S. AURELII AUGUSTINI HIPPONENSIS EPISCOPI CONFESSIONUM LIBRI TREDECIM .
CAPUT PRIMUM. Deum vult laudare ab ipso excitatus.
CAPUT II. Deum quem invocat in ipso esse, ipsumque in Deo.
CAPUT III. Deus sic ubique totus, ut res nulla ipsum totum capiat.
CAPUT IV. Dei majestas et perfectiones inexplicabiles.
CAPUT V. Petit amorem Dei, et delictorum veniam.
CAPUT VI. Infantiam suam describit, laudat Dei providentiam et aeternitatem.
CAPUT VII. Infantia quoque peccatis obnoxia.
CAPUT VIII. Unde puer loqui didicerit.
CAPUT IX. Odium litterarum, amor lusus, et vapulandi timor in pueris.
CAPUT X. Amore lusus et spectaculorum avocatur a litterarum studio.
CAPUT XI. Morbo pressus Baptismum flagitat, quem mater certo consilio differt.
CAPUT XII. Ad litteras cogebatur, quo tamen Deus utebatur bene.
CAPUT XIII. Quibus studiis potissimum sit delectatus.
CAPUT XIV. Litteras graecas oderat.
CAPUT XVI. Improbat modum juventutis erudiendae.
CAPUT XVII. Prosequitur contra modum exercendae juventutis in re litteraria.
CAPUT XVIII. Quod homines curant servare leges grammaticorum, et non divinorum praeceptorum.
CAPUT XIX. Pueritiae vitia quae in majores aetates transeunt.
CAPUT XX. Pro bonis sibi in pueritia collatis Deo gratias agit.
CAPUT PRIMUM. Adolescentiae aetatem et vitia recolit.
CAPUT II. Annum aetatis suae decimum sextum in ardore libidinoso consumptum.
CAPUT III. De peregrinatione studiorum causa, et de parentum proposito.
CAPUT IV. Furtum cum sodalibus perpetratum.
CAPUT V. Neminem peccare sine causa.
CAPUT VI. Omnia quae boni specie ad vitia invitant, in solo Deo esse vera et perfecta.
CAPUT VII. Gratias agit Deo pro remissione peccatorum, quodque a multis servatus sit.
CAPUT VIII. Amavit in furto consortium simul peccantium.
CAPUT IX. Contagiosa res sodales mali.
CAPUT PRIMUM. Amore quem venabatur capitur.
CAPUT II. Amavit spectacula tragica.
CAPUT III. In schola rhetoris ab Eversorum factis abhorrebat.
CAPUT IV. Hortensius Ciceronis excitavit illum ad ardorem philosophiae.
CAPUT V. Fastidiit sacras Litteras propter simplicitatem stili.
CAPUT VI. A Manichaeis quomodo captus.
CAPUT VII. Doctrina Manichaeorum absurda cui suffragabatur.
CAPUT VIII. Contra Manichaeos dicit quae flagitia semper detestanda, quae facinora.
CAPUT IX. Discrimen inter peccata, et inter Dei judicium et hominum.
CAPUT X. Nugae Manichaeorum de terrae fructibus.
CAPUT XI. Planctus et somnium matris de filio.
CAPUT XII. Quale responsum mater Augustini accepit a quodam episcopo de ipsius conversione.
CAPUT PRIMUM. Quamdiu et quomodo alios seduxerit.
CAPUT II. Rhetoricam docet, concubinam fovet, et aruspicem qui victoriam promittebat, contemnit.
CAPUT III. Ab astrologia, cui deditus erat, per senem medicinae et rerum peritum revocatur.
CAPUT V. Cur fletus dulcis miseris.
CAPUT VI. Quantus ex amici morte dolor.
CAPUT VII. Impatientia doloris mutat locum.
CAPUT VIII. Tempus et amicorum colloquia dolori medentur.
CAPUT IX. De humana amicitia. Beatus qui amat in Deo.
CAPUT X. Labiles creaturae, nec in eis potest anima requiescere.
CAPUT XI. Omnia creata sunt instabilia. Solus Deus stabilis.
CAPUT XII. Amor non improbatur, modo in his quae placent, amemus-Deum.
CAPUT XIII. Amor unde proveniat.
CAPUT XIV. Libri de Apto et Pulchro Hierio nuncupati. Unde hunc amaverat.
CAPUT XV. Quod corporalibus imaginibus contenebratus, non potuit capere spiritualia.
CAPUT XVI. Categorias Aristotelis et liberalium artium libros per se intellexit.
CAPUT PRIMUM. Excitat mentem ad Deum laudandum.
CAPUT II. Dei praesentiam iniquos non effugere: itaque ad eum debere converti.
CAPUT IV. Sola Dei cognitio beat.
CAPUT V. Manichaei de astris imperitia indignum eum fide in caeteris faciebat.
CAPUT VI. Faustus eloquens, sed liberalium disciplinarum expers.
CAPUT VII. Alienatur a secta Manichaeorum.
CAPUT VIII. Proficiscitur Romam contra matris voluntatem.
CAPUT IX. Febri correptus periculose laborat.
CAPUT X. Errores ante susceptam Evangelii doctrinam.
CAPUT XI. Qualiter Augustinus contulerit cum catholicis.
CAPUT XII. Fraus discipulorum Romae in praeceptores.
CAPUT XIII. Docturus rhetoricam mittitur Mediolanum ab Ambrosio suscipitur.
CAPUT XIV. Audito Ambrosio paulatim ab erroribus resipiscit.
CAPUT PRIMUM. Augustinus nec manichaeus nec catholicus.
CAPUT II. Epulae et synaxis apud sepulcra martyrum.
CAPUT III. Occupationes et studia Ambrosii.
CAPUT IV. Doctrinam Ecclesiae Ambrosio concionante intelligit.
CAPUT V. De sacrorum Librorum auctoritate et necessario usu.
CAPUT VI. De miseria ambitiosorum, adducto exemplo mendici laetantis.
CAPUT VII. Alypium a Circensium insania convertit.
CAPUT VIII. Alypius capitur insania ludorum gladiatoriorum, a quibus antea abhorruerat.
CAPUT IX. Alypius ut fur apprehenditur.
CAPUT X. De integritate Alypii et adventu Nebridii.
CAPUT XI. Anxius Augustinus de instituenda vita deliberat.
CAPUT XII. Contentio inter Alypium et Augustinum de matrimonio et caelibatu.
CAPUT XIII. Uxor quaeritur Augustino.
CAPUT XIV. De vita communi agenda cum amicis deliberat.
CAPUT XV. In locum discedentis concubinae alia succedit.
CAPUT XVI. Mortis et judicii metum nunquam deposuit.
CAPUT PRIMUM. Deum cogitat tanquam aliquid corporeum per infinita spatia diffusum.
CAPUT II. Momentum quo Nebridius confutarat Manichaeos.
CAPUT III. Liberum arbitrium causa peccati.
CAPUT IV. Deum incorruptibilem esse oportet.
CAPUT V. Quaerit iterum unde malum, et quae radix ejus.
CAPUT VI. Mathematicorum divinationes rejicit.
CAPUT VII. Misere torquetur inquirens unde sit malum.
CAPUT VIII. Quomodo divina misericordia subvenerit Augustino.
CAPUT IX. In Platonicorum libris Verbi aeterni divinitatem, non incarnati humilitatem invenit.
CAPUT X. Clarius innotescunt jam Augustino divina.
CAPUT XI. Quomodo creaturae sunt et non sunt.
CAPUT XII. Omnia bona, quaecumque sunt.
CAPUT XIII. Omnia condita laudant Deum.
CAPUT XIV. Sanae mentis homini nihil displicet inter creaturas Dei.
CAPUT XV. Quomodo veritas et falsitas in creaturis.
CAPUT XVI. Omnia bona, licet quibusdam non apta.
CAPUT XVII. Quae retardent a cognitione divinorum.
CAPUT XVIII. Solus Christus via ad salutem.
CAPUT XIX. Quid senserit de Christi incarnatione.
CAPUT XX. Ex Platonicis libris peritior, sed inflatior evaserat.
CAPUT XXI. Quid in sacris Libris invenerit, non inventum in Platonicis.
CAPUT PRIMUM. Studio vitae melius instituendae ad Simplicianum ire statuit.
CAPUT II. De Victorino rhetore ad fidem converso.
CAPUT III. Quod Deus et Angeli magis gaudent in peccatorum conversione.
CAPUT IV. Quare plus laetandum sit in conversione nobilium.
CAPUT V. Quae remorabantur eum a conversione.
CAPUT VI. Pontitianus narrat Antonii vitam.
CAPUT VII. Rodebatur intus audito Pontitiano.
CAPUT VIII. In hortum secedit, quid ibi egerit.
CAPUT IX. Unde fit ut animus imperet sibi et resistatur.
CAPUT XI. Lucta spiritus et carnis in Augustino.
CAPUT XII. Vocis admonitu quomodo totus conversus.
CAPUT PRIMUM. Laudat Dei bonitatem, agnoscens suam miseriam.
CAPUT II. Deserere rhetorices professionem differt usque ad vindemiales ferias.
CAPUT III. Verecundus concedit illi rus suum.
CAPUT V Ambrosium consulit quid legendum.
CAPUT VI. Mediolani baptizatur cum Alypio et Adeodato.
CAPUT VII. Ecclesiastici cantus institutio Mediolani. Inventio corporum SS. Protasii et Gervasii.
CAPUT VIII. Evodii conversio. Matris obitus, ejusque a teneris educatio.
CAPUT IX. Laudabiles matris suae mores prosequitur.
CAPUT X. Colloquium cum matre de regno coelorum.
CAPUT XI. De ecstasi et morte matris.
CAPUT XII. Quomodo luxerit mortem matris. Sacrificium pro defunctis.
CAPUT XIII. Orat pro matre defuncta.
CAPUT PRIMUM. In Deo solo spes et gaudium.
CAPUT II. Cum Deo nota sint arcana, quid est confiteri illi.
CAPUT III. Quo fructu confitebitur deinceps quis sit, non quis fuerit.
CAPUT IV. Quod magni sint fructus hujusmodi confessionis.
CAPUT V. Homo sese totum non novit.
CAPUT VI. Quid amat, cum Deum amat: et quomodo ex creaturis Deus cognoscitur.
CAPUT VII. Corporea aut sensitiva virtute Deus non invenitur.
CAPUT IX. Memoria disciplinarum.
CAPUT X. Disciplinae in memoriam non introducuntur per sensus, sed ex ejus abditiore sinu eruuntur.
CAPUT XII. Rerum Mathematicarum memoria.
CAPUT XIII. Memoria meminisse nos meminimus.
CAPUT XIV. Quomodo memoria continet affectus animi. Laeta non laeti quomodo recordamur.
CAPUT XV. Etiam quae absunt meminimus.
CAPUT XVI. Et oblivionis memoria est.
CAPUT XVII. Magna memoriae vis, sed ultra progrediendum ut attingatur Deus.
CAPUT XVIII. Non inveniretur ea res quae excidit, nisi memoria teneretur.
CAPUT XIX. Quid sit reminisci.
CAPUT XX. Ut beatitudinem omnes appetant, oportet eam noverint.
CAPUT XXI. Quomodo memoria beatam vitam continet.
CAPUT XXII. Beata vita quae, et ubi.
CAPUT XXIII. Item prosequitur quae sit beata vita, et ubi.
CAPUT XXIV. Gratulatur quod sua in memoria Deus locum habeat.
CAPUT XXV. In quo memoriae gradu reperiatur Deus.
CAPUT XXVI. Ubi invenitur Deus.
CAPUT XXVII. Quomodo hominem rapiat Dei pulchritudo.
CAPUT XXVIII. Miseriae hujus vitae.
CAPUT XXX. Confitetur ut se habet ad tentationes carnalis libidinis.
CAPUT XXXI. Ut se gerit ad tentationes gulae.
CAPUT XXXII. Ut se gerit ad odorum illecebras.
CAPUT XXXIII. Ut se gerit ad voluptates aurium.
CAPUT XXXIV. Ut se gerit ad oculorum illecebras.
CAPUT XXXV. Ut se habet ad secundum tentationis genus, quod est curiositatis.
CAPUT XXXVI. Ut se habet ad tertium tentationis genus, quod est superbiae.
CAPUT XXXVII. Ut movetur laudibus humanis.
CAPUT XXXVIII. Et virtuti periculum a vana gloria.
CAPUT XXXIX. Amoris proprii vis et natura.
CAPUT XL. Quod in se et caeteris rebus Deum investigavit.
CAPUT XLII. Nonnulli ad daemones tanquam redeundi ad Deum mediatores infeliciter recurrerunt.
CAPUT XLIII. Christus verus mediator.
CAPUT PRIMUM. Cur confitemur Deo scienti.
CAPUT II. Petit a Deo Scripturarum sanctarum intelligentiam.
CAPUT IV. Creatura clamat creatorem Deum.
CAPUT V. Ex nihilo conditus mundus.
CAPUT VI. Quomodo Deus dixit, ut fieret mundus.
CAPUT VII. Verbum Dei coaeternum Deo.
CAPUT VIII. Verbum Dei ipsum est principium quo docemur omnem veritatem.
CAPUT IX. Quomodo Verbum Dei loquatur cordi.
CAPUT X. Obtrectantes quid faceret Deus antequam coelum et terram conderet.
CAPUT XI. Objectioni respondet quod aeternitas Dei nescit tempora.
CAPUT XII. Quid Deus fecerit ante mundi creationem.
CAPUT XIII. Quod ante tempora a Deo creata nullum tempus fuerit.
CAPUT XIV. Temporis differentiae tres.
CAPUT XV. Mensura temporis in quo.
CAPUT XVI. Quale tempus metiri liceat, et quale non.
CAPUT XVII. Ubi tempus praeteritum et futurum.
CAPUT XVIII. Quomodo praeterita et futura tempora sint praesentia.
CAPUT XIX. Non capit modum, quo Deus docet futura.
CAPUT XX. Differentiae temporis quomodo nominandae.
CAPUT XXI. Quomodo tempus liceat metiri.
CAPUT XXII. Petit aenigmatis istius solutionem a Deo.
CAPUT XXIV. Tempus est quo metimur motum corporis.
CAPUT XXV. Rursus Deum interpellat.
CAPUT XXVI. Quomodo tempus metimur.
CAPUT XXVII. Quomodo metimur tempus permanens in animo.
CAPUT XXVIII. Animo metimur tempora.
CAPUT XXIX. Se in temporalia distentum cupit in Deum colligi.
CAPUT XXX. Coarguit rursum obtrectantes, quid fecerit Deus ante mundi creationem.
CAPUT XXXI. Quomodo cognoscit Deus, quomodo creatura.
CAPUT PRIMUM. Difficilis inquisitio veri.
CAPUT II. De duplici coelo et terra.
CAPUT III. Quid tenebrae super faciem abyssi.
CAPUT IV. Quid terra invisibilis et incomposita.
CAPUT V. Cur sic appellata videtur materia informis.
CAPUT VI. Quid olim cum Manichaeis senserit de materia informi, quid modo.
CAPUT VII. Deus fecit de nihilo coelum, id est Angelos et terram, id est informem materiam.
CAPUT VIII. Materia informis ex nihilo: ex hac omnia visibilia.
CAPUT IX. Cur absque dierum mentione scriptum est Deum fecisse in principio coelum et terram.
CAPUT XI. Quid a Deo didicerit.
CAPUT XII. Creatura duplex carens tempore.
CAPUT XIV. Scripturae profunditas.
CAPUT XVI. Rem habere non vult cum iis, qui contradicunt veritati divinae.
CAPUT XVII. Ut coeli et terrae nominibus aliud et aliud intelligi potest.
CAPUT XVIII. Quis error innoxius in Scripturis.
CAPUT XX. In principio creavit, etc., varie intellectum.
CAPUT XXI. Terra erat invisibilis, etc., varie intellectum.
CAPUT XXII. Aliquid esse a Deo conditum, de quo sileat liber Genesis, nihil repugnat.
CAPUT XXIII. Duo dissensionum genera in Scripturis interpretandis.
CAPUT XXIV. Ex multis veris non debet fidenter asseri hoc aut illud sensisse Moysen.
CAPUT XXV. Adversus eos qui aliorum interpretandi rationem temere rejiciunt.
CAPUT XXVI. Qui sermo deceat Scripturam.
CAPUT XXVII. Scripturam decet humile simplexque verborum genus.
CAPUT XXVIII. Ut varie intelligitur ab eruditis Scriptura.
CAPUT XXIX. Quot modis dicitur aliquid prius.
CAPUT XXXI. Sensisse putandus est Moyses quidquid veri potest in ipsius verbis inveniri.
CAPUT XXXII. Veri Scripturae sensus a Spiritu sancto revelantur.
CAPUT PRIMUM. Invocat Deum, cujus bonitate se praeventum agnoscit.
CAPUT II. Creaturae ex Dei bonitate subsistunt et perficiuntur.
CAPUT III. Ex Dei gratia omnia.
CAPUT IV. Deus non eget rebus conditis.
CAPUT V. Trinitas qui Deus est ex primis verbis Geneseos intelligitur.
CAPUT VI. Cur dictus est Spiritus superferri super aquas.
CAPUT VII. Effectus Spiritus sancti.
CAPUT VIII. Intellectuali creaturae ad beatam requiem non sufficit quidquid Deo minus est.
CAPUT IX. Cur solus Spiritus sanctus superferebatur super aquas.
CAPUT XI. Symbola Trinitatis in homine.
CAPUT XII. Mundi creatio formationem Ecclesiae praefigurat.
CAPUT XIII. Renovatio hominis dum hic vivit nondum perfecta.
CAPUT XIV. Fide et spe corroboramur.
CAPUT XV. Fiat firmamentum, etc., Gen. 1, 6. Quid firmamentum, quid superiores aquae.
CAPUT XVI. Solus Deus se scit omnino sicuti est.
CAPUT XVIII. Fiant luminaria, etc. Gen. 1, 14. Quae luminaria dividentia inter diem et noctem.
CAPUT XIX. Tractat eumdem versiculum, Fiant luminaria, etc.
CAPUT XX. Producant aquae, etc., Gen. 1, 20. Quae reptilia, quae volatilia.
CAPUT XXI. Producat terra animam vivam, etc., Gen. 1, 24.
CAPUT XXII. Faciamus hominem ad imaginem, etc., Gen. 1, 26. Renovatio mentis.
CAPUT XXIII. Et praesit piscibus maris, etc., Gen. 1, 26. De quibus christianus judicet.
CAPUT XXIV. Et benedixit eos Deus dicens, Crescite, etc., Gen. 81, 2.
CAPUT XXV. Ecce dedi vobis omnem herbam . . . . in escam, etc., Gen. 1, 29.
CAPUT XXVI. Voluptas et utilitas ex beneficio in proximum collato.
CAPUT XXVII. Quid per pisces et cetos significetur.
CAPUT XXVIII. Et vidit Deus omnia quae fecit, et ecce bona valde, etc., Gen. 1, 31.
CAPUT XXIX. Quomodo intelligendum quod Deus octies vidit bona esse opera sua.
CAPUT XXX. Manichaeorum deliria.
CAPUT XXXI. Piis idem probatur quod Deo placuit.
CAPUT XXXII. Compendio enarrat opera Dei.
CAPUT XXXIII. Omnia de nihilo sive de concreata materia.
CAPUT XXXIV. Totius creationis mundi allegorica expositio.
CAPUT XXXVI. Diem septimum vespera quare non sequatur.
Chapter XIII.—He Entreats God for Her Sins, and Admonishes His Readers to Remember Her Piously.
34. But,—my heart being now healed of that wound, in so far as it could be convicted of a carnal670 Rom. viii. 7. affection,—I pour out unto Thee, O our God, on behalf of that Thine handmaid, tears of a far different sort, even that which flows from a spirit broken by the thoughts of the dangers of every soul that dieth in Adam. And although she, having been “made alive” in Christ671 1 Cor. xv. 22. The universalists of every age have interpreted the word “all” here so as to make salvation by Christ Jesus extend to every child of Adam. If their interpretation were true, Monica’s spirit need not have been troubled at the thought of the danger of unregenerate souls. But Augustin in his De Civ. Dei, xiii. 23, gives the import of the word: “Not that all who die in Adam shall be members of Christ—for the great majority shall be punished in eternal death,—but he uses the word ‘all’ in both clauses because, as no one dies in an animal body except in Adam, so no one is quickened a spiritual body save in Christ.” See x. sec. 68, note 1, below. even before she was freed from the flesh had so lived as to praise Thy name both by her faith and conversation, yet dare I not say672 For to have done so would have been to go perilously near to the heresy of the Pelagians, who laid claim to the possibility of attaining perfection in this life by the power of free-will, and without the assistance of divine grace; and went even so far, he tells us (Ep. clxxvi. 2), as to say that those who had so attained need not utter the petition for forgiveness in the Lord’s Prayer,—ut ei non sit jam necessarium dicere “Dimitte nobis debita nostra.” Those in our own day who enunciate perfectionist theories,— though, it is true, not denying the grace of God as did these,—may well ponder Augustin’s forcible words in his De Pecc. Mer. et Rem. iii. 13: “Optandum est ut fiat, conandum est ut fiat, supplicandum est ut fiat; non tamen quasi factum fuerit, confitendum.” We are indeed commanded to be perfect (Matt. v. 48); and the philosophy underlying the command is embalmed in the words of the proverb, “Aim high, and you will strike high.” But he who lives nearest to God will have the humility of heart which will make him ready to confess that in His sight he is a “miserable sinner.” Some interesting remarks on this subject will be found in Augustin’s De Civ. Dei, xiv. 9, on the text, “If we say we have no sin,” etc. (1 John i. 8.) On sins after baptism, see note on next section. that from the time Thou didst regenerate her by baptism, no word went forth from her mouth against Thy precepts.673 Matt. xii. 36. And it hath been declared by Thy Son, the Truth, that “Whosoever shall say to his brother, Thou fool, shall be in danger of hell fire.”674 Matt. v. 22. And woe even unto the praiseworthy life of man, if, putting away mercy, Thou shouldest investigate it. But because Thou dost not narrowly inquire after sins, we hope with confidence to find some place of indulgence with Thee. But whosoever recounts his true merits675 There is a passage parallel to this in his Ep. to Sextus (cxciv. 19). “Merits” therefore would appear to be used simply in the sense of good actions. Compare sec. 17, above, xiii. sec. 1, below, and Ep. cv. That righteousness is not by merit, appears from Ep. cxciv.; Ep. clxxvii., to Innocent; and Serm.ccxciii. to Thee, what is it that he recounts to Thee but Thine own gifts? Oh, if men would know themselves to be men; and that “he that glorieth” would “glory in the Lord!”676 2 Cor. x. 17.
35. I then, O my Praise and my Life, Thou God of my heart, putting aside for a little her good deeds, for which I joyfully give thanks to Thee, do now beseech Thee for the sins of my mother. Hearken unto me, through that Medicine of our wounds who hung upon the tree, and who, sitting at Thy right hand, “maketh intercession for us.”677 Rom. viii. 34. I know that she acted mercifully, and from the heart678 Matt. xviii. 35. forgave her debtors their debts; do Thou also forgive her debts,679 Matt. vi. 12. Augustin here as elsewhere applies this petition in the Lord’s Prayer to the forgiveness of sins after baptism. He does so constantly. For example, in his Ep. cclxv. he says: “We do not ask for those to be forgiven which we doubt not were forgiven in baptism; but those which, though small, are frequent, and spring from the frailty of human nature.” Again, in his Con Ep. Parmen. ii. 10, after using almost the same words, he points out that it is a prayer against daily sins; and in his De Civ. Dei, xxi. 27, where he examines the passage in relation to various erroneous beliefs, he says it “was a daily prayer He [Christ] was teaching, and it was certainly to disciples already justified He was speaking. What, then, does He mean by ‘your sins’ (Matt. vi. 14), but those sins from which not even you who are justified and sanctified can be free?” See note on the previous section; and also for the feeling in the early Church as to sins after baptism, the note on i. sec. 17, above. whatever she contracted during so many years since the water of salvation. Forgive her, O Lord, forgive her, I beseech Thee; “enter not into judgment” with her.680 Ps. cxliii. 2. Let Thy mercy be exalted above Thy justice,681 Jas. ii. 13. because Thy words are true, and Thou hast promised mercy unto “the merciful;”682 Matt. v. 7. which Thou gavest them to be who wilt “have mercy” on whom Thou wilt “have mercy,” and wilt “have compassion” on whom Thou hast had compassion.683 Rom. ix. 15.
36. And I believe Thou hast already done that which I ask Thee; but “accept the free-will offerings of my mouth, O Lord.”684 Ps. cxix. 108. For she, when the day of her dissolution was near at hand, took no thought to have her body sumptuously covered, or embalmed with spices; nor did she covet a choice monument, or desire her paternal burial-place. These things she entrusted not to us, but only desired to have her name remembered at Thy altar, which she had served without the omission of a single day;685 See v. sec. 17, above. whence she knew that the holy sacrifice was dispensed, by which the handwriting that was against us is blotted out;686 Col. ii. 14. by which the enemy was triumphed over,687 See his De Trin. xiii. 18, the passage beginning, “What then is the righteousness by which the devil was conquered?” who, summing up our offences, and searching for something to bring against us, found nothing in Him688 John xiv. 30. in whom we conquer. Who will restore to Him the innocent blood? Who will repay Him the price with which He bought us, so as to take us from Him? Unto the sacrament of which our ransom did Thy handmaid bind her soul by the bond of faith. Let none separate her from Thy protection. Let not the “lion” and the “dragon”689 Ps. xci. 13. introduce himself by force or fraud. For she will not reply that she owes nothing, lest she be convicted and got the better of by the wily deceiver; but she will answer that her “sins are forgiven”690 Matt. ix. 2. by Him to whom no one is able to repay that price which He, owing nothing, laid down for us.
37. May she therefore rest in peace with her husband, before or after whom she married none; whom she obeyed, with patience bringing forth fruit691 Luke viii. 15. unto Thee, that she might gain him also for Thee. And inspire, O my Lord my God, inspire Thy servants my brethren, Thy sons my masters, who with voice and heart and writings I serve, that so many of them as shall read these confessions may at Thy altar remember Monica, Thy handmaid, together with Patricius, her sometime husband, by whose flesh Thou introducedst me into this life, in what manner I know not. May they with pious affection be mindful of my parents in this transitory light, of my brethren that are under Thee our Father in our Catholic mother, and of my fellow-citizens in the eternal Jerusalem, which the wandering of Thy people sigheth for from their departure until their return. That so my mother’s last entreaty to me may, through my confessions more than through my prayers, be more abundantly fulfilled to her through the prayers of many.692 The origin of prayers for the dead dates back probably to the close of the second century. In note 1, p. 90, we have quoted from Tertullian’s De Corona Militis, where he says “Oblationes pro defunctis pro natalitiis annua die facimus.” In his De Monogamia, he speaks of a widow praying for her departed husband, that “he might have rest, and be a partaker in the first resurrection.” From this time a catena of quotations from the Fathers might be given, if space permitted, showing how, beginning with early expressions of hope for the dead, there, in process of time, arose prayers even for the unregenerate, until at last there was developed purgatory on the one side, and creature-worship on the other. That Augustin did not entertain the idea of creature-worship will be seen from his Ep. to Maximus, xvii. 5. In his De Dulcit. Quæst. 2 (where he discusses the whole question), he concludes that prayer must not be made for all, because all have not led the same life in the flesh. Still, in his Enarr. in Ps. cviii. 17, he argues from the case of the rich man in the parable, that the departed do certainly “have a care for us.” Aërius, towards the close of the fourth century, objected to prayers for the dead, chiefly on the ground (see Usher’s Answer to a Jesuit, iii. 258) of their uselessness. In the Church of England, as will be seen by reference to Keeling’s Liturgicæ Britannicæ, pp. 210, 335, 339, and 341, prayers for the dead were eliminated from the second Prayer Book; and to the prudence of this step Palmer bears testimony in his Origines Liturgicæ, iv. 10, justifying it on the ground that the retaining of these prayers implied a belief in her holding the doctrine of purgatory. Reference may be made to Epiphanius, Adv. Hær. 75; Bishop Bull, Sermon 3; and Bingham, xv. 3, secs. 15, 16, and xxiii. 3, sec. 13.
CAPUT XIII. Orat pro matre defuncta.
34. Ego autem, jam sanato corde ab illo vulnere in quo poterat redargui carnalis affectus, fundo tibi, Deus noster, pro illa famula tua longe aliud lacrymarum genus, quod manat de concusso spiritu consideratione periculorum omnis animae quae in Adam moritur. Quanquam illa in Christo vivificata (I Cor. XV, 22), etiam nondum a carne resoluta, sic vixerit ut laudetur nomen tuum in fide moribusque ejus; non tamen audeo dicere, ex quo eam per Baptismum regenerasti, nullum verbum exisse ab ore ejus contra praeceptum tuum. Et dictum est a Veritate Filio tuo: Si quis dixerit fratri suo, Fatue, reus erit gehennae ignis (Matth. V, 22). Et vae etiam laudabili vitae hominum, si, remota misericordia, discutias eam. Quia vero non exquiris delicta vehementer, fiducialiter speramus aliquem apud te locum invenire indulgentiae . Quisquis autem tibi enumerat vera merita sua, quid tibi enumerat nisi munera tua? O si cognoscant se homines homines, et qui gloriatur, in Domino glorietur! (II Cor. X, 17.)
35. Ego itaque, laus mea et vita mea, Deus cordis mei, sepositis paulisper bonis ejus actibus, pro quibus tibi gaudens gratias ago, nunc pro peccatis matris meae deprecor te; exaudi me per Medicinam vulnerum nostrorum quae pependit in ligno, et sedens ad dexteram tuam, te interpellat pro nobis (Rom. VIII, 34). Scio misericorditer operatam, et ex corde dimisisse debita debitoribus suis; dimitte illi et tu debita sua (Matth. VI, 12), si qua etiam contraxit per tot annos post aquam salutis. Dimitte, Domine, dimitte obsecro, ne intres cum ea in judicium (Psal. CXLII, 2). Superexaltet misericordia judicium (Jacobi II, 13), quoniam eloquia tua vera sunt, et promisisti misericordiam misericordibus (Matth. V, 7): quod ut essent, tu dedisti eis, qui misereberis cui misertus eris, et misericordiam praestabis cui misericors fueris (Exod. XXXIII, 19; Rom. IX, 15).
36. Et credo jam feceris quod te rogo, sed voluntaria oris mei approba, Domine (Psal. CXVIII, 108). Namque illa imminente die resolutionis suae non cogitavit suum corpus sumptuose contegi, aut condiri aromatibus, aut monumentum electum concupivit, aut curavit sepulcrum patrium; non ista mandavit nobis: sed tantummodo memoriam sui ad altare tuum fieri desideravit, cui nullius diei praetermissione servierat; unde sciret dispensari victimam sanctam, qua deletum est chirographum quod erat contrarium nobis (Coloss. II, 14), qua triumphatus est hostis computans delicta nostra, et quaerens quid objiciat, et nihil inveniens in illo in quo vincimus. Quis ei refundet innocentem sanguinem? Quis ei restituet pretium quo nos 0779 emit ut nos auferat ei ? Ad cujus pretii nostri sacramentum ligavit ancilla tua animam suam vinculo fidei. Nemo a protectione tua disrumpat eam. Non se interponat nec vi nec insidiis leo et draco: neque enim respondebit illa nihil se debere, ne convincatur et obtineatur ab accusatore caliido; sed respondebit dimissa debita sua ab eo, cui nemo reddet quod pro nobis non debens reddidit.
37. Sit ergo in pace cum viro, ante quem nulli et post quem nulli nupta est, cui servivit fructum tibi afferens cum tolerantia (Luc. VIII, 15), ut eum quoque lucraretur tibi. Et inspira, Domine meus, Deus meus , inspira servis tuis fratribus meis, filiis tuis dominis meis, quibus et voce et corde et litteris servio, ut quotquot haec legerint, meminerint ad altare 0780 tuum Monnicae famulae tuae , cum Patricio quondam ejus conjuge, per quorum carnem introduxisti me in hanc vitam, quemadmodum nescio. Meminerint cum affectu pio parentum meorum in hac luce transitoria, et fratrum meorum sub te patre in matre Catholica, et civium meorum in aeterna Jerusalem, cui suspirat peregrinatio populi tui ab exitu usque ad reditum; ut quod a me illa poposcit extremum, uberius illi praestetur in multorum orationibus per confessiones , quam per orationes meas.