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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK
TEN
CHAPTER
IV
5. But for what profit do they desire this? Will they wish me happiness when
they learn how near I have approached thee, by thy gifts? And will they pray
for me when they learn how much I am still kept back by my own weight? To such
as these I will declare myself. For it is no small profit, O Lord my God, that
many people should give thanks to thee on my account and that many should entreat
thee for my sake. Let the brotherly soul love in me what thou teachest him should
be loved, and let him lament in me what thou teachest him should be lamented.
Let it be the soul of a brother that does this, and not a stranger--not one
of those "strange children, whose mouth speaks vanity, and whose right hand
is the right hand of falsehood."[325]
But let my brother do it who, when he approves of me, rejoices for me, but when
he disapproves of me is sorry for me; because whether he approves or disapproves,
he loves me. To such I will declare myself. Let them be refreshed by my good
deeds and sigh over my evil ones. My good deeds are thy acts and thy gifts;
my evil ones are my own faults and thy judgment. Let them breathe expansively
at the one and sigh over the other. And let hymns and tears ascend in thy sight
out of their brotherly hearts--which are thy censers.[326]
And, O Lord, who takest delight in the incense of thy holy temple, have mercy
upon me according to thy great mercy, for thy name's sake. And do not, on any
account whatever, abandon what thou hast begun in me. Go on, rather, to complete
what is yet imperfect in me.
6. This, then, is the fruit of my confessions (not of what
I was, but of what I am), that I may not confess this before
thee alone, in a secret exultation with trembling and a
secret sorrow with hope, but also in the ears of the believing
sons of men--who are the companions of my joy and sharers
of my mortality, my fellow citizens and fellow pilgrims--those
who have gone before and those who are to follow after,
as well as the comrades of my present way. These are thy
servants, my brothers, whom thou desirest to be thy sons.
They are my masters, whom thou hast commanded me to serve
if I desire to live with and in thee. But this thy Word
would mean little to me if it commanded in words alone,
without thy prevenient action. I do this, then, both in
act and word. I do this under thy wings, in a danger too
great to risk if it were not that under thy wings my soul
is subject to thee, and my weakness known to thee. I am
insufficient, but my Father liveth forever, and my Defender
is sufficient for me. For he is the Selfsame who didst beget
me and who watcheth over me; thou art the Selfsame who art
all my good. Thou art the Omnipotent, who art with me, even
before I am with thee. To those, therefore, whom thou commandest
me to serve, I will declare, not what I was, but what I
now am and what I will continue to be. But I do not judge
myself. Thus, therefore, let me be heard.
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