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GraciousCall.org - Confessions of St. Augustine
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AUGUSTINE: CONFESSIONS
Introduction
LIKE A COLOSSUS BESTRIDING TWO WORLDS, Augustine stands as the last patristic
and the first medieval father of Western Christianity. He gathered together and
conserved all the main motifs of Latin Christianity from Tertullian to Ambrose;
he appropriated the heritage of Nicene orthodoxy; he was a Chalcedonian before
Chalcedon--and he drew all this into an unsystematic synthesis which is still
our best mirror of the heart and mind of the Christian community in the Roman
Empire. More than this, he freely received and deliberately reconsecrated the
religious philosophy of the Greco-Roman world to a new apologetic use in
maintaining the intelligibility of the Christian proclamation. Yet, even in his
role as summator of tradition, he was no mere eclectic. The center of his
"system" is in the Holy Scriptures, as they ordered and moved his heart and
mind. It was in Scripture that, first and last, Augustine found the focus of
his religious authority.
At the same time, it was this essentially conservative genius who recast the
patristic tradition into the new pattern by which European Christianity would
be largely shaped and who, with relatively little interest in historical
detail, wrought out the first comprehensive "philosophy of history." Augustine
regarded himself as much less an innovator than a summator. He was less a
reformer of the Church than the defender of the Church's faith. His own
self-chosen project was to save Christianity from the disruption of heresy and
the calumnies of the pagans, and, above everything else, to renew and exalt the
faithful hearing of the gospel of man's utter need and God's abundant grace.
But the unforeseen result of this enterprise was to furnish the motifs of the
Church's piety and doctrine for the next thousand years and more. Wherever one
touches the Middle Ages, he finds the marks of Augustine's influence, powerful
and pervasive--even Aquinas is more of an Augustinian at heart than a "proper"
Aristotelian. In the Protestant Reformation, the evangelical elements in
Augustine's thought were appealed to in condemnation of the corruptions of
popular Catholicism--yet even those corruptions had a certain right of appeal
to some of the non-evangelical aspects of Augustine's thought and life. And,
still today, in the important theological revival of our own time, the
influence of Augustine is obviously one of the most potent and productive
impulses at work.
A succinct characterization of Augustine is impossible, not only because his
thought is so extraordinarily complex and his expository method so incurably
digressive, but also because throughout his entire career there were lively
tensions and massive prejudices in his heart and head. His doctrine of God
holds the Plotinian notions of divine unity and remotion in tension with the
Biblical emphasis upon the sovereign God's active involvement in creation and
redemption. For all his devotion to Jesus Christ, this theology was never
adequately Christocentric, and this reflects itself in many ways in his
practical conception of the Christian life. He did not invent the doctrines of
original sin and seminal transmission of guilt but he did set them as
cornerstones in his "system," matching them with a doctrine of infant baptism
which cancels,
ex opere operato,
birth sin and hereditary guilt. He
never wearied of celebrating God's abundant mercy and grace--but he was also
fully persuaded that the vast majority of mankind are condemned to a wholly
just and appalling damnation. He never denied the reality of human freedom and
never allowed the excuse of human irresponsibility before God--but against all
detractors of the primacy of God's grace, he vigorously insisted on both double
predestination and irresistible grace.
For all this the Catholic Church was fully justified in giving Augustine his
aptest title,
Doctor Gratiae.
The central theme in all Augustine's
writings is the sovereign God of grace and the sovereign grace of God. Grace,
for Augustine, is God's freedom to act without any external necessity
whatsoever--to act in love beyond human understanding or control; to act in
creation, judgment, and redemption; to give his Son freely as Mediator and
Redeemer; to endue the Church with the indwelling power and guidance of the
Holy Spirit; to shape the destinies of all creation and the ends of the two
human societies, the "city of earth" and the "city of God." Grace is God's
unmerited love and favor, prevenient and occurrent. It touches man's inmost
heart and will. It guides and impels the pilgrimage of those called to be
faithful. It draws and raises the soul to repentance, faith, and praise. It
transforms the human will so that it is capable of doing good. It relieves
man's religious anxiety by forgiveness and the gift of hope. It establishes the
ground of Christian humility by abolishing the ground of human pride. God's
grace became incarnate in Jesus Christ, and it remains immanent in the Holy
Spirit in the Church.
Augustine had no system--but he did have a stable and coherent Christian
outlook. Moreover, he had an unwearied, ardent concern: man's salvation from
his hopeless plight, through the gracious action of God's redeeming love. To
understand and interpret this was his one endeavor, and to this task he devoted
his entire genius.
He was, of course, by conscious intent and profession, a Christian theologian,
a pastor and teacher in the Christian community. And yet it has come about that
his contributions to the larger heritage of Western civilization are hardly
less important than his services to the Christian Church. He was far and away
the best--if not the very first--psychologist in the ancient world. His
observations and descriptions of human motives and emotions, his depth analyses
of will and thought in their interaction, and his exploration of the inner
nature of the human self--these have established one of the main traditions in
European conceptions of human nature, even down to our own time. Augustine is
an essential source for both contemporary depth psychology and existentialist
philosophy. His view of the shape and process of human history has been more
influential than any other single source in the development of the Western
tradition which regards political order as inextricably involved in moral
order. His conception of a
societas
as a community identified and held
together by its loyalties and love has become an integral part of the general
tradition of Christian social teaching and the Christian vision of
"Christendom." His metaphysical explorations of the problems of being, the
character of evil, the relation of faith and knowledge, of will and reason, of
time and eternity, of creation and cosmic order, have not ceased to animate and
enrich various philosophic reflections throughout the succeeding centuries. At
the same time the hallmark of the Augustinian philosophy is its insistent
demand that reflective thought issue in practical consequence; no contemplation
of the end of life suffices unless it discovers the means by which men are
brought to their proper goals. In sum, Augustine is one of the very few men who
simply cannot be ignored or depreciated in any estimate of Western civilization
without serious distortion and impoverishment of one's historical and religious
understanding.
In the space of some forty-four years, from his conversion in Milan (A.D. 386)
to his death in Hippo Regius (A.D. 430), Augustine wrote--mostly at
dictation--a vast sprawling library of books, sermons, and letters, the remains
of which (in the Benedictine edition of St. Maur) fill fourteen volumes as they
are reprinted in Migne,
Patrologiae cursus completus,
Series Latina
(Vols. 32-45). In his old age, Augustine reviewed his authorship (in the
Retractations)
and has left us a critical review of ninety-three of his
works he judged most important. Even a cursory glance at them shows how
enormous was his range of interest. Yet almost everything he wrote was in
response to a specific problem or an actual crisis in the immediate situation.
One may mark off significant developments in his thought over this twoscore
years, but one can hardly miss the fundamental consistency in his entire life's
work. He was never interested in writing a systematic
summa theologica,
and would have been incapable of producing a balanced digest of his
multifaceted teaching. Thus, if he is to be read wisely, he must be read
widely--and always in context, with due attention to the specific aim in view
in each particular treatise.
For the general reader who wishes to approach Augustine as directly as
possible, however, it is a useful and fortunate thing that at the very
beginning of his Christian ministry and then again at the very climax of it,
Augustine set himself to focus his experience and thought into what were, for
him, summings up. The result of the first effort is the
Confessions,
which is his most familiar and widely read work. The second is in the
Enchiridion,
written more than twenty years later. In the
Confessions,
he stands on the threshold of his career in the Church. In
the
Enchiridion,
he stands forth as triumphant champion of orthodox
Christianity. In these two works--the nearest equivalent to summation in the
whole of the Augustinian corpus--we can find all his essential themes and can
sample the characteristic
flavor of his thought.
Augustine was baptized by Ambrose at Milan during Eastertide, A.D. 387.[0]
A short time later his mother, Monica, died at Ostia on the
journey back to Africa. A year later, Augustine was back in Roman Africa living
in a monastery at Tagaste, his native town. In 391, he was ordained presbyter
in the church of Hippo Regius (a small coastal town nearby). Here in 395--with
grave misgivings on his own part (cf.
Sermon
CCCLV, 2) and in actual
violation of the eighth canon of Nicea (cf. Mansi,
Sacrorum conciliorum,
II, 671, and IV, 1167)--he was consecrated assistant bishop to the aged
Valerius, whom he succeeded the following year. Shortly after he entered into
his episcopal duties he began his
Confessions,
completing them probably
in 398 (cf. De Labriolle, I, vi (see Bibliography), and di Capua,
Miscellanea Agostiniana,
II, 678).
Augustine had a complex motive for undertaking such a self-analysis.[1 ]
His pilgrimage of grace had led him to a most unexpected
outcome. Now he felt a compelling need to retrace the crucial turnings of the
way by which he had come. And since he was sure that it was God's grace that
had been his prime mover on that way, it was a spontaneous expression of his
heart that cast his self-recollection into the form of a sustained prayer to
God.
The
Confessions
are not Augustine's autobiography. They are, instead, a
deliberate effort, in the permissive atmosphere of God's felt presence, to
recall those crucial episodes and events in which he can now see and celebrate
the mysterious actions of God's prevenient and provident grace. Thus he follows
the windings of his memory as it re-presents the upheavals of his youth and the
stages of his disorderly quest for wisdom. He omits very much indeed. Yet he
builds his successive climaxes so skillfully that the denouement in Book VIII
is a vivid and believable convergence of influences, reconstructed and "placed"
with consummate dramatic skill. We see how Cicero's
Hortensius
first
awakened his thirst for wisdom, how the Manicheans deluded him with their
promise of true wisdom, and how the Academics upset his confidence in certain
knowledge--how they loosed him from the dogmatism of the Manicheans only to
confront him with the opposite threat that all knowledge is uncertain. He shows
us (Bk. V, Ch. X, 19) that almost the sole cause of his intellectual perplexity
in religion was his stubborn, materialistic prejudice that if God existed he
had to exist in a body, and thus had to have extension, shape, and finite
relation. He remembers how the "Platonists" rescued him from this "materialism"
and taught him how to think of spiritual and immaterial reality--and so to
become able to conceive of God in non-dualistic categories. We can follow him
in his extraordinarily candid and plain report of his Plotinian ecstasy, and
his momentary communion with the One (Book VII). The "Platonists" liberated him
from error, but they could not loose him from the fetters of incontinence.
Thus, with a divided will, he continues to seek a stable peace in the Christian
faith while he stubbornly clings to his pride and appetence.
In Book VIII, Augustine piles up a series of remembered incidents that inflamed
his desire to imitate those who already seemed to have gained what he had so
long been seeking. First of all, there had been Ambrose, who embodied for
Augustine the dignity of Christian learning and the majesty of the authority of
the Christian Scriptures. Then Simplicianus tells him the moving story of
Victorinus (a more famous scholar than Augustine ever hoped to be), who finally
came to the baptismal font in Milan as humbly as any other catechumen. Then,
from Ponticianus he hears the story of Antony and about the increasing
influence of the monastic calling. The story that stirs him most, perhaps,
relates the dramatic conversion of the two "special agents of the imperial
police" in the garden at Treves--two unlikely prospects snatched abruptly from
their worldly ways to the monastic life.
He makes it plain that these examples forced his own feelings to an intolerable
tension. His intellectual perplexities had become resolved; the virtue of
continence had been consciously preferred; there was a strong desire for the
storms of his breast to be calmed; he longed to imitate these men who had done
what he could not and who were enjoying the peace he longed for.
But the old habits were still strong and he could not muster a full act of the
whole will to strike them down. Then comes the scene in the Milanese garden
which is an interesting parallel to Ponticianus' story about the garden at
Treves. The long struggle is recapitulated in a brief moment; his will
struggles against and within itself. The trivial distraction of a child's
voice, chanting, "
Tolle, lege,"
precipitates the resolution of the
conflict. There is a radical shift in mood and will, he turns eagerly to the
chance text in Rom. 13:13--and a new spirit rises in his heart.
After this radical change, there was only one more past event that had to be
relived before his personal history could be seen in its right perspective.
This was the death of his mother and the severance of his strongest earthly
tie. Book IX tells us this story. The climactic moment in it is, of course, the
vision at Ostia where mother and son are uplifted in an ecstasy that
parallels--but also differs significantly from--the Plotinian vision of Book
VII. After this, the mother dies and the son who had loved her almost too much
goes on alone, now upheld and led by a greater and a wiser love.
We can observe two separate stages in Augustine's "conversion." The first was
the dramatic striking off of the slavery of incontinence and pride which had so
long held him from decisive commitment to the Christian faith. The second was
the development of an adequate understanding of the Christian faith itself and
his baptismal confession of Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour. The former was
achieved in the Milanese garden. The latter came more slowly and had no
"dramatic moment." The dialogues that Augustine wrote at Cassiciacum the year
following his conversion show few substantial signs of a theological
understanding, decisively or distinctively Christian. But by the time of his
ordination to the presbyterate we can see the basic lines of a comprehensive
and orthodox theology firmly laid out. Augustine neglects to tell us (in 398)
what had happened in his thought between 385 and 391. He had other questions,
more interesting to him, with which to wrestle.
One does not read far in the
Confessions
before he recognizes that the
term "confess" has a double range of meaning. On the one hand, it obviously
refers to the free acknowledgment, before God, of the truth one knows about
oneself--and this obviously meant, for Augustine, the "confession of sins."
But, at the same time, and more importantly,
confiteri
means to
acknowledge, to God, the truth one knows about God. To confess, then, is to
praise and glorify God; it is an exercise in self-knowledge and true humility
in the atmosphere of grace and reconciliation.
Thus the
Confessions
are by no means complete when the personal history
is concluded at the end of Book IX. There are two more closely related problems
to be explored: First, how does the finite self find the infinite God (or, how
is it found of him?)? And, secondly, how may we interpret God's action in
producing this created world in which such personal histories and revelations
do occur? Book X, therefore, is an exploration of
man's way to God,
a
way which begins in sense experience but swiftly passes beyond it, through and
beyond the awesome mystery of memory, to the ineffable encounter between God
and the soul in man's inmost subject-self. But such a journey is not complete
until the process is reversed and man has looked as deeply as may be into the
mystery of creation, on which all our history and experience depend. In Book
XI, therefore, we discover why
time
is such a problem and how "
In the
beginning God created the heavens and the earth
" is the basic formula of a
massive Christian metaphysical world view. In Books XII and XIII, Augustine
elaborates, in loving patience and with considerable allegorical license, the
mysteries of creation--exegeting the first chapter of Genesis, verse by verse,
until he is able to relate the whole round of creation to the point where we
can view the drama of God's enterprise in human history on the vast stage of
the cosmos itself. The Creator is the Redeemer! Man's end and the beginning
meet at a single point!
The
Enchiridion
is a briefer treatise on the grace of God and represents
Augustine's fully matured theological perspective--after the magnificent
achievements of the
De Trinitate
and the greater part of the
De
civitate Dei,
and after the tremendous turmoil of the Pelagian controversy
in which the doctrine of grace was the exact epicenter. Sometime in 421,
Augustine received a request from one Laurentius, a Christian layman who was
the brother of the tribune Dulcitius (for whom Augustine wrote the
De octo
dulcitii quaestionibus
in 423-425). This Laurentius wanted a handbook
(enchiridion)
that would sum up the essential Christian teaching in the
briefest possible form. Augustine dryly comments that the shortest complete
summary of the Christian faith is that God is to be served by man in faith,
hope, and love. Then, acknowledging that this answer might indeed be
too
brief, he proceeds to expand it in an essay in which he tries
unsuccessfully to subdue his natural digressive manner by imposing on it a
patently artificial schematism. Despite its awkward form, however, the
Enchiridion
is one of the most important of all of Augustine's writings,
for it is a conscious effort of the theological magistrate of the Western
Church to stand on final ground of testimony to the Christian truth.
For his framework, Augustine chooses the Apostles' Creed and the Lord's Prayer.
The treatise begins, naturally enough, with a discussion of God's work in
creation. Augustine makes a firm distinction between the comparatively
unimportant knowledge of nature and the supremely important acknowledgment of
the Creator of nature. But creation lies under the shadow of sin and evil and
Augustine reviews his famous (and borrowed!) doctrine of the privative
character of evil. From this he digresses into an extended comment on error and
lying as special instances of evil. He then returns to the hopeless case of
fallen man, to which God's wholly unmerited grace has responded in the
incarnation of the Mediator and Redeemer, Jesus Christ. The questions about the
appropriation of God's grace lead naturally to a discussion of baptism and
justification, and beyond these, to the Holy Spirit and the Church. Augustine
then sets forth the benefits of redeeming grace and weighs the balance between
faith and good works in the forgiven sinner. But redemption looks forward
toward resurrection, and Augustine feels he must devote a good deal of energy
and subtle speculation to the questions about the manner and mode of the life
everlasting. From this he moves on to the problem of the destiny of the wicked
and the mystery of predestination. Nor does he shrink from these grim topics;
indeed, he actually
expands
some of his most rigid ideas of God's
ruthless justice toward the damned. Having thus treated the Christian faith and
Christian hope, he turns in a too-brief concluding section to the virtue of
Christian love as the heart of the Christian life. This, then, is the
"handbook" on faith, hope, and love which he hopes Laurence will put to use and
not leave as "baggage on his bookshelf."
Taken together, the
Confessions
and the
Enchiridion
give us two
very important vantage points from which to view the Augustinian perspective as
a whole, since they represent both his early and his mature formulation. From
them, we can gain a competent--though by no means complete--introduction to the
heart and mind of this great Christian saint and sage. There are important
differences between the two works, and these ought to be noted by the careful
reader. But all the main themes of Augustinian Christianity appear in them, and
through them we can penetrate to its inner dynamic core.
There is no need to justify a new English translation of these books, even
though many good ones already exist. Every translation is, at best, only an
approximation--and an interpretation too. There is small hope for a translation
to end all translations. Augustine's Latin is, for the most part, comparatively
easy to read. One feels directly the force of his constant wordplay, the artful
balancing of his clauses, his laconic use of parataxis, and his deliberate
involutions of thought and word order. He was always a Latin rhetor; artifice
of style had come to be second nature with him--even though the Latin
scriptures were powerful modifiers of his classical literary patterns. But it
is a very tricky business to convey such a Latin style into anything like
modern English without considerable violence one way or the other. A literal
rendering of the text is simply not readable English. And this falsifies the
text in another way, for Augustine's Latin is eminently readable! On the other
side, when one resorts to the unavoidable paraphrase there is always the open
question as to the point beyond which the thought itself is being recast. It
has been my aim and hope that these translations will give the reader an
accurate medium of contact with Augustine's temper and mode of argumentation.
There has been no thought of trying to contrive an English equivalent for his
style. If Augustine's ideas come through this translation with positive force
and clarity, there can be no serious reproach if it is neither as eloquent nor
as elegant as Augustine in his own language. In any case, those who will
compare this translation with the others will get at least a faint notion of
how complex and truly brilliant the original is!
The sensitive reader soon recognizes that Augustine will not willingly be
inspected from a distance or by a neutral observer. In all his writings there
is a strong concern and moving power to involve his reader in his own process
of inquiry and perplexity. There is a manifest eagerness to have him share in
his own flashes of insight and his sudden glimpses of God's glory. Augustine's
style is deeply personal; it is therefore idiomatic, and often colloquial. Even
in his knottiest arguments, or in the labyrinthine mazes of his allegorizing
(e.g.,
Confessions,
Bk. XIII, or
Enchiridion,
XVIII), he seeks to
maintain contact with his reader in genuine respect and openness. He is never
content to seek and find the truth in solitude. He must enlist his fellows in
seeing and applying the truth as given. He is never the blind fideist; even in
the face of mystery, there is a constant reliance on the limited but real
powers of human reason, and a constant striving for clarity and
intelligibility. In this sense, he was a consistent follower of his own
principle of "Christian Socratism," developed in the
De Magistro
and the
De catechezandis rudibus.
Even the best of Augustine's writing bears the marks of his own time and there
is much in these old books that is of little interest to any but the
specialist. There are many stones of stumbling in them for the modern
secularist--and even for the modern Christian! Despite all this, it is
impossible to read him with any attention at all without recognizing how his
genius and his piety burst through the limitations of his times and his
language--and even his English translations! He grips our hearts and minds and
enlists us in the great enterprise to which his whole life was devoted: the
search for and the celebration of God's grace and glory by which his faithful
children are sustained and guided in their pilgrimage toward the true Light of
us all
.
The most useful critical text of the
Confessions
is that of Pierre de
Labriolle (fifth edition, Paris, 1950). I have collated this with the other
major critical editions: Martin Skutella,
S. Aureli Augustini Confessionum
Libri Tredecim
(Leipzig, 1934)--itself a recension of the
Corpus
Scriptorum ecclesiasticorum Latinorum XXXIII
text of Pius Knöll
(Vienna, 1896)--and the second edition of John Gibb and William Montgomery
(Cambridge, 1927).
There are two good critical texts of the
Enchiridion
and I have collated
them: Otto Scheel,
Augustins Enchiridion
(zweite Auflage, Tübingen,
1930), and Jean Rivière,
Enchiridion
in the Bibliothèque
Augustinienne, Œuvres de S. Augustin, première série:
Opuscules, IX:
Exposés généraux de la foi
(Paris,
1947).
It remains for me to express my appreciation to the General Editors of this
Library for their constructive help; to Professor Hollis W. Huston, who read
the entire manuscript and made many valuable suggestions; and to Professor
William A. Irwin, who greatly aided with parts of the
Enchiridion.
These
men share the credit for preventing many flaws, but naturally no responsibility
for those remaining. Professors Raymond P. Morris, of the Yale Divinity School
Library; Robert Beach, of the Union Theological Seminary Library; and Decherd
Turner, of our Bridwell Library here at Southern Methodist University, were
especially generous in their bibliographical assistance. Last, but not least,
Mrs. Hollis W. Huston and my wife, between them, managed the difficult task of
putting the results of this project into fair copy. To them all I am most
grateful.
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