St. Augustine’s Anthropology
Excerpts from the City of God (trans. Dods)
Book X. Chapter 1.— That the
Platonists Themselves Have Determined that God Alone Can Confer Happiness Either
on Angels or Men, But that It Yet Remains a Question Whether Those Spirits Whom
They Direct Us to Worship, that We May Obtain Happiness, Wish Sacrifice to Be
Offered to Themselves, or to the One God Only.
It is the decided opinion of all who use their
brains, that all men desire to be happy. But who are happy, or how they become
so, these are questions about which the weakness of human understanding stirs
endless and angry controversies, in which philosophers have wasted their
strength and expended their leisure. To adduce and discuss their various
opinions would be tedious, and is unnecessary. The reader may remember what we
said in the eighth book, while making a selection of the philosophers with whom
we might discuss the question regarding the future life of happiness, whether
we can reach it by paying divine honors to the one true God, the Creator of all
gods, or by worshipping many gods, and he will not expect us to repeat here the
same argument, especially as, even if he has forgotten it, he may refresh his
memory by reperusal. For we made selection of the
Platonists, justly esteemed the noblest of the philosophers, because they had
the wit to perceive that the human soul, immortal and rational, or
intellectual, as it is, cannot be happy except by partaking of the light of
that God by whom both itself and the world were made; and also that the happy
life which all men desire cannot be reached by any who does not cleave with a
pure and holy love to that one supreme good, the unchangeable God. But as even
these philosophers, whether accommodating to the folly and ignorance of the
people, or, as the apostle says, "becoming vain in their
imaginations," Romans 1:21 supposed or allowed others to suppose that many
gods should be worshipped, so that some of them considered that divine honor by
worship and sacrifice should be rendered even to the demons (an error I have
already exploded), we must now, by God's help, ascertain what is thought about
our religious worship and piety by those immortal and blessed spirits, who
dwell in the heavenly places among dominations, principalities, powers, whom
the Platonists call gods, and some either good demons, or, like us, angels—that
is to say, to put it more plainly, whether the angels desire us to offer
sacrifice and worship, and to consecrate our possessions and ourselves, to them
or only to God, theirs and ours.
For this is the worship which is due to the
Divinity, or, to speak more accurately, to the Deity; and, to express this
worship in a single word as there does not occur to me any Latin term
sufficiently exact, I shall avail myself, whenever necessary, of a Greek word.
Λατρεία, whenever
it occurs in Scripture, is rendered by the word service. But that service which
is due to men, and in reference to which the apostle writes that servants must
be subject to their own masters, Ephesians 6:5 is usually designated by another
word in Greek, whereas the service which is paid to God alone by worship, is
always, or almost always, called λατρεία
in the usage of those who wrote from the divine oracles. This cannot so well be
called simply "cultus," for in that case it would not seem to be due
exclusively to God; for the same word is applied to the respect we pay either
to the memory or the living presence of men. From it, too, we derive the words
agriculture, colonist, and others. And the heathen call their gods "cślicolć," not because they worship heaven, but
because they dwell in it, and as it were colonize it—not in the sense in which
we call those colonists who are attached to their native soil to cultivate it
under the rule of the owners, but in the sense in which the great master of the
Latin language says, "There was an ancient city inhabited by Tyrian
colonists." He called them colonists, not because they cultivated the
soil, but because they inhabited the city. So, too, cities that have hived off
from larger cities are called colonies. Consequently, while it is quite true
that, using the word in a special sense, "cult" can be rendered to
none but God, yet, as the word is applied to other things besides, the cult due
to God cannot in Latin be expressed by this word alone. . . .
Book
XIV. Chapter 1.— That the Disobedience of the First Man Would Have Plunged All
Men into the Endless Misery of the Second Death, Had Not the Grace of God
Rescued Many.
We have already stated in the preceding books
that God, desiring not only that the human race might be able by their
similarity of nature to associate with one another, but also that they might be
bound together in harmony and peace by the ties of relationship, was pleased to
derive all men from one individual, and created man with such a nature that the
members of the race should not have died, had not the two first (of whom the
one was created out of nothing, and the other out of him) merited this by their
disobedience; for by them so great a sin was committed, that by it the human
nature was altered for the worse, and was transmitted also to their posterity,
liable to sin and subject to death. And the kingdom of death so reigned over
men, that the deserved penalty of sin would have hurled all headlong even into
the second death, of which there is no end, had not the undeserved grace of God
saved some therefrom. And thus it has come to pass, that though there are very
many and great nations all over the earth, whose rites and customs, speech,
arms, and dress, are distinguished by marked differences, yet there are no more
than two kinds of human society, which we may justly call two cities, according
to the language of our Scriptures. The one consists of those who wish to live
after the flesh, the other of those who wish to live after the spirit; and when
they severally achieve what they wish, they live in peace, each after their
kind.
Chapter
13.— That in Adam's Sin an Evil Will Preceded the Evil Act.
Our first parents fell into open disobedience
because already they were secretly corrupted; for the evil act had never been
done had not an evil will preceded it. And what is the origin of our evil will
but pride? For "pride is the beginning of sin." Sirach 10:13 And what
is pride but the craving for undue exaltation? And this is undue exaltation,
when the soul abandons Him to whom it ought to cleave as its end, and becomes a
kind of end to itself. This happens when it becomes its own satisfaction. And
it does so when it falls away from that unchangeable good which ought to
satisfy it more than itself. This falling away is spontaneous; for if the will
had remained steadfast in the love of that higher and changeless good by which
it was illumined to intelligence and kindled into love, it would not have
turned away to find satisfaction in itself, and so become frigid and benighted;
the woman would not have believed the serpent spoke the truth, nor would the
man have preferred the request of his wife to the command of God, nor have
supposed that it was a venial transgression to cleave to the partner of his
life even in a partnership of sin. The wicked deed, then—that is to say, the
transgression of eating the forbidden fruit—was committed by persons who were
already wicked. That "evil fruit" Matthew 7:18 could be brought forth
only by "a corrupt tree." But that the tree was evil was not the
result of nature; for certainly it could become so only by the vice of the will,
and vice is contrary to nature. Now, nature could not have been depraved by
vice had it not been made out of nothing. Consequently, that it is a nature,
this is because it is made by God; but that it falls away from Him, this is
because it is made out of nothing. But man did not so fall away as to become
absolutely nothing; but being turned towards himself, his being became more
contracted than it was when he clave to Him who supremely is. Accordingly, to
exist in himself, that is, to be his own satisfaction after abandoning God, is
not quite to become a nonentity, but to approximate to that. And therefore the
holy Scriptures designate the proud by another name, "self-pleasers."
For it is good to have the heart lifted up, yet not to one's self, for this is
proud, but to the Lord, for this is obedient, and can be the act only of the
humble. There is, therefore, something in humility which, strangely enough,
exalts the heart, and something in pride which debases it. This seems, indeed,
to be contradictory, that loftiness should debase and lowliness exalt. But
pious humility enables us to submit to what is above us; and nothing is more
exalted above us than God; and therefore humility, by making us subject to God,
exalts us. But pride, being a defect of nature, by the very act of refusing
subjection and revolting from Him who is supreme, falls to a low condition; and
then comes to pass what is written: "You cast them down when they lifted
up themselves." For he does not say, "when they had been lifted
up," as if first they were exalted, and then afterwards cast down; but
"when they lifted up themselves" even then they were cast down—that
is to say, the very lifting up was already a fall. And therefore it is that
humility is specially recommended to the city of God as it sojourns in this
world, and is specially exhibited in the city of God, and in the person of
Christ its King; while the contrary vice of pride, according to the testimony
of the sacred writings, specially rules his adversary the devil. And certainly
this is the great difference which distinguishes the two cities of which we
speak, the one being the society of the godly men, the other of the ungodly,
each associated with the angels that adhere to their party, and the one guided
and fashioned by love of self, the other by love of God.
The devil, then, would not have ensnared man
in the open and manifest sin of doing what God had forbidden, had man not
already begun to live for himself. It was this that made him listen with
pleasure to the words, "You shall be as gods," Genesis 3:5 which they
would much more readily have accomplished by obediently adhering to their
supreme and true end than by proudly living to themselves. For created gods are
gods not by virtue of what is in themselves, but by a participation of the true
God. By craving to be more, man becomes less; and by aspiring to be
self-sufficing, he fell away from Him who truly suffices him. Accordingly, this
wicked desire which prompts man to please himself as if he were himself light,
and which thus turns him away from that light by which, had he followed it, he
would himself have become light—this wicked desire, I say, already secretly
existed in him, and the open sin was but its consequence. For that is true
which is written, "Pride goes before destruction, and before honor is
humility;" Proverbs 18:12 that is to say, secret ruin precedes open ruin,
while the former is not counted ruin. For who counts exaltation ruin, though no
sooner is the Highest forsaken than a fall is begun? But who does not recognize
it as ruin, when there occurs an evident and indubitable transgression of the
commandment? And consequently, God's prohibition had reference to such an act
as, when committed, could not be defended on any pretense of doing what was
righteous. And I make bold to say that it is useful for the proud to fall into
an open and indisputable transgression, and so displease themselves, as
already, by pleasing themselves, they had fallen. For Peter was in a healthier
condition when he wept and was dissatisfied with himself, than when he boldly
presumed and satisfied himself. And this is averred by the sacred Psalmist when
he says, "Fill their faces with shame, that they may seek Your name, O
Lord;" that is, that they who have pleased themselves in seeking their own
glory may be pleased and satisfied with You in seeking Your glory.
Chapter
28.— Of the Nature of the Two Cities, the Earthly and the Heavenly.
Accordingly, two cities have been formed by
two loves: the earthly by the love of self, even to the contempt of God; the
heavenly by the love of God, even to the contempt of self. The former, in a
word, glories in itself, the latter in the Lord. For the one seeks glory from
men; but the greatest glory of the other is God, the witness of conscience. The
one lifts up its head in its own glory; the other says to its God, "You
are my glory, and the lifter up of mine head." In the one, the princes and
the nations it subdues are ruled by the love of ruling; in the other, the
princes and the subjects serve one another in love, the latter obeying, while
the former take thought for all. The one delights in its own strength,
represented in the persons of its rulers; the other says to its God, "I
will love You, O Lord, my strength." And therefore the wise men of the one
city, living according to man, have sought for profit to their own bodies or
souls, or both, and those who have known God "glorified Him not as God,
neither were thankful, but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish
heart was darkened; professing themselves to be wise,"— that is, glorying
in their own wisdom, and being possessed by pride—"they became fools, and
changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like to
corruptible man, and to birds, and four-footed beasts, and creeping things."
For they were either leaders or followers of the people in adoring images,
"and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator, who is
blessed for ever." Romans 1:21-25 But in the
other city there is no human wisdom, but only godliness, which offers due
worship to the true God, and looks for its reward in the society of the saints,
of holy angels as well as holy men, "that God may be all in all." 1
Corinthians 15:28.
Book
XIX. Chapter 11.— Of the Happiness of the Eternal Peace, Which
Constitutes the End or True Perfection of the Saints.
And thus we may say of peace, as we have said
of eternal life, that it is the end of our good; and the rather because the
Psalmist says of the city of God, the subject of this laborious work, Praise
the Lord, O Jerusalem; praise your God, O Zion: for He has strengthened the
bars of your gates; He has blessed your children within you; who has made your
borders peace. For when the bars of her gates shall be strengthened, none shall
go in or come out from her; consequently we ought to understand the peace of
her borders as that final peace we are wishing to declare. For even the
mystical name of the city itself, that is, Jerusalem, means, as I have already
said, Vision of Peace. But as the word peace is employed in connection with
things in this world in which certainly life eternal has no place, we have
preferred to call the end or supreme good of this city life eternal rather than
peace. Of this end the apostle says, But now, being freed from sin, and become
servants to God, you have your fruit unto holiness, and the end life eternal.
Romans 6:22 But, on the other hand, as those who are not familiar with
Scripture may suppose that the life of the wicked is eternal life, either
because of the immortality of the soul, which some of the philosophers even
have recognized, or because of the endless punishment of the wicked, which
forms a part of our faith, and which seems impossible unless the wicked live for ever, it may therefore be advisable, in order that
every one may readily understand what we mean, to say that the end or supreme
good of this city is either peace in eternal life, or eternal life in peace.
For peace is a good so great, that even in this earthly and mortal life there
is no word we hear with such pleasure, nothing we desire with such zest, or
find to be more thoroughly gratifying. So that if we dwell for a little longer
on this subject, we shall not, in my opinion, be wearisome to our readers, who
will attend both for the sake of understanding what is the end of this city of
which we speak, and for the sake of the sweetness of peace which is dear to
all.
Chapter
13.— Of the Universal Peace Which the Law of Nature Preserves Through All
Disturbances, and by Which Every One Reaches His Desert in a Way Regulated by
the Just Judge.
The peace of the body then consists in the
duly proportioned arrangement of its parts. The peace of the irrational soul is
the harmonious repose of the appetites, and that of the rational soul the
harmony of knowledge and action. The peace of body and soul is the well-ordered
and harmonious life and health of the living creature. Peace between man and
God is the well-ordered obedience of faith to eternal law. Peace between man
and man is well-ordered concord. Domestic peace is the well-ordered concord
between those of the family who rule and those who obey. Civil peace is a
similar concord among the citizens. The peace of the celestial city is the
perfectly ordered and harmonious enjoyment of God, and of one another in God.
The peace of all things is the tranquillity of order.
Order is the distribution which allots things equal and unequal, each to its
own place. And hence, though the miserable, in so far as they are such, do
certainly not enjoy peace, but are severed from that tranquillity
of order in which there is no disturbance, nevertheless, inasmuch as they are
deservedly and justly miserable, they are by their very misery connected with
order. They are not, indeed, conjoined with the blessed, but they are disjoined
from them by the law of order. And though they are disquieted, their
circumstances are notwithstanding adjusted to them, and consequently they have
some tranquillity of order, and therefore some peace.
But they are wretched because, although not wholly miserable, they are not in
that place where any mixture of misery is impossible. They would, however, be
more wretched if they had not that peace which arises from being in harmony
with the natural order of things. When they suffer, their peace is in so far
disturbed; but their peace continues in so far as they do not suffer, and in so
far as their nature continues to exist. As, then, there may be life without
pain, while there cannot be pain without some kind of life, so there may be
peace without war, but there cannot be war without some kind of peace, because
war supposes the existence of some natures to wage it, and these natures cannot
exist without peace of one kind or other.
And therefore there is a nature in which evil
does not or even cannot exist; but there cannot be a nature in which there is
no good. Hence not even the nature of the devil himself is evil, in so far as
it is nature, but it was made evil by being perverted. Thus he did not abide in
the truth, John 8:44 but could not escape the judgment of the Truth; he did not
abide in the tranquillity of order, but did not
therefore escape the power of the Ordainer. The good
imparted by God to his nature did not screen him from the justice of God by
which order was preserved in his punishment; neither did God punish the good
which He had created, but the evil which the devil had committed. God did not
take back all He had imparted to his nature, but something He took and
something He left, that there might remain enough to be sensible of the loss of
what was taken. And this very sensibility to pain is evidence of the good which
has been taken away and the good which has been left. For, were nothing good
left, there could be no pain on account of the good which had been lost. For he
who sins is still worse if he rejoices in his loss of righteousness. But he who
is in pain, if he derives no benefit from it, mourns at least the loss of
health. And as righteousness and health are both good things, and as the loss
of any good thing is matter of grief, not of joy—if, at least, there is no
compensation, as spiritual righteousness may compensate for the loss of bodily
health—certainly it is more suitable for a wicked man to grieve in punishment
than to rejoice in his fault. As, then, the joy of a sinner who has abandoned
what is good is evidence of a bad will, so his grief for the good he has lost
when he is punished is evidence of a good nature. For he who laments the peace
his nature has lost is stirred to do so by some relics of peace which make his
nature friendly to itself. And it is very just that in the final punishment the
wicked and godless should in anguish bewail the loss of the natural advantages
they enjoyed, and should perceive that they were most justly taken from them by
that God whose benign liberality they had despised. God, then, the most wise
Creator and most just Ordainer of all natures, who
placed the human race upon earth as its greatest ornament, imparted to men some
good things adapted to this life, to wit, temporal peace, such as we can enjoy
in this life from health and safety and human fellowship, and all things
needful for the preservation and recovery of this peace, such as the objects
which are accommodated to our outward senses, light, night, the air, and waters
suitable for us, and everything the body requires to sustain, shelter, heal, or
beautify it: and all under this most
equitable condition, that every man who made a good use of these advantages
suited to the peace of this mortal condition, should receive ampler and better
blessings, namely, the peace of immortality, accompanied by glory and honor in
an endless life made fit for the enjoyment of God and of one another in God;
but that he who used the present blessings badly should both lose them and
should not receive the others.
Book
XXII. Chapter 22.— Of the Miseries and Ills to Which the Human Race is Justly
Exposed Through the First Sin, and from Which None Can Be Delivered Save by
Christ's Grace.
That the whole human race has been condemned
in its first origin, this life itself, if life it is to be called, bears
witness by the host of cruel ills with which it is filled. Is not this proved
by the profound and dreadful ignorance which produces all the errors that
enfold the children of Adam, and from which no man can be delivered without
toil, pain, and fear? Is it not proved by his love of so many vain and hurtful
things, which produces gnawing cares, disquiet, griefs, fears, wild joys,
quarrels, lawsuits, wars, treasons, angers, hatreds, deceit, flattery, fraud,
theft, robbery, perfidy, pride, ambition, envy, murders, parricides, cruelty,
ferocity, wickedness, luxury, insolence, impudence, shamelessness,
fornications, adulteries, incests, and the numberless uncleannesses and unnatural
acts of both sexes, which it is shameful so much as to mention; sacrileges,
heresies, blasphemies, perjuries, oppression of the innocent, calumnies, plots,
falsehoods, false witnessings, unrighteous judgments, violent deeds,
plunderings, and whatever similar wickedness has found its way into the lives
of men, though it cannot find its way into the conception of pure minds? These
are indeed the crimes of wicked men, yet they spring from that root of error
and misplaced love which is born with every son of Adam. For who is there that
has not observed with what profound ignorance, manifesting itself even in
infancy, and with what superfluity of foolish desires, beginning to appear in
boyhood, man comes into this life, so that, were he left to live as he pleased,
and to do whatever he pleased, he would plunge into all, or certainly into many
of those crimes and iniquities which I mentioned, and could not mention?
But because God does not wholly desert those
whom He condemns, nor shuts up in His anger His tender mercies, the human race
is restrained by law and instruction, which keep guard against the ignorance
that besets us, and oppose the assaults of vice, but are themselves full of
labor and sorrow. For what mean those multifarious threats which are used to
restrain the folly of children? What mean pedagogues, masters, the birch, the
strap, the cane, the schooling which Scripture says must be given a child,
"beating him on the sides lest he wax stubborn," Sirach 30:12 and it
be hardly possible or not possible at all to subdue him? Why all these
punishments, save to overcome ignorance and bridle evil desires— these evils
with which we come into the world? For why is it that we remember with
difficulty, and without difficulty forget? Learn with difficulty, and without
difficulty remain ignorant? Are diligent with difficulty, and without
difficulty are indolent? Does not this show what vitiated nature inclines and
tends to by its own weight, and what succor it needs if it is to be delivered?
Inactivity, sloth, laziness, negligence, are vices which shun labor, since
labor, though useful, is itself a punishment.
But, besides the punishments of childhood,
without which there would be no learning of what the parents wish—and the
parents rarely wish anything useful to be taught—who can describe, who can
conceive the number and severity of the punishments which afflict the human
race—pains which are not only the accompaniment of the wickedness of godless
men, but are a part of the human condition and the common misery—what fear and
what grief are caused by bereavement and mourning, by losses and condemnations,
by fraud and falsehood, by false suspicions, and all the crimes and wicked
deeds of other men? For at their hands we suffer robbery, captivity, chains,
imprisonment, exile, torture, mutilation, loss of sight, the violation of
chastity to satisfy the lust of the oppressor, and many other dreadful evils.
What numberless casualties threaten our bodies from without—extremes of heat
and cold, storms, floods, inundations, lightning, thunder, hail, earthquakes,
houses falling; or from the stumbling, or shying, or vice of horses; from
countless poisons in fruits, water, air, animals; from the painful or even
deadly bites of wild animals; from the madness which a mad dog communicates, so
that even the animal which of all others is most gentle and friendly to its own
master, becomes an object of intenser fear than a
lion or dragon, and the man whom it has by chance infected with this
pestilential contagion becomes so rabid, that his parents, wife, children,
dread him more than any wild beast! What disasters are suffered by those who
travel by land or sea! What man can go out of his own house without being
exposed on all hands to unforeseen accidents? Returning home sound in limb, he
slips on his own doorstep, breaks his leg, and never recovers. What can seem
safer than a man sitting in his chair? Eli the priest fell from his, and broke
his neck. How many accidents do farmers, or rather all men, fear that the crops
may suffer from the weather, or the soil, or the ravages of destructive
animals? Commonly they feel safe when the crops are gathered and housed. Yet,
to my certain knowledge, sudden floods have driven the laborers away, and swept
the barns clean of the finest harvest. Is innocence a sufficient protection
against the various assaults of demons? That no man might think so, even
baptized infants, who are certainly unsurpassed in innocence, are sometimes so
tormented, that God, who permits it, teaches us hereby to bewail the calamities
of this life, and to desire the felicity of the life to come. As to bodily
diseases, they are so numerous that they cannot all be contained even in
medical books. And in very many, or almost all of them, the cures and remedies
are themselves tortures, so that men are delivered from a pain that destroys by
a cure that pains. Has not the madness of thirst driven men to drink human
urine, and even their own? Has not hunger driven men to eat human flesh, and
that the flesh not of bodies found dead, but of bodies slain for the purpose?
Have not the fierce pangs of famine driven mothers to eat their own children,
incredibly savage as it seems? In fine, sleep itself, which is justly called
repose, how little of repose there sometimes is in it when disturbed with
dreams and visions; and with what terror is the wretched mind overwhelmed by
the appearances of things which are so presented, and which, as it were so
stand out before the senses, that we can not
distinguish them from realities! How wretchedly do false appearances distract
men in certain diseases! With what astonishing variety of appearances are even
healthy men sometimes deceived by evil spirits, who produce these delusions for
the sake of perplexing the senses of their victims, if they cannot succeed in
seducing them to their side!
From this hell upon earth there is no escape,
save through the grace of the Saviour Christ, our God and Lord. The very name
Jesus shows this, for it means Saviour; and He saves us especially from passing
out of this life into a more wretched and eternal state, which is rather a
death than a life. For in this life, though holy men and holy pursuits afford
us great consolations, yet the blessings which men crave are not invariably
bestowed upon them, lest religion should be cultivated for the sake of these
temporal advantages, while it ought rather to be cultivated for the sake of
that other life from which all evil is excluded. Therefore, also, does grace
aid good men in the midst of present calamities, so that they are enabled to
endure them with a constancy proportioned to their faith. The world's sages
affirm that philosophy contributes something to this—that philosophy which,
according to Cicero, the gods have bestowed in its purity only on a few men.
They have never given, he says, nor can ever give, a greater gift to men. So
that even those against whom we are disputing have been compelled to
acknowledge, in some fashion, that the grace of God is necessary for the
acquisition, not, indeed, of any philosophy, but of the true philosophy. And if
the true philosophy— this sole support against the miseries of this life— has
been given by Heaven only to a few, it sufficiently appears from this that the
human race has been condemned to pay this penalty of wretchedness. And as,
according to their acknowledgment, no greater gift has been bestowed by God, so
it must be believed that it could be given only by that God whom they
themselves recognize as greater than all the gods they worship.
Chapter 24.— Of the Blessings with Which the
Creator Has Filled This Life, Obnoxious Though It Be to the Curse.
But we must now contemplate the rich and
countless blessings with which the goodness of God, who cares for all He has
created, has filled this very misery of the human race, which reflects His
retributive justice. That first blessing which He pronounced before the fall,
when He said, Increase, and multiply, and replenish the earth, Genesis 1:28 He
did not inhibit after man had sinned, but the fecundity originally bestowed
remained in the condemned stock; and the vice of sin, which has involved us in
the necessity of dying, has yet not deprived us of that wonderful power of
seed, or rather of that still more marvellous power
by which seed is produced, and which seems to be as it were inwrought and inwoven
in the human body. But in this river, as I may call it, or torrent of the human
race, both elements are carried along together — both the evil which is derived
from him who begets, and the good which is bestowed by Him who creates us. In
the original evil there are two things, sin and punishment; in the original
good, there are two other things, propagation and conformation. But of the
evils, of which the one, sin, arose from our audacity, and the other,
punishment, from God's judgment, we have already said as much as suits our
present purpose. I mean now to speak of the blessings which God has conferred
or still confers upon our nature, vitiated and condemned as it is. For in
condemning it He did not withdraw all that He had given it, else it had been annihilated;
neither did He, in penally subjecting it to the devil, remove it beyond His own
power; for not even the devil himself is outside of God's government, since the
devil's nature subsists only by the supreme Creator who gives being to all that
in any form exists.
Of these two blessings, then, which we have
said flow from God's goodness, as from a fountain, towards our nature, vitiated
by sin and condemned to punishment, the one, propagation, was conferred by
God's benediction when He made those first works, from which He rested on the
seventh day. But the other, conformation, is conferred in that work of His
wherein He works hitherto. John 5:17 For were He to withdraw His efficacious
power from things, they should neither be able to go on and complete the
periods assigned to their measured movements, nor should they even continue in
possession of that nature they were created in. God, then, so created man that
He gave him what we may call fertility, whereby he might propagate other men,
giving them a congenital capacity to propagate their kind, but not imposing on
them any necessity to do so. This capacity God withdraws at pleasure from
individuals, making them barren; but from the whole race He has not withdrawn
the blessing of propagation once conferred. But though not withdrawn on account
of sin, this power of propagation is not what it would have been had there been
no sin. For since man placed in honor fell, he has become like the beasts, and
generates as they do, though the little spark of reason, which was the image of
God in him, has not been quite quenched. But if conformation were not added to
propagation, there would be no reproduction of one's kind. For even though
there were no such thing as copulation, and God wished to fill the earth with human
inhabitants, He might create all these as He created one without the help of
human generation. And, indeed, even as it is, those who copulate can generate
nothing save by the creative energy of God. As, therefore, in respect of that
spiritual growth whereby a man is formed to piety and righteousness, the
apostle says, Neither is he that plants anything, neither he that waters, but
God that gives the increase, 1 Corinthians 3:7 so also it must be said that it
is not he that generates that is anything, but God that gives the essential
form; that it is not the mother who carries and nurses the fruit of her womb
that is anything, but God that gives the increase. For He alone, by that energy
wherewith He works hitherto, causes the seed to develop, and to evolve from
certain secret and invisible folds into the visible forms of beauty which we
see. He alone, coupling and connecting in some wonderful fashion the spiritual
and corporeal natures, the one to command, the other to obey, makes a living
being. And this work of His is so great and wonderful, that not only man, who
is a rational animal, and consequently more excellent than all other animals of
the earth, but even the most diminutive insect, cannot be considered
attentively without astonishment and without praising the Creator.
It is He, then, who has given to the human
soul a mind, in which reason and understanding lie as it were asleep during
infancy, and as if they were not, destined, however, to be awakened and
exercised as years increase, so as to become capable of knowledge and of
receiving instruction, fit to understand what is true and to love what is good.
It is by this capacity the soul drinks in wisdom, and becomes endowed with
those virtues by which, in prudence, fortitude, temperance, and righteousness,
it makes war upon error and the other inborn vices, and conquers them by fixing
its desires upon no other object than the supreme and unchangeable Good. And
even though this be not uniformly the result, yet who can competently utter or
even conceive the grandeur of this work of the Almighty, and the unspeakable
boon He has conferred upon our rational nature, by giving us even the capacity
of such attainment? For over and above those arts which are called virtues, and
which teach us how we may spend our life well, and attain to endless happiness
— arts which are given to the children of the promise and the kingdom by the
sole grace of God which is in Christ — has not the genius of man invented and
applied countless astonishing arts, partly the result of necessity, partly the
result of exuberant invention, so that this vigor of mind, which is so active
in the discovery not merely of superfluous but even of dangerous and
destructive things, betokens an inexhaustible wealth in the nature which can invent,
learn, or employ such arts? What wonderful — one might say stupefying —
advances has human industry made in the arts of weaving and building, of
agriculture and navigation! With what endless variety are designs in pottery,
painting, and sculpture produced, and with what skill executed! What wonderful
spectacles are exhibited in the theatres, which those who have not seen them
cannot credit! How skillful the contrivances for catching, killing, or taming
wild beasts! And for the injury of men, also, how many kinds of poisons,
weapons, engines of destruction, have been invented, while for the preservation
or restoration of health the appliances and remedies are infinite! To provoke
appetite and please the palate, what a variety of seasonings have been concocted!
To express and gain entrance for thoughts, what a multitude and variety of
signs there are, among which speaking and writing hold the first place! What
ornaments has eloquence at command to delight the mind! What wealth of song is
there to captivate the ear! How many musical instruments and strains of harmony
have been devised! What skill has been attained in measures and numbers! With
what sagacity have the movements and connections of the stars been discovered!
Who could tell the thought that has been spent upon nature, even though,
despairing of recounting it in detail, he endeavored only to give a general
view of it? In fine, even the defense of errors and misapprehensions, which has
illustrated the genius of heretics and philosophers, cannot be sufficiently
declared. For at present it is the nature of the human mind which adorns this
mortal life which we are extolling, and not the faith and the way of truth
which lead to immortality. And since this great nature has certainly been
created by the true and supreme God, who administers all things He has made
with absolute power and justice, it could never have fallen into these
miseries, nor have gone out of them to miseries eternal, — saving only those
who are redeemed — had not an exceeding great sin been found in the first man
from whom the rest have sprung.
Moreover, even in the body, though it dies
like that of the beasts, and is in many ways weaker than theirs, what goodness
of God, what providence of the great Creator, is apparent! The organs of sense
and the rest of the members, are not they so placed, the appearance, and form,
and stature of the body as a whole, is it not so fashioned, as to indicate that
it was made for the service of a reasonable soul? Man has not been created
stooping towards the earth, like the irrational animals; but his bodily form,
erect and looking heavenwards, admonishes him to mind the things that are
above. Then the marvellous nimbleness which has been
given to the tongue and the hands, fitting them to speak, and write, and
execute so many duties, and practise so many arts,
does it not prove the excellence of the soul for which such an assistant was
provided? And even apart from its adaptation to the work required of it, there
is such a symmetry in its various parts, and so beautiful a proportion
maintained, that one is at a loss to decide whether, in creating the body,
greater regard was paid to utility or to beauty. Assuredly no part of the body
has been created for the sake of utility which does not also contribute something
to its beauty. And this would be all the more apparent, if we knew more
precisely how all its parts are connected and adapted to one another, and were
not limited in our observations to what appears on the surface; for as to what
is covered up and hidden from our view, the intricate web of veins and nerves,
the vital parts of all that lies under the skin, no one can discover it. For
although, with a cruel zeal for science, some medical men, who are called
anatomists, have dissected the bodies of the dead, and sometimes even of sick
persons who died under their knives, and have inhumanly pried into the secrets
of the human body to learn the nature of the disease and its exact seat, and
how it might be cured, yet those relations of which I speak, and which form the
concord, or, as the Greeks call it, harmony, of the whole body outside and in,
as of some instrument, no one has been able to discover, because no one has
been audacious enough to seek for them. But if these could be known, then even
the inward parts, which seem to have no beauty, would so delight us with their
exquisite fitness, as to afford a profounder satisfaction to the mind — and the
eyes are but its ministers — than the obvious beauty which gratifies the eye.
There are some things, too, which have such a place in the body, that they
obviously serve no useful purpose, but are solely for beauty, as e.g. the teats
on a man's breast, or the beard on his face; for that this is for ornament, and
not for protection, is proved by the bare faces of women, who ought rather, as
the weaker sex, to enjoy such a defense. If, therefore, of all those members
which are exposed to our view, there is certainly not one in which beauty is
sacrificed to utility, while there are some which serve no purpose but only
beauty, I think it can readily be concluded that in the creation of the human
body comeliness was more regarded than necessity. In truth, necessity is a
transitory thing; and the time is coming when we shall enjoy one another's
beauty without any lust — a condition which will specially redound to the
praise of the Creator, who, as it is said in the psalm, has put on praise and
comeliness.
How can I tell of the rest of creation, with
all its beauty and utility, which the divine goodness has given to man to
please his eye and serve his purposes, condemned though he is, and hurled into
these labors and miseries? Shall I speak of the manifold and various loveliness
of sky, and earth, and sea; of the plentiful supply and wonderful qualities of
the light; of sun, moon, and stars; of the shade of trees; of the colors and
perfume of flowers; of the multitude of birds, all differing in plumage and in
song; of the variety of animals, of which the smallest in size are often the
most wonderful — the works of ants and bees astonishing us more than the huge
bodies of whales? Shall I speak of the sea, which itself is so grand a
spectacle, when it arrays itself as it were in vestures of various colors, now
running through every shade of green, and again becoming purple or blue? Is it
not delightful to look at it in storm, and experience the soothing complacency
which it inspires, by suggesting that we ourselves are not tossed and
shipwrecked? What shall I say of the numberless kinds of food to alleviate
hunger, and the variety of seasonings to stimulate appetite which are scattered
everywhere by nature, and for which we are not indebted to the art of cookery?
How many natural appliances are there for preserving and restoring health! How
grateful is the alternation of day and night! How pleasant the breezes that
cool the air! How abundant the supply of clothing furnished us by trees and
animals! Who can enumerate all the blessings we enjoy? If I were to attempt to detail and unfold only
these few which I have indicated in the mass, such an enumeration would fill a
volume. And all these are but the solace of the wretched and condemned, not the
rewards of the blessed. What then shall these rewards be, if such be the
blessings of a condemned state? What will He give to those whom He has
predestined to life, who has given such things even to those whom He has
predestined to death? What blessings will He in the blessed life shower upon
those for whom, even in this state of misery, He has been willing that His
only-begotten Son should endure such sufferings even to death? Thus the apostle
reasons concerning those who are predestined to that kingdom: He that spared
not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him
also give us all things? Romans 8:32 When this promise is fulfilled, what shall
we be? What blessings shall we receive in that kingdom, since already we have
received as the pledge of them Christ's dying? In what condition shall the
spirit of man be, when it has no longer any vice at all; when it neither yields
to any, nor is in bondage to any, nor has to make war against any, but is
perfected, and enjoys undisturbed peace with itself? Shall it not then know all
things with certainty, and without any labor or error, when unhindered and
joyfully it drinks the wisdom of God at the fountain-head? What shall the body
be, when it is in every respect subject to the spirit, from which it shall draw
a life so sufficient, as to stand in need of no other nutriment? For it shall
no longer be animal, but spiritual, having indeed the substance of flesh, but
without any fleshly corruption.