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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK THIRTEEN
The
mysteries and allegories of the days of creation. Augustine
undertakes to interpret Gen.
1:2-31 in a mystical and allegorical fashion so as
to exhibit the profundities of God's power and wisdom
and love. He is also interested in developing his theories
of hermeneutics on his favorite topic: creation. He finds
the Trinity in the account of creation and he ponders
the work of the Spirit moving over the waters. In the
firmament he finds the allegory of Holy Scripture and
in the dry land and bitter sea he finds the division between
the people of God and the conspiracy of the unfaithful.
He develops the theme of man's being made in the image
and likeness of God. He brings his survey to a climax
and his confessions to an end with a meditation on the
goodness of all creation and the promised rest and blessedness
of the eternal Sabbath, on which God, who is eternal rest,
"rested."
CHAPTER
I
1. I call on thee, my God, my Mercy, who madest me and didst
not forget me, though I was forgetful of thee. I call thee
into my soul, which thou didst prepare for thy reception
by the desire which thou inspirest in it. Do not forsake
me when I call on thee, who didst anticipate me before I
called and who didst repeatedly urge with manifold calling
that I should hear thee afar off and be turned and call
upon thee, who callest me. For thou, O Lord, hast blotted
out all my evil deserts, not punishing me for what my hands
have done; and thou hast anticipated all my good deserts
so as to recompense me for what thy hands have done--the
hands which made me. Before I was, thou wast, and I was
not anything at all that thou shouldst grant me being. Yet,
see how I exist by reason of thy goodness, which made provision
for all that thou madest me to be and all that thou madest
me from. For thou didst not stand in need of me, nor am
I the kind of good entity which could be a help to thee,
my Lord and my God. It is not that I may serve thee as if
thou wert fatigued in working, or as if thy power would
be the less if it lacked my assistance. Nor is the service
I pay thee like the cultivation of a field, so that thou
wouldst go untended if I did not tend thee.[506]
Instead, it is that I may serve and worship thee to the
end that I may have my well-being from thee, from whom comes
my capacity for well-being.
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