Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| A Difficulty Removed, Which Lies in the Way of What Has Just Been Said. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 3.—A
Difficulty Removed, Which Lies in the Way of What Has Just Been
Said.
But far be it from us to think,
that while the nature of the soul is immortal, and from the first
beginning of its creation thenceforth never ceases to be, yet that
that which is the best thing it has should not endure for ever with
its own immortality. Yet what is there in its nature as created,
better than that it is made after the image of its Creator?872 We must find
then what may be fittingly called the image of God, not in the
holding, contemplating, and loving that faith which will not exist
always, but in that which will exist always.
5. Shall we then scrutinize
somewhat more carefully and deeply whether the case is really thus?
For it may be said that this trinity does not perish even when
faith itself shall have passed away; because, as now we both hold
it by memory, and discern it by thought, and love it by will; so
then also, when we shall both hold in memory, and shall recollect,
that we once had it, and shall unite these two by the third, namely
will, the same trinity will still continue. Since, if it have left
in its passage as it were no trace in us, doubtless we shall not
have ought of it even in our memory, whereto to recur when
recollecting it as past, and by the third, viz. purpose,
coupling both these, to wit, what was in our memory though we were
not thinking about it, and what is formed thence by conception. But
he who speaks thus, does not perceive, that when we hold, see, and
love in ourselves our present faith, we are concerned with a
different trinity as now existing, from that trinity which will
exist, when we shall contemplate by recollection, not the faith
itself, but as it were the imagined trace of it laid up in the
memory, and shall unite by the will, as by a third, these two
things, viz. that which was in the memory of him who
retains, and that which is impressed thence upon the vision of the
mind of him who recollects. And that we may understand this, let us
take an example from things corporeal, of which we have
sufficiently spoken in the eleventh book.873 For as we ascend from lower to
higher things, or pass inward from outer to inner things, we first
find a trinity in the bodily object which is seen, and in the
vision of the seer, which, when he sees it, is informed thereby,
and in the purpose of the will which combines both. Let us assume a
trinity like this, when the faith which is now in ourselves is so
established in our memory as the bodily object we spoke of was in
place, from which faith is formed the conception in recollection,
as from that bodily object was formed the vision of the beholder;
and to these two, to complete the trinity, will is to be reckoned
as a third, which connects and combines the faith established in
the memory, and a sort of effigy of that faith impressed upon the
vision of recollection; just as in that trinity of corporeal
vision, the form of the bodily object that is seen, and the
corresponding form wrought in the vision of the beholder, are
combined by the purpose of the will. Suppose, then, that this
bodily object which was beheld was dissolved and had perished, and
that nothing at all of it remained anywhere, to the vision of which
the gaze might have recourse; are we then to say, that because the
image of the bodily object thus now past and done with remains in
the memory, whence to form the conception in recollecting, and to
have the two united by will as a third, therefore it is the same
trinity as that former one, when the appearance of the bodily
object posited in place was seen? Certainly not, but altogether a
different one: for, not to say that that was from without, while
this is from within; the former certainly was produced by the
appearance of a present bodily object, the latter by the image of
that object now past. So, too, in the case of which we are now
treating, to illustrate which we have thought good to adduce this
example, the faith which is even now in our mind, as that bodily
object was in place, while held, looked at, loved, produces a sort
of trinity; but that trinity will exist no more, when this faith in
the mind, like that bodily object in place, shall no longer exist.
But that which will then exist, when we shall remember it to have
been, but not now to be, in us, will doubtless be a different one.
For that which now is, is wrought by the thing itself, actually
present and attached to the mind of one who believes; but that
which shall then be, will be wrought by the imagination of a past
thing left in the memory of one who recollects.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|