THE FULL FORCE of the conflict which was enacted in the souls of
Christian believers during the transition from paganism to the new
religion is shown in the person of Augustine (354430). When we see
how this conflict has become resolved in the spirit of Augustine we
are enabled in a mysterious way to penetrate the spiritual struggles
of Origin, Clement of Alexandria, Gregory of Nazianzus, Jerome and
others.
Augustine was a personality in whom deep spiritual needs developed out
of a passionate nature. He passed through pagan and half-Christian
ideas. He suffered deeply from the most dreadful doubts which can
attack a man who has felt the impotence of many varieties of thought
in the face of spiritual problems, and who has tasted the depressing
effect of the question, Can man know anything at all?
At the beginning of his struggles Augustine's thoughts clung to the
transitory things of the material world. He could conceive of the
spiritual only in material images. It is a deliverance for him when he
rises above this stage. He describes this in his Confessions: "When I
desired to think upon my God, I knew not how to think of Him except as
a mass of bodies, for what was not of such a nature seemed to me to be
nothing. This was the greatest and almost the only cause of my
(see Note 78)
inevitable error."
Thus he indicates the point which a person is bound
to reach who is seeking the true life in the spirit. There are
thinkers and they are not few who maintain that it is impossible to
arrive at pure thought, free from any material substance. These
thinkers confuse what they believe they ought to say about their own
soul life with what is humanly possible. On the contrary, the truth is
that it is only possible to arrive at higher cognition when thought
has been freed from all material substance; when a soul life has been
developed in which images of reality do not cease when their
demonstration in sense-impressions comes to an end. Augustine relates
how he achieved spiritual vision. Everywhere he asked where the
"divine" was to be found. "I asked the earth and it said, I am not He;
and all things that are in the earth confessed the same. I asked the
ocean and the depths and all that lives in them, and they answered me:
We are not thy God. Seek above us. I asked the fleeting winds, and the
whole air, with all its inhabitants made answer: The philosophers who
seek for the essence of things in us are deceived. We are not God. I
asked the heavens, the sun, moon and stars, and they said: Neither are
we the God whom thou seekest."
(see Note 79)
And Augustine perceived that there is
but one thing which can answer his question about the divine: his own
soul. The soul said, No eyes nor ears can impart to you what is in me.
for I alone can tell you, and I tell you in such a way that doubt is
impossible. "Men may doubt whether vital force lives in air or in
fire, but who can doubt that he himself lives, remembers, understands,
wills, thinks, knows and judges? If he doubts, it is a proof that he
is alive, he remembers why he doubts, he understands that he doubts,
he will assure himself of something, he thinks, he knows that he knows
nothing, he judges that he must not accept anything hastily."
(see Note 80)
External things do not defend themselves when their essence and existence are
denied. But the soul does defend itself. It could not be doubtful of
itself unless it existed. By its doubt it confirms its own existence.
"We are and we perceive our existence and we love our own existence
and cognition. On these three points no error disguised as truth can
trouble us, for we do not apprehend them with our bodily senses like
physical things."
(see Note 81)
Man learns about the divine by bringing his soul to
perceive itself as spiritual in order that it may find its way as
spirit into the spiritual world. Augustine had struggled through to
this perception. Out of such an attitude of mind grew the desire in
pagan personalities seeking cognition, to knock at the portal of the
Mysteries. In the age of Augustine such convictions could lead a man
to become a Christian. Jesus, the Logos become man, had shown the path
which must be followed by the soul if it would attain the goal of
which it must speak when in communion with itself. In 358 at Milan
Augustine received the teachings of Ambrose. All his doubts about the
Old and New Testaments vanished when the most important passages were
interpreted by his teacher, not in a merely literal sense, but "were
spiritually laid open and expounded by him, the mystical veil thereof
being removed."
(see Note 82)
What had been guarded in the Mysteries was embodied
for Augustine in the historical tradition of the Gospels and in the
community where that tradition was preserved. By degrees he comes to a
conviction regarding Church doctrine, of which he says, "I felt it was
with moderation and honesty that it commanded things to be believed
that were not demonstrated." He arrives at the idea, "Who could be so
blind as to say that the Church of the Apostles deserves to have no
faith placed in it, when it is so loyal and is supported by the
conformity of so many brethren; when these have handed down their
writings to posterity so conscientiously, and when the Church has so
strictly maintained the succession of teachers down to our present bishops?"
(see Note 83)
Augustine's method of thinking told him that since the
Christ event other conditions had begun for souls seeking the spirit
in place of those which had existed previously. For him it was firmly
established that in Christ Jesus there had been revealed in the outer
historical world what the mystic had sought through preparation in the
Mysteries. One of his most significant utterances is the following:
"What is now called the Christian religion already existed among the
ancients, and was not lacking at the very beginnings of the human
race. When Christ appeared in the flesh, the true religion already in
existence received the name of Christian."
(see Note 84)
Two paths of development
were possible for such a mode of thinking. One is that if the human
soul develops within it the forces leading it to the cognition of its
true self, if it but goes far enough, it will also come to cognition
of the Christ and of everything connected with him. This would have
been a Mystery knowledge enriched through the Christ event. The other
way is that actually taken by Augustine, by which he became the great
example for his successors. It consists in cutting off the development
of the forces of the soul at a certain point and in receiving the
ideas connected with the Christ event from written accounts and oral
traditions. Augustine rejected the first way as springing from pride
of soul; he thought the second way was the way of true humility. Thus
he says to those who wished to follow the first way: "You may find
peace in the truth, but for this, humility is needed, which does not
suit your proud neck."
(see Note 85)
On the other hand he was filled with boundless
inward happiness by the fact that since the "appearance of Christ in
the flesh" it was possible to say that experience of the spiritual can
be attained by every soul which goes as far as it can in seeking
within itself, and then, in order to reach the highest, has faith in
what the written and oral traditions of the community of Christians
tell about the Christ and his revelation. On this point he says: "What
bliss, what abiding enjoyment of supreme and true good is offered to
us, what serenity, what a breath of eternity! How shall I describe it?
It has been expressed, as far as it could be, by those great
incomparable souls who we admit have beheld and still behold ... We
reach a point at which we acknowledge how true is what we have been
commanded to believe and how well and beneficiently we have been
brought up by our mother the Church, and of what benefit was the milk
given by the Apostle Paul to the little ones ..."
(see Note 86)
(It is beyond the
scope of this book to give an account of the alternative method of
thinking which is evolved from the Mystery knowledge enriched through
the Christ event. The description of this method will be found in my
outline of a
Geheimwissenschaft.)
Whereas in pre-Christian times one
who wished to seek the spiritual foundations of existence was
necessarily directed to the way of the Mysteries, Augustine was able
to say, even to those souls who could find no such path within
themselves: Go as far as you can on the path of cognition with your
human powers; from there, faith (belief) will carry you up into the
higher spiritual regions. It was only going one step further to say:
It is in the nature of the human soul to be able to arrive only at a
certain stage of cognition through its own powers; from there it can
advance further only through faith, through belief in the written and
oral tradition. This step was taken by the spiritual movement which
assigned to natural perception a certain sphere above which the soul
could not rise by its own efforts, but everything which lay beyond
this sphere was made an object of belief which has to be supported by
written and oral tradition, and by faith in its representatives.
Thomas Aquinas (12241274), the greatest teacher of the Church, has
set forth this doctrine in the most varied ways in his writings. Human
perception can only attain to that which led Augustine to self
knowledge, to the certainty of the divine. The nature of the divine
and its relation to the world is given by revealed theology, which is
not accessible to man's own perception, and as an article of faith, is
superior to all cognition.
The origin of this point of view may be observed in the world
conception of John Scotus Erigena, who lived in the ninth century at
the court of Charles the Bald, and who represents a natural transition
from early Christianity to the point of view of Thomas Aquinas. His
conception of the world is expressed in the sense of Neoplatonism. In
his treatise, De Divisione Naturae, Erigena has elaborated the
teaching of Dionysius the Areopagite. This teaching started with a God
far above the transitory things of the material world and it derived
the world from Him.
(see Note in Chapter 11)
Man is involved in the transformation
of all beings toward this God, Who finally attains to what He was from
the beginning. Everything falls back again into the Godhead which has
passed through the universal process and finally has become perfected.
But in order to reach this goal man must find the way to the Logos who
became flesh. In Erigena this thought leads to another, that faith in
the content of the writings which give an account of the Logos, leads
to salvation. Reason and the authority of the Scriptures, belief and
cognition, stand side by side. The one does not contradict the other,
but faith must bring that to which knowledge alone can never raise
itself.
The cognition of the eternal which the ancient Mysteries withheld from
the multitudes, when presented in this way by Christian thought and
feeling, became an article of faith which by its very nature was
related to something unattainable by mere knowledge. It was the
conviction of the pre-Christian mystic that to him was given cognition
of the divine, and to the people, a faith expressed in imagery.
Christianity came to the conviction that God has given His wisdom to
mankind through His revelation, and man attains an image of the divine
revelation through his cognition. The wisdom of the Mysteries is a
hot-house plant which is revealed to a few mature individuals;
Christian wisdom is a Mystery revealed as cognition to none, but as an
article of faith it is revealed to all. In Christianity the viewpoint
of the Mysteries lived on. But it lived on in an altered form. All,
not only the special individual, were to share in the truth. But it
should so happen that at a certain point man perceived his inability
to penetrate further by means of cognition, and from there on ascended
to faith. Christianity brought the content of the Mysteries out of the
darkness of the temple into the clear light of day. The one spiritual
stream within Christianity outlined here led to the idea that this
content must necessarily be retained in the form of faith.
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