Augustine of Hippo. On Christian Doctrine

 Book I.

 Chapter 1.—The Interpretation of Scripture Depends on the Discovery and Enunciation of the Meaning, and is to Be Undertaken in Dependence on God’s Aid

 Chapter 2.—What a Thing Is, and What A Sign.

 Chapter 3.—Some Things are for Use, Some for Enjoyment.

 Chapter 4.—Difference of Use and Enjoyment.

 Chapter 5.—The Trinity the True Object of Enjoyment.

 Chapter 6.—In What Sense God is Ineffable.

 Chapter 7.—What All Men Understand by the Term God.

 Chapter 8.—God to Be Esteemed Above All Else, Because He is Unchangeable Wisdom.

 Chapter 9.—All Acknowledge the Superiority of Unchangeable Wisdom to that Which is Variable.

 Chapter 10.—To See God, the Soul Must Be Purified.

 Chapter 11.—Wisdom Becoming Incarnate, a Pattern to Us of Purification.

 Chapter 12.—In What Sense the Wisdom of God Came to Us.

 Chapter 13.—The Word Was Made Flesh.

 Chapter 14.—How the Wisdom of God Healed Man.

 Chapter 15.—Faith is Buttressed by the Resurrection and Ascension of Christ, and is Stimulated by His Coming to Judgment.

 Chapter 16.—Christ Purges His Church by Medicinal Afflictions.

 Chapter 17.—Christ, by Forgiving Our Sins, Opened the Way to Our Home.

 Chapter 18.—The Keys Given to the Church.

 Chapter 19.—Bodily and Spiritual Death and Resurrection.

 Chapter 20.—The Resurrection to Damnation.

 Chapter 21.—Neither Body Nor Soul Extinguished at Death.

 Chapter 22.—God Alone to Be Enjoyed.

 Chapter 23.—Man Needs No Injunction to Love Himself and His Own Body.

 Chapter 24.—No Man Hates His Own Flesh, Not Even Those Who Abuse It.

 Chapter 25.—A Man May Love Something More Than His Body, But Does Not Therefore Hate His Body.

 Chapter 26.—The Command to Love God and Our Neighbor Includes a Command to Love Ourselves.

 Chapter 27.—The Order of Love.

 Chapter 28.—How We are to Decide Whom to Aid.

 Chapter 29.—We are to Desire and Endeavor that All Men May Love God.

 Chapter 30.—Whether Angels are to Be Reckoned Our Neighbors.

 Chapter 31.—God Uses Rather Than Enjoys Us.

 Chapter 32.—In What Way God Uses Man.

 Chapter 33.—In What Way Man Should Be Enjoyed.

 Chapter 34.—Christ the First Way to God.

 Chapter 35.—The Fulfillment and End of Scripture is the Love of God and Our Neighbor.

 Chapter 36.—That Interpretation of Scripture Which Builds Us Up in Love is Not Perniciously Deceptive Nor Mendacious, Even Though It Be Faulty.  The I

 Chapter 37.—Dangers of Mistaken Interpretation.

 Chapter 38.—Love Never Faileth.

 Chapter 39.—He Who is Mature in Faith, Hope and Love, Needs Scripture No Longer.

 Chapter 40.—What Manner of Reader Scripture Demands.

 Book II.

 Chapter 1.—Signs, Their Nature and Variety.

 Chapter 2.—Of the Kind of Signs We are Now Concerned with.

 Chapter 3.—Among Signs, Words Hold the Chief Place.

 Chapter 4.—Origin of Writing.

 Chapter 5.—Scripture Translated into Various Languages.

 Chapter 6.—Use of the Obscurities in Scripture Which Arise from Its Figurative Language.

 Chapter 7.—Steps to Wisdom:  First, Fear Second, Piety Third, Knowledge Fourth, Resolution Fifth, Counsel Sixth, Purification of Heart Seventh,

 Chapter 8.—The Canonical Books.

 Chapter 9.—How We Should Proceed in Studying Scripture.

 Chapter 10.—Unknown or Ambiguous Signs Prevent Scripture from Being Understood.

 Chapter 11.—Knowledge of Languages, Especially of Greek and Hebrew, Necessary to Remove Ignorance or Signs.

 Chapter 12.—A Diversity of Interpretations is Useful.  Errors Arising from Ambiguous Words.

 Chapter 13.—How Faulty Interpretations Can Be Emended.

 Chapter 14.—How the Meaning of Unknown Words and Idioms is to Be Discovered.

 Chapter 15.—Among Versions a Preference is Given to the Septuagint and the Itala.

 Chapter 16.—The Knowledge Both of Language and Things is Helpful for the Understanding of Figurative Expressions.

 Chapter 17.—Origin of the Legend of the Nine Muses.

 Chapter 18.—No Help is to Be Despised, Even Though It Come from a Profane Source.

 Chapter 19.—Two Kinds Of Heathen Knowledge.

 Chapter 20.—The Superstitious Nature of Human Institutions.

 Chapter 21.—Superstition of Astrologers.

 Chapter 22 .—The Folly of Observing the Stars in Order to Predict the Events of a Life.

 Chapter 23.—Why We Repudiate Arts of Divination.

 Chapter 24.—The Intercourse and Agreement with Demons Which Superstitious Observances Maintain.

 Chapter 25.—In Human Institutions Which are Not Superstitious, There are Some Things Superfluous and Some Convenient and Necessary.

 Chapter 26.—What Human Contrivances We are to Adopt, and What We are to Avoid.

 Chapter 27.—Some Departments of Knowledge, Not of Mere Human Invention, Aid Us in Interpreting Scripture.

 Chapter 28.—To What Extent History is an Aid.

 Chapter 29.—To What Extent Natural Science is an Exegetical Aid.

 Chapter 30.—What the Mechanical Arts Contribute to Exegetics.

 Chapter 31.—Use of Dialectics.  Of Fallacies.

 Chapter 32.—Valid Logical Sequence is Not Devised But Only Observed by Man.

 Chapter 33.—False Inferences May Be Drawn from Valid Reasonings, and Vice Versa.

 Chapter 34.—It is One Thing to Know the Laws of Inference, Another to Know the Truth of Opinions.

 Chapter 35 .—The Science of Definition is Not False, Though It May Be Applied to Falsities.

 Chapter 36.—The Rules of Eloquence are True, Though Sometimes Used to Persuade Men of What is False.

 Chapter 37.—Use of Rhetoric and Dialectic.

 Chapter 38.—The Science of Numbers Not Created, But Only Discovered, by Man.

 Chapter 39.—To Which of the Above-Mentioned Studies Attention Should Be Given, and in What Spirit.

 Chapter 40.—Whatever Has Been Rightly Said by the Heathen, We Must Appropriate to Our Uses.

 Chapter 41.—What Kind of Spirit is Required for the Study of Holy Scripture.

 Chapter 42.—Sacred Scripture Compared with Profane Authors.

 Book III.

 Chapter 1 .—Summary of the Foregoing Books, and Scope of that Which Follows.

 Chapter 2.—Rule for Removing Ambiguity by Attending to Punctuation.

 Chapter 3.—How Pronunciation Serves to Remove Ambiguity.  Different Kinds of Interrogation.

 Chapter 4.—How Ambiguities May Be Solved.

 Chapter 5.—It is a Wretched Slavery Which Takes the Figurative Expressions of Scripture in a Literal Sense.

 Chapter 6.—Utility of the Bondage of the Jews.

 Chapter 7.—The Useless Bondage of the Gentiles.

 Chapter 8.—The Jews Liberated from Their Bondage in One Way, the Gentiles in Another.

 Chapter 9.—Who is in Bondage to Signs, and Who Not.

 Chapter 10.—How We are to Discern Whether a Phrase is Figurative.

 Chapter 11.—Rule for Interpreting Phrases Which Seem to Ascribe Severity to God and the Saints.

 Chapter 12.—Rule for Interpreting Those Sayings and Actions Which are Ascribed to God and the Saints, and Which Yet Seem to the Unskillful to Be Wicke

 Chapter 13.—Same Subject, Continued.

 Chapter 14.—Error of Those Who Think that There is No Absolute Right and Wrong.

 Chapter 15.—Rule for Interpreting Figurative Expressions.

 Chapter 16.—Rule for Interpreting Commands and Prohibitions.

 Chapter 17.—Some Commands are Given to All in Common, Others to Particular Classes.

 Chapter 18.—We Must Take into Consideration the Time at Which Anything Was Enjoyed or Allowed.

 Chapter 19.—Wicked Men Judge Others by Themselves.

 Chapter 20.—Consistency of Good Men in All Outward Circumstances.

 Chapter 21.—David Not Lustful, Though He Fell into Adultery.

 Chapter 22.—Rule Regarding Passages of Scripture in Which Approval is Expressed of Actions Which are Now Condemned by Good Men.

 Chapter 23.—Rule Regarding the Narrative of Sins of Great Men.

 Chapter 24.—The Character of the Expressions Used is Above All to Have Weight.

 Chapter 25.—The Same Word Does Not Always Signify the Same Thing.

 Chapter 26.—Obscure Passages are to Be Interpreted by Those Which are Clearer.

 Chapter 27.—One Passage Susceptible of Various Interpretations.

 Chapter 28.— It is Safer to Explain a Doubtful Passage by Other Passages of Scripture Than by Reason.

 Chapter 29.—The Knowledge of Tropes is Necessary.

 Chapter 30.—The Rules of Tichonius the Donatist Examined.

 Chapter 31.—The First Rule of Tichonius.

 Chapter 32.—The Second Rule of Tichonius.

 Chapter 33.—The Third Rule of Tichonius.

 Chapter 34.—The Fourth Rule of Tichonius.

 Chapter 35.—The Fifth Rule of Tichonius.

 Chapter 36.—The Sixth Rule of Tichonius.

 Chapter 37.—The Seventh Rule of Tichonius.

 Book IV.

 Chapter 1.—This Work Not Intended as a Treatise on Rhetoric.

 Chapter 2.—It is Lawful for a Christian Teacher to Use the Art of Rhetoric.

 Chapter 3.—The Proper Age and the Proper Means for Acquiring Rhetorical Skill.

 Chapter 4.—The Duty of the Christian Teacher.

 Chapter 5.—Wisdom of More Importance Than Eloquence to the Christian Teacher.

 Chapter 6.—The Sacred Writers Unite Eloquence with Wisdom.

 Chapter 7.—Examples of True Eloquence Drawn from the Epistles of Paul and the Prophecies of Amos.

 Chapter 8.—The Obscurity of the Sacred Writers, Though Compatible with Eloquence, Not to Be Imitated by Christian Teachers.

 Chapter 9.—How, and with Whom, Difficult Passages are to Be Discussed.

 Chapter 10.—The Necessity for Perspicuity of Style.

 Chapter 11.—The Christian Teacher Must Speak Clearly, But Not Inelegantly.

 Chapter 12.—The Aim of the Orator, According to Cicero, is to Teach, to Delight, and to Move.  Of These, Teaching is the Most Essential.

 Chapter 13.—The Hearer Must Be Moved as Well as Instructed.

 Chapter 14.—Beauty of Diction to Be in Keeping with the Matter.

 Chapter 15.—The Christian Teacher Should Pray Before Preaching.

 Chapter 16.—Human Directions Not to Be Despised, Though God Makes the True Teacher.

 Chapter 17.—Threefold Division of The Various Styles of Speech.

 Chapter 18.—The Christian Orator is Constantly Dealing with Great Matters.

 Chapter 19.—The Christian Teacher Must Use Different Styles on Different Occasions.

 Chapter 20.—Examples of the Various Styles Drawn from Scripture.

 Chapter 21.—Examples of the Various Styles, Drawn from the Teachers of the Church, Especially Ambrose and Cyprian.

 Chapter 22.—The Necessity of Variety in Style.

 Chapter 23.—How the Various Styles Should Be Mingled.

 Chapter 24.—The Effects Produced by the Majestic Style.

 Chapter 25.—How the Temperate Style is to Be Used.

 Chapter 26.—In Every Style the Orator Should Aim at Perspicuity, Beauty, and Persuasiveness.

 Chapter 27.—The Man Whose Life is in Harmony with His Teaching Will Teach with Greater Effect.

 Chapter 28.—Truth is More Important Than Expression.  What is Meant by Strife About Words.

 Chapter 29.—It is Permissible for a Preacher to Deliver to the People What Has Been Written by a More Eloquent Man Than Himself.

 Chapter 30.—The Preacher Should Commence His Discourse with Prayer to God.

 Chapter 31.—Apology for the Length of the Work.

Chapter 7.—Steps to Wisdom:  First, Fear; Second, Piety; Third, Knowledge; Fourth, Resolution; Fifth, Counsel; Sixth, Purification of Heart; Seventh, Stop or Termination, Wisdom.

9.  First of all, then, it is necessary that we should be led by the fear of God to seek the knowledge of His will, what He commands us to desire and what to avoid.  Now this fear will of necessity excite in us the thought of our mortality and of the death that is before us, and crucify all the motions of pride as if our flesh were nailed to the tree.  Next it is necessary to have our hearts subdued by piety, and not to run in the face of Holy Scripture, whether when understood it strikes at some of our sins, or, when not understood, we feel as if we could be wiser and give better commands ourselves.  We must rather think and believe that whatever is there written, even though it be hidden, is better and truer than anything we could devise by our own wisdom.

10.  After these two steps of fear and piety, we come to the third step, knowledge, of which I have now undertaken to treat.  For in this every earnest student of the Holy Scriptures exercises himself, to find nothing else in them but that God is to be loved for His own sake, and our neighbor for God’s sake; and that God is to be loved with all the heart, and with all the soul, and with all the mind, and one’s neighbor as one’s self—that is, in such a way that all our love for our neighbor, like all our love for ourselves, should have reference to God.56    Comp. Matt. xxii. 37–40.  And on these two commandments I touched in the previous book when I was treating about things.57    See Book 1. c. 22.  It is necessary, then, that each man should first of all find in the Scriptures that he, through being entangled in the love of this world—i.e., of temporal things—has been drawn far away from such a love for God and such a love for his neighbor as Scripture enjoins.  Then that fear which leads him to think of the judgment of God, and that piety which gives him no option but to believe in and submit to the authority of Scripture, compel him to bewail his condition.  For the knowledge of a good hope makes a man not boastful, but sorrowful.  And in this frame of mind he implores with unremitting prayers the comfort of the Divine help that he may not be overwhelmed in despair, and so he gradually comes to the fourth step,—that is, strength and resolution,58    Fortitudo.—in which he hungers and thirsts after righteousness.  For in this frame of mind he extricates himself from every form of fatal joy in transitory things, and turning away from these, fixes his affection on things eternal, to wit, the unchangeable Trinity in unity.

11.  And when, to the extent of his power, he has gazed upon this object shining from afar, and has felt that owing to the weakness of his sight he cannot endure that matchless light, then in the fifth step—that is, in the counsel of compassion59    Consilium misericordiæ.—he cleanses his soul, which is violently agitated, and disturbs him with base desires, from the filth it has contracted.  And at this stage he exercises himself diligently in the love of his neighbor; and when he has reached the point of loving his enemy, full of hopes and unbroken in strength, he mounts to the sixth step, in which he purifies the eye itself which can see God,60    Matt. v. 8. so far as God can be seen by those who as far as possible die to this world.  For men see Him just so far as they die to this world; and so far as they live to it they see Him not.  But yet, although that light may begin to appear clearer, and not only more tolerable, but even more delightful, still it is only through a glass darkly that we are said to see, because we walk by faith, not by sight, while we continue to wander as strangers in this world, even though our conversation be in heaven.61    1 Cor. xiii. 12; 2 Cor. v. 7.  And at this stage, too, a man so purges the eye of his affections as not to place his neighbor before, or even in comparison with, the truth, and therefore not himself, because not him whom he loves as himself.  Accordingly, that holy man will be so single and so pure in heart, that he will not step aside from the truth, either for the sake of pleasing men or with a view to avoid any of the annoyances which beset this life.  Such a son ascends to wisdom, which is the seventh and last step, and which he enjoys in peace and tranquillity.  For the fear of God is the beginning of wisdom.62    Ps. cxi. 10.  From that beginning, then, till we reach wisdom itself, our way is by the steps now described.

CAPUT VII. Gradus ad sapientiam: primus, timor; secundus, pietas; tertius, scientia; quartus, fortitudo; quintus, consilium; sextus, purgatio cordis; septimus gradus seu finis, sapientia.

9. Ante omnia igitur opus est Dei timore converti ad cognoscendam ejus voluntatem, quid nobis appetendum fugiendumque praecipiat. Timor autem iste cogitationem de nostra mortalitate et de futura morte necesse est incutiat, et quasi clavatis carnibus omnes superbiae motus ligno crucis affigat. Deinde mitescere opus est pietate, neque contradicere divinae Scripturae sive intellectae, si aliqua vitia nostra percutit; sive non intellectae, quasi nos melius sapere meliusque praecipere possimus: sed cogitare potius et credere id esse melius et verius quod ibi scriptum est, etiam si lateat, quam id quod nos per nosmetipsos sapere possumus.

10. Post istos duos gradus timoris atque pietatis ad tertium venitur scientiae gradum, de quo nunc agere institui. Nam in eo se exercet omnis divinarum Scripturarum studiosus, nihil in eis aliud inventurus quam diligendum esse Deum propter Deum, et proximum propter Deum: et illum quidem ex toto corde, ex tota anima, ex tota mente diligere; proximum vero tanquam seipsum (Matth. XXII, 37 et 39), id est, ut tota proximi, sicut etiam nostri, dilectio referatur in Deum. De quibus duobus praeceptis, cum de rebus ageremus, libro superiore tractavimus. Necesse est ergo, ut primo se quisque in Scripturis inveniat amore hujus saeculi, hoc est, temporalium rerum, implicatum, longe sejunctum esse a tanto amore Dei et tanto amore proximi, quantum Scriptura ipsa praescribit. Tum vero ille timor quo cogitat de judicio Dei, et illa pietas qua non potest nisi credere et cedere auctoritati sanctorum Librorum, cogit eum seipsum lugere. Nam ista scientia bonae spei hominem non se jactantem, sed lamentantem facit: quo affectu impetrat sedulis precibus consolationem divini adjutorii, ne desperatione frangatur, et esse incipit in quarto gradu, hoc est fortitudinis, quo esuritur et sititur justitia. Hoc enim affectu ab omni 0040 mortifera jucunditate rerum transeuntium sese extrahit, et inde se avertens convertit ad dilectionem aeternorum, incommutabilem scilicet unitatem eamdemque Trinitatem.

11. Quam ubi aspexerit, quantum potest, in longinqua radiantem, suique aspectus infirmitate sustinere se illam lucem non posse persenserit; in quinto gradu, hoc est in consilio misericordiae, purgat animam tumultuantem quodammodo atque obstrepentem sibi de appetitu inferiorum conceptis sordibus. Hic vero se in dilectione proximi guaviter exercet, in eaque perficitur; et spe jam plenus atque integer viribus, cum pervenerit usque ad inimici dilectionem, ascendit in sextum gradum, ubi jam ipsum oculum purgat, quo videri Deus potest, quantum potest ab iis qui huic saeculo moriuntur quantum possunt. Nam in tantum vident, in quantum moriuntur huic saeculo; in quantum autem huic vivunt, non vident. Et ideo quamvis jam certior, et non solum tolerabilior, sed etiam jucundior species lucis illius incipiat apparere; in aenigmate adhuc tamen et per speculum videri dicitur (I Cor. XIII, 12,), quia magis per fidem quam per speciem ambulatur, cum in hac vita peregrinamur (II Cor. V, 6, 7), quamvis conversationem habeamus in coelis (Philipp. III, 20.) In hoc autem gradu ita purgat oculum cordis, ut veritati ne ipsum quidem praeferat aut conferat proximum; ergo nec seipsum, quia nec illum quem diligit sicut seipsum. Erit ergo iste sanctus tam simplici corde atque mundato, ut neque hominibus placendi studio detorqueatur a vero, nec respectu devitandorum quorumlibet incommodorum suorum, quae adversantur huic vitae. Talis filius ascendit ad sapientiam, quae ultima et septima est, qua pacatus tranquillusque perfruitur. Initium enim sapientiae timor Domini (Psal. CX, 10, et Eccli. I, 16). Ab illo enim usque ad ipsam per hos gradus tenditur, et venitur.