|
|
| print this
AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK
ELEVEN
CHAPTER
VIII
10. Why is this, I ask of thee, O Lord my God? I see it
after a fashion, but I do not know how to express it, unless
I say that everything that begins to be and then ceases
to be begins and ceases when it is known in thy eternal
Reason that it ought to begin or cease--in thy eternal Reason
where nothing begins or ceases. And this is thy Word, which
is also "the Beginning," because it also speaks to us.[424]
Thus, in the gospel, he spoke through the flesh; and this
sounded in the outward ears of men so that it might be believed
and sought for within, and so that it might be found in
the eternal Truth, in which the good and only Master teacheth
all his disciples.[425] There, O Lord, I hear thy voice,
the voice of one speaking to me, since he who teacheth us
speaketh to us. But he that doth not teach us doth not really
speak to us even when he speaketh. Yet who is it that teacheth
us unless it be the Truth immutable? For even when we are
instructed by means of the mutable creation, we are thereby
led to the Truth immutable. There we learn truly as we stand
and hear him, and we rejoice greatly "because of the bridegroom's
voice,"[426]
restoring us to the source whence our being comes. And therefore,
unless the Beginning remained immutable, there would then
not be a place to which we might return when we had wandered
away. But when we return from error, it is through our gaining
knowledge that we return. In order for us to gain knowledge
he teacheth us, since he is the Beginning, and speaketh
to us.
|

|