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Front Page Titles (by Subject) LETTER CXLIII. ( 412.) - A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, Vol. 1 (The Confessions and Letters of St. Augustine)
LETTER CXLIII. ( 412.) - Philip Schaff, A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, Vol. 1 (The Confessions and Letters of St. Augustine) [1886]Edition used:A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, ed. Philip Schaff, LL.D. (Buffalo: The Christian Literature Co., 1886). Vol. 1 The Confessions and Letters of St. Augustin, with a Sketch of his Life and Work.
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- Preface.
- Prolegomena. St. Augustin’s Life and Work.
- Chapter I.—: Literature.
- Chapter II.—: A Sketch of the Life of St. Augustin.
- Chapter III.—: Estimate of St. Augustin.
- Chapter IV.—: The Writings of St. Augustin.
- Chapter V.—: The Influence of St. Augustin Upon Posterity, and His Relation to Catholicism and Protestantism.
- Chief Events In the Life of St. Augustin, (as Given, Nearly, In the Benedictine Edition).
- The Confessions of St. Augustin.
- Translator’s Preface.
- The Opinion of St. Augustin Concerning His Confessions, As Embodied In His Retractations, II. 6
- The Thirteen Books of the Confessions of St. Aur. Augustin, Bishop of Hippo.
- Book I.: Commencing With the Invocation of God, Augustin Relates In Detail the Beginning of His Life, His Infancy and Boyhood, Up to His Fifteenth Year; At Which Age He Acknowledges That He Was More Inclined to All Youthful Pleasures and Vices Than to the
- Chap. I.—: He Proclaims the Greatness of God, Whom He Desires to Seek and Invoke, Being Awakened By Him.
- Chap. II.—: That the God Whom We Invoke Is In Us, and We In Him.
- Chap. III.—: Everywhere God Wholly Filleth All Things, But Neither Heaven Nor Earth Containeth Him.
- Chap. IV.—: The Majesty of God Is Supreme, and His Virtues Inexplicable.
- Chap. V.—: He Seeks Rest In God, and Pardon of His Sins.
- Chap. VI.—: He Describes His Infancy, and Lauds the Protection and Eternal Providence of God.
- Chap. VII.—: He Shows By Example That Even Infancy Is Prone to Sin.
- Chap. VIII.—: That When a Boy He Learned to Speak, Not By Any Set Method, But From the Acts and Words of His Parents.
- Chap. IX.—: Concerning the Hatred of Learning, the Love of Play, and the Fear of Being Whipped Noticeable In Boys: and of the Folly of Our Elders and Masters.
- Chap. X.—: Through a Love of Ball-playing and Shows, He Neglects His Studies and the Injunctions of His Parents.
- Chap. XI.—: Seized By Disease, His Mother Being Troubled, He Earnestly Demands Baptism, Which On Recovery Is Postponed—his Father Not As Yet Believing In Christ.
- Chap. XII.—: Being Compelled, He Gave His Attention to Learning; But Fully Acknowledges That This Was the Work of God.
- Chap. XIII.—: He Delighted In Latin Studies and the Empty Fables of the Poets, But Hated the Elements of Literature and the Greek Language.
- Chap. XIV.—: Why He Despised Greek Literature, and Easily Learned Latin.
- Chap. XV.—: He Entreats God, That Whatever Useful Things He Learned As a Boy May Be Dedicated to Him.
- Chap. XVI.—: He Disaproves of the Mode of Educating Youth, and He Points Out Why Wickedness Is Attributed to the Gods By the Poets.
- Chap. XVII.—: He Continues On the Unhappy Method of Training Youth In Literary Subjects.
- Chap. XVIII.—: Men Desire to Observe the Rules of Learning, But Neglect the Eternal Rules of Everlasting Safety.
- Book II.: He Advances to Puberty, and Indeed to the Early Part of the Sixteenth Year of His Age, In Which, Having Abandoned His Studies, He Indulged In Lustful Pleasures, And, With His Companions, Committed Theft.
- Chap. I.—: He Deplores the Wickedness of His Youth.
- Chap. II.—: Stricken With Exceeding Grief, He Remembers the Dissolute Passions In Which, In His Sixteenth Year, He Used to Indulge.
- Chap. III.—: Concerning His Father, a Freeman of Thagaste, the Assister of His Son’s Studies, and On the Admonitions of His Mother On the Preservation of Chastity.
- Chap. IV.—: He Commits Theft With His Companions, Not Urged On By Poverty, But From a Certain Distaste of Well-doing.
- Chap. V.—: Concerning the Motives to Sin, Which Are Not In the Love of Evil, But In the Desire of Obtaining the Property of Others.
- Chap. VI.—: Why He Delighted In That Theft, When All Things Which Under the Appearance of Good Invite to Vice Are True and Perfect In God Alone.
- Chap. VII.—: He Gives Thanks to God For the Remission of His Sins, and Reminds Every One That the Supreme God May Have Preserved Us From Greater Sins.
- Chap. VIII.—: In His Theft He Loved the Company of His Fellow-sinners.
- Chap. IX.—: It Was a Pleasure to Him Also to Laugh When Seriously Deceiving Others.
- Chap. X.—: With God There Is True Rest and Life Unchanging.
- Book III.: Of the Seventeenth, Eighteenth, and Nineteenth Years of His Age, Passed At Carthage, When, Having Completed His Course of Studies, He Is Caught In the Snares of a Licentious Passion, and Falls Into the Errors of the ManichÆans.
- Chap. I.—: Deluded By an Insane Love, He, Though Foul and Dishonourable, Desires to Be Thought Elegant and Urbane.
- Chap. II.—: In Public Spectacles He Is Moved By an Empty Compassion. He Is Attacked By a Troublesome Spiritual Disease.
- Chap. III.—: Not Even When At Church Does He Suppress His Desires. In the School of Rhetoric He Abhors the Acts of the Subverters.
- Chap. IV.—: In the Nineteenth Year of His Age (his Father Having Died Two Years Before) He Is Led By the “hortensius” of Cicero to “philosophy,” to God, and a Better Mode of Thinking.
- Chap. V.—: He Rejects the Sacred Scriptures As Too Simple, and As Not to Be Compared With the Dignity of Tully.
- Chap. VI.—: Deceived By His Own Fault, He Falls Into the Errors of the ManichÆans, Who Gloried In the True Knowledge of God and In a Thorough Examination of Things.
- Chap. VII.—: He Attacks the Doctrine of the ManichÆans Concerning Evil, God, and the Righteousness of the Patriarchs.
- Chap. VIII.—: He Argues Against the Same As to the Reason of Offences.
- Chap. IX.—: That the Judgment of God and Men, As to Human Acts of Violence, Is Different.
- Chap. X.—: He Reproves the Triflings of the ManichÆans As to the Fruits of the Earth.
- Chap. XI.—: He Refers to the Tears, and the Memorable Dream Concerning Her Son, Granted By God to His Mother.
- Chap. XII.—: The Excellent Answer of the Bishop When Referred to By His Mother As to the Conversion of Her Son.
- Book IV.: Then Follows a Period of Nine Years From the Nineteenth Year of His Age, During Which Having Lost a Friend, He Followed the ManichÆans—and Wrote Books On the Fair and Fit, and Published a Work On the Liberal Arts, and the Categories of Aristotle
- Chap. I.—: Concerning That Most Unhappy Time In Which He, Being Deceived, Deceived Others; and Concerning the Mockers of His Confession.
- Chap. II.—: He Teaches Rhetoric, the Only Thing He Loved, and Scorns the Soothsayer, Who Promised Him Victory.
- Chap. III.—: Not Even the Most Experienced Men Could Persuade Him of the Vanity of Astrology, to Which He Was Devoted.
- Chap. IV.—: Sorely Distressed By Weeping At the Death of His Friend, He Provides Consolation For Himself.
- Chap. V.—: Why Weeping Is Pleasant to the Wretched.
- Chap. VI.—: His Friend Being Snatched Away By Death, He Imagines That He Remains Only As Half.
- Chap. VII.—: Troubled By Restlessness and Grief, He Leaves His Country a Second Time For Carthage.
- Chap. VIII.—: That His Grief Ceased By Time, and the Consolation of Friends.
- Chap. IX.—: That the Love of a Human Being, However Constant In Loving and Returning Love, Perishes; While He Who Loves God Never Loses a Friend.
- Chap. X.—: That All Things Exist That They May Perish, and That We Are Not Safe Unless God Watches Over Us.
- Chap. XI.—: That Portions of the World Are Not to Be Loved; But That God, Their Author, Is Immutable, and His Word Eternal.
- Chap. XII.—: Love Is Not Condemned, But Love In God, In Whom There Is Rest Through Jesus Christ, Is to Be Preferred.
- Chap. XIII.—: Love Originates From Grace and Beauty Enticing Us.
- Chap. XIV.—: Concerning the Books Which He Wrote “on the Fair and Fit,” Dedicated to Hierius.
- Chap. XV.—: While Writing, Being Blinded By Corporeal Images, He Failed to Recognise the Spiritual Nature of God.
- Chap. XVI.—: He Very Easily Understood the Liberal Arts and the Categories of Aristotle, But Without True Fruit.
- Book V.: He Describes the Twenty-ninth Year of His Age, In Which, Having Discovered the Fallacies of the ManichÆans, He Professed Rhetoric At Rome and Milan. Having Heard Ambrose, He Begins to Come to Himself.
- Chap. I.—: That It Becomes the Soul to Praise God, and to Confess Unto Him.
- Chap. II.—: On the Vanity of Those Who Wished to Escape the Omnipotent God.
- Chap. III.—: Having Heard Faustus, the Most Learned Bishop of the ManichÆans, He Discerns That God, the Author Both of Things Animate and Inanimate, Chiefly Has Care For the Humble.
- Chap. IV.—: That the Knowledge of Terrestrial and Celestial Things Does Not Give Happiness, But the Knowledge of God Only.
- Chap. V.—: Of ManichÆus Pertinaciously Teaching False Doctrines, and Proudly Arrogating to Himself the Holy Spirit.
- Chap. VI.—: Faustus Was Indeed an Elegant Speaker, But Knew Nothing of the Liberal Sciences.
- Chap. VII.—: Clearly Seeing the Fallacies of the ManichÆans, He Retires From Them, Being Remarkably Aided By God.
- Chap. VIII.—: He Sets Out For Rome, His Mother In Vain Lamenting It.
- Chap. IX.—: Being Attacked By Fever, He Is In Great Danger.
- Chap. X.—: When He Had Left the ManichÆans, He Retained His Depraved Opinions Concerning Sin and the Origin of the Saviour.
- Chap. XI.—: Helpidius Disputed Well Against the ManichÆans As to the Authenticity of the New Testament.
- Chap. XII.—: Professing Rhetoric At Rome, He Discovers the Fraud of His Scholars.
- Chap. XIII.—: He Is Sent to Milan, That He, About to Teach Rhetoric, May Be Known By Ambrose.
- Chap. XIV.—: Having Heard the Bishop, He Perceives the Force of the Catholic Faith, Yet Doubts, After the Manner of the Modern Academics.
- Book VI.: Attaining His Thirtieth Year, He, Under the Admonition of the Discourses of Ambrose, Discovered More and More the Truth of the Catholic Doctrine, and Deliberates As to the Better Regulation of His Life.
- Chap. I.—: His Mother Having Followed Him to Milan, Declares That She Will Not Die Before Her Son Shall Have Embraced the Catholic Faith.
- Chap. II.—: She, On the Prohibition of Ambrose, Abstains From Honouring the Memory of the Martyrs.
- Chap. III.—: As Ambrose Was Occupied With Business and Study, Augustin Could Seldom Consult Him Concerning the Holy Scriptures.
- Chap. IV.—: He Recognises the Falsity of His Own Opinions, and Commits to Memory the Saying of Ambrose.
- Chap. V.—: Faith Is the Basis of Human Life; Man Cannot Discover That Truth Which Holy Scripture Has Disclosed.
- Chap. VI.—: On the Source and Cause of True Joy,—the Example of the Joyous Beggar Being Adduced.
- Chap. VII.—: He Leads to Reformation His Friend Alypius, Seized With Madness For the Circensian Games.
- Chap. VIII.—: The Same When At Rome, Being Led By Others Into the Amphitheatre, Is Delighted With the Gladiatorial Games.
- Chap. IX.—: Innocent Alypius, Being Apprehended As a Thief, Is Set At Liberty By the Cleverness of an Architect.
- Chap. X.—: The Wonderful Integrity of Alypius In Judgment. the Lasting Friendship of Nebridius With Augustin.
- Chap. XI.—: Being Troubled By His Grievous Errors, He Meditates Entering On a New Life.
- Chap. XII.—: Discussion With Alypius Concerning a Life of Celibacy.
- Chap. XIII.—: Being Urged By His Mother to Take a Wife, He Sought a Maiden That Was Pleasing Unto Him.
- Chap. XIV.—: The Design of Establishing a Common Household With His Friends Is Speedily Hindered.
- Chap. XV.—: He Dismisses One Mistress, and Chooses Another.
- Chap. XVI.—: The Fear of Death and Judgment Called Him, Believing In the Immortality of the Soul, Back From His Wickedness, Him Who Aforetime Believed In the Opinions of Epicurus.
- Book VII.: He Recalls the Beginning of His Youth, I. E. the Thirty-first Year of His Age, In Which Very Grave Errors As to the Nature of God and the Origin of Evil Being Distinguished, and the Sacred Books More Accurately Known, He At Length Arrives At
- Chap. I.—: He Regarded Not God Indeed Under the Form of a Human Body, But As a Corporeal Substance Diffused Through Space.
- Chap. II.—: The Disputation of Nebridius Against the ManichÆans, On the Question “whether God Be Corruptible Or Incorruptible.”
- Chap. III.—: That the Cause of Evil Is the Free Judgment of the Will.
- Chap. IV.—: That God Is Not Corruptible, Who, If He Were, Would Not Be God At All.
- Chap. V.—: Questions Concerning the Origin of Evil In Regard to God, Who, Since He Is the Chief Good, Cannot Be the Cause of Evil.
- Chap. VI.—: He Refutes the Divinations of the Astrologers, Deduced From the Constellations.
- Chap. VII.—: He Is Severely Exercised As to the Origin of Evil.
- Chap. VIII.—: By God’s Assistance He By Degrees Arrives At the Truth.
- Chap. IX.—: He Compares the Doctrine of the Platonists Concerning the Λόγος With the Much More Excellent Doctrine of Christianity.
- Chap. X.—: Divine Things Are the More Clearly Manifested to Him Who Withdraws Into the Recesses of His Heart.
- Chap. XI.—: That Creatures Are Mutable and God Alone Immutable.
- Chap. XII.—: Whatever Things the Good God Has Created Are Very Good.
- Chap. XIII.—: It Is Meet to Praise the Creator For the Good Things Which Are Made In Heaven and Earth.
- Chap. XIV.—: Being Displeased With Some Part of God’s Creation, He Conceives of Two Original Substances.
- Chap. XV.—: Whatever Is, Owes Its Being to God.
- Chap. XVI.—: Evil Arises Not From a Substance, But From the Perversion of the Will.
- Chap. XVII.—: Above His Changeable Mind, He Discovers the Unchangeable Author of Truth.
- Chap. XVIII.—: Jesus Christ, the Mediator, Is the Only Way of Safety.
- Chap. XIX.—: He Does Not Yet Fully Understand the Saying of John, That “the Word Was Made Flesh.”
- Chap. XX.—: He Rejoices That He Proceeded From Plato to the Holy Scriptures, and Not the Reverse.
- Chap. XXI.—: What He Found In the Sacred Books Which Are Not to Be Found In Plato.
- Book VIII.: He Finally Describes the Thirty-second Year of His Age, the Most Memorable of His Whole Life, In Which, Being Instructed By Simplicianus Concerning the Conversion of Others, and the Manner of Acting, He Is, After a Severe Struggle, Renewed In
- Chap. I.—: He, Now Given to Divine Things, and Yet Entangled By the Lusts of Love, Consults Simplicianus In Reference to the Renewing of His Mind.
- Chap. II.—: The Pious Old Man Rejoices That He Read Plato and the Scriptures, and Tells Him of the Rhetorician Victorinus Having Been Converted to the Faith Through the Reading of the Sacred Books.
- Chap. III.—: That God and the Angels Rejoice More On the Return of One Sinner Than of Many Just Persons.
- Chap. IV.—: He Shows By the Example of Victorinus That There Is More Joy In the Conversion of Nobles.
- Chap. V.—: Of the Causes Which Alienate Us From God.
- Chap. VI.—: Pontitianus’ Account of Antony, the Founder of Monachism, and of Some Who Imitated Him.
- Chap. VII.—: He Deplores His Wretchedness, That Having Been Born Thirty-two Years, He Had Not Yet Found Out the Truth.
- Chap. VIII.—: The Conversation With Alypius Being Ended, He Retires to the Garden, Whither His Friend Follows Him.
- Chap. IX.—: That the Mind Commandeth the Mind, But It Willeth Not Entirely.
- Chap. X.—: He Refutes the Opinion of the ManichÆans As to Two Kinds of Minds,—one Good and the Other Evil.
- Chap. XI.—: In What Manner the Spirit Struggled With the Flesh, That It Might Be Freed From the Bondage of Vanity.
- Chap. XII.—: Having Prayed to God, He Pours Forth a Shower of Tears, And, Admonished By a Voice, He Opens the Book and Reads the Words In Rom. XIII. 13; By Which, Being Changed In His Whole Soul, He Discloses the Divine Favour to His Friend and His Mother
- Book IX.: He Speaks of His Design of Forsaking the Profession of Rhetoric; of the Death of His Friends, Nebridius and Verecundus; of Having Received Baptism In the Thirty-third Year of His Age; and of the Virtues and Death of His Mother, Monica.
- Chap. I.—: He Praises God, the Author of Safety, and Jesus Christ, the Redeemer, Acknowledging His Own Wickedness.
- Chap. II.—: As His Lungs Were Affected, He Meditates Withdrawing Himself From Public Favour.
- Chap. III.—: He Retires to the Villa of His Friend Verecundus, Who Was Not Yet a Christian, and Refers to His Conversion and Death, As Well As That of Nebridius.
- Chap. IV.—: In the Country He Gives His Attention to Literature, and Explains the Fourth Psalm In Connection With the Happy Conversion of Alypius. He Is Troubled With Toothache.
- Chap. V.—: At the Recommendation of Ambrose, He Reads the Prophecies of Isaiah, But Does Not Understand Them.
- Chap. VI.—: He Is Baptized At Milan With Alypius and His Son Adeodatus. the Book “de Magistro.”
- Chap. VII.—: Of the Church Hymns Instituted At Milan; of the Ambrosian Persecution Raised By Justina; and of the Discovery of the Bodies of Two Martyrs.
- Chap. VIII.—: Of the Conversion of Evodius, and the Death of His Mother When Returning With Him to Africa; and Whose Education He Tenderly Relates.
- Chap. IX.—: He Describes the Praiseworthy Habits of His Mother; Her Kindness Towards Her Husband and Her Sons.
- Chap. X.—: A Conversation He Had With His Mother Concerning the Kingdom of Heaven.
- Chap. XI.—: His Mother, Attacked By Fever, Dies At Ostia.
- Chap. XII.—: How He Mourned His Dead Mother.
- Chap. XIII.—: He Entreats God For Her Sins, and Admonishes His Readers to Remember Her Piously.
- Book X.: Having Manifested What He Was and What He Is, He Shows the Great Fruit of His Confession; and Being About to Examine By What Method God and the Happy Life May Be Found, He Enlarges On the Nature and Power of Memory. Then He Examines His Own Acts,
- Chap. I.—: In God Alone Is the Hope and Joy of Man.
- Chap. II.—: That All Things Are Manifest to God. That Confession Unto Him Is Not Made By the Words of the Flesh, But of the Soul, and the Cry of Reflection.
- Chap. III.—: He Who Confesseth Rightly Unto God Best Knoweth Himself.
- Chap. IV.—: That In His Confessions He May Do Good, He Considers Others.
- Chap. V.—: That Man Knoweth Not Himself Wholly.
- Chap. VI.—: The Love of God, In His Nature Superior to All Creatures, Is Acquired By the Knowledge of the Senses and the Exercise of Reason.
- Chap. VII.—: That God Is to Be Found Neither From the Powers of the Body Nor of the Soul.
- Chap. VIII.—: Of the Nature and the Amazing Power of Memory.
- Chap. IX.—: Not Only Things, But Also Literature and Images, Are Taken From the Memory, and Are Brought Forth By the Act of Remembering.
- Chap. X.—: Literature Is Not Introduced to the Memory Through the Senses, But Is Brought Forth From Its More Secret Places.
- Chap. XI.—: What It Is to Learn and to Think.
- Chap. XII.—: On the Recollection of Things Mathematical.
- Chap. XIII.—: Memory Retains All Things.
- Chap. XIV.—: Concerning the Manner In Which Joy and Sadness May Be Brought Back to the Mind and Memory.
- Chap. XV.—: In Memory There Are Also Images of Things Which Are Absent.
- Chap. XVI.—: The Privation of Memory Is Forgetfulness.
- Chap. XVII.—: God Cannot Be Attained Unto By the Power of Memory, Which Beasts and Birds Possess.
- Chap. XVIII.—: A Thing When Lost Could Not Be Found Unless It Were Retained In the Memory.
- Chap. XIX.—: What It Is to Remember.
- Chap. XX.—: We Should Not Seek For God and the Happy Life Unless We Had Known It.
- Chap. XXI.—: How a Happy Life May Be Retained In the Memory.
- Chap. XXII.—: A Happy Life Is to Rejoice In God, and For God.
- Chap. XXIII.—: All Wish to Rejoice In the Truth.
- Chap. XXIV.—: He Who Finds Truth, Finds God.
- Chap. XXV.—: He Is Glad That God Dwells In His Memory.
- Chap. XXVI.—: God Everywhere Answers Those Who Take Counsel of Him.
- Chap. XXVII.—: He Grieves That He Was So Long Without God.
- Chap. XXVIII.—: On the Misery of Human Life.
- Chap. XXIX.—: All Hope Is In the Mercy of God.
- Chap. XXX.—: Of the Perverse Images of Dreams, Which He Wishes to Have Taken Away.
- Chap. XXXI.—: About to Speak of the Temptations of the Lust of the Flesh, He First Complains of the Lust of Eating and Drinking.
- Chap. XXXII.—: Of the Charms of Perfumes Which Are More Easily Overcome.
- Chap. XXXIII.—: He Overcame the Pleasures of the Ear, Although In the Church He Frequently Delighted In the Song, Not In the Thing Sung.
- Chap. XXXIV.—: Of the Very Dangerous Allurements of the Eyes; On Account of Beauty of Form, God, the Creator, Is to Be Praised.
- Chap. XXXV.—: Another Kind of Temptation Is Curiosity, Which Is Stimulated By the Lust of the Eyes.
- Chap. XXXVI.—: A Third Kind Is “pride,” Which Is Pleasing to Man, Not to God.
- Chap. XXXVII.—: He Is Forcibly Goaded On By the Love of Praise.
- Chap. XXXVIII.—: Vain-glory Is the Highest Danger.
- Chap. XXXIX.—: Of the Vice of Those Who, While Pleasing Themselves, Displease God.
- Chap. XI.—: The Only Safe Resting-place For the Soul Is to Be Found In God.
- Chap. Xli.—: Having Conquered His Triple Desire, He Arrives At Salvation.
- Chap. Xlii.—: In What Manner Many Sought the Mediator.
- Chap. Xliii.—: That Jesus Christ, At the Same Time God and Man, Is the True and Most Efficacious Mediator.
- Book XI.: The Design of His Confessions Being Declared, He Seeks From God the Knowledge of the Holy Scriptures, and Begins to Expound the Words of Genesis I. 1, Concerning the Creation of the World. the Questions of Rash Disputers Being Refuted, “what Did
- Chap. I.—: By Confession He Desires to Stimulate Towards God His Own Love and That of His Readers.
- Chap. Ii—: He Begs of God That Through the Holy Scriptures He May Be Led to Truth.
- Chap. III.—: He Begins From the Creation of the World—not Understanding the Hebrew Text.
- Chap. IV.—: Heaven and Earth Cry Out That They Have Been Created By God.
- Chap. V.—: God Created the World Not From Any Certain Matter, But In His Own Word.
- Chap. VI.—: He Did Not, However, Create It By a Sounding and Passing Word.
- Chap. VII.—: By His Co-eternal Word He Speaks, and All Things Are Done.
- Chap. VIII.—: That Word Itself Is the Beginning of All Things, In the Which We Are Instructed As to Evangelical Truth.
- Chap. IX.—: Wisdom and the Beginning.
- Chap. X.—: The Rashness of Those Who Inquire What God Did Before He Created Heaven and Earth.
- Chap. XI.—: They Who Ask This Have Not As Yet Known the Eternity of God, Which Is Exempt From the Relation of Time.
- Chap. XII.—: What God Did Before the Creation of the World.
- Chap. XIII.—: Before the Times Created By God, Times Were Not.
- Chap. XIV.—: Neither Time Past Nor Future, But the Present Only, Really Is.
- Chap. XV.—: There Is Only a Moment of Present Time.
- Chap. XVI.—: Time Can Only Be Perceived Or Measured While It Is Passing.
- Chap. XVII.—: Nevertheless There Is Time Past and Future.
- Chap. XVIII.—: Past and Future Times Cannot Be Thought of But As Present.
- Chap. XIX.—: We Are Ignorant In What Manner God Teaches Future Things.
- Chap. XX.—: In What Manner Time May Properly Be Designated.
- Chap. XXI.—: How Time May Be Measured.
- Chap. XXII.—: He Prays God That He Would Explain This Most Entangled Enigma.
- Chap. XXIII.—: That Time Is a Certain Extension.
- Chap. XXIV.—: That Time Is Not a Motion of a Body Which We Measure By Time.
- Chap. XXV.—: He Calls On God to Enlighten His Mind.
- Chap. XXVI.—: We Measure Longer Events By Shorter In Time.
- Chap. XXVII.—: Times Are Measured In Proportion As They Pass By.
- Chap. XXVIII.—: Time In the Human Mind, Which Expects, Considers, and Remembers.
- Chap. XXIX.—: That Human Life Is a Distraction, But That Through the Mercy Or God He Was Intent On the Prize of His Heavenly Calling.
- Chap. XXX.—: Again He Refutes the Empty Question, “what Did God Before the Creation of the World?”
- Chap. XXXI.—: How the Knowledge of God Differs From That of Man.
- Book XII.: He Continues His Explanation of the First Chapter of Genesis According to the Septuagint, and By Its Assistance He Argues, Especially, Concerning the Double Heaven, and the Formless Matter Out of Which the Whole World May Have Been Created; Aft
- Chap. I.—: The Discovery of Truth Is Difficult, But God Has Promised That He Who Seeks Shall Find.
- Chap. II.—: Of the Double Heaven,—the Visible, and the Heaven of Heavens.
- Chap. III.—: Of the Darkness Upon the Deep, and of the Invisible and Formless Earth.
- Chap. IV.—: From the Formlessness of Matter, the Beautiful World Has Arisen.
- Chap. V.—: What May Have Been the Form of Matter.
- Chap. VI.—: He Confesses That At One Time He Himself Thought Erroneously of Matter.
- Chap. VII.—: Out of Nothing God Made Heaven and Earth.
- Chap. VIII.—: Heaven and Earth Were Made “in the Beginning;” Afterwards the World, During Six Days, From Shapeless Matter.
- Chap. 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.
- Chap. 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.
- Chap. XI.—: What May Be Discovered to Him By God.
- Chap. XII.—: From the Formless Earth God Created Another Heaven and a Visible and Formed Earth.
- Chap. XIII.—: Of the Intellectual Heaven and Formless Earth, Out of Which, On Another Day, the Firmament Was Formed.
- Chap. XIV.—: Of the Depth of the Sacred Scripture, and Its Enemies.
- Chap. XV.—: He Argues Against Adversaries Concerning the Heaven of Heavens.
- Chap. XVI.—: He Wishes to Have No Intercourse With Those Who Deny Divine Truth.
- Chap. XVII.—: He Mentions Five Explanations of the Words of Genesis 1. I.
- Chap. XVIII.—: What Error Is Harmless In Sacred Scripture.
- Chap. XIX.—: He Enumerates the Things Concerning Which All Agree.
- Chap. Xx—: of the Words, “in the Beginning,” Variously Understood.
- Chap. XXI.—: Of the Explanation of the Words, “the Earth Was Invisible.”
- Chap. XXII.—: He Discusses Whether Matter Was From Eternity, Or Was Made By God. 1
- Chap. XXIII.—: Two Kinds of Disagreements In the Books to Be Explained.
- Chap. XXIV.—: Out of the Many True Things, It Is Not Asserted Confidently That Moses Understood This Or That.
- Chap. XXV.—: It Behoves Interpreters, When Disagreeing Concerning Obscure Places, to Regard God the Author of Truth, and the Rule of Charity.
- Chap. XXVI.—: What He Might Have Asked of God Had He Been Enjoined to Write the Book of Genesis.
- Chap. XXVII.—: The Style of Speaking In the Book of Genesis Is Simple and Clear.
- Chap. XXVIII.—: The Words, “in the Beginning,” And, “the Heaven and the Earth,” Are Differently Understood.
- Chap. XXIX.—: Concerning the Opinion of Those Who Explain It “at First He Made.”
- Chap. XXX.—: In the Great Diversity of Opinions, It Becomes All to Unite Charity and Divine Truth.
- Chap. XXXI.—: Moses Is Supposed to Have Perceived Whatever of Truth Can Be Discovered In His Words.
- Chap. XXXII.—: First, the Sense of the Writer Is to Be Discovered, Then That Is to Be Brought Out Which Divine Truth Intended.
- Book XIII.: Of the Goodness of God Explained In the Creation of Things, and of the Trinity As Found In the First Words of Genesis. the Story Concerning the Origin of the World (gen. I.) Is Allegorically Explained, and He Applies It to Those Things Which G
- Chap. I.—: He Calls Upon God, and Proposes to Himself to Worship Him.
- Chap. II.—: All Creatures Subsist From the Plenitude of Divine Goodness.
- Chap. III.—: Genesis I. 3,—of “light,”—he Understands As It Is Seen In the Spiritual Creature.
- Chap. IV.—: All Things Have Been Created By the Grace of God, and Are Not of Him As Standing In Need of Created Things.
- Chap. V.—: He Recognises the Trinity In the First Two Verses of Genesis.
- Chap. VI.—: Why the Holy Ghost Should Have Been Mentioned After the Mention of Heaven and Earth.
- Chap. VII.—: That the Holy Spirit Brings Us to God.
- Chap. VIII.—: That Nothing Whatever, Short of God, Can Yield to the Rational Creature a Happy Rest.
- Chap. IX.—: Why the Holy Spirit Was Only “borne Over” the Waters.
- Chap. X.—: That Nothing Arose Save By the Gift of God.
- Chap. XI.—: That the Symbols of the Trinity In Man, to Be, to Know, and to Will, Are Never Thoroughly Examined.
- Chap. XII.—: Allegorical Explanation of Genesis, Chap. I., Concerning the Origin of the Church and Its Worship.
- Chap. XIII.—: That the Renewal of Man Is Not Completed In This World.
- Chap. XIV.—: That Out of the Children of the Night and of the Darkness, Children of the Light and of the Day Are Made.
- Chap. XV.—: Allegorical Explanation of the Firmament and Upper Works, Ver. 6.
- Chap. XVI.—: That No One But the Unchangeable Light Knows Himself.
- Chap. XVII.—: Allegorical Explanation of the Sea and the Fruit-bearing Earth—verses 9 and 11.
- Chap. XVIII.—: Of the Lights and Stars of Heaven—of Day and Night, Ver. 14.
- Chap. XIX.—: All Men Should Become Lights In the Firmament of Heaven.
- Chap. XX.—: Concerning Reptiles and Flying Creatures (ver. 20),—the Sacrament of Baptism Being Regarded.
- Chap. XXI.—: Concerning the Living Soul, Birds, and Fishes (ver. 24),—the Sacrament of the Fucharist Being Regarded.
- Chap. XXII.—: He Explains the Divine Image (ver. 26) of the Renewal of the Mind.
- Chap. XXIII.—: That to Have Power Over All Things (ver. 26) Is to Judge Spiritually of All.
- Chap. XXIV.—: Why God Has Blessed Men, Fishes, Flying Creatures, and Not Herbs and the Other Animais (ver. 28).
- Chap. XXV.—: He Explains the Fruits of the Earth (ver. 29) of Works of Mercy.
- Chap. XXVI.—: In the Confessing of Benefits, Computation Is Made Not As to the “gift,” But As to the “fruit,”—that Is, the Good and Right Will of the Giver.
- Chap. XXVII.—: Many Are Ignorant As to This, and Ask For Miracles, Which Are Signified Under the Names of “fishes” and “whales.”
- Chap. XXVIII.—: The Proceeds to the Last Verse, “all Things Are Very Good,”—that Is, the Work Being Altogether Good.
- Chap. XXIX.—: Although It Is Said Eight Times That “god Saw That It Was Good,” Yet Time Has No Relation to God and His Word.
- Chap. XXX.—: He Refutes the Opinions of the ManichÆans and the Gnostics Concerning the Origin of the World.
- Chap. XXXI.—: We Do Not See “that It Was Good” But Through the Spirit of God, Which Is In Us.
- Chap. XXXII.—: Of the Particular Works of God, More Especially of Man.
- Chap. XXXIII.—: The World Was Created By God Out of Nothing.
- Chap. XXXIV.—: He Briefly Repeats the Allegorical Interpretation of Genesis (ch. I.), And Confesses That We See It By the Divine Spirit.
- Chap. XXXV.—: He Prays God For That Peace of Rest Which Hath No Evening.
- Chap. XXXVI.—: The Seventh Day, Without Evening and Setting, the Image of Eternal Life and Rest In God.
- Chap. XXXVII.—: Of Rest In God, Who Ever Worketh, and Yet Is Ever At Rest.
- Chap. XXXVIII.—: Of the Difference Between the Knowledge of God and of Men, and of the Repose Which Is to Be Sought From God Only.
- Letters of St. Augustin.
- Preface.
- Prefatory Note.
- First Division.
- Letter I. ( 386.)
- Letter II. ( 386.)
- Letter III. ( 387.)
- Letter IV. ( 387.)
- Letter V. ( 388.)
- Letter VI. ( 389.)
- Letter VII. ( 389.)
- Letter VIII. ( 389.)
- Letter IX. ( 389.)
- Letter X. ( 389.)
- Letter XI. ( 389.)
- Letter XII. ( 389.)
- Letter XIII. ( 389.)
- Letter XIV. ( 389.)
- Letter XV. ( 390.)
- Letter XVI. ( 390.)
- Letter XVII. ( 390.)
- Letter XVIII. ( 390.)
- Letter XIX. ( 390.)
- Letter XX. ( 390.)
- Letter XXI. ( 391.)
- Letter XXII. ( 392.)
- Letter XXIII. ( 392.)
- Letter XXIV.
- Letter XXV. ( 394.)
- Letter XXVI. ( 395.)
- Letter XXVII. ( 395.)
- Letter XXVIII. ( 394 Or 395.)
- Letter XXIX. ( 395.)
- Letter XXX. ( 396.)
- Second Division. Letters Which Were Written By Augustin After His Becoming Bishop of Hippo, and Before the Conference Held With the Donatists At Carthage, and the Discovery of the Heresy of Pelagius In Africa ( 396-410).
- Letter XXXI. ( 396.)
- Letter XXXII.
- Letter XXXIII. ( 396.)
- Letter XXXIV. ( 396.)
- Letter XXXV. ( 396.)
- Letter XXXVI. ( 396.)
- Letter XXXVII. ( 397.)
- Letter XXXVIII. ( 397.)
- Letter XXXIX. ( 397.)
- Letter Xl. ( 397.)
- Letter Xli. ( 397.)
- Letter Xlii. ( 397.)
- Letter Xliii. ( 397.)
- Letter Xliv. ( 398.)
- Letter Xlv.
- Letter Xlvi. ( 398.)
- Letter Xlvii. ( 398.)
- Letter Xlviii. ( 398.)
- Letter Xlix.
- Letter L. 13 ( 399.)
- Letter Li. ( 399 Or 400.)
- Letter Lii.
- Letter Liii. ( 400.)
- Letter Liv.
- Letter Lv.
- Letters Lvi. and Lvii.
- Letter Lviii. ( 401.)
- Letter Lix. ( 401.)
- Letter Lx. ( 401.)
- Letter Lxi. ( 401.)
- Letter Lxii. ( 401.)
- Letter Lxiii. ( 401.)
- Letter Lxiv. ( 401.)
- Letter Lxv. ( 402.)
- Letter Lxvi. ( 402.)
- Letter Lxvii. ( 402.)
- Letter Lxviii. ( 402.)
- Letter Lxix. ( 402.)
- Letter Lxx. ( 402.)
- Letter Lxxi. ( 403.)
- Letter Lxxii. ( 404.)
- Letter Lxxiii. ( 404.)
- Letter Lxxiv. ( 404.)
- Letter Lxxv. ( 404.)
- Letter Lxxvi. ( 402.)
- Letter Lxxvii. ( 404.)
- Letter Lxxviii. ( 404.)
- Letter Lxxix. ( 404.)
- Letter Lxxx. ( 404.)
- Letter Lxxxi. ( 405.)
- Letter Lxxxii. ( 405.)
- Letter Lxxxiii. ( 405.)
- Letter Lxxxiv. ( 405.)
- Letter Lxxxv. ( 405.)
- Letter Lxxxvi. ( 405.)
- Letter Lxxxvii. ( 405.)
- Letter Lxxxviii. ( 406.)
- Letter Lxxxix. ( 406.)
- Letter XC. ( 408.)
- Letter XCI. ( 408.)
- Letter XCII. ( 408.)
- Letter XCIII. ( 408.)
- Letter XCIV. ( 408.)
- Letter XCV. ( 408.)
- Letter XCVI. ( 408.)
- Letter XCVII. ( 408.)
- Letter XCVIII. ( 408.)
- Letter XCIX. ( 408 Or Beginning of 409.)
- Letter C. ( 409.)
- Letter CI. ( 409.)
- Letter CII. ( 409.)
- Letter CIII. ( 409.)
- Letter CIV. ( 409.)
- Letter CXI. ( November, 409.)
- Letter CXV. ( 410.)
- Letter CXVI.
- Letter CXVII. ( 410.)
- Letter CXVIII. ( 410.)
- Letter CXXII. ( 410.)
- Letter CXXIII. ( 410.)
- Third Division. Letters Which Were Written By Augustin After the Time of the Conference With the Donatists and the Rise of the Pelagian Heresy In Africa; I.E., During the Last Twenty Years of His Life ( 411-430).
- Letter CXXIV. ( 411.)
- Letter CXXV. ( 411.)
- Letter CXXVI. ( 411.)
- Letter CXXX. ( 412.)
- Letter CXXXI. ( 412.)
- Letter CXXXII. ( 412.)
- Letter CXXXIII. ( 412.)
- Letter CXXXV. ( 412.)
- Letter CXXXVI. ( 412.)
- Letter CXXXVII. ( 412.)
- Letter CXXXVIII. ( 412.)
- Letter CXXXIX. ( 412.)
- Letter Cxliii. ( 412.)
- Letter Cxliv. ( 412.)
- Letter Cxlv. ( 412 Or 413.)
- Letter Cxlvi. ( 413.)
- Letter Cxlviii. ( 413.)
- Letter Cl. ( 413.)
- Letter Cli. ( 413 Or 414.)
- Letter Clviii. ( 414.)
- Letter Clix. ( 415.)
- Letter Clxiii. ( 414.)
- Letter Clxiv. ( 414.)
- Letter Clxv. ( 410. 1 )
- Letter Clxvi. ( 415.)
- Letter Clxvii. ( 415.)
- Letter Clxix. ( 415.)
- Letter Clxxii. ( 416.)
- Letter Clxxiii. ( 416.)
- Letter Clxxx. ( 416.)
- Letter Clxxxviii. ( 416.)
- Letter Clxxxix. ( 418.)
- Letter CXCI. ( 418.)
- Letter CXCII. ( 418.)
- Letter CXCV. ( 418.)
- Letter CCI. ( 419.)
- Letter CCII. ( 419.)
- Letter CCIII. ( 420.)
- Letter CCVIII. ( 423.)
- Letter CCIX. ( 423.)
- Letter CCX. ( 423.)
- Letter CCXI. ( 423.)
- Letter CCXII. ( 423.)
- Letter CCXIII. ( September 26th, 426.)
- Letter CCXVIII. ( 426.)
- Letter CCXIX. ( 426.)
- Letter CCXX. ( 427.)
- Letter CCXXVII. ( 428 Or 429.)
- Letter CCXXVIII. ( 428 Or 429.)
- Letter CCXXIX. ( 429.)
- Letter CCXXXI. ( 429.)
- Fourth Division. [hitherto the Order Followed In the Arrangement of the Letters Has Been the Chronological. It Being Impossible to Ascertain Definitely the Date of Composition of Thirty-nine of the Letters, These Have Been Placed By the Benedictine Edi
- Letter CCXXXII.
- Letter CCXXXVII.
- Letter Ccxlv.
- Letter Ccxlvi.
- Letter Ccl.
- Letter Ccliv.
- Letter Cclxiii.
- Letter Cclxix.
- First Series.
- Contributors. Philip Schaff, D. D., Editor-in-chief.
- Names of Translators and Editors.
- Works.
LETTER CXLIII.
( 412.)
to marcellinus, my noble lord, justly distinguished, my son very much beloved, augustin sends greeting in the lord.
1. Desiring to reply to the letter which I received from you through our holy brother, my co-bishop Boniface, I have sought for it, but have not found it. I have recalled to mind, however, that you asked me in that letter how the magicians of Pharaoh could, after all the water of Egypt had been turned into blood, find any with which to imitate the miracle. There are two ways in which the question is commonly answered: either that it was possible for water to have been brought from the sea, or, which is more credible, that these plagues were not inflicted on the district in which the children of Israel were; for the clear, express statements to this effect in some parts of that scriptural narrative entitle us to assume this in places where the statement is omitted.
2. In your other letter, brought to me by the presbyter Urbanus, a question is proposed, taken from a passage not in the Divine Scriptures, but in one of my own books, namely, that which I wrote on Free Will. On questions of this kind, however, I do not bestow much labour; because, even if the statement objected to does not admit of unanswerable vindication, it is mine only; it is not an utterance of that Author whose words it is impiety to reject, even when, through our misapprehension of their meaning, the interpretation which we put on them deserves to be rejected. I freely confess, accordingly, that I endeavour to be one of those who write because they have made some progress, and who, by means of writing, make further progress. If, therefore, through inadvertence or want of knowledge, anything has been stated by me which may with good reason be condemned, not only by others who are able to discover this, but also by myself (for if I am making progress, I ought, at least after it has been pointed out, to see it), such a mistake is not to be regarded with surprise or grief, but rather forgiven, and made the occasion of congratulating me, not, of course, on having erred, but on having renounced an error. For there is an extravagant perversity in the self-love of the man who desires other men to be in error, that the fact of his having erred may not be discovered. How much better and more profitable is it that in the points in which he has erred others should not err, so that he may be delivered from his error by their advice, or, if he refuse this, may at least have no followers in his error. For, if God permit me, as I desire, to gather together and point out, in a work devoted to this express purpose, all the things which most justly displease me in my books, men will then see how far I am from being a partial judge in my own case.
3. As for you, however, who love me warmly, if, in opposing those by whom, whether through malice or ignorance or superior intelligence, I am censured, you maintain the position that I have nowhere in my writings made a mistake, you labour in a hopeless enterprise—you have undertaken a bad cause, in which, even if I myself were judge, you must be easily worsted; for it is no pleasure to me that my dearest friends should think me to be such as I am not, since assuredly they love not me, but instead of me another under my name, if they love not what I am, but what I am not; for in so far as they know me, or believe what is true concerning me, I am loved by them; but in so far as they ascribe to me what they do not know to be in me, they love another person, such as they suppose me to be. Cicero, the prince of Roman orators, says of some one, “He never uttered a word which he would wish to recall.” This commendation, though it seems to be the highest possible, is nevertheless more likely to be true of a consummate fool than of a man perfectly wise; for it is true of idiots, that the more absurd and foolish they are, and the more their opinions diverge from those universally held, the more likely are they to utter no word which they will wish to recall; for to regret an evil, or foolish, or ill-timed word is characteristic of a wise man. If, however, the words quoted are taken in a good sense, as intended to make us believe that some one was such that, by reason of his speaking all things wisely, he never uttered any word which he would wish to recall,—this we are, in accordance with sound piety, to believe rather concerning men of God, who spoke as they were moved by the Holy Ghost, than concerning the man whom Cicero commends. For my part, so far am I from this excellence, that if I have uttered no word which I would wish to recall, it must be because I resemble more the idiot than the wise man. The man whose writings are most worthy of the highest authority is he who has uttered no word, I do not say which it would be his desire, but which it would be his duty to recall. Let him that has not attained to this occupy the second rank through his humility, since he cannot take the first rank through his wisdom. Since he has been unable, with all his care, to exclude every expression whose use may be justly regretted, let him acknowledge his regret for anything which, as he may now have discovered, ought not to have been said.
4. Since, therefore, the words spoken by me which I would if I could recall, are not, as my very dear friends suppose, few or none, but perhaps even more than my enemies imagine, I am not gratified by such commendation as Cicero’s sentence, “He never uttered a word which he would wish to recall,” but I am deeply distressed by the saying of Horace, “The word once uttered cannot be recalled.” This is the reason why I keep beside me, longer than you wish or patiently bear, the books which I have written on difficult and important questions on the book of Genesis and the doctrine of the Trinity, hoping that, if it be impossible to avoid having some things which may deservedly be found fault with, the number of these may at least be smaller than it might have been, if, through impatient haste, the works had been published without due deliberation; for you, as your letters indicate (our holy brother and co-bishop Florentius having written me to this effect), are urgent for the publication of these works now, in order that they may be defended in my own lifetime by myself, when, perhaps, they may begin to be assailed in some particulars, either through the cavilling of enemies or the misapprehensions of friends. You say this doubtless because you think there is nothing in them which might with justice be censured, otherwise you would not exhort me to publish the books, but rather to revise them more carefully. But I fix my eye rather on those who are true judges, sternly impartial, between whom and myself I wish, in the first place, to make sure of my ground, so that the only faults coming to be censured by them may be those which it was impossible for me to observe, though using the most diligent scrutiny.
5. Notwithstanding what I have just said, I am prepared to defend the sentence in the third book of my treatise on Free Will, in which, discoursing on the rational substance, I have expressed my opinion in these words: “The soul, appointed to occupy a body inferior in nature to itself after the entrance of sin, governs its own body, not absolutely according to its free will, but only in so far as the laws of the universe permit.” I bespeak the particular attention of those who think that I have here fixed and defined, as ascertained concerning the human soul, either that it comes by propagation from the parents, or that it has, through sins committed in a higher celestial life, incurred the penalty of being shut up in a corruptible body. Let them, I say, observe that the words in question have been so carefully weighed by me, that while they hold fast what I regard as certain, namely, that after the sin of the first man, all other men have been born and continue to be born in that sinful flesh, for the healing of which “the likeness of sinful flesh” came in the person of the Lord, they are also so chosen as not to pronounce upon any one of those four opinions which I have in the sequel expounded and distinguished—not attempting to establish any one of them as preferable to the others, but disposing in the meantime of the matter under discussion, and reserving the consideration of these opinions, so that whichever of them may be true, praise should unhesitatingly be given to God.
6. For whether all souls are derived by propagation from the first, or are in the case of each individual specially created, or being created apart from the body are sent into it, or introduce themselves into it of their own accord, without doubt this creature endowed with reason, namely, the human soul—appointed to occupy an inferior, that is, an earthly body—after the entrance of sin, does not govern its own body absolutely according to its free will. For I did not say, “after his sin,” or “after he sinned,” but after the entrance of sin, that whatever might afterwards, if possible, be determined by reason as to the question whether the sin was his own or the sin of the first parent of mankind, it might be perceived that in saying that “the soul, appointed, after the entrance of sin, to occupy an inferior body, does not govern its body absolutely according to its own free will,” I stated what is true; for “the flesh lusteth against the spirit, and in this we groan, being burdened,” and “the corruptible body weighs down the soul,” —in short, who can enumerate all the evils arising from the infirmity of the flesh, which shall assuredly cease when “this corruptible shall have put on incorruption,” so that “that which is mortal shall be swallowed up of life”? In that future condition, therefore, the soul shall govern its spiritual body with absolute freedom of will; but in the meantime its freedom is not absolute, but conditioned by the laws of the universe, according to which it is fixed, that bodies having experienced birth experience death, and having grown to maturity decline in old age. For the soul of the first man did, before the entrance of sin, govern his body with perfect freedom of will, although that body was not yet spiritual, but animal; but after the entrance of sin, that is, after sin had been committed in that flesh from which sinful flesh was thenceforward to be propagated, the reasonable soul is so appointed to occupy an inferior body, that it does not govern its body with absolute freedom of will. That infant children, even before they have committed any sin of their own, are partakers of sinful flesh, is, in my opinion, proved by their requiring to have it healed in them also, by the application in their baptism of the remedy provided in Him who came in the likeness of sinful flesh. But even those who do not acquiesce in this view have no just ground for taking offence at the sentence quoted from my book; for it is certain, if I am not mistaken, that even if the infirmity be the consequence not of sin, but of nature, it was at all events only after the entrance of sin that bodies having this infirmity began to be produced; for Adam was not created thus, and he did not beget any offspring before he sinned.
7. Let my critics, therefore, seek other passages to censure, not only in my other more hastily published works, but also in these books of mine on Free Will. For I by no means deny that they may in this search discover opportunities of conferring a benefit on me; for if the books, having passed into so many hands, cannot now be corrected, I myself may, being still alive. Those words, however, so carefully selected by me to avoid committing myself to any one of the four opinions or theories regarding the soul’s origin, are liable to censure only from those who think that my hesitation as to any definite view in a matter so obscure is blameworthy; against whom I do not defend myself by saying that I think it right to pronounce no opinion whatever on the subject, seeing that I have no doubt either that the soul is immortal—not in the same sense in which God is immortal, who alone hath immortality, but in a certain way peculiar to itself—or that the soul is a creature and not a part of the substance of the Creator, or as to any other thing which I regard as most certain concerning its nature. But seeing that the obscurity of this most mysterious subject, the origin of the soul, compels me to do as I have done, let them rather stretch out a friendly hand to me, confessing my ignorance, and desiring to know whatever is the truth on the subject; and let them, if they can, teach or demonstrate to me what they may either have learned by the exercise of sound reason, or have believed on indisputably plain testimony of the divine oracles. For if reason be found contradicting the authority of Divine Scriptures, it only deceives by a semblance of truth, however acute it be, for its deductions cannot in that case be true. On the other hand, if, against the most manifest and reliable testimony of reason, anything be set up claiming to have the authority of the Holy Scriptures, he who does this does it through a misapprehension of what he has read, and is setting up against the truth not the real meaning of Scripture, which he has failed to discover, but an opinion of his own; he alleges not what he has found in the Scriptures, but what he has found in himself as their interpreter.
8. Let me give an example, to which I solicit your earnest attention. In a passage near the end of Ecclesiastes, where the author is speaking of man’s dissolution through death separating the soul from the body, it is written, “Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was, and the spirit shall return unto God who gave it.” A statement having the authority on which this one is based is true beyond all dispute, and is not intended to deceive any one; yet if any one wishes to put upon it such an interpretation as may help him in attempting to support the theory of the propagation of souls, according to which all other souls are derived from that one which God gave to the first man, what is there said concerning the body under the name of “dust” (for obviously nothing else than body and soul are to be understood by “dust” and “spirit” in this passage) seems to favour his view; for he may affirm that the soul is said to return to God because of its being derived from the original stock of that soul which God gave to the first man, in the same way as the body is said to return to the dust because of its being derived from the original stock of that body which was made of dust in the first man, and therefore may argue that, from what we know perfectly as to the body, we ought to believe what is hidden from our observation as to the soul; for there is no difference of opinion as to the original stock of the body, but there is as to the original stock of the soul. In the text thus brought forward as a proof, statements are made concerning both, as if the manner of the return of each to its original was precisely similar in both,—the body, on the one hand, returning to the earth as it was, for thence was it taken when the first man was formed; the soul, on the other hand, returning to God, for He gave it when He breathed into the nostrils of the man whom He had formed the breath of life, and he became a living soul, so that thenceforward the propagation of each part should go on from the corresponding part in the parent.
9. If, however, the true account of the soul’s origin be, that God gives to each individual man a soul, not propagated from that first soul, but created in some other way, the statement that the “spirit returns to God who gave it,” is equally consistent with this view. The two other opinions regarding the soul’s origin are, then, the only ones which seem to be excluded by this text. For in the first place, as to the opinion that every man’s soul is made separately within him at the time of his creation, it is supposed that, if this were the case, the soul should have been spoken of as returning, not to God who gave it, but to God who made it; for the word “gave” seems to imply that that which could be given had already a separate existence. The words “returneth to God” are further insisted upon by some, who say, How could it return to a place where it had never been before? Accordingly they maintain that, if the soul is to be believed to have never been with God before, the words should have been “it goes,” or “goes on,” or “goes away,” rather than it “returns” to God. In like manner, as to the opinion that each soul glides of its own accord into its body, it is not easy to explain how this theory is reconcilable with the statement that God gave it. The words of this scriptural passage are consequently somewhat adverse to these two opinions, namely, the one which supposes each soul to be created in its own body, and the one which supposes each soul to introduce itself into its own body spontaneously. But there is no difficulty in showing that the words are consistent with either of the other two opinions, namely, that all souls are derived by propagation from the one first created, or that, having been created and kept in readiness with God, they are given to each body as required.
10. Nevertheless, even if the theory that each soul is created in its own body may not be wholly excluded by this text,—for if its advocates affirm that God is here said to have given the spirit (or the soul) in the same way as He is said to have given us eyes, ears, hands, or other such members, which were not made elsewhere by Him, and kept in store that He might give them, i.e. add and join them to our bodies, but are made by Him in that body to which He is said to have given them,—I do not see what could be said in reply, unless, perchance, the opinion could be refuted, either by other passages of Scripture, or by valid reasoning. In like manner, those who think that each soul flows of its own accord into its body take the words “God gave it” in the sense in which it is said, “He gave them up to uncleanness, through the lusts of their own hearts.” Only one word, therefore, remains apparently irreconcilable with the theory that each soul is made in its own body, namely, the word “returneth,” in the expression “returneth to God;” for in what sense can the soul return to Him with whom it has not formerly been? By this one word alone are the supporters of this one of the four opinions embarrassed. And yet I do not think that this opinion ought to be held as refuted by this one word, for it may be possible to show that in the ordinary style of scriptural language it may be quite correct to use the word “return,” as signifying the spirit created by God returns to Him not because of its having been with Him before its union with the body, but because of its having received being from His creative power.
11. I have written these things in order to show that whoever is disposed to maintain and vindicate any one of these four theories of the soul’s origin, must bring forward, either from the Scriptures received into ecclesiastical authority, passages which do not admit of any other interpretation,—as the statement that God made man,—or reasonings founded on premises so obviously true that to call them in question would be madness, such as the statement that none but the living are capable of knowledge or of error; for a statement like this does not require the authority of Scripture to prove its truth, as if the common sense of mankind did not of itself announce its truth with such transparent cogency of reason, that whoever contradicts it must be held to be hopelessly mad. If any one is able to produce such arguments in discussing the very obscure question of the soul’s origin, let him help me in my ignorance; but if he cannot do this, let him forbear from blaming my hesitation on the question.
12. As to the virginity of the Holy Mary, if what I have written on this subject does not suffice to prove that it was possible, we must refuse to believe every record of anything miraculous having taken place in the body of any. If, however, the objection to believing this miracle is, that it happened only once, ask the friend who is still perplexed by this, whether instances may not be quoted from secular literature of events which were, like this one, unique, and which, nevertheless, are believed, not merely as fables are believed by the simple, but with that faith with which the history of facts is received—ask him, I beseech you, this question. For if he says that nothing of this kind is to be found in these writings, he ought to have such instances pointed out to him; if he admits this, the question is decided by his admission.
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