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Letter CCXVIII.
(a.d. 426.)
To Palatinus, My Well-Beloved Lord
and Son, Most Tenderly Longed For, Augustin Sends
Greeting.
1. Your life of eminent fortitude and
fruitfulness towards the Lord our God has brought to us great joy.
For “you have made choice of instruction from your youth upwards,
that you may still find wisdom even to grey hairs;”2938 for
“wisdom is the grey hair unto men, and an unspotted life is old
age;”2939 which may
the Lord, who knoweth how to give good gifts unto His children,
give to you asking, seeking, knocking.2940 Although you have many counsellors
and many counsels to direct you in the path which leads to eternal
glory, and although, above all, you have the grace of Christ, which
has so effectually spoken in saving power in your heart,
nevertheless we also, as in duty bound by the love which we owe to
you, offer to you, in hereby reciprocating your salutation, some
words of counsel, designed not to awaken you as one hindered by
sloth or sleep, but to stimulate and quicken you in the race which
you are already running.
2. You require wisdom, my son, for
stedfastness in this race, as it was under the influence of wisdom
that you entered on it at first. Let this then be “a part of your
wisdom, to know whose gift it is.”2941 “Commit thy way unto the Lord;
trust also in Him, and He shall bring it to pass: and He shall
bring forth thy righteousness as the light, and thy judgment as the
noonday.”2942 “He will
make straight thy path, and guide thy steps in peace.”2943 As you
despised your prospects of greatness in this world, lest you should
glory in the abundance of riches which you had begun to covet after
the manner of the children of this world, so now, in taking up the
yoke of the Lord and His burden, let not your confidence be in your
own strength; so shall “His yoke be easy, and His burden
light.”2944 For in the
book of Psalms those are alike censured “who trust in their
strength,” and “who boast themselves in the multitude of their
riches.”2945 Therefore,
as formerly you did not seek glory in riches, but most wisely
despised that which you had begun to desire, so now be on your
guard against insidious temptation to trust in your strength; for
you are but man, and “cursed is every one that trusteth in
man.”2946 But by all
means trust in God with your whole heart, and He will Himself be
your strength, wherein you may trust with piety and thankfulness,
and to Him you may say with humility and boldness, “I will love
thee, O Lord, my strength;2947 because even the love of God,
which, when it is perfect, “casteth out fear,”2948 is shed
abroad in our hearts, not by our strength, that is, by any human
power, but, as the apostle says, “by the Holy Ghost, which is
given unto us.”2949
3. “Watch, therefore, and pray that you
enter not into temptation.”2950 Such prayer is indeed in itself an
admonition to you that you need the help of the Lord, and that you
ought not to rest upon yourself your hope of living well. For now
you pray, not that you may obtain the riches and honours of this
present world, or any unsubstantial human possession, but that you
may not enter into temptation, a thing which would not be asked in
prayer if a man could accomplish it for himself by his own will.
Wherefore we would not pray that we may not enter into temptation
if our own will sufficed for our protection and yet if the will to
avoid temptation were wanting to us, we could not so pray. It may,
therefore, be present with us to will,2951 when we have through his own gift
been made wise, but we must pray that we may be able to perform
that which we have so willed. In the fact that you have begun to
exercise this true wisdom, you have reason to give thanks. “For
what have you which you have not received? But if you have received
it, beware that you boast not as if you had not received it,”2952 that is,
as if you could have had it of yourself. Knowing, however, whence
you have received it, ask Him by whose gift it was begun to grant
that it may be perfected. “Work out your own salvation with fear
and trembling: for it is God that worketh in you, both to will and
to do, of His good pleasure;”2953 for “the will is prepared by
God,”2954
2954 Prov. viii. 35, LXX. | and “the
steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord, and He delighteth in
his way.”2955 Holy
meditation on these things will preserve you, so that your wisdom
shall be piety, that is, that by God’s gift you shall be good,
and not ungrateful for the grace of Christ.
4. Your parents, unfeignedly rejoicing with you in
the better hope which in the Lord you have begun to cherish, are
longing earnestly for your presence. But whether you be absent from
us or present with us in the body, we desire to have you with us in
the one Spirit by whom love is shed abroad in our hearts, so that, in
whatever place our bodies may sojourn, our spirits may be in no
degree sundered from each other.
We have most thankfully received the cloaks of
goat’s-hair cloth2956 which you sent to us, in which
gift you have yourself anticipated me in admonition as to the duty
of being often engaged in prayer, and of practising humility in our
supplications.
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