GraciousCall.org - Confessions of St. Augustine
AUGUSTINE: CONFESSIONS
Notes
[2]Gen. 1:1.
[3]Gen. 2:2.
[4]Notice the echo here of Acts 9:1.
[5]Ps. 100:3.
[6]Cf. Ps. 145:3 and Ps. 147:5.
[7]Rom. 10:14.
[8]Ps. 22:26.
[9]Matt. 7:7.
[10]A reference to Bishop Ambrose of Milan; see Bk. V, Ch.
XIII; Bk. VIII, Ch. 11, 3.
[11]Ps. 139:8.
[12]Jer. 23:24.
[13]Cf. Ps. 18:31.
[14]Ps. 35:3.
[15]Cf. Ps. 19:12, 13.
[16]Ps. 116:10.
[17]Cf. Ps. 32:5.
[18]Cf. Job 9:2.
[19]Ps. 130:3.
[20]Ps. 102:27.
[21]Ps. 102:27.
[22]Cf. Ps. 92:1.
[23]Cf. Ps. 51:5.
[24]In baptism which, Augustine believed, established the
effigiem Christi in the human soul.
[25]Cf. Ps. 78:39.
[26]Cf. Ps. 72:27.
[27]Aeneid, VI, 457
[28]Cf. Aeneid, II.
[29]Lignum is a common metaphor for the cross; and it
was often joined to the figure of Noah's ark, as the means of safe transport
from earth to heaven.
[30]This apostrophe to "the torrent of human custom" now
switches its focus to the poets who celebrated the philanderings of the gods;
see De civ. Dei, II, vii-xi; IV, xxvi-xxviii.
[31]Probably a contemporary disciple of Cicero (or the
Academics) whom Augustine had heard levy a rather common philosopher's
complaint against Olympian religion and the poetic myths about it. Cf. De
Labriolle, I, 21 (see Bibl.).
[32]Terence, Eunuch., 584-591; quoted again in De
civ. Dei, II, vii.
[33]Aeneid, I, 38.
[34]Cf. Ps. 103:8 and Ps. 86:15.
[35]Ps. 27:8.
[36]An interesting mixed reminiscence of Enneads, I,
5:8 and Luke 15:13-24.
[37]Ps. 123:1.
[38]Matt. 19:14.
[39]Another Plotinian echo; cf. Enneads, III, 8:10.
[40]Yet another Plotinian phrase; cf. Enneads, I, 6,
9:1-2.
[41]Cf. Gen. 3:18 and De bono conjugali, 8-9, 39-35
(N-PNF, III, 396-413).
[42]1 Cor. 7:28.
[43]1 Cor. 7:1.
[44]1 Cor. 7:32, 33.
[45]Cf. Matt. 19:12.
[46]Twenty miles from Tagaste, famed as the birthplace of
Apuleius, the only notable classical author produced by the province of
Africa.
[47]Another echo of the De profundis (Ps. 130:1)--and
the most explicit statement we have from Augustine of his motive and aim in
writing these "confessions."
[48]Cf. 1 Cor. 3:9.
[49]Ps. 116:16.
[50]Cf. Jer. 51:6; 50:8.
[51]Cf. Ps. 73:7.
[52]Cicero, De Catiline, 16.
[53]Deus summum bonum et bonum verum meum.
[54]Avertitur, the opposite of convertitur:
the evil will turns the soul away from God; this is sin. By grace it is
turned to God; this is conversion.
[55]Ps. 116:12.
[56]Ps. 19:12.
[57]Cf. Matt. 25:21.
[58]Cf. Job 2:7, 8.
[59]2 Cor. 2:16.
[60]Eversores, "overturners," from overtere,
to overthrow or ruin. This was the nickname of a gang of young hoodlums in
Carthage, made up largely, it seems, of students in the schools.
[61]A minor essay now lost. We know of its existence from
other writers, but the only fragments that remain are in Augustine's works:
Contra Academicos, III, 14:31; De beata vita, X;
Soliloquia, I, 17; De civitate Dei, III, 15; Contra
Julianum, IV, 15:78; De Trinitate, XIII, 4:7, 5:8; XIV, 9:12, 19:26;
Epist. CXXX, 10.
[62]Note this merely parenthetical reference to his father's
death and contrast it with the account of his mother's death in Bk. IX, Chs.
X-XII.
[63]Col. 2:8, 9.
[64]I.e., Marcus Tullius Cicero.
[65]These were the Manicheans, a pseudo-Christian sect
founded by a Persian religious teacher, Mani (c. A.D. 216-277). They professed
a highly eclectic religious system chiefly distinguished by its radical dualism
and its elaborate cosmogony in which good was co-ordinated with light and evil
with darkness. In the sect, there was an esoteric minority called
perfecti, who were supposed to obey the strict rules of an ascetic
ethic; the rest were auditores, who followed, at a distance, the
doctrines of the perfecti but not their rules. The chief attraction of
Manicheism lay in the fact that it appeared to offer a straightforward,
apparently profound and rational solution to the problem of evil, both in
nature and in human experience. Cf. H.C. Puech, Le Manichéisme, son
fondateur--sa doctrine (Paris, 1949); F.C. Burkitt, The Religion of the
Manichees (Cambridge, 1925); and Steven Runciman, The Medieval
Manichee (Cambridge, 1947).
[66]James 1:17.
[67]Cf. Plotinus, Enneads, V, 3:14.
[68]Cf. Luke 15:16.
[69]Cf. Ovid, Metamorphoses, VII, 219-224.
[70]For the details of the Manichean cosmogony, see Burkitt,
op. cit., ch. 4.
[71]Prov. 9:18.
[72]Cf. Prov. 9:17; see also Prov. 9:13 (Vulgate text).
[73]Cf. Enchiridion, IV.
[74]Cf. Matt. 22:37-39.
[75]Cf. 1 John 2:16. And see also Bk. X, Chs. XXX-XLI, for
an elaborate analysis of them.
[76]Cf. Ex. 20:3-8; Ps. 144:9. In Augustine's Sermon
IX, he points out that in the Decalogue three commandments pertain to
God and seven to men.
[77]Acts 9:5.
[78]An example of this which Augustine doubtless had in mind
is God's command to Abraham to offer up his son Isaac as a human sacrifice. Cf.
Gen. 22:1, 2.
[79]Electi sancti. Another Manichean term for the
perfecti, the elite and "perfect" among them.
[80]Ps. 144:7.
[81]Dedocere me mala ac docere bona; a typical
Augustinian wordplay.
[82]Ps. 50:14.
[83]Cf. John 6:27.
[84]Ps. 74:21.
[85]Cf. Ps. 4:2.
[86]The rites of the soothsayers, in which animals were
killed, for auguries and propitiation of the gods.
[87]Cf. Hos. 12:1.
[88]Ps. 41:4.
[89]John 5:14.
[90]Ps. 51:17.
[91]Vindicianus; see below, Bk. VII, Ch. VI, 8.
[92]James 4:6; 1 Peter 5:5.
[93]Rom. 5:5.
[94]Cf. Ps. 106:2.
[95]Cf. Ps. 42:5; 43:5.
[96]Ibid.
[97]Cf. Ovid, Tristia, IV, 4:74.
[98]Cf. Horace, Ode I, 3:8, where he speaks of Virgil, et
serves animae dimidium meae. Augustine's memory changes the text here to
dimidium animae suae.
[99]2 Tim. 4:3.
[100]Ps. 119:142.
[101]Ps. 80:3.
[102]That is, our physical universe.
[103]Ps. 19:5.
[104]John 1:10.
[105]De pulchro et apto; a lost essay with no other
record save echoes in the rest of Augustine's aesthetic theories. Cf. The
Nature of the Good Against the Manicheans, VIII-XV; City of God, XI,
18; De ordine, I, 7:18; II, 19:51; Enchiridion, III, 10; I, 5.
[106]Eph. 4:14.
[107]Ps. 72:18.
[108]Ps. 18:28.
[109]John 1:16.
[110]John 1:9.
[111]Cf. James 1:17.
[112]Cf. James 4:6; 1 Peter 5:5.
[113]Ps. 78:39.
[114]Cf. Jer. 25:10; 33:11; John 3:29; Rev. 18:23.
[115]Cf. Ps. 51:8.
[116]The first section of the Organon, which
analyzes the problem of predication and develops "the ten categories" of
essence and the nine "accidents." This existed in a Latin translation by
Victorinus, who also translated the Enneads of Plotinus, to which
Augustine refers infra, Bk. VIII, Ch. II, 3.
[117]Cf. Gen. 3:18.
[118]Again, the Prodigal Son theme; cf. Luke 15:13.
[119]Cf. Ps. 17:8.
[120]Ps. 35:10.
[121]Cf. Ps. 19:6.
[122]Cf. Rev. 21:4.
[123]Cf. Ps. 138:6.
[124]Ps. 8:7.
[125]Heb. 12:29.
[126]An echo of the opening sentence, Bk. I, Ch. I, 1.
[127]Cf. 1 Cor. 1:30.
[128]Cf. Matt. 22:21.
[129]Cf. Rom. 1:21ff.
[130]Cf. Rom. 1:23.
[131]Cf. Rom. 1:25.
[132]Wis. 11:20.
[133]Cf. Job 28:28.
[134]Eph. 4:13, 14.
[135]Ps. 36:23 (Vulgate).
[136]Ps. 142:5.
[137]Cf. Eph. 2:15.
[138]Bk. I, Ch. XI, 17.
[139]Cf. Ps. 51:17.
[140]A constant theme in The Psalms and elsewhere; cf. Ps.
136.
[141]Cf. Ps. 41:4.
[142]Cf. Ps 141:3f.
[143]Followers of the skeptical tradition established in
the Platonic Academy by Arcesilaus and Carneades in the third century B.C. They
taught the necessity of [[epsilon]][[pi]][[omicron]][[chi]][[eta]], suspended
judgment, in all questions of truth, and would allow nothing more than the
consent of probability. This tradition was known in Augustine's time chiefly
through the writings of Cicero; cf. his Academica. This kind of
skepticism shook Augustine's complacency severely, and he wrote one of his
first dialogues, Contra Academicos, in an effort to clear up the problem
posed thereby.
[144]The Manicheans were under an official ban in Rome.
[145]Ps. 139:22.
[146]A mixed figure here, put together from Ps. 4:7; 45:7;
104:15; the phrase sobriam vini ebrietatem is almost certainly an echo
of a stanza of one of Ambrose's own hymns, Splendor paternae gloriae,
which Augustine had doubtless learned in Milan: "Bibamus sobriam ebrietatem
spiritus." Cf. W.I. Merrill, Latin Hymns (Boston, 1904), pp. 4, 5.
[147]Ps. 119:155.
[148]Cf. 2 Cor. 3:6. The discovery of the allegorical
method of interpretation opened new horizons for Augustine in Biblical
interpretation and he adopted it as a settled principle in his sermons and
commentaries; cf. M. Pontet, L'Exégèse de Saint Augustin
prédicateur (Lyons, 1946).
[149]Cf. Ps. 71:5.
[150]Cf. Ps. 10:1.
[151]Cf. Luke 7:11-17.
[152]Cf. John 4:14.
[153]Rom. 12:11.
[154]2 Tim. 2:15.
[155]Cf. Gen. 1:26f.
[156]The Church.
[157]2 Cor. 3:6.
[158]Another reference to the Academic doctrine of
suspendium ([[epsilon]][[pi]][[omicron]][[chi]][[eta]]); cf. Bk. V, Ch.
X, 19, and also Enchiridion, VII, 20.
[159]Nisi crederentur, omnino in hac vita nihil
ageremus, which should be set alongside the more famous nisi crederitis,
non intelligetis (Enchiridion, XIII, 14). This is the basic
assumption of Augustine's whole epistemology. See Robert E. Cushman, "Faith and
Reason in the Thought of St. Augustine," in Church History (XIX, 4,
1950), pp. 271-294.
[160]Cf. Heb. 11:6.
[161]Cf. Plato, Politicus, 273 D.
[162]Alypius was more than Augustine's close friend; he
became bishop of Tagaste and was prominent in local Church affairs in the
province of Africa.
[163]Prov. 9:8.
[164]Luke 16:10.
[165]Luke 16:11, 12.
[166]Cf. Ps. 145:15.
[167]Here begins a long soliloquy which sums up his turmoil
over the past decade and his present plight of confusion and indecision.
[168]Cf. Wis. 8:21 (LXX).
[169]Isa. 28:15.
[170]Ecclus. 3:26.
[171]The normal minimum legal age for marriage was twelve!
Cf. Justinian, Institutiones, I, 10:22.
[172]Cf. Ps. 33:11.
[173]Cf. Ps. 145:15, 16.
[174]A variation on "restless is our heart until it comes
to find rest in Thee," Bk. I, Ch. I, 1.
[175]Isa. 46:4.
[176]Thirty years old; although the term "youth"
(juventus) normally included the years twenty to forty.
[177]Phantasmata, mental constructs, which may be
internally coherent but correspond to no reality outside the mind.
[178]Echoes here of Plato's Timaeus and Plotinus'
Enneads, although with no effort to recall the sources or elaborate the
ontological theory.
[179]Cf. the famous "definition" of God in Anselm's
ontological argument: "that being than whom no greater can be conceived." Cf.
Proslogium, II-V.
[180]This simile is Augustine's apparently original
improvement on Plotinus' similar figure of the net in the sea; Enneads,
IV, 3:9.
[181]Gen. 25:21 to 33:20.
[182]Cf. Job 15:26 (Old Latin version).
[183]Cf. Ps. 103:9-14.
[184]James 4:6.
[185]Cf. John 1:14.
[186]It is not altogether clear as to which "books" and
which "Platonists" are here referred to. The succeeding analysis of "Platonism"
does not resemble any single known text closely enough to allow for
identification. The most reasonable conjecture, as most authorities agree, is
that the "books" here mentioned were the Enneads of Plotinus, which
Marius Victorinus (q.v. infra, Bk. VIII, Ch. II, 3-5) had translated
into Latin several years before; cf. M.P. Garvey, St. Augustine: Christian
or Neo-Platonist (Milwaukee, 1939). There is also a fair probability that
Augustine had acquired some knowledge of the Didaskalikos of Albinus;
cf. R.E. Witt, Albinus and the History of Middle Platonism (Cambridge,
1937).
[187]Cf. this mixed quotation of John 1:1-10 with the Fifth
Ennead and note Augustine's identification of Logos, in the
Fourth Gospel, with Nous in Plotinus.
[188]John 1:11, 12
[189]John 1:13.
[190]John 1:14.
[191]Phil. 2:6.
[192]Phil. 2:7-11.
[193]Rom. 5:6; 8:32.
[194]Luke 10:21.
[195]Cf. Matt. 11:28, 29.
[196]Cf. Ps. 25:9, 18.
[197]Matt. 11:29.
[198]Rom. 1:21, 22.
[199]Rom. 1:23.
[200]An echo of Porphyry's De abstinentia ab esu
animalium.
[201]The allegorical interpretation of the Israelites'
despoiling the Egyptians (Ex. 12:35, 36) made it refer to the liberty of
Christian thinkers in appropriating whatever was good and true from the pagan
philosophers of the Greco-Roman world. This was a favorite theme of Clement of
Alexandria and Origen and was quite explicitly developed in Origen's Epistle
to Gregory Thaumaturgus (ANF, IX, pp. 295, 296); cf. Augustine,
On Christian Doctrine, II, 41-42.
[202]Cf. Acts 17:28.
[203]Cf. Rom. 1:25.
[204]Cf. Ps. 39:11.
[205]Some MSS. add "immo vero" ("yea, verily"), but
not the best ones; cf. De Labriolle, op. cit., I, p. 162.
[206]Rom. 1:20.
[207]A locus classicus of the doctrine of the
privative character of evil and the positive character of the good. This is a
fundamental premise in Augustine's metaphysics: it reappears in Bks. XII-XIII,
in the Enchiridion, and elsewhere (see note, infra, p. 343). This
doctrine of the goodness of all creation is taken up into the scholastic
metaphysics; cf. Confessions, Bks. XII-XIII, and Thomas Aquinas,
Summa contra gentes, II: 45.
[208]Ps. 148:7-12.
[209]Ps. 148:1-5.
[210]"The evil which overtakes us has its source in
self-will, in the entry into the sphere of process and in the primal assertion
of the desire for self-ownership" (Plotinus, Enneads, V, 1:1).
[211]"We have gone weighed down from beneath; the vision is
frustrated" (Enneads, VI, 9:4).
[212]Rom. 1:20.
[213]The Plotinian Nous.
[214]This is an astonishingly candid and plain account of a
Plotinian ecstasy, the pilgrimage of the soul from its absorption in things to
its rapturous but momentary vision of the One; cf. especially the Sixth
Ennead, 9:3-11, for very close parallels in thought and echoes of
language. This is one of two ecstatic visions reported in the
Confessions; the other is, of course, the last great moment with his
mother at Ostia (Bk. IX, Ch. X, 23-25). One comes before the "conversion" in
the Milanese garden (Bk. VIII, Ch. XII, 28-29); the other, after. They ought to
be compared with particular interest in their similarities as well as
their significant differences. Cf. also K.E. Kirk, The Vision of God
(London, 1932), pp. 319-
346.
[215]1 Tim. 2:5.
[216]Rom. 9:5.
[217]John 14:6.
[218]An interesting reminder that the Apollinarian heresy
was condemned but not extinct.
[219]It is worth remembering that both Augustine and
Alypius were catechumens and had presumably been receiving doctrinal
instruction in preparation for their eventual baptism and full membership in
the Catholic Church. That their ideas on the incarnation, at this stage, were
in such confusion raises an interesting problem.
[220]Cf. Augustine's The Christian Combat as an
example of "the refutation of heretics."
[221]Cf. 1 Cor. 11:19.
[222]Non peritus, sed periturus essem.
[223]Cf. 1 Cor. 3:11f.
[224]Rom. 7:22, 23.
[225]Rom. 7:24, 25.
[226]Cf. Prov. 8:22 and Col. 1:15. Augustine is here
identifying the figure of Wisdom in Proverbs with the figure of the Logos in
the Prologue to the Fourth Gospel. In the Arian controversy both these
references to God's Wisdom and Word as "created" caused great difficulty for
the orthodox, for the Arians triumphantly appealed to them as proof that Jesus
Christ was a "creature" of God. But Augustine was a Chalcedonian before
Chalcedon, and there is no doubt that he is here quoting familiar Scripture and
filling it with the interpretation achieved by the long struggle of the Church
to affirm the coeternity and consubstantiality of Jesus Christ and God the
Father.
[227]Cf. Ps. 62:1, 2, 5, 6.
[228]Cf. Ps. 91:13.
[229]A figure that compares the dangers of the solitary
traveler in a bandit-infested land and the safety of an imperial convoy on a
main highway to the capital city.
[230]Cf. 1 Cor. 15:9.
[231]Ps. 35:10.
[232]Cf. Ps. 116:16, 17.
[233]Cf. Ps. 8:1.
[234]1 Cor. 13:12.
[235]Matt. 19:12.
[236]Rom. 1:21.
[237]Job 28:28.
[238]Prov. 3:7.
[239]Rom. 1:22.
[240]Col. 2:8.
[241]Virgil, Aeneid, VIII, 698.
[242]Ps. 144:5.
[243]Luke 15:4.
[244]Cf. Luke, ch. 15.
[245]1 Cor. 1:27.
[246]A garbled reference to the story of the conversion of
Sergius Paulus, proconsul of Cyprus, in Acts 13:4-12.
[247]2 Tim. 2:21.
[248]Gal. 5:17.
[249]The text here is a typical example of Augustine's love
of wordplay and assonance, as a conscious literary device: tuae caritati
me dedere quam meae cupiditati cedere; sed illud placebat
et vincebat, hoc libebat et vinciebat.
[250]Eph. 5:14.
[251]Rom. 7:22-25.
[252]The last obstacles that remained. His intellectual
difficulties had been cleared away and the intention to become a Christian had
become strong. But incontinence and immersion in his career were too firmly
fixed in habit to be overcome by an act of conscious resolution.
[253]Trèves, an important imperial town on the
Moselle; the emperor referred to here was probably Gratian. Cf. E.A. Freeman,
"Augusta Trevororum," in the British Quarterly Review (1875), 62, pp.
1-45.
[254]Agentes in rebus, government agents whose
duties ranged from postal inspection and tax collection to espionage and secret
police work. They were ubiquitous and generally dreaded by the populace; cf.
J.S. Reid, "Reorganization of the Empire," in Cambridge Medieval
History, Vol. I, pp. 36-38.
[255]The inner circle of imperial advisers; usually rather
informally appointed and usually with precarious tenure.
[256]Cf. Luke 14:28-33.
[257]Eph. 5:8.
[258]Cf. Ps. 34:5.
[259]Cf. Ps. 6:3; 79:8.
[260]This is the famous Tolle, lege; tolle, lege.
[261]Doubtless from Ponticianus, in their earlier
conversation.
[262]Matt. 19:21.
[263]Rom. 13:13.
[264]Note the parallels here to the conversion of Anthony
and the agentes in rebus.
[265]Rom. 14:1.
[266]Eph. 3:20.
[267]Ps. 116:16, 17.
[268]An imperial holiday season, from late August to the
middle of October.
[269]Cf. Ps. 46:10.
[270]His subsequent baptism; see below, Ch. VI.
[271]Luke 14:14.
[272]Ps. 125:3.
[273]The heresy of Docetism, one of the earliest and most
persistent of all Christological errors.
[274]Cf. Ps. 27:8.
[275]The group included Monica, Adeodatus (Augustine's
fifteen-year-old son), Navigius (Augustine's brother), Rusticus and Fastidianus
(relatives), Alypius, Trygetius, and Licentius (former pupils).
[276]A somewhat oblique acknowledgment of the fact that
none of the Cassiciacum dialogues has any distinctive or substantial Christian
content. This has often been pointed to as evidence that Augustine's conversion
thus far had brought him no farther than to a kind of Christian Platonism; cf.
P. Alfaric, L'Évolution intellectuelle de Saint Augustin (Paris,
1918).
[277]The dialogues written during this stay at Cassiciacum:
Contra Academicos, De beata vita, De ordine,
Soliloquia. See, in this series, Vol. VI, pp. 17-63, for an English
translation of the Soliloquies.
[278]Cf. Epistles II and III.
[279]A symbolic reference to the "cedars of Lebanon"; cf.
Isa. 2:12-14; Ps. 29:5.
[280]There is perhaps a remote connection here with Luke
10:18-20.
[281]Ever since the time of Ignatius of Antioch who
referred to the Eucharist as "the medicine of immortality," this had been a
popular metaphor to refer to the sacraments; cf. Ignatius, Ephesians
20:2.
[282]Here follows (8-11) a brief devotional commentary on
Ps. 4.
[283]John 7:39.
[284]Idipsum--the oneness and immutability of God.
[285]Cf. v. 9.
[286]1 Cor. 15:54.
[287]Concerning the Teacher; cf. Vol. VI of this
series, pp. 64-101.
[288]This was apparently the first introduction into the
West of antiphonal chanting, which was already widespread in the East. Ambrose
brought it in; Gregory brought it to perfection.
[289]Cf. S. of Sol. 1:3, 4.
[290]Cf. Isa. 40:6; 1 Peter 1:24: "All flesh is grass." See
Bk. XI, Ch. II, 3.
[291]Ecclus. 19:1.
[292]1 Tim. 5:9.
[293]Phil. 3:13.
[294]Cf. 1 Cor. 2:9.
[295]Ps. 36:9.
[296]Idipsum.
[297]Cf. this report of a "Christian ecstasy" with the
Plotinian ecstasy recounted in Bk. VII, Ch. XVII, 23, above.
[298]Cf. Wis. 7:21-30; see especially v. 27: "And being but
one, she [Wisdom] can do all things: and remaining in herself the same, she
makes all things new."
[299]Matt. 25:21.
[300]1 Cor. 15:51.
[301]Navigius, who had joined them in Milan, but about whom
Augustine is curiously silent save for the brief and unrevealing references in
De beata vita, I, 6, to II, 7, and De ordine, I, 2-3.
[302]A.D. 387.
[303]Nec omnino moriebatur. Is this an echo of
Horace's famous memorial ode, Exegi monumentum aere perennius . . . non
omnis moriar? Cf. Odes, Book III, Ode XXX.
[304]1 Tim. 1:5.
[305]Cf. this passage, as Augustine doubtless intended,
with the story of his morbid and immoderate grief at the death of his boyhood
friend, above, Bk. IV, Chs. IV, 9, to VII, 12.
[306]Ps. 101:1.
[307]Ps. 68:5.
[308]Sir Tobie Matthew (adapted). For Augustine's own
analysis of the scansion and structure of this hymn, see De musica, VI,
2:2-3; for a brief commentary on the Latin text, see A. S. Walpole, Early
Latin Hymns (Cambridge, 1922), pp. 44-49.
[309]1 Cor. 15:22.
[310]Matt. 5:22.
[311]2 Cor. 10:17.
[312]Rom. 8:34.
[313]Cf. Matt. 6:12.
[314]Ps. 143:2.
[315]Matt. 5:7.
[316]Cf. Rom. 9:15.
[317]Ps. 119:108.
[318]Cf. 1 Cor. 13:12.
[319]Eph. 5:27.
[320]Ps. 51:6.
[321]John 3:21.
[322]1 Cor. 2:11.
[323]1 Cor. 13:7.
[324]Ps. 32:1.
[325]Ps. 144:7, 8.
[326]Cf. Rev. 8:3-5. "And the smoke of the incense with the
prayers of the saints went up before God out of the angel's hand" (v. 4).
[327]1 Cor. 2:11.
[328]1 Cor. 13:12.
[329]Isa. 58:10.
[330]Rom. 1:20.
[331]Cf. Rom. 9:15.
[332]One of the pre-Socratic "physiologers" who taught that
[[alpha]][[iota]][[theta]][[eta]][[rho]] was the primary element in [[eta]]
[[phi]][[upsilon]][[sigma]][[iota]][[gamma]][[zeta]]. Cf. Cicero's On the
Nature of the Gods (a likely source for Augustine's knowledge of early
Greek philosophy), I, 10: "After Anaximander comes Anaximenes, who taught that
the air is God. . . ."
[333]An important text for Augustine's conception of
sensation and the relation of body and mind. Cf. On Music, VI, 5:10;
The Magnitude of the Soul, 25:48; On the Trinity, XII, 2:2; see
also F. Coplestone, A History of Philosophy (London, 1950), II, 51-60,
and E. Gilson, Introduction à l'étude de Saint Augustin,
pp. 74-87.
[334]Rom. 1:20.
[335]Reading videnti (with De Labriolle) instead of
vident (as in Skutella).
[336]Ps. 32:9.
[337]The notion of the soul's immediate self-knowledge is a
basic conception in Augustine's psychology and epistemology; cf. the refutation
of skepticism, Si fallor, sum in On Free Will, II, 3:7;
see also the City of God, XI, 26.
[338]Again, the mind-body dualism typical of the
Augustinian tradition. Cf. E. Gilson, The Spirit of Medieval Philosophy
(Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1940), pp. 173-188; and E. Gilson, The
Philosophy of Saint Bonaventure (Sheed & Ward, New York, 1938), ch.
XI.
[339]Luke 15:8.
[340]Cf. Isa. 55:3.
[341]Cf. the early dialogue "On the Happy Life" in Vol. I
of The Fathers of the Church (New York, 1948).
[342]Gal. 5:17.
[343]Ps. 42:11.
[344]Cf. Enchiridion, VI, 19ff.
[345]When he is known at all, God is known as the
Self-evident. This is, of course, not a doctrine of innate ideas but rather of
the necessity, and reality, of divine illumination as the dynamic source
of all our knowledge of divine reality. Cf. Coplestone, op. cit., ch.
IV, and Cushman, op. cit.
[346]Cf. Wis. 8:21.
[347]Cf. Enneads, VI, 9:4.
[348]1 John 2:16.
[349]Eph. 3:20.
[350]1 Cor. 15:54.
[351]Cf. Matt. 6:34.
[352]1 Cor. 9:27.
[353]Cf. Luke 21:34.
[354]Cf. Wis. 8:21.
[355]Ecclus. 18:30.
[356]1 Cor. 8:8.
[357]Phil. 4:11-13.
[358]Ps. 103:14.
[359]Cf. Gen. 3:19.
[360]Luke 15:24.
[361]Ecclus. 23:6.
[362]Titus 1:15.
[363]Rom. 14:20.
[364]1 Tim. 4:4.
[365]1 Cor. 8:8.
[366]Cf. Col. 2:16.
[367]Rom. 14:3.
[368]Luke 5:8.
[369]John 16:33.
[370]Cf. Ps. 139:16.
[371]Cf. the evidence for Augustine's interest and
proficiency in music in his essay De musica, written a decade earlier.
[372]Cf. 2 Cor. 5:2.
[373]Cf. Tobit, chs. 2 to 4.
[374]Gen. 27:1; cf. Augustine's Sermon IV, 20:21f.
[375]Cf. Gen., ch. 48.
[376]Again, Ambrose, Deus, creator omnium, an
obvious favorite of Augustine's. See above, Bk. IX, Ch. XII, 32.
[377]Ps. 25:15.
[378]Ps. 121:4.
[379]Ps. 26:3.
[380]1 John 2:16.
[381]Cf. Ps. 103:3-5.
[382]Cf. Matt. 11:30.
[383]1 Peter 5:5.
[384]Cf. Ps. 18:7, 13.
[385]Cf. Isa. 14:12-14.
[386]Cf. Prov. 27:21.
[387]Cf. Ps. 19:12.
[388]Cf. Ps. 141:5.
[389]Ps. 109:22.
[390]Ps. 31:22.
[391]Cf. the parable of the Pharisee and the Publican, Luke
18:9-14.
[392]Cf. Eph. 2:2.
[393]2 Cor. 11:14.
[394]Rom. 6:23.
[395]1 Tim. 2:5.
[396]Cf. Rom. 8:32.
[397]Phil. 2:6-8.
[398]Cf. Ps. 88:5; see Ps. 87:6 (Vulgate).
[399]Ps. 103:3.
[400]Cf. Rom. 8:34.
[401]John 1:14.
[402]2 Cor. 5:15.
[403]Ps. 119:18.
[404]Col. 2:3.
[405]Cf. Ps. 21:27 (Vulgate).
[406]In the very first sentence of Confessions, Bk.
I, Ch. I. Here we have a basic and recurrent motif of the Confessions
from beginning to end: the celebration and praise of the greatness and goodness
of God--Creator and Redeemer. The repetition of it here connects this
concluding section of the Confessions, Bks. XI-XIII, with the preceding
part.
[407]Matt. 6:8.
[408]The "virtues" of the Beatitudes, the reward for which
is blessedness; cf. Matt. 5:1-11.
[409]Ps. 118:1; cf. Ps. 136.
[410]An interesting symbol of time's ceaseless passage; the
reference is to a water clock (clepsydra).
[411]Cf. Ps. 130:1, De profundis.
[412]Ps. 74:16.
[413]This metaphor is probably from Ps. 29:9.
[414]A repetition of the metaphor above, Bk. IX, Ch. VII,
16.
[415]Ps. 26:7.
[416]Ps. 119:18.
[417]Cf. Matt. 6:33.
[418]Col. 2:3.
[419]Augustine was profoundly stirred, in mind and heart,
by the great mystery of creation and the Scriptural testimony about it. In
addition to this long and involved analysis of time and creation which follows
here, he returned to the story in Genesis repeatedly: e.g., De Genesi contra
Manicheos; De Genesi ad litteram, liber imperfectus (both
written before the Confessions); De Genesi ad litteram,
libri XII and De civitate Dei, XI-XII (both written after
the Confessions).
[420]The final test of truth, for Augustine, is
self-evidence and the final source of truth is the indwelling Logos.
[421]Cf. the notion of creation in Plato's Timaeus
(29D-30C; 48E-50C), in which the Demiurgos (craftsman) fashions the universe
from pre-existent matter ([[tau]][[omicron]]
[[upsilon]][[pi]][[omicron]]d[[omicron]][[chi]][[eta]]) and imposes as much
form as the Receptacle will receive. The notion of the world fashioned from
pre-existent matter of some sort was a universal idea in Greco-Roman
cosmology.
[422]Cf. Ps. 33:9.
[423]Matt. 3:17.
[424]Cf. the Vulgate of John 8:25.
[425]Cf. Augustine's emphasis on Christ as true Teacher in
De Magistro.
[426]Cf. John 3:29.
[427]Cf. Ps. 103:4, 5 (mixed text).
[428]Ps. 104:24.
[429]Pleni vetustatis suae. In Sermon
CCLXVII, 2 (PL 38, c. 1230), Augustine has a similar usage. Speaking of
those who pour new wine into old containers, he says: Carnalitas vetustas
est, gratia novitas est, "Carnality is the old nature; grace is the new";
cf. Matt. 9:17.
[430]The notion of the eternity of this world was widely
held in Greek philosophy, in different versions, and was incorporated into the
Manichean rejection of the Christian doctrine of creatio ex nihilo which
Augustine is citing here. He returns to the question, and his answer to it,
again in De civitate Dei, XI, 4-8.
[431]The unstable "heart" of those who confuse time and
eternity.
[432]Cf. Ps. 102:27.
[433]Ps. 2:7.
[434]Spatium, which means extension either in space
or time.
[435]The breaking light and the image of the rising sun.
[436]Cf. Ps. 139:6.
[437]Memoria, contuitus, and
expectatio: a pattern that corresponds vaguely to the movement of
Augustine's thought in the Confessions: from direct experience back to
the supporting memories and forward to the outreach of hope and confidence in
God's provident grace.
[438]Cf. Ps. 116:10.
[439]Cf. Matt. 25:21, 23.
[440]Communes notitias, the universal principles of
"common sense." This idea became a basic category in scholastic epistemology.
[441]Gen. 1:14.
[442]Cf. Josh. 10:12-14.
[443]Cf. Ps. 18:28.
[444]Cubitum, literally the distance between the
elbow and the tip of the middle finger; in the imperial system of weights and
measures it was 17.5 inches.
[445]Distentionem, "spread-out-ness"; cf. Descartes'
notion of res extensae, and its relation to time.
[446]Ps. 100:3.
[447]Here Augustine begins to summarize his own answers to
the questions he has raised in his analysis of time.
[448]The same hymn of Ambrose quoted above, Bk. IX, Ch.
XII, 39, and analyzed again in De musica, VI, 2:2.
[449]This theory of time is worth comparing with its most
notable restatement in modern poetry, in T.S. Eliot's Four Quartets and
especially "Burnt Norton."
[450]Ps. 63:3.
[451]Cf. Phil. 3:12-14.
[452]Cf. Ps. 31:10.
[453]Note here the preparation for the transition from this
analysis of time in Bk. XI to the exploration of the mystery of creation in
Bks. XII and XIII.
[454]Celsitudo, an honorific title, somewhat like
"Your Highness."
[455]Rom. 8:31.
[456]Matt. 7:7, 8.
[457]Vulgate, Ps. 113:16 (cf. Ps. 115:16, K.J.; see also
Ps. 148:4, both Vulgate and K.J.): Caelum caeli domino, etc. Augustine
finds a distinction here for which the Hebrew text gives no warrant. The Hebrew
is a typical nominal sentence and means simply "The heavens are the heavens of
Yahweh"; cf. the Soncino edition of The Psalms, edited by A. Cohen; cf. also
R.S.V., Ps. 115:16. The LXX reading ([[omicron]]
[[omicron]][[upsilon]][[rho]][[alpha]][[nu]][[omicron]][[zeta]]
[[tau]][[omicron]][[upsilon]]
[[omicron]][[upsilon]][[rho]][[alpha]][[nu]][[omicron]][[upsilon]]) seems to
rest on a variant Hebrew text. This idiomatic construction does not mean "the
heavens of the heavens" (as it is too literally translated in the LXX), but
rather "highest heaven." This is a familiar way, in Hebrew, of emphasizing a
superlative (e.g., "King of kings," "Song of songs"). The singular thing can be
described superlatively only in terms of itself!
[458]Earth and sky.
[459]It is interesting that Augustine should have preferred
the invisibilis et incomposita of the Old Latin version of Gen. 1:2 over
the inanis et vacua of the Vulgate, which was surely accessible to him.
Since this is to be a key phrase in the succeeding exegesis this reading can
hardly have been the casual citation of the old and familiar version. Is it
possible that Augustine may have had the sensibilities and associations of his
readers in mind--for many of them may have not known Jerome's version or, at
least, not very well?
[460]Abyssus, literally, the unplumbed depths of the
sea, and as a constant meaning here, "the depths beyond measure."
[461]Gen. 1:2.
[462]Augustine may not have known the Platonic doctrine of
nonbeing (cf. Sophist, 236C-237B), but he clearly is deeply influenced
here by Plotinus; cf. Enneads, II, 4:8f., where matter is analyzed as a
substratum without quantity or quality; and 4:15: "Matter, then, must be
described as [[tau]][[omicron]]
[[alpha]][[pi]][[epsilon]][[iota]][[rho]][[omicron]][[nu]] (the indefinite). .
. . Matter is indeterminateness and nothing else." In short, materia
informis is sheer possibility; not anything and not nothing!
[463]Dictare: was Augustine dictating his
Confessions? It is very probable.
[464]Visibiles et compositas, the opposite of
"invisible and unformed."
[465]Isa. 6:3; Rev. 4:8.
[466]De nihilo.
[467]Trina unitas.
[468]Cf. Gen. 1:6.
[469]Constat et non constat, the created earth
really exists but never is self-sufficient.
[470]Moses.
[471]Ps. 42:3, 10.
[472]Cor. 13:12.
[473]Cf. Ecclus. 1:4.
[474]2 Cor. 5:21.
[475]Cf. Gal. 4:26.
[476]2 Cor. 5:1.
[477]Cf. Ps. 26:8.
[478]Ps. 119:176.
[479]To "the house of God."
[480]Cf. Ps. 28:1.
[481]Cubile, i.e., the heart.
[482]Cf. Rom. 8:26.
[483]The heavenly Jerusalem of Gal. 4:26, which had become
a favorite Christian symbol of the peace and blessedness of heaven; cf. the
various versions of the hymn "Jerusalem, My Happy Home" in Julian's
Dictionary of Hymnology, pp. 580-583. The original text is found in the
Liber meditationum, erroneously ascribed to Augustine himself.
[484]Cf. 2 Tim. 2:14.
[485]1 Tim. 1:5.
[486]This is the basis of Augustine's defense of allegory
as both legitimate and profitable in the interpretation of Scripture. He did
not mean that there is a plurality of literal truths in Scripture but a
multiplicity of perspectives on truth which amounted to different levels and
interpretations of truth. This gave Augustine the basis for a positive
tolerance of varying interpretations which did hold fast to the essential
common premises about God's primacy as Creator; cf. M. Pontet,
L'Exégèse de Saint Augustin prédicateur (Lyons,
1944), chs. II and III.
[487]In this chapter, Augustine summarizes what he takes to
be the Christian consensus on the questions he has explored about the relation
of the intellectual and corporeal creations.
[488]Cf. 1 Cor. 8:6.
[489]Mole mundi.
[490]Cf. Col. 1:16.
[491]Gen. 1:9.
[492]Note how this reiterates a constant theme in the
Confessions as a whole; a further indication that Bk. XII is an integral
part of the single whole.
[493]Cf. De libero arbitrio, II, 8:20, 10:28.
[494]Cf. John 8:44.
[495]The essential thesis of the De Magistro; it has
important implications both for Augustine's epistemology and for his theory of
Christian nurture; cf. the De catechizandis rudibus.
[496]1 Cor. 4:6.
[497]Cf. Deut. 6:5; Lev. 19:18; see also Matt. 22:37, 39.
[498]Cf. Rom. 9:21.
[499]Cf. Ps. 8:4.
[500]"In the beginning God created," etc.
[501]An echo of Job 39:13-16.
[502]The thicket denizens mentioned above.
[503]Cf. Ps. 143:10.
[504]Something of an understatement! It is interesting to
note that Augustine devotes more time and space to these opening verses of
Genesis than to any other passage in the entire Bible--and he never commented
on the full text of Genesis. Cf. Karl Barth's 274 pages devoted to Gen.,
chs. 1;2, in the Kirchliche Dogmatik, III, I, pp. 103-377.
[505]Transition, in preparation for the concluding book
(XIII), which undertakes a constructive resolution to the problem of the
analysis of the mode of creation made here in Bk. XII.
[506]This is a compound--and untranslatable--Latin pun:
neque ut sic te colam quasi terram, ut sis uncultus si non te colam.
[507]Cf. Enneads, I, 2:4: "What the soul now
sees, it certainly always possessed, but as lying in the darkness. . . . To
dispel the darkness and thus come to knowledge of its inner content, it must
thrust toward the light." Compare the notions of the initiative of such
movements in the soul in Plotinus and Augustine.
[508]Cf. 2 Cor. 5:21.
[509]Cf. Ps. 36:6 and see also Augustine's Exposition on
the Psalms, XXXVI, 8, where he says that "the great preachers [receivers of
God's illumination] are the mountains of God," for they first catch the light
on their summits. The abyss he called "the depth of sin" into which the evil
and unfaithful fall.
[510]Cf. Timaeus, 29D-30A, "He [the
Demiurge-Creator] was good: and in the good no jealousy . . . can ever arise.
So, being without jealousy, he desired that all things should come as near as
possible to being like himself. . . . He took over all that is visible . . .
and brought it from order to order, since he judged that order was in every way
better" (F. M. Cornford, Plato's Cosmology, New York, 1937, p. 33). Cf.
Enneads, V, 4:1, and Athanasius, On the Incarnation, III, 3.
[511]Cf. Gen. 1:2.
[512]Cf. Ps. 36:9.
[513]In this passage in Genesis on the creation.
[514]Cf. Gen. 1:6.
[515]Rom. 5:5.
[516]1 Cor. 12:1.
[517]Cf. Eph. 3:14, 19.
[518]Cf. the Old Latin version of Ps. 123:5.
[519]Cf. Eph. 5:8.
[520]Cf. Ps. 31:20.
[521]Cf. Ps. 9:13.
[522]The Holy Spirit.
[523]Canticum graduum. Psalms 119 to 133 as numbered
in the Vulgate were regarded as a single series of ascending steps by which the
soul moves up toward heaven; cf. The Exposition on the Psalms, loc.
cit.
[524]Tongues of fire, symbol of the descent of the Holy
Spirit; cf. Acts 2:3, 4.
[525]Cf. Ps. 122:6.
[526]Ps. 122:1.
[527]Cf. Ps. 23:6.
[528]Gen. 1:3.
[529]John 1:9.
[530]Cf. the detailed analogy from self to Trinity in De
Trinitate, IX-XII.
[531]I.e., the Church.
[532]Cf. Ps. 39:11.
[533]Ps. 36:6.
[534]Gen. 1:3 and Matt. 4:17; 3:2.
[535]Cf. Ps. 42:5, 6.
[536]Cf. Eph. 5:8.
[537]Ps. 42:7.
[538]Cf. 1 Cor. 3:1.
[539]Cf. Phil. 3:13.
[540]Cf. Ps. 42:1.
[541]Ps. 42:2.
[542]Cf. 2 Cor. 5:1-4.
[543]Rom. 12:2.
[544]1 Cor. 14:20.
[545]Gal. 3:1.
[546]Eph. 4:8, 9.
[547]Cf. Ps. 46:4.
[548]Cf. John 3:29.
[549]Cf. Rom. 8:23.
[550]I.e., the Body of Christ.
[551]1 John 3:2.
[552]Ps. 42:3.
[553]Cf. Ps. 42:4.
[554]Ps. 43:5.
[555]Cf. Ps. 119:105.
[556]Cf. Rom. 8:10.
[557]Cf. S. of Sol. 2:17.
[558]Cf. Ps. 5:3.
[559]Ps. 43:5.
[560]Cf. Rom. 8:11.
[561]1 Thess. 5:5.
[562]Cf. Gen. 1:5.
[563]Cf. Rom. 9:21.
[564]Isa. 34:4.
[565]Cf. Gen. 3:21.
[566]Ps. 8:3.
[567]"The heavens," i.e. the Scriptures.
[568]Cf. Ps. 8:2.
[569]Legunt, eligunt, diligunt.
[570]Ps. 36:5.
[571]Cf. Matt. 24:35.
[572]Cf. Isa. 40:6-8.
[573]Cf. 1 John 3:2.
[574]Retia, literally "a net"; such as those used by
retiarii, the gladiators who used nets to entangle their opponents.
[575]Cf. S. of Sol. 1:3, 4.
[576]1 John 3:2.
[577]Cf. Ps. 63:1.
[578]Ps. 36:9.
[579]Amaricantes, a figure which Augustine develops
both in the Exposition of the Psalms and The City of God.
Commenting on Ps. 65, Augustine says: "For the sea, by a figure, is used to
indicate this world, with its bitter saltiness and troubled storms, where men
with perverse and depraved appetites have become like fishes devouring one
another." In The City of God, he speaks of the bitterness of life in the
civitas terrena; cf. XIX, 5.
[580]Cf. Ps. 95:5.
[581]Cf. Gen. 1:10f.
[582]In this way, Augustine sees an analogy between the
good earth bearing its fruits and the ethical "fruit-bearing" of the Christian
love of neighbor.
[583]Cf. Ps. 85:11.
[584]Cf. Gen. 1:14.
[585]Cf. Isa. 58:7.
[586]Cf. Phil. 2:15.
[587]Cf. Gen. 1:19.
[588]Cf. 2 Cor. 5:17.
[589]Cf. Rom. 13:11, 12.
[590]Ps. 65:11.
[591]For this whole passage, cf. the parallel developed
here with 1 Cor. 12:7-11.
[592]In principio diei, an obvious echo to the
Vulgate ut praesset diei of Gen. 1:16. Cf. Gibb and Montgomery, p. 424
(see Bibl.), for a comment on in principio diei and in principio
noctis, below.
[593]Sacramenta; but cf. Augustine's discussion of
sacramenta in the Old Testament in the Exposition of the Psalms,
LXXIV, 2: "The sacraments of the Old Testament promised a Saviour; the
sacraments of the New Testament give salvation."
[594]Cf. 1 Cor. 3:1; 2:6.
[595]Isa. 1:16.
[596]Isa. 1:17.
[597]Isa. 1:18.
[598]Cf. for this syntaxis, Matt. 19:16-22 and Ex.
20:13-16.
[599]Cf. Matt. 6:21.
[600]I.e., the rich young ruler.
[601]Cf. Matt. 13:7.
[602]Cf. Matt. 97 Reading here, with Knöll and the
Sessorianus, in firmamento mundi.
[603]Cf. Isa. 52:7.
[604]Perfectorum. Is this a conscious use, in a
Christian context, of the distinction he had known so well among the
Manicheans--between the perfecti and the auditores?
[605]Ps. 19:2.
[606]Cf. Acts 2:2, 3.
[607]Cf. Matt. 5:14, 15.
[608]Cf. Gen. 1:20.
[609]Cf. Jer. 15:19.
[610]Ps. 19:4.
[611]That is, the Church.
[612]An allegorical ideal type of the perfecti in
the Church.
[613]1 Cor. 14:22.
[614]The fish was an early Christian rebus for "Jesus
Christ." The Greek word for fish, [[iota]][[chi]][[theta]][[upsilon]][[zeta]],
was arranged acrostically to make the phrase
[[Iota]][[eta]][[sigma]][[omicron]][[upsilon]][[zeta]]
[[Chi]][[rho]][[iota]][[sigma]][[tau]][[omicron]][[sigma]],
[[Theta]][[epsilon]][[omicron]][[upsilon]]
[[Upsilon]][[iota]][[omicron]][[zeta]],
[[Sigma]][[omega]][[tau]][[eta]][[rho]]; cf. Smith and Cheetham, Dictionary
of Christian Antiquities, pp. 673f.; see also Cabrol, Dictionnaire
d'archéologie chrétienne, Vol. 14, cols. 1246-1252, for a
full account of the symbolism and pictures of early examples.
[615]Cf. Ps. 69:32.
[616]Cf. Rom. 12:2.
[617]Cf. 1 Tim. 6:20.
[618]Gal. 4:12.
[619]Cf. Ecclus. 3:19.
[620]Rom. 1:20.
[621]Rom. 12:2.
[622]Gen. 1:26.
[623]Rom. 12:2 (mixed text).
[624]Cf. 1 Cor. 2:15.
[625]1 Cor. 2:14.
[626]Cf. Ps. 49:20.
[627]Cf. James 4:11.
[628]See above, Ch. XXI, 30.
[629]I.e., the Church.
[630]Cf. 1 Cor. 14:16.
[631]Another reminder that, ideally, knowledge is immediate
and direct.
[632]Here, again, as in a coda, Augustine restates his
central theme and motif in the whole of his "confessions": the primacy of God,
His constant creativity, his mysterious, unwearied, unfrustrated redemptive
love. All are summed up in this mystery of creation in which the purposes of
God are announced and from which all Christian hope takes its premise.
[633]That is, from basic and essentially simple ideas, they
proliferate multiple--and valid--implications and corollaries.
[634]Cf. Rom. 3:4.
[635]Cf. Gen. 1:29, 30.
[636]Cf. 2 Tim. 1:16.
[637]2 Tim. 4:16.
[638]Cf. Ps. 19:4.
[639]Phil. 4:10 (mixed text).
[640]Phil. 4:11-13.
[641]Phil. 4:14.
[642]Phil. 4:15-17.
[643]Phil. 4:17.,
[644]Cf. Matt. 10:41, 42.
[645]Idiotae: there is some evidence that this term
was used to designate pagans who had a nominal connection with the Christian
community but had not formally enrolled as catechumens. See Th. Zahn in Neue
kirkliche Zeitschrift (1899), pp. 42-43.
[646]Gen. 1:31.
[647]A reference to the Manichean cosmogony and similar
dualistic doctrines of "creation."
[648]1 Cor. 2:11, 12.
[649]Rom. 5:5.
[650]Sed quod est, est. Note the variant text in
Skutella, op. cit.: sed est, est. This is obviously an echo of
the Vulgate Ex. 3:14: ego sum qui sum.
[651]Augustine himself had misgivings about this passage.
In the Retractations, he says that this statement was made "without due
consideration." But he then adds, with great justice: "However, the point in
question is very obscure" (res autem in abdito est valde); cf.
Retract., 2:6.
[652]See above, amaricantes, Ch. XVII, 20.
[653]Cf. this requiescamus in te with the
requiescat in te in Bk. I, Ch. I.
[654]Cf. The City of God, XI, 10, on Augustine's
notion that the world exists as a thought in the mind of God.
[655]Another conscious connection between Bk. XIII and Bks.
I-X.
[656]This final ending is an antiphon to Bk. XII, Ch. I, 1
above.
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