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AUGUSTINE: CONFESSIONS
BOOK THIRTEEN
The mysteries and allegories of the days of creation. Augustine
undertakes to interpret Gen. 1:2-31 in a mystical and allegorical
fashion so as to exhibit the profundities of God's power and wisdom and love.
He is also interested in developing his theories of hermeneutics on his
favorite topic: creation. He finds the Trinity in the account of creation and
he ponders the work of the Spirit moving over the waters. In the firmament he
finds the allegory of Holy Scripture and in the dry land and bitter sea he
finds the division between the people of God and the conspiracy of the
unfaithful. He develops the theme of man's being made in the image and likeness
of God. He brings his survey to a climax and his confessions to an end with a
meditation on the goodness of all creation and the promised rest and
blessedness of the eternal Sabbath, on which God, who is eternal rest,
"rested."
CHAPTER I
1. I call on thee, my God, my Mercy, who madest me and didst not forget me,
though I was forgetful of thee. I call thee into my soul, which thou didst
prepare for thy reception by the desire which thou inspirest in it. Do not
forsake me when I call on thee, who didst anticipate me before I called and who
didst repeatedly urge with manifold calling that I should hear thee afar off
and be turned and call upon thee, who callest me. For thou, O Lord, hast
blotted out all my evil deserts, not punishing me for what my hands have done;
and thou hast anticipated all my good deserts so as to recompense me for what
thy hands have done--the hands which made me. Before I was, thou wast, and I
was not anything at all that thou shouldst grant me being. Yet, see how I exist
by reason of thy goodness, which made provision for all that thou madest me to
be and all that thou madest me from. For thou didst not stand in need of me,
nor am I the kind of good entity which could be a help to thee, my Lord and my
God. It is not that I may serve thee as if thou wert fatigued in working, or as
if thy power would be the less if it lacked my assistance. Nor is the service I
pay thee like the cultivation of a field, so that thou wouldst go untended if I
did not tend thee.[506]
Instead, it is that I may serve
and worship thee to the end that I may have my well-being from thee, from whom
comes my capacity for well-being.
CHAPTER II
2. Indeed, it is from the fullness of thy goodness that thy creation exists at
all: to the end that the created good might not fail to be, even though it can
profit thee nothing, and is nothing of thee nor equal to thee--since its
created existence comes from thee.
For what did the heaven and earth, which thou didst make in the beginning, ever
deserve from thee? Let them declare--these spiritual and corporeal entities,
which thou madest in thy wisdom--let them declare what they merited at thy
hands, so that the inchoate and the formless, whether spiritual or corporeal,
would deserve to be held in being in spite of the fact that they tend toward
disorder and extreme unlikeness to thee? An unformed spiritual entity is more
excellent than a formed corporeal entity; and the corporeal, even when
unformed, is more excellent than if it were simply nothing at all. Still, these
formless entities are held in their state of being by thee, until they are
recalled to thy unity and receive form and being from thee, the one sovereign
Good. What have they deserved of thee, since they would not even be unformed
entities except from thee?
3. What has corporeal matter deserved of thee--even in its invisible and
unformed state--since it would not exist even in this state if thou hadst not
made it? And, if it did not exist, it could not merit its existence from
thee.
Or, what has that formless spiritual creation deserved of thee--that it should
flow lightlessly like the abyss--since it is so unlike thee and would not exist
at all if it had not been turned by the Word which made it that same Word, and,
illumined by that Word, had been "made light"[507]
although not as thy equal but only as an image of that Form [of Light] which is
equal to thee? For, in the case of a body, its being is not the same thing as
its being beautiful; else it could not then be a deformed body. Likewise, in
the case of a created spirit, living is not the same state as living wisely;
else it could then be immutably wise. But the true good of every created thing
is always to cleave fast to thee, lest, in turning away from thee, it lose the
light it had received in being turned by thee, and so relapse into a life like
that of the dark abyss.
As for ourselves, who are a spiritual creation by virtue of our souls, when we
turned away from thee, O Light, we were in that former life of darkness; and we
toil amid the shadows of our darkness until--through thy only Son--we become
thy righteousness,[508]
like the mountains of God. For we,
like the great abyss,[509]
have been the objects of thy
judgments.
CHAPTER III
4. Now what thou saidst in the beginning of the creation--"Let there be light:
and there was light"--I interpret, not unfitly, as referring to the spiritual
creation, because it already had a kind of life which thou couldst illuminate.
But, since it had not merited from thee that it should be a life capable of
enlightenment, so neither, when it already began to exist, did it merit from
thee that it should be enlightened. For neither could its formlessness please
thee until it became light--and it became light, not from the bare fact of
existing, but by the act of turning its face to the light which enlightened it,
and by cleaving to it. Thus it owed the fact that it lived, and lived happily,
to nothing whatsoever but thy grace, since it had been turned, by a change for
the better, toward that which cannot be changed for either better or worse.
Thou alone art, because thou alone art without complication. For thee it is not
one thing to live and another thing to live in blessedness; for thou art
thyself thy own blessedness.
CHAPTER IV
5. What, therefore, would there have been lacking in thy good, which thou
thyself art, even if these things had never been made or had remained unformed?
Thou didst not create them out of any lack but out of the plenitude of thy
goodness, ordering them and turning them toward form,[510]
but not because thy joy had to be perfected by them. For thou art perfect, and
their imperfection is displeasing. Therefore were they perfected by thee and
became pleasing to thee--but not as if thou wert before that imperfect and had
to be perfected in their perfection. For thy good Spirit which moved over the
face of the waters[511]
was not borne up by them as if he
rested on them. For those in whom thy good Spirit is said to rest he actually
causes to rest in himself. But thy incorruptible and immutable will--in itself
all-sufficient for itself--moved over that life which thou hadst made: in which
living is not at all the same thing as living happily, since that life still
lives even as it flows in its own darkness. But it remains to be turned to him
by whom it was made and to live more and more like "the fountain of life," and
in his light "to see light,"[512]
and to be perfected, and
enlightened, and made blessed.
CHAPTER V
6. See now,[513]
how the Trinity appears to me in an
enigma. And thou art the Trinity, O my God, since thou, O Father--in the
beginning of our wisdom, that is, in thy wisdom born of thee, equal and
coeternal with thee, that is, thy Son--created the heaven and the earth. Many
things we have said about the heaven of heavens, and about the earth invisible
and unformed, and about the shadowy abyss--speaking of the aimless flux of its
being spiritually deformed unless it is turned to him from whom it has its life
(such as it is) and by his Light comes to be a life suffused with beauty. Thus
it would be a [lower] heaven of that [higher] heaven, which afterward was made
between water and water.[514]
And now I came to recognize, in the name of God, the Father who made all these
things, and in the term "the Beginning" to recognize the Son, through whom he
made all these things; and since I did believe that my God was the Trinity, I
sought still further in his holy Word, and, behold, "Thy Spirit moved over the
waters." Thus, see the Trinity, O my God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, the
Creator of all creation!
CHAPTER VI
7. But why, O truth-speaking Light? To thee I lift up my heart--let it not
teach me vain notions. Disperse its shadows and tell me, I beseech thee, by
that Love which is our mother; tell me, I beseech thee, the reason why--after
the reference to heaven and to the invisible and unformed earth, and darkness
over the abyss--thy Scripture should then at long last refer to thy Spirit? Was
it because it was appropriate that he should first be shown to us as "moving
over"; and this could not have been said unless something had already been
mentioned over which thy Spirit could be understood as "moving"? For he did not
"move over" the Father and the Son, and he could not properly be said to be
"moving over" if he were "moving over" nothing. Thus, what it was he was
"moving over" had to be mentioned first and he whom it was not proper to
mention otherwise than as "moving over" could then be mentioned. But why was it
not fitting that he should have been introduced in some other way than in this
context of "moving over''?
CHAPTER VII
8. Now let him who is able follow thy apostle with his understanding when he
says, "Thy love is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit, who is given
to us"[515]
and who teacheth us about spiritual gifts[516]
and showeth us a more excellent way of love; and who
bows his knee unto thee for us, that we may come to the surpassing knowledge of
the love of Christ.[517]
Thus, from the beginning, he who
is above all was "moving over" the waters.
To whom shall I tell this? How can I speak of the weight of concupiscence which
drags us downward into the deep abyss, and of the love which lifts us up by thy
Spirit who moved over the waters? To whom shall I tell this? How shall I tell
it? For concupiscence and love are not certain "places" into which we are
plunged and out of which we are lifted again. What could be more like, and yet
what more unlike? They are both feelings; they are both loves. The uncleanness
of our own spirit flows downward with the love of worldly care; and the
sanctity of thy Spirit raises us upward by the love of release from
anxiety--that we may lift our hearts to thee where thy Spirit is "moving over
the waters." Thus, we shall have come to that supreme rest where our souls
shall have passed through the waters which give no standing ground.[518]
CHAPTER VIII
9. The angels fell, and the soul of man fell; thus they indicate to us the deep
darkness of the abyss, which would have still contained the whole spiritual
creation if thou hadst not said, in the beginning, "Let there be light: and
there was light"--and if every obedient mind in thy heavenly city had not
adhered to thee and had not reposed in thy Spirit, which moved immutable over
all things mutable. Otherwise, even the heaven of heavens itself would have
been a dark shadow, instead of being, as it is now, light in the Lord.[519]
For even in the restless misery of the fallen spirits,
who exhibit their own darkness when they are stripped of the garments of thy
light, thou showest clearly how noble thou didst make the rational creation,
for whose rest and beatitude nothing suffices save thee thyself. And certainly
it is not itself sufficient for its beatitude. For it is thou, O our God, who
wilt enlighten our darkness; from thee shall come our garments of light; and
then our darkness shall be as the noonday. Give thyself to me, O my God,
restore thyself to me! See, I love thee; and if it be too little, let me love
thee still more strongly. I cannot measure my love so that I may come to know
how much there is still lacking in me before my life can run to thy embrace and
not be turned away until it is hidden in "the covert of thy presence."[520]
Only this I know, that my existence is my woe except in
thee--not only in my outward life, but also within my inmost self--and all
abundance I have which is not my God is poverty.
CHAPTER IX
10. But was neither the Father nor the Son "moving over the waters"? If we
understand this as a motion in space, as a body moves, then not even the Holy
Spirit "moved." But if we understand the changeless supereminence of the divine
Being above every changeable thing, then Father, Son, and Holy Spirit "moved
over the waters."
Why, then, is this said of thy Spirit alone? Why is it said of him only--as if
he had been in a "place" that is not a place--about whom alone it is written,
"He is thy gift"? It is in thy gift that we rest. It is there that we enjoy
thee. Our rest is our "place." Love lifts us up toward that place, and thy good
Spirit lifts our lowliness from the gates of death.[521]
Our peace rests in the goodness of will. The body tends toward its own place by
its own gravity. A weight does not tend downward only, but moves to its own
place. Fire tends upward; a stone tends downward. They are propelled by their
own mass; they seek their own places. Oil poured under the water rises above
the water; water poured on oil sinks under the oil. They are moved by their own
mass; they seek their own places. If they are out of order, they are restless;
when their order is restored, they are at rest. My weight is my love. By it I
am carried wherever I am carried. By thy gift,[522]
we are
enkindled and are carried upward. We burn inwardly and move forward. We ascend
thy ladder which is in our heart, and we sing a canticle of degrees[523]
; we glow inwardly with thy fire--with thy good fire[524]
--and we go forward because we go up to the peace of
Jerusalem[525]
; for I was glad when they said to me, "Let
us go into the house of the Lord."[526]
There thy good
pleasure will settle us so that we will desire nothing more than to dwell there
forever.[527]
CHAPTER X
11. Happy would be that creature who, though it was in itself other than thou,
still had known no other state than this from the time it was made, so that it
was never without thy gift which moves over everything mutable--who had been
borne up by the call in which thou saidst, "Let there be light: and there was
light."[528]
For in us there is a distinction between the
time when we were darkness and the time when we were made light. But we are not
told what would have been the case with that creature if the light had not been
made. It is spoken of as though there had been something of flux and darkness
in it beforehand so that the cause by which it was made to be otherwise might
be evident. This is to say, by being turned to the unfailing Light it might
become light. Let him who is able understand this; and let him who is not ask
of thee. Why trouble me, as if I could "enlighten every man that comes into the
world"[529]
?
CHAPTER XI
12. Who can understand the omnipotent Trinity? And yet who does not speak about
it, if indeed it is of it that he speaks? Rare is the soul who, when he speaks
of it, also knows of what he speaks. And men contend and strive, but no man
sees the vision of it without peace.
I could wish that men would consider three things which are within themselves.
These three things are quite different from the Trinity, but I mention them in
order that men may exercise their minds and test themselves and come to realize
how different from it they are.[530]
The three things I speak of are: to be, to know, and to will. For I am, and I
know, and I will. I am a knowing and a willing being; I know that I am and that
I will; and I will to be and to know. In these three functions, therefore, let
him who can see how integral a life is; for there is one life, one mind, one
essence. Finally, the distinction does not separate the things, and yet it is a
distinction. Surely a man has this distinction before his mind; let him look
into himself and see, and tell me. But when he discovers and can say anything
about any one of these, let him not think that he has thereby discovered what
is immutable above them all, which
is
immutably and
knows
immutably and
wills
immutably. But whether there is a Trinity there
because these three functions exist in the one God, or whether all three are in
each Person so that they are each threefold, or whether both these notions are
true and, in some mysterious manner, the Infinite is in itself its own Selfsame
object--at once one and many, so that by itself it is and knows itself and
suffices to itself without change, so that the Selfsame is the abundant
magnitude of its Unity--who can readily conceive? Who can in any fashion
express it plainly? Who can in any way rashly make a pronouncement about it?
CHAPTER XII
13. Go forward in your confession, O my faith; say to the Lord your God, "Holy,
holy, holy, O Lord my God, in thy name we have been baptized, in the name of
the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit." In thy name we baptize, in the name of the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. For among us also God in his Christ made
"heaven and earth," namely, the spiritual and carnal members of his Church. And
true it is that before it received "the form of doctrine," our "earth"[531]
was "invisible and unformed," and we were covered with
the darkness of our ignorance; for thou dost correct man for his iniquity,[532]
and "thy judgments are a great abyss."[533]
But because thy Spirit was moving over these waters,
thy mercy did not forsake our wretchedness, and thou saidst, "Let there be
light; repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand."[534]
Repent, and let there be light. Because our soul was troubled within us, we
remembered thee, O Lord, from the land of Jordan, and from the mountain[535]
--and as we became displeased with our darkness we
turned to thee, "and there was light." And behold, we were heretofore in
darkness, but now we are light in the Lord.[536]
CHAPTER XIII
14. But even so, we still live by faith and not by sight, for we are saved by
hope; but hope that is seen is not hope. Thus far deep calls unto deep, but now
in "the noise of thy waterfalls."[537]
And thus far he who
said, "I could not speak to you as if you were spiritual ones, but only as if
you were carnal"[538]
--thus far even he does not count
himself to have apprehended, but forgetting the things that are behind and
reaching forth to the things that are before, he presses on to those things
that are ahead,[539]
and he groans under his burden and
his soul thirsts after the living God as the stag pants for the water brooks,[540]
and says, "When shall I come?"[541]
--"desiring to be further clothed by his house which is
from heaven."[542]
And he called to this lower deep,
saying, "Be not conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of
your mind."[543]
And "be not children in understanding,
although in malice be children," in order that "in understanding you may become
perfect."[544]
"O foolish Galatians, who has bewitched
you?"[545]
But this is not now only in his own voice but
in thy voice, who sent thy Spirit from above through Him who both "ascended up
on high"[546]
and opened up the floodgates of his gifts,
that the force of his streams might make glad the city of God.[547]
For that city and for him sighs the Bridegroom's friend,[548]
who has now the first fruits of the Spirit laid up with
him, but who is still groaning within himself and waiting for adoption, that
is, the redemption of his body.[549]
To Him he sighs, for
he is a member of the Bride[550]
; for him he is jealous,
not for himself, but because not in his own voice but in the voice of thy
waterfalls he calls on that other deep, of which he is jealous and in fear; for
he fears lest, as the serpent seduced Eve by his subtlety, his mind should be
corrupted from the purity which is in our Bridegroom, thy only Son. What a
light of beauty that will be when "we shall see him as he is"[551]
!--and when these tears shall pass away which "have been
my meat day and night, while they continually say unto me, `Where is your
God?'"[552]
CHAPTER XIV
15. And I myself say: "O my God, where art thou? See now, where art thou?" In
thee I take my breath for a little while, when I pour out my soul beyond myself
in the voice of joy and praise, in the voice of him that keeps holyday.[553]
And still it is cast down because it relapses and
becomes an abyss, or rather it feels that it still is an abyss. My faith speaks
to my soul--the faith that thou dost kindle to light my path in the night: "Why
are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you disquieted in me? Hope in God."[554]
For his word is a lamp to your feet.[555]
Hope and persevere until the night passes--that mother
of the wicked; until the Lord's wrath subsides--that wrath whose children once
we were, of whom we were beforehand in darkness, whose residue we still bear
about us in our bodies, dead because of sin.[556]
Hope and
endure until the day breaks and the shadows flee away.[557]
Hope in the Lord: in the morning I shall stand in his
presence and keep watch[558]
; I shall forever give praise
to him. In the morning I shall stand and shall see my God, who is the health of
my countenance,[559]
who also will quicken our mortal
bodies by the Spirit that dwells in us,[560]
because in
mercy he was moving over our lightless and restless inner deep. From this we
have received an earnest, even now in this pilgrimage, that we are now in the
light, since already we are saved by hope and are children of the light and
children of the day--not children of the night, nor of the darkness,[561]
which we have been hitherto. Between those children of
the night and ourselves, in this still uncertain state of human knowledge, only
thou canst rightly distinguish--thou who dost test the heart and who dost call
the light day, and the darkness night.[562]
For who can
see us clearly but thee? What do we have that we have not received from thee,
who madest from the same lump some vessels to noble, and others to ignoble,
use[563]
?
CHAPTER XV
16. Now who but thee, our God, didst make for us that firmament of the
authority of thy divine Scripture to be over us? For "the heaven shall be
folded up like a scroll"[564]
; but now it is stretched
over us like a skin. Thy divine Scripture is of more sublime authority now that
those mortal men through whom thou didst dispense it to us have departed this
life. And thou knowest, O Lord, thou knowest how thou didst clothe men with
skins when they became mortal because of sin.[565]
In
something of the same way, thou hast stretched out the firmament of thy Book as
a skin--that is to say, thou hast spread thy harmonious words over us through
the ministry of mortal men. For by their very death that solid firmament of
authority in thy sayings, spoken forth by them, stretches high over all that
now drift under it; whereas while they lived on earth their authority was not
so widely extended. Then thou hadst not yet spread out the heaven like a skin;
thou hadst not yet spread abroad everywhere the fame of their death.
17. Let us see, O Lord, "the heavens, the work of thy fingers,"[566]
and clear away from our eyes the fog with which thou
hast covered them. In them[567]
is that testimony of thine
which gives wisdom even to the little ones. O my God, out of the mouth of babes
and sucklings, perfect thy praise.[568]
For we know no
other books that so destroy man's pride, that so break down the adversary and
the self-defender who resists thy reconciliation by an effort to justify his
own sins. I do not know, O Lord, I do not know any other such pure words that
so persuade me to confession and make my neck submissive to thy yoke, and
invite me to serve thee for nothing else than thy own sake. Let me understand
these things, O good Father. Grant this to me, since I am placed under them;
for thou hast established these things for those placed under them.
18. There are other waters that are above this firmament, and I believe that
they are immortal and removed from earthly corruption. Let them praise thy
name--this super-celestial society, thy angels, who have no need to look up at
this firmament or to gain a knowledge of thy Word by reading it--let them
praise thee. For they always behold thy face and read therein, without any
syllables in time, what thy eternal will intends. They read, they choose, they
love.[569]
They are always reading, and what they read
never passes away. For by choosing and by loving they read the very
immutability of thy counsel. Their book is never closed, nor is the scroll
folded up, because thou thyself art this to them, and art this to them
eternally; because thou didst range them above this firmament which thou madest
firm over the infirmities of the people below the heavens, where they might
look up and learn thy mercy, which proclaims in time thee who madest all times.
"For thy mercy, O Lord, is in the heavens, and thy faithfulness reaches to the
clouds."[570]
The clouds pass away, but the heavens
remain. The preachers of thy Word pass away from this life into another; but
thy Scripture is spread abroad over the people, even to the end of the world.
Indeed, both heaven and earth shall pass away, but thy words shall never pass
away.[571]
The scroll shall be rolled together, and the
"grass" over which it was spread shall, with all its goodliness, pass away; but
thy Word remains forever[572]
--thy Word which now appears
to us in the dark image of the clouds and through the glass of heaven, and not
as it really is. And even if we are the well-beloved of thy Son, it has not yet
appeared what we shall be.[573]
He hath seen us through
the entanglement[574]
of our flesh, and he is
fair-speaking, and he hath enkindled us, and we run after his fragrance.[575]
But "when he shall appear, then we shall be like him,
for we shall see him as he is.''[576]
As he is, O Lord, we
shall see him--although that time is not yet.
CHAPTER XVI
19. For just as thou art the utterly Real, thou alone dost fully know, since
thou art immutably, and thou knowest immutably, and thou willest immutably. And
thy Essence knows and wills immutably. Thy Knowledge is and wills immutably.
Thy Will is and knows immutably. And it does not seem right to thee that the
immutable Light should be known by the enlightened but mutable creature in the
same way as it knows itself. Therefore, to thee my soul is as a land where no
water is[577]
; for, just as it cannot enlighten itself by
itself, so it cannot satisfy itself by itself. Thus the fountain of life is
with thee, and "in thy light shall we see light."[578]
CHAPTER XVII
20. Who has gathered the "embittered ones"[579]
into a
single society? For they all have the same end, which is temporal and earthly
happiness. This is their motive for doing everything, although they may
fluctuate within an innumerable diversity of concerns. Who but thee, O Lord,
gathered them together, thou who saidst, "Let the waters be gathered together
into one place and let the dry land appear"--athirst for thee? For the sea also
is thine, and thou madest it, and thy hands formed the dry land.[580]
For it is not the bitterness of men's wills but the
gathering together of the waters which is called "the sea"; yet thou dost curb
the wicked lusts of men's souls and fix their bounds: how far they are allowed
to advance, and where their waves will be broken against each other--and thus
thou makest it "a sea," by the providence of thy governance of all things.
21. But as for the souls that thirst after thee and who appear before
thee--separated from "the society of the [bitter] sea" by reason of their
different ends--thou waterest them by a secret and sweet spring, so that "the
earth" may bring forth her fruit and--thou, O Lord, commanding it--our souls
may bud forth in works of mercy after their kind.[581]
Thus we shall love our neighbor in ministering to his bodily needs, for in this
way the soul has seed in itself after its kind when in our own infirmity our
compassion reaches out to the relief of the needy, helping them even as we
would desire to be helped ourselves if we were in similar need. Thus we help,
not only in easy problems (as is signified by "the herb yielding its seed") but
also in the offering of our best strength in affording them the aid of
protection (such as "the tree bearing its fruit"). This is to say, we seek to
rescue him who is suffering injury from the hands of the powerful--furnishing
him with the sheltering protection which comes from the strong arm of a
righteous judgment.[582]
CHAPTER XVIII
22. Thus, O Lord, thus I beseech thee: let it happen as thou hast prepared it,
as thou givest joy and the capacity for joy. Let truth spring up out of the
earth, and let righteousness look down from heaven,[583]
and let there be lights in the firmament.[584]
Let us break our bread with the hungry, let us bring the shelterless poor to
our house; let us clothe the naked, and never despise those of our own flesh.[585]
See from the fruits which spring forth from the earth
how good it is. Thus let our temporal light break forth, and let us from even
this lower level of fruitful action come to the joy of contemplation and hold
on high the Word of Life. And let us at length appear like "lights in the
world,"[586]
cleaving to the firmament of thy Scripture.
For in it thou makest it plain to us how we may distinguish between things
intelligible and things tangible, as if between the day and the night--and to
distinguish between souls who give themselves to things of the mind and others
absorbed in things of sense. Thus it is that now thou art not alone in the
secret of thy judgment as thou wast before the firmament was made, and before
thou didst divide between the light and the darkness. But now also thy
spiritual children, placed and ranked in this same firmament--thy grace being
thus manifest throughout the world--may shed light upon the earth, and may
divide between the day and night, and may be for the signs of the times[587]
; because old things have passed away, and, lo, all
things are become new[588]
; and because our salvation is
nearer than when we believed; and because "the night is far spent and the day
is at hand"[589]
; and because "thou crownest the year with
blessing,"[590]
sending the laborers into thy harvest, in
which others have labored in the sowing and sending laborers also to make new
sowings whose harvest shall not be until the end of time. Thus thou dost grant
the prayers of him who seeks, and thou dost bless the years of the righteous
man. But thou art always the Selfsame, and in thy years which fail not thou
preparest a granary for our transient years. For by an eternal design thou
spreadest the heavenly blessings on the earth in their proper seasons.
23. For "to one there is given by thy Spirit the word of wisdom"[591]
(which resembles the greater light--which is for those
whose delight is in the clear light of truth--as the light which is given for
the ruling of the day[592]
). But to another the word of
knowledge is given by the same Spirit (as it were, the "lesser light"); to
another, faith; to another, the gift of healing; to another, the power of
working miracles; to another, the gift of prophecy; to another, the discerning
of spirits; to another, other kinds of tongues--and all these gifts may be
compared to "the stars." For in them all the one and selfsame Spirit is at
work, dividing to every man his own portion, as He wills, and making stars to
appear in their bright splendor for the profit of souls. But the word of
knowledge,
scientia
, in which is contained all the mysteries[593]
which change in their seasons like the moon; and all
the other promises of gifts, which when counted are like the stars--all of
these fall short of that splendor of Wisdom in which the day rejoices and are
only for the ruling of the night. Yet they are necessary for those to whom thy
most prudent servant could not speak as to the spiritually mature, but only as
if to carnal men--even though he could speak wisdom among the perfect.[594]
Still the natural man--as a babe in Christ, and a
drinker of milk, until he is strong enough for solid meat, and his eye is able
to look into the sun--do not leave him in a lightless night. Instead, let him
be satisfied with the light of the moon and the stars. In thy book thou dost
discuss these things with us wisely, our God--in thy book, which is thy
"firmament"--in order that we may be able to view all things in admiring
contemplation, although thus far we must do so through signs and seasons and in
days and years.
CHAPTER XIX
24. But, first, "wash yourselves and make you clean; put away iniquity from
your souls and from before my eyes"[595]
--so that "the dry
land" may appear. "Learn to do well, judge the fatherless, plead for the
widow,"[596]
that the earth may bring forth the green herb
for food and fruit-bearing trees. "And come, let us reason together, saith the
Lord"[597]
--that there may be lights in the firmament of
heaven and that they may shine upon the earth.
There was that rich man who asked of the good Teacher what he should do to
attain eternal life. Let the good Teacher (whom the rich man thought a man and
nothing more) give him an answer--he is good for he is God. Let him answer him
that, if he would enter into life, he must keep the commandments: let him put
away from himself the bitterness of malice and wickedness; let him not kill,
nor commit adultery, nor steal, nor bear false witness[598]
--that "the dry land" may appear and bring forth the
honoring of fathers and mothers and the love of neighbor. "All these," he
replied, "I have kept." Where do so many thorns come from, if the earth is
really fruitful? uproot the brier patch of avarice; "sell what you have, and be
filled with fruit by giving to the poor, and you shall have treasure in heaven;
and follow" the Lord if you would be perfect and joined with those in whose
midst he speaketh wisdom--who know how to give rightly to the day and to the
night--and you will also understand, so that for you also there may be lights
in the firmament of heaven--which will not be there, however, unless your heart
is there also. And your heart will not be there unless your treasure is
there,[599]
as you have heard from the good Teacher. But
"the barren earth"[600]
was grieved, and the briers choked
the word.[601]
25. But you, O elect people, set in the firmament of the world,[602]
who have forsaken all that you may follow the Lord:
follow him now, and confound the mighty! Follow him, O beautiful feet,[603]
and shine in the firmament, that the heavens may
declare his glory, dividing the light of the perfect ones[604]
--though not yet so perfect as the angels--from the
darkness of the little ones--who are nevertheless not utterly despised. Shine
over all the earth, and let the day be lighted by the sun, utter the Word of
wisdom to the day ("day unto day utters speech"[605]
) and
let the night, lighted by the moon, display the Word of knowledge to the night.
The moon and the stars give light for the night; the night does not put them
out, and they illumine in its proper mode. For lo, it is as if God were saying,
"Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven": and suddenly there came a
sound from heaven, as if it were a rushing mighty wind, and there appeared
cloven tongues of fire, and they sat on each of them.[606]
And then they were made to be lights in the firmament of heaven, having the
Word of life. Run to and fro everywhere, you holy fires, you lovely fires, for
you are the light of the world and you are not to be hid under a peck
measure.[607]
He to whom you cleave is raised on high, and
he hath raised you on high. Run to and fro; make yourselves known among all the
nations!
CHAPTER XX
26. Also let the sea conceive and bring forth your works, and let the waters
bear the moving creatures that have life.[608]
For by
separating the precious from the vile you are made the mouth of God[609]
by whom he said, "Let the waters bring forth." This
does not refer to the living creatures which the earth brings forth, but to the
creeping creatures that have life and the fowls that fly over the earth. For,
by the ministry of thy holy ones, thy mysteries have made their way amid the
buffeting billows of the world, to instruct the nations in thy name, in thy
Baptism. And among these things many great and marvelous works have been
wrought, which are analogous to the huge whales. The words of thy messengers
have gone flying over the earth, high in the firmament of thy Book which is
spread over them as the authority beneath which they are to fly wheresoever
they go. For "there is no speech nor language where their voice is not heard,"
because "their sound has gone out through all the earth, and their words to the
end of the world"[610]
--and this because thou, O Lord,
hast multiplied these things by thy blessing.
27. Am I speaking falsely? Am I mingling and confounding and not rightly
distinguishing between the knowledge of these things in the firmament of heaven
and those corporeal works in the swelling sea and beneath the firmament of
heaven? For there are those things, the knowledge of which is solid and
defined. It does not increase from generation to generation and thus they
stand, as it were, as lights of wisdom and knowledge. But there are many and
varied physical processes that manifest these selfsame principles. And thus one
thing growing from another is multiplied by thy blessing, O God, who dost so
refresh our easily wearied mortal senses that in our mental cognition a single
thing may be figured and signified in many different ways by different bodily
motions.
"The waters" have brought forth these mysteries, but only at thy word. The
needs of the people who were alien to the eternity of thy truth have called
them forth, but only in thy gospel, since it was these "waters" which cast them
up--the waters whose stagnant bitterness was the reason why they came forth
through thy Word.
28. Now all the things that thou hast made are fair, and yet, lo, thou who
didst make all things art inexpressibly fairer. And if Adam had not fallen away
from thee, that brackish sea--the human race--so deeply prying, so boisterously
swelling, so restlessly moving, would never have flowed forth from his belly.
Thus, there would have been no need for thy ministers to use corporeal and
tangible signs in the midst of many "waters" in order to show forth their
mystical deeds and words. For this is the way I interpret the phrases "creeping
creatures" and "flying fowl." Still, men who have been instructed and initiated
and made dependent on thy corporeal mysteries would not be able to profit from
them if it were not that their soul has a higher life and unless, after the
word of its admission, it did not look beyond toward its perfection.
CHAPTER XXI
29. And thus, in thy Word, it was not the depth of the sea but "the earth,"[611]
separated from the brackishness of the water, that
brought forth, not "the creeping and the flying creature that has life," but
"the living soul" itself![612]
And now this soul no longer has need of baptism, as the heathen had, or as it
did when it was covered with the waters--and there can be no other entrance
into the Kingdom of Heaven, since thou hast appointed that baptism should be
the entrance. Nor does it seek great, miraculous works by which to buttress
faith. For such a soul does not refuse to believe unless it sees signs and
marvels, now that "the faithful earth" is separated from "the waters" of the
sea, which have been made bitter by infidelity. Thus, for them, "tongues are
for a sign, not to those who believe but to those who do not believe."[613]
And the earth which thou hast founded above the waters does not stand in need
of those flying creatures which the waters brought forth at thy word. Send
forth thy word into it by the agency of thy messengers. For we only tell of
their works, but it is thou who dost the works in them, so that they may bring
forth "a living soul" in the earth.
The earth brings forth "the living soul" because "the earth" is the cause of
such things being done by thy messengers, just as the sea was the cause of the
production of the creeping creatures having life and the flying fowl under the
firmament of heaven. "The earth" no longer needs them, although it feeds on the
Fish which was taken out of the deep,[614]
set out on that
table which thou preparest in the presence of those who believe. To this end he
was raised from the deep: that he might feed "the dry land." And "the fowl,"
even though they were bred in the sea, will yet be multiplied on the earth. The
preaching of the first evangelists was called forth by reason of man's
infidelity, but the faithful also are exhorted and blessed by them in manifold
ways, day by day. "The living soul" has its origin from "the earth," because
only to the faithful is there any profit in restraining themselves from the
love of this world, so that their soul may live to thee. This soul was dead
while it was living in pleasures--in pleasures that bear death in them--whereas
thou, O Lord, art the living delight of the pure heart.
30. Now, therefore, let thy ministers do their work on "the earth"--not as they
did formerly in "the waters" of infidelity, when they had to preach and speak
by miracles and mysteries and mystical expressions, in which ignorance--the
mother of wonder--gives them an attentive ear because of its fear of occult and
strange things. For this is the entry into faith for the sons of Adam who are
forgetful of thee, who hide themselves from thy face, and who have become a
darkened abyss. Instead, let thy ministers work even as on "the dry land," safe
from the whirlpools of the abyss. Let them be an example unto the faithful by
living before them and stirring them up to imitation.
For in such a setting, men will heed, not with the mere intent to hear, but
also to act. Seek the Lord and your soul shall live[615]
and "the earth" may bring forth "the living soul." Be not conformed to this
world;[616]
separate yourselves from it. The soul lives by
avoiding those things which bring death if they are loved. Restrain yourselves
from the unbridled wildness of pride, from the indolent passions of luxury, and
from what is falsely called knowledge.[617]
Thus may the
wild beast be tamed, the cattle subdued, and the serpent made harmless. For, in
allegory, these figures are the motions of our mind: that is to say, the
haughtiness of pride, the delight of lust, and the poison of curiosity are
motions of the dead soul--not so dead that it has lost all motion, but dead
because it has deserted the fountain of life, and so has been taken up by this
transitory world and conformed to it.
31. But thy Word, O God, is a fountain of life eternal, and it does not pass
away. Therefore, this desertion is restrained by thy Word when it says to us,
"Be not conformed to this world," to the end that "the earth" may bring forth a
"living soul" in the fountain of life--a soul disciplined by thy Word, by thy
evangelists, by the following of the followers of thy Christ. For this is the
meaning of "after his kind." A man tends to follow the example of his friend.
Thus, he [Paul] says, "Become as I am, because I have become as you are."[618]
Thus, in this "living soul" there shall be good beasts, acting meekly. For thou
hast commanded this, saying: "Do your work in meekness and you shall be loved
by all men."[619]
And the cattle will be good, for if they
eat much they shall not suffer from satiety; and if they do not eat at all they
will suffer no lack. And the serpents will be good, not poisonous to do harm,
but only cunning in their watchfulness--exploring only as much of this temporal
nature as is necessary in order that the eternal nature may "be clearly seen,
understood through the things that have been made."[620]
For all these animals will obey reason when, having been restrained from their
death-dealing ways, they live and become good.
CHAPTER XXII
32. Thus, O Lord, our God, our Creator, when our affections have been turned
from the love of the world, in which we died by living ill; and when we began
to be "a living soul" by living well; and when the word, "Be not conformed to
this world," which thou didst speak through thy apostle, has been fulfilled in
us, then will follow what thou didst immediately add when thou saidst, "But be
transformed by the renewing of your mind."[621]
This will
not now be "after their kind," as if we were following the neighbor who went
before us, or as if we were living after the example of a better man--for thou
didst not say, "Let man be made after his kind," but rather, "Let us make man
in our own image and our own likeness,"[622]
so that then
we may be able to prove what thy will is.
This is why thy minister--begetting children by the gospel so that he might not
always have them babes whom he would have to feed with milk and nurse as
children--this is why he said, "Be transformed by the renewing of your minds,
that you may prove what is the good and acceptable and perfect will of God."[623]
Therefore thou didst not say, "Let man be made," but
rather, "Let us make man." And thou didst not say, "After his kind," but after
"our image" and "likeness." Indeed, it is only when man has been renewed in his
mind, and comes to behold and apprehend thy truth, that he does not need
another man as his director, to show him how to imitate human examples.
Instead, by thy guidance, he proves what is thy good and acceptable and perfect
will. And thou dost teach him, now that he is able to understand, to see the
trinity of the Unity and the unity of the Trinity.
This is why the statement in the plural, "Let us make man," is also connected
with the statement in the singular, "And God made man." Thus it is said in the
plural, "After our likeness," and then in the singular, "After the image of
God." Man is thus transformed in the knowledge of God, according to the image
of Him who created him. And now, having been made spiritual, he judges all
things--that is, all things that are appropriate to be judged--and he himself
is judged of no man.[624]
CHAPTER XXIII
33. Now this phrase, "he judges all things," means that man has dominion over
the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over all cattle and wild
beasts, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps on
the earth. And he does this by the power of reason in his mind by which he
perceives "the things of the Spirit of God."[625]
But,
when man was put in this high office, he did not understand what was involved
and thus was reduced to the level of the brute beasts, and made like them.[626]
Therefore in thy Church, O our God, by the grace thou hast given us--since we
are thy workmanship, created in good works (not only those who are in spiritual
authority but also those who are spiritually subject to them)--thou madest man
male and female. Here all are equal in thy spiritual grace where, as far as sex
is concerned, there is neither male nor female, just as there is neither Jew
nor Greek, nor bond nor free. Spiritual men, therefore, whether those who are
in authority or those who are subject to authority, judge spiritually. They do
not judge by the light of that spiritual knowledge which shines in the
firmament, for it is inappropriate for them to judge by so sublime an
authority. Nor does it behoove them to judge concerning thy Book itself,
although there are some things in it which are not clear. Instead, we submit
our understanding to it and believe with certainty that what is hidden from our
sight is still rightly and truly spoken. In this way, even though a man is now
spiritual and renewed by the knowledge of God according to the image of him who
created him, he must be a doer of the law rather than its judge.[627]
Neither does the spiritual man judge concerning that
division between spiritual and carnal men which is known to thy eyes, O God,
and which may not, as yet, be made manifest to us by their external works, so
that we may know them by their fruits; yet thou, O God, knowest them already
and thou hast divided and called them secretly, before the firmament was made.
Nor does a man, even though he is spiritual, judge the disordered state of
society in this world. For what business of his is it to judge those who are
without, since he cannot know which of them may later on come into the
sweetness of thy grace, and which of them may continue in the perpetual
bitterness of their impiety?
34. Man, then, even if he was made after thy own image, did not receive the
power of dominion over the lights of heaven, nor over the secret heaven, nor
over the day and the night which thou calledst forth before the creation of the
heaven, nor over the gathering together of the waters which is the sea.
Instead, he received dominion over the fish of the sea, and the fowls of the
air; and over all cattle, and all the earth; and over all creeping things which
creep on the earth.
Indeed, he judges and approves what he finds right and disapproves what he
finds amiss, whether in the celebration of those mysteries by which are
initiated those whom thy mercy hast sought out in the midst of many waters; or
in that sacrament in which is exhibited the Fish itself[628]
which, being raised from the depths, the pious
"earth"[629]
feeds upon; or, in the signs and symbols of
words, which are subject to the authority of thy Book--such signs as burst
forth and sound from the mouth, as if it were "flying" under the firmament,
interpreting, expounding, discoursing, disputing, blessing, invoking thee, so
that the people may answer, "Amen."[630]
The reason that
all these words have to be pronounced vocally is because of the abyss of this
world and the blindness of our flesh in which thoughts cannot be seen
directly,[631]
but have to be spoken aloud in our ears.
Thus, although the flying fowl are multiplied on the earth, they still take
their origins from the waters.
The spiritual man also judges by approving what is right and reproving what he
finds amiss in the works and morals of the faithful, such as in their
almsgiving, which is signified by the phrase, "The earth bringing forth its
fruit." And he judges of the "living soul," which is then made to live by the
disciplining of her affections in chastity, in fasting, and in holy meditation.
And he also judges concerning all those things which are perceived by the
bodily senses. For it can be said that he should judge in all matters about
which he also has the power of correction.
CHAPTER XXIV
35. But what is this; what kind of mystery is this? Behold, O Lord, thou dost
bless men in order that they may be "fruitful and multiply, and replenish the
earth." In this art thou not making a sign to us that we may understand
something [allegorically]? Why didst thou not also bless the light, which thou
calledst "the day," nor the firmament of heaven, nor the lights, nor the stars,
nor the earth, nor the sea? I might reply, O our God, that thou in creating us
after thy own image--I might reply that thou didst will to bestow this gift of
blessing upon man alone, if thou hadst not similarly blessed the fishes and the
whales, so that they too should be fruitful and multiply and replenish the
waters of the sea; and also the fowls, so that they should be multiplied on the
earth. In like fashion, I might say that this blessing properly belonged only
to such creatures as are propagated from their own kind, if I could find it
given also as a blessing to trees, and plants, and the beasts of the earth. But
this "increase and multiply" was not said to plants or trees or beasts or
serpents--although all of these, along with fishes and birds and men, do
actually increase by propagation and so preserve their species.
36. What, then, shall I say, O Truth, O my Life: that it was idly and vainly
said? Surely not this, O Father of piety; far be it from a servant of thy Word
to say anything like this! But if I do not understand what thou meanest by that
phrase, let those who are better than I--that is, those more intelligent than
I--interpret it better, in the degree that thou hast given each of us the
ability to understand.
But let also my confession be pleasing in thy eyes, for I confess to thee that
I believe, O Lord, that thou hast not spoken thus in vain. Nor will I be silent
as to what my reading has suggested to me. For it is valid, and I do not see
anything to prevent me from thus interpreting the figurative sayings in thy
books. For I know that a thing that is understood in only one way in the mind
may be expressed in many different ways by the body; and I know that a thing
that has only one manner of expression through the body may be understood in
the mind in many different ways. For consider this single example--the love of
God and of our neighbor--by how many different mysteries and countless
languages, and, in each language, by how many different ways of speaking, this
is signified corporeally! In similar fashion, the "young fish" in "the waters"
increase and multiply. On the other hand, whoever you are who reads this,
observe and behold what Scripture declares, and how the voice pronounces it
in only one way
, "In the beginning God created heaven and earth."[632]
Is this not understood in many different ways by
different kinds of true interpretations which do not involve the deceit of
error? Thus the offspring of men are fruitful and do multiply.[633]
37. If, then, we consider the nature of things, in their strictly literal
sense, and not allegorically, the phrase, "Be fruitful and multiply," applies
to all things that are begotten by seed. But if we treat these words
figuratively, as I judge that the Scripture intended them to be--since it
cannot be for nothing that this blessing is attributed only to the offspring of
marine life and man--then we discover that the characteristic of fecundity
belongs also to the spiritual and physical creations (which are signified by
"heaven and earth"), and also in righteous and unrighteous souls (which are
signified by "light and darkness") and in the sacred writers through whom the
law is uttered (who are signified by "the firmament established between the
waters and the waters"); and in the earthly commonwealth still steeped in their
bitterness (which is signified by "the sea"); and in the zeal of holy souls
(signified by "the dry land"); and the works of mercy done in this present life
(signified by "the seed-bearing herbs and fruit-bearing trees"); and in
spiritual gifts which shine out for our edification (signified by "the lights
of heaven"); and to human affections ruled by temperance (signified by "the
living soul"). In all these instances we meet with multiplicity and fertility
and increase; but the particular way in which "Be fruitful and multiply" can be
exemplified differs widely. Thus a single category may include many things, and
we cannot discover them except through their signs displayed corporeally and by
the things being excogitated by the mind.
We thus interpret the phrase, "The generation of the waters," as referring to
the corporeally expressed signs [of fecundity], since they are made necessary
by the degree of our involvement in the flesh. But the power of human
generation refers to the process of mental conception; this we see in the
fruitfulness of reason. Therefore, we believe that to both of these two kinds
it has been said by thee, O Lord, "Be fruitful and multiply." In this blessing,
I recognize that thou hast granted us the faculty and power not only to express
what we understand by a single idea in many different ways but also to
understand in many ways what we find expressed obscurely in a single statement.
Thus the waters of the sea are replenished, and their waves are symbols of
diverse meanings. And thus also the earth is also replenished with human
offspring. Its dryness is the symbol of its thirst for truth, and of the fact
that reason rules over it.
CHAPTER XXV
38. I also desire to say, O my Lord God, what the following Scripture suggests
to me. Indeed, I will speak without fear, for I will speak the truth, as thou
inspirest me to know what thou dost will that I should say concerning these
words. For I do not believe I can speak the truth by any other inspiration than
thine, since thou art the Truth, and every man a liar.[634]
Hence, he that speaks a lie, speaks out of himself.
Therefore, if I am to speak the truth, I must speak of thy truth.
Behold, thou hast given us for our food every seed-bearing herb on the face of
the earth, and all trees that bear in themselves seed of their own kind; and
not to us only, but to all the fowls of the air and the beasts of the field and
all creeping things.[635]
Still, thou hast not given these
things to the fishes and great whales. We have said that by these fruits of the
earth the works of mercy were signified and figured forth in an allegory: thus,
from the fruitful earth, things are provided for the necessities of life. Such
an "earth" was the godly Onesiphorus, to whose house thou gavest mercy because
he often refreshed Paul and was not ashamed of his bonds.[636]
This was also the way of the brethren from Macedonia,
who bore such fruit and supplied to him what he lacked. But notice how he
grieves for certain "trees," which did not give him the fruit that was due,
when he said, "At my first answer no man stood with me, but all men forsook me:
I pray God, that it be not laid up to their charge."[637]
For we owe "fruits" to those who minister spiritual doctrine to us through
their understanding of the divine mysteries. We owe these to them as men. We
owe these fruits, also, to "the living souls" since they offer themselves as
examples for us in their own continence. And, finally, we owe them likewise to
"the flying creatures" because of their blessings which are multiplied on the
earth, for "their sound has gone forth into all the earth."[638]
CHAPTER XXVI
39. Those who find their joy in it are fed by these "fruits"; but those whose
god is their belly find no joy in them. For in those who offer these fruits, it
is not the fruit itself that matters, but the spirit in which they give them.
Therefore, he who serves God and not his own belly may rejoice in them, and I
plainly see why. I see it, and I rejoice with him greatly. For he [Paul] had
received from the Philippians the things they had sent by Epaphroditus; yet I
see why he rejoiced. He was fed by what he found his joy in; for, speaking
truly, he says, "I rejoice in the Lord greatly, that now at the last your care
of me has flourished again, in which you were once so careful, but it had
become a weariness to you.[639]
These Philippians, in
their extended period of weariness in well-doing, had become weak and were, so
to say, dried up; they were no longer bringing forth the fruits of good works.
And now Paul rejoices in them--and not just for himself alone--because they
were flourishing again in ministering to his needs. Therefore he adds: "I do
not speak in respect of my want, for I have learned in whatsoever state I am
therewith to be content. I know both how to be abased and how to abound;
everywhere and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry,
both to abound and to suffer need. I can do all things through Christ who
strengtheneth me."[640]
40. Where do you find joy in all things, O great Paul? What is the cause of
your joy? On what do you feed, O man, renewed now in the knowledge of God after
the image of him who created you, O living soul of such great continence--O
tongue like a winged bird, speaking mysteries? What food is owed such
creatures; what is it that feeds you? It is joy! For hear what follows:
"Nevertheless, you have done well in that you have shared with me in my
affliction."[641]
This is what he finds his joy in; this
is what he feeds on. They have done well, not merely because his need had been
relieved--for he says to them, "You have opened my heart when I was in
distress"--but because he knew both how to abound and how to suffer need, in
thee who didst strengthen him. And so he said, "You [Philippians] know also
that in the beginning of the gospel, when I departed from Macedonia, no church
shared with me in regard to giving and receiving, except you only. For even in
Thessalonica you sent time and time again, according to my need."[642]
He now finds his joy in the fact that they have
returned once again to these good works, and he is made glad that they are
flourishing again, as a fruitful field when it recovers its fertility.
41. Was it on account of his own needs alone that he said, "You have sent me
gifts according to my needs?" Does he find joy in that? Certainly not for that
alone. But how do we know this? We know it because he himself adds, "Not
because I desire a gift, but because I desire fruit."[643]
Now I have learned from thee, O my God, how to distinguish between the terms
"gift" and "fruit." A "gift" is the thing itself, given by one who bestows
life's necessities on another--such as money, food, drink, clothing, shelter,
and aid. But "the fruit" is the good and right will of the giver. For the good
Teacher not only said, "He that receives a prophet," but he added, "In the name
of a prophet." And he did not say only, "He who receives a righteous man," but
added, "In the name of a righteous man."[644]
Thus,
surely, the former shall receive the reward of a prophet; the latter, that of a
righteous man. Nor did he say only, "Whoever shall give a cup of cold water to
one of these little ones to drink," but added, "In the name of a disciple"; and
concluded, "Truly I tell you he shall not lose his reward." The "gift" involves
receiving a prophet, receiving a righteous man, handing a cup of cold water to
a disciple: but the "fruit" is to do all this in the name of a prophet, in the
name of a righteous man, in the name of a disciple. Elijah was fed by the widow
with "fruit," for she knew that she was feeding a man of God and this is why
she fed him. But he was fed by the raven with a "gift." The inner man of Elijah
was not fed by this "gift," but only the outer man, which otherwise might have
perished from the lack of such food.
CHAPTER XXVII
42. Therefore I will speak before thee, O Lord, what is true, in order that the
uninstructed[645]
and the infidels, who require the
mysteries of initiation and great works of miracles--which we believe are
signified by the phrase, "Fishes and great whales"--may be helped in being
gained [for the Church] when they endeavor to provide that thy servants are
refreshed in body, or otherwise aided in this present life. For they do not
really know why this should be done, and to what end. Thus the former do not
feed the latter, and the latter do not feed the former; for neither do the
former offer their "gifts" through a holy and right intent, nor do the others
rejoice in the gifts of those who do not as yet see the "fruit." For it is on
the "fruit" that the mind is fed, and by which it is gladdened. And, therefore,
fishes and whales are not fed on such food as the earth alone brings forth when
they have been separated and divided from the bitterness of "the waters" of the
sea.
CHAPTER XXVIII
43. And thou, O God, didst see everything that thou hadst made and, behold, it
was very good.[646]
We also see the whole creation and,
behold, it is all very good. In each separate kind of thy work, when thou didst
say, "Let them be made," and they were made, thou didst see that it was good. I
have counted seven times where it is written that thou didst see what thou
hadst made was "good." And there is the eighth time when thou didst see
all
things that thou hadst made and, behold, they were not only good but
also
very
good; for they were now seen as a totality. Individually they
were only good; but taken as a totality they were both good and very good.
Beautiful bodies express this truth; for a body which consists of several
parts, each of which is beautiful, is itself far more beautiful than any of its
individual parts separately, by whose well-ordered union the whole is completed
even though these parts are separately beautiful.
CHAPTER XXIX
44. And I looked attentively to find whether it was seven or eight times that
thou didst see thy works were good, when they were pleasing to thee, but I
found that there was no "time" in thy seeing which would help me to understand
in what sense thou hadst looked so many "times" at what thou hadst made. And I
said: "O Lord, is not this thy Scripture true, since thou art true, and thy
truth doth set it forth? Why, then, dost thou say to me that in thy seeing
there are no times, while this Scripture tells me that what thou madest each
day thou didst see to be good; and when I counted them I found how many
`times'?" To these things, thou didst reply to me, for thou art my God, and
thou dost speak to thy servant with a strong voice in his inner ear, my
deafness, and crying: "O man, what my Scripture says, I say. But it speaks in
terms of time, whereas time does not affect my Word--my Word which exists
coeternally with myself. Thus the things you see through my Spirit, I see; just
as what you say through my Spirit, I say. But while you see those things in
time, I do not see them in time; and when you speak those things in time, I do
not speak them in time."
CHAPTER XXX
45. And I heard this, O Lord my God, and drank up a drop of sweetness from thy
truth, and understood that there are some men to whom thy works are
displeasing, who say that many of them thou didst make under the compulsion of
necessity--such as the pattern of the heavens and the courses of the stars--and
that thou didst not make them out of what was thine, but that they were already
created elsewhere and from other sources. It was thus [they say] that thou
didst collect and fashion and weave them together, as if from thy conquered
enemies thou didst raise up the walls of the universe; so that, built into the
ramparts of the building, they might not be able a second time to rebel against
thee. And, even of other things, they say that thou didst neither make them nor
arrange them--for example, all flesh and all the very small living creatures,
and all things fastened to the earth by their roots. But [they say] a hostile
mind and an alien nature--not created by thee and in every way contrary to
thee--begot and framed all these things in the nether parts of the world.[647]
They who speak thus are mad [
insani
], since they
do not see thy works through thy Spirit, nor recognize thee in them.
CHAPTER XXXI
46. But for those who see these things through thy Spirit, it is thou who seest
them in them. When, therefore, they see that these things are good, it is thou
who seest that they are good; and whatsoever things are pleasing because of
thee, it is thou who dost give us pleasure in those things. Those things which
please us through thy Spirit are pleasing to thee in us. "For what man knows
the things of a man except the spirit of a man which is in him? Even so, no man
knows the things of God, but the Spirit of God. Now we have not received the
spirit of the world, but the Spirit of God, that we might know the things that
are freely given to us from God."[648]
And I am admonished
to say: "Yes, truly. No man knows the things of God, but the Spirit of God: but
how, then, do we also know what things are given us by God?" The answer is
given me: "Because we know these things by his Spirit; for no one knows but the
Spirit of God." But just as it is truly said to those who were to speak through
the Spirit of God, "It is not you who speak," so it is also truly said to them
who know through the Spirit of God, "It is not you yourselves who know," and
just as rightly it may be said to those who perceive through the Spirit of God
that a thing is good; it is not they who see, but God who seeth that it is
good.
It is, therefore, one thing to think like the men who judge something to be bad
when it is good, as do those whom we have already mentioned. It is quite
another thing that a man should see as good what is good--as is the case with
many whom thy creation pleases because it is good, yet what pleases them in it
is not thee, and so they would prefer to find their joy in thy creatures rather
than to find their joy in thee. It is still another thing that when a man sees
a thing to be good, God should see in him that it is good--that truly he may be
loved in what he hath made, he who cannot be loved except through the Holy
Spirit which he hath given us: "Because the love of God is shed abroad in our
hearts by the Holy Spirit who is given to us."[649]
It is
by him that we see whatever we see to be good in any degree, since it is from
him, who doth not exist in any particular degree but who simply is what he
is.[650]
CHAPTER XXXII
47. Thanks be to thee, O Lord! We see the heaven and the earth, either the
corporeal part--higher and lower--or the spiritual and physical creation. And
we see the light made and divided from the darkness for the adornment of these
parts, from which the universal mass of the world or the universal creation is
constituted. We see the firmament of heaven, either the original "body" of the
world between the spiritual (higher) waters and the corporeal (lower) waters[651]
or the expanse of air--which is also called
"heaven"--through which the fowls of heaven wander, between the waters which
move in clouds above them and which drop down in dew on clear nights, and those
waters which are heavy and flow along the earth. We see the waters gathered
together in the vast plains of the sea; and the dry land, first bare and then
formed, so as to be visible and well-ordered; and the soil of herbs and trees.
We see the light shining from above--the sun to serve the day, the moon and the
stars to give cheer in the night; and we see by all these that the intervals of
time are marked and noted. We see on every side the watery elements, fruitful
with fishes, beasts, and birds--and we notice that the density of the
atmosphere which supports the flights of birds is increased by the evaporation
of the waters. We see the face of the earth, replete with earthly creatures;
and man, created in thy image and likeness, in the very image and likeness of
thee--that is, having the power of reason and understanding--by virtue of which
he has been set over all irrational creatures. And just as there is in his soul
one element which controls by its power of reflection and another which has
been made subject so that it should obey, so also, physically, the woman was
made for the man; for, although she had a like nature of rational intelligence
in the mind, still in the sex of her body she should be similarly subject to
the sex of her husband, as the appetite of action is subjected to the
deliberation of the mind in order to conceive the rules of right action. These
things we see, and each of them is good; and the whole is very good!
CHAPTER XXXIII
48. Let thy works praise thee, that we may love thee; and let us love thee that
thy works may praise thee--those works which have a beginning and an end in
time--a rising and a setting, a growth and a decay, a form and a privation.
Thus, they have their successions of morning and evening, partly hidden, partly
plain. For they were made from nothing by thee, and not from thyself, and not
from any matter that is not thine, or that was created beforehand. They were
created from concreated matter--that is, matter that was created by thee at the
same time that thou didst form its formlessness, without any interval of time.
Yet, since the matter of heaven and earth is one thing and the form of heaven
and earth is another thing, thou didst create matter out of absolutely nothing
(
de omnino nihilo
), but the form of the world thou didst form from
formless matter (
de informi materia
). But both were done at the same
time, so that form followed matter with no delaying interval.
CHAPTER XXXIV
49. We have also explored the question of what thou didst desire to figure
forth, both in the creation and in the description of things in this particular
order. And we have seen that things taken separately are good, and all things
taken together are very good, both in heaven and earth. And we have seen that
this was wrought through thy Word, thy only Son, the head and the body of the
Church, and it signifies thy predestination before all times, without morning
and evening. But when, in time, thou didst begin to unfold the things destined
before time, so that thou mightest make hidden things manifest and mightest
reorder our disorders--since our sins were over us and we had sunk into
profound darkness away from thee, and thy good Spirit was moving over us to
help us in due season--thou didst justify the ungodly and also didst divide
them from the wicked; and thou madest the authority of thy Book a firmament
between those above who would be amenable to thee and those beneath who would
be subject to them. And thou didst gather the society of unbelievers[652]
into a conspiracy, in order that the zeal of the
faithful might become manifest and that they might bring forth works of mercy
unto thee, giving their earthly riches to the poor to obtain heavenly riches.
Then thou didst kindle the lights in the firmament, which are thy holy ones,
who have the Word of Life and who shine with an exalted authority, warranted to
them by their spiritual gifts. And then, for the instruction of the unbelieving
nations, thou didst out of physical matter produce the mysteries and the
visible miracles and the sounds of words in harmony with the firmament of thy
Book, through which the faithful should be blessed. After this thou didst form
"the living soul" of the faithful, through the ordering of their passions by
the strength of continence. And then thou didst renew, after thy image and
likeness, the mind which is faithful to thee alone, which needs to imitate no
human authority. Thus, thou didst subordinate rational action to the higher
excellence of intelligence, as the woman is subordinate to the man. Finally, in
all thy ministries which were needed to perfect the faithful in this life, thou
didst will that these same faithful ones should themselves bring forth good
things, profitable for their temporal use and fruitful for the life to come. We
see all these things, and they are very good, because thou seest them thus in
us--thou who hast given us thy Spirit, by which we may see them so and love
thee in them.
CHAPTER XXXV
50. O Lord God, grant us thy peace--for thou hast given us all things. Grant us
the peace of quietness, the peace of the Sabbath, the peace without an evening.
All this most beautiful array of things, all so very good, will pass away when
all their courses are finished--for in them there is both morning and
evening.
51. But the seventh day is without an evening, and it has no setting, for thou
hast sanctified it with an everlasting duration. After all thy works of
creation, which were very good, thou didst rest on the seventh day, although
thou hadst created them all in unbroken rest--and this so that the voice of thy
Book might speak to us with the prior assurance that after our works--and they
also are very good because thou hast given them to us--we may find our rest in
thee in the Sabbath of life eternal.[653]
CHAPTER XXXVII
52. For then also thou shalt so rest in us as now thou workest in us; and,
thus, that will be thy rest through us, as these are thy works through us. But
thou, O Lord, workest evermore and art always at rest. Thou seest not in time,
thou movest not in time, thou restest not in time. And yet thou makest all
those things which are seen in time--indeed, the very times themselves--and
everything that proceeds in and from time.
CHAPTER XXXVIII
53. We can see all those things which thou hast made because they are--but they
are because thou seest them.[654]
And we see with our eyes
that they are, and we see with our minds that they are good. But thou sawest
them as made when thou sawest that they would be made.
And now, in this present time, we have been moved to do well, now that our
heart has been quickened by thy Spirit; but in the former time, having forsaken
thee, we were moved to do evil.[655]
But thou, O the one
good God, hast never ceased to do good! And we have accomplished certain good
works by thy good gifts, and even though they are not eternal, still we hope,
after these things here, to find our rest in thy great sanctification. But thou
art the Good, and needest no rest, and art always at rest, because thou thyself
art thy own rest.
What man will teach men to understand this? And what angel will teach the
angels? Or what angels will teach men? We must ask it of thee; we must seek it
in thee; we must knock for it at thy door. Only thus shall we receive; only
thus shall we find; only thus shall thy door be opened.[656]
[1]
He had no models before him, for such earlier writings as
the
Meditations
of Marcus Aurelius and the autobiographical sections in
Hilary of Poitiers and Cyprian of Carthage have only to be compared with the
Confessions
to see how different they are.
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