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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK THIRTEEN
CHAPTER
XI
12. Who can understand the omnipotent Trinity? And yet who
does not speak about it, if indeed it is of it that he speaks?
Rare is the soul who, when he speaks of it, also knows of
what he speaks. And men contend and strive, but no man sees
the vision of it without peace.
I could wish that men would consider three things which
are within themselves. These three things are quite different
from the Trinity, but I mention them in order that men may
exercise their minds and test themselves and come to realize
how different from it they are.[530]
The three things I speak of are: to be, to know, and to
will. For I am, and I know, and I will. I am a knowing and
a willing being; I know that I am and that I will; and I
will to be and to know. In these three functions, therefore,
let him who can see how integral a life is; for there is
one life, one mind, one essence. Finally, the distinction
does not separate the things, and yet it is a distinction.
Surely a man has this distinction before his mind; let him
look into himself and see, and tell me. But when he discovers
and can say anything about any one of these, let him not
think that he has thereby discovered what is immutable above
them all, which is immutably and knows immutably
and wills immutably. But whether there is a Trinity
there because these three functions exist in the one God,
or whether all three are in each Person so that they are
each threefold, or whether both these notions are true and,
in some mysterious manner, the Infinite is in itself its
own Selfsame object--at once one and many, so that by itself
it is and knows itself and suffices to itself without change,
so that the Selfsame is the abundant magnitude of its Unity--who
can readily conceive? Who can in any fashion express it
plainly? Who can in any way rashly make a pronouncement
about it?
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