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| Having Heard Faustus, the Most Learned Bishop of the Manichæans, He Discerns that God, the Author Both of Things Animate and Inanimate, Chiefly Has Care for the Humble. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter III.—Having Heard
Faustus, the Most Learned Bishop of the Manichæans, He Discerns
that God, the Author Both of Things Animate and Inanimate, Chiefly
Has Care for the Humble.
3. Let me lay bare before my God that
twenty-ninth year of my age. There had at this time come to
Carthage a certain bishop of the Manichæans, by name Faustus, a
great snare of the devil, and in any were entangled by him through
the allurement of his smooth speech; the which, although I did
commend, yet could I separate from the truth of those things which
I was eager to learn. Nor did I esteem the small dish of oratory so
much as the science, which this their so praised Faustus placed
before me to feed upon. Fame, indeed, had before spoken of him to
me, as most skilled in all becoming learning, and pre-eminently
skilled in the liberal sciences. And as I had read and retained in
memory many injunctions of the philosophers, I used to compare some
teachings of theirs with those long fables of the Manichæans and
the former things which they declared, who could only prevail so
far as to estimate this lower world, while its lord they could by
no means find out,362 seemed to me the more probable. For
Thou art great, O Lord, and hast respect unto the lowly, but the
proud Thou knowest afar off.”363 Nor dost Thou draw near but to the
contrite heart,364 nor art Thou
found by the proud,365
365 See Book iv. sec. 19, note, above. | —not even could they number by
cunning skill the stars and the sand, and measure the starry
regions, and trace the courses of the planets.
4. For with their understanding and the
capacity which Thou hast bestowed upon them they search out these
things; and much have they found out, and foretold many years
before,—the eclipses of those luminaries, the sun and moon, on
what day, at what hour, and from how many particular points they
were likely to come. Nor did their calculation fail them; and it
came to pass even as they foretold. And they wrote down the rules
found out, which are read at this day; and from these others
foretell in what year and in what month of the year, and on what
day of the month, and at what hour of the day, and at what quarter
of its light, either moon or sun is to be eclipsed, and thus it
shall be even as it is foretold. And men who are ignorant of these
things marvel and are amazed, and they that know them exult and are
exalted; and by an impious pride, departing from Thee, and
forsaking Thy light, they foretell a failure of the sun’s light
which is likely to occur so long before, but see not their own,
which is now present. For they seek not religiously whence they
have the ability where-with they seek out these things. And finding
that Thou hast made them, they give not themselves up to Thee, that
Thou mayest preserve what Thou hast made, nor sacrifice themselves
to Thee, even such as they have made themselves to be; nor do they
slay their own pride, as fowls of the air,366
366 He makes use of the same illustrations on Psalms viii.
and xi. , where the birds
of the air represent the proud, the fishes of the sea those who
have too great a curiosity, while the beasts of the field are those
given to carnal pleasures. It will be seen that there is a
correspondence between them and the lust of the flesh, the lust of
the eye, and the pride of life, in 1 John ii. 16. See also above, Book iii.
sec. 16; and below, Book x. sec. 41, etc. | nor their own curiosities, by which
(like the fishes of the sea) they wander over the unknown paths of
the abyss, nor their own extravagance, as the “beasts of the
field,”367 that Thou,
Lord, “a consuming fire,”368 mayest burn up their lifeless cares
and renew them immortally.
5. But the way—Thy Word,369 by whom Thou didst make these
things which they number, and themselves who number, and the sense
by which they perceive what they number, and the judgment out of
which they number—they knew not, and that of Thy wisdom there is
no number.370 But the
Only-begotten has been “made unto us wisdom, and righteousness,
and sanctification,”371 and has been numbered amongst us,
and paid tribute to Cæsar.372 This way, by which they might
descend to Him from themselves, they knew not; nor that through Him
they might ascend unto Him.373
373 In Sermon 123, sec. 3, we have: “Christ as
God is the country to which we go—Christ as man is the way by
which we go.” See note on Book iv. sec. 19, above. | This way they knew not, and they
think themselves exalted with the stars374 and shining, and lo! they fell upon
the earth,375 and “their
foolish heart was darkened.”376 They say many true things
concerning the creature; but Truth, the Artificer of the creature,
they seek not with devotion, and hence they find Him not. Or if
they find Him, knowing that He is God, they glorify Him not as God,
neither are they thankful,377 but become vain in their
imaginations, and say that they themselves are wise,378 attributing
to themselves what is Thine; and by this, with most perverse
blindness, they desire to impute to Thee what is their own, forging
lies against Thee who art the Truth, and changing the glory of the
incorruptible God into an image made like corruptible man, and to
birds, and four-footed beasts, and creeping things,379 —changing
Thy truth into a lie, and worshipping and serving the creature more
than the Creator.380
6. Many truths, however, concerning the creature did
I retain from these men, and the cause appeared to me from
calculations, the succession of seasons, and the visible
manifestations of the stars; and I compared them with the sayings
of Manichæus, who in his frenzy has written most extensively on
these subjects, but discovered not any account either of the
solstices, or the equinoxes, the eclipses of the luminaries, or
anything of the kind I had learned in the books of secular
philosophy. But therein I was ordered to believe, and yet it
corresponded not with those rules acknowledged by calculation and
my own sight, but was far different.
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