|
|
| print this
AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK
TEN
CHAPTER
XXXIII
49. The delights of the ear drew and held me much more powerfully, but thou
didst unbind and liberate me. In those melodies which thy words inspire when
sung with a sweet and trained voice, I still find repose; yet not so as to cling
to them, but always so as to be able to free myself as I wish. But it is because
of the words which are their life that they gain entry into me and strive for
a place of proper honor in my heart; and I can hardly assign them a fitting
one. Sometimes, I seem to myself to give them more respect than is fitting,
when I see that our minds are more devoutly and earnestly inflamed in piety
by the holy words when they are sung than when they are not. And I recognize
that all the diverse affections of our spirits have their appropriate measures
in the voice and song, to which they are stimulated by I know not what secret
correlation. But the pleasures of my flesh--to which the mind ought never to
be surrendered nor by them enervated--often beguile me while physical sense
does not attend on reason, to follow her patiently, but having once gained entry
to help the reason, it strives to run on before her and be her leader. Thus
in these things I sin unknowingly, but I come to know it afterward.
50. On the other hand, when I avoid very earnestly this kind of deception, I
err out of too great austerity. Sometimes I go to the point of wishing that
all the melodies of the pleasant songs to which David's Psalter is adapted should
be banished both from my ears and from those of the Church itself. In this mood,
the safer way seemed to me the one I remember was once related to me concerning
Athanasius, bishop of Alexandria, who required the readers of the psalm to use
so slight an inflection of the voice that it was more like speaking than singing.
However, when I call to mind the tears I shed at the songs
of thy Church at the outset of my recovered faith, and how
even now I am moved, not by the singing but by what is sung
(when they are sung with a clear and skillfully modulated
voice), I then come to acknowledge the great utility of
this custom. Thus I vacillate between dangerous pleasure
and healthful exercise. I am inclined--though I pronounce
no irrevocable opinion on the subject--to approve of the
use of singing in the church, so that by the delights of
the ear the weaker minds may be stimulated to a devotional
mood.[371] Yet
when it happens that I am more moved by the singing than
by what is sung, I confess myself to have sinned wickedly,
and then I would rather not have heard the singing. See
now what a condition I am in! Weep with me, and weep for
me, those of you who can so control your inward feelings
that good results always come forth. As for you who do not
act this way at all, such things do not concern you. But
do thou, O Lord, my God, give ear; look and see, and have
mercy upon me; and heal me--thou, in whose sight I am become
an enigma to myself; this itself is my weakness.
|

|