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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
III. God the Creator of All; and the Goodness of All Creation
9. Wherefore, when it is asked what we ought to believe in matters of religion,
the answer is not to be sought in the exploration of the nature of things
[
rerum natura
], after the manner of those whom the Greeks called
"physicists."[20]
Nor should we be
dismayed if Christians are ignorant about the properties and the number of the
basic elements of nature, or about the motion, order, and deviations of the
stars, the map of the heavens, the kinds and nature of animals, plants, stones,
springs, rivers, and mountains; about the divisions of space and time, about
the signs of impending storms, and the myriad other things which these
"physicists" have come to understand, or think they have. For even these men,
gifted with such superior insight, with their ardor in study and their abundant
leisure, exploring some of these matters by human conjecture and others through
historical inquiry, have not yet learned everything there is to know. For that
matter, many of the things they are so proud to have discovered are more often
matters of opinion than of verified knowledge.
For the Christian, it is enough to believe that the cause of all created
things, whether in heaven or on earth, whether visible or invisible, is nothing
other than the goodness of the Creator, who is the one and the true God.[21]
Further, the Christian believes that
nothing exists save God himself and what comes from him; and he believes that
God is triune, i.e., the Father, and the Son begotten of the Father, and the
Holy Spirit proceeding from the same Father, but one and the same Spirit of the
Father and the Son.
10. By this Trinity, supremely and equally and immutably good, were all things
created. But they were not created supremely, equally, nor immutably good.
Still, each single created thing is good, and taken as a whole they are very
good, because together they constitute a universe of admirable beauty.
11. In this universe, even what is called evil, when it is rightly ordered and
kept in its place, commends the good more eminently, since good things yield
greater pleasure and praise when compared to the bad things. For the Omnipotent
God, whom even the heathen acknowledge as the Supreme Power over all, would not
allow any evil in his works, unless in his omnipotence and goodness, as the
Supreme Good, he is able to bring forth good out of evil. What, after all, is
anything we call evil except the privation of good? In animal bodies, for
instance, sickness and wounds are nothing but the privation of health. When a
cure is effected, the evils which were present (i.e., the sickness and the
wounds) do not retreat and go elsewhere. Rather, they simply do not exist any
more. For such evil is not a substance; the wound or the disease is a defect of
the bodily substance which, as a substance, is good. Evil, then, is an
accident, i.e., a privation of that good which is called health. Thus, whatever
defects there are in a soul are privations of a natural good. When a cure takes
place, they are not transferred elsewhere but, since they are no longer present
in the state of health, they no longer exist at all.[22]
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