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| He is Forcibly Goaded on by the Love of Praise. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXXVII.—He is Forcibly
Goaded on by the Love of Praise.
60. By these temptations, O Lord, are we daily
tried; yea, unceasingly are we tried. Our daily “furnace”954 is the human
tongue. And in this respect also dost Thou command us to be
continent. Give what Thou commandest, and command what Thou wilt.
Regarding this matter, Thou knowest the groans of my heart, and the
rivers955 of mine
eyes. For I am not able to ascertain how far I am clean of this
plague, and I stand in great fear of my “secret faults,”956 which Thine
eyes perceive, though mine do not. For in other kinds of
temptations I have some sort of power of examining myself; but in
this, hardly any. For, both as regards the pleasures of the flesh
and an idle curiosity, I see how far I have been able to hold my
mind in check when I do without them, either voluntarily or by
reason of their not being at hand;957
957 In his De Vera Relig. sec. 92, he points out
that adversity also, when it comes to a good man, will disclose to
him how far his heart is set on worldly things: “Hoc enim sine
amore nostro aderat, quod sine dolore discedit.” | for then I inquire of myself how
much more or less troublesome it is to me not to have them. Riches
truly which are sought for in order that they may minister to some
one of these three “lusts,”958 or to two, or the whole of them, if
the mind be not able to see clearly whether, when it hath them, it
despiseth them, they may be cast on one side, that so it may prove
itself. But if we desire to test our power of doing without praise,
need we live ill, and that so flagitiously and immoderately as that
every one who knows us shall detest us? What greater madness than
this can be either said or conceived? But if praise both is wont
and ought to be the companion of a good life and of good works, we
should as little forego its companionship as a good life itself.
But unless a thing be absent, I do not know whether I shall be
contented or troubled at being without it.
61. What, then, do I confess unto Thee, O Lord, in
this kind of temptation? What, save that I am delighted with
praise, but more with the truth itself than with praise? For were I
to have my choice, whether I had rather, being
mad, or astray on all things, be
praised by all men, or, being firm and well-assured in the truth,
be blamed by all, I see which I should choose. Yet would I be
unwilling that the approval of another should even add to my joy
for any good I have. Yet I admit that it doth increase it, and,
more than that, that dispraise doth diminish it. And when I am
disquieted at this misery of mine, an excuse presents itself to me,
the value of which Thou, God, knowest, for it renders me uncertain.
For since it is not continency alone that Thou hast enjoined upon
us, that is, from what things to hold back our love, but
righteousness also, that is, upon what to bestow it, and hast
wished us to love not Thee only, but also our neighbour,959 —often,
when gratified by intelligent praise, I appear to myself to be
gratified by the proficiency or towardliness of my neighbour, and
again to be sorry for evil in him when I hear him dispraise either
that which he understands not, or is good. For I am sometimes
grieved at mine own praise, either when those things which I am
displeased at in myself be praised in me, or even lesser and
trifling goods are more valued than they should be. But, again, how
do I know whether I am thus affected, because I am unwilling that
he who praiseth me should differ from me concerning myself—not as
being moved with consideration for him, but because the same good
things which please me in myself are more pleasing to me when they
also please another? For, in a sort, I am not praised when my
judgment of myself is not praised; since either those things which
are displeasing to me are praised, or those more so which are less
pleasing to me. Am I then uncertain of myself in this
matter?
62. Behold, O Truth, in Thee do I see that I
ought not to be moved at my own praises for my own sake, but for my
neighbour’s good. And whether it be so, in truth I know not. For
concerning this I know less of myself than dost Thou. I beseech
Thee now, O my God, to reveal to me myself also, that I may confess
unto my brethren, who are to pray for me, what I find in myself
weak. Once again let me more diligently examine myself.960
960 It may be well, in connection with the striking
piece of soul-anatomy in this and the last two sections, to advert
to other passages in which Augustin speaks of the temptation
arising from the praise of men. In Serm. cccxxxix. 1, he
says that he does not altogether dislike praise when it comes from
the good, though feeling it to be a snare, and does not reject it:
“Ne ingrati sint quibus prædico.” That is, as he says
above, he accepted it for his “neighbour’s good,” since, had
his neighbour not been ready to give praise, it would have
indicated a wrong condition of heart in him. We are, therefore, as
he argues in his De Serm. Dom. in Mon. ii. 1, 2, 6, to see
that the design of our acts be not that men should see and
praise us (compare also Enarr. in Ps. lxv. 2). If they
praise us it is well, since it shows that their heart is right; but
if we “act rightly only because of the praise of men”
(Matt. vi. 2; 5), we seek our own glory and
not that of God. See also Serms. xciii. 9, clix. 10, etc.;
and De Civ. Dei, v. 13, 14. | If, in mine
own praise, I am moved with consideration for my neighbour, why am
I less moved if some other man be unjustly dispraised than if it be
myself? Why am I more irritated at that reproach which is cast upon
myself, than at that which is with equal injustice cast upon
another in my presence? Am I ignorant of this also? or does it
remain that I deceive myself,961 and do not the “truth”962 before Thee
in my heart and tongue? Put such madness far from me, O Lord, lest
my mouth be to me the oil of sinners, to anoint my head.963
963 Ps. cxli. 5, according to the Vulg.
and LXX. The Authorized Version (with which the Targum is in
accord) gives the more probable sense, when it makes the oil to be
that of the righteous and not that of the sinner: “Let the
righteous smite me, it shall be a kindness; and let him reprove me,
it shall be an excellent oil, which shall not break my head.” |
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