|
|
| print this
AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS
INDEX
Augustine's
Testimony Concerning The Confessions
I.
THE Retractations, II, 6 (A.D. 427)
1.
My Confessions, in thirteen books, praise the righteous
and good God as they speak either of my evil or good, and
they are meant to excite men's minds and affections toward
him. At least as far as I am concerned, this is what they
did for me when they were being written and they still do
this when read. What some people think of them is their
own affair [ipse viderint]; but I do know
that they have given pleasure to many of my brethren and
still do so. The first through the tenth books were written
about myself; the other three about Holy Scripture, from
what is written there, In the beginning God created the
heaven and the earth,[2]even as far as the reference to the
Sabbath rest.[3]
2. In Book IV, when I confessed my soul's misery over the death of a friend
and said that our soul had somehow been made one out of two souls, "But it may
have been that I was afraid to die, lest he should then die wholly whom I had
so greatly loved" (Ch. VI, 11)--this now seems to be more a trivial declamation
than a serious confession, although this inept expression may be tempered somewhat
by the "may have been" [forte] which I added. And in Book XIII
what I said--"The firmament was made between the higher waters (and superior)
and the lower (and inferior) waters"--was said without sufficient thought. In
any case, the matter is very obscure.
This work begins thus: "Great art thou, O Lord."
II.
De Dono Perseverantiae, XX, 53 (A.D. 428)
Which
of my shorter works has been more widely known or given
greater pleasure than the [thirteen] books of my Confessions?
And, although I published them long before the Pelagian
heresy had even begun to be, it is plain that in them I
said to my God, again and again, "Give what thou commandest
and command what thou wilt." When these words of mine were
repeated in Pelagius' presence at Rome by a certain brother
of mine (an episcopal colleague), he could not bear them
and contradicted him so excitedly that they nearly came
to a quarrel. Now what, indeed, does God command, first
and foremost, except that we believe in him? This faith,
therefore, he himself gives; so that it is well said to
him, "Give what thou commandest." Moreover, in those same
books, concerning my account of my conversion when God turned
me to that faith which I was laying waste with a very wretched
and wild verbal assault,[4]
do you not remember how the narration shows that I was given
as a gift to the faithful and daily tears of my mother,
who had been promised that I should not perish? I certainly
declared there that God by his grace turns men's wills to
the true faith when they are not only averse to it, but
actually adverse. As for the other ways in which I sought
God's aid in my growth in perseverance, you either know
or can review them as you wish (PL, 45, c. 1025).
III.
Letter to Darius (A.D. 429)
Thus,
my son, take the books of my Confessions and use
them as a good man should--not superficially, but as a Christian
in Christian charity. Here see me as I am and do not praise
me for more than I am. Here believe nothing else about me
than my own testimony. Here observe what I have been in
myself and through myself. And if something in me pleases
you, here praise Him with me--him whom I desire to be praised
on my account and not myself. "For it is he that hath made
us and not we ourselves."[5]
Indeed, we were ourselves quite lost; but he who made us,
remade us [sed qui fecit, refecit]. As, then, you
find me in these pages, pray for me that I shall not fail
but that I may go on to be perfected. Pray for me, my son,
pray for me! (Epist. CCXXXI, PL, 33, c. 1025).
The Confessions of Saint Augustine
|

|