Subscribe
to CF
Be
first to know
Read our AAA review
from Catholic Culture
Our Mission
To
bring Jesus Christ; the Way, the Truth and the Life; to all who will follow,
according to scripture and tradition, per the Magisterium
of the Roman Catholic Church.
While you visit!
Listen
to
Radio
For the Sacred
Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary. |
THE THIRTEEN BOOKS
OF THE CONFESSIONS
OF ST. AUGUSTIN
BISHOP OF HIPPO
BOOK V
HE DESCRIBES THE TWENTY-NINTH YEAR OF HIS AGE, IN WHICH, HAVING DISCOVERED
THE FALLACIES OF THE MANICHAEANS, HE PROFESSED RHETORIC AT ROME AND MILAN.
HAVING HEARD AMBROSIa, HE BEGINS TO COME TO HIMSELF.
CHAP. I.--THAT IT BECOMES THE SOUL TO PRAISE GOD, AND TO CONFESS UNTO HIM.
1. ACCEPT
the sacrifice of my confessions by the agency of my tongue, which Thou hast
formed and
quickened, that it
may confess to Thy name; and heal Thou
all my bones, and let them say, "Lord, who is like unto Thee ?"1
For neither does he who confesses to Thee teach Thee what may be passing within
him, because: a dosed heart doth not exclude Thine eye, nor does man's hardness
of heart repulse Thine hand, but Thou dissolvest it when Thou wiliest, either
in pity or in vengeance, "and there is no One who can hide himself from
Thy heat."2 But let my soul praise Thee, that it may love Thee; and let
it confess Thine own mercies to Thee, at it may praise Thee. Thy whole creation
ceaseth not, nor is it silent in Thy praises -- neither the spirit of man,
by the voice directed unto Thee, nor animal nor corporeal things, by the voice
of those meditating thereon;3 so that our souls may from their weariness arise
towards Thee, leaning on those things which Thou hast made, and passing on
to Thee, who hast made them Wonderfully and there is there refreshment and
true strength.
CHAP. II.-- ON THE VANITY OF THOSE WHO WISHED TO ESCAPE THE OMNIPOTENT GOD.
2. Let the restless and the unjust depart and flee from Thee. Thou both seest
them and distinguishest the shadows. And lo! all things with them are far,
yet are they themselves foul.4 And how have they injured Thee?5 Or in what
have they disgraced Thy government, which is just and perfect from heaven even
to the lowest parts of the earth. For whither fled they when they fled from
Thy presence?6 Or where dost Thou not find them ? But they fled that they might
not see Thee seeing them, and blinded might stumble against Thee ;7 since Thou
forsakest nothing that Thou hast made8 -- that the unjust might stumble. against
Thee, and justly be hurt,9 withdrawing themselves from Thy gentleness, and
stumbling against Thine uprightness, and falling upon their own roughness.
Forsooth, they know not that Thou art everywhere whom no place encompasseth,
and that Thou alone art near even to those that re. move far from Thee?10 Let
them, then, be converted and seek Thee; because not as they have forsaken their
Creator hast Thou forsaken Thy creature. Let them be converted and seek Thee;
and behold, Thou art there in their hearts, in the hearts of those who confess
to Thee, and east themselves upon Thee, and weep on Thy bosom after their obdurate
ways, even Thou gently wiping away their tears. And they weep the more, and
rejoice in weeping, since Thou, O Lord, not man, flesh and blood, but Thou,
Lord, who didst make, remakest and comfortest them. And where was I when I
was seeking Thee ? And Thou weft before me, but I had gone away even from myself;
nor did I find myself, much less Thee!
CHAP. III. -- HAVING HEARD FAUSTUS, THE MOST LEARNED BISHOP OF THE MANICHAEANS,
HE DISCERNS THAT GOD, THE AUTHOR BOTH OF THINGS ANIMATE AND INANIMATE, CHIEFLY
HAS CARE FOR THE HUMBLE.
3. Let
me lay bare before my God that twenty-ninth year of my age. There had at
this time come to Carthage
a certain bishop of the Manichaeans, by name
Faustus, a great snare Of the devil, and in any were entangled by him through
the allurement of his smooth speech the which, although I did commend, yet
could I separate from the truth of those things which I was eager to learn.
Nor did I esteem the small dish of oratory so much as the science, which this
their so praised Faustus placed before me to feed upon. Fame, indeed, had before
Sen of him to me, as most skilled in all being learning, and pre-eminently
skilled in the liberal sciences. And as I had read and retained in memory many
injunctions of the philosophers, I used to compare some teachings of theirs
with those long fables of the Manichaeans and the former things which they
declared, who could only prevail so far as to estimate this lower world, while
its lord they could by no means find out,1 seemed to me the more probable.
For Thou art great, O Lord, and hast respect unto the lowly, but the proud
Thou knowest afar off."2 Nor dost Thou draw near but to the COntrite heart,3
nor art Thou found the proud,4 -- not even could they number by cunning skill
the stars and the sand, and measure the starry regions, and trace the courses
of the planets.
4. For
with their understanding and the capacity which Thou hast bestowed upon them
they search out these
things; and much have they found out, and foretold
many years before, -- the eclipses of those luminaries, the sun and moon, on
what day, at what hour, and from how many particular points they were likely
to come. Nor did their calculation fail them; and it came to pass even as they
foretold. And they wrote down the rules found out, which are read at this day;
and from these others foretell in what year and in what month of the year,
and on what day of the month, and at what hour of the day, and at what quarter
of its light, either moon or sun is to be eclipsed, and thus it shall be even
as it is foretold. And men who are ignorant of these things marvel and are
amazed, and they that know them exult and are exalted; and by an impious pride,
departing from Thee, and forsaking Thy light, they foretell a failure of the
sun's light which is likely to occur so long before, but see not their own,
which is now present. For they seek not religiously whence they have the ability
where-with they seek out these things. And finding that Thou hast made them,
they give not themselves up to Thee, that Thou mayest preserve what Thou hast
made, nor sacrifice themselves to Thee, even such as they have made themselves
to be; nor do they slay their own pride, as fowls of the air,5 nor their own
curiosities, by which (like the fishes of the sea). they wander over the unknown
paths of the abyss, nor their own extravagance, as the "beasts of the
field," 6 that Thou, Lord, "a consuming fire,"7 mayest burn
up their lifeless cares and renew them immortally.
5. But
the way -- Thy Word,8 by whom Thou didst make these things which they number,
and themselves
who number,
and the sense by which they perceive what
they number, and the judgment out of which they number -- they knew not, and
that of Thy wisdom there is no number) But the Only-begotten has been "made
unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification,"10 and has been
numbered amongst us, and paid tribute to Caesar.11 This way, by which they
might descend to Him from themselves, they knew not; nor that through Him they
might ascend unto Him.12 This way they knew not, and they think themselves
exalted with the stars13 and shining, and lo ! they fell upon the earth,14
and "their foolish heart was darkened."1 They say many true things
concerning the creature; but Truth, the Artificer of the creature, they seek
not with devotion, and hence they find Him not. Or if they find Him, knowing
that He is God, they glorify Him not as God, neither are they thankful,2 but
become vain in their imaginations, and say that they themselves are wise? attributing
to themselves what is Thine; and by this, with most perverse blindness, they
desire to impute to Thee what is their own, forging lies against Thee who art
the Truth, and changing the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made
like corruptible man, and to birds, and four-fooled beasts, and creeping things,4
-- changing Thy truth into a lie, and worshipping and serving the creature
more than the Creator.5
6. Many truths, however, concerning the creature did I retain from these men,
and the cause appeared to me from calculations, the succession of seasons,
and the visible manifestations of the stars; and I compared them with the sayings
of Manichaeus, who in his frenzy has written most extensively on these subjects,
but discovered not any account either of the solstices, or the equinoxes, the
eclipses of the luminaries, or anything of the kind I had learned in the books
of secular philosophy. But therein I was ordered to believe, and yet it corresponded
not with those rules acknowledged by calculation and my own sight, but was
far different.
CHAP. IV.--THAT THE KNOWLEDGE OF TERRESTRIAL AND CELESTIAL THINGS DOES NOT
GIVE HAPPINESS, BUT THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD ONLY.
7. Doth,
then, O Lord God of truth, whosoever knoweth those things therefore please
Thee? For unhappy
is the
man who knoweth all those things, but knoweth
Thee not; but happy is he who knoweth Thee, though these he may not know.6
But he who knoweth both Thee and them is not the happier on account of them,
but is happy on account of Thee only, if knowing Thee he glorify Thee as God,
and gives thanks, and becomes not vain in his thoughts.7 But as he is happier
who knows how to possess a tree, and for the use thereof renders thanks to
Thee, although he may not know how many cubits high it is, or how wide it spreads,
than he that measures it and counts all its branches, and neither owns it nor
knows or loves its Creator; so a just man, whose is the entire world of wealth,8
and who, as having nothing, yet possesseth all things9 by cleaving unto Thee,
to whom all things are subservient, though he know not even the circles of
the Great Bear, yet it is foolish to doubt but that he may verily be better
than he who can measure the heavens, and number the stars, and weigh the elements,
but is forgetful of Thee, "who hast set in order all things in number,
weight, and measure."10
CHAP. V. --OF MANICHAEUS PERTINACIOUSLY TEACHING FALSE DOCTRINES, AND PROUDLY
ARROGATING TO HIMSELF THE HOLY SPIRIT.
8. But
yet who was it that ordered Manichaeus to write on these things likewise,
skill in which
was not necessary
to piety ? For Thou hast told man to behold
piety ind wisdom,11 of which he might be in ignorance although having a complete
knowledge of these other things; but since, knowing not these things, he yet
most impudently dared to teach them, it is clear that he had no acquaintance
with piety. For even when we have a knowledge of these worldly matters, it
is folly to make a profession of them; but confession to Thee is piety. It
was therefore with this view that this straying one spake much of these matters,
that, standing convicted by those who had in truth learned them, the understanding
that he really had in those more difficult things might be made plain. For
he wished not to be lightly esteemed, but went about trying to persuade men "that
the Holy Ghost, the Comforter and Enricher of Thy faithful ones, was with full
authority personally resident in him."12 When, therefore, it was discovered
that his teaching concerning the heavens and stars, and the motions of sun
and moon, was false, though these things do not relate to the doctrine of religion,
yet his sacrilegious arrogance would become sufficiently evident, seeing that
not only did he affirm things of which he knew nothing, but also perverted
them, and with such egregious vanity of pride as to seek to attribute them
to himself as to a divine being.
9. For
when I hear a Christian brother ignorant of these things, or in error concerning
them, I can bear
with patience to see that man hold to his opinions;
nor can I apprehend that any want of knowledge as to the situation or nature
of this material creation can be injurious to him, so long as he does not entertain
belief in anything unworthy of Thee, O Lord, the Creator of all. But if he
conceives it to pertain to the form of the doctrine of piety, and presumes
to affirm with great obstinacy that whereof he is ignorant, therein lies the
injury. And yet even a weakness such as this in the dawn of faith is borne
by our Mother Charity, till the new man may grow up "unto a perfect man," and
not be "carried about with every wind of doctrine." 1 But in him
who thus presumed to beat once the teacher, author, head, and leader of all
whom he could induce to believe this, so that all who followed him believed
that they were following not a simple man only, but Thy Holy Spirit, who would
not judge that such great insanity, when once it stood convicted of false teaching,
should be abhorred and utterly cast off? But I had not yet clearly ascertained
whether the changes of longer and shorter days ,and nights, and day and night
itself, with the eclipses of the greater lights, and whatever of the like kind
I had read in other books, could be expounded consistently with his words.
Should I have found myself able to do so, there would still have remained a
doubt in my mind whether it were so or no, although I might, on the strength
of his reputed godliness,2 rest my faith on his authority.
CHAP. VI.--FAUSTUS WAS INDEED AN ELEGANT SPEAKER, BUT KNEW NOTHING OF THE
LIBERAL SCIENCES.
10. And
for nearly the whole of those nine years during which, with unstable mind,
I had been their
follower,
I had been looking forward • with but
too great eagerness for the arrival of this same Faustus. For the other members
of the sect whom I had chanced to light upon, when unable to answer the questions
I raised, always bade me look forward to his coming, when, by discoursing with
him, these, and greater difficulties if I had them, would be most easily and
amply cleared away. When at last he did come, I found him to be a man of pleasant
speech, who spoke of the very same things as they themselves did, although
more fluently, and in better language. But of what profit to me was the elegance
of my cup-bearer, since he offered me not the more precious draught for which
I thirsted ? My ears were already satiated with similar things; neither did
they appear to me more conclusive, because better expressed; nor true, because
oratorical; nor the spirit necessarily wise, because the face was comely and
the language eloquent. But they who extolled him to me were not competent judges;
and therefore, as he was possessed of suavity of speech, he appeared to them
to be prudent and wise. Another sort of persons, however, was, I was aware,
suspicious even of truth itself, if enunciated in smooth and flowing language.
But me, O my God, Thou hadst already instructed by wonderful and mysterious
ways, and therefore I believe that Thou instructedst me because it is truth;
nor of truth is there any other teacher -- where or whencesoever it may shine
upon us3 -- but Thee. From Thee, therefore, I had now learned, that cause a
thing is eloquently expressed, it should not of necessity seem to be true;
nor, because uttered with stammering lips, should it be false nor, again, perforce
true, because unskilfully delivered; nor consequently untrue, because the language
is fine; but that wisdom and folly are as food both wholesome and unwholesome,
and courtly or simple words as town-made or rustic vessels, -- and both kinds
of food may be served in either kind of dish.
11. That eagerness, therefore, with which I had so long waited for this man
was in truth delighted with his action and feeling when disputing, and the
fluent and apt words with which he clothed his ideas. I was therefore filled
with joy, and joined with others (and even exceeded them) in exalting and praising
him. It was, however, a source of annoyance to me that was not allowed at those
meetings of his auditors to introduce and impart4 any of those questions that
troubled me in familiar exchange of arguments with him. When I might speak,
and began, in conjunction with my friends, to engage his attention at such
times as it was not unseeming for him to enter into a discussion with me, and
had mooted such questions as perplexed me, I discovered him first to know nothing
of the liberal sciences save grammar, and that only in an ordinary way. Having,
however, read some of Tully's Orations, a very few books of Seneca and some
of the poets, and such few volumes of his own sect as were written coherently
in Latin, and being day by day practised in speaking, he so acquired a sort
of eloquence, which proved the more delightful and enticing in that it was
under the control of ready tact, and a sort of native grace. Is it not even
as I recall, O Lord my God, Thou judge of my conscience ? My heart and my memory
are laid before Thee, who didst at that time direct me by the inscrutable mystery
of Thy Providence, and didst set before my face those vile errors of mine,
in order that I might see and loathe them.
CHAP. VII.---CLEARLY SEEING THE FALLACIES OF THE MANICHAEANS, HE RETIRES FROM
THEM, BEING REMARKABLY AIDED BY GOD.
12. For when it became plain to me that he was ignorant of those arts in which
I had believed him to excel, I began to despair of his clearing up and explaining
all the perplexities which harassed me: though ignorant of these, however,
he might still have held the truth of piety, had he not been a Manichaean.
For their books are full of lengthy fables1 concerning the heaven and stars,
the sun and moon, and I had ceased to think him able to decide in a satisfactory
manner what I ardently desired, -- whether, on comparing these things with
the calculations I had read elsewhere, the explanations contained in the works
of Manichaeus were preferable, or at any rate equally sound ? But when I proposed
that these subjects should be deliberated upon and reasoned out, he very modestly
did not dare to endure the burden. For he was aware that he had no knowledge
of these things, and was not ashamed to confess it. For he was not one of those
loquacious persons, many of whom I had been troubled with, who covenanted to
teach me these things, and said nothing; but this man possessed a heart, which,
though not right towards Thee, yet was not altogether false towards himself.
For he was not altogether ignorant of his own ignorance, nor m would he without
due consideration be inveigled in a controversy, from which he could neither
draw back nor extricate himself fairly. And for that I was even more pleased
with him, for more beautiful is the modesty of an ingenuous mind than the acquisition
of the knowledge I desired, -- and such I found him to be in all the more abstruse
and subtle questions.
13. My eagerness after the writings of Manichaeus having thus received a check,
and despairing even more of their other teachers,seeing that in sundry things
which puzzled me, he, so famous amongst them, had thus turned out, -- I began
to occupy myself with him in the study of that literature which he also much
affected, and which I, as Professor of Rhetoric, was then engaged in teaching
the young Carthaginian students, and in reading with him either what he expressed
a wish to hear, or I deemed suited to his bent of mind. But all my endeavours
by which I had concluded to improve in that sect, by acquaintance with that
man, came completely to an end: not that I separated myself altogether from
them, but, as one who could find nothing better, I determined in the meantime
upon contenting myself with what I had in any way lighted upon, unless, by
chance, something more desirable should present itself. Thus that Faustus,
who had entrapped so many to their death, -- neither willing nor wilting it,
-- now began to loosen the snare in which I had been taken. For Thy hands,
O my God, in the hidden design of Thy Providence, did not desert my soul; and
out of the blood of my mother's heart, through the tears that she poured out
by day and by night, was a sacrifice offered unto Thee for me; and by marvellous
ways didst Thou deal with me.2 It was Thou, O my God, who didst it, for the
steps of a man are ordered by the Lord, and He shall dispose his way.3 Or how
can we procure salvation but from Thy hand, remaking what it hath made ?
CHAP. VIII.--HE SETS OUT FOR ROME, HIS MOTHER IN VAIN LAMENTING IT.
14. Thou
dealedst with me, therefore, that I should be persuaded to go to Rome, and
teach there
rather what I was
then teaching at Carthage. And how
I was persuaded to do this, I will not fail to confess unto Thee; for in this
also the profoundest workings of Thy wisdom, and Thy ever present mercy to
usward, must be pondered and avowed. It was not my desire to go to Rome because
greater advantages and dignities were guaranteed me by the friends who persuaded
me into this, -- although even at this period I was influenced by these considerations,
-- but my principal and almost sole motive was, that I had been informed that
the youths studied more quietly there, and were kept under by the control of
more rigid discipline, so that they did not capriciously and impudently rash
into the school of a master not their own, into whose presence they were forbidden
to enter unless with his consent. At Carthage, on the contrary, there was amongst
the scholars a shameful and intemperate license. They burst in rudely, and,
with almost furious gesticulations, interrupt the system which any one may
have instituted for the good of his pupils. Many outrages they perpetrate with
astounding phlegm, which would be punishable by law were they not sustained
by custom; that custom showing them to be the more worthless, in that they
now do, as according to law, what by Thy unchangeable law will never be lawful.
And they fancy they do it with impunity, whereas the very blindness whereby
they do it is their punishment, and they suffer far greater things than they
do. The manners, then, which as a student I would not adopt,1 I was compelled
as a teacher to submit to from others; and so I was too glad to go where all
who knew anything about it assured me that similar things were not done. But
Thou, "my refuge and my portion in the land of the living,"2 didst
while at Carthage goad me, so that I might thereby be withdrawn from it, and
exchange my worldly habitation for the preservation of my soul; whilst at Rome
Thou, didst offer me enticements by which to attract me there, by men enchanted
with this dying life, -- the one doing insane actions, and the, other making
assurances of vain things; and, in order to correct my footsteps, didst secretly
employ their and my perversity. For both they who disturbed my tranquillity
were blinded by a shameful madness, and they who allured me elsewhere smacked
of the earth. And I, who hated real misery here, sought fictitious happiness
there.
15. But the cause of my going thence and going thither, Thou, O God, knewest,
yet revealedst it not, either to me or to my mother, who grievously lamented
my journey, and went with me as far as the sea. But I deceived her, when she
violently restrained me either that she might retain me or accompany me, and
I pretended that I had a friend whom I could not quit until he had a favourable
wind to set sail. And I lied to my mother -- and such a mother! -- and got
away. For this also Thou hast in mercy pardoned me, saving me, thus replete
with abominable pollutions, from the waters of the sea, for the water of Thy
grace, whereby, when I was purified, the fountains of my mother's eyes should
be dried, from which for me she day by day watered the ground under her face.
And yet, refusing to go back without me, it was with difficulty I persuaded
her to remain that night in a place quite close to our ship, where there was
an oratory3 in memory of the blessed Cyprian. That night I secretly left, but
she was not backward in prayers and weeping. And what was it, O Lord, that
she, with such an abundance of tears, was asking of Thee, but that Thou wouldest
not permit me to sail ? But Thou, mysteriously counselling and hearing the
real purpose of her desire, granted not what she then asked, in order to make
me what she was ever asking. The wind blew and filled our sails, and withdrew
the shore from our sight; and she, wild with grief, was there on the morrow,
and filled Thine ears with complaints and groans, which Thou didst disregard;
whilst, by the means of my longings, Thou wert hastening me on to the cessation
of all longing, and the gross part of her love to me was whipped out by the
just lash of sorrow. But, like all mothers, --though even more than others,
-- she loved to have me with her, and knew not what joy Thou weft preparing
for her by my absence. Being ignorant of this, she did weep and mourn, and
in her agony was seen the inheritance of Eve, -- seeking in sorrow what in
sorrow she had brought forth. And yet, after accusing my perfidy and cruelty,
she again continued her intercessions for me with Thee, returned to her accustomed
place, and I to Rome.
CHAP. IX.--BEING ATTACKED BY FEVER, HE IS IN GREAT DANGER.
16. And
behold, there was I received by the scourge of bodily sickness, and I was
descending into
hell burdened
with all the sins that I had committed,
both against Thee, myself, and others, many and grievous, over and above that
bond of original sin whereby we all die in Adam.4 For none of these things
hadst Thou forgiven me in Christ, neither had He "abolished" by His
cross "the enmity" t which, by my sins, I had incurred with Thee.
For how could He, by the crucifixion of a phantasm? which I supposed Him to
be ? As true, then, was the death of my soul, as that of His flesh appeared
to me to be untrue; and as true the death of His flesh as the life of my soul,
which believed it not, was false. The fever increasing, I was now passing away
and perishing. For had I then gone hence, whither should I have gone but into
the fiery torments meet for my misdeeds, in the truth of Thy ordinance ? She
was ignorant of this, yet, while absent, prayed for me. But Thou, everywhere
present, hearkened to her where she was, and hadst pity upon me where I was,
that I should regain my bodily health, although still frenzied in my sacrilegious
heart. For all that peril did not make me wish to be baptized, and I was better
when, as a lad, I entreated it of my mother's piety, as I have already related
and confessed? But I had grown up to my own dishonour, and all the purposes
of Thy medicine I madly derided,4 who wouldst not suffer me, though such a
one, to die a double death. Had my mother's heart been smitten with this wound,
it never could have been cured. For I cannot sufficiently express the love
she had for me, nor how she now travailed for me in the spirit with a far keener
anguish than when she bore me in the flesh.
17. I
cannot conceive, therefore, how she could have been healed if such a death
of mine had transfixed
the
bowels of her love. Where then would have
been her so earnest, frequent, and unintermitted prayers to Thee alone ? But
couldst Thou, most merciful God, despise the "contrite and humble heart" s
of that pure and prudent widow, so constant in alms-deeds, so gracious and
attentive to Thy saints, not permitting one day to pass without oblation at
Thy altar, twice a day, at morning and even-tide, coming to Thy church without
intermission--not for vain gossiping, nor old wives' "fables,"6 but
in order that she might listen to Thee in Thy sermons, and Thou to her in her
prayers?7 Couldst Thou--Thou by whose gift she was such ---despise and disregard
without succouring the tears of such a one, wherewith she entreated Thee not
for gold or silver, nor for any changing or fleeting good, but for the salvation
of the soul of her son ? By no means, Lord. Assuredly Thou wert near, and weft
hearing and doing in that method in which Thou hadst predetermined that it
should be done. Far be it from Thee that Thou shouldst delude her in those
visions and the answers she had from Thee,--some of which I have spoken of,s
and others not?---which she kept10 in her faithful breast, and, always petitioning,
pressed upon Thee as Thine autograph. For Thou, "because Thy mercy endureth
for ever," n condescendest to those whose debts Thou hast pardoned, to
become likewise a debtor by Thy promises.
CHAP. X.--WHEN HE HAD LEFT THE MANICHAEANS, HE RETAINED HIS DEPRAVED OPINIONS
CONCERNING SIN AND THE ORIGIN OF THE SAVIOUR.
18. Thou
restoredst me then from that illness, and made sound the son of Thy hand-maid
meanwhile
in body,
that he might live for Thee, to endow him with
a higher and more enduring health. And even then at Rome I joined those deluding
and deluded "saints ;" not their "hearers" only,--of the
number of whom was he in whose house I had fallen ill, and had recovered,--but
those also whom they designate "The Elect."1 For it still seemed
to me "that it was not we that sin, but that I know not what other nature
sinned in us." And it gratified my pride to be free from blame and, after
I had committed any fault, not to acknowledge that I had done any,--" that
Thou mightest heal my soul because it had sinned against Thee;"3 but I
loved to excuse it, and to accuse something else (I wot not what) which was
with me, but was not I. But assuredly it was wholly I, and my impiety had divided
me against myself; and that sin was all the more incurable in that I did not
deem myself a sinner. And execrable iniquity it was, O God omnipotent, that
I would rather have Thee to be overcome in me to my destruction, than myself
of Thee to salvation ! Not yet, therefore, hadst Thou set a watch before my
mouth, and kept the door of my lips, that my heart might not incline to wicked
speeches, to make excuses of sins, with men that work iniquity4 -- and, therefore,
was I still united with their "Elect."
19. But
now, hopeless of making proficiency in that false doctrine, even those things
with which
I had decided
upon contenting myself, providing that I could
find nothing better, I now held more loosely and negligently. For I was half
inclined to believe that those philosophers whom they call "Academics" s
were more sagacious than the rest, in that they held that we ought to doubt
everything, and ruled that man had not the power of comprehending any truth;
for so, not yet realizing their meaning, I a/so was fully persuaded that they
thought just as they are commonly held to do. And I did not fail frankly to
restrain in my host that assurance which I observed him to have in those fictions
of which the works of Manichaeus are full. Notwithstanding, I was on terms
of more intimate friendship with them than with others who were not of this
heresy. Nor did I defend it with my former ardour; still my familiarity with
that sect (many of them being concealed in Rome) made me slower6 to seek any
other way,--particularly since I was hopeless of finding the truth, from which
in Thy Church, O Lord of heaven and earth, Creator' of all things visible and
invisible, they had turned me aside, --and it seemed to me most unbecoming
to believe Thee to have the form of human flesh, and to be bounded by the bodily
lineaments of our members. And because, when I desired to meditate on my God,
I knew not what to think ' of but a mass of bodies7 (for what was not such
' did not seem to me to be), this was the greatest 'and almost sole cause of
my inevitable error.
20. For hence I also believed evil to be a similar sort of substance, and
to be possessed of its own foul and misshapen mass---whether dense, which they
denominated earth, or thin and subtle, as is the body of the air, which they
fancy some malignant spirit crawling through that earth. And because a piety--such
as it was---compelled me to believe that the good God never created any evil
nature, I conceived two masses, the one opposed to the other, both infinite,
but the evil the more contracted, the good the more expansive. And from this
mischievous commencement the other profanities followed on me. For when my
mind tried to revert to the Catholic faith, I was cast back, since what I had
held to be the Catholic faith was not so. And it appeared to me more devout
to look upon Thee, my God,--to whom i make confession of Thy mercies,--as infinite,
at least, on other sides, although on that side where the mass of evil was
in opposition to Thee x I was compelled to confess Thee finite, that if on
every side I should conceive Thee to be confined by the form of a human body.
And better did it seem to me to believe that no evil had been created by Thee--which
to me in my ignorance appeared not only some substance, but a bodily one, because
I had no conception of the mind excepting as a subtle body, and that diffused
in local spaces--than to believe that anything could emanate from Thee of such
a kind as I considered the nature of evil to be. And our very Saviour Himself,
also, Thine only-begotten,2 I believed to have been reached forth, as it were,
for our salvation out of the lump of Thy most effulgent mass, so as to believe
nothing of Him but what I was able to imagine in my vanity. Such a nature,
then, I thought could not be born of the Virgin Mary without being mingled
with the flesh; and how that which I had thus figured to myself could be mingled
without being contaminated, I saw not. I was afraid, therefore, to believe
Him to be born in the flesh, lest I should be compelled to believe Him contaminated
by the flesh? Now will Thy spiritual ones blandly and lovingly smile at me
if they shall read these my confessions; yet such was I.
CHAP. XI.--HELPIDIUS DISPUTED WELL AGAINST THE MANICHAEANS AS TO THE AUTHENTICITY
OF THE NEW TESTAMENT.
21. Furthermore, whatever they had censured4 in Thy Scriptures I thought impossible
to be defended; and yet sometimes, indeed, I desired to confer on these several
points with some one well learned in those books, and to try what he thought
of them. For at this time the words of one Helpidius, speaking and disputing
face to face against the said Manichaeans, had begun to move me even at Carthage,
in that he brought forth things from the Scriptures not easily withstood, to
which their answer appeared to me feeble. And this answer they did not give
forth publicly, but only to us in private, --when they said that the writings
of the New Testament had been tampered with by I know not whom, who were desirous
of ingrafting the Jewish law upon the Christian faith; but they themselves
did not bring forward any uncorrupted copies.' But I, thinking of corporeal
things, very much ensnared and in a measure stifled, was oppressed by those
masses;7 panting under which for the breath of Thy Truth, I was not able to
breathe it pure and undefiled.
CHAP. XII.--PROFESSING RHETORIC AT ROME, HE DISCOVERS THE FRAUD OF HIS SCHOLARS.
22. Then
began I assiduously to practise that for which I came to Rome--the teaching
of rhetoric; and
first
to bring together at my home some to whom,
and through whom, I had begun to be known; when, behold, I learnt that other
offences were committed in Rome which I had not to bear in Africa. For those
subvertings by abandoned young men were not practised here, as I had been informed;
yet, suddenly, said they, to evade paying their master's fees, many of the
youths conspire together, and remove themselves to another,--breakers of faith,
who, for the love of money, set a small value on justice. These also my heart "hated," though
not with a "perfect hatred ;" 8 for, perhaps, I hated them more in
that I was to suffer by them, than for the illicit acts they committed. Such
of a truth are base persons, and they are unfaithful to Thee, loving these
transitory mockeries of temporal things, and vile gain, which begrimes the
hand that lays hold on it; and embracing the fleeting world, and scorning Thee,
who abidest, and invitest to return, and pardonest the prostituted human soul
when it returneth to Thee. And now I hate such crooked and perverse men, although
I love them if they are to be corrected so as to prefer the learning they obtain
to money, and to learning. Thee, O God, the truth and fulness of certain good
and most chaste peace. But then was the wish stronger in me for my own sake
not to suffer them evil, than was the wish that they should become good for
Thine.
CHAP. XIII.--HE IS SENT TO MILAN, THAT HE, ABOUT TO TEACH RHETORIC, MAY BE
KNOWN BY AMBROSE.
23. When,
therefore, they of Milan had sent to Rome to the prefect of the city, to
provide them with
a teacher
of rhetoric for their city, and to despatch
him at the public expense, I made interest through those identical persons,
drunk with Manichaean vanities, to be freed from whom I was going away,--neither
of us, however, being aware of it,--that Symmachus, the then prefect, having
proved me by proposing a subject, would send me. And to Milan I came, unto
Ambrose the bishop, known to the whole world as among the best of men, Thy
devout servant; whose eloquent discourse did at that time strenuously dispense
unto Thy people the flour of Thy wheat, the "gladness" of Thy "oil," and
the sober intoxication of Thy "wine.'' x To him was I unknowingly led
by Thee, that by him I might knowingly be led to Thee. That man of God received
me like a father, and looked with a benevolent and episcopal kindliness on
my change of abode. And I began to love him, not at first, indeed, as a teacher
of the truth,--which I entirely despaired of in Thy Church,--but as a man friendly
to myself. And I studiously hearkened to him preaching to the people, not with
the motive I should, but, as it were, trying to discover whether his eloquence
came up to the fame thereof, or flowed fuller or lower than was asserted; and
I hung on his words intently, but of the matter I was but as a careless and
contemptuous spectator; and I was delighted with the pleasantness of his speech,
more erudite, yet less cheerful and soothing in manner, than that of Faustus.
Of the matter, however, there could be no comparison; for the latter was straying
amid Manichaean deceptions, whilst the former was teaching salvation most soundly.
But "salvation is far from the wicked,'' 2 such as I then stood before
him; and yet I was drawing nearer gradually and unconsciously.
CHAP. XIV.--HAVING HEARD THE BISHOP, HE PERCEIVES THE FORCE OF THE CATHOLIC
FAITH, YET DOUBTS, AFTER THE MANNER OF THE MODERN ACADEMICS.
24. For
although I took no trouble to learn what he spake, but only to hear how he
spake (for that
empty care
alone remained to me, despairing of a way
accessible for man to Thee), yet, together with the words which I prized, there
came into my mind also the things about which I was careless; for I could not
separate them. And whilst I opened my heart to admit "how skilfully he
spake," there also entered with it, but gradually, "and how truly
he spake !" For first, these things also had begun to appear to me to
be defensible; and the Catholic faith, for which I had fancied nothing could
be said against the attacks of the Manichaeans, I now conceived might be maintained
without presumption; especially after I had heard one or two parts of the Old
Testament explained, and often allegorically--which when I accepted literally,
I was "killed" spiritually.s Many places, then, of those books having
been ex-pounded to me, I now blamed my despair in having believed that no reply
could be made to those who hated and derided4 the Law and the Prophets. Yet
I did not then see that for that reason the Catholic way was to be held because
it had its learned advocates, who could at length, and not irrationally, answer
objections; nor that what I held ought therefore to be condemned because both
sides were equally defensible. For that way did not appear to me to be vanquished;
nor yet did it seem to me to be victorious.
25. Hereupon did I earnestly bend my mind to see if in any way I could possibly
prove the Manichaeans guilty of falsehood. Could I have realized a spiritual
substance, all their strongholds would have been beaten down, and cast utterly
out of my mind; but I could not. But vet, concerning the body of this world,
and the whole of nature, which the senses of the flesh can attain unto, I,
now more and more considering and comparing things, judged that the greater
part of the philosophers held much the more probable opinions. So, then, after
the manner of the Academics (as they are supposed),5 doubting of everything
and fluctuating between all, I decided that the Manichaeans were to be abandoned;
judging that, even while in that period of doubt, I could not remain in a sect
to which I preferred some of the philosophers; to which philosophers, however,
because they were without the saving name of Christ, I utterly refused to commit
the cure of my fainting soul. I resolved, therefore, to be a catechumen6 in
the Catholic Church, which my i parents had commended to me, until something
settled should manifest itself to me whither I might steer my course.7
Back to Volume 10 Index