sábado, 10 de noviembre de 2007

Augustine Quotes

I just finished reading Augustine’s Confessions and it was incredible. Check out some of my favorite quotes:



What can any man say when he speaks of Thee? But woe to them that keep silence- since even those who say most are dumb (3).

[reflecting on his infancy] And when I was not satisfied… I grew indignant that my elders were not subject to me and that those on whom I actually had no claim did not wait on me as slaves- and I avenged myself on them by crying (5).

What is it to me if someone doesn’t understand this? Let him still rejoice and continue to ask, “What is this?” Let him also rejoice and prefer to seek Thee even if he fails to find an answer, rather than to seek an answer and not find Thee (6)!

For the tedium of learning a foreign language mingled gall into the sweetness of those Grecian myths (14).

Yet, by Thy ordinance, O God, discipline is given to restrain the excess of freedom; this ranges from the ferule of the schoolmaster to the trials of the martyr and has the effect of mingling for us a wholesome bitterness, which calls us back to Thee from the poisonous pleasures that first drew us from Thee (14).

Hear my prayer, O Lord; let not my soul faint under Thy discipline, nor let me faint in confessing unto Thee Thy mercies, whereby Thou hast saved me from all my most wicked ways til Thou shouldst become sweet to me beyond all the allurements that I used to follow. Let me come to love Thee wholly, and grasp Thy hand with my whole heart that Thou mayest deliver me from every temptation, even unto the last (14).

[reflecting on the value placed on rhetoric and being a persuasive speaker] I do not blame the words, for they are, as it were, choice and precious vessels, but I do deplore the wine of error which was poured out to us by teachers already drunk. And unless we also drank, we were beaten, without liberty of appeal to a sober judge (16).

[on the sins of his youth] What shall I render to the Lord for the fact that while my memory recalls these things my soul no longer fears them? I will love Thee, O Lord, and thank Thee, and confess to Thy name, because Thou hast put away from me such wicked and evil deeds. To Thy grace I attribute it and to Thy mercy, that Thou hast melted away my sin as if it were ice (28).

For I had my back toward the light, and my face toward the things on which the light falls, so that my face, which looked toward the illuminated things, was not itself illuminated (63).

And what kind of burden was it for Thy little ones to have a far slower wit, since they did not use it to depart from Thee, and since they remained in the nest of Thy Church to become safely fledged and to nourish the wings of love by the food of a sound faith (63).

For our stability, when it is in Thee, is stability indeed; but when it is in ourselves, then it is all unstable. Our good lives forever with Thee, and when we turn from Thee with aversion, we fall into our own perversion. Let us now, O Lord, return that we be not overturned, because with Thee our good lives without blemish- for our good is Thee Thyself. And we need not fear that we shall find no place to return to because we fell away from it. For, in our absence, our home- which is Thy eternity- does not fall away (64).

I was still eagerly aspiring to honors, money, and matrimony; and Thou dist mock me (90).

[regarding his philosophical/ theological questions] I continued to reflect upon these things, and Thou wast with me. I sighed, and Thou dist hear me. I vacillated, and Thou guidest me. I roamed the broad way of the world, and Thou didst not desert me (90).

Active efforts were made to get me a wife. I wooed; I was engaged; and my mother took the greatest pains in the matter (100).

[in the period following his conversion] The examples of Thy servants whom Thou hadst changed from black to shining white, and from death to life, crowded into the bosom of our thoughts and burned and consumed our sluggish temper, that we might not topple back into the abyss (149).

He is Thy best servant who does not look to hear from Thee what he himself wills, but who wills rather to will what he hears from Thee (194).

It is not the uncleanness of meat that I fear, but the uncleanness of my incontinent appetite. I know that permission was granted Noah to eat every kind of flesh that was good for food; that Elijah was fed with flesh; that Joh, blessed with a wonderful abstinence, was not polluted by the living creatures (that is, locusts) on which he fed. And I know that Esau was deceived by his hungering after lentils and that David blamed himself for desiring water, and that our King was tempted not by flesh but by bread. And thus, the people in the wilderness truly desired their reproof, not because they desired meat, but because in their desire for food they murmured against the Lord.
Set down, then, in the midst of these temptations, I strive daily against my appetite for food and drink. For it is not the kind of appetite that I am able to deal with by cutting it off once for all, and thereafter not touching it, as I was able to do with fornication. The bridle of the throat, therefore, must be held in the mean between slackness and tightness. And who, o Lord, is he who is not in some degree carried away beyond the bounds of necessity? Whoever hs is, he is great; let him magnify Thy name. But I am not such a one, ‘for I am a sinful man.’ Yet I too magnify Thy name, for he who hath ‘overcome the world’ intercedeth with Thee for my sins, numbering me among the weak members of His body; for Thy eyes did see what was imperfect in Him, and in Thy book all shall be written down (199).

How then, shall I respond to him who asks, ‘What was God doing before He made heaven and earth?’ I do not answer, as a certain one is reported to have done facetiously (shrugging off the force of the question), ‘He was preparing hell,’ he said, ‘for those who pry too deep.’ It is one thing to see the answer; it is another to laugh at the questioner- and for myself I do not answer these things thus. More willingly would I have answered, ‘I do not know what I do not know,’ than cause one who asked a deep question to be ridiculed- and by such tactics gain praise for a worthless answer (223).

This way of Thine is too far removed from my sight; it is too great for me. I cannot attain to it. But I shall be enabled by Thee, when Thou wilt grant it, O sweet Light of my secret eyes (228).

Thou, O Light and Truth, wilt show me (232).

[a refrain repeated about many subjects] All this, in Thy sight, is clear to me. Let it become clearer and clearer, I beseech Thee, and in that light let me abide soberly under Thy wings (246).

For they all have the same end, which is temporal and earthly happiness. This is their motive for doing everything, although they may fluctuate within an innumerable diversity of concerns (281).