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| While Writing, Being Blinded by Corporeal Images, He Failed to Recognise the Spiritual Nature of God. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XV.—While Writing, Being
Blinded by Corporeal Images, He Failed to Recognise the Spiritual
Nature of God.
24. But not yet did I perceive the hinge on
which this impotent matter turned in Thy wisdom, O Thou Omnipotent,
“who alone doest great wonders;”329 and my mind ranged through
corporeal forms, and I defined and distinguished as “fair,”
that which is so in itself, and “fit,” that which is beautiful
as it corresponds to some other thing; and this I supported by
corporeal examples. And I turned my attention to the nature of the
mind, but the false opinions which I entertained of spiritual
things prevented me from seeing the truth. Yet the very power of
truth forced itself on my gaze, and I turned away my throbbing soul
from incorporeal substance, to lineaments, and colours, and bulky
magnitudes. And not being able to perceive these in the mind, I
thought I could not perceive my mind. And whereas in virtue I loved
peace, and in viciousness I hated discord, in the former I
distinguished unity, but in the latter a kind of division. And in
that unity I conceived the rational soul and the nature of truth
and of the chief good330
330 Augustin tells us (De Civ. Dei, xix. 1) that
Varro, in his lost book De Philosophia, gives two hundred
and eighty-eight different opinions as regards the chief good, and
shows us how readily they may be reduced in number. Now, as then,
philosophers ask the same questions. We have our hedonists, whose
“good” is their own pleasure and happiness; our materialists,
who would seek the common good of all; and our intuitionists, who
aim at following the dictates of conscience. When the pretensions
of these various schools are examined without prejudice, the
conclusion is forced upon us that we must have recourse to
Revelation for a reconcilement of the difficulties of the various
systems; and that the philosophers, to employ Davidson’s happy
illustration (Prophecies, Introd.), forgetting that their
faded taper has been insensibly kindled by gospel light, are
attempting now, as in Augustin’s time (ibid. sec. 4),
“to fabricate for themselves a happiness in this life based upon
a virtue as deceitful as it is proud.” Christianity gives the
golden key to the attainment of happiness, when it declares that
“godliness is profitable for all things, having the promise of
the life which now is, and of that which is to come ” (1 Tim. iv.
8). It was a saying of
Bacon (Essay on Adversity), that while “prosperity is the
blessing of the old Testament, adversity is the blessing of the
New.” He would have been nearer the truth had he said that while
temporal rewards were the special promise of the Old Testament,
spiritual rewards are the special promise of the New. For though
Christ’s immediate followers had to suffer “adversity” in the
planting of our faith, adversity cannot properly be said to be the
result of following Christ. It has yet to be shown that, on the
whole, the greatest amount of real happiness does not result, even
in this life, from a Christian life, for virtue is, even here, its
own reward. The fulness of the reward, however, will only be
received in the life to come. Augustin’s remark, therefore, still
holds good that “life eternal is the supreme good, and death
eternal the supreme evil, and that to obtain the one and escape the
other we must live rightly” (ibid. sec. 4); and again,
that even in the midst of the troubles of life, “as we are saved,
so we are made happy, by hope. And as we do not as yet possess a
present, but look for a future salvation, so it is with our
happiness,…we ought patiently to endure till we come to the
ineffable enjoyment of unmixed good.” See Abbé Anselme, Sur
le Souverain Bien, vol. v. serm. 1; and the last
Chapter of Professor Sidgwick’s
Methods of Ethics, for the conclusions at which a mind at once
lucid and dispassionate has arrived on this question. | to consist. But in this division I,
unfortunate one, imagined there was I know not what substance of
irrational life, and the nature of the chief evil, which should not
be a substance only, but real life also, and yet not emanating from
Thee, O my God, from whom are all things. And yet the first I
called a Monad, as if it had been a soul without sex,331
331 “Or ‘an unintelligent soul;’ very good mss. reading ‘sensu,’ the majority, it
appears, ‘sexu.’ If we read ‘sexu,’ the
absolute unity of the first principle or Monad, may be insisted
upon, and in the inferior principle, divided into ‘violence’
and ‘lust,’ ‘violence,’ as implying strength, may be looked
on as the male, ‘lust’ was, in mythology, represented as
female; if we take ‘sensu,’ it will express the living
but unintelligent soul of the world in the Manichæan, as a
pantheistic system.”—E. B. P. | but the
other a Duad,—anger in deeds of violence, in deeds of passion,
lust,—not knowing of what I talked. For I had not known or
learned that neither was evil a substance, nor our soul that chief
and unchangeable good.
25. For even as it is in the case of deeds of
violence, if that emotion of the soul from whence the stimulus
comes be depraved, and carry itself insolently and mutinously; and
in acts of passion, if that affection of the soul whereby carnal
pleasures are imbibed is unrestrained,—so do errors and false
opinions contaminate the life, if the reasonable soul itself be
depraved, as it was at that time in me, who was ignorant that it
must be enlightened by another light that it may be partaker of
truth, seeing that itself is not that nature of truth. “For Thou
wilt light my candle; the Lord my God will enlighten my darkness;332
332 Ps. xviii. 28. Augustin constantly urges our
recognition of the truth that God is the “Father of lights.”
From Him as our central sun, all light, whether of wisdom or
knowledge proceedeth, and if changing the figure, our candle which
He hath lighted be blown out, He again must light it. Compare
Enar. in Ps. xciii. 147; and Sermons, 67 and 341. | and “of
His fulness have all we received,”333 for “that was the true Light
which lighted every man that cometh into the world;”334 for in Thee
there is “no variableness, neither shadow of turning.”335
26. But I pressed towards Thee, and was
repelled by Thee that I might taste of death, for Thou “resistest
the proud.”336 But what
prouder than for me, with a marvellous madness, to assert myself to
be that by nature which Thou art? For whereas I was mutable,—so
much being clear to me, for my very longing to become wise arose
from the wish from worse to become better,—yet chose I rather to
think Thee mutable, than myself not to be that which Thou art.
Therefore was I repelled by Thee, and Thou resistedst my changeable
stiffneckedness; and I imagined corporeal forms, and, being flesh,
I accused flesh, and, being “a wind that passeth away,”337 I returned
not to Thee, but went wandering and wandering on towards those
things that have no being, neither in Thee, nor in me, nor in the
body. Neither were they created for me by Thy truth, but conceived
by my vain conceit out of corporeal things. And I used to ask Thy
faithful little ones, my fellow-citizens,—from whom I
unconsciously stood exiled,—I used flippantly and foolishly to
ask, “Why, then, doth the soul which God created err?” But I
would not permit any one to ask me, “Why, then, doth God err?”
And I contended that Thy immutable substance erred of constraint,
rather than admit that my mutable substance had gone astray of free
will, and erred as a punishment.338
338 It may assist those unacquainted with Augustin’s
writings to understand the last three sections, if we set before
them a brief view of the Manichæan speculations as to the good and
evil principles, and the nature of the human soul:—(1) The
Manichæans believed that there were two principles or substances,
one good and the other evil, and that both were eternal and opposed
one to the other. The good principle they called God, and the evil,
matter or Hyle (Con. Faust. xxi. 1, 2). Faustus, in his
argument with Augustin, admits that they sometimes called the evil
nature “God,” but simply as a conventional usage. Augustin says
thereon (ibid. sec. 4): “Faustus glibly defends himself by
saying, ‘We speak not of two gods, but of God and Hyle;’ but
when you ask for the meaning of Hyle, you find that it is in fact
another god. If the Manichæans gave the name of Hyle, as the
ancients did, to the unformed matter which is susceptible of bodily
forms, we should not accuse them of making two gods. But it is pure
folly and madness to give to matter the power of forming bodies, or
to deny that what has this power is God.” Augustin alludes in the
above passage to the Platonic theory of matter, which, as the late
Dean Mansel has shown us (Gnostic Heresies, Basilides,
etc.), resulted after his time in Pantheism, and which was entirely
opposed to the dualism of Manichæus. It is to this “power of
forming bodies” claimed for matter, then, that Augustin alludes
in our text (sec. 24) as “not only a substance but real life
also.” (2) The human soul the Manichæans declared to be of the
same nature as God, though not created by Him—it having
originated in the intermingling of part of His being with the evil
principle, in the conflict between the kingdoms of light and
darkness (in Ps. cxl. sec. 10). Augustin says to Faustus:
“You generally call your soul not a temple, but a part or member
of God ” (Con. Faust. xx. 15); and thus, “identifying
themselves with the nature and substance of God” (ibid.
xii. 13), they did not refer their sin to themselves, but to the
race of darkness, and so did not “prevail over their sin.” That
is, they denied original sin, and asserted that it necessarily
resulted from the soul’s contact with the body. To this Augustin
steadily replied, that as the soul was not of the nature of God,
but created by Him and endowed with free will, man was responsible
for his transgressions. Again, referring to the Confessions,
we find Augustin speaking consistently with his then belief, when
he says that he had not then learned that the soul was not a
“chief and unchangeable good” (sec. 24), or that “it was not
that nature of truth” (sec. 25); and that when he transgressed
“he accused flesh” rather than himself; and, as a result of his
Manichæan errors (sec. 26), “contended that God’s immutable
substance erred of constraint, rather than admit that his mutable
substance had gone astray of free will, and erred as a
punishment.” |
27. I was about six or seven and twenty years of age
when I wrote those volumes—meditating upon corporeal fictions,
which clamoured in the ears of my heart. These I directed, O sweet
Truth, to Thy
inward melody, pondering on the “fair and fit,” and longing to
stay and listen to Thee, and to rejoice greatly at the
Bridegroom’s voice,339 and I could not; for by the voices
of my own errors was I driven forth, and by the weight of my own
pride was I sinking into the lowest pit. For Thou didst not “make
me to hear joy and gladness;” nor did the bones which were not
yet humbled rejoice.340
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