 CHAPTER X And being admonished by these books to return into myself, I entered into my inward soul, guided by thee. This I could do because thou wast my helper. And I entered, and with the eye of my soul, such as it was, saw above the same eye of my soul and above my mind the immutable light. It was not the common light, which all flesh can see, nor was it simply a greater one of the same sort, as if the light of day were to grow brighter and brighter and flood all space. It was not like that light, but different, yea, very different, from all earthly light, whatever. Nor was it above my mind, in the same way as oil is above water, or heaven above earth. But it was higher, because it made me, and I was below it, because I was made by it. He who knows the truth knows that light, and he who knows it knows eternity. Love knows it, O eternal truth and true love and beloved eternity. Thou art my God, to whom I sigh both night and day. When I first knew thee, thou didst lift me up, that I might see that there was something to be seen, though I was not yet fit to see it. And thou didst beat back the weakness of my sight, shining forth upon me thy dazzling beams of light, and I trembled with love and fear. I realized that I was far away from thee in the land of unlikeness, as if I heard thy voice from on high. I and the food of strong men grow, and you shall feed on me. Nor shall you change me like the food of your flesh into yourself, but you shall be changed into my likeness. And I understood that thou chastendest man for his iniquity, and makest my soul to be eaten away as though by a spider. And I said, Is truth therefore nothing, because it is not diffused through space, neither finite nor infinite? And thou didst cry to me from afar, I am that I am. And I heard this, as things are heard in the heart, and there was no room for doubt. I should have more readily doubted that I am alive than that the truth exists, the truth which is clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made. CHAPTER 11 And I viewed all the other things that are beneath thee, and I realized that they are neither wholly real nor wholly unreal. They are real insofar as they come from thee, but they are unreal insofar as they are not what thou art. For that is truly real, which remains immutable. It is good, then, for me to hold fast to God, for if I do not remain in him, neither shall I abide in myself. But he, remaining in himself, renews all things. And thou art the Lord my God, since thou standest in no need of my goodness. CHAPTER 12 And it was made clear to me that all things are good, even if they are corrupted. They could not be corrupted if they were supremely good. But unless they were good, they could not be corrupted. If they were supremely good, they would be incorruptible. If they were not good at all, there would be nothing in them to be corrupted. For corruption harms, but unless it could diminish goodness, it could not harm. Either, then, corruption does not harm, which cannot be. Or, as is certain, all that is corrupted is thereby deprived of good. But if they are deprived of all good, they will cease to be. For if they are at all, and cannot be at all corrupted, they will become better, because they will remain incorruptible. Now what can be more monstrous than to maintain that by losing all good they have become better? If, then, they are deprived of all good, they will cease to exist. So long as they are, therefore, they are good. Therefore whatever is, is good. Evil, then, the origin of which I had been seeking, has no substance at all. For if it were a substance, it would be good. For either it would be an incorruptible substance, and so a supreme good, or a corruptible substance, which could not be corrupted unless it were good. I understood, therefore, and it was made clear to me that thou madeest all things good, nor is there any substance at all not made by thee. And because all that thou madeest is not equal, each by itself is good, and the sum of all of them is very good. For our God made all things very good. Chapter 13 To thee there is no such thing as evil, and even in thy whole creation, taken as a whole, there is not. Because there is nothing from beyond it that can burst in and destroy the order which thou hast appointed for it. But in the parts of creation some things, because they do not harmonize with others, are considered evil. Yet those same things harmonize with others and are good, and in themselves are good. And all these things which do not harmonize with each other still harmonize with the inferior part of creation which we call the earth, having its own cloudy and windy sky of like nature with itself. Far be it from me then to say these things should not be. For if I could see nothing but these I should indeed desire something better. But still I ought to praise thee if only for these created things. For that thou art to be praised is shown from the fact that earth, dragons and all deeps, fire and hail, snow and vapours, stormy winds fulfilling thy word, mountains and all hills, fruitful trees and all cedars, beasts and all cattle, creeping things and flying fowl, things of the earth and all people, princes and all judges of the earth, both young men and maidens, old men and children, praise thy name. But seeing also that in heaven all thy angels praise thee, O God, praise thee in the heights, and all thy hosts sun and moon, all stars and light, the heavens of heavens and the waters that are above the heavens, praise thy name. Seeing this, I say, I no longer desire a better world, because my thought ranged over all, and with a sounder judgment I reflected that the things above were better than those below, yet that all creation together was better than the higher things alone. Chapter 14 There is no health in those who find fault with any part of thy creation, as there was no health in me when I found fault with so many of thy works. And because my soul dared not to be displeased with my God, it would not allow that the things which displeased me were from thee. Hence it had wandered into the notion of two substances and could find no rest, but talked foolishly. And turning from that error, it had then made for itself a God extended through infinite space, and it thought this was thou, and set it up in its heart, and it became once more the temple of its own idol, an abomination to thee. But thou didst soothe my brain, though I was unaware of it, and closed my eyes lest they should behold vanity. And thus I ceased from preoccupation with self by a little, and my madness was lulled to sleep. And I awoke in thee, and beheld thee as the infinite, but not in the way I had thought, and this vision was not derived from the flesh. Chapter 15 And I looked around at other things, and I saw that it was to thee that all of them owed their being, and that they were all finite in thee. Yet they are in thee, not as in a space, but because thou holdest all things in the hand of thy truth, and because all things are true insofar as they are, and because falsehood is nothing except the existence in thought of what does not exist in fact. And I saw that all things harmonize, not only in their places, but also in their seasons. And I saw that thou, who alone are eternal, didst not begin to work after unnumbered periods of time, because all ages, both those which are past and those which shall pass, neither go nor come except through thy working and abiding. Chapter 16 And I saw and found it no marvel that bread, which is distasteful to an unhealthy palate, is pleasant to a healthy one, or that the light, which is painful to sore eyes, is a delight to sound ones. Thy righteousness displeases the wicked, and they find even more fault with the viper and the little worm, which thou hast created good, fitting, in as they do with the inferior parts of creation. The wicked themselves also fit in here, and proportionately more so as they become unlike thee, but they harmonize with the higher creation proportionately as they become like thee. And I asked what wickedness was, and I found that it was no substance, but a perversion of the will bent aside from thee, O God, the supreme substance toward those lower things, casting away its innermost treasure and becoming bloated with external good. Chapter 17 And I marveled that I now loved thee and no phantasm in thy stead, and yet I was not stable enough to enjoy my God steadily. Instead I was transported to thee by thy beauty, and then presently torn away from thee by my own weight, sinking with grief into these lower things. This weight was carnal habit, but thy memory dwelt with me, and I never doubted in the least that there was one for me to cleave to, but I was not yet ready to cleave to thee firmly. For the body, which is corrupted, presses down the soul, and the earthly dwelling weighs down the mind, which muses upon many things. My greatest certainty was that the invisible things of thine from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even thy eternal power and Godhead. For when I inquired how it was that I could appreciate the beauty of bodies, both celestial and terrestrial, and what it was that supported me in making correct judgments about things mutable, and when I concluded this ought to be thus, this ought not, then when I inquired how it was that I could make such judgments, since I did in fact make them, I realized that I had found the unchangeable and true eternity of truth above my changeable mind. And thus by degrees was led upward from bodies to the soul, which perceives them by means of the bodily senses, and from there on to the soul's inward faculty, to which the bodily senses report outward things. And this belongs even to the capacities of the beasts, and thence on up to the reasoning power, to whose judgment is referred the experience received from the bodily sense. And when this power of reason within me found that it was changeable, it raised itself up to its own intellectual principle and withdrew its thoughts from experience, abstracting itself from the contradictory throng of phantasms, in order to seek for that light in which it was bathed. Then, without any doubting, it cried out that the unchangeable was better than the changeable. From this it follows that the mind somehow knew the unchangeable, for unless it had known it in some fashion it could have had no sure ground for preferring it to the changeable. And thus with the flash of a trembling glance it arrived at that which is. And I saw thy invisibility, invisibilia tua, understood by means of the things that are made. But I was not able to sustain my gaze. My weakness was dashed back, and I lapsed again into my accustomed ways, carrying along with me nothing but a loving memory of my vision, and an appetite for what I had, as it were, smelled the odor of, but was not yet able to eat. Chapter 18 I sought, therefore, some way to acquire the strength sufficient to enjoy thee. But I did not find it until I embraced that mediator between God and man, the man Christ Jesus, who is overall God blessed forever, who came calling and saying, I am the way, the truth, and the life, and mingling with our fleshly humanity the heavenly food I was unable to receive. For the word was made flesh in order that thy wisdom by which thou didst create all things might become milk for our infancy. And as yet I was not humble enough to hold the humble Jesus. Nor did I understand what lesson his weakness was meant to teach us. For thy word, the eternal truth, far exalted above even the higher parts of thy creation, lifts his subjects up toward himself. But in this lower world he built for himself a humble habitation of our own clay so that he might pull down from themselves and win over to himself those whom he is to bring subject to him. Lowering their pride and heightening their love to the end that they might go on no farther in self-confidence, but rather should become weak, seeing at their feet the deity made weak by sharing our coats of skin so that they might cast themselves exhausted upon him and be uplifted by his rising. But I thought otherwise. I saw in our Lord Christ only a man of eminent wisdom to whom no other man could be compared, especially because he was miraculously born of a virgin, sent to set us an example of despising worldly things for the attainment of immortality, and thus exhibiting his divine care for us. Because of this I held that he had merited his great authority as leader. But concerning the mystery contained in the word was made flesh, I could not even form a notion. From what I learned, from what has been handed down to us in the books about him, that he ate, drank, slept, walked, rejoiced in spirit, was sad and discoursed with his fellows. I realized that his flesh alone was not bound unto thy word, but also that there was a bond with the human soul and body. Everyone knows this who knows the unchangeableness of thy word, and this I knew by now as far as I was able, and I had no doubts at all about it. For at one time to move the limbs by an act of will at another time not at one time to feel some emotion at another time not at one time to speak intelligibly through verbal signs at another not. These are all properties of a soul and mind subject to change. And if these things were falsely written about him, all the rest would risk the imputation of falsehood and there would remain in those books no saving faith for the human race. Therefore, because they were written truthfully, I acknowledged a perfect man to be in Christ, not the body of a man only, nor in the body an animal soul without a rational one as well, but a true man. And this man I held to be superior to all others, not only because he was a form of the truth, but also because of the great excellence and perfection of his human nature due to his participation in wisdom. Alopeas, on the other hand, supposed the Catholics to believe that God was so clothed with flesh that besides God and the flesh there was no soul in Christ. And he did not think that a human mind was ascribed to him. And because he was fully persuaded that the actions recorded of him except by a living rational creature, he moved the more slowly toward Christian faith. But when he later learned that this was the error of the Apollonarian heretics, he rejoiced in the Catholic faith and accepted it. For myself, I must confess that it was even later that I learned how, in the sentence the word was made flesh the Catholic truth can be distinguished from the falsehood of Photinus. For the refutation of heretics makes the tenets of thy church and sound doctrine to stand out boldly. For there must also be heresies that those who are approved may be made manifest among the weak. Chapter 20 By having thus read the books of the Platonists and having been taught by them to search for the incorporeal truth, I saw how my invisible things are understood through the things that are made. And even when I was thrown back, I still sensed what it was that the dullness of my soul would not allow me to contemplate. I was assured that thou wast and wast infinite, though not diffused in finite space or infinity, that thou truly art who art ever the same, varying neither in part nor motion, and that all things are from thee, as is proved by this sure cause alone, that they exist. Of all this I was convinced, yet I was too weak to enjoy thee. I chattered away as if I were an expert, but if I had not sought thy way in Christ our Saviour, my knowledge would have turned out to be not instruction, but destruction. For now, full of what was in fact my punishment, I had begun to desire to seem wise. I did not mourn my ignorance, but rather was puffed up with knowledge. For where was that love which builds upon the foundation of humility, which is Jesus Christ? Or when would these books teach me this? I now believe that it was thy pleasure that I should fall upon these books before I studied thy scriptures, and rest on my memory how I was affected by them. And then, afterward, when I was subdued by thy scriptures, and when my wounds were touched by thy healing fingers, I might discern and distinguish what a difference there is between presumption and confession, between those who saw where they were to go, even if they did not see the way, and the way which leads not only to the observing, but also to the inhabiting of the blessed country. For had I first been moulded in thy holy scriptures, and if thou hadst grown sweet to me through my familiar use of them, and if then I had afterward fallen upon those volumes, they might have pushed me off the solid ground of godliness. Or if I had stood firm in that wholesome disposition which I had there required, I might have thought that wisdom was attained by the study of those books alone. CHAPTER XXI With great eagerness then I fastened upon the venerable writings of thy spirit, and principally upon the apostle Paul. I had thought that he sometimes contradicted himself, and that the text of his teaching did not agree with the testimonies of the law and the prophets. But now all these doubts vanished away. And I saw that those pure words had but one face, and I learned to rejoice with trembling. So I began, and I found that whatever truth I had read was here combined with the exaltation of thy grace. Thus he who sees must not glory as if he had not received, not only the things that he sees, but the very power of sight. For what does he have received as a gift? By this he is not only exhorted to see, but also to be cleansed, that he may grasp thee, who art ever the same. And thus he who cannot see thee afar off must yet enter upon the road that leads to reaching, seeing, and possessing thee. For although a man may delight in the law of God after the inward man, what shall he do with that other law in his members, which wars against the law of his mind and brings him into captivity under the law of sin, which is in his members? Thou art righteous, O Lord, but we have sinned, and committed iniquities, and have done wickedly. Thy hand has grown heavy upon us, and we are justly delivered over to that ancient sinner, the Lord of Death. Thou hast to become like his will, by which he remained not in thy truth. What shall wretched man do? Who shall deliver him from the body of this death, except thy grace through Jesus Christ our Lord, whom thou hast begotten, co-eternal with thyself, and didst create in the beginning of thy ways, in whom the Prince of this world found nothing worthy of death, yet he killed him. And so the handwriting, which was all against us, was blotted out. The books of the Platonists tell nothing of this. Their pages do not contain the expression of this kind of godliness, the tears of confession, thy sacrifice, a troubled spirit, a broken and a contrite heart, the salvation of thy people, the espoused city, the earnest of the Holy Spirit, the cup of our redemption. In them no man sings, shall not my soul be subject unto God, for from him comes my salvation. He is my God and my salvation, my defender. I shall no more be moved. In them no one hears him calling, come unto me, all you who labor. They scorn to learn of him, because he is meek and lowly of heart, for thou hast hidden those things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto babes. For it is one thing to see the land of peace from a wooded mountaintop, and fail to find the way thither, to attempt impassable ways in vain, opposed and way-laid by fugitives and deserters under their captain, the lion and the dragon. But it is quite another thing to keep to the highway that leads thither, guarded by the hosts of the heavenly emperor, on which there are no deserters from the heavenly army to rob the passers-by. For they shun it as a torment. These thoughts sank wondrously into my heart, when I read that least of thy apostles and when I had considered all thy works, and trembled. End of Book 7, chapters 10 to 21 chapters 1 through 6 of Confessions This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org Recording by Jeanne Confessions by Saint Augustine translated by Albert C. Outler Book 8, chapters 1 through 6 Chapter 1 Oh my God! Let me remember this gratitude and confess to thee thy mercies toward me. Let my bones be bathed in thy love and let them say, Lord, who is like unto thee? Thou hast broken my bonds in Sunder, and I will offer unto thee the sacrifice of thanksgiving. And how thou didst break them, I will declare, and all who worship thee shall say, when they hear these words, blessed be the Lord in heaven and earth. Great and wonderful is his name. Thy words had stuck fast in my breast, and I was hedged round about by thee on every side. Of thy eternal life I was now certain, although I had seen it through a glass darkly. And I had been relieved of all doubt that there is an incorruptible substance, which is the source of every other substance. Nor did I any longer crave greater certainty about thee, but rather greater steadfastness in thee. But as for my temporal life everything was uncertain, and my heart had to be purged of the old leaven, the way the Saviour himself pleased me well, but as yet I was reluctant to pass through the straight gate. And thou didst put it into my mind, and it seemed good in my own sight, to go to Simplicianus, who appeared to me a faithful servant of thine, and thy grace shone forth in him. I had also been told that from his youth up he had lived in entire devotion to thee. He was already an old man, and because of his great age, which he had passed in such a zealous discipleship in thy way, he appeared to me likely to have gained much wisdom, and indeed he had. From all his experience I desired him to tell me, setting before him all my agitations, which would be the most fitting way for one who felt as I did to walk in thy way. For I saw the church full, and one man was going this way, and another that. Still I could not be satisfied with the life I was living in the world. Now indeed my passions had ceased to excite me as of old, with hopes of honour and wealth, and it was a grievous burden to go on in such servitude. For compared with thy sweetness and the beauty of thy house, which I loved, those things delighted me no longer. But I was still tightly bound by the love of women, nor did the apostle ask me to marry, although he exhorted me to something better, wishing earnestly that all men were as he himself was. But I was weak and chose the easier way, and for this single reason my whole life was one of inner turbulence and listless indecision, because from so many influences I was compelled, even though unwilling, to agree to a married life which bound me hand and foot. I have heard from the mouth of truth that there are eunuchs who have made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake. But, said he, he that is able to receive it let him receive it. Of a certainty all men are vain who do not have the knowledge of God, or have not been able from the good things that are seen to find him who is good. But I was no longer fettered in that vanity. I had surmounted it, and from the united testimony of thy whole creation had found thee, our Creator and thy Word, God with thee, and together with thee and the Holy Spirit, one God, by whom thou hast created all things. There is still another sort of wicked man who, when they knew God, they glorified him not as God, neither were thankful. Into this also I had fallen, but thy right hand held me up and bore me away, and thou didst place me where I might recover. For thou hast said to men, Behold the fear of the Lord, this is wisdom, and be not wise in your own eyes, because they that profess themselves to be wise become fools. But I had now found the goodly pearl, and I ought to have sold all that I had and bought it. Yet I hesitated. CHAPTER II I went, therefore, to Simplicianus, the spiritual father of Ambrose, then a bishop, whom Ambrose truly loved as a father. I recounted to him all the mazes of my wanderings, but when I mentioned to him that I had read certain books of the Platonists, which Victorinas, formerly professor of rhetoric at Rome, who died a Christian as I had been told, had translated into Latin, Simplicianus congratulated me that I had not fallen upon the writings of other philosophers, which were full of fallacies and deceit after the beggarly elements of this world. Whereas in the Platonists, at every turn the pathway led to belief in God and his word. Then, to encourage me to copy of Christ, which is hidden from the wise and revealed to babes, he told me about Victorinas himself, whom he had known intimately at Rome. And I cannot refrain from repeating what he told me about him, for it contains a glorious proof of thy grace which ought to be confessed to thee. How that old man, most learned, most skilled in all the liberal arts, who had read, criticized, and explained so many of the writings of the philosophers, the teacher of so many noble senators, one who, as a mark of his distinguished service in office, had both merited and obtained a statue in the Roman Forum, which men of this world esteem a great honor. This man, who up to an advanced age had been a worshipper of idols, a communicant in the sacrilegious rites to which almost all the nobility of Rome were wedded, and who had inspired the people with the love of Osiris, and the dog, Anubis, and a medley crew of monster gods who, against Neptune, stand in arms, against Venus and Minerva, steal clad Mars, whom Rome once conquered and now worshipped, all of which old Victorinas had with thundering eloquence defended for so many years. Despite all this, he did not blush to become the child of thy Christ, a babe at thy font, bowing his neck to the yoke of humility and submitting his forehead to the ignominy of the cross. O Lord, Lord who didst bow the heavens, and didst descend, who didst touch the mountains and they smoked, by what means didst thou find thy way into that breast? He used to read scriptures, as Simplicianus said, and thought out and studied all the Christian writings most studiously. He said to Simplicianus, not openly, but secretly, as a friend, you must know that I am a Christian, to which Simplicianus replied, I shall not believe it, nor shall I count you among the Christians until I see you in the Church of Christ. Victorinas then asked, with mild mockery, is it then the walls that make Christians? Thus he often would affirm that he was already a Christian, and as often, Simplicianus made the same answer. And just as often, his jest about the walls was repeated. He was fearful of offending his friends, proud demon-worshippers, from the height of whose Babylonian dignity, as from the tops of the cedars of Lebanon, but had not yet broken down. He feared that a storm of enmity would descend upon him. But he steadily gained strength from reading and inquiry, and came to fear, lest he should be denied by Christ before the holy angels, if he now was afraid to confess him before men. Thus he came to appear to himself guilty of a great fault, in being ashamed of the sacraments of the humility of thy word, ashamed of the sacrilegious rights of those proud demons, whose pride he had imitated and whose rights he had shared. From this he became bold-faced against vanity and shame-faced toward the truth. Thus, suddenly and unexpectedly, he said to Simplicianus, as he himself told me, let us go to the church I wish to become a Christian. Simplicianus went with him, simply able to contain himself for joy. He was admitted to the first sacraments of instruction and, not long afterward, gave in his name that he might receive the baptism of regeneration. At this Rome marveled, and the church rejoiced. The proud saw and were enraged. They gnashed their teeth and melted away. But the Lord God was thy servant's hope, and he paid no attention to their vanity and lying madness. Finally, when the hour arrived for him to make a public profession of his faith, which at Rome, those who are about to enter into thy grace, make from a platform in the full sight of the faithful people, in a set form of words learned by heart, the presbyters offered Victorinas the chance to make his profession more privately, for this was the custom for some who were likely to be afraid through bashfulness. But Victorinas chose rather to profess his salvation in the presence of the Holy Congregation. For there was no salvation in the rhetoric which he taught, yet he had professed that openly. Why then should he shrink from naming thy word before the sheep of thy flock, when he had not shrunk from uttering his own words before the mad multitude? So then, when he ascended the platform to make his profession, everyone, as they recognized him, whispered his name one to the other in tones of jubilation. Who was there among them who did not know him? And a low murmur ran through the mouths of all the rejoicing multitude, Victorinas, Victorinas. There was a sudden burst of exaltation at the sight of him, and suddenly they were hushed to hear him. He pronounced the true faith with an excellent boldness, and all desired to take him to their very heart. Indeed, by their love and joy they did take him to their heart. And they received him with loving and joyful hands. CHAPTER III O good God, what happens in a man to make him rejoice more at the salvation of a soul and then delivered from greater danger than over one who has never lost hope or never been in such imminent danger? For thou also, O merciful Father, dost rejoice more over one that repents than over ninety and nine just persons that need no repentance. And we listen with much delight whenever we hear how the lost sheep is brought home again on the shepherd's shoulders while the angels rejoice. Or when the peace of money is restored to its place in the treasury and the neighbors rejoice with the woman who found it. And the joy of the solemn festival of thy house constrains us to tears when it is read in thy house. About the younger son who was dead and is alive again was lost and is found. For it is thou who rejoicest both in us and in thy angels holy through holy love. For thou art ever the same because thou knowest unchangeably all things which remain neither the same nor forever. What then happens in the soul when it takes more delight at finding or having restored to it the things it loves than if it had always possessed them? Indeed many other things bear witness that this is so. All things are full of witnesses crying out so it is. The commander triumphs in victory yet he could not have conquered if he had not fought and the greater the peril of the battle the more joy of the triumph. The storm tosses the voyagers threatens shipwreck and everyone turns pale in the presence of death. Then the sky and sea grow calm and they rejoice as much as they had feared. A loved one is sick and indicates danger. All who desire his safety are themselves sick at heart. He recovers though not able as yet to walk with his former strength and there is more joy now than there was before when he walked sound and strong. Indeed the very pleasures of human life not only those which rush upon us unexpectedly and involuntarily but also those which are voluntary and planned men obtain by difficulties. There is no pleasure in caring and drinking unless the pains of hunger and thirst have preceded. Drunkards even eat certain salt meats in order to create a painful thirst and when the drink allays this it causes pleasure. It is also the custom that the affianced bride should not be immediately given in marriage so that the husband may not esteem her any less whom as his betrothed for. This can be seen in the case of base and dishonorable pleasure but it is also apparent in pleasures that are permitted and lawful in the sincerity of honest friendship and in him who was dead and lived again who had been lost and was found. The greater joy is everywhere preceded by the greater pain. What does this mean, O Lord my God when thou art an everlasting joy to thyself and some creatures about thee are ever rejoicing in thee? What does it mean that this portion of creation thus ebbs and flows alternately in want and satiety? Is this their mode of being and is this all thou hast allotted to them? That from the highest heaven to the lowest earth, from the beginning of the world to the end, from the angels to the worm, from the first movement to the last, thou wasst assigning to all their proper places and their proper seasons to all the kinds of good things and to all thy just works? Alas, how high thou art in the highest and how deep in the deepest! Thou never departest from us and yet only with difficulty do we return to thee. Chapter 4 Go on, O Lord, and act. Stir us up and call us back. Inflame us and draw us to thee. Curse up and grow sweet to us. Let us now love thee. Let us run to thee. Are there not many men who, out of a deeper pit of darkness than that of victoriness, return to thee? Who draw near to thee and are illuminated by that light which gives those who receive it power from thee to become thy sons? But if they are less well known, even those who know them rejoice less for them. For when many rejoice together the joy of each other is fuller in that they warm one another, catch fire from one another. Moreover, those who are well known influence many toward salvation and take the lead with many to follow them. Therefore even those who took the way before them rejoice over them greatly because they do not rejoice over them alone. But it ought never to be that in thy tabernacle the persons of the rich should be welcomed before the poor or the nobly born before the rest. Since thou hast rather chosen the weak things of the world to confound the strong and hast chosen the base things of the world and things that are despised and the things that are not in order to bring to not the things that are. It was even the least of the apostles by whose tongue thou didst sound forth these words. And when Paulus the procounsel had his pride overcome by the onslaught of the apostle and he was made to pass under the easy yoke of thy Christ and became an officer of the great king, he also desired to be called Paul instead of Saul his former name in testimony to such a great victory. For the enemy is more overcome in one on whom he has a greater hold and whom he has hold of more completely. But the proud he controls more readily through their concern about their rank and through them he controls more by means of their influence. The more therefore the world prized the heart of Victorinas which the devil had held in an impregnable stronghold and the tongue of Victorinas that sharp strong weapon which the devil had slain so many all the more exultingly should thy sons rejoice because our king hath bound the strong man and they saw his vessels taken from him and cleansed and made fit for thy honour and profitable to the Lord for every good work. Chapter 5 Now when this man of thine Simplicianus told me the story of Victorinas I was eager to imitate him. Indeed this was Simplicianus' purpose in telling it to me. But when he went on to tell how in the reign of the Emperor Julian there was a law passed by which Christians were forbidden to teach literature and rhetoric and how Victorinas in ready obedience to the law chose to abandon his school of words rather than thy word by which thou makest eloquent the tongues dumb. He appeared to me not so much brave as happy because he had found a reason for giving his time holy to thee. For this was what I was longing to do but as yet I was bound by the iron chain of my own will. The enemy held fast my will and had made of it a chain and had bound me tight with it. For out of the perverse will and the service of lust ended in habit and habit not resisted became necessity. By these links as it were forged together which is why I called it a chain a hard bondage held me in slavery but that new will which had begun to spring up in me freely to worship thee and to enjoy thee oh my God the only certain joy was not able as yet to overcome my former willfulness made strong by long indulgence. Thus my two wills the old and the new the carnal and the spiritual were in conflict within me and by their discord they tore my soul apart. Thus I came to understand from my own experience what I had read how the flesh lusts against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh I truly lusted both ways yet more in that which I approved in myself than in that which I disapproved in myself. For in the latter it was not now really I that was involved because here I was rather an unwilling sufferer than a willing actor and yet it was through me that habit had become an armed enemy against me because I had willingly come to be what I willingly found myself to be. Who then can with any justice speak against it when just punishment follows the sinner? I had now no longer my accustomed excuse that as yet I hesitated to forsake the world and serve thee because my perception of the truth was uncertain for now it was certain. But still bound to the earth I refused to be thy soldier and was as much afraid of being freed from all entanglements as we ought to fear to be entangled. Thus with the baggage of the world I was sweetly burdened as one in slumber and my musings on thee were like the efforts of those who desire to awake but who are still overpowered with drowsiness and fall back into deep slumber. And as no one wishes to sleep forever for all men rightly count waking better. Yet a man will usually defer shaking off his drowsiness when there is a heavy lethargy in his limbs and he is glad to sleep even when his reason disapproves and the hour for rising has struck. So was I assured that it was much better for me to give myself up to thy love than to go on yielding myself to my own lust. Thy love satisfied and vanquished me. I lost, pleased and fettered me. I had no answer to thy calling to me. Awake, you who sleep and arise from the dead and Christ shall give you light. On all sides thou didst show me that thy words are true and I, convicted by the truth, had nothing at all to reply but the drawling and drowsy words presently, see, presently leave me alone a little while. But presently, presently had no present and my leave me alone a little while went on for a long while. In vain did I delight in thy law in the inner man while another law in my members ward against the law of my mind and brought me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. For the law of sin is the tyranny of habit by which the mind is drawn and held even against its will. Yet it deserves to be so held because it is so willingly falling into the habit. O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death but thy grace alone through Jesus Christ our Lord. Chapter 6 And now I will tell and confess unto thy name, O Lord my helper and my redeemer how thou didst deliver me from the chain of sexual desire by which I was so tightly held and from the slavery of worldly business. With increasing anxiety I was going about my usual affairs and daily sighing to thee. I attended thy church as frequently as my business unto the burden of which I groaned left me free to do so. Allopeus was with me disengaged at last from his legal post after a third term as assessor and now waiting for private clients to whom he might sell his legal advice as I sold the power of speaking as if it could be supplied by teaching. But Nebredeus had consented for the sake of our friendship to teach under Veracundus, a citizen of Milan and professor of grammar and a very intimate friend of us all who ardently desired and by right of friendship demanded from us the faithful aid he greatly needed. Nebredeus was not drawn to this by any desire of gain for he could have made much more out of his learning had he been so inclined. But as he was a most sweet and kindly friend he was unwilling out of respect for the duties of friendship to slight our request. But in this he acted very discreetly taking care not to become known to those persons who had great reputations in the world. Thus he avoided all distractions of mind and reserved as many hours as possible to pursue or read or listen to discussions about wisdom. On a certain day then when Nebredeus was away for some reason I cannot remember there came to visit Alopeus and me at our house one Pontichianus a fellow countrymen of ours who held high office in the Emperor's court. What he wanted with us I do not know but we sat down to talk together and it chanced that he noticed a book on a game table before us. He took it up, opened it and contrary to his expectation found it to be the Apostle Paul for he imagined that it was one of my wearisome rhetoric textbooks. At this he looked up at me with a smile and expressed his delight and wonder that he had so unexpectedly found this book and only this one lying before my eyes for he was indeed a Christian and a faithful one at that and often he prostrated himself before thee our God in the church in constant daily prayer. When I had told him that I had given much attention to these writings a conversation followed in which he spoke of Anthony the Egyptian monk whose name was in high repute among thy servants although up to that time not familiar to me. When he learned this he lingered on the topic giving us an account of this eminent man and marveling at our ignorance. We in turn were amazed to hear of thy wonderful works so fully manifested in recent times almost in our own occurring in the true faith and the Catholic church. We all wondered we that these things were so great and he that we had never heard of them. From this his conversation turned to the multitudes in the monasteries and their manners so fragrant to thee and to the teeming solitudes of the wilderness of which we knew nothing at all. There was even a monastery at Milan outside the city's walls full of good brothers under the fostering care of Ambrose and we were ignorant of it. He went on with his story and we listened intently and in silence. He then told us how on a certain afternoon at Triere when the emperor was occupied watching the gladiatorial games he and three comrades went out for a walk in the gardens close to the city walls. There as they chanced to walk two by two they with him while the other two went on by themselves. As they rambled these first two came upon a certain cottage where lived some of thy servants some of the poor in spirit of such is the kingdom of heaven where they found the book in which was written the life of Anthony. One of them began to read it to marvel and to be inflamed by it. While reading he meditated on embracing just such a life giving up his worldly employment to seek thee alone. These two belonged to the group of officials called secret service agents. Then suddenly being overwhelmed with a holy love and a sober shame and as if in anger with himself he fixed his eyes on his friend exclaiming tell me I beg you what goal are we seeking in all these toils of ours what is it that we desire what is our motive in public service can our hopes in the court rise higher than to be friends of the emperor but how frail how beset with peril is that pride through what dangers must we climb to a greater danger and when shall we succeed but if I chose to become a friend of God see I can become one now thus he spoke and in the pangs of the travail of the new life he turned his eyes again onto the page and continued reading he was inwardly changed as thou didst see and the world dropped away from his mind as soon became plain to others for as he read with a heart like a stormy sea more than once he groaned finally he saw the better course and resolved upon it then having become thy servant he said to his friend now I have broken loose from those hopes we had and I am determined to serve God and I enter into that service for this hour in this place if you are reluctant to imitate me do not oppose me the other replied that he would continue bound in his friendship to share in so great a service for so great a prize so both became thine and began to build a tower counting the cost namely of forsaking all that they had and following thee shortly after Pontichianus and his companion who had walked with him in the other part of the garden came in search of them to that same place and having found them reminded them to return as the day was declining but the first two making known to Pontichianus their resolution and purpose and how a resolve had sprung up some confirmed in them and treated them not to take it ill if they refused to join themselves with them but Pontichianus and his friend although not changed from their former course did nevertheless as he told us bewailed themselves and congratulated their friends on their godliness recommending themselves to their prayers and with hearts inclining again toward earthly things they returned to the palace but the other two setting their reflections on heavenly things remained in the cottage both of them had affianced brides who when they heard of this likewise dedicated their virginity to thee end of book 8 chapters 1 through 6 chapters 7 through 12 of confessions this is a Librivox recording all Librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit Librivox.org recording by Jeanne confessions by Saint Augustine translated by Albert C. Outler book 8 chapters 7 through 12 chapter 7 such was the story Pontichianus told but while he was speaking thou, O Lord turned me toward myself taking me from behind my back where I had put myself while unwilling to exercise self scrutiny and now thou didst set me face to face with myself that I might see how ugly I was and how crooked and sordid bespotted and ulcerous and I looked and I loathed myself but wither to fly from myself I could not discover and if I sought to turn my gaze away from myself he would continue his narrative and thou wouldst oppose me to myself and thrust me before my own eyes that I might discover my iniquity and hate it I had known it but acted as though I knew it not I winked at it and forgot it but now the more ardently I loved those some affections I heard reported that they had given themselves up wholly to thee to be cured the more did I abhor myself when compared with them for many of my years perhaps twelve had passed since my nineteenth when upon the reading of Cicero's Hortensius I was roused to a desire for wisdom and here I was still postponing the abandonment of this world's happiness to devote myself to the search for not just the finding alone but also the bare search for it ought to have been preferred above the treasures and kingdoms of this world better than all bodily pleasures though they were to be had for the taking but wretched youth that I was supremely wretched even in the very outset of my youth I had entreated chastity of thee and had prayed grant me chastity and continents but not yet for I was afraid lest thou shouldst hear me too soon and too soon cure me of my disease of lust which I desired to have satisfied rather than extinguished and I had wandered through perverse ways of godless superstition not really sure of it either but preferring it to the other which I did not seek in piety but opposed in malice and I had thought that I delayed from day to day in rejecting those worldly hopes and following thee alone because there did not appear anything certain by which I could direct my course and now the day had arrived in which I was laid bare to myself and my conscience was to chide me where are you oh my tongue you said indeed that you were not willing to cast off the baggage of vanity for uncertain truth but behold now it is certain and still that burden oppresses you at the same time those who have not worn themselves out with searching for it as you have nor spent ten years and more in thinking about it have had their shoulders unburdened and have received wings to fly away thus was I inwardly confused and mightily confounded with a horrible shame while Pontichianus went ahead making such things and when he had finished his story and the business he came for he went his way and then what did I not say to myself within myself with what scourges of rebuke did I not lash my soul to make it follow thee as I was struggling to go after thee yet it drew back it refused it would not make an effort all its arguments were exhausted yet it resisted in sullen disquiet fearing the cutting off of that habit by which it was being wasted to death as if that were death itself Chapter 8 then as this vehement quarrel which I waged with my soul in the chamber of my heart was raging inside my inner dwelling agitated both in mind and countenance I seized upon Alopeus and exclaimed what is the matter with us what is this what did you hear the uninstructed start up and take heaven and we with all our learning but so little heart see where we wallow in flesh and blood because others have gone before us are we ashamed to follow and not rather ashamed at our not following I scarcely knew what I said and in my excitement I flung away from him while he gazed at me in silent astonishment for I did not sound like myself my face, eyes, colour tone expressed my meaning more clearly than my words there was a little garden belonging to our lodging of which we had the use as of the whole house for the master our landlord did not live there the tempest in my breast hurried me out into this garden where no one might interrupt the fiery struggle in which I was engaged with myself until it came to the outcome that thou newest though I did not but I was mad for health and dying for life knowing what evil thing I was but not knowing what good thing I was so shortly to become I fled into the garden with Alopeus following step by step for I had no secret in which he did not share and how could he leave me in such distress we sat down as far from the house as possible I was greatly disturbed in spirit angry at myself with a turbulent indignation because I had not entered thy will and covenant oh my God while all my bones cried out to me to enter extolling it to the skies the way therein is not by ships or chariots or feet indeed it was not as far as I had come close to the place where we were seated for to go along that road and indeed to reach the goal is nothing else but the will to go but it must be a strong and single will not staggering and swaying about this way and that a changeable twisting fluctuating will wrestling with itself while one part falls as another rises finally in the very fever my indecision I made many motions with my body like men do when they will to act but cannot either because they do not have the limbs or because their limbs are bound or weakened by disease or incapacitated in some other way thus if I tore my hair struck my forehead or entwining my fingers clasped my knee these I did because I willed it but I might have willed it if the nerves had not obeyed my will many things then I did in which the will and power to do were not the same yet I did not do that one thing which seemed to me infinitely more desirable which before long I should have power to will because shortly when I willed I would will with a single will for in this the power of willing is the power of doing and as yet I could not do it thus my body more readily obeyed the slightest wish of the soul in moving its limbs at the order of my mind then my soul obeyed itself to accomplish in the will alone its great resolve chapter 9 how can there be such a strange anomaly and why is it let my mercy shine on me that I may inquire and find an answer amid the dark labyrinth of human punishment and in the darkest contritions of the sons of Adam whence such an anomaly and why should it be the mind commands the body and the body obeys the mind commands itself and is resisted the mind commands the hand to be moved and there is such readiness that the command is scarcely distinguished from the obedience in act yet the mind is the mind and the hand is body the mind commands the mind to will and yet though it be itself it does not obey itself whence this strange anomaly and why should it be I repeat the will commands itself to will and could not give the command unless it wills yet what is commanded is not done but actually the will does not will entirely therefore it does not command entirely for as far as it wills it commands and as far as it does not will the thing commanded is not done for the will commands that there be an act of will not another but itself but it does not command entirely therefore what is commanded does not happen for if the will were whole and entire it would not even because it would already be it is therefore no strange anomaly partly to will and partly to be unwilling this is actually an infirmity of mind which cannot wholly rise while pressed down by habit even though it is supported by the truth and so there are two wills because one of them is not whole and what is present in this one is lacking in the other chapter 10 you were formally in darkness but now are you in the light of the Lord but they desired to be light not in the Lord but in themselves they conceived the nature of the soul to be the same as what God is and thus have become a thicker darkness than they were for in their dread arrogance they have gone farther away from them from thee the true light lights every man that comes into the world mark what you say and blush for shame draw near to him and be enlightened and your faces shall not be ashamed while I was deliberating whether I would serve the Lord my God now as I had long purposed to do it was I who willed and it was also I who was unwilling in either case it was I I neither willed with my whole will nor was I wholly unwilling and so I was at war with myself and torn apart by myself and this strife was against my will yet it did not show the presence of another mind but the punishment of my own thus it was no more I who did it but the sin that dwelt in me the punishment of a sin freely committed by Adam and I was a son of Adam for if there are as many opposing natures as there are opposing wills there will not be two but many more if any man is trying to decide whether he should go to their conventical or to the theatre the mannequins at once cry out see here are two natures one good drawing this way another bad drawing that way for how else can you explain this indecision between conflicting wills but I reply that both impulses are bad that which draws to them and that which draws back to the theatre but they do not believe that the will which draws to them can be anything but good suppose then that one of us should try to decide and through the conflict of his two wills should waver whether he should go to the theatre or to the church would not those also waver about the answer here for either they must confess which they are unwilling to do that the will that leads to our church is as good as that which carries their own adherents and those captivated by their mysteries or else they must imagine that there are two evil natures and two evil minds in one man both at war with each other and then it will not be true what they say that there is one good and the other bad else they must be converted to the truth and no longer deny that when anyone deliberates there is one soul fluctuating between conflicting wills let them no longer maintain that when they perceive two wills to be contending with each other in the same man the contest is between two opposing minds of two opposing substances from two opposing principles the one good and the one bad thus oh true God thou dost reprove and confute and convict them for both wills may be bad as when a man tries to decide whether he should kill a man by poison or by the sword whether he should take possession of this field or that one belonging to someone else when he cannot get both whether he should squander his money to buy pleasure or hold on to his money for his business whether he should go to the circus or to the theatre if both are open on the same day or whether he should take a third course open at the same time and rob another man's house or a fourth option whether he should commit adultery if he has the opportunity all these things concurring in the same space of time and all being equally longed for although impossible to do the mind is pulled four ways by four antagonistic wills or even more in view of the vast range of human desires but even the Manicheans do not affirm that there are these many different substances the same principle applies as in the action of good wills for I ask them is it a good thing to have delight in reading the apostle or is it a good thing to delight in a sober psalm to each of these they will answer it is good but what then if all delight us equally and all at the same time do not different wills distract the mind when a man is trying to decide what he should choose yet they are all good and are at variance with each other until one is chosen when this is done the whole united will may go forward on a single track as it was before divided in many ways so also when eternity attracts us from above and the pleasure of earthly delight pulls us down from below the soul does not will either the one or the other with all its force but still it is the same soul that does not will this or that with the united will and it is therefore pulled apart with grievous perplexities because for truth's sake God prefers this but for customs' sake it does not lay that aside CHAPTER XI thus I was sick and tormented reproaching myself more bitterly than ever rolling and writhing in my chain till it should be utterly broken but now I was held but slightly but still was held and thou, O Lord didst press upon me in my inmost heart with a severe mercy with the lashes of fear and shame lest I should again give way and that same slender remaining tie not be broken off but recover strength and enchain me yet more securely I kept saying to myself see let it be done now let it be done now and as I said this I all but came to a firm decision I all but did it yet I did not quite still I did not fall back to my old condition but stood aside for a moment and drew breath and I tried again and lacked only a very little of reaching the resolve and then somewhat less and then all but touched and grasped it yet I still did not quite reach or touch or grasp the goal because I hesitated to die the death and to live to life and the worse way to which I was habituated was stronger in me than the better which I had not tried and up to the very moment in which I was to become another man the nearer the moment approached the greater horror did it strike in me but it did not strike me back nor turn me aside but held me in suspense it was in fact my old mistresses trifles of trifles and vanities of vanities who still enthralled me they tugged at my fleshly garments and softly whispered are you going to part with us and from that moment will we never be with you any more and from that moment will not this and that be forbidden you forever what were they suggesting to me in those words this or that what is it they suggested oh my god let thy mercy guard the soul of thy servant from the vileness and the shame they did suggest and now I scarcely heard them for they were not openly showing themselves and opposing me face to face but muttering as it were behind my back and furtively plucking at me as I was leaving trying to make me look back at them still they delayed me so that I hesitated to break loose and shake myself free of them and leap over to the place to which I was being called for unruly habit kept saying to me do you think you can live without them but now it said this very faintly for in the direction I had set my face and yet toward which I still trembled to go the chaste dignity of continents appeared to me cheerful but not wanton modestly alluring me to come and doubt nothing extending her holy hands full of a multitude of good examples to receive and embrace me there were there so many young men and maidens a multitude of youth and every age grave widows and ancient versions and continents herself in their midst not barren but a fruitful mother of children her joys by thee, oh lord, her husband and she smiled on me with a challenging smile as if to say can you not do what these young men and maidens can or can any of them do it of themselves and not rather in the Lord their God the Lord their God gave me to them why do you stand in your own strength and so stand not cast yourself on him fear not he will not flinch and you will not fall cast yourself on him without fear for he will receive and heal you and I blushed violently for I still heard the muttering of those trifles and hung suspended again she seemed to speak stop your ears against those unclean members of yours that they may be mortified they tell you of delights but not according to the law of the Lord thy God this struggle raging in my heart was nothing but the contest of self against self and Alopeas kept close beside me and awaited in silence the outcome of my extraordinary agitation Chapter 12 now when deep reflection had drawn up out of the secret depths of my soul all my misery and had heaped it up before the sight of my heart there arose a mighty storm accompanied by a mighty rain of tears that I might give way fully to my tears and lamentations I stole away from Alopeas for it seemed to me that solitude was more appropriate for the business of weeping I went far enough away that I could feel that even his presence was no longer a restraint upon me this was the way I felt at the time and he realized it I suppose I had said something before I started up and he noticed that the sound of my voice was choked with weeping and so he stayed alone where we had been sitting together greatly astonished by the big tree how I know not and gave free course to my tears the streams of my eyes gushed out an acceptable sacrifice to thee and not indeed in these words but to this effect I cried out to thee and thou, O Lord how long how long, O Lord will thou be angry forever O remember not against us that we were controlled by them I sent up these sorrowful cries how long, how long tomorrow and tomorrow why not now why not this very hour make an end to my uncleanness I was saying these things and weeping in the most bitter contretion of my heart when suddenly I heard the voice of a boy or a girl I know not which come from the neighboring house chanting over and over again pick it up, read it pick it up, read it immediately I ceased weeping and began most earnestly to think whether it was usual for children in some kind of game to sing such a song but I could not remember ever having heard the like so damning the torrent of my tears I got to my feet for I could not but think that this was a divine command to open the Bible and read the first passage I should light upon for I had heard how Anthony accidentally coming into church while the Gospel was being read received the admonition as if what was read had been addressed to him go and sell what you have and give it to the poor and you shall have treasure in heaven and come and follow me by such an oracle he was forthwith converted to thee so I quickly returned to the bench where Alopeas was sitting for there I had put down the apostles book when I had left there I snatched it up opened it and in silence read the paragraph on which my eyes first fell not in rioting and drunkenness not in chambering and wantonness not in strife and envying but put on the Lord Jesus Christ and make no provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof I wanted to read no further nor did I need to for instantly as the sentence ended there was infused in my heart something like the light of full certainty and all the gloom of doubt vanished away closing the book then and putting my finger or something else for a mark I began now with the tranquil countenance to tell it all to Alopeas and he in turn disclosed to me what had been going on in himself of which I knew nothing he asked to see what I had read I showed him and he looked on even further than I had read I had not known what followed but indeed it was this him that is weak in the faith receive this he applied to himself and told me so by these words of warning he was strengthened and by exercising his good resolution and purpose all very much in keeping with his character in which in these respects he was always far different from and better than I he joined me in full commitment without any restless hesitation then we went into my mother and told her what happened to her great joy we explained to her how it had occurred and she leaped for joy triumphant and she blessed thee who aren't able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think for she saw that thou hast granted her far more than she had asked for in all her pitiful and doleful lamentations for thou didst so convert me to thee that I sought neither a wife nor any other of this world's hopes but set my feet on that rule of faith which so many years before thou hadst showed her in her dream about me and so thou didst turn her grief into gladness more plentiful than she had ventured to desire and dearer and purer to desire she used to cherish of having grandchildren of my flesh End of book 8 chapters 7 through 12