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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK THIRTEEN
CHAPTER
III
4. Now what thou saidst in the beginning of the creation--"Let
there be light: and there was light"--I interpret, not unfitly,
as referring to the spiritual creation, because it already
had a kind of life which thou couldst illuminate. But, since
it had not merited from thee that it should be a life capable
of enlightenment, so neither, when it already began to exist,
did it merit from thee that it should be enlightened. For
neither could its formlessness please thee until it became
light--and it became light, not from the bare fact of existing,
but by the act of turning its face to the light which enlightened
it, and by cleaving to it. Thus it owed the fact that it
lived, and lived happily, to nothing whatsoever but thy
grace, since it had been turned, by a change for the better,
toward that which cannot be changed for either better or
worse. Thou alone art, because thou alone art without complication.
For thee it is not one thing to live and another thing to
live in blessedness; for thou art thyself thy own blessedness.
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