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| That All Things are Manifest to God. That Confession Unto Him is Not Made by the Words of the Flesh, But of the Soul, and the Cry of Reflection. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter II.—That All Things are
Manifest to God. That Confession Unto Him is Not Made by the Words
of the Flesh, But of the Soul, and the Cry of
Reflection.
2. And from Thee, O Lord, unto whose eyes the
depths of man’s conscience are naked,818 what in me could be hidden though I
were unwilling to confess to Thee? For so should I hide Thee from
myself, not myself from Thee. But now, because my groaning
witnesseth that I am dissatisfied with myself, Thou shinest forth,
and satisfiest, and art beloved and desired; that I may blush for
myself, and renounce myself, and choose Thee, and may neither
please Thee nor myself, except in Thee. To Thee, then, O Lord, am I
manifest, whatever I am, and with what fruit I may confess unto
Thee I have spoken. Nor do I it with words and sounds of the flesh,
but with the words of the soul, and that cry of reflection which
Thine ear knoweth. For when I am wicked, to confess to Thee is
naught but to be dissatisfied with myself; but when I am truly
devout, it is naught but not to attribute it to myself, because
Thou, O Lord, dost “bless the righteous;”819 but first Thou justifiest him
“ungodly.”820 My
confession, therefore, O my God, in Thy sight, is made unto Thee
silently, and yet not silently. For in noise it is silent, in
affection it cries aloud. For neither do I give utterance to
anything that is right unto men which Thou hast not heard from me
before, nor dost Thou hear anything of the kind from me which
Thyself saidst not first unto me.
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