure new books and
repair the old. May God recompense you, both in the present life and in that
to come, with those favours which He has prepared for such as He has willed
you to be. I request you now to salute again for me, as before, the pledge
of peace entrusted to you, very dear to both of us.
FOURTH DIVISION.
[Hitherto the order followed in the arrangement of the letters has been the
chronological. It being impossible to ascertain definitely the date of composition
of thirty-nine of the letters, these have been placed by the Benedictine editors
in the fourth division, and in it they are arranged under two principal divisions,
the first embracing some controversial letters, and the second a number of
those which were occasioned either by Augustin's interest in the welfare of
individuals, or by the claims of official duty.]
LETTER CCXXXII.
TO THE PEOPLE OF MADAURA, MY LORDS WORTHY OF PRAISE, AND BRETHREN MOST BELOVED,
AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING, IN REPLY TO THE LETTER RECEIVED BY THE HANDS OF BROTHER
FLORENTINUS.
1. If,
perchance, such a letter as I have received was sent to me by those among
you who are Catholic
Christians,
the only thing at which I am surprised
is, that it was sent in the name of the municipality, and not in their own
name. If, however, it has pleased all or almost all of your men of rank to
send a letter to me, I am surprised at the title "Father" and the "salutation
in the Lord" addressed to me by you, of whom I know certainly, and with
much regret, that you regard with superstitious veneration those idols against
which your temples are more easily shut than your hearts; or, I should rather
say, those idols which are not more truly shut up in your temples than in your
hearts.1 Can it be that you are at last, after wise reflection, seriously thinking
of that salvation which is in the Lord, in whose name you have chosen to salute
me? For if it be not so, I ask you, my lords worthy of all praise, and brethren
most beloved, in what have I injured, in what have I offended your benevolence,
that you should think it fight to treat me with ridicule rather than with respect
in the salutation prefixed to your letter?
2. For
when I read the words, "To Father Augustin, eternal salvation
in the Lord," I was suddenly elated with such fulness of hope, that I
believed you either already converted to the Lord Himself, and to that eternal
salvation of which He is the author, or desirous, through our, ministry, to
be so converted. But when I read the rest of the letter my heart was chilled.
I inquired, however, from the bearer of the letter, whether you were already
Christians or were desirous to be so. After I learned from his answer that
you were in no way changed, I was deeply grieved that you thought it right
not only to reject the name of Christ, to whom you already see the whole world
submitting, but even to insult His name in my person; for I could not think
of any other Lord than Christ the Lord in whom a bishop could be addressed
by you as a father, and if there had been any doubt as to the meaning to be
attached to your words, it would have been removed by the closing sentence
of your letter, where you say plainly, "We desire that, for many years,
your lordship may always, in the midst of your clergy, be glad in God and His
Christ." After reading and pondering all these things, what could I (or,
indeed, could any man) think but that these words were written either as the
genuine expression of the mind of the writers, or with an intention to deceive
? If you write these things as the genuine expression of your mind, who has
barred your way to the truth? Who has strewn it with thorns? What enemy has
placed masses of rock across your path ? In fine, if you are desiring to come
in, who has shut the door of our places of worship against you, so that you
are unwilling to enjoy the same salvation with us in the same Lord in whose
name you salute us? But if you write these things deceitfully and mockingly,
do you, then, in the very act of imposing on me the care of your affairs, presume
to insult, with the language of feigned adulation, the name of Him through
whom alone I can do anything, instead of honouring Him with the veneration
which is due to Him?
3. Be assured, dearest brethren, that it is with inexpressible trembling of
heart on your account that I write this letter to you, for I know how much
greater in the judgment of God must be your guilt and your doom if I shall
have said these things to you in vain. In regard to everything in the history
of the human race which our forefathers observed and handed down to us, and
not less in regard to everything connected with the seeking and holding of
true religion which we now see and put on record for those who come after us,
the Divine Scriptures have not been silent; so far from this, all things come
to pass exactly according to the predictions of Scripture. You cannot deny
that you see the Jewish people torn from the abodes of their ancestry, dispersed
and scattered over almost every country: now, the origin of that people, their
gradual increase, their losing of the kingdom, their dispersion through all
the world, have happened exactly as foretold. You cannot deny that you see
that the word of the Lord, and the law coming forth from that people through
Christ, who was miraculously born among their nation, has taken and retained
possession of the faith of all nations: now we read of all these announced
beforehand as we see them. You cannot deny that you see what we call heresies
and schisms, that is, many cut off from the root of the Christian society,
which by means of the Apostolic Sees, and the successions of bishops, is spread
abroad in an indisputably world-wide diffusion, claiming the name of Christians,
and as withering branches boasting of the mere appearance of being derived
from the true vine: all this has been foreseen, predicted, and described in
ScriptUre. You cannot deny that you see some temples of the idols fallen into
ruin through neglect, others thrown down by violence, others closed, and some
applied to other purposes; you see the idols themselves either broken to pieces,
or burnt, or shut up, or destroyed, and the same powers of this world, who
in defence of idols persecuted Christians, now vanquished and subdued by Christians,
who did not fight for the truth but died for it, and directing their attacks
and their laws against the very idols in defence of which they put Christians
to death, and the highest dignitary of the noblest empire laying aside his
crown and kneeling as a! suppliant at the tomb of the fisherman Peter.
4. The Divine Scriptures, which have now come into the hands of all, testified
long before: that all these things would come to pass. We rejoice that all
these things have happened, with a faith which is strong in proportion to the
discovery thereby made of the greatness of the authority with which they are
declared in the sacred Scriptures. Seeing, then, that all these things have
come to pass as foretold, are we, I ask, to suppose that the judgment of God,
which we read of in the same Scriptures as appointed to separate finally between
the believing and the unbelieving, is the only event in regard to which the
prophecy is to fail ? Yea, certainly, as all these events have come, it shall
also come. Nor shall there be a man of our time who shall be able in that day
to plead anything in defence of his unbelief. For the name of Christ is on
the lips of every man: it is invoked by the just man in doing justice, by the
perjurer in the act of deceiving, by the king to confirm his rule, by the soldier
to nerve himself for battle, by the husband to establish his authority, by
the wife to confess her submission, by the father to enforce his command, by
the son to declare his obedience, by the master in supporting his right to
govern, by the slave in performing his duty, by the humble in quickening piety,
by the proud in stimulating ambition, by the rich man when he gives, and by
the poor when he receives an alms, by the drunkard at his wine-cup, by the
beggar at the gate, by the good man in keeping his word, by the wicked man
in violating his promises: all frequently use the name of Christ, the Christian
with genuine reverence, the Pagan with reigned respect; and they shall undoubtedly
give to that same Being whom they invoke an account both of the spirit and
of the language in which they repeat His name.
5. There is One invisible, from whom, as the Creator and First Cause, all
things seen by us derive their being: He is supreme, eternal, unchangeable,
and comprehensible by none save Himself alone. There is One by whom the supreme
Majesty utters and reveals Himself, namely, the Word, not inferior to Him by
whom it is begotten and uttered, by which Word He who begets it is manifested.
There is One who is holiness, the sanctifier of all that becomes holy, who
is the inseparable and undivided mutual communion between this unchangeable
Word by whom that First Cause is revealed, and that First Cause who reveals
Himself by the Word which is His equal. But who is able with perfectly calm
and pure mind to contemplate this whole Essence (whom I have endeavoured to
describe without giving His name, instead of giving His name without describing
Him), and to draw blessedness from that contemplation, and by sinking, as it
were, in the rapture of such meditation, to become oblivious of self, and to
press on to that the sight of which is beyond our sphere of perception; in
other words, to be clothed with immortality, and obtain that eternal salvation
which you were pleased to desire on my behalf in your greeting? Who, I say,
is able to do this but the man who, confessing his sins, shall have levelled
with the dust all the vain risings of pride, and prostrated himself in meekness
and humility to receive God as his Teacher?
6. Since, therefore, it is necessary that we be first brought down from vain
self-sufficiency to lowliness of spirit, that rising thence .we may attain
to real exaltation, it was not possible that this spirit could be produced
in us by any method at once more glorious and more gentle (subduing our haughtiness
by persuasion instead of violence) than that the Word by whom the Father reveals
Himself to angels, who is His Power and Wisdom, who could not be discerned
by the human heart so long as it was blinded by love for the things which are
seen, should condescend . to assume out nature, and so to exercise and manifest
His personality when incarnate as to make men more afraid of being elated by
the pride of man, than of being brought low after the example of God. Therefore
the Christ who is preached throughout the whole world is not Christ adorned
with an earthly crown, nor Christ rich in earthly treasures, nor Christ illustrious
for earthly prosperity, but Christ crucified. This was ridiculed, at first,
by whole nations of proud men, and is still ridiculed by a remnant among the
nations, but it was the object of faith at first to a few and now to whole
nations, because when Christ crucified was preached at that time, notwithstanding
the ridicule of the nations, to the few who believed, the lame received power
to walk, the dumb to speak, the deaf to hear, the blind to see, and the dead
were restored to life. Thus, at length, the pride of this world was convinced
that, even among the things of this world, there is nothing more powerful than
the humility of God,1 so that beneath the shield of a divine example that humility,
which it is most profitable for men to practise, might find defence against
the contemptuous assaults of pride.
7. O men of Madaura, my brethren, nay, my fathers,2 I beseech you to awake
at last: this opportunity of writing to you God has given to me. So far as
I could, I rendered my service and help in the business of brother Florentinus,
by whom, as God willed it, you wrote to me; but the business was of such a
nature, that even without my assistance it might have been easily transacted,
for almost all the men of his family, who reside at Hippo, know Florentinus,
and deeply regret his bereavement. But the letter was sent by you to me, that,
having occasion to reply, it might not seem presumptuous on my part, when the
opportunity was afforded me by yourselves, to say something concerning Christ
to the worshippers of idols. But I beseech you, if you have not taken His name
in vain in that epistle, suffer not these things which I write to you to be
in vain; but if in using His name you wished to mock me, fear Him whom the
world formerly in its pride scorned as a condemned criminal, and whom the same
world now, subjected to His sway, awaits as its Judge. For the desire of my
heart for you, expressed as far as in my power by this letter, shall witness
against you at the judgment-seat of Him who shall establish for ever those
who believe in Him and confound the unbelieving. May the one true God deliver
you wholly from the vanity of this world, and turn you to Himself, my lords
worthy of all praise and brethren most beloved.
LETTER CCXXXVII.
This letter
was addressed to Ceretius, a bishop, who had sent to Augustin certain apocryphal
writings,
on which
the Spanish heretical sect called Priscillianists
3 rounded some of their doctrines. Ceretius had especially directed his attention
to a hymn which they alleged to have been composed by the Lord Jesus Christ,
and given by Him to His disciples on that night on which He was betrayed, when
they sang an" hymn" before going out to the Mount of Olives. The
length of tile letter precludes its insertion here, but we believe it will
interest many to read the few lines of this otherwise long-forgotten hymn,
which Augustin has here preserved. They are as follows :--
"Salvare
volo et salvari volo;
Solvere volo et solvi volo;
Ornate volo et ornari volo;
Generari volo;
Cantare volo, saltate cuncti:
Plangere volo, tundite vos omnes:
Lucerna sum tibi, ille qui me vides;
Janua sum tibi, quicunque me pulsas;
Qui rides quod ago, tace opera mea;
Verbo
illusi cuncta et non sum illusus in totum."
The reader who ponders these extracts, and remembers the occasion on which
the hymn is alleged to have been composed, will agree with us that Augustin
employs a very unnecessary fulness of argument in devoting several paragraphs
to demolish the claims advanced on its behalf as a revelation more profound
and sacred than anything contained in the canonical Scriptures. Augustin also
brings against the Priscillianists the charge of justifying perjury when it
might be of service in concealing their real opinions, and quotes a line in
which, as he had heard from some who once belonged to that sect, the lawfulness
of such deceitful conduct was taught:--
"Jura,
perjura, secretum prodere noli."
LETTER CCXLV.
TO POSSIDIUS,4 MY MOST BELOVED LORD AND VENERABLE BROTHER AND PARTNER IN THE