GraciousCall.org - ON CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE - PREFACE
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ON CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE
PREFACE
by St. Augustine
This text is in the public domain.
Showing that to teach rules for the interpretation of Scripture is not a
superfluous task
Argument
There are certain rules for the interpretation of Scripture which I
think might with great advantage be taught to earnest students of the
word, that they may profit not only from reading the works of others who
have laid open the secrets of the sacred writings, but also from
themselves opening such secrets to others. These rules I propose to teach
to those who are able and willing to learn, if God our Lord do not
withhold from me, while I write, the thoughts He is wont to vouchsafe to
me in my meditations on this subject. But before I enter upon this
undertaking, I think it well to meet the objections of those who are
likely to take exception to the work, or who would do so, did I not
conciliate them beforehand. And if, after all, men should still be found
to make objections, yet at least they will not prevail with others (over
whom they might have influence, did they not find them forearmed against
their assaults), to turn them back from a useful study to the dull sloth
of ignorance.
There are some, then, likely to object to this work of mine, because
they have failed to understand the rules here laid down. Others, again,
will think that I have spent my labour to no purpose, because, though
they understand the rules, yet in their attempts to apply them and to
interpret Scripture by them, they have failed to clear up the point they
wish cleared up; and these, because they have received no assistance from
this work themselves, will give it as their opinion that it can be of no
use to anybody. There is a third class of objectors who either really do
understand Scripture well, or think they do, and who, because they know
(or imagine) that they have attained a certain power of interpreting the
sacred books without reading any directions of the kind that I propose to
lay down here, will cry out that such rules are not necessary for any
one, but that everything rightly done towards clearing up the obscurities
of Scripture could be better done by the unassisted grace of God.
To reply briefly to all these. To those who do not understand what
is here set down, my answer is, that I am not to be blamed for their want
of understanding. It is just as if they were anxious to see the new or
the old moon, or some very obscure star, and I should point it out with
my finger: if they had not sight enough to see even my finger, they would
surely have no right to fly into a passion with me on that account. As
for those who, even though they know and understand my directions, fail
to penetrate the meaning of obscure passages in Scripture, they may stand
for those who, in the case I have imagined, are just able to see my
finger, but cannot see the stars at which it is pointed. And so both
these classes had better give up blaming me, and pray instead that God
would grant them the sight of their eyes. For though I can move my finger
to point out an object, it is out of my power to open men's eyes that
they may see either the fact that I am pointing, or the object at which I
point.
But now as to those who talk vauntingly of Divine Grace, and boast
that they understand and can explain Scripture without the aid of such
directions as those I now propose to lay down, and who think, therefore,
that what I have undertaken to write is entirely superfluous. I would
such persons could calm themselves so far as to remember that, however
justly they may rejoice in God's great gift, yet it was from human
teachers they themselves learnt to read. Now, they would hardly think it
right that they should for that reason be held in contempt by the
Egyptian monk Antony, a just and holy man, who, not being able to read
himself, is said to have committed the Scriptures to memory through
hearing them read by others, and by dint of wise meditation to have
arrived at a thorough understanding of them; or by that barbarian slave
Christianus, of whom I have lately heard from very respectable and
trustworthy witnesses, who, without any teaching from man, attained a
full knowledge of the art of reading simply through prayer that it might
be revealed to him; after three days' supplication obtaining his request
that he might read through a book presented to him on the spot by the
astonished bystanders.
But if any one thinks that these stories are false, I do not
strongly insist on them. For, as I am dealing with Christians who profess
to understand the Scriptures without any directions from man (and if the
fact be so, they boast of a real advantage, and one of no ordinary kind),
they must surely grant that every one of us learnt his own language by
hearing it constantly from childhood, and that any other language we have
learnt,--Greek, or Hebrew, or any of the rest,--we have learnt either in
the same way, by hearing it spoken, or from a human teacher. Now, then,
suppose we advise all our brethren not to teach their children any of
these things, because on the outpouring of the Holy Spirit the apostles
immediately began to speak the language of every race; and warn every one
who has not had a like experience that he need not consider himself a
Christian, or may at least doubt whether he has yet received the Holy
Spirit? No, no; rather let us put away false pride and learn whatever can
be learnt from man; and let him who teaches another communicate what he
has himself received without arrogance and without jealousy. And do not
let us tempt Him in whom we have believed, lest, being ensnared by such
wiles of the enemy and by our own perversity, we may even refuse to go to
the churches to hear the gospel itself, or to read a book, or to listen
to another reading or preaching, in the hope that we shall be carried up
to the third heaven, "whether in the body or out of the body," as the
apostle says,and there hear unspeakable words, such as it is not lawful
for man to utter, or see the Lord Jesus Christ and hear the gospel from
His own lips rather than from those of men.
Let us beware of such dangerous temptations of pride, and let us
rather consider the fact that the Apostle Paul himself, although stricken
down and admonished by the voice of God from heaven, was yet sent to a
man to receive the sacraments and be admitted into the Church; and that
Cornelius the centurion, although an angel announced to him that his
prayers were heard and his alms had in remembrance, was yet handed over
to Peter for instruction, and not only received the sacraments from the
apostle's hands, but was also instructed by him as to the proper objects
of faith, hope, and love. And without doubt it was possible to have done
everything through the instrumentality of angels, but the condition of
our race would have been much more degraded if God had not chosen to make
use of men as the ministers of His word to their fellow-men. For how
could that be true which is written, "The temple of God is holy, which
temple ye are," if God gave forth no oracles from His human temple, but
communicated everything that He wished to be taught to men by voices from
heaven, or through the ministration of angels? Moreover, love itself,
which binds men together in the bond of unity, would have no means of
pouring soul into soul, and, as it were, mingling them one with another,
if men never learnt anything from their fellow-men.
And we know that the eunuch who was reading Isaiah the prophet, and
did not understand what he read, was not sent by the apostle to an angel,
nor was it an angel who explained to him what he did not understand, nor
was he inwardly illuminated by the grace of God without the interposition
of man; on the contrary, at the suggestion of God, Philip, who did
understand the prophet, came to him, and sat with him, and in human
words, and with a human tongue, opened to him the Scriptures. Did not God
talk with Moses, and yet he, with great wisdom and entire absence of
jealous pride, accepted the plan of his father-in-law, a man of an alien
race, for ruling and administering the affairs of the great nation
entrusted to him? For Moses knew that a wise plan, in whatever mind it
might originate, was to be ascribed not to the man who devised it, but to
Him who is the Truth, the unchangeable God.
In the last place, every one who boasts that he, through divine
illumination, understands the obscurities of Scripture, though not
instructed in any rules of interpretation, at the same time believes, and
rightly believes, that this power is not his own, in the sense of
originating with himself, but is the gift of God. For so he seeks God's
glory, not his own. But reading and understanding, as he does, without
the aid of any human interpreter, why does he himself undertake to
interpret for others? Why does he not rather send them direct to God,
that they too may learn by the inward teaching of the Spirit without the
help of man? The truth is, he fears to incur the reproach: "Thou wicked
and slothful servant, thou oughtest to have put my money to the
exchangers." Seeing, then, that these men teach others, either through
speech or writing, what they understand, surely they cannot blame me if I
likewise teach not only what they understand, but also the rules of
interpretation they follow. For no one ought to consider anything as his
own, except perhaps what is false. All truth is of Him who says, "I am
the truth." For what have we that we did not receive? And if we have
received it, why do we glory, as if we had not received it?
He who reads to an audience pronounces aloud the words he sees
before him: he who teaches reading, does it that others may be able to
read for themselves. Each, however, communicates to others what he has
learnt himself. Just so, the man who explains to an audience the passages
of Scripture he understands is like one who reads aloud the words before
him. On the other hand, the man who lays down rules for interpretation is
like one who teaches reading, that is, shows others how to read for
themselves. So that, just as he who knows how to read is not dependent on
some one else, when he finds a book, to tell him what is written in it,
so the man who is in possession of the rules which I here attempt to lay
down, if he meet with an obscure passage in the books which he reads,
will not need an interpreter to lay open the secret to him, but, holding
fast by certain rules, and following up certain indications, will arrive
at the hidden sense without any error, or at least without falling into
any gross absurdity. And so although it will sufficiently appear in the
course of the work itself that no one can justly object to this
undertaking of mine, which has no other object than to be of service, yet
as it seemed convenient to reply at the outset to any who might make
preliminary objections, such is the start I have thought good to make on
the road I am about to traverse in this book.
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