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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
XV. The Holy Spirit (56) and the Church (57-60)
56. Now, when we have spoken of Jesus Christ, the only Son of God our Lord, in
the brevity befitting our confession of faith, we go on to affirm that we
believe also in the Holy Spirit, as completing the Trinity which is God; and
after that we call to mind our faith "in holy Church." By this we are given to
understand that the rational creation belonging to the free Jerusalem ought to
be mentioned in a subordinate order to the Creator, that is, the supreme
Trinity. For, of course, all that has been said about the man Christ Jesus
refers to the unity of the Person of the Only Begotten.
Thus, the right order of the Creed demanded[110]
that the Church be made subordinate
to the Trinity, as a house is subordinate to him who dwells in it, the temple
to God, and the city to its founder. By the Church here we are to understand
the whole Church, not just the part that journeys here on earth from rising of
the sun to its setting, praising the name of the Lord[111]
and singing a new song of
deliverance from its old captivity, but also that part which, in heaven, has
always, from creation, held fast to God, and which never experienced the evils
of a fall. This part, composed of the holy angels, remains in blessedness, and
it gives help, even as it ought, to the other part still on pilgrimage. For
both parts together will make one eternal consort, as even now they are one in
the bond of love--the whole instituted for the proper worship of the one God.[112]
Wherefore, neither the whole Church
nor any part of it wishes to be worshiped as God nor to be God to anyone
belonging to the temple of God--the temple that is being built up of "the gods"
whom the uncreated God created.[113]
Consequently, if the Holy Spirit were creature and not Creator, he would
obviously be a rational creature, for this is the highest of the levels of
creation. But in this case he would not be set in the rule of faith
before
the Church, since he would then belong
to
the Church, in
that part of it which is in heaven. He would not have a temple, for he himself
would be a temple. Yet, in fact, he hath a temple of which the apostle speaks,
"Know you not that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you,
whom you have from God?"[114]
In
another place, he says of this body, "Know you not that your bodies are members
of Christ?"[115]
How, then, is he not
God who has a temple? Or how can he be less than Christ whose members are his
temple? It is not that he has one temple and God another temple, since the same
apostle says: "Know you not that you are the temple of God," and then, as if to
prove his point, added, "and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you?"
God therefore dwelleth in his temple, not the Holy Spirit only, but also Father
and Son, who saith of his body--in which he standeth as Head of the Church on
earth "that in all things he may be pre-eminent"[116]
--"Destroy this temple and in three
days I will raise it up again."[117]
Therefore, the temple of God---that is, of the supreme Trinity as a whole--is
holy Church, the Universal Church in heaven and on the earth.
57. But what can we affirm about that part of the Church in heaven, save that
in it no evil is to be found, nor any apostates, nor will there be again, since
that time when "God did not spare the sinning angels"--as the apostle Peter
writes--"but casting them out, he delivered them into the prisons of darkness
in hell, to be reserved for the sentence in the Day of Judgment"[118]
?
58. Still, how is life ordered in that most blessed and supernal society? What
differences are there in rank among the angels, so that while all are called by
the general title "angels"--as we read in the Epistle to the Hebrews, "But to
which of the angels said he at any time, 'Sit at my right hand'?"[119]
; this expression clearly signifies
that all are angels without exception--yet there are archangels there as well?
Again, should these archangels be called "powers" [
virtutes
], so that
the verse, "Praise him all his angels; praise him, all his powers,"[120]
would mean the same thing as,
"Praise him, all his angels; praise him, all his archangels"? Or, what
distinctions are implied by the four designations by which the apostle seems to
encompass the entire heavenly society, "Be they thrones or dominions,
principalities, or powers"[121]
? Let
them answer these questions who can, if they can indeed prove their answers.
For myself, I confess to ignorance of such matters. I am not even certain about
another question: whether the sun and moon and all the stars belong to that
same heavenly society--although they seem to be nothing more than luminous
bodies, with neither perception nor understanding.
59. Furthermore, who can explain the kind of bodies in which the angels
appeared to men, so that they were not only visible, but tangible as well? And,
again, how do they, not by impact of physical stimulus but by spiritual force,
bring certain visions, not to the physical eyes but to the spiritual eyes of
the mind, or speak something, not to the ears, as from outside us, but actually
from within the human soul, since they are present within it too? For, as it is
written in the book of the Prophets: "And the angel that spoke in me, said to
me..."[122]
He does not say, "Spoke
to
me" but "Spoke
in
me." How do they appear to men in sleep, and
communicate through dreams, as we read in the Gospel: "Behold, the angel of the
Lord appeared to him in his sleep, saying..."[123]
? By these various modes of
presentation, the angels seem to indicate that they do not have tangible
bodies. Yet this raises a very difficult question: How, then, did the
patriarchs wash the angels' feet?[124]
How, also, did Jacob wrestle with the angel in such a tangible fashion?[125]
To ask such questions as these, and to guess at the answers as one can, is not
a useless exercise in speculation, so long as the discussion is moderate and
one avoids the mistake of those who think they know what they do not know.
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