Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| This Work is Written Against Those Who Sophistically Assail the Faith of the Trinity, Through Misuse of Reason. They Who Dispute Concerning God Err from a Threefold Cause. Holy Scripture, Removing What is False, Leads Us on by Degrees to Things Divine. What True Immortality is. We are Nourished by Faith, that We May Be Enabled to Apprehend Things Divine. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 1.—This Work is Written Against Those Who
Sophistically Assail the Faith of the Trinity, Through Misuse of
Reason. They Who Dispute Concerning God Err from a Threefold Cause.
Holy Scripture, Removing What is False, Leads Us on by Degrees to
Things Divine. What True Immortality is. We are Nourished by Faith,
that We May Be Enabled to Apprehend Things Divine.
1. The
following dissertation concerning the Trinity, as the reader ought
to be informed, has been written in order to guard against the
sophistries of those who disdain to begin with faith, and are
deceived by a crude and perverse love of reason. Now one class of
such men endeavor to transfer to things incorporeal and spiritual
the ideas they have formed, whether through experience of the
bodily senses, or by natural human wit and diligent quickness, or
by the aid of art, from things corporeal; so as to seek to measure
and conceive of the former by the latter. Others, again, frame
whatever sentiments they may have concerning God according to the
nature or affections of the human mind; and through this error they
govern their discourse, in disputing concerning God, by distorted
and fallacious rules. While yet a third class strive indeed to
transcend the whole creation, which doubtless is changeable, in
order to raise their thought to the unchangeable substance, which
is God; but being weighed down by the burden of mortality, whilst
they both would seem to know what they do not, and cannot know what
they would, preclude themselves from entering the very path of
understanding, by an over-bold affirmation of their own
presumptuous judgments; choosing rather not to correct their own
opinion when it is perverse, than to change that which they have
once defended. And, indeed, this is the common disease of all the
three classes which I have mentioned,—viz., both of those
who frame their thoughts of God according to things corporeal, and
of those who do so according to the spiritual creature, such as is
the soul; and of those who neither regard the body nor the
spiritual creature, and yet think falsely about God; and are indeed
so much the further from the truth, that nothing can be found
answering to their conceptions, either in the body, or in the made
or created spirit, or in the Creator Himself. For he who thinks,
for instance, that God is white or red, is in error; and yet these
things are found in the body. Again, he who thinks of God as now
forgetting and now remembering, or anything of the same kind, is
none the less in error; and yet these things are found in the mind.
But he who thinks that God is of such power as to have generated
Himself, is so much the more in error, because not only
does God not so exist, but neither does the spiritual nor the
bodily creature; for there is nothing whatever that generates its
own existence.8
8
[Augustin here puts generare for
creare—which is rarely the case with him, since the
distinction between generation and creation is of the highest
importance in discussing the doctrine of the Trinity. His thought
here is, that God does not bring himself into being, because he
always is. Some have defined God as the Self-caused: causa
sui. But the category of cause and effect is inapplicable to
the Infinite Being.—W.G.T.S.] |
2. In order, therefore, that the
human mind might be purged from falsities of this kind, Holy
Scripture, which suits itself to babes has not avoided words drawn
from any class of things really existing, through which, as by
nourishment, our understanding might rise gradually to things
divine and transcendent. For, in speaking of God, it has both used
words taken from things corporeal, as when it says, “Hide me
under the shadow of Thy wings;”9
and it has borrowed many things from the spiritual creature,
whereby to signify that which indeed is not so, but must needs so
be said: as, for instance, “I the Lord thy God am a jealous
God;”10 and, “It
repenteth me that I have made man.”11 But it has drawn no words whatever,
whereby to frame either figures of speech or enigmatic sayings,
from things which do not exist at all. And hence it is that they
who are shut out from the truth by that third kind of error are
more mischievously and emptily vain than their fellows; in that
they surmise respecting God, what can neither be found in Himself
nor in any creature. For divine Scripture is wont to frame, as it
were, allurements for children from the things which are found in
the creature; whereby, according to their measure, and as it were
by steps, the affections of the weak may be moved to seek those
things that are above, and to leave those things that are below.
But the same Scripture rarely employs those things which are spoken
properly of God, and are not found in any creature; as, for
instance, that which was said to Moses, “I am that I am;” and,
“I Am hath sent me to you.”12
For since both body and soul also are said in some sense to
be, Holy Scripture certainly would not so express itself unless
it meant to be understood in some special sense of the term. So,
too, that which the Apostle says, “Who only hath
immortality.”13 Since the soul
also both is said to be, and is, in a certain manner immortal,
Scripture would not say “only hath,” unless because true
immortality is unchangeableness; which no creature can possess,
since it belongs to the creator alone.14
14
[God’s being is necessary; that of the creature
is contingent. Hence the name I Am, or Jehovah,—which denotes
this difference. God alone has immortality a parte ante, as
well as a parte post.—W.G.T.S.] | So also James says, “Every good
gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the
Father of Lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of
turning.”15 So also David,
“Thou shall change them, and they shall be changed; but Thou art
the same.”16
3. Further, it is difficult to
contemplate and fully know the substance of God; who fashions
things changeable, yet without any change in Himself, and creates
things temporal, yet without any temporal movement in Himself. And
it is necessary, therefore, to purge our minds, in order to be able
to see ineffably that which is ineffable; whereto not having yet
attained, we are to be nourished by faith, and led by such ways as
are more suited to our capacity, that we may be rendered apt and
able to comprehend it. And hence the Apostle says, that “in
Christ indeed are hid all the treasures of wisdom and
knowledge;”17 and yet has
commended Him to us, as to babes in Christ, who, although already
born again by His grace, yet are still carnal and psychical, not by
that divine virtue wherein He is equal to the Father, but by that
human infirmity whereby He was crucified. For he says, “I
determined not to know anything among you, save Jesus Christ and
Him crucified;”18 and then he
continues, “And I was with you in weakness, and in fear, and in
much trembling.” And a little after he says to them, “And I,
brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto
carnal,19
19
[St. Paul, in this place, denominates imperfect
but true believers “carnal,” in a relative sense, only. They
are comparatively carnal, when contrasted with the law of God,
which is absolutely and perfectly spiritual. (Rom. vii. 14.) They do not,
however, belong to the class of carnal or natural men, in
distinction from spiritual. The persons whom the Apostle here
denominates “carnal,” are “babes in
Christ.”—W.G.T.S.] | even as unto
babes in Christ. I have fed you with milk, and not with meat: for
hitherto ye were not able to bear it, neither yet now are ye
able.”20 There are some
who are angry at language of this kind, and think it is used in
slight to themselves, and for the most part prefer rather to
believe that they who so speak to them have nothing to say, than
that they themselves cannot understand what they have said. And
sometimes, indeed, we do allege to them, not certainly that account
of the case which they seek in their inquiries about God,—because
neither can they themselves receive it, nor can we perhaps either
apprehend or express it,—but such an account of it as to
demonstrate to them how incapable and utterly unfit they are to
understand that which they require of us. But they, on their parts,
because they do not hear what they desire, think that we are
either playing them false in order to conceal our own ignorance, or
speaking in malice because we grudge them knowledge; and so go away
indignant and perturbed.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|