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| How the Knowledge of God Differs from that of Man. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXXI.—How the Knowledge
of God Differs from that of Man.
41. O Lord my God, what is that secret place of Thy
mystery, and how far thence have the consequences of my
transgressions cast me? Heal my eyes, that I may enjoy Thy light.
Surely, if there be a mind, so greatly abounding in knowledge and
foreknowledge, to which all things past and future are so known as
one psalm is well known to me, that mind is exceedingly wonderful,
and very astonishing; because whatever is so past, and whatever is
to come of after ages, is no more concealed from Him than was it
hidden from me when singing that psalm, what and how much of it had
been sung from the beginning, what and how much remained unto the
end. But far be it that Thou, the Creator of the universe, the
Creator of souls and bodies,—far be it that Thou shouldest
know all things future and past. Far, far more wonderfully, and far
more mysteriously, Thou knowest them.1066
1066 Dean Mansel’s argument, in his Bampton
Lectures, as to our knowledge of the Infinite, is well worthy
of consideration. He refers to Augustin’s views on the subject of
this book in note 13 to his third lecture, and in the text itself
says: “The limited character of all existence which can be
conceived as having a continuous duration, or as made up of
successive moments, is so far manifest that it has been assumed
almost as an axiom, by philosophical theologians, that in the
existence of God there is no distinction between past, present, and
future. ‘In the changes of things,’ say Augustin, ‘there is a
past and a future; in God there is a present, in which neither past
nor future can be.’ ‘Eternity,’ says Beethius, ‘is the
perfect possession of interminable life, and of all that life at
once;’ and Aquinas, accepting the definition, adds, ‘Eternity
has no succession, but exists all together.’ But whether this
assertion be literally true or not (and this we have no means of
ascertaining), it is clear that such a mode of existence is
altogether inconceivable by us, and that the words in which it is
described represent not thought, but the refusal to think at
all.” See notes to xiii. 12, below. | For it is not as the feelings of
one singing known things, or hearing a known song, are—through
expectation of future words, and in remembrance of those that are
past—varied, and his senses divided, that anything happeneth unto
Thee, unchangeably eternal, that is, the truly eternal1067
1067 “With God, indeed, all things are arranged and
fixed; and when He seemeth to act upon sudden motive, He doth
nothing but what He foreknew that He should do from eternity”
(Aug. in Ps. cvi. 35). With this passage may well be
compared Dean Mansel’s remarks (Bampton Lectures, lect.
vi., and notes 23–25) on the doctrine, that the world is but a
machine and is not under the continual government and direction of
God. See also note 4, on p. 80 and note 2 on p. 136, above. | Creator of
minds. As, then, Thou in the Beginning knewest the heaven and the
earth without any change of Thy knowledge, so in the Beginning
didst Thou make heaven and earth without any distraction of Thy
action.1068 Let him
who understandeth confess unto Thee; and let him who understandeth
not, confess unto Thee. Oh, how exalted art Thou, and yet the
humble in heart are Thy dwelling-place; for Thou raisest up those
that are bowed down,1069 and they whose exaltation Thou art
fall not.
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