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 XII
CHAPTER I-THE DISCOVERY OF TRUTH IS DIFFICULT, BUT GOD HAS PROMISED THAT HE
WHO SEEKS SHALL FIND.
My heart, O Lord, touched with the words of Thy Holy Scripture, is much busied,
amid this poverty of my life. And therefore most times, is the poverty of human
understanding copious in words, because enquiring hath more to say than discovering,
and demanding is longer than obtaining, and our hand that knocks, hath more
work to do, than our hand that receives. We hold the promise, who shall make
it null? If God be for us, who can be against us? Ask, and ye shall have; seek,
and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you. For every one that
asketh, receiveth; and he that seeketh, findeth; and to him that knocketh,
shall it be opened. These be Thine own promises: and who need fear to be deceived,
when the Truth promiseth?
CHAPTER II-OF THE DOUBLE HEAVEN,-THE VISIBLE, AND THE HEAVEN OF HEAVENS.
The lowliness of my tongue confesseth unto Thy Highness, that Thou madest
heaven and earth; this heaven which I see, and this earth that I tread upon,
whence is this earth that I bear about me; Thou madest it. But where is that
heaven of heavens, O Lord, which we hear of in the words of the Psalm. The
heaven of heavens are the Lord's; but the earth hath He given to the children
of men? Where is that heaven which we see not, to which all this which we see
is earth? For this corporeal whole, not being wholly every where, hath in such
wise received its portion of beauty in these lower parts, whereof the lowest
is this our earth; but to that heaven of heavens, even the heaven of our earth,
is but earth: yea both these great bodies, may not absurdly be called earth,
to that unknown heaven, which is the Lord's, not the sons' of men.
CHAPTER III-OF THE DARKNESS UPON THE DEEP, AND OF THE INVISIBLE AND FORMLESS
EARTH.
And now this earth was invisible and without form, and there was I know not
what depth of abyss, upon which there was no light, because it had no shape.
Therefore didst Thou command it to be written, that darkness was upon the face
of the deep; what else than the absence of light? For had there been light,
where should it have been but by being over all, aloft, and enlightening? Where
then light was not, what was the presence of darkness, but the absence of light?
Darkness therefore was upon it, because light was not upon it; as where sound
is not, there is silence. And what is it to have silence there, but to have
no sound there? Hast not Thou, O Lord, taught his soul, which confesseth unto
Thee? Hast not Thou taught me, Lord, that before Thou formedst and diversifiedst
this formless matter, there was nothing, neither colour, nor figure, nor body,
nor spirit? and yet not altogether nothing; for there was a certain formlessness,
without any beauty.
CHAPTER IV-FROM THE FORMLESSNESS OF MATTER, THE BEAUTIFUL WORLD HAS ARISEN.
How then should it be called, that it might be in some measure conveyed to
those of duller mind, but by some ordinary word? And what, among all parts
of the world can be found nearer to an absolute formlessness, than earth and
deep? For, occupying the lowest stage, they are less beautiful than the other
higher parts are, transparent all and shining. Wherefore then may I not conceive
the formlessness of matter (which Thou hadst created without beauty, whereof
to make this beautiful world) to be suitably intimated unto men, by the name
of earth invisible and without form.
CHAPTER V-WHAT MAY HAVE BEEN THE FORM OF MATTER.
So that
when thought seeketh what the sense may conceive under this, and saith to
itself, "It is no intellectual form, as life, or justice; because it
is the matter of bodies; nor object of sense, because being invisible, and
without form, there was in it no object of sight or sense";- while man's
thought thus saith to itself, it may endeavour either to know it, by being
ignorant of it; or to be ignorant, by knowing it.
CHAPTER VI-HE CONFESSES THAT AT ONE TIME HE HIMSELF THOUGHT ERRONEOUSLY OF
MATTER.
But I,
Lord, if I would, by my tongue and my pen, confess unto Thee the whole, whatever
Thyself hath
taught
me of that matter, -the name whereof hearing before,
and not understanding, when they who understood it not, told me of it, so I
conceived of it as having innumerable forms and diverse, and therefore did
not conceive it at all, my mind tossed up and down foul and horrible "forms" out
of all order, but yet "forms" and I called it without form not that
it wanted all form, but because it had such as my mind would, if presented
to it, turn from, as unwonted and jarring, and human frailness would be troubled
at. And still that which I conceived, was without form, not as being deprived
of all form, but in comparison of more beautiful forms; and true reason did
persuade me, that I must utterly uncase it of all remnants of form whatsoever,
if I would conceive matter absolutely without form; and I could not; for sooner
could I imagine that not to be at all, which should be deprived of all form,
than conceive a thing betwixt form and nothing, neither formed, nor nothing,
a formless almost nothing. So my mind gave over to question thereupon with
my spirit, it being filled with the images of formed bodies, and changing and
varying them, as it willed; and I bent myself to the bodies themselves, and
looked more deeply into their changeableness, by which they cease to be what
they have been, and begin to be what they were not; and this same shifting
from form to form, I suspected to be through a certain formless state, not
through a mere nothing; yet this I longed to know, not to suspect only.-If
then my voice and pen would confess unto Thee the whole, whatsoever knots Thou
didst open for me in this question, what reader would hold out to take in the
whole? Nor shall my heart for all this cease to give Thee honour, and a song
of praise, for those things which it is not able to express. For the changeableness
of changeable things, is itself capable of all those forms, into which these
changeable things are changed. And this changeableness, what is it? Is it soul?
Is it body? Is it that which constituteth soul or body? Might one say, "a
nothing something", an "is, is not," I would say, this were
it: and yet in some way was it even then, as being capable of receiving these
visible and compound figures.
CHAPTER VII-OUT OF NOTHING GOD MADE HEAVEN AND EARTH.
But whence had it this degree of being, but from Thee, from Whom are all things,
so far forth as they are? But so much the further from Thee, as the unliker
Thee; for it is not farness of place. Thou therefore, Lord, Who art not one
in one place, and otherwise in another, but the Self-same, and the Self-same,
and the Self-same, Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God Almighty, didst in the Beginning,
which is of Thee, in Thy Wisdom, which was born of Thine own Substance, create
something, and that out of nothing. For Thou createdst heaven and earth; not
out of Thyself, for so should they have been equal to Thine Only Begotten Son,
and thereby to Thee also; whereas no way were it right that aught should be
equal to Thee, which was not of Thee. And aught else besides Thee was there
not, whereof Thou mightest create them, O God, One Trinity, and Trine Unity;
and therefore out of nothing didst Thou create heaven and earth; a great thing,
and a small thing; for Thou art Almighty and Good, to make all things good,
even the great heaven, and the petty earth. Thou wert, and nothing was there
besides, out of which Thou createdst heaven and earth; things of two sorts;
one near Thee, the other near to nothing; one to which Thou alone shouldest
be superior; the other, to which nothing should be inferior.
CHAPTER
VIII-HEAVEN AND EARTH WERE MADE "IN THE BEGINNING;" AFTERWARDS
THE WORLD, DURING SIX DAYS, FROM SHAPELESS MATTER.
But that heaven of heavens was for Thyself, O Lord; but the earth which Thou
gavest to the sons of men, to be seen and felt, was not such as we now see
and feel. For it was invisible, without form, and there was a deep, upon which
there was no light; or, darkness was above the deep, that is, more than in
the deep. Because this deep of waters, visible now, hath even in his depths,
a light proper for its nature; perceivable in whatever degree unto the fishes,
and creeping things in the bottom of it. But that whole deep was almost nothing,
because hitherto it was altogether without form; yet there was already that
which could be formed. For Thou, Lord, madest the world of a matter without
form, which out of nothing, Thou madest next to nothing, thereof to make those
great things, which we sons of men wonder at. For very wonderful is this corporeal
heaven; of which firmament between water and water, the second day, after the
creation of light, Thou saidst, Let it be made, and it was made. Which firmament
Thou calledst heaven; the heaven, that is, to this earth and sea, which Thou
madest the third day, by giving a visible figure to the formless matter, which
Thou madest before all days. For already hadst Thou made both an heaven, before
all days; but that was the heaven of this heaven; because In the beginning
Thou hadst made heaven and earth. But this same earth which Thou madest was
formless matter, because it was invisible and without form, and darkness was
upon the deep, of which invisible earth and without form, of which formlessness,
of which almost nothing, Thou mightest make all these things of which this
changeable world consists, but subsists not; whose very changeableness appears
therein, that times can be observed and numbered in it. For times are made
by the alterations of things, while the figures, the matter whereof is the
invisible earth aforesaid, are varied and turned.
CHAPTER IX-THAT THE HEAVEN OF HEAVENS WAS AN INTELLECTUAL CREATURE, BUT THAT
THE EARTH WAS INVISIBLE AND FORMLESS BEFORE THE DAYS THAT IT WAS MADE.
And therefore the Spirit, the Teacher of Thy servant, when It recounts Thee
to have In the Beginning created heaven and earth, speaks nothing of times,
nothing of days. For verily that heaven of heavens which Thou createdst in
the Beginning, is some intellectual creature, which, although no ways coeternal
unto Thee, the Trinity, yet partaketh of Thy eternity, and doth through the
sweetness of that most happy contemplation of Thyself, strongly restrain its
own changeableness; and without any fall since its first creation, cleaving
close unto Thee, is placed beyond all the rolling vicissitude of times. Yea,
neither is this very formlessness of the earth, invisible, and without form,
numbered among the days. For where no figure nor order is, there does nothing
come, or go; and where this is not, there plainly are no days, nor any vicissitude
of spaces of times.
CHAPTER X-HE BEGS OF GOD THAT HE MAY LIVE IN THE TRUE LIGHT, AND MAY BE INSTRUCTED
AS TO THE MYSTERIES OF THE SACRED BOOKS.
O let the Light, the Truth, the Light of my heart, not mine own darkness,
speak unto me. I fell off into that, and became darkened; but even thence,
even thence I loved Thee. I went astray, and remembered Thee. I heard Thy voice
behind me, calling to me to return, and scarcely heard it, through the tumultuousness
of the enemies of peace. And now, behold, I return in distress and panting
after Thy fountain. Let no man forbid me! of this will I drink, and so live.
Let me not be mine own life; from myself I lived ill, death was I to myself;
and I revive in Thee. Do Thou speak unto me, do Thou discourse unto me. I have
believed Thy Books, and their words be most full of mystery.
CHAPTER XI-WHAT MAY BE DISCOVERED TO HIM BY GOD.
Already Thou hast told me with a strong voice, O Lord, in my inner ear, that
Thou art eternal, Who only hast immortality; since Thou canst not be changed
as to figure or motion, nor is Thy will altered by times: seeing no will which
varies is immortal. This is in Thy sight clear to me, and let it be more and
more cleared to me, I beseech Thee; and in the manifestation thereof, let me
with sobriety abide under Thy wings. Thou hast told me also with a strong voice,
O Lord, in my inner ear, that Thou hast made all natures and substances, which
are not what Thyself is, and yet are; and that only is not from Thee, which
is not, and the motion of the will from Thee who art, unto that which in a
less degree is, because such motion is transgression and sin; and that no man's
sin doth either hurt Thee, or disturb the order of Thy government, first or
last. This is in Thy sight clear unto me, and let it be more and more cleared
to me, I beseech Thee: and in the manifestation thereof, let me with sobriety
abide under Thy wings.
Thou hast told me also with a strong voice, in my inner ear, that neither
is that creature coeternal unto Thyself, whose happiness Thou only art, and
which with a most persevering purity, drawing its nourishment from Thee, doth
in no place and at no time put forth its natural mutability; and, Thyself being
ever present with it, unto Whom with its whole affection it keeps itself, having
neither future to expect, nor conveying into the past what it remembereth,
is neither altered by any change, nor distracted into any times. O blessed
creature, if such there be, for cleaving unto Thy Blessedness; blest in Thee,
its eternal Inhabitant and its Enlightener! Nor do I find by what name I may
the rather call the heaven of heavens which is the Lord's, than Thine house,
which contemplateth Thy delights without any defection of going forth to another;
one pure mind, most harmoniously one, by that settled estate of peace of holy
spirits, the citizens of Thy city in heavenly places; far above those heavenly
places that we see.
By this may the soul, whose pilgrimage is made long and far away, by this
may she understand, if she now thirsts for Thee, if her tears be now become
her bread, while they daily say unto her, Where is Thy God? if she now seeks
of Thee one thing, and desireth it, that she may dwell in Thy house all the
days of her life (and what is her life, but Thou? and what Thy days, but Thy
eternity, as Thy years which fail not, because Thou art ever the same?); by
this then may the soul that is able, understand how far Thou art, above all
times, eternal; seeing Thy house which at no time went into a far country,
although it be not coeternal with Thee, yet by continually and unfailingly
cleaving unto Thee, suffers no changeableness of times. This is in Thy sight
clear unto me, and let it be more and more cleared unto me, I beseech Thee,
and in the manifestation thereof, let me with sobriety abide under Thy wings.
There is, behold, I know not what formlessness in those changes of these last
and lowest creatures; and who shall tell me (unless such a one as through the
emptiness of his own heart, wonders and tosses himself up and down amid his
own fancies?), who but such a one would tell me, that if all figure be so wasted
and consumed away, that there should only remain that formlessness, through
which the thing was changed and turned from one figure to another, that that
could exhibit the vicissitudes of times? For plainly it could not, because,
without the variety of motions, there are no times: and no variety, where there
is no figure.
CHAPTER XII-FROM THE FORMLESS EARTH GOD CREATED ANOTHER HEAVEN AND A VISIBLE
AND FORMED EARTH.
These things considered, as much as Thou givest, O my God, as much as Thou
stirrest me up to knock, and as much as Thou openest to me knocking, two things
I find that Thou hast made, not within the compass of time, neither of which
is coeternal with Thee. One, which is so formed, that without any ceasing of
contemplation, without any interval of change, though changeable, yet not changed,
it may thoroughly enjoy Thy eternity and unchangeableness; the other which
was so formless, that it had not that, which could be changed from one form
into another, whether of motion, or of repose, so as to become subject unto
time. But this Thou didst not leave thus formless, because before all days,
Thou in the Beginning didst create Heaven and Earth; the two things that I
spake of. But the Earth was invisible and without form, and darkness was upon
the deep. In which words, is the formlessness conveyed unto us (that such capacities
may hereby be drawn on by degrees, as are not able to conceive an utter privation
of all form, without yet coming to nothing), out of which another Heaven might
be created, together with a visible and well-formed earth: and the waters diversly
ordered, and whatsoever further is in the formation of the world, recorded
to have been, not without days, created; and that, as being of such nature,
that the successive changes of times may take place in them, as being subject
to appointed alterations of motions and of forms.
CHAPTER XIII-OF THE INTELLECTUAL HEAVEN AND FORMLESS EARTH, OUT OF WHICH,
ON ANOTHER DAY, THE FIRMAMENT WAS FORMED.
This then
is what I conceive, O my God, when I hear Thy Scripture saying, In the beginning
God made Heaven
and Earth: and the Earth was invisible and
without form, and darkness was upon the deep, and not mentioning what day Thou
createdst them; this is what I conceive, that because of the Heaven of heavens,
-that intellectual Heaven, whose Intelligences know all at once, not in part,
not darkly, not through a glass, but as a whole, in manifestation, face to
face; not, this thing now, and that thing anon; but (as I said) know all at
once, without any succession of times; -and because of the earth invisible
and without form, without any succession of times, which succession presents "this
thing now, that thing anon"; because where is no form, there is no distinction
of things: -it is, then, on account of these two, a primitive formed, and a
primitive formless; the one, heaven but the Heaven of heaven, the other earth
but the earth invisible and without form; because of these two do I conceive,
did Thy Scripture say without mention of days, In the Beginning God created
Heaven and Earth. For forthwith it subjoined what earth it spake of; and also,
in that the Firmament is recorded to be created the second day, and called
Heaven, it conveys to us of which Heaven He before spake, without mention of
days.
CHAPTER XIV-OF THE DEPTH OF THE SACRED SCRIPTURE, AND ITS ENEMIES.
Wondrous
depth of Thy words! whose surface, behold! is before us, inviting to little
ones; yet
are they a wondrous
depth. O my God, a wondrous depth!
It is awful to look therein; an awfulness of honour, and a trembling of love.
The enemies thereof I hate vehemently; oh that Thou wouldest slay them with
Thy two-edged sword, that they might no longer be enemies unto it: for so do
I love to have them slain unto themselves, that they may live unto Thee. But
behold others not faultfinders, but extollers of the book of Genesis; "The
Spirit of God," say they, "Who by His servant Moses wrote these things,
would not have those words thus understood; He would not have it understood,
as thou sayest, but otherwise, as we say." Unto Whom Thyself, O Thou God
all, being judge, do I thus answer.
CHAPTER XV-HE ARGUES AGAINST ADVERSARIES CONCERNING THE HEAVEN OF HEAVENS.
"Will you affirm that to be false, which with a strong voice Truth tells
me in my inner ear, concerning the Eternity of the Creator, that His substance
is no ways changed by time, nor His will separate from His substance? Wherefore
He willeth not one thing now, another anon, but once, and at once, and always,
He willeth all things that He willeth; not again and again, nor now this, now
that; nor willeth afterwards, what before He willed not, nor willeth not, what
before He willed; because such a will is and no mutable thing is eternal: but
our God is eternal. Again, what He tells me in my inner ear, the expectation
of things to come becomes sight, when they are come, and this same sight becomes
memory, when they be past. Now all thought which thus varies is mutable; and
is eternal: but our God is eternal." These things I infer, and put together,
and find that my God, the eternal God, hath not upon any new will made any
creature, nor doth His knowledge admit of any thing transitory. "What
will ye say then, O ye gainsayers? Are these things false?" "No," they
say; "What then? Is it false, that every nature already formed, or matter
capable of form, is not, but from Him Who is supremely good, because He is
supremely?" "Neither do we deny this," say they. "What
then? do you deny this, that there is a certain sublime creature, with so chaste
a love cleaving unto the true and truly eternal God, that although not coeternal
with Him, yet is it not detached from Him, nor dissolved into the variety and
vicissitude of times, but reposeth in the most true contemplation of Him only?" Because
Thou, O God, unto him that loveth Thee so much as Thou commandest, dost show
Thyself, and sufficest him; and therefore doth he not decline from Thee, nor
toward himself. This is the house of God, not of earthly mould, nor of celestial
bulk corporeal but spiritual, and partaker of Thy eternity, because without
defection for ever. For Thou hast made it fast for ever and ever, Thou hast
given it a law which it shall not pass. Nor yet is it coeternal with Thee,
O God, because not without beginning; for it was made.
For although we find no time before it, for wisdom was created before all
things; not that Wisdom which is altogether equal and coeternal unto Thee,
our God, His Father, and by Whom all things were created, and in Whom, as the
Beginning, Thou createdst heaven and earth; but that wisdom which is created,
that is, the intellectual nature, which by contemplating the light, is light.
For this, though created, is also called wisdom. But what difference there
is betwixt the Light which enlighteneth, and which is enlightened, so much
is there betwixt the Wisdom that createth, and that created; as betwixt the
Righteousness which justifieth, and the righteousness which is made by justification.
For we also are called Thy righteousness; for so saith a certain servant of
Thine, That we might be made the righteousness of God in Him. Therefore since
a certain created wisdom was created before all things, the rational and intellectual
mind of that chaste city of Thine, our mother which is above, and is free and
eternal in the heavens (in what heavens, if not in those that praise Thee,
the Heaven of heavens? Because this is also the Heaven of heavens for the Lord);
-though we find no time before it (because that which hath been created before
all things, precedeth also the creature of time), yet is the Eternity of the
Creator Himself before it, from Whom, being created, it took the beginning,
not indeed of time (for time itself was not yet), but of its creation.
Hence it is so of Thee, our God, as to be altogether other than Thou, and
not the Self-same: because though we find time neither before it, nor even
in it (it being meet ever to behold Thy face, nor is ever drawn away from it,
wherefore it is not varied by any change), yet is there in it a liability to
change, whence it would wax dark, and chill, but that by a strong affection
cleaving unto Thee, like perpetual noon, it shineth and gloweth from Thee.
O house most lightsome and delightsome! I have loved thy beauty, and the place
of the habitation of the glory of my Lord, thy builder and possessor. Let my
wayfaring sigh after thee, and I say to Him that made thee, let Him take possession
of me also in thee, seeing He hath made me likewise. I have gone astray like
a lost sheep: yet upon the shoulders of my Shepherd, thy builder, hope I to
be brought back to thee.
"What say ye to me, O ye gainsayers that I was speaking unto, who yet
believe Moses to have been the holy servant of God, and his books the oracles
of the Holy Ghost? Is not this house of God, not coeternal indeed with God,
yet after its measure, eternal in the heavens, when you seek for changes of
times in vain, because you will not find them? For that, to which it is ever
good to cleave fast to God, surpasses all extension, and all revolving periods
of time." "It is," say they. "What then of all that which
my heart loudly uttered unto my God, when inwardly it heard the voice of His
praise, what part thereof do you affirm to be false? Is it that the matter
was without form, in which because there was no form, there was no order? But
where no order was, there could be no vicissitude of times: and yet this almost
nothing,' inasmuch as it was not altogether nothing, was from Him certainly,
from Whom is whatsoever is, in what degree soever it is." "This also," say
they, "do we not deny."
CHAPTER XVI-HE WISHES TO HAVE NO INTERCOURSE WITH THOSE WHO DENY DIVINE TRUTH.
With these I now parley a little in Thy presence, O my God, who grant all
these things to be true, which Thy Truth whispers unto my soul. For those who
deny these things, let them bark and deafen themselves as much as they please;
I will essay to persuade them to quiet, and to open in them a way for Thy word.
But if they refuse, and repel me; I beseech, O my God, be not Thou silent to
me. Speak Thou truly in my heart; for only Thou so speakest: and I will let
them alone blowing upon the dust without, and raising it up into their own
eyes: and myself will enter my chamber, and sing there a song of loves unto
Thee; groaning with groanings unutterable, in my wayfaring, and remembering
Jerusalem, with heart lifted up towards it, Jerusalem my country, Jerusalem
my mother, and Thyself that rulest over it, the Enlightener, Father, Guardian,
Husband, the pure and strong delight, and solid joy, and all good things unspeakable,
yea all at once, because the One Sovereign and true Good. Nor will I be turned
away, until Thou gather all that I am, from this dispersed and disordered estate,
into the peace of that our most dear mother, where the first-fruits of my spirit
be already (whence I am ascertained of these things), and Thou conform and
confirm it for ever, O my God, my Mercy. But those who do not affirm all these
truths to be false, who honour Thy holy Scripture, set forth by holy Moses,
placing it, as we, on the summit of authority to be followed, and do yet contradict
me in some thing, I answer thus; By Thyself judge, O our God, between my Confessions
and these men's contradictions.
CHAPTER XVII-HE MENTIONS FIVE EXPLANATIONS OF THE WORDS OF GENESIS I.
For they
say, "Though these things be true, yet did not Moses intend
those two, when, by revelation of the Spirit, he said, In the beginning God
created heaven and earth. He did not under the name of heaven, signify that
spiritual or intellectual creature which always beholds the face of God; nor
under the name of earth, that formless matter." "What then?" "That
man of God," say they, "meant as we say, this declared he by those
words." "What?" "By the name of heaven and earth would
he first signify," say they, "universally and compendiously, all
this visible world; so as afterwards by the enumeration of the several days,
to arrange in detail, and, as it were, piece by piece, all those things, which
it pleased the Holy Ghost thus to enounce. For such were that rude and carnal
people to which he spake, that he thought them fit to be entrusted with the
knowledge of such works of God only as were visible." They agree, however,
that under the words earth invisible and without form, and that darksome deep
(out of which it is subsequently shown, that all these visible things which
we all know, were made and arranged during those "days") may, not
incongruously, be understood of this formless first matter.
What now
if another should say that "this same formlessness and confusedness
of matter, was for this reason first conveyed under the name of heaven and
earth, because out of it was this visible world with all those natures which
most manifestly appear in it, which is ofttimes called by the name of heaven
and earth, created and perfected?" What again if another say that "invisible
and visible nature is not indeed inappropriately called heaven and earth; and
so, that the universal creation, which God made in His Wisdom, that is, in
the Beginning, was comprehended under those two words? Notwithstanding, since
all things be made not of the substance of God, but out of nothing (because
they are not the same that God is, and there is a mutable nature in them all,
whether they abide, as doth the eternal house of God, or be changed, as the
soul and body of man are): therefore the common matter of all things visible
and invisible (as yet unformed though capable of form), out of which was to
be created both heaven and earth (i. the invisible and visible creature when
formed), was entitled by the same names given to the earth invisible and without
form and the darkness upon the deep, but with this distinction, that by the
earth invisible and without form is understood corporeal matter, antecedent
to its being qualified by any form; and by the darkness upon the deep, spiritual
matter, before it underwent any restraint of its unlimited fluidness, or received
any light from Wisdom?"
It yet
remains for a man to say, if he will, that "the already perfected
and formed natures, visible and invisible, are not signified under the name
of heaven and earth, when we read, In the beginning God made heaven and earth,
but that the yet unformed commencement of things, the stuff apt to receive
form and making, was called by these names, because therein were confusedly
contained, not as yet distinguished by their qualities and forms, all those
things which being now digested into order, are called Heaven and Earth, the
one being the spiritual, the other the corporeal, creation."
CHAPTER XVIII-WHAT ERROR IS HARMLESS IN SACRED SCRIPTURE.
All which things being heard and well considered, I will not strive about
words: for that is profitable to nothing, but the subversion of the hearers.
But the law is good to edify, if a man use it lawfully: for that the end of
it is charity, out of a pure heart and good conscience, and faith unfeigned.
And well did our Master know, upon which two commandments He hung all the Law
and the Prophets. And what doth it prejudice me, O my God, Thou light of my
eyes in secret, zealously confessing these things, since divers things may
be understood under these words which yet are all true, -what, I say, doth
it prejudice me, if I think otherwise than another thinketh the writer thought?
All we readers verily strive to trace out and to understand his meaning whom
we read; and seeing we believe him to speak truly, we dare not imagine him
to have said any thing, which ourselves either know or think to be false. While
every man endeavours then to understand in the Holy Scriptures, the same as
the writer understood, what hurt is it, if a man understand what Thou, the
light of all true-speaking minds, dost show him to be true, although he whom
he reads, understood not this, seeing he also understood a Truth, though not
this truth?
CHAPTER XIX-HE ENUMERATES THE THINGS CONCERNING WHICH ALL AGREE.
For true it is, O Lord, that Thou madest heaven and earth; and it is true
too, that the Beginning is Thy Wisdom, in Which Thou createst all: and true
again, that this visible world hath for its greater part the heaven and the
earth, which briefly comprise all made and created natures. And true too, that
whatsoever is mutable, gives us to understand a certain want of form, whereby
it receiveth a form, or is changed, or turned. It is true, that that is subject
to no times, which so cleaveth to the unchangeable Form, as though subject
to change, never to be changed. It is true, that that formlessness which is
almost nothing, cannot be subject to the alteration of times. It is true, that
that whereof a thing is made, may by a certain mode of speech, be called by
the name of the thing made of it; whence that formlessness, whereof heaven
and earth were made, might be called heaven and earth. It is true, that of
things having form, there is not any nearer to having no form, than the earth
and the deep. It is true, that not only every created and formed thing, but
whatsoever is capable of being created and formed, Thou madest, of Whom are
all things. It is true, that whatsoever is formed out of that which had no
form, was unformed before it was formed.
CHAPTER
XX-OF THE WORDS, "IN THE BEGINNING," VARIOUSLY
UNDERSTOOD.
Out of
these truths, of which they doubt not whose inward eye Thou hast enabled
to see such things,
and who
unshakenly believe Thy servant Moses to have spoken
in the Spirit of truth; -of all these then, he taketh one, who saith, In the
Beginning God made the heaven and the earth; that is, "in His Word coeternal
with Himself, God made the intelligible and the sensible, or the spiritual
and the corporeal creature." He another, that saith, In the Beginning
God made heaven and earth; that is, "in His Word coeternal with Himself,
did God make the universal bulk of this corporeal world, together with all
those apparent and known creatures, which it containeth." He another,
that saith, In the Beginning God made heaven and earth; that is, "in His
Word coeternal with Himself, did God make the formless matter of creatures
spiritual and corporeal." He another, that saith, In the Beginning God
created heaven and earth; that is, "in His Word coeternal with Himself,
did God create the formless matter of the creature corporeal, wherein heaven
and earth lay as yet confused, which, being now distinguished and formed, we
at this day see in the bulk of this world." He another, who saith, In
the Beginning God made heaven and earth; that is, "in the very beginning
of creating and working, did God make that formless matter, confusedly containing
in itself both heaven and earth; out of which, being formed, do they now stand
out, and are apparent, with all that is in them."
CHAPTER
XXI-OF THE EXPLANATION OF THE WORDS, "THE EARTH WAS INVISIBLE."
And with
regard to the understanding of the words following, out of all those truths,
he chooses
one to himself,
who saith, But the earth was invisible,
and without form, and darkness was upon the deep; that is, "that corporeal
thing that God made, was as yet a formless matter of corporeal things, without
order, without light. " Another he who says, The earth was invisible and
without form, and darkness was upon the deep; that is, "this all, which
is called heaven and earth, was still a formless and darksome matter, of which
the corporeal heaven and the corporeal earth were to be made, with all things
in them, which are known to our corporeal senses." Another he who says,
The earth was invisible and without form, and darkness was upon the deep; that
is, "this all, which is called heaven and earth, was still a formless
and a darksome matter; out of which was to be made, both that intelligible
heaven, otherwhere called the Heaven of heavens, and the earth, that is, the
whole corporeal nature, under which name is comprised this corporeal heaven
also; in a word, out of which every visible and invisible creature was to be
created." Another he who says, The earth was invisible and without form,
and darkness was upon the deep, "the Scripture did not call that formlessness
by the name of heaven and earth; but that formlessness, saith he, already was,
which he called the earth invisible without form, and darkness upon the deep;
of which he had before said, that God had made heaven and earth, namely, the
spiritual and corporeal creature." Another he who says, The earth was
invisible and without form, and darkness was upon the deep; that is, "there
already was a certain formless matter, of which the Scripture said before,
that God made heaven and earth; namely, the whole corporeal bulk of the world,
divided into two great parts, upper and lower, with all the common and known
creatures in them."
CHAPTER XXII-HE DISCUSSES WHETHER MATTER WAS FROM ETERNITY, OR WAS MADE BY
GOD.
For should
any attempt to dispute against these two last opinions, thus, "If
you will not allow, that this formlessness of matter seems to be called by
the name of heaven and earth; Ergo, there was something which God had not made,
out of which to make heaven and earth; for neither hath Scripture told us,
that God made this matter, unless we understand it to be signified by the name
of heaven and earth, or of earth alone, when it is said, In the Beginning God
made the heaven and earth; that so in what follows, and the earth was invisible
and without form (although it pleased Him so to call the formless matter),
we are to understand no other matter, but that which God made, whereof is written
above, God made heaven and earth." The maintainers of either of those
two latter opinions will, upon hearing this, return for answer, "we do
not deny this formless matter to be indeed created by God, that God of Whom
are all things, very good; for as we affirm that to be a greater good, which
is created and formed, so we confess that to be a lesser good which is made
capable of creation and form, yet still good. We say however that Scripture
hath not set down, that God made this formlessness, as also it hath not many
others; as the Cherubim, and Seraphim, and those which the Apostle distinctly
speaks of, Thrones, Dominions, Principalities, Powers. All which that God made,
is most apparent. Or if in that which is said, He made heaven and earth, all
things be comprehended, what shall we say of the waters, upon which the Spirit
of God moved? For if they be comprised in this word earth; how then can formless
matter be meant in that name of earth, when we see the waters so beautiful?
Or if it be so taken; why then is it written, that out of the same formlessness,
the firmament was made, and called heaven; and that the waters were made, is
not written? For the waters remain not formless and invisible, seeing we behold
them flowing in so comely a manner. But if they then received that beauty,
when God said, Let the waters under the firmament be gathered together, that
so the gathering together be itself the forming of them; what will be said
as to those waters above the firmament? Seeing neither if formless would they
have been worthy of so honourable a seat, nor is it written, by what word they
were formed. If then Genesis is silent as to God's making of any thing, which
yet that God did make neither sound faith nor well-grounded understanding doubteth,
nor again will any sober teaching dare to affirm these waters to be coeternal
with God, on the ground that we find them to be mentioned in the hook of Genesis,
but when they were created, we do not find; why (seeing truth teaches us) should
we not understand that formless matter (which this Scripture calls the earth
invisible and without form, and darksome deep) to have been created of God
out of nothing, and therefore not to be coeternal to Him; notwithstanding this
history hath omitted to show when it was created?"
CHAPTER XXIII-TWO KINDS OF DISAGREEMENTS IN THE BOOKS TO BE EXPLAINED.
These things then being heard and perceived, according to the weakness of
my capacity (which I confess unto Thee, O Lord, that knowest it), two sorts
of disagreements I see may arise, when a thing is in words related by true
reporters; one, concerning the truth of the things, the other, concerning the
meaning of the relater. For we enquire one way about the making of the creature,
what is true; another way, what Moses, that excellent minister of Thy Faith,
would have his reader and hearer understand by those words. For the first sort,
away with all those who imagine themselves to know as a truth, what is false;
and for this other, away with all them too, which imagine Moses to have written
things that be false. But let me be united in Thee, O Lord, with those and
delight myself in Thee, with them that feed on Thy truth, in the largeness
of charity, and let us approach together unto the words of Thy book, and seek
in them for Thy meaning, through the meaning of Thy servant, by whose pen Thou
hast dispensed them.
CHAPTER XXIV-OUT OF THE MANY TRUE THINGS, IT IS NOT ASSERTED CONFIDENTLY THAT
MOSES UNDERSTOOD THIS OR THAT.
But which
of us shall, among those so many truths, which occur to enquirers in those
words, as they
are differently
understood, so discover that one meaning,
as to affirm, "this Moses thought," and "this would he have
understood in that history"; with the same confidence as he would, "this
is true," whether Moses thought this or that? For behold, O my God, I
Thy servant, who have in this book vowed a sacrifice of confession unto Thee,
and pray, that by Thy mercy I may pay my vows unto Thee, can I, with the same
confidence wherewith I affirm, that in Thy incommutable world Thou createdst
all things visible and invisible, affirm also, that Moses meant no other than
this, when he wrote, In the Beginning God made heaven and earth? No. Because
I see not in his mind, that he thought of this when he wrote these things,
as I do see it in Thy truth to be certain. For he might have his thoughts upon
God's commencement of creating, when he said In the beginning; and by heaven
and earth, in this place he might intend no formed and perfected nature whether
spiritual or corporeal, but both of them inchoate and as yet formless. For
I perceive, that whichsoever of the two had been said, it might have been truly
said; but which of the two he thought of in these words, I do not so perceive.
Although, whether it were either of these, or any sense beside (that I have
not here mentioned), which this so great man saw in his mind, when he uttered
these words, I doubt not but that he saw it truly, and expressed it aptly.
CHAPTER XXV-IT BEHOVES INTERPRETERS, WHEN DISAGREEING CONCERNING OBSCURE PLACES,
TO REGARD GOD THE AUTHOR OF TRUTH, AND THE RULE OF CHARITY.
Let no
man harass me then, by saying, Moses thought not as you say, but as I say:
for if he should ask
me, "How know you that Moses thought that
which you infer out of his words?" I ought to take it in good part, and
would answer perchance as I have above, or something more at large, if he were
unyielding. But when he saith, "Moses meant not what you say, but what
I say," yet denieth not that what each of us say, may both be true, O
my God, life of the poor, in Whose bosom is no contradiction, pour down a softening
dew into my heart, that I may patiently bear with such as say this to me, not
because they have a divine Spirit, and have seen in the heart of Thy servant
what they speak, but because they be proud; not knowing Moses' opinion, but
loving their own, not because it is truth, but because it is theirs. Otherwise
they would equally love another true opinion, as I love what they say, when
they say true: not because it is theirs, but because it is true; and on that
very ground not theirs because it is true. But if they therefore love it, because
it is true, then is it both theirs, and mine; as being in common to all lovers
of truth. But whereas they contend that Moses did not mean what I say, but
what they say, this I like not, love not: for though it were so, yet that their
rashness belongs not to knowledge, but to overboldness, and not insight but
vanity was its parent. And therefore, O Lord, are Thy judgements terrible;
seeing Thy truth is neither mine, nor his, nor another's; but belonging to
us all, whom Thou callest publicly to partake of it, warning us terribly, not
to account it private to ourselves, lest we he deprived of it. For whosoever
challenges that as proper to himself, which Thou propoundest to all to enjoy,
and would have that his own which belongs to all, is driven from what is in
common to his own; that is, from truth, to a lie. For he that speaketh a lie,
speaketh it of his own.
Hearken,
O God, Thou best judge; Truth Itself, hearken to what I shall say to this
gainsayer, hearken,
for
before Thee do I speak, and before my brethren,
who employ Thy law lawfully, to the end of charity: hearken and behold, if
it please Thee, what I shall say to him. For this brotherly and peaceful word
do I return unto Him: "If we both see that to be true that Thou sayest,
and both see that to be true that I say, where, I pray Thee, do we see it?
Neither I in thee, nor thou in me; but both in the unchangeable Truth itself,
which is above our souls." Seeing then we strive not about the very light
of the Lord God, why strive we about the thoughts of our neighbour which we
cannot so see, as the unchangeable Truth is seen: for that, if Moses himself
had appeared to us and said, "This I meant"; neither so should we
see it, but should believe it. Let us not then be puffed up for one against
another, above that which is written: let us love the Lord our God with all
our heart, with all our soul, and with all our mind: and our neighbour as ourself.
With a view to which two precepts of charity, unless we believe that Moses
meant, whatsoever in those books he did mean, we shall make God a liar, imagining
otherwise of our fellow servant's mind, than he hath taught us. Behold now,
how foolish it is, in such abundance of most true meanings, as may be extracted
out of those words, rashly to affirm, which of them Moses principally meant;
and with pernicious contentions to offend charity itself, for whose sake he
spake every thing, whose words we go about to expound.
CHAPTER XXVI-WHAT HE MIGHT HAVE ASKED OF GOD HAD HE BEEN ENJOINED TO WRITE
THE BOOK OF GENESIS.
And yet I, O my God, Thou lifter up of my humility, and rest of my labour,
Who hearest my confessions, and forgivest my sins: seeing Thou commandest me
to love my neighbour as myself, I cannot believe that Thou gavest a less gift
unto Moses Thy faithful servant, than I would wish or desire Thee to have given
me, had I been born in the time he was, and hadst Thou set me in that office,
that by the service of my heart and tongue those books might be dispensed,
which for so long after were to profit all nations, and through the whole world
from such an eminence of authority, were to surmount all sayings of false and
proud teachings. I should have desired verily, had I then been Moses (for we
all come from the same lump, and what is man, saving that Thou art mindful
of him?), I would then, had I been then what he was, and been enjoined by Thee
to write the book of Genesis, have desired such a power of expression and such
a style to be given me, that neither they who cannot yet understand how God
created, might reject the sayings, as beyond their capacity; and they who had
attained thereto, might find what true opinion soever they had by thought arrived
at, not passed over in those few words of that Thy servant: and should another
man by the light of truth have discovered another, neither should that fail
of being discoverable in those same words.
CHAPTER XXVII-THE STYLE OF SPEAKING IN THE BOOK OF GENESIS IS SIMPLE AND CLEAR.
For as a fountain within a narrow compass, is more plentiful, and supplies
a tide for more streams over larger spaces, than any one of those streams,
which, after a wide interval, is derived from the same fountain; so the relation
of that dispenser of Thine, which was to benefit many who were to discourse
thereon, does out of a narrow scantling of language, overflow into streams
of clearest truth, whence every man may draw out for himself such truth as
he can upon these subjects, one, one truth, another, another, by larger circumlocutions
of discourse. For some, when they read, or hear these words, conceive that
God like a man or some mass endued with unbounded power, by some new and sudden
resolution, did, exterior to itself, as it were at a certain distance, create
heaven and earth, two great bodies above and below, wherein all things were
to be contained. And when they hear, God said, Let it be made, and it was made;
they conceive of words begun and ended, sounding in time, and passing away;
after whose departure, that came into being, which was commanded so to do;
and whatever of the like sort, men's acquaintance with the material world would
suggest. In whom, being yet little ones and carnal, while their weakness is
by this humble kind of speech, carried on, as in a mother's bosom, their faith
is wholesomely built up, whereby they hold assured, that God made all natures,
which in admirable variety their eye beholdeth around. Which words, if any
despising, as too simple, with a proud weakness, shall stretch himself beyond
the guardian nest; he will, alas, fall miserably. Have pity, O Lord God, lest
they who go by the way trample on the unfledged bird, and send Thine angel
to replace it into the nest, that it may live, till it can fly.
CHAPTER
XXVIII-THE WORDS, "IN THE BEGINNING," AND, "THE HEAVEN
AND THE EARTH," ARE DIFFERENTLY UNDERSTOOD.
But others, unto whom these words are no longer a nest, but deep shady fruit-bowers,
see the fruits concealed therein, fly joyously around, and with cheerful notes
seek out, and pluck them. For reading or hearing these words, they see that
all times past and to come, are surpassed by Thy eternal and stable abiding;
and yet that there is no creature formed in time, not of Thy making. Whose
will, because it is the same that Thou art, Thou madest all things, not by
any change of will, nor by a will, which before was not, and that these things
were not out of Thyself, in Thine own likeness, which is the form of all things;
but out of nothing, a formless unlikeness, which should be formed by Thy likeness
(recurring to Thy Unity, according to their appointed capacity, so far as is
given to each thing in his kind), and might all be made very good; whether
they abide around Thee, or being in gradation removed in time and place, made
or undergo the beautiful variations of the Universe. These things they see,
and rejoice, in the little degree they here may, in the light of Thy truth.
Another
bends his mind on that which is said, In the Beginning God made heaven and
earth; and beholdeth
therein Wisdom, the Beginning because It also speaketh
unto us. Another likewise bends his mind on the same words, and by Beginning
understands the commencement of things created; In the beginning He made, as
if it were said, He at first made. And among them that understand In the Beginning
to mean, "In Thy Wisdom Thou createdst heaven and earth," one believes
the matter out of which the heaven and earth were to be created, to be there
called heaven and earth; another, natures already formed and distinguished;
another, one formed nature, and that a spiritual, under the name Heaven, the
other formless, a corporeal matter, under the name Earth. They again who by
the names heaven and earth, understand matter as yet formless, out of which
heaven and earth were to be formed, neither do they understand it in one way;
but the one, that matter out of which both the intelligible and the sensible
creature were to be perfected; another, that only, out of which this sensible
corporeal mass was to he made, containing in its vast bosom these visible and
ordinary natures. Neither do they, who believe the creatures already ordered
and arranged, to be in this place called heaven and earth, understand the same;
but the one, both the invisible and visible, the other, the visible only, in
which we behold this lightsome heaven, and darksome earth, with the things
in them contained.
CHAPTER
XXIX-CONCERNING THE OPINION OF THOSE WHO EXPLAIN IT "AT FIRST
HE MADE."
But he
that no otherwise understands In the Beginning He made, than if it were said,
At first He made,
can only
truly understand heaven and earth of
the matter of heaven and earth, that is, of the universal intelligible and
corporeal creation. For if he would understand thereby the universe, as already
formed, it may be rightly demanded of him, "If God made this first, what
made He afterwards?" and after the universe, he will find nothing; whereupon
must he against his will hear another question; "How did God make this
first, if nothing after?" But when he says, God made matter first formless,
then formed, there is no absurdity, if he be but qualified to discern, what
precedes by eternity, what by time, what by choice, and what in original. By
eternity, as God is before all things; by time, as the flower before the fruit;
by choice, as the fruit before the flower; by original, as the sound before
the tune. Of these four, the first and last mentioned, are with extreme difficulty
understood, the two middle, easily. For a rare and too lofty a vision is it,
to behold Thy Eternity, O Lord, unchangeably making things changeable; and
thereby before them. And who, again, is of so sharpsighted understanding, as
to be able without great pains to discern, how the sound is therefore before
the tune; because a tune is a formed sound; and a thing not formed, may exist;
whereas that which existeth not, cannot be formed. Thus is the matter before
the thing made; not because it maketh it, seeing itself is rather made; nor
is it before by interval of time; for we do not first in time utter formless
sounds without singing, and subsequently adapt or fashion them into the form
of a chant, as wood or silver, whereof a chest or vessel is fashioned. For
such materials do by time also precede the forms of the things made of them,
but in singing it is not so; for when it is sung, its sound is heard; for there
is not first a formless sound, which is afterwards formed into a chant. For
each sound, so soon as made, passeth away, nor canst thou find ought to recall
and by art to compose. So then the chant is concentrated in its sound, which
sound of his is his matter. And this indeed is formed, that it may be a tune;
and therefore (as I said) the matter of the sound is before the form of the
tune; not before, through any power it hath to make it a tune; for a sound
is no way the workmaster of the tune; but is something corporeal, subjected
to the soul which singeth, whereof to make a tune. Nor is it first in time;
for it is given forth together with the tune; nor first in choice, for a sound
is not better than a tune, a tune being not only a sound, but a beautiful sound.
But it is first in original, because a tune receives not form to become a sound,
but a sound receives a form to become a tune. By this example, let him that
is able, understand how the matter of things was first made, and called heaven
and earth, because heaven and earth were made out of it. Yet was it not made
first in time; because the forms of things give rise to time; but that was
without form, but now is, in time, an object of sense together with its form.
And yet nothing can be related of that matter, but as though prior in time,
whereas in value it is last (because things formed are superior to things without
form) and is preceded by the Eternity of the Creator: that so there might be
out of nothing, whereof somewhat might be created.
CHAPTER XXX-IN THE GREAT DIVERSITY OF OPINIONS, IT BECOMES ALL TO UNITE CHARITY
AND DIVINE TRUTH.
In this
diversity of the true opinions, let Truth herself produce concord. And our
God have mercy
upon us, that we
may use the law lawfully, the end of
the commandment, pure charity. By this if man demands of me, "which of
these was the meaning of Thy servant Moses"; this were not the language
of my Confessions, should I not confess unto Thee, "I know not";
and yet I know that those senses are true, those carnal ones excepted, of which
I have spoken what seemed necessary. And even those hopeful little ones who
so think, have this benefit, that the words of Thy Book affright them not,
delivering high things lowlily, and with few words a copious meaning. And all
we who, I confess, see and express the truth delivered in those words, let
us love one another, and jointly love Thee our God, the fountain of truth,
if we are athirst for it, and not for vanities; yea, let us so honour this
Thy servant, the dispenser of this Scripture, full of Thy Spirit, as to believe
that, when by Thy revelation he wrote these things, he intended that, which
among them chiefly excels both for light of truth, and fruitfulness of profit.
CHAPTER XXXI-MOSES IS SUPPOSED TO HAVE PERCEIVED WHATEVER OF TRUTH CAN BE
DISCOVERED IN HIS WORDS.
So when
one says, "Moses meant as I do"; and another, "Nay,
but as I do," I suppose that I speak more reverently, "Why not rather
as both, if both be true?" And if there be a third, or a fourth, yea if
any other seeth any other truth in those words, why may not he be believed
to have seen all these, through whom the One God hath tempered the holy Scriptures
to the senses of many, who should see therein things true but divers? For I
certainly (and fearlessly I speak it from my heart), that were I to indite
any thing to have supreme authority, I should prefer so to write, that whatever
truth any could apprehend on those matters, might he conveyed in my words,
rather than set down my own meaning so clearly as to exclude the rest, which
not being false, could not offend me. I will not therefore, O my God, be so
rash, as not to believe, that Thou vouchsafedst as much to that great man.
He without doubt, when he wrote those words, perceived and thought on what
truth soever we have been able to find, yea and whatsoever we have not been
able, nor yet are, but which may be found in them.
CHAPTER XXXII-FIRST, THE SENSE OF THE WRITER IS TO BE DISCOVERED, THEN THAT
IS TO BE BROUGHT OUT WHICH DIVINE TRUTH INTENDED.
Lastly, O Lord, who art God and not flesh and blood, if man did see less,
could any thing be concealed from Thy good Spirit (who shall lead me into the
land of uprightness), which Thou Thyself by those words wert about to reveal
to readers in times to come, though he through whom they were spoken, perhaps
among many true meanings, thought on some one? which if so it be, let that
which he thought on be of all the highest. But to us, O Lord, do Thou, either
reveal that same, or any other true one which Thou pleasest; that so, whether
Thou discoverest the same to us, as to that Thy servant, or some other by occasion
of those words, yet Thou mayest feed us, not error deceive us. Behold, O Lord
my God, how much we have written upon a few words, how much I beseech Thee!
What strength of ours, yea what ages would suffice for all Thy books in this
manner? Permit me then in these more briefly to confess unto Thee, and to choose
some one true, certain, and good sense that Thou shalt inspire me, although
many should occur, where many may occur; this being the law my confession,
that if I should say that which Thy minister intended, that is right and best;
for this should I endeavour, which if I should not attain, yet I should say
that, which Thy Truth willed by his words to tell me, which revealed also unto
him, what It willed.
Back to Volume 10 Index