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| He Proclaims the Greatness of God, Whom He Desires to Seek and Invoke, Being Awakened by Him. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter I.—He Proclaims the
Greatness of God, Whom He Desires to Seek and Invoke, Being
Awakened by Him.
1. Great art Thou, O
Lord, and greatly to be praised; great is Thy power, and of Thy
wisdom there is no end.121 And man, being a part of Thy
creation, desires to praise Thee, man, who bears about with him his
mortality, the witness of his sin, even the witness that Thou
“resistest the proud,”122 —yet man, this part of Thy
creation, desires to praise Thee.123
123Augustin begins with praise, and the whole book
vibrates with praise. He says elsewhere (in Ps. cxlix.), that “as
a new song fits not well an old man’s lips, he should sing a new
song who is a new creature and is living a new life;” and so from
the time of his new birth, the “new song” of praise went up
from him, and that “not of the lip only,” but (ibid. cxlviii.)
conscientia lingua vita. | Thou movest us to delight in
praising Thee; for Thou hast formed us for Thyself, and our hearts
are restless till they find rest in Thee.124
124And the rest which the Christian has here is but an
earnest of the more perfect rest hereafter, when, as Augustin says
(De Gen. ad. Lit.. xii. 26), “all virtue will be to love
what one sees, and the highest felicity to have what one loves.”
[Watts, followed by Pusey, and Shedd, missed the paronomasia of the
Latin: “cor nostrum inquietum est donec requiescat
in Te,” by translating: “our heart is restless, until it
repose in Thee.” It is the finest sentence in the whole
book, and furnishes one of the best arguments for Christianity as
the only religion which leads to that rest in God.—P.
S.] | Lord, teach me to know and
understand which of these should be first, to call on Thee, or to
praise Thee; and likewise to know Thee, or to call upon Thee. But
who is there that calls upon Thee without knowing Thee? For he that
knows Thee not may call upon Thee as other than Thou art. Or
perhaps we call on Thee that we may know Thee. “But how shall
they call on Him in whom they have not believed? or how shall they
believe without a preacher?”125 And those who seek the Lord shall
praise Him.126 For those
who seek shall find Him,127 and those who find Him shall praise
Him. Let me seek Thee, Lord, in calling on Thee, and call on Thee
in believing in Thee; for Thou hast been preached unto us. O Lord,
my faith calls on Thee,—that faith which Thou hast imparted to
me, which Thou hast breathed into me through the incarnation of Thy
Son, through the ministry of Thy preacher.128
128 That
is, Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, who was instrumental in his
conversion (vi. sec. 1; viii. sec. 28, etc.). “Before
conversion,” as Leighton observes on
I Pet. ii. 1, 2, “wit or eloquence may draw
a man to the word, and possibly prove a happy bait to catch him (as
St. Augustin reports of his hearing St. Ambrose), but, once born
again, then it is the milk itself that he desires for
itself.” |
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