THE DESIGN OF
HIS CONFESSIONS BEING DECLARED, HE SEEKS FROM GOD THE KNOWLEDGE
OF THE HOLY SCRIPTURES, AND BEGINS TO EXPOUND THE WORDS OF
GENESIS I. I, CONCERNING THE CREATION OF THE WORLD. THE QUESTIONS
OF RASH DISPUTERS BEING REFUTED, "WHAT DID GOD BEFORE HE CREATED
THE WORLD ?" THAT HE MIGHT THE BETTER OVERCOME HIS OPPONENTS, HE
ADDS A COPIOUS DISQUISITION CONCERNING TIME.
CHAP. I.--BY CONFESSION HE
DESIRES TO STIMULATE TOWARDS GOD HIS OWN LOVE AND THAT
1. Eternity is Thine, art Thou ignorant of the things which I
say unto Thee ? Or seest Thou at the time that which cometh to
pass in time? Why, therefore, do I place before Thee so many
relations of things ? Not surely that Thou mightest know them
through me, but that I may awaken my own love and that of my
readers towards Thee, that we may all say, "Great is the Lord,
and greatly to be praised." t I have already said, and shall
say, for the love of Thy love do I this. For we also pray, and
yet Truth says, "Your Father knoweth what things ye have need of
before ye ask Him."(2) Therefore do we make known unto Thee our
love, in confessing unto Thee our own miseries and Thy mercies
upon us, that Thou mayest free us altogether, since Thou hast
begun, that we may cease to be wretched in ourselves, and that we
may be blessed in Thee; since Thou hast called us, that we may be
poor in spirit, and meek, and mourners, and hungering and athirst
after righteousness, and merciful, and pure in heart, and
peacemakers? Behold, I have told unto Thee many things, which I
could and which I would, for Thou first wouldest that I should
confess unto Thee, the Lord my God, for Thou art good, since Thy
"mercy endureth for ever." *
CHAP. II--HE BEGS OF GOD THAT
THROUGH THE HOLY SCRIPTURES HE MAY BE LED TO TRUTH.
2. But when shall I suffice with the tongue of my pen to
express all Thy exhortations, and all Thy terrors, and comforts,
and guidances, whereby Thou hast led me to preach Thy Word and to
dispense Thy Sacrament (5) unto Thy people ? And if I suffice to
utter these things in order, the drops (6) of time are dear to
me. Long time have I burned to meditate in Thy law, and in it to
confess to Thee my knowledge and ignorance, the beginning of
Thine enlightening, and the remains of thy darkness, until
infirmity be swallowed up by strength. And I would not that to
aught else those hours should flow away, which I find free from
the necessities of refreshing my body, and the care of my mind,
and of the service which we owe to men, and which, though we owe
not, even yet we pay.'
3. O Lord my God, hear my prayer,
and let Thy mercy regard my longing, since it bums not for myself
alone, but because it desires to benefit brotherly charity; and
Thou seest into my heart, that so it is. I would sacrifice to
Thee the service of my thought and tongue; and do Thou give what
I may offer unto Thee. For "I am poor and needy," Thou rich unto
all that call upon Thee? who free from care carest for us.
Circumcise from all rashness and from all lying my inward and
outward lips. (1) Let Thy Scriptures be my chaste delights.
Neither let me be deceived in them, nor deceive out of them. (2)
Lord, hear and pity, O Lord my God, light of the blind, and
strength of the weak; even also light of those that see, and
strength of the strong, hearken unto my soul, and hear it crying
"out of the depths." a For unless Thine ears be present in the
depths also, whither shall we go ? whither shall we cry ? "The
day is Thine, and the night also is Thine."(4) At Thy nod the
moments flee by. Grant thereof space for our meditations amongst
the hidden things of Thy law, nor close it against us who knock.
For not in vain hast Thou willed that the obscure secret of so
many pages should be written. Nor is it that those forests have
not their harts, (5) betaking themselves therein, and ranging,
and walking, and feeding, lying down, and ruminating. Perfect
me, O Lord, and reveal them unto me. Behold, Thy voice is my
joy, Thy voice surpasseth the abundance of pleasures. Give that
which I love, for I do love; and this hast Thou given. Abandon
not Thine own gifts, nor despise Thy grass that thirsteth. Let
me confess unto Thee whatsoever I shall have found in Thy books,
and let me hear the voice of praise, and let me imbibe Thee, and
reflect on the wonderful things of Thy law; (6) even from the
beginning, wherein Thou madest the heaven and the earth, unto the
everlasting kingdom of Thy holy city that is with Thee.
4. Lord, have mercy on me and hear my desire. For I think
that it is not of the earth, nor of gold and silver, and precious
stones, nor gorgeous apparel, nor honours and powers, nor the
pleasures of the flesh, nor necessaries for the body, and this
life of our pilgrimage i all which are added to those that seek
Thy kingdom and Thy righteousness.(7) Behold, O Lord my God,
whence is my desire. The unrighteous have told me of delights,
but not such as Thy law, O Lord. Behold whence is my desire.
Behold, Father, look and see, and approve; and let it be pleasing
in the sight of Thy mercy, that I may find grace before Thee,
that the secret things of Thy Word may be opened unto me when I
knock? I beseech, by our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, "the Man of
Thy right hand, the Son of man, whom Thou madest strong for
Thyself,"(10) as Thy Mediator and ours, through whom Thou hast
sought us, although not seeking Thee, but didst seek us that we
might seek Thee,n--Thy Word through whom Thou hast made all
things,(12) and amongst them me also,Thy Only-begotten, through
whom Thou hast called to adoption the believing people, and
therein me also. I beseech Thee through Him, who sitteth at Thy
right hand, and "maketh intercession for us,"(13) "in whom are
hid all treasures of wisdom and knowledge."(14) Him (15) do I
seek in Thy books. Of Him did Moses write;(16) this saith
Himself; this saith the Truth.
CHAP, III.--HE BEGINS FROM THE CREATION OF THE WORLD--NOT
UNDERSTANDING THE HEBREW TEXT.
5. Let me hear and understand how in the beginning Thou
didst make the heaven and the earth.(17)Moses wrote this; he
wrote and departed,--passed hence from Thee to Thee. Nor now is
he before me; for if he were I would hold him, and ask him, and
would adjure him by Thee that he would open unto me these things,
and I would lend the ears of my body to the sounds bursting forth
from his mouth. And should he speak in the Hebrew tongue, in
vain would it beat on my senses, nor would aught touch my mind;
but if in Latin, I should know what he said. But whence should I
know whether he said what was true ? But if I knew this even,
should I know it from him ? Verily within me, within in the
chamber of my thought, Truth, neither Hebrew, nor Greek, nor
Latin, nor barbarian, without the organs of voice and tongue,
without the sound of syllables, would say, "He speaks the truth,"
and I, forthwith assured of it, confidently would say unto that
man of Thine, "Thou speakest the truth." As, then, I cannot
inquire of him, I beseech Thee, -- Thee, O Truth, full of whom he
spake truth, -- Thee, my God, I beseech, forgive my sins; and do
Thou, who didst give to that Thy servant to speak these things,
grant to me also to understand them.
CHAP. IV. -- HEAVEN AND EARTH
CRY OUT THAT THEY HAVE BEEN CREATED BY GOD.
6. Behold, the heaven and earth are; they proclaim that they
were made, for they are changed and varied. Whereas whatsoever
hath not been made, and yet hath being, hath nothing in it which
there was not before; this is what it is to be changed and
varied. They also proclaim that they made not themselves;
"therefore we are, because we have been made; we were not
therefore before we were, so that we could have made ourselves."
And the voice of those that speak is in itself an evidence.
Thou, therefore, Lord, didst make these things; Thou who art
beautiful, for they are beautiful; Thou who art good, for they
are good; Thou who art, for they are. Nor even so are they
beautiful, nor good, nor are they, as Thou their Creator art;
compared with whom they are neither beautiful, nor good, nor are
at all. These things we know, thanks be to Thee. And our
knowledge, compared with Thy knowledge, is ignorance.
CHAP. V. -- GOD CREATED THE
WORLD NOT FROM ANY CERTAIN MATTER, BUT IN HIS OWN WORD.
7. But how didst Thou make the heaven and the earth, and
what was the instrument of Thy so mighty work? For it was not as
a human worker fashioning body from body, according to the fancy
of his mind, in somewise able to assign a form which it perceives
in itself by its inner eye. And whence should he be able to do
this, hadst not Thou made that mind? And he assigns to it
already existing, and as it were having a being, a form, as clay,
or stone, or wood, or gold, or such like. And whence should
these things be, hadst not Thou appointed them? Thou didst make
for the workman his body, -- Thou the mind commanding the limbs,
-- Thou the matter whereof he makes anything, -- Thou the
capacity whereby he may apprehend his art, and see within what he
may do without, -- Thou the sense of his body, by which, as by an
interpreter, he may from mind unto matter convey that which he
doeth, and report to his mind what may have been done, that it
within may consult the truth, presiding over itself, whether it
be well done. All these things praise Thee, the Creator of all.
But how dost Thou make them? How, O God, didst Thou make heaven
and earth? Truly, neither in the heaven nor in the earth didst
Thou make heaven and earth; nor in the air, nor in the waters,
since these also belong to the heaven and the earth; nor in the
whole world didst Thou make the whole world; because there was no
place wherein it could be made before it was made, that it might
be; nor didst Thou hold anything in Thy hand wherewith to make
heaven and earth. For whence couldest Thou have what Thou hadst
not made, whereof to make anything? For what is, save because
Thou art? Therefore Thou didst speak and they were made, and in
Thy Word Thou madest these things.
CHAP. VI. -- HE DID NOT,
HOWEVER, CREATE IT BY A SOUNDING AND PASSING WORD.
8. But how didst Thou speak? Was it in that manner in which
the voice came from the cloud, saying, "This is my beloved Son"?
For that voice was uttered and passed away, began and ended. The
syllables sounded and passed by, the second after the first, the
third after the second, and thence in order, until the last after
the rest, and silence after the last. Hence it is clear and
plain that the motion of a creature expressed it, itself
temporal, obeying Thy Eternal will. And these thy words formed
at the time, the outer ear conveyed to the intelligent mind,
whose inner ear lay attentive to Thy eternal word. But it
compared these words sounding in time with Thy eternal word in
silence, and said, "It is different, very different. These words
are far beneath me, nor are they, since they flee and pass away;
but the Word of my Lord remaineth above me for ever." If, then,
in sounding and fleeting words Thou didst say that heaven and
earth should be made, and didst thus make heaven and earth, there
was already a corporeal creature before heaven and earth by whose
temporal motions that voice might take its course in time. But
there was nothing corporeal before heaven and earth; or if there
were, certainly Thou without a transitory voice hadst created
that whence Thou wouldest make the passing voice, by which to say
that the heaven and the earth should be made. For whatsoever
that were of which such a voice was made, unless it were made by
Thee, it could not be at all. By what word of Thine was it
decreed that a body might be made, whereby these words might be
made?
CHAP. VII. -- BY HIS CO-
ETERNAL WORD HE SPEAKS, AND ALL THINGS ARE DONE.
9. Thou callest us, therefore, to understand the Word, God
with Thee, God, which is spoken eternally, and by it are all
things spoken eternally. For what was spoken was not finished,
and another spoken until all were spoken; but all things at once
and for ever. For otherwise have we time and change, and not a
true eternity, nor a true immortality. This I know, O my God,
and give thanks. I know, I confess to Thee, O Lord, and
whosoever is not unthankful to certain truth, knows and blesses
Thee with me. We know, O Lord, we know; since in proportion as
anything is not what it was, and is what it was not, in that
proportion does it die and arise. Not anything, therefore, of
Thy Word giveth place and cometh into place again, because it is
truly immortal and eternal. And, therefore, unto the Word co-
eternal with Thee, Thou dost at once and for ever say all that
Thou dost say; and whatever Thou sayest shall be made, is made;
nor dost Thou make otherwise than by speaking; yet all things are
not made both together and everlasting which Thou makest by
speaking
CHAP. VIII. -- THAT WORD
ITSELF IS THE BEGINNING OF ALL THINGS, IN THE WHICH WE ARE
INSTRUCTED AS TO EVANGELICAL TRUTH.
10. Why is this, I beseech Thee, O Lord my God? I see it,
however; but how I shall express it, I know not, unless that
everything which begins to be and ceases to be, then begins and
ceases when in Thy eternal Reason it is known that it ought to
begin or cease where nothing beginneth or ceaseth. The same is
Thy Word, which is also "the Beginning," because also It speaketh
unto us. Thus, in the gospel He speaketh through the flesh; and
this sounded outwardly in the ears of men, that it might be
believed and sought inwardly, and that it might be found in the
eternal Truth, where the good and only Master teacheth all His
disciples. There, O Lord, I hear Thy voice, the voice of one
speaking unto me, since He speaketh unto us who teacheth us. But
He that teachth us not, although He speaketh, speaketh not to us.
Moreover, who teacheth us, unless it be the immutable Truth? For
even when we are admonished through a changeable creature, we are
led to the Truth immutable. There we learn truly while we stand
and hear Him, and rejoice greatly "because of the Bridegroom's
voice," restoring us to that whence we are. And, therefore, the
Beginning, because unless It remained, there would not, where we
strayed, be whither to return. But when we return from error, it
is by knowing that we return. But that we may know, He teacheth
us, because He is the Beginning and speaketh unto us.
CHAP. IX. -- WISDOM AND THE
BEGINNING.
11. In this Beginning, O God, hast Thou made heaven and
earth, -- in Thy Word, in Thy Son, in Thy Power, in Thy Wisdom,
in Thy Truth, wondrously speaking and wondrously making. Who
shall comprehend? who shall relate it? What is that which
shines through me, and strikes my heart without injury, and I
both shudder and burn? I shudder inasmuch as I am unlike it; and
I burn inasmuch as I am like it. It is Wisdom itself that shines
through me, clearing my cloudiness, which again overwhelms me,
fainting from it, in the darkness and amount of my punishment.
For my strength is brought down in need, so that I cannot endure
my blessings, until Thou, O Lord, who hast been gracious to all
mine iniquities, heal also all mine infirmities; because Thou
shalt also redeem my life from corruption, and crown me with Thy
loving-kindness and mercy, and shalt satisfy my desire with good
things, because my youth shall be renewed like the eagle's. For
by hope we are saved; and through patience we await Thy promises.
Let him that is able hear Thee discoursing within. I will with
confidence cry out from Thy oracle, How wonderful are Thy works,
O Lord, in Wisdom hast Thou made them all. And this Wisdom is
the Beginning, and in that Beginning hast Thou made heaven and
earth.
CHAP. X. -- THE RASHNESS OF
THOSE WHO INQUIRE WHAT GOD DID BEFORE HE CREATED HEAVEN AND
EARTH.
12. Lo, are they not full of their ancient way, who say to
us, "What was God doing before He made heaven and earth? For
if," say they, "He were unoccupied, and did nothing, why does He
not for ever also, and from henceforth, cease from working, as in
times past He did? For if any new motion has arisen in God, and
a new will, to form a creature which He had never before formed,
however can that be a true eternity where there ariseth a will
which was not before? For the will of God is not a creature, but
before the creature; because nothing could be created unless the
will of the Creator were before it. The will of God, therefore,
pertaineth to His very Substance. But if anything hath arisen in
the Substance of God which was not before, that Substance is not
truly called eternal. But if it was the eternal will of God that
the creature should be, why was not the creature also from
eternity?"
CHAP. XI. -- THEY WHO ASK
THIS HAVE NOT AS YET KNOWN THE ETERNITY OF GOD, WHICH IS EXEMPT
FROM THE RELATION OF TIME.
13. Those who say these things do not as yet understand
Thee, O Thou Wisdom of God, Thou light of souls; not as yet do
they understand how these things be made which are made by and in
Thee. They even endeavour to comprehend things eternal; but as
yet their heart flieth about in the past and future motions of
things, and is still wavering. Who shall hold it and fix it,
that it may rest a little, and by degrees catch the glory of that
everstanding eternity, and compare it with the times which never
stand, and see that it is incomparable; and that a long time
cannot become long, save from the many motions that pass by,
which cannot at the same instant be prolonged; but that in the
Eternal nothing passeth away, but that the whole is present; but
no time is wholly present; and let him see that all time past is
forced on by the future, and that all the future followeth from
the past, and that all, both past and future, is created and
issues from that which is always present? Who will hold the
heart of man, that it may stand still, and see how the still-
standing eternity, itself neither future nor past, uttereth the
times future and past? Can my hand accomplish this, or the hand
of my mouth by persuasion bring about a thing so great?(4)
CHAP. XII. -- WHAT GOD DID
BEFORE THE CREATION OF THE WORLD.
14. Behold, I answer to him who asks, "What was God doing
before He made heaven and earth?" I answer not, as a certain
person is reported to have done facetiously (avoiding the
pressure of the question), "He was preparing hell," saith he,
"for those who pry into mysteries." It is one thing to perceive,
another to laugh, -- these things I answer not. For more
willingly would I have answered, "I know not what I know not,"
than that I should make him a laughing-stock who asketh deep
things, and gain praise as one who answereth false things. But I
say that Thou, our God, art the Creator of every creature; and if
by the term "heaven and earth" every creature is understood, I
boldly say, "That before God made heaven and earth, He made not
anything. For if He did, what did He make unless the creature?"
And would that I knew whatever I desire to know to my advantage,
as I know that no creature was made before any creature was made.
CHAP. XIII. -- BEFORE THE
TIMES CREATED BY GOD, TIMES WERE NOT.
15. But if the roving thought of any one should wander
through the images of bygone time, and wonder that Thou, the God
Almighty, and All-creating, and All-sustaining, the Architect of
heaven and earth, didst for innumerable ages refrain from so
great a work before Thou wouldst make it, let him awake and
consider that he wonders at false things. For whence could
innumerable ages pass by which Thou didst not make, since Thou
art the Author and Creator of all ages? Or what times should
those be which were not made by Thee? Or how should they pass by
if they had not been? Since, therefore, Thou art the Creator of
all times, if any time was before Thou madest heaven and earth,
why is it said that Thou didst refrain from working? For that
very time Thou madest, nor could times pass by before Thou madest
times. But if before heaven and earth there was no time, why is
it asked, What didst Thou then? For there was no "then" when
time was not.
16. Nor dost Thou by time precede time; else
wouldest not Thou precede all times. But in the excellency of an
ever-present eternity, Thou precedest all times past, and
survivest all future times, because they are future, and when
they have come they will be past; but "Thou art the same, and Thy
years shall have no end." Thy years neither go nor come; but
ours both go and come, that all may come. All Thy years stand at
once since they do stand; nor were they when departing excluded
by coming years, because they pass not away; but all these of
ours shall be when all shall cease to be. Thy years are one day,
and Thy day is not daily, but today; because Thy today yields not
with tomorrow, for neither doth it follow yesterday. Thy today
is eternity; therefore didst Thou beget the Co-eternal, to whom
Thou saidst, "This day have I begotten Thee." Thou hast made all
time; and before all times Thou art, nor in any time was there
not time.
CHAP. XIV. -- NEITHER TIME
PAST NOR FUTURE, BUT THE PRESENT ONLY, REALLY IS.
17. At no time, therefore, hadst Thou not made anything,
because Thou hadst made time itself. And no times are co-eternal
with Thee, because Thou remainest for ever; but should these
continue, they would not be times. For what is time? Who can
easily and briefly explain it? Who even in thought can
comprehend it, even to the pronouncing of a word concerning it?
But what in speaking do we refer to more familiarly and knowingly
than time? And certainly we understand when we speak of it; we
understand also when we hear it spoken of by another. What,
then, is time? If no one ask of me, I know; if I wish to explain
to him who asks, I know not. Yet I say with confidence, that I
know that if nothing passed away, there would not be past time;
and if nothing were coming, there would not be future time; and
if nothing were, there would not be present time. Those two
times, therefore, past and future, how are they, when even the
past now is not; and the future is not as yet? But should the
present be always present, and should it not pass into time past,
time truly it could not be, but eternity. If, then, time present
-- if it be time -- only comes into existence because it passes
into time past, how do we say that even this is, whose cause of
being is that it shall not be -- namely, so that we cannot truly
say that time is, unless because it tends not to be?
CHAP. XV. -- THERE IS ONLY A
MOMENT OF PRESENT TIME.
18. And yet we say that "time is long and time is short;"
nor do we speak of this save of time past and future. A long
time past, for example, we call a hundred years ago; in like
manner a long time to come, a hundred years hence. But a short
time past we call, say, ten days ago: and a short time to come,
ten days hence. But in what sense is that long or short which is
not? For the past is not now, and the future is not yet.
Therefore let us not say, "It is long;" but let us say of the
past, "It hath been long," and of the future, "It will be long."
O my Lord, my light, shall not even here Thy truth deride man?
For that past time which was long, was it long when it was
already past, or when it was as yet present? For then it might
be long when there was that which could be long, but when past it
no longer was; wherefore that could not be long which was not at
all. Let us not, therefore, say, "Time past hath been long;" for
we shall not find what may have been long, seeing that since it
was past it is not; but let us say "that present time was long,
because when it was present it was long." For it had not as yet
passed away so as not to be, and therefore there was that which
could be long. But after it passed, that ceased also to be long
which ceased to be.
19. Let us therefore see, O human soul,
whether present time can be long; for to thee is it given to
perceive and to measure periods of time. What wilt thou reply to
me? Is a hundred years when present a long time? See, first,
whether a hundred years can be present. For if the first year of
these is current, that is present, but the other ninety and nine
are future, and therefore they are not as yet. But if the second
year is current, one is already past, the other present, the rest
future. And thus, if we fix on any middle year of this hundred
as present, those before it are past, those after it are future;
wherefore a hundred years cannot be present. See at least
whether that year itself which is current can be present. For if
its first month be current, the rest are future; if the second,
the first hath already passed, and the remainder are not yet.
Therefore neither is the year which is current as a whole
present; and if it is not present as a whole, then the year is
not present. For twelve months make the year, of which each
individual month which is current is itself present, but the rest
are either past or future. Although neither is that month which
is current present, but one day only: if the first, the rest
being to come, if the last, the rest being past; if any of the
middle, then between past and future.
20. Behold, the
present time, which alone we found could be called long, is
abridged to the space scarcely of one day. But let us discuss
even that, for there is not one day present as a whole. For it
is made up of four-and-twenty hours of night and day, whereof the
first hath the rest future, the last hath them past, but any one
of the intervening hath those before it past, those after it
future. And that one hour passeth away in fleeting particles.
Whatever of it hath flown away is past, whatever remaineth is
future. If any portion of time be conceived which cannot now be
divided into even the minutest particles of moments, this only is
that which may be called present; which, however, flies so
rapidly from future to past, that it cannot be extended by any
delay. For if it be extended, it is divided into the past and
future; but the present hath no space. Where, therefore, is the
time which we may call long? Is it nature? Indeed we do not
say, "It is long," because it is not yet, so as to be long; but
we say, "It will be long." When, then, will it be? For if even
then, since as yet it is future, it will not be long, because
what may be long is not as yet; but it shall be long, when from
the future, which as yet is not, it shall already have begun to
be, and will have become present, so that there could be that
which may be long; then doth the present time cry out in the
words above that it cannot be long.
CHAP. XVI. -- TIME CAN ONLY
BE PERCEIVED OR MEASURED WHILE IT IS PASSING.
21. And yet, O Lord, we perceive intervals of times, and we
compare them with themselves, and we say some are longer, others
shorter. We even measure by how much shorter or longer this time
may be than that; and we answer, "That this is double or treble,
while that is but once, or only as much as that." But we measure
times passing when we measure them by perceiving them; but past
times, which now are not, or future times, which as yet are not,
who can measure them? Unless, perchance, any one will dare to
say, that that can be measured which is not. When, therefore,
time is passing, it can be perceived and measured; but when it
has passed, it cannot, since it is not.
CHAP. XVII. -- NEVERTHELESS
THERE IS TIME PAST AND FUTURE.
22. I ask, Father, I do not affirm. O my God, rule and
guide me. "Who is there who can say to me that there are not
three times (as we learned when boys, and as we have taught
boys), the past, present, and future, but only present, because
these two are not? Or are they also; but when from future it
becometh present, cometh it forth from some secret place, and
when from the present it becometh past, doth it retire into
anything secret? For where have they, who have foretold future
things, seen these things, if as yet they are not? For that
which is not cannot be seen. And they who relate things past
could not relate them as true, did they not perceive them in
their mind. Which things, if they were not, they could in no
wise be discerned. There are therefore things both future and
past.
CHAP. XVIII. -- PAST AND
FUTURE TIMES CANNOT BE THOUGHT OF BUT AS PRESENT.
23. Suffer me, O Lord, to seek further; O my Hope, let not
my purpose be confounded. For if there are times past and
future, I desire to know where they are. But if as yet I do not
succeed, I still know, wherever they are, that they are not there
as future or past, but as present. For if there also they be
future, they are not as yet there; if even there they be past,
they are no longer there. Wheresoever, therefore, they are,
whatsoever they are, they are only so as present. Although past
things are related as true, they are drawn out from the memory, -
- not the things themselves, which have passed, but the words
conceived from the images of the things which they have formed in
the mind as footprints in their passage through the senses. My
childhood, indeed, which no longer is, is in time past, which now
is not; but when I call to mind its image, and speak of it, I
behold it in the present, because it is as yet in my memory.
Whether there be a like cause of foretelling future things, that
of things which as yet are not the images may be perceived as
already existing, I confess, my God, I know not. This certainly
I know, that we generally think before on our future actions, and
that this premeditation is present; but that the action whereon
we premeditate is not yet, because it is future; which when we
shall have entered upon, and have begun to do that which we were
premeditating, then shall that action be, because then it is not
future, but present.
24. In whatever manner, therefore,
this secret preconception of future things may be, nothing can be
seen, save what is. But what now is is not future, but present.
When, therefore, they say that things future are seen, it is not
themselves, which as yet are not (that is, which are future); but
their causes or their signs perhaps are seen, the which already
are. Therefore, to those already beholding them, they are not
future, but present, from which future things conceived in the
mind are foretold. Which conceptions again now are, and they who
foretell those things behold these conceptions present before
them. Let now so multitudinous a variety of things afford me
some example. I behold daybreak; I foretell that the sun is
about to rise. That which I behold is present; what I foretell
is future, -- not that the sun is future, which already is; but
his rising, which is not yet. Yet even its rising I could not
predict unless I had an image of it in my mind, as now I have
while I speak. But that dawn which I see in the sky is not the
rising of the sun, although it may go before it, nor that
imagination in my mind; which two are seen as present, that the
other which is future may be foretold. Future things, therefore,
are not as yet; and if they are not as yet, they are not. And if
they are not, they cannot be seen at all; but they can be
foretold from things present which now are, and are seen.
CHAP. XIX. -- WE ARE
IGNORANT IN WHAT MANNER GOD TEACHES FUTURE THINGS.
25. Thou, therefore, Ruler of Thy creatures, what is the
method by which Thou teachest souls those things which are
future? For Thou hast taught Thy prophets. What is that way by
which Thou, to whom nothing is future, dost teach future things;
or rather of future things dost teach present? For what is not,
of a certainty cannot be taught. Too far is this way from my
view; it is too mighty for me, I cannot attain unto it; but by
Thee I shall be enabled, when Thou shalt have granted it, sweet
light of my hidden eyes.
CHAP. XX. -- IN WHAT MANNER
TIME MAY PROPERLY BE DESIGNATED.
26. But what now is manifest and clear is, that neither are
there future nor past things. Nor is it fitly said, "There are
three times, past, present and future;" but perchance it might be
fitly said, "There are three times; a present of things past, a
present of things present, and a present of things future." For
these three do somehow exist in the soul, and otherwise I see
them not: present of things past, memory; present of things
present, sight; present of things future, expectation. If of
these things we are permitted to speak, I see three times, and I
grant there are three. It may also be said, "There are three
times, past, present and future," as usage falsely has it. See,
I trouble not, nor gainsay, nor reprove; provided always that
which is said may be understood, that neither the future, nor
that which is past, now is. For there are but few things which
we speak properly, many things improperly; but what we may wish
to say is understood.
CHAP. XXI. -- HOW TIME MAY
BE MEASURED.
27. I have just now said, then, that we measure times as
they pass, that we may be able to say that this time is twice as
much as that one, or that this is only as much as that, and so of
any other of the parts of time which we are able to tell by
measuring. Wherefore, as I said, we measure times as they pass.
And if any one should ask me, "Whence dost thou know?" I can
answer, "I know, because we measure; nor can we measure things
that are not; and things past and future are not." But how do we
measure present time, since it hath not space? It is measured
while it passeth; but when it shall have passed, it is not
measured; for there will not be aught that can be measured. But
whence, in what way, and whither doth it pass while it is being
measured? Whence, but from the future? Which way, save through
the present? Whither, but into the past? From that, therefore,
which as yet is not, through that which hath no space, into that
which now is not. But what do we measure, unless time in some
space? For we say not single, and double, and triple, and equal,
or in any other way in which we speak of time, unless with
respect to the spaces of times. In what space, then, do we
measure passing time? Is it in the future, whence it passeth
over? But what yet we measure not, is not. Or is it in the
present, by which it passeth? But no space, we do not measure.
Or in the past, whither it passeth? But that which is not now,
we measure not.
CHAP. XXII. -- HE PRAYS GOD
THAT HE WOULD EXPLAIN THIS MOST ENTANGLED ENIGMA.
28. My soul yearns to know this most entangled enigma.
Forbear to shut up, O Lord my God, good Father, -- through Christ
I beseech Thee, -- forbear to shut up these things, both usual
and hidden, from my desire, that it may be hindered from
penetrating them; but let them dawn through Thy enlightening
mercy, O Lord. Of whom shall I inquire concerning these things?
And to whom shall I with more advantage confess my ignorance than
to Thee, to whom these my studies, so vehemently kindled towards
Thy Scriptures, are not troublesome? Give that which I love; for
I do love, and this hast Thou given me. Give, Father, who truly
knowest to give good gifts unto Thy children. Give, since I have
undertaken to know, and trouble is before me until Thou dost open
it. Through Christ, I beseech Thee, in His name, Holy of Holies,
let no man interrupt me. For I believed, and therefore do I
speak. This is my hope; for this do I live, that I may
contemplate the delights of the Lord. Behold, Thou hast made my
days old, and they pass away, and in what manner I know not. And
we speak as to time and time, times and times, -- "How long is
the time since he said this?" "How long the time since he did
this?" and, "How long the time since I saw that?" and, "This
syllable hath double the time of that single short syllable."
These words we speak, and these we hear; and we are understood,
and we understand. They are most manifest and most usual, and
the same things again lie hid too deeply, and the discovery of
them is new.
CHAP. XXIII. -- THAT TIME
iS A CERTAIN EXTENSION.
29. I have heard from a learned man that the motions of the
sun, moon, and stars constituted time, and I assented not. For
why should not rather the motions of all bodies be time? What if
the lights of heaven should cease, and a potter's wheel run
round, would there be no time by which we might measure those
revolutions, and say either that it turned with equal pauses, or,
if it were moved at one time more slowly, at another more
quickly, that some revolutions were longer, others less so? Or
while we were saying this, should we not also be speaking in
time? Or should there in our words be some syllables long,
others short, but because those sounded in a longer time, these
in a shorter? God grant to men to see in a small thing ideas
common to things great and small. Both the stars and luminaries
of heaven are "for signs and for seasons, and for days and
years." No doubt they are; but neither should I say that the
circuit of that wooden wheel was a day, nor yet should he say
that therefore there was no time.
30. I desire to know the
power and nature of time, by which we measure the motions of
bodies, and say (for example) that this motion is twice as long
as that. For, I ask, since "day" declares not the stay only of
the sun upon the earth, according to which day is one thing,
night another, but also its entire circuit from east even to
east, -- according to which we say, "So many days have passed"
(the nights being included when we say "so many days," and their
spaces not counted apart), -- since, then, the day is finished by
the motion of the sun, and by his circuit from east to east, I
ask, whether the motion itself is the day, or the period in which
that motion is completed, or both? For if the first be the day,
then would there be a day although the sun should finish that
course in so small a space of time as an hour. If the second,
then that would not be a day if from one sunrise to another there
were but so short a period as an hour, but the sun must go round
four-and-twenty times to complete a day. If both, neither could
that be called a day if the sun should run his entire round in
the space of an hour; nor that, if, while the sun stood still, so
much time should pass as the sun is accustomed to accomplish his
whole course in from morning to morning. I shall not therefore
now ask, what that is which is called day, but what time is, by
which we, measuring the circuit of the sun, should say that it
was accomplished in half the space of time it was wont, if it had
been completed in so small a space as twelve hours; and comparing
both times, we should call that single, this double time,
although the sun should run his course from east to east
sometimes in that single, sometimes in that double time. Let no
man then tell me that the motions of the heavenly bodies are
times, because, when at the prayer of one the sun stood still in
order that he might achieve his victorious battle, the sun stood
still, but time went on. For in such space of time as was
sufficient was that battle fought and ended. I see that time,
then, is a certain extension. But do I see it, or do I seem to
see it? Thou, O Light and Truth, wilt show me.
CHAP. XXIV. -- THAT TIME IS
NOT A MOTION OF A BODY WHICH WE MEASURE BY TIME.
31. Dost Thou command that I should assent, if any one
should say that time is "the motion of a body?" Thou dost not
command me. For I hear that no body is moved but in time. This
Thou sayest; but that the very motion of a body is time, I hear
not; Thou sayest it not. For when a body is moved, I by time
measure how long it may be moving from the time in which it began
to be moved till it left off. And if I saw not whence it began,
and it continued to be moved, so that I see not when it leaves
off, I cannot measure unless, perchance, from the time I began
until I cease to see. But if I look long, I only proclaim that
the time is long, but not how long it may be because when we say,
"How long," we speak by comparison, as, "This is as long as
that," or, "This is double as long as that," or any other thing
of the kind. But if we were able to note down the distances of
places whence and whither cometh the body which is moved, or its
parts, if it moved as in a wheel, we can say in how much time the
motion of the body or its part, from this place unto that, was
performed. Since, then, the motion of a body is one thing, that
by which we measure how long it is another, who cannot see which
of these is rather to be called time? For, although a body be
sometimes moved, sometimes stand still, we measure not its motion
only, but also its standing still, by time; and we say, "It stood
still as much as it moved;" or, "It stood still twice or thrice
as long as it moved;" and if any other space which our measuring
hath either determined or imagined, more or less, as we are
accustomed to say. Time, therefore, is not the motion of a body.
CHAP. XXV. -- HE CALLS ON
GOD TO ENLIGHTEN HIS MIND.
32. And I confess unto Thee, O Lord, that I am as yet
ignorant as to what time is, and again I confess unto Thee, O
Lord, that I know that I speak these things in time, and that I
have already long spoken of time, and that very "long" is not
long save by the stay of time. How, then, know I this, when I
know not what time is? Or is it, perchance, that I know not in
what wise I may express what I know? Alas for me, that I do not
at least know the extent of my own ignorance! Behold, O my God,
before Thee I lie not. As I speak, so is my heart. Thou shalt
light my candle; Thou, O Lord my God, wilt enlighten my darkness.
CHAP. XXVI. -- WE MEASURE
LONGER EVENTS BY SHORTER IN TIME.
33. Doth not my soul pour out unto Thee truly in confession
that I do measure times? But do I thus measure, O my God, and
know not what I measure? I measure the motion of a body by time;
and the time itself do I not measure? But, in truth, could I
measure the motion of a body, how long it is, and how long it is
in coming from this place to that, unless I should measure the
time in which it is moved? How, therefore, do I measure this
very time itself? Or do we by a shorter time measure a longer,
as by the space of a cubit the space of a crossbeam? For thus,
indeed, we seem by the space of a short syllable to measure the
space of a long syllable, and to say that this is double. Thus
we measure the spaces of stanzas by the spaces of the verses, and
the spaces of the verses by the spaces of the feet, and the
spaces of the feet by the spaces of the syllables, and the spaces
of long by the spaces of short syllables; not measuring by pages
(for in that manner we measure spaces, not times), but when in
uttering the words they pass by, and we say, "It is a long stanza
because it is made up of so many verses; long verses, because
they consist of so many feet; long feet, because they are
prolonged by so many syllables; a long syllable, because double a
short one." But neither thus is any certain measure of time
obtained; since it is possible that a shorter verse, if it be
pronounced more fully, may take up more time than a longer one,
if pronounced more hurriedly. Thus for a stanzas, thus for a
foot, thus for a syllable. Whence it appeared to me that time is
nothing else than protraction; but of what I know not. It is
wonderful to me, if it be not of the mind itself. For what do I
measure, I beseech Thee, O my God, even when I say either
indefinitely, "This time is longer than that;" or even
definitely, "This is double that?" That I measure time, I know.
But I measure not the future, for it is not yet; nor do I measure
the present, because it is extended by no space; nor do I measure
the past, because it no longer is. What, therefore, do I
measure? Is it times passing, not past? For thus had I said.
CHAP. XXVII. -- TIMES ARE
MEASURED IN PROPORTION AS THEY PASS BY.
34. Persevere, O my mind, and give earnest heed. God is our
helper; He made us, and not we ourselves. Give heed, where truth
dawns. Lo, suppose the voice of a body begins to sound, and does
sound, and sounds on, and lo! it ceases, -- it is now silence,
and that voice is past and is no longer a voice. It was future
before it sounded, and could not be measured, because as yet it
was not; and now it cannot, because it longer is. Then,
therefore, while it was sounding, it might, because there was
then that which might be measured. But even then it did not
stand still, for it was going and passing away. Could it, then,
on that account be measured the more? For, while passing, it was
being extended into some space of time, in which it might be
measured, since the present hath no space. If, therefore, then
it might be measured, lo! suppose another voice hath begun to
sound, and still soundeth, in a continued tenor without any
interruption, we can measure it while it is sounding; for when it
shall have ceased to sound, it will be already past, and there
will not be that which can be measured. Let us measure it truly,
and let us say how much it is. But as yet it sounds, nor can it
be measured, save from that instant in which it began to sound,
even to the end in which it left off. For the interval itself we
measure from some beginning unto some end. On which account, a
voice which is not yet ended cannot be measured, so that it may
be said how long or how short it may be; nor can it be said to be
equal to another, or single or double in respect of it, or the
like. But when it is ended, it no longer is. In what manner,
therefore, may it be measured? And yet we measure times; still
not those which as yet are not, nor those which no longer are,
nor those which are protracted by some delay, nor those which
have no limits. We, therefore, measure neither future times, nor
past, nor present, nor those passing by; and yet we do measure
times.
35. Deus Creator omnium; this verse of eight
syllables alternates between short and long syllables. The four
short, then, the first, third, fifth and seventh, are single in
respect of the four long, the second, fourth, sixth, and eighth.
Each of these hath a double time to every one of those. I
pronounce them, report on them, and thus it is, as is perceived
by common sense. By common sense, then, I measure a long by a
short syllable, and I find that it has twice as much. But when
one sounds after another, if the former be short the latter long,
how shall I hold the short one, and how measuring shall I apply
it to the long, so that I may find out that this has twice as
much, when indeed the long does not begin to sound unless the
short leaves off sounding? That very long one I measure not as
present, since I measure it not save when ended. But its ending
is its passing away. What, then, is it that I can measure?
Where is the short syllable by which I measure? Where is the
long one which I measure? Both have sounded, have flown, have
passed away, and are no longer; and still I measure, and I
confidently answer (so far as is trusted to a practised sense),
that as to space of time this syllable is single, that double.
Nor could I do this, unless because they have past, and are
ended. Therefore do I not measure themselves, which now are not,
but something in my memory, which remains fixed.
36. In
thee, O my mind, I measure times. Do not overwhelm me with thy
clamour. That is, do not overwhelm thyself with the multitude of
thy impressions. In thee, I say, I measure times; the impression
which things as they pass by make on Thee, and which, when they
have passed by, remains, that I measure as time present, not
those things which have passed by, that the impression should be
made. This I measure when I measure times. Either, then, these
are times, or I do not measure times. What when we measure
silence, and say that this silence hath lasted as long as that
voice lasts? Do we not extend our thought to the measure of a
voice, as if it sounded, so that we may be able to declare
something concerning the intervals of silence in a given space of
time? For when both the voice and tongue are still, we go over
in thought poems and verses, and any discourse, or dimensions of
motions; and declare concerning the spaces of times, how much
this may be in respect of that, not otherwise than if uttering
them we should pronounce them. Should any one wish to utter a
lengthened sound, and had with forethought determined how long it
should be, that man hath in silence verily gone through a space
of time, and, committing it to memory, he begins to utter that
speech, which sounds until it be extended to the end proposed;
truly it hath sounded, and will sound. For what of it is already
finished hath verily sounded, but what remains will sound; and
thus does it pass on, until the present intention carry over the
future into the past; the past increasing by the diminution of
the future, until, by the consumption of the future, all be past.
CHAP. XXVIII. -- TIME IN
THE HUMAN MIND, WHICH EXPECTS, CONSIDERS, AND REMEMBERS.
37. But how is that future diminished or consumed which as
yet is not? Or how doth the past, which is no longer, increase,
unless in the mind which enacteth this there are three things
done? For it both expects, and considers, and remembers, that
that which it expecteth, through that which it considereth, may
pass into that which it remembereth. Who, therefore, denieth
that future things as yet are not? But yet there is already in
the mind the expectation of things future. And who denies that
past things are now no longer? But, however, there is still in
the mind the memory of things past. And who denies that time
present wants space, because it passeth away in a moment? But
yet our consideration endureth, through which that which may be
present may proceed to become absent. Future time, which is not,
is not therefore long; but a "long future" is "a long expectation
of the future." Nor is time past, which is now no longer, long;
but a long past is "a long memory of the past."
38. I am
about to repeat a psalm that I know. Before I begin, my
attention is extended to the whole; but when I have begun, as
much of it as becomes past by my saying it is extended in my
memory; and the life of this action of mine is divided between my
memory, on account of what I have repeated, and my expectation,
on account of what I am about to repeat; yet my consideration is
present with me, through which that which was future may be
carried over so that it may become past. Which the more it is
done and repeated, by so much (expectation being shortened) the
memory is enlarged, until the whole expectation be exhausted,
when that whole action being ended shall have passed into memory.
And what takes place in the entire psalm, takes place also in
each individual part of it, and in each individual syllable: this
holds in the longer action, of which that psalm is perchance a
portion; the same holds in the whole life of man, of which all
the actions of man are parts; the same holds in the whole age of
the sons of men, of which all the lives of men are parts.
CHAP. XXIX. -- THAT HUMAN
LIFE IS A DISTRACTION BUT THAT THROUGH THE MERCY OF GOD HE WAS
INTENT ON THE PRIZE OF HIS HEAVENLY CALLING.
39. But "because Thy loving-kindness is better than life,"
behold, my life is but a distraction, and Thy right hand upheld
me in my Lord, the Son of man, the Mediator between Thee, The
One, and us the many, -- in many distractions amid many things, -
- that through Him I may apprehend in whom I have been
apprehended, and may be re-collected from my old days, following
The One, forgetting the things that are past; and not distracted,
but drawn on, not to those things which shall be and shall pass
away, but to those things which are before, not distractedly, but
intently, I follow on for the prize of my heavenly calling, where
I may hear the voice of Thy praise, and contemplate Thy delights,
neither coming nor passing away. But now are my years spent in
mourning. And Thou, O Lord, art my comfort, my Father
everlasting. But I have been divided amid times, the order of
which I know not; and my thoughts, even the inmost bowels of my
soul, are mangled with tumultuous varieties, until I flow
together unto Thee, purged and molten in the fire of Thy love.
CHAP. XXX. -- AGAIN HE
REFUTES THE EMPTY QUESTION, "WHAT DID GOD BEFORE THE CREATION OF
THE WORLD?"
40. And I will be immoveable, and fixed in Thee, in my
mould, Thy truth; nor will I endure the questions of men, who by
a penal disease thirst for more than they can hold, and say,
"What did God make before He made heaven and earth?" Or, "How
came it into His mind to make anything, when He never before made
anything?" Grant to them, O Lord, to think well what they say,
and to see that where there is no time, they cannot say "never."
What, therefore, He is said "never to have made," what else is it
but to say, that in no time was it made? Let them therefore see
that there could be no time without a created being, and let them
cease to speak that vanity. Let them also be extended unto those
things which are before, and understand that thou, the eternal
Creator of all times, art before all times, and that no times are
co-eternal with Thee, nor any creature, even if there be any
creature beyond all times.
CHAP. XXXI. -- HOW THE
KNOWLEDGE OF GOD DIFFERS FROM THAT OF MAN.
41. O Lord my God, what is that secret place of Thy mystery,
and how far thence have the consequences of my transgressions
cast me? Heal my eyes, that I may enjoy Thy light. Surely, if
there be a mind, so greatly abounding in knowledge and
foreknowledge, to which all things past and future are so known
as one psalm is well known to me, that mind is exceedingly
wonderful, and very astonishing; because whatever is so past, and
whatever is to come of after ages, is no more concealed from Him
than was it hidden from me when singing that psalm, what and how
much of it had been sung from the beginning, what and how much
remained unto the end. But far be it that Thou, the Creator of
the universe, the Creator of souls and bodies,--far be it that
Thou shouldest know all things future and past. Far, far more
wonderfully, and far more mysteriously, Thou knowest them. (1)
For it is not as the feelings of one singing known things, or
hearing a known song, are --through expectation of future words,
and in remembrance of those that are past--varied, and his senses
divided, that anything happeneth unto Thee, unchangeably eternal,
that is, the truly eternal (2) Creator of minds. As, then, Thou
in the Beginning knewest the heaven and the earth without any
change of Thy knowledge, so in the Beginning didst Thou make
heaven and earth without any distraction of Thy action? Let him
who understandeth confess unto Thee; and let him who
understandeth not, confess unto Thee. Oh, how exalted art Thou,
and yet the humble in heart are Thy dwelling-place; for Thou
raisest up those that are bowed down, (4) and they whose
exaltation Thou art fall not.
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