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G429
From a letter to Proba by Saint Augustine, bishop
The Spirit pleads for us
The person who asks for and seeks this
one thing from the Lord makes his petition confidently and serenely. He
has no fear that, when he receives it, it may harm him, for if this is
absent, anything else he duly receives brings no benefit at all. This is
the one, true and only life of happiness, that, immortal and
incorruptible in body and spirit, we should contemplate the Lord's
graciousness for ever. It is for the sake of this one thing that
everything else is sought and without impropriety requested. The person
who has' this will have all that he wants; in heaven he will be unable
to want, because he will be unable to possess anything that is
unfitting.
In heaven is the fountain of life, that
we should now thirst for in prayer as long as we live in hope and do not
yet see the object of our hope, under the protection of his wings in
whose presence is all our desire, so that we may drink our fill from the
plenty of his house and be given drink from the running stream of his
delights, for with him is the fountain of life, and in his light we
shall see light, when our desire will be satisfied with good things, and
there will be nothing to ask for with sighs but only what we possess
with joy.
Yet, since this is that peace that
surpasses all understanding, even when we ask for it in prayer we
do not know how to pray for what is right. Certainly we do not know
something if we cannot think of it as it really is; whatever comes to
mind we reject, repudiate, find fault with; we know that this is not
what we are seeking, even if we do not yet know what kind of thing it
really is.
There is then within us a kind of
instructed ignorance, instructed, that is, by the Spirit of God who
helps our weakness. When the Apostle said: If we hope for something we
do not see, we look forward to it with patience, he added, In the same
way the Spirit helps our weakness; we do not know what it is right to
pray for, but the Spirit himself pleads with sighs too deep for words.
He who searches hearts knows what the Spirit means, for he pleads for
the saints according to God's will.
We must not understand by this that the
Holy Spirit of God pleads for the saints as if he were someone different
from what God is: in the Trinity the Spirit is the unchangeable God and
one God with the Father and the Son. Scripture says: He pleads for the
saints because he moves the saints to plead, just as it says: The Lord
your God tests you, to know if you love him, in this sense, that he does
it to enable you to know. So the Spirit moves the saints to plead with
sighs too deep for words by inspiring in them a desire for the great and
as yet unknown reality that we look forward to with patience. How can
words express what we desire when it remains unknown? If we were
entirely ignorant of it we would not desire it; again, we would not
desire it or seek it with sighs, if we were able to see it.

G425
From a letter to Proba by Saint Augustine, bishop
We do not know what it is right to
pray for
You may still want to ask why the Apostle
said: We do not know what it is right to pray for, because, surely, we
cannot believe that either he or those to whom he wrote did not know the
Lord's Prayer.
He showed that he himself shared this
uncertainty, Did he know what it was right to pray for when he was given
a thorn in the flesh, an angel of Satan to bruise him, so that he might
not be puffed up by the greatness of what was revealed to him? Three
times he asked the Lord to take it away from him, which showed that he
did not know what he should ask for in prayer. At last, he heard the
Lord's answer, explaining why the prayer of so great a man was not
granted, and why it was not expedient for it to be granted: My grace is
sufficient for you, for power shines forth more perfectly in weakness.
In the kind of affliction, then, which
can bring either good or ill, we do not know what it is right to pray
for; yet, because it is difficult, troublesome and against the grain for
us, weak as we are, we do what every human would do, we pray that it may
be taken away from us. We owe, however, at least this much in our duty
to God: if he does not take it away, we must not imagine that we are
being forgotten by him but, because of our loving endurance of evil,
must await greater blessings in its place. In this way, power shines
forth more perfectly in weakness. These words are written to prevent us
from having too great an opinion of ourselves if our prayer is granted,
when we are impatient in asking for something that it would be better
not to receive; and to prevent us from being dejected, and distrustful
of God's mercy toward us, if our prayer is not granted, when we ask for
something that would bring us greater affliction, or completely ruin us
through the corrupting influence of prosperity. In these cases we do not
know what it is right to ask for in prayer.
Therefore, if something happens that we
did not pray for, we must have no doubt at all that what God wants is
more expedient than what we wanted ourselves. Our great Mediator gave us
an example of this. After he had said: Father, if it is possible, let
this cup be taken away from me, he immediately added, Yet not what I
will, but what you will, Father, so transforming the human will that was
his through his taking a human nature. As a consequence, and rightly so,
through the obedience of one man the many are made righteous.

G421
From a letter to Proba by Saint Augustine, bishop
You will find everything in the
Lord's Prayer
We read, for example: May you receive
glory among all the nations as you have among us, and May your prophets
prove themselves faithful. What does this mean but Hallowed be your
name?
We read: Lord of power and might, touch
our hearts and show us your face, and we shall be saved. What does this
mean but Your kingdom come?
We read: Direct my ways by your word, and
let no sin rule over me. What does this mean but Your will be done on
earth as it is in heaven?
We read: Do not give me poverty or
riches. What does this mean but Give us this day our daily bread?
We read: Lord, remember David and all his
patient suffering, and Lord, if I have done this, if there is guilt on
my hands, if I have repaid evil for evil....What does this mean but
Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us?
We read: Rescue me, God, from my enemies,
deliver me from those who rise up against me What does this mean but
Deliver us from evil?
If you study every word of the petitions
of Scripture, you will find, I think, nothing that is not contained and
included in the Lord's Prayer. when we pray, then, we may use different
words to say the same things, but we may not say different things.
We should not hesitate to make these
prayers for ourselves, for our friends, for strangers, and even for
enemies, though the emotions in our heart may vary with the strength or
weakness of our relationships with individuals.
You now know, I think, the attitudes you
should bring to prayer, as well as the petitions you should make, and
this not because of what I have taught you but thanks to the teaching of
the one who has been pleased to teach us all.
We must search out the life of happiness,
we must ask for it from the Lord our God. Many have discussed at great
length the meaning of happiness, but surely we do not need to go to them
and their long drawn out discussions. Holy Scripture says concisely and
with truth: Happy is the people whose God is the Lord. We are meant to
belong to that people, and to be able to see God and live with him for
ever, and so the object of this command is love from a pure heart, from
a good conscience and a sincere faith.
In these three qualities, "a good
conscience" stands for "hope." Faith, hope and love bring
safely to God the person who prays, that is, the person who believes,
who hopes, who desires, and who ponders what he is asking of the Lord in
the Lord's Prayer.

B1510
From a sermon by Saint Augustine, bishop
All men are called to holiness
If anyone wishes to come after me, let
him deny himself, take up his cross and follow me. The Lord's command
seems difficult and painful: that anyone who wishes to follow him must
deny himself. But his command is not really difficult or painful, since
he himself helps us to do what he commands. For the verse of the psalm
addressed to him was truly spoken: Because of the words of your lips I
have abided by hard ways. True also are his own words: My yoke is mild
and my burden is light. For love makes easy whatever is difficult in his
commands.
What does it mean, let him take up his
own cross? It means he must endure many things that are painful; that is
the way he must follow me. When he begins to follow me in my life and my
teachings, many will contradict him, try to stop him, or dissuade him,
even those who call themselves Christ's disciples. It was they who
walked with Christ that tried to stop the blind men from calling out to
him. So if you wish to follow Christ, you will take these threats or
flattery or any kind of obstacle and fashion them into the cross; you
must endure it, carry it, and not give way under it. And so in this
world that is the Church, a world of the good, the reconciled, and the
saved---or rather, those destined for salvation, but already
saved by hope, as it is written, by hope we are saved---in this
world of the Church, which completely follows Christ, he has said to
everyone: If anyone wishes to follow me, let him deny himself.
This is not a command for virgins to obey
and brides to ignore, for widows and not for married women, for monks
and not for married men, or for the clergy and not for the laity. No,
the whole Church, the entire body, all the members in their distinct and
varied functions, must follow Christ. She who is totally unique, the
dove, the spouse who was redeemed and dowered by the blood of her
bridegroom, is to follow him. There is a place in the Church for the
chastity of the virgin, for the continence of the widow, and for the
modesty of the married. Indeed, all her members have their place, and
this is where they are to follow Christ, in their function and in their
way of life. They must deny themselves, that is, they must not presume
on their own strength. They must take up their cross by enduring in the
world for Christ's sake whatever pain the world brings.
Let them love him who alone can neither
deceive nor be deceived, who alone will not fail them. Let them love him
because his promises are true. Faith sometimes falters because he does
not reward us immediately. But hold out, be steadfast, endure, bear the
delay, and you have carried the cross.

T450
From a sermon by Saint Augustine, bishop
A sacrifice to God is a contrite
spirit
I acknowledge my transgression, says
David. If I admit my fault, then you will pardon it. Let us never assume
that if we live good lives we will be without sin; our lives should be
praised only when we continue to beg for pardon. But men are hopeless
creatures, and the less they concentrate on their own sins, the more
interested they become in the sins of others. They seek to criticize not
to correct. Unable to excuse themselves, they are ready to accuse
others. This was not the way that David showed us how to pray and make
amends to God, when he said: I acknowledge my transgression, and my sin
is ever before me. He did not concentrate on others' sins; he turned his
thoughts upon himself. He did not merely stroke the surface, but he
plunged inside and went deep down within himself. He did not spare
himself, and therefore was not impudent in asking to be spared.
Do you want God to be appeased? Learn
what you are to do that God may be pleased with you. Consider the psalm
again: If you wanted sacrifice, I would indeed have given it; in burnt
offerings you will take no delight. Are you then to be without
sacrifice? Are you to offer nothing? Will you please God without an
offering? Consider what you read in the same psalm: If you wanted
sacrifice, I would indeed have given it; in burnt offerings you will
take no delight. But continue to listen, and say with him: A sacrifice
to God is a contrite spirit; God does not despise a contrite and humble
heart. Cast aside your former offerings, for now you have found out what
you are to offer. In the days of your fathers you would have made
offerings of cattle---these were the sacrifices. If you wanted
sacrifice, I would indeed have given it. These then, Lord, you do not
want, and yet you do want sacrifice.
You will take no delight in burnt
offerings, David says. If you will not take delight in burnt offerings,
will you remain without sacrifice? Not at all. A sacrifice to God is a
contrite spirit; God does not despise a contrite and humble heart.
You now have the offering you are to
make. No need to examine the herd, no need to outfit ships and travel to
the most remote provinces in search of incense. Search within your heart
for what is pleasing to God. Your heart must be crushed. Are you afraid
that it might perish so? You have the reply: Create a clean heart in me,
O God. For a clean heart to be created, the unclean one must be crushed.
We should be displeased with ourselves
when we commit sin, for sin is displeasing t God. Sinful though we are,
let us at least be like God in this, that we are displeased at what
displeases him. In some measure then you will be in harmony with God's
will, because you find displeasing in yourself what is abhorrent to your
Creator.

T426
From a sermon by Saint Augustine, bishop
If I wanted to please men, I would
not be a servant of Christ
This is our glory: the witness of our
conscience. There are men who rashly judge, who slander, whisper and
murmur, who are eager to suspect what they do not see, and eager to
spread abroad things they have not even a suspicion of. Against men of
this sort, what defense is there save the witness of our own conscience?
My brothers, we do not seek, nor should
we seek, our own glory even among those whose approval we desire. What
we should seek is their salvation, so that if we walk as we should they
will not go astray in following us. They should imitate us if we are
imitators of Christ; and if we are not, they should still imitate him.
He cares for his flock, and he alone is to be found with those who care
for their flocks, because they are all in him.
And so we seek no advantage for ourselves
when we aim to please men. We want to take our joy in men---and
we rejoice when they take pleasure in what is good, not because this
exalts us, but because it benefits them.
It is clear who is intended by the
apostle Paul: If I wanted to please men, I would not be a servant of
Christ. And similarly when he says: Be pleasing to all men in all
things. Yet his words are as clear as water, limpid, undisturbed,
unclouded. And so you should, as sheep, feed on and drink of his
message; do not trample or confuse it.
You have listened to our Lord Jesus
Christ as he taught his apostles: Let your actions shine before men so
that they may see your good deeds, and give glory to your Father who is
in heaven, for it is the Father who made you thus. We are the people of
his pasture, the sheep of his hands. If then you are good, praise is due
to him who made you so; it is no credit to you, for if you were left to
yourself, you could only be wicked. Why then do you try to pervert the
truth, in wishing to be praised when you do good, and blaming God when
you do evil? For though he said: Let your works shine before men, in the
same Sermon on the Mount he also said: Do not parade your good deeds
before men. So if you think there are contradictions in Saint Paul, you
will find the same in the Gospels; but if you refrain from troubling the
waters of your heart, you will recognize here the peace of the
Scriptures and with it you will have peace.
And so, my brothers, our concern should
be not only to live as we should, but also to do so in the sight of men;
not only to have a good conscience but also, so far as we can in our
weakness, so far as we can govern our frailty, we should do nothing
which might lead our weak brother into thinking evil of us. Otherwise,
as we feed on the good pasture and drink the pure water, we may trample
on God's meadow, and weaker sheep will have to feed on trampled grass
and drink from troubled waters.

G608
From a sermon by Saint Augustine, bishop
Let us sing alleluia to the good
God who delivers us from evil
Let us sing alleluia here on earth, while
we still live in anxiety, so that we may sing it one day in heaven in
full security. Why do we now live in anxiety? Can you expect me not to
feel anxious when I read: Is not man's life on earth a time of trial?
Can you expect me not to feel anxious when the words still ring in my
ears: Watch and pray that you will not be put to the test? Can you
expect me not to feel anxious when there are so many temptations here
below that prayer itself reminds us of them, when we say: Forgive us our
trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us? Every day we
make our petitions, every day we sin. Do you want me to feel secure when
I am daily asking pardon for my sins, and requesting help in time of
trial? Because of my past sins I pray: Forgive us our trespasses, as we
forgive those who trespass against us, and then, because of the perils
still before me, I immediately go on to add: Lead us not into
temptation. How can all be well with people who are crying out with me:
Deliver us from evil? And yet, brothers, while we are still in the midst
of this evil, let us sing alleluia to the good God who delivers us from
evil.
Even here amidst trials and temptations
let us, let all men, sing alleluia. God is faithful, says holy
Scripture, and he will not allow you to be tried beyond your strength.
So let us sing alleluia, even here on earth. Man is still a debtor, but
God is faithful. Scripture does not say that he will not allow you to be
tried, but that he will not allow you to be tried beyond your strength.
Whatever the trial, he will see you through it safely, and so enable you
to endure. You have entered upon a time of trial but you will come to no
harm---God's help will bring you through it safely. You are like
a piece of pottery, shaped by instruction, fired by tribulation. When
you are put into the oven therefore, keep your thoughts on the time when
you will be taken out again; for God is faithful, and he will guard both
your going in and your coming out.
But in the next life, when this body of
ours has become immortal and incorruptible, then all trials will be
over. Your body is indeed dead, and why? Because of sin. Nevertheless,
your spirit lives, because you have been justified. Are we to leave our
dead bodies behind then? By no means. Listen to the words of holy
scripture: If the Spirit of him who raised Christ from the dead dwells
within you, then he who raised Christ from the dead will also give life
to your own mortal bodies. At present your body receives its life from
the soul, but then it will receive it from the Spirit.
O the happiness of the heavenly alleluia,
sung in security, in fear of no adversity! We shall have no enemies in
heaven, we shall never lose a friend. God's praises are sung both there
and here, but here they are sung in anxiety, there, in security; here
they are sung by those destined to die, there, by those destined to live
for ever; here they are sung in hope, there, in hope's fulfillment; here
they are sung by wayfarers, there, by those living in their own country.
So, then, my brothers, let us sing now,
not in order to enjoy a life of leisure, but in order to lighten our
labors. You should sing as wayfarers do---sing, but continue your
journey. Do not be lazy, but sing to make your journey more enjoyable.
Sing, but keep going. What do I mean by keep going? Keep on making
progress. This progress, however, must be in virtue; for there are some,
the Apostle warns, whose only progress is in vice. If you make progress,
you will be continuing your journey, but be sure that your progress is
in virtue, true faith and right living. Sing then, but keep going.

R712
From a sermon by Saint Augustine, Bishop
Let us sing to the Lord a song of
love
Sing to the Lord a new song; his praise
is in the assembly of the saints. We are urged to sing a new song to the
Lord, as new men who have learned a new song. A song is a thing of joy;
more profoundly, it is a thing of love. Anyone, therefore, who has
learned to love the new life has learned to sing a new song, and the new
song reminds us of our new life. The new man, the new song, the new
covenant, all belong to the one kingdom of God, and so the new man will
sing a new song and will belong to the new covenant.
There is not one who does not love
something, but the question is, what to love. The psalms do not tell us
not to love, but to choose the object of our love. But how can we choose
unless we are first chosen? We cannot love unless someone has loved us
first. Listen to the apostle John: We love him, because he first loved
us. The source of man's love for God can only be found in the fact that
God loved him first. He has given us himself as the object of our love,
and he has also given us its source. What this source is you may learn
more clearly from the apostle Paul who tells us: The love of God has
been poured into our hearts. This love is not something we generate
ourselves; it comes to us through the Holy Spirit who has been given to
us.
Since we have such an assurance, then,
let us love God with the love he has given us. As John tells us more
fully: God is love, and whoever dwells in love dwells in God, and
God in him. It is not enough to say: Love is from God. Which of us would
dare to pronounce the words of Scripture: God is love? He alone could
say it who knew what it was to have God dwelling within him. God offers
us a short route to the possession of himself. He cries out: Love me and
you will have me for you would be unable to love me if you did not
possess me already.
My dear brothers and sons, fruit of the
true faith and holy seed of heaven, all you who have been born again in
Christ and whose life is from above, listen to me; or rather, listen to
the Holy Spirit saying through me: Sing to the Lord a new song. Look,
you tell me, I am singing. Yes indeed, you are singing; you are singing
clearly, I can hear you. But make sure that your life does not
contradict your words. Sing with your voices, your hearts, your lips and
your lives: Sing to the Lord a new song.
Now it is your unquestioned desire to
sing of him whom you love, but you ask me how to sing his praises. You
have heard the words: Sing to the Lord a new song, and you wish to know
what praises to sing. The answer is: His praise is in the assembly of
the saints; it is in the singers themselves. If you desire to praise
him, then live what you express. Live good lives, and you yourselves
will be his praise.

R1839
From a sermon by Saint Augustine, bishop
Rejoice in the Lord always
The Apostle tells us to rejoice, but in
the Lord, not in the world. Whoever wishes to be a friend of this world,
says Scripture, will be reckoned an enemy of God. As a man cannot serve
two masters, so one cannot rejoice both in the world and in the Lord.
Let joy in the Lord prevail, then, until
joy in the world is no more. Let joy in the Lord go on increasing; let
joy in the world go on decreasing until it is no more. This is said, not
because we are not to rejoice while we are in this world, but in order
that, even while we are still in this world, we may already rejoice in
the Lord.
You may object. I am in the world; if I
rejoice I certainly rejoice where I am. What is this? Do you mean that
because you are in the world you are not in the Lord? Listen again to
the Apostle, speaking now to the Athenians: in the Acts of the Apostles
he says this of God and the Lord our creator: In him we live and move
and have our being. If he is everywhere, where is he not? Surely this
was what he was exhorting us to realize. The Lord is near, do not be
anxious about anything.
This is a great truth, that he ascended
above all the heavens, yet is near to those on earth. Who is this
stranger and neighbor if not the one who became our neighbor out of
compassion?
The man lying on the road, left half-dead
by robbers, the man treated with contempt by the priest and the levite
who passed by, the man approached by the passing Samaritan to take care
of him and help him, that man is the whole human race. When the immortal
one, the holy one, was far removed from us because we were mortal and
sinners, he came down to us, so that he, the stranger, might become our
neighbor.
He did not treat us as our sins deserved.
For we are now sons of God. How do we show this? The only Son of God
died for us, so that he might not remain alone. He who died as the only
Son did not want to remain as the only Son. For the only Son of God made
many sons of God. He bought brothers for himself by his blood; he made
them welcome by being rejected; he ransomed them by being sold; he
honored them by being dishonored; he gave them life by being put to
death.
So, brethren, rejoice in the Lord, not in
the world. That is, rejoice in the truth, not in wickedness; rejoice in
the hope of eternity, not in the fading flower of vanity. That is the
way to rejoice. wherever you are on earth, however long you remain on
earth, the Lord is near, do not be anxious about anything.

T1360
From a sermon by Saint Augustine, bishop
Suffer for my sheep
The Son of Man has come not to be served,
but to serve, and to give his own life as a ransom for many. Consider
how the Lord served, and see what kind of servants he bids us to be. He
gave his own life as a ransom for many; he ransomed us.
But who of us is fit to ransom anyone? By
his blood, by his death we were ransomed from death, and we who lay
prostrate were raised up by his humiliation. And yet we, too, have a
duty to contribute our meager offerings to his members, for we have
become his members. He is the head; we are the body.
In his letter, the apostle John holds up
the Lord as our model. Jesus said: Whoever wishes to be the greater
among you will be your servant, just as the Son of Man has come not to
be served but to serve and to give his own life as ransom for many. So
in his exhortation to us to act likewise, John says: Christ laid down
his life for us; so we, too, ought to lay down our lives for our
brothers.
After his resurrection our Lord asked:
Peter, do you love me? And Peter replied: I do love you. The question
and the answer were repeated three times. And each time the Lord added:
Feed my sheep. In other words, if you want to show that you love me,
then feed my sheep. What will you give me if you love me, since you look
for everything to come from me? Now you know what you are to do if you
love me: Feed my sheep. Thus we have the same question and answer once,
twice, three times. Do you love me? I do love you. Feed my sheep. Three
times Peter had denied in fear; three times he confessed out of love. By
his replies and his profession of love, Peter condemned and wiped out
his former fear. And so the Lord, after entrusting his sheep to him for
the third time, immediately added: When you were a young man, you would
gird yourself and go wherever you wished. But when you are old, another
will gird you and take you where you do not wish to go. This he spoke
signifying by what death he was about to glorify God. Thus he foretold
Peter's own offerings and crucifixion. By this the Lord suggested that
feed my sheep meant suffer for my sheep.

B1306
From a sermon by Saint Augustine, bishop
The building and dedication of
God's house within us
We are gathered together to celebrate the
dedication of a house of prayer. This is our house of prayer, but we too
are a house of God. If we are a house of God, its construction goes on
in time so that it may be dedicated at the end of time. The house, in
its construction, involves hard work, while its dedication is an
occasion for rejoicing.
What was done when this church was being
built is similar to what is done when believers are built up into
Christ. When they first come to believe they are like timber and stone
taken from woods and mountains. In their instruction, baptism and
formation they are , so to speak, shaped, leveled and smoothed by the
hands of carpenters and craftsmen.
But Christians do not make a house of God
until they are one in charity. The timber and stone must fit together in
an orderly plan, must be joined in perfect harmony, must give each other
the support as it were of love, or no one would enter the building. When
you see the stones and beams of a building holding together securely,
you enter the building with an easy mind; you are not afraid of its
falling down in ruins.
Christ the Lord wants to come in to us
and dwell in us. Like a good builder he says: A new commandment I give
you: love one another. He says: I give you a commandment. He means:
Before, you were not engaged in building a house for me, but you lay in
ruins. Therefore, to be raised up from your former state of ruin you
must love one another.
Dear brethren, remember that this house
is still in process of being built in the whole world: this is the
promise of prophecy. When God's house was being built after the Exile,
it was prophesied, in the words of a psalm: Sing a new song to the Lord;
sing to the Lord, all the earth. For a new song our Lord speaks of a new
commandment. A new song implies a new inspiration of love. To sing is a
sign of love. The singer of this new song is full of the warmth of God's
love.
The work we see complete in this building
is physical; it should find its spiritual counterpart in your hearts. We
see here the finished product of stone and wood; so too your lives
should reveal the handiwork of God's grace.
Let us then offer our thanksgiving above
all to the Lord our God, from whom every best and perfect gift comes.
Let us praise his goodness with our whole hearts. He it was who inspired
in his faithful people the will to build this house of prayer; he
stirred up their desire and gave them his help. He awakened enthusiasm
among those who were at first unconvinced, and guided to a successful
conclusion the efforts of men of good will. So God, who gives to those
of good will both the desire and the accomplishment of the things that
belong to him, is the one who began this work, the one who has brought
it to completion.

R275
From a treatise on John by Saint Augustine, bishop
Christ is the way to the light the
truth and the life
The Lord tells us: I am the light of the
world; he who follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the
light of life. In these few words he gives a command and makes a
promise. Let us do what he commands so that we may not blush to covet
what he promises and to hear him say on the day of judgment: "I
laid down certain conditions for obtaining my promises. Have you
fulfilled them?" If you say: "what did you command, Lord our
God?" he will tell you: "I commanded you to follow me. You
asked for advice on how to enter into life. what life, if not the life
about which it is written: With you is the fountain of life?"
Let us do now what he commands. Let us
follow in the footsteps of the Lord. Let us throw off the chains that
prevent us from following him. Who can throw off these shackles without
the aid of the one addressed in these words: You have broken my chains?
Another psalm says of him: The Lord frees those in chains, the Lord
raises up the downcast.
Those who have been freed and raised up
follow the light. The light they follow speaks to them: I am the light
of the world; he who follows me will not walk in darkness. The Lord
gives light to the blind. Brethren, that light shines on us now, for we
have had our eyes anointed with the eye-salve of faith. His saliva was
mixed with earth to anoint the man born blind. We are of Adam's stock,
blind from our birth; we need him to give us light. He mixed saliva with
earth, and so it was prophesied: Truth has sprung up from the earth. He
himself has said: I am the way, the truth and the life.
We shall be in possession of the truth
when we see face to face. This is his promise to us. Who would dare to
hope for something that God in his goodness did not choose to promise or
bestow?
We shall see face to face. The Apostle
says: Now I know in part, now obscurely through a mirror, but then face
to face. John the apostle says in one of his letters: Dearly beloved, we
are now children of God, and it has not yet been revealed what we shall
be. We know that when he is revealed we shall be like him, for we shall
see him as he is. This is a great promise.
If you love me, follow me. "I do
love you," you protest, "but how do I follow you?" If the
Lord your God said to you: "I am the truth and the life," in
your desire for truth, in your love for life, you would certainly ask
him to show you the way to reach them. You would say to yourself:
"Truth is a great reality, life is a great reality; if only it were
possible for my soul to find them!"

B511
From a treatise on John by Saint Augustine, bishop
The double commandment of love
The Lord, the teacher of love, full of
love, came in person with summary judgment on the world, as had been
foretold of him, and showed that the law and the prophets are summed up
in two commandments of love.
Call to mind, brethren, what these two
commandments are. They ought to be very familiar to you; they should not
only spring to mind when I mention them, but ought never to be absent
from your hearts. Keep always in mind that we must love God and our
neighbor: Love God with your whole heart, your whole soul, and your
whole mind, and your neighbor as yourself.
These two commandments must be always in
your thoughts and in your hearts, treasured, acted on, fulfilled. Love
of God is the first to be commanded, but love of neighbor is the first
to be put into practice. In giving two commandments of love Christ would
not commend to you first your neighbor and then God but first God and
then your neighbor.
Since you do not yet see God, you merit
the vision of God by loving your neighbor. By loving your neighbor you
prepare your eye to see God: Saint John says clearly: If you do not love
your brother whom you see, how will you love God whom you do not see!
Consider what is said to you: Love God.
If you say to me: Show me whom I am to love, what shall I say if not
what Saint John says: No one has ever seen God! But in case you should
think that you are completely cut off from the sight of God, he says:
God is love, and he who remains in love remains in God. Love your
neighbor, then, and see within yourself the power by which you love your
neighbor; there you will see God, as far as you are able.
Begin, then, to love your neighbor. Break
your bread to feed the hungry, and bring into your home the homeless
poor; if you see someone naked, clothe him, and do not look down on your
own flesh and blood.
What will you gain by doing this? Your
light will then burst forth like the dawn. Your light is your God; he is
your dawn, for he will come to you when the night of time is over. He
does not rise or set but remains for ever.
In loving your neighbor and caring for
him you are on a journey. Where are you traveling if not to the Lord
God, to him whom we should love with our whole heart, our whole soul,
our whole mind? we have not yet reached his presence, but we have our
neighbor at our side. Support, then, this companion of your pilgrimage
if you want to come into the presence of the one with whom you desire to
remain for ever.

R788
From a treatise on John by Saint Augustine, Bishop
The New Commandment
A new commandment I give you, that you
love one another. This commandment that he is giving them is a new one,
the Lord Jesus tells his disciples. Yet was it not contained in the Old
Law, where it is written: You shall love your neighbor as yourself ? Why
does the Lord call it new when it is clearly so old? Or is the
commandment new because it divests us of our former selves and clothes
us with the new man? Love does indeed renew the man who hears, or rather
obeys its command; but only that love which Jesus distinguished from a
natural love by the qualification: As I have loved you.
This is the kind of love that renews us.
When we love as he loved us we become new men, heirs of the new covenant
and singers of the new song. My brothers, this was the love that even in
bygone days renewed the holy men, the patriarchs and prophets of old. In
later times it renewed the blessed apostles, and now it is the turn of
the Gentiles. From the entire human race throughout the world this love
gathers together into one body a new people, to be the bride of God's
only Son. She is the bride of whom it is asked in the Song of Songs: Who
is this who comes clothed in white? White indeed are her garments, for
she has been made new; and the source of her renewal is none other than
this new commandment.
And so all her members make each other's
welfare their common care. When one member suffers, all the members
suffer with him, and if one member is glorified all the rest rejoice.
They hear and obey the Lord's words: A new commandment I give you, that
you love one another; not as men love one another for their own selfish
ends, nor merely on account of their common humanity, but because they
are all gods and sons of the Most High. They love one another as God
loves them so that they may be brothers of his only Son. He will lead
them to the goal that alone will satisfy them, where all their desires
will be fulfilled. For when God is all in all, there will be nothing
left to desire.
This love is the gift of the Lord who
said: As I have loved you, you also mast love one another. His object in
loving us, then, was to enable us to love each other. By loving us
himself, our mighty head has linked us all together as members of his
own body, bound to one another by the tender bond of love.

R449
From a treatise on John by Saint Augustine, bishop
The perfection of love
Dear brethren, the Lord has marked out
for us the fullness of love that we ought to have for each other. He
tells us: No one has greater love than the man who lays down his life
for his friends. In these words, the Lord tells us what the perfect love
we should have for one another involves. John, the evangelist who
recorded them, draws the conclusion in one of his letters: As Christ
laid down his life for us, so we too ought to lay down our lives for our
brothers. We should indeed love one another as he loved us, he who laid
down his life for us
This is surely what we read in the
Proverbs of Solomon: If you sit down to eat at the table of a ruler,
observe carefully what is set before you; then stretch out your hand,
knowing that you must provide the same kind of meal yourself. What is
this ruler's table if not the one at which we receive the body and blood
of him who laid down his life for us? What does it mean to sit at this
table if not to approach it with humility? What does it mean to observe
carefully what is set before you if not to meditate devoutly on so great
a gift? What does it mean to stretch out one's hand, knowing that one
must provide the same kind of meal oneself, if not what I have just
said: as Christ laid down his life for us, so we in our turn ought to
lay down our lives for our brothers? This is what the apostle Paul said:
Christ suffered for us, leaving us an example, that we might follow in
his footsteps.
This is what is meant by providing
"the same kind of meal." This is what the blessed martyrs did
with such burning love. If we are to give true meaning to our
celebration of their memorials, to our approaching the Lord's table in
the very banquet at which they were fed, we must, like them, provide
"the same kind of meal."
At this table of the Lord we do not
commemorate the martyrs in the same way as we commemorate others who
rest in peace. We do not pray for the martyrs as we pray for those
others, rather, they pray for us, that we may follow in their footsteps.
They practiced the perfect love of which the Lord said there could be
none greater.
They provided "the same kind of
meal" as they had themselves received at the Lord's table.This must
not be understood as saying that we can be the Lord's equals by bearing
witness to him to the extent of shedding our blood. He had the power of
laying down his life; we by contrast cannot choose the length of our
lives, and we die even if it is against our will. He, by dying,
destroyed death in himself; we are freed from death only in his death.
His body did not see corruption; our body will see corruption and only
then be clothed through him in incorruption at the end of the world. He
needed no help from us in saving us; without him we can do nothing. He
gave himself to us as the vine to the branches; apart from him we cannot
have life.
Finally, even if brothers die for
brothers, yet no martyr by shedding his blood brings forgiveness for the
sins of his brothers, as Christ brought forgiveness to us. In this he
gave us, not an example to imitate but a reason for rejoicing. Inasmuch,
then, as they shed their blood for their brothers, the martyrs provided
"the same kind of meal" as they had received at the Lord's
table. Let us then love one another as Christ also loved us and gave
himself up for us.

R947
From a treatise on John by Saint Augustine, bishop
Two kinds of life
The Church recognizes two kinds of life
as having been commended to her by God. One is a life of faith, the
other a life of vision; one is a life passed on pilgrimage in time, the
other in a dwelling place in eternity; one is a life of toil, the other
of repose; one is spent on the road, the other in our homeland; one is
active, involving labor, the other contemplative, the reward of labor.
The first kind of life is symbolized by
the apostle Peter, the second by John. All of the first life is lived in
this world, and it will come to an end with this world. The second life
will be imperfect till the end of this world, but it will have no end in
the next world. And so Christ says to Peter: Follow me; but of John he
says: If I wish him to remain until I come, what is that to you? Your
duty is to follow me.
You are to follow me by imitating my
endurance of transient evils; John is to remain until my coming, when I
will bring eternal blessings. A way of saying this more dearly might be:
Your active life will be perfect if you follow the example of my
passion, but-to attain its full perfection John's life of contemplation
must wait until I come.
Perfect patience is to follow Christ
faithfully, even to death, but for perfect knowledge we must await his
coming. Here, in the land of the dying, the sufferings of the world must
be endured; there, in the land of the living, shall be seen the good
things of the Lord.
Christ's words, I wish him to remain
until I come, should not be taken to imply that John was to remain on
earth until Christ's coming, but rather that he was to wait because it
is not now but only when Christ comes that the life he symbolizes will
find fulfillment. On the other hand, Christ says to Peter: Your duty is
to follow me, because the life Peter symbolizes can attain its goal only
by action here and now.
Yet we should make no mental separation
between these great apostles. Both lived the life symbolized by Peter;
both were to attain the life symbolized by John. Symbolically, one
followed, the other remained, but living by faith they both endured the
sufferings of this present life of sorrow and they both longed for the
joys of the future life of happiness.
Nor were they alone in this. They were
one with the whole Church, the bride of Christ, which will in time be
delivered from the trials of this life and live for ever in the joy of
the next. These two kinds of life were represented respectively by Peter
and John, yet both apostles lived by faith in this present, passing life
and in eternal life both have the joy of vision.
And so for the sake of all the saints
inseparably united to the body of Christ, to guide them through the
storms of this life, Peter, the chief of the apostles, received the keys
of the kingdom of heaven with the power to bind and loose sins; and for
the sake of those same saints, to plumb the depths of that other, hidden
life, John the evangelist reclined on the breast of Christ.
For it is not only Peter but the whole
Church that binds and looses from sin; and as for the sublime teaching
of John about the Word, who in the beginning was God with God, and
everything else he told us about Christ's divinity, and about the
trinity and unity of the God-head, which now, until the Lord comes, is
all like a faint reflection in a mirror, but which will be seen face to
face in the kingdom of heaven---it was not only John who drank in
this teaching that came forth from the Lord's breast as from a fountain.
All who belong to the Lord are to drink it in, each according to his
capacity, and this is why the Lord himself has spread John's gospel
throughout the world.

T312
From a sermon by Baldwin of Canterbury, bishop
The Lord sees our thoughts and the
intentions of our hearts
The Lord knows the thoughts and
intentions of hearts. Without a doubt, every one of them is known to
him, while we know only those which he lets us read by the grace of
discernment. The spirit of man does not know all that is in man, nor all
of the thoughts which he has, willingly or unwillingly. Man does not
always perceive his thoughts as they really are. Having clouded vision,
he does not discern them clearly with his mind's eye.
Often under the guise of devotion a
suggestion occurs to our mind---coming from our own thoughts or from
another person or from the tempter---and in God's eyes we do not deserve
any reward for our virtue. For there are certain imitations of true
virtues as also of vices which play tricks with the heart and bedazzle
the mind's vision. As a result, the appearance of goodness often seems
to be in something which is evil, and equally the appearance of evil
seems to be in something good. This is part of our wretchedness and
ignorance, causing us anguish and anxiety.
It has been written: There are paths
which seem to man to be right, but which in the end lead him to hell. To
avoid this peril, Saint John gives us these words of advice: Test the
spirits to see if they are from God. Now no one can test the spirits to
see if they are from God unless God has given him discernment of spirits
to enable him to investigate spiritual thoughts, inclinations and
intentions with honest and true judgment. Discernment is the mother of
all the virtues; everyone needs it either to guide the lives of others
or to direct and reform his own life.
In the sphere of action, a right thought
is one ruled by the will of God, and intentions are holy when directed single-mindedly
toward him. In a word, we could see clearly through any action of ours,
or into our entire lives, if we had a simple eye. A simple eye is an
eye, and it is simple. This means that we see by right thinking. what is
to be done, and by our good intention we carry it out with simple
honesty, because deceitful action is wrong. Right thinking does not
permit mistakes, a good intention rules out pretense. This then is true
discernment, a combination of right thinking and good intention.
Therefore, we must do all our actions in
the light of discernment as if in God and in his presence.

R223
From a homily by saint Basil the Great, bishop
Boast only of the Lord
The wise man must not boast of his
wisdom, nor the strong man of his strength, nor the rich man of his
riches. What then is the right kind of boasting? What is the source of
man's greatness? Scripture says: The man who boasts must boast of this,
that he knows and understands that I am the Lord. Here is man's
greatness, here is man's glory and majesty: to know in truth what is
great, to hold fast to it, and to seek glory from the Lord of glory. The
Apostle tells us: The man who boasts must boast of the Lord. He has just
said: Christ was appointed by God to be our wisdom, our righteousness,
our sanctification, our redemption, so that, as it is written, a man who
boasts must boast of the Lord.
Boasting of God is perfect and complete
when we take no pride in our own righteousness but acknowledge that we
are utterly lacking in true righteousness and have been made righteous
only by faith in Christ.
Paul boasts of the fact that he holds his
own righteousness in contempt and seeks the righteousness in faith that
comes through Christ and is from God. He wants only to know Christ and
the power of his resurrection and to have fellowship with his sufferings
by taking on the likeness of his death, in the hope that somehow he may
arrive at the resurrection of the dead.
Here we see all overweening pride laid
low. Humanity, there is nothing left for you to boast of, for your
boasting and hope lie in putting to death all that is your own and
seeking the future life that is in Christ. Since we have its firstfruits
we are already in its midst, living entirely in the grace and gift of
God.
It is God who is active within us, giving
us both the will and the achievement, in accordance with his good
purpose. Through his Spirit, God also reveals his wisdom in the plan he
has preordained for our glory.
God gives power and strength in our
labors. I have toiled harder than all others, Paul says, but it is not I
but the grace of God, which is with me.
God rescues us from dangers beyond all
human expectation. We felt within ourselves that we had received the
sentence of death, so that we might not trust in ourselves but in God,
who raises the dead; from so great a danger did he deliver us, and does
deliver us; we hope in him, for he will deliver us again.

T551
From a sermon on charity by Saint Basil the Great, bishop
Sow integrity for yourselves
Man should be like the earth and bear
fruit; he should not let inanimate matter appear to surpass him. The
earth bears crops for your benefit, not for its own, but when you give
to the poor, you are bearing fruit which you will gather in for
yourself, since the reward for good deeds goes to those who perform
them. Give to a hungry man, and what you give becomes yours, and indeed
it returns to you with interest. As the sower profits from wheat that
falls onto the ground, so will you profit greatly in the world to come
from the bread that you place before a hungry man. Your husbandry must
be the sowing of heavenly seed: Sow integrity for yourselves, says
Scripture.
You are going to leave your money behind
you here whether you wish to or not. On the other hand, you will take
with you to the Lord the honor that you have won through good works. In
the presence of the universal judge, all the people will surround you,
acclaim you as a public benefactor and tell of your generosity and
kindness.
Do you not see how people throw away
their wealth on theatrical performances, boxing contests,, mimes and
fights between men and wild beasts, which are sickening to see, and all
for the sake of fleeting honor and popular applause? If you are miserly
with your money, how can you expect any similar honor? Your reward for
the right use of the things of this world will be everlasting glory, a
crown of righteousness, and the kingdom of heaven; God will welcome you,
the angels will praise you, all men who have existed since the world
began will call you blessed. Do you care nothing for these things, and
spurn the hopes that lie in the future for the sake of your present
enjoyment. Come, distribute your wealth freely, give generously to those
who are in need. Earn for yourself the psalmist's praise: He gave freely
to the poor; his righteousness will endure for ever.
How grateful you should be to your own
benefactor; how you should beam with joy at the honor of having other
people come to your door, instead of being obliged to go to theirs! But
you are now ill-humored and unapproachable; you avoid meeting people, in
case you might be forced to loosen your purse-strings even a little. You
can say only one thing: "I have nothing to give you. I am only a
poor man." A poor man you certainly are, and destitute of all real
riches; you are poor in love, generosity, faith in God and hope of
eternal happiness.

B1460 From The Mirror
of Faith by William of Thierry, abbot
Seek the understanding of faith from the Holy
Spirit
When in your life of faith you are confronted with the
deeper mysteries it is natural to become a little frightened. When this
happens take heart, faithful Christian. Do not raise objections, but ask
with loving submission, "How can these things be?" Let your
question be a prayer, an expression of love and self-surrender to God.
Let it be an expression of your humble desire not to penetrate his
sublime majesty, but to find salvation through the saving deeds of God
our Savior.
Then the angel of good counsel will reply: when the
Paraclete comes, whom I shall send you from the Father, he will remind
you of everything and teach you all truth. Even as no one knows a man's
secret thoughts except his own spirit within him, so no one comprehends
the mysteries of God except the Spirit of God.
Hasten therefore to receive the Holy Spirit. He is
with you when you call upon him; you can call upon him only because he
is already present. But when he comes in answer to your prayer, he comes
with an abundance of divine blessing; he is the river whose streams give
joy to the city of God.
If when he comes he finds you humble, silent and
trembling at the words of God, he will rest upon you and reveal what God
the Father has hidden from the wise and the prudent of this world. you
will then begin to understand the things holy Wisdom could have told his
disciples on earth, but which they were unable to bear until the Spirit
of truth came who was to teach them all truth. For this reason we cannot
hope to learn from the lips of any man truths that Truth himself could
not convey. As he himself has told us: God is Spirit. As those who
worship him must worship in spirit and truth, so those who wish to know
him must seek understanding of their faith and perception of its pure
and simple truth only in the Holy Spirit.
In the darkness and ignorance of this life the Holy
Spirit enlightens the poor in spirit. He is the love that draws them on,
the sweetness that attracts them, the way in which a man approaches God.
He is the love of the lover. He is devotion. He is piety. From one
degree of faith to the next he is ever revealing to believers the
justice of God, so that grace follows grace, and the faith that comes
from hearing yields to a faith enlightened by understanding.
Morals 4
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