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| He Recognises the Falsity of His Own Opinions, and Commits to Memory the Saying of Ambrose. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter IV.—He Recognises the
Falsity of His Own Opinions, and Commits to Memory the Saying of
Ambrose.
5. As, then, I knew not how this image of Thine
should subsist, I should have knocked and propounded the doubt how
it was to be believed, and not have insultingly opposed it, as if
it were believed. Anxiety, therefore, as to what to retain as
certain, did all the more sharply gnaw into my soul, the more shame
I felt that, having been so long deluded and deceived by the promise of
certainties, I had, with puerile error and petulance, prated of so
many uncertainties as if they were certainties. For that they were
falsehoods became apparent to me afterwards. However, I was certain
that they were uncertain, and that I had formerly held them as
certain when with a blind contentiousness I accused Thy Catholic
Church, which though I had not yet discovered to teach truly, yet
not to teach that of which I had so vehemently accused her. In this
manner was I confounded and converted, and I rejoiced, O my God,
that the one Church, the body of Thine only Son (wherein the name
of Christ had been set upon me when an infant), did not appreciate
these infantile trifles, nor maintained, in her sound doctrine, any
tenet that would confine Thee, the Creator of all, in
space—though ever so great and wide, yet bounded on all sides by
the restraints of a human form.
6. I rejoiced also that the old Scriptures of
the law and the prophets were laid before me, to be perused, not
now with that eye to which they seemed most absurd before, when I
censured Thy holy ones for so thinking, whereas in truth they
thought not so; and with delight I heard Ambrose, in his sermons to
the people, oftentimes most diligently recommend this text as a
rule,—“The letter killeth, but the Spirit giveth life;”447
447 2 Cor. iii. 6. The spiritual or allegorical
meaning here referred to is one that Augustin constantly sought, as
did many of the early Fathers, both Greek and Latin. He only
employs this method of interpretation, however, in a qualified
way—never going to the lengths of Origen or Clement of
Alexandria. He does not depreciate the letter of Scripture, though,
as we have shown above (iii. sec. 14, note), he went as far as he
well could in interpreting the history spiritually. He does not
seem, however, quite consistent in his statements as to the
relative prominence to be given to the literal and spiritual
meanings, as may be seen by a comparison of the latter portions of
secs. 1 and 3 of book xvii. of the City of God. His general
idea may be gathered from the following passage in the 21st sec. of
book xiii.:—“Some allegorize all that concerns paradise itself,
where the first men, the parents of the human race, are, according
to the truth of Holy Scripture, recorded to have been; and they
understand all its trees and fruit-bearing plants as virtues and
habits of life, as if they had no existence in the external world,
but were only so spoken of or related for the sake of spiritual
meanings. As if there could not be a real terrestrial paradise! As
if there never existed these two women, Sarah and Hagar, nor the
two sons who were born to Abraham, the one of the bond-woman, the
other of the free, because the apostle says that in them the two
covenants were prefigured! or as if water never flowed from the
rock when Moses struck it, because therein Christ can be seen in a
figure, as the same apostle says: ‘Now that rock was Christ’
(1
Cor. x. 4).…These and
similar allegorical interpretations may be suitably put upon
paradise without giving offence to any one, while yet we believe
the strict truth of the history, confirmed by its
circumstantial narrative of facts.” The allusion in the above
passage to Sarah and Hagar invites the remark, that in Galatians
iv. 24, the words in our
version rendered, “which things are an allegory,” should be,
“which things are such as may be allegorized.” [Ἁτινά ἐστιν ἀλληγορούμενα. See Jelf, 398,
sec. 2.] It is important to note this, as the passage has been
quoted in support of the more extreme method of allegorizing,
though it could clearly go no further than to sanction allegorizing
by way of spiritual meditation upon Scripture, and not in the
interpretation of it—which first, as Waterland thinks
(Works, vol. v. p. 311), was the end contemplated by most of
the Fathers. Thoughtful students of Scripture will feel that we
have no right to make historical facts typical or allegorical,
unless (as in the case of the manna, the brazen serpent, Jacob’s
ladder, etc.) we have divine authority for so doing; and few such
will dissent from the opinion of Bishop Marsh (Lecture vi.) that
the type must not only resemble the antitype, but must have been
designed to resemble it, and further, that we must have the
authority of Scripture for the existence of such design. The text,
“The letter killeth, but the Spirit giveth life,” as a perusal
of the context will show, has nothing whatever to do with either
“literal” or “spiritual” meanings. Augustin himself
interprets it in one place (De Spir. et Lit. cc. 4, 5) as
meaning the killing letter of the law, as compared with the
quickening power of the gospel. “An opinion,” to conclude with
the thoughtful words of Alfred Morris on this
Chapter ( Words for the Heart and
Life, p. 203), “once common must therefore be rejected. Some
still talk of ‘letter’ and ‘spirit’ in a way which has no
sanction here. The ‘letter’ with them is the literal meaning of
the text, the ‘spirit’ is its symbolic meaning. And, as the
‘spirit’ possesses an evident superiority to the ‘letter,’
they fly away into the region of secret senses and hidden
doctrines, find types where there is nothing typical, and
allegories where there is nothing allegorical; make Genesis more
evangelical than the Epistle to the Romans, and Leviticus than the
Epistle to the Hebrews; mistaking lawful criticism for legal
Christianity, they look upon the exercise of a sober judgment as a
proof of a depraved taste, and forget that diseased as well as very
powerful eyes may see more than others. It is not the obvious
meaning and the secret meaning that are intended by ‘letter’
and ‘spirit,’ nor any two meanings of Christianity, nor two
meanings of any thing or things, but the two systems of Moses and
of Christ.” Reference may be made on this whole subject of
allegorical interpretation in the writings of the Fathers to
Blunt’s Right Use of the Early Fathers, series i. lecture
9. | whilst,
drawing aside the mystic veil, he spiritually laid open that which,
accepted according to the “letter,” seemed to teach perverse
doctrines—teaching herein nothing that offended me, though he
taught such things as I knew not as yet whether they were true. For
all this time I restrained my heart from assenting to anything,
fearing to fall headlong; but by hanging in suspense I was the
worse killed. For my desire was to be as well assured of those
things that I saw not, as I was that seven and three are ten. For I
was not so insane as to believe that this could not be
comprehended; but I desired to have other things as clear as this,
whether corporeal things, which were not present to my senses, or
spiritual, whereof I knew not how to conceive except corporeally.
And by believing I might have been cured, that so the sight of my
soul being cleared,448
448 Augustin frequently dilates on this idea. In sermon
88 (cc. 5, 6, etc.), he makes the whole of the ministries of
religion subservient to the clearing of the inner eye of the soul
and in his De Trin. i. 3, he says: “And it is necessary to
purge our minds, in order to be able to see ineffably that which is
ineffable [i.e. the Godhead], whereto not having yet
attained, we are to be nourished by faith, and led by such ways as
are more suited to our capacity, that we may be rendered apt and
able to comprehend it.” | it might in some way be directed
towards Thy truth, which abideth always, and faileth in naught. But
as it happens that he who has tried a bad physician fears to trust
himself with a good one, so was it with the health of my soul,
which could not be healed but by believing, and, lest it should
believe falsehoods, refused to be cured—resisting Thy hands, who
hast prepared for us the medicaments of faith, and hast applied
them to the maladies of the whole world, and hast bestowed upon
them so great authority.
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