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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK TWELVE
The
mode of creation and the truth of Scripture. Augustine explores the relation
of the visible and formed matter of heaven and earth to the prior matrix from
which it was formed. This leads to an intricate analysis of "unformed matter"
and the primal "possibility" from which God created, itself created de
nihilo. He finds a reference to this in the misconstrued Scriptural phrase
"the heaven of heavens." Realizing that his interpretation of Gen. 1:1, 2,
is not self-evidently the only possibility, Augustine turns to an elaborate
discussion of the multiplicity of perspectives in hermeneutics and, in the
course of this, reviews the various possibilities of true interpretation of
his Scripture text. He emphasizes the importance of tolerance where there
are plural options, and confidence where basic Christian faith is concerned.
CHAPTER I
1. My heart is deeply stirred, O Lord, when in this poor
life of mine the words of thy Holy Scripture strike upon
it. This is why the poverty of the human intellect expresses
itself in an abundance of language. Inquiry is more loquacious
than discovery. Demanding takes longer than obtaining; and
the hand that knocks is more active than the hand that receives.
But we have the promise, and who shall break it? "If God
be for us, who can be against us?"[455] "Ask, and you shall receive;
seek, and you shall find; knock, and it shall be opened
unto you; for everyone that asks receives, and he who seeks
finds, and to him that knocks, it shall be opened."[456] These are thy own promises, and
who need fear to be deceived when truth promises?
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