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| Above His Changeable Mind, He Discovers the Unchangeable Author of Truth. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XVII.—Above His
Changeable Mind, He Discovers the Unchangeable Author of
Truth.
23. And I marvelled that I now loved Thee, and
no phantasm instead of Thee. And yet I did not merit to enjoy my
God, but was transported to Thee by Thy beauty, and presently torn
away from Thee by mine own weight, sinking with grief into these
inferior things. This weight was carnal custom. Yet was there a
remembrance of Thee with me; nor did I any way doubt that there was
one to whom I might cleave, but that I was not yet one who could
cleave unto Thee; for that the body which is corrupted presseth
down the soul, and the earthly dwelling weigheth down the mind
which thinketh upon many things.545 And most certain I was that Thy
“invisible things from the creation of the world are clearly
seen, being understood by the things that are made, even Thy
eternal power and Godhead.”546 For, inquiring whence it was that I
admired the beauty of bodies whether celestial or terrestrial, and
what supported me in judging correctly on things mutable, and
pronouncing, “This should be thus, this not,”—inquiring,
then, whence I so judged, seeing I did so judge, I had found the
unchangeable and true eternity of Truth, above my changeable mind.
And thus, by degrees, I passed from bodies to the soul, which makes
use of the senses of the body to perceive; and thence to its
inward547 faculty, to
which the bodily senses represent outward things, and up to which
reach the capabilities of beasts; and thence, again, I passed on to
the reasoning faculty,548
548 Here, and more explicitly in sec. 25, we have
before us what has been called the “trichotomy” of man. This
doctrine Augustin does not deny in theory, but appears to consider
(De Anima, iv. 32) it prudent to overlook in practice. The
biblical view of psychology may well be considered here not only on
its own account, but as enabling us clearly to apprehend this
passage and that which follows it. It is difficult to understand
how any one can doubt that St. Paul, when speaking in 1 Thess.
v. 23, of our
“spirit, soul, and body being preserved unto the coming of
our Lord Jesus Christ,” implies a belief in a kind of trinity in
man. And it is very necessary to the understanding of other
Scriptures that we should realize what special attributes pertain
to the soul and the spirit respectively. It may be said, generally,
that the soul (ψυχή) is
that passionate and affectionate nature which is common to us and
the inferior creatures, while the spirit (πνεῦμα) is the higher intellectual nature
which is peculiar to man. Hence our Lord in His agony in the garden
says (Matt. xxvi. 38), “My
Soul is exceeding sorrowful”—the soul being
liable to emotions of pleasure and pain. In the same passage (ver
41) he says to the apostles who had slept during His great agony,
“The Spirit indeed is willing, but
the flesh is weak,” so that the spirit is the seat of the will.
And that the spirit is also the seat of consciousness we
gather from St. Paul’s words (1 Cor. ii. 11), “What man knoweth the
things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? even so
the things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God.” And it
is on the spirit of man that the Spirit of God operates;
whence we read (Rom. viii. 16), “The Spirit beareth
witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God.” It is
important to note that the word “flesh” (σαρξ) has its special significance, as
distinct from body. The word comes to us from the Hebrew through
the Hellenistic Greek of the LXX., and in biblical language (see
Bishop Pearson’s Præfatio Parænetica to his edition of
the LXX.) stands for our human nature with it worldly surroundings
and liability to temptation; so that when it is said, “The Word
was made flesh,” we have what is equivalent to, “The Word put
on human nature.” It is, therefore, the flesh and the spirit that
are ever represented in conflict one with the other when men are in
the throes of temptation. So it must be while life lasts; for it is
characteristic of our position in the world that we possess
soulish bodies (to employ the barbarous but expressive word of
Dr. Candlish in his Life in a Risen Saviour, p. 182), and
only on the morning of the resurrection will the body be
spiritual and suited to the new sphere of its existence: “It
is sown a natural [ψυχικὸν,
“soulish”] body, it is raised a spiritual [πνευματικόν] body” (1 Cor.
xv. 44); “for,” as
Augustin says in his Enchiridion (c. xci.), “just as now
the body is called animate (or, using the Greek term, as
above, instead of the Latin, “soulish”), though it is a body
and not a soul, so then the body shall be called spiritual,
though it shall be a body, not a spirit.…No part of our nature
shall be in discord with another; but as we shall be free from
enemies without, so we shall not have ourselves for enemies
within.” For further information on this most interesting
subject, see Delitzsch, Biblical Psychology, ii. 4 (“The
True and False Trichotomy”); Olshausen, Opuscula
Theologica, iv. (“De Trichotomia”) and cc. 2, 17, and 18 of
R. W. Evans’ Ministry of the Body, where the subject is
discussed with thoughtfulness and spiritual insight. This matter is
also treated of in the introductory chapters of Schlegel’s
Philosophy of Life. | unto which whatever is received
from the
senses of the body is referred to be judged, which also, finding
itself to be variable in me, raised itself up to its own
intelligence, and from habit drew away my thoughts, withdrawing
itself from the crowds of contradictory phantasms; that so it might
find out that light549
549 That light which illumines the soul, he tells us in
his De Gen. ad Lit. (xii. 31), is God Himself, from whom all
light cometh; and, though created in His image and likeness, when
it tries to discover Him, palpitat infirmitate, et minus
valet. In sec. 13, above, speaking of Platonism, he describes
it as holding “that the soul of man, though it ‘bears witness
of the Light,’ yet itself ‘is not that Light.’” In his
De Civ. Dei, x. 2, he quotes from Plotinus (mentioned in note
2, sec. 13, above) in regard to the Platonic doctrine as to
enlightenment from on high. He says: “Plotinus, commenting on
Plato, repeatedly and strongly asserts that not even the soul,
which they believe to be the soul of the world, derives its
blessedness from any other source than we do, viz. from that Light
which is distinct from it and created it, and by whose intelligible
illumination it enjoys light in things intelligible. He also
compares those spiritual things to the vast and conspicuous
heavenly bodies, as if God were the sun, and the soul the moon; for
they suppose that the moon derives its light from the sun. That
great Platonist, therefore, says that the rational soul, or rather
the intellectual soul,—in which class he comprehends the souls of
the blessed immortal who inhabit heaven,—has no nature superior
to it save God, the Creator of the world and the soul itself, and
that these heavenly spirits derive their blessed life, and the
light of truth, from the same source as ourselves, agreeing with
the gospel where we read, ‘There was a man sent from God, whose
name was John. The same came for a witness, to bear witness of that
Light, that through Him all might believe. He was not that Light,
but that he might bear witness of the Light. That was the true
Light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world’
(John
i. 6-9);—a distinction
which sufficiently proves that the rational or intellectual soul,
such as John had, cannot be its own light, but needs to receive
illumination from another, the true Light. This John himself avows
when he delivers his witness (ibid. 16): ‘We have all received of
His fulness.’” Comp. Tertullian, De Testim. Anim., and
the note to iv. sec. 25, above, where other references to God’s
being the Father of Lights are given. | by which it was besprinkled, when,
without all doubting, it cried out, “that the unchangeable was to
be preferred before the changeable;” whence also it knew that
unchangeable, which, unless it had in some way known, it could have
had no sure ground for preferring it to the changeable. And thus,
with the flash of a trembling glance, it arrived at that which is.
And then I saw Thy invisible things understood by the things that
are made.550 But I was
not able to fix my gaze thereon; and my infirmity being beaten
back, I was thrown again on my accustomed habits, carrying along
with me naught but a loving memory thereof, and an appetite for
what I had, as it were, smelt the odour of, but was not yet able to
eat.
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