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GraciousCall.org - Handbook on Faith, Hope, and Love
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Handbook on Faith, Hope, and Love by Saint Augustine
CHAPTER
I. The Occasion and Purpose of this "Manual"
1. I cannot say, my dearest son Laurence, how much your learning pleases me,
and how much I desire that you should be wise--though not one of those of whom
it is said: "Where is the wise? Where is the scribe? Where is the disputant of
this world? Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world?"[1]
Rather, you should be one of those of
whom it is written, "The multitude of the wise is the health of the world"[2]
; and also you should be the kind of man
the apostle wishes those men to be to whom he said,[3]
"I would have you be wise in goodness
and simple in evil."[4]
2. Human wisdom consists in piety. This you have in the book of the saintly
Job, for there he writes that Wisdom herself said to man, "Behold, piety is
wisdom."[5]
If, then, you ask what kind
of piety she was speaking of, you will find it more distinctly designated by
the Greek term
theosebeia
,
literally, "the service of God." The Greek has still another word for "piety,"
ensebeia
,
which also signifies "proper service." This too refers chiefly to the service
of God. But no term is better than
theosebeia
,
which clearly expresses the idea of the man's service of God as the source of
human wisdom.
When you ask me to be brief, you do not expect me to speak of great issues in a
few sentences, do you? Is not this rather what you desire: a brief summary or a
short treatise on the proper mode of worshipping [serving] God?
3. If I should answer, "God should be worshipped in faith, hope, love," you
would doubtless reply that this was shorter than you wished, and might then beg
for a brief explication of what each of these three means: What should be
believed, what should be hoped for, and what should be loved? If I should
answer these questions, you would then have everything you asked for in your
letter. If you have kept a copy of it, you can easily refer to it. If not,
recall your questions as I discuss them.
4. It is your desire, as you wrote, to have from me a book, a sort of
enchiridion
,
6
as it might be called--something to have "at
hand"--that deals with your questions. What is to be sought after above all
else? What, in view of the divers heresies, is to be avoided above all else?
How far does reason support religion; or what happens to reason when the issues
involved concern faith alone; what is the beginning and end of our endeavor?
What is the most comprehensive of all explanations? What is the certain and
distinctive foundation of the catholic faith? You would have the answers to all
these questions if you really understood what a man should believe, what he
should hope for, and what he ought to love. For these are the chief
things--indeed, the only things--to seek for in religion. He who turns away
from them is either a complete stranger to the name of Christ or else he is a
heretic. Things that arise in sensory experience, or that are analyzed by the
intellect, may be demonstrated by the reason. But in matters that pass beyond
the scope of the physical senses, which we have not settled by our own
understanding, and cannot--here we must believe, without hesitation, the
witness of those men by whom the Scriptures (rightly called divine) were
composed, men who were divinely aided in their senses and their minds to see
and even to foresee the things about which they testify.
5. But, as this faith, which works by love,[7]
begins to penetrate the soul, it tends,
through the vital power of goodness, to change into sight, so that the holy and
perfect in heart catch glimpses of that ineffable beauty whose full vision is
our highest happiness. Here, then, surely, is the answer to your question about
the beginning and the end of our endeavor. We begin in faith, we are perfected
in sight.[8]
This likewise is the most
comprehensive of all explanations. As for the certain and distinctive
foundation of the catholic faith, it is Christ. "For other foundation," said
the apostle, "can no man lay save that which has been laid, which is Christ
Jesus."[9]
Nor should it be denied that
this is the distinctive basis of the catholic faith, just because it appears
that it is common to us and to certain heretics as well. For if we think
carefully about the meaning of Christ, we shall see that among some of the
heretics who wish to be called Christians, the
name
of Christ is held in
honor, but the reality itself is not among them. To make all this plain would
take too long--because we would then have to review all the heresies that have
been, the ones that now exist, and those which could exist under the label
"Christian," and we would have to show that what we have said of all is true of
each of them. Such a discussion would take so many volumes as to make it seem
endless.[10]
6. You have asked for an
enchiridion
, something you could carry around,
not just baggage for your bookshelf. Therefore we may return to these three
ways in which, as we said, God should be served: faith, hope, love. It is easy
to
say
what one ought to believe, what to hope for, and what to love.
But to defend our doctrines against the calumnies of those who think
differently is a more difficult and detailed task. If one is to have this
wisdom, it is not enough just to put an
enchiridion
in the hand. It is
also necessary that a great zeal be kindled in the heart.
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