<SPAN name="toc65" id="toc65"></SPAN> <SPAN name="pdf66" id="pdf66"></SPAN>
<SPAN name="Book_I_Chap_XXVII" id="Book_I_Chap_XXVII" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN>
<h2 style= "text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"> <span style="font-size: 144%">Chap. XXVII. How St. Augustine, being made a bishop, sent to acquaint Pope Gregory with what had been done in Britain, and asked and received replies, of which he stood in need. [597-601</span> <span class="tei tei-hi" style= "text-align: left"><span style= "font-size: 144%; font-variant: small-caps">a.d.</span></span><span style="font-size: 144%">]</span></h2>
<p>In the meantime,
Augustine, the man of God, went to Arles, and, according to the
orders received from the holy Father Gregory, was ordained
archbishop of the English nation,<SPAN id="noteref_118" name="noteref_118" href="#note_118"><span><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">118</span></span></SPAN> by
Aetherius,<SPAN id="noteref_119" name="noteref_119" href="#note_119"><span ><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">119</span></span></SPAN>
archbishop of that city. Then returning into Britain, he sent
Laurentius the the priest<SPAN id="noteref_120" name="noteref_120"
href="#note_120"><span ><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">120</span></span></SPAN> and
Peter the monk<SPAN id="noteref_121" name="noteref_121" href="#note_121"><span ><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">121</span></span></SPAN> to
Rome, to acquaint Pope Gregory, that the English nation had
received the faith of Christ, and that he was himself made their
bishop. At the same time, he desired his solution of some doubts
which seemed urgent to him. He soon received fitting answers to his
questions, which we have also thought meet to insert in this our
history:</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">The First Question of
the blessed Augustine, Bishop of the Church of
Canterbury.</span></span>—Concerning bishops, what should be their
manner of conversation towards their clergy? or into how many
portions the offerings of the faithful at the altar are to be
divided? and how the bishop is to act in the Church?</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gregory, Pope of the
City of Rome, answers.</span></span>—Holy <span class="tei tei-pb" id="page050"></span><SPAN name="Pg050" id="Pg050" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN> Scripture, in which we doubt not you are well
versed, testifies to this, and in particular the Epistles of the
Blessed Paul to Timothy, wherein he endeavours to show him what
should be his manner of conversation in the house of God; but it is
the custom of the Apostolic see to prescribe these rules to bishops
when they are ordained: that all emoluments which accrue, are to be
divided into four portions;—one for the bishop and his household,
for hospitality and entertainment of guests; another for the
clergy; a third for the poor; and the fourth for the repair of
churches. But in that you, my brother, having been instructed in
monastic rules, must not live apart from your clergy in the Church
of the English, which has been lately, by the will of God,
converted to the faith, you must establish the manner of
conversation of our fathers in the primitive Church, among whom,
none said that aught of the things which they possessed was his
own, but they had all things common.</p>
<p>But if there are
any clerks not received into holy orders,<SPAN id="noteref_122" name="noteref_122" href="#note_122"><span><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">122</span></span></SPAN> who
cannot live continent, they are to take wives, and receive their
stipends outside of the community; because we know that it is
written concerning the same fathers of whom we have spoken that a
distribution was made unto every man according as he had need. Care
is also to be taken of their stipends, and provision to be made,
and they are to be kept under ecclesiastical rule, that they may
live orderly, and attend to singing of psalms, and, by the help of
God, preserve their hearts and tongues and bodies from all that is
unlawful. But as for those that live in common, there is no need to
say anything of assigning portions, or dispensing hospitality and
showing mercy; inasmuch as all that they have over is to be spent
in pious and religious works, according to the teaching of Him who
is the Lord and Master of all, <span class="tei tei-q">“Give alms
of such things as ye have over, and behold all things are clean
unto you.”</span><SPAN id="noteref_123" name="noteref_123" href="#note_123"><span ><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">123</span></span></SPAN></p>
<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page051"></span><SPAN name="Pg051" id="Pg051" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Augustine's Second
Question.</span></span>—Whereas the faith is one and the same, are
there different customs in different Churches? and is one custom of
Masses observed in the holy Roman Church, and another in the Church
of Gaul?<SPAN id="noteref_124" name="noteref_124" href="#note_124"><span ><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">124</span></span></SPAN></p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pope Gregory
answers.</span></span>—You know, my brother, the custom of the
Roman Church in which you remember that you were bred up. But my
will is, that if you have found anything, either in the Roman, or
the Gallican, or any other Church, which may be more acceptable to
Almighty God, you should carefully make choice of the same, and
sedulously teach the Church of the English, which as yet is new in
the faith, whatsoever you can gather from the several Churches. For
things are not to be loved for the sake of places, but places for
the sake of good things. Choose, therefore, from every Church those
things that are pious, religious, and right, and when you have, as
it were, made them up into one bundle, let the minds of the English
be accustomed thereto.</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Augustine's Third
Question.</span></span>—I beseech you, what punishment must be
inflicted on one who steals anything from a church?</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gregory
answers.</span></span>—You may judge, my brother, by the condition
of the thief, in what manner he is to be corrected. For there are
some, who, having substance, commit theft; and there are others,
who transgress in this matter through want. Wherefore it is
requisite, that some be punished with fines, others with stripes;
some with more severity, and some more mildly. And when the
severity is greater, it is to proceed from charity, not from anger;
because this is done for the sake of him who is corrected, that he
may not be delivered up to the fires of Hell. For it behoves us to
maintain discipline among the faithful, as good parents do with
their children according to the flesh, whom they punish with
stripes for their faults, and yet they design to make those whom
they chastise their heirs, and preserve their possessions
<span id="page052"></span><SPAN name="Pg052" id="Pg052" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN> for those whom they
seem to visit in wrath. This charity is, therefore, to be kept in
mind, and it dictates the measure of the punishment, so that the
mind may do nothing beyond the rule prescribed by reason. You will
add to this, how men are to restore those things which they have
stolen from the church. But let not the Church take more than it
has lost of its worldly possessions, or seek gain from
vanities.</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Augustine's Fourth
Question.</span></span>—Whether two full brothers may marry two
sisters, who are of a family far removed from them?</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gregory
answers.</span></span>—Most assuredly this may lawfully be done;
for nothing is found in Holy Writ on this matter that seems to
contradict it.</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Augustine's Fifth
Question.</span></span>—To what degree may the faithful marry with
their kindred? and is it lawful to marry a stepmother or a
brother's wife?</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gregory
answers.</span></span>—A certain secular law in the Roman
commonwealth allows, that the son and daughter of a brother and
sister,<SPAN id="noteref_125" name="noteref_125" href="#note_125"><span ><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">125</span></span></SPAN> or of
two full brothers, or two sisters, may be joined in matrimony; but
we have found, by experience, that the offspring of such wedlock
cannot grow up; and the Divine law forbids a man to <span class="tei tei-q">“uncover the nakedness of his kindred.”</span> Hence of
necessity it must be the third or fourth generation of the
faithful, that can be lawfully joined in matrimony; for the second,
which we have mentioned, must altogether abstain from one another.
To marry with one's stepmother is a heinous crime, because it is
written in the Law, <span class="tei tei-q">“Thou shalt not uncover
the nakedness of thy father:”</span> now the son, indeed, cannot
uncover his father's nakedness; but in regard that it is written,
<span class="tei tei-q">“They twain shall be one flesh,”</span> he
that presumes to uncover the nakedness of his stepmother, who was
one flesh with his father, certainly uncovers the nakedness of his
father. It is also prohibited to marry with a sister-in-law,
because by the former union she is become the brother's flesh. For
which thing <span id="page053">[pg
053]</span><SPAN name="Pg053" id="Pg053" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN>
also John the Baptist was beheaded, and obtained the crown of holy
martyrdom. For, though he was not ordered to deny Christ, and it
was not for confessing Christ that he was killed, yet inasmuch as
the same Jesus Christ, our Lord, said, <span class="tei tei-q">“I
am the Truth,”</span> because John was killed for the truth, he
also shed his blood for Christ.</p>
<p>But forasmuch as
there are many of the English, who, whilst they were still
heathens, are said to have been joined in this unholy union, when
they attain to the faith they are to be admonished to abstain, and
be made to know that this is a grievous sin. Let them fear the
dread judgement of God, lest, for the gratification of their carnal
desires, they incur the torments of eternal punishment. Yet they
are not on this account to be deprived of the Communion of the Body
and Blood of Christ, lest they should seem to be punished for those
things which they did through ignorance before they had received
Baptism. For in these times the Holy Church chastises some things
with zeal, and tolerates some in mercy, and is blind to some in her
wisdom, and so, by forbearance and blindness often suppresses the
evil that stands in her way. But all that come to the faith are to
be admonished not to presume to do such things. And if any shall be
guilty of them, they are to be excluded from the Communion of the
Body and Blood of Christ. For as the offence is, in some measure,
to be tolerated in those who did it through ignorance, so it is to
be rigorously punished in those who do not fear to sin
knowingly.</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Augustine's Sixth
Question.</span></span>—Whether a bishop may be consecrated without
other bishops being present, if there be so great a distance
between them, that they cannot easily come together?</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gregory
answers.</span></span>—In the Church of England, of which you are
as yet the only bishop, you cannot otherwise ordain a bishop than
in the absence of other bishops. For when do bishops come over from
Gaul, that they may be present as witnesses to you in ordaining a
bishop? But we would have you, my brother, to ordain bishops in
such a manner, that the said bishops may not be far <span class="tei tei-pb" id="page054"></span><SPAN name="Pg054" id="Pg054" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN> asunder, to the end that there be no
lack, but that at the ordination of a bishop other pastors also,
whose presence is of great benefit, should easily come
together.<SPAN id="noteref_126" name="noteref_126" href="#note_126"><span ><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">126</span></span></SPAN> Thus,
when, by the help of God, bishops shall have been ordained in
places near to one another, no ordination of a bishop is to take
place without assembling three or four bishops. For, even in
spiritual affairs, we may take example by the temporal, that they
may be wisely and discreetly conducted. For surely, when marriages
are celebrated in the world, some married persons are assembled,
that those who went before in the way of matrimony, may also
partake in the joy of the new union. Why, then, at this spiritual
ordinance, wherein, by means of the sacred ministry, man is joined
to God, should not such persons be assembled, as may either rejoice
in the advancement of the new bishop, or jointly pour forth their
prayers to Almighty God for his preservation?</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Augustine's Seventh
Question.</span></span>—How are we to deal with the bishops of Gaul
and Britain?</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gregory
answers.</span></span>—We give you no authority over the bishops of
Gaul, because the bishop of Arles received the pall<SPAN id="noteref_127" name="noteref_127" href="#note_127"><span><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">127</span></span></SPAN> in
the old times of my predecessors, and we must by no means deprive
him of the authority he has received. If it shall therefore happen,
my brother, that you go over into the province of Gaul, you are to
concert with the said bishop of Arles, how, if there be any faults
among the bishops, they may be amended. And if he shall be lukewarm
in keeping up discipline, he is to be <span id="page055"></span><SPAN name="Pg055" id="Pg055" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN> fired by your zeal; to whom we have also
written, that aided by the presence of your Holiness in Gaul, he
should exert himself to the utmost, and put away from the behaviour
of the bishops all that is opposed to the command of our Creator.
But you shall not have power to go beyond your own authority and
judge the bishops of Gaul, but by persuading, and winning them, and
showing good works for them to imitate, you shall recall the
perverted to the pursuit of holiness; for it is written in the Law,
<span class="tei tei-q">“When thou comest into the standing corn of
thy neighbour, then thou mayest bruise the ears with thine hand and
eat; but thou shalt not move a sickle unto thy neighbours' standing
corn.”</span><SPAN id="noteref_128" name="noteref_128" href="#note_128"><span ><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">128</span></span></SPAN> For
thou mayest not apply the sickle of judgement in that harvest which
thou seest to have been committed to another; but by the influence
of good works thou shalt clear the Lord's wheat of the chaff of its
vices, and convert it by exhortation and persuasion in the body of
the Church, as it were, by eating. But whatsoever is to be done by
authority, must be transacted with the aforesaid bishop of Arles,
lest that should be omitted, which the ancient institution of the
fathers has appointed.<SPAN id="noteref_129" name="noteref_129" href="#note_129"><span ><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">129</span></span></SPAN> But
as for all the bishops of Britain, we commit them to your care,
that the unlearned may be taught, the weak strengthened by
persuasion, and the perverse corrected by authority.</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Augustine's Eighth
Question.</span></span>—Whether a woman with child ought to be
baptized? Or when she has brought forth, after what time she may
come into the church? As also, after how many days the infant born
may be baptized, lest he be prevented by death? Or how long after
her husband may have carnal knowledge of her? Or whether it is
lawful for her to come into the church when she has her courses, or
to receive the Sacrament of Holy Communion? Or whether a man, under
certain circumstances, may come into the church before he has
<span id="page056"></span><SPAN name="Pg056" id="Pg056" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN> washed with water?
Or approach to receive the Mystery of the Holy Communion? All which
things are requisite to be known by the ignorant nation of the
English.</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gregory
answers.</span></span>—I do not doubt but that these questions have
been put to you, my brother, and I think I have already answered
you therein. But I believe you would wish the opinion which you
yourself might give and hold to be confirmed by my reply also. Why
should not a woman with child be baptized, since the fruitfulness
of the flesh is no offence in the eyes of Almighty God? For when
our first parents sinned in Paradise, they forfeited the
immortality which they had received, by the just judgement of God.
Because, therefore, Almighty God would not for their fault wholly
destroy the human race, he both deprived man of immortality for his
sin, and, at the same time, of his great goodness and
loving-kindness, reserved to him the power of propagating his race
after him. On what ground, then, can that which is preserved to
human nature by the free gift of Almighty God, be excluded from the
privilege of Holy Baptism? For it is very foolish to imagine that
the gift can be opposed to grace in that Mystery in which all sin
is blotted out. When a woman is delivered, after how many days she
may come into the church, you have learnt from the teaching of the
Old Testament, to wit, that she is to abstain for a male child
thirty-three days, and sixty-six for a female. Now you must know
that this is to be received in a mystery; for if she enters the
church the very hour that she is delivered, to return thanks, she
is not guilty of any sin; because the pleasure of the flesh is a
fault, and not the pain; but the pleasure is in the copulation of
the flesh, whereas there is pain in bringing forth the child.
Wherefore it is said to the first mother of all, <span class="tei tei-q">“In sorrow thou shalt bring forth children.”</span> If,
therefore, we forbid a woman that has brought forth, to enter the
church, we make a crime of her very punishment. To baptize either a
woman who has brought forth, if there be danger of death, even the
very hour that she brings forth, or that which she has brought
forth the very hour it is born, is in no way prohibited, because,
<span id="page057"></span><SPAN name="Pg057" id="Pg057" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN> as the grace of the
Holy Mystery is to be with much discretion provided for those who
are in full life and capable of understanding, so is it to be
without any delay administered to the dying; lest, while a further
time is sought to confer the Mystery of redemption, if a small
delay intervene, the person that is to be redeemed be dead and
gone.</p>
<p>Her husband is
not to approach her, till the infant born be weaned. An evil custom
is sprung up in the lives of married people, in that women disdain
to suckle the children whom they bring forth, and give them to
other women to suckle; which seems to have been invented on no
other account but incontinency; because, as they will not be
continent, they will not suckle the children whom they bear. Those
women, therefore, who, from evil custom, give their children to
others to bring up, must not approach their husbands till the time
of purification is past. For even when there has been no
child-birth, women are forbidden to do so, whilst they have their
courses, insomuch that the Law condemns to death any man that shall
approach unto a woman during her uncleanness. Yet the woman,
nevertheless, must not be forbidden to come into the church whilst
she has her courses; because the superfluity of nature cannot be
imputed to her as a crime; and it is not just that she should be
refused admittance into the church, for that which she suffers
against her will. For we know, that the woman who had the issue of
blood, humbly approaching behind our Lord's back, touched the hem
of his garment, and her infirmity immediately departed from her.
If, therefore, she that had an issue of blood might commendably
touch the garment of our Lord, why may not she, who has her
courses, lawfully enter into the church of God? But you may say,
Her infirmity compelled her, whereas these we speak of are bound by
custom. Consider, then, most dear brother, that all we suffer in
this mortal flesh, through the infirmity of our nature, is ordained
by the just judgement of God after the fall; for to hunger, to
thirst, to be hot, to be cold, to be weary, is from the
<span id="page058"></span><SPAN name="Pg058" id="Pg058" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN> infirmity of our
nature; and what else is it to seek food against hunger, drink
against thirst, air against heat, clothes against cold, rest
against weariness, than to procure a remedy against distempers?
Thus to a woman her courses are a distemper. If, therefore, it was
a commendable boldness in her, who in her disease touched our
Lord's garment, why may not that which is allowed to one infirm
person, be granted to all women, who, through the fault of their
nature, are rendered infirm?</p>
<p>She must not,
therefore, be forbidden to receive the Mystery of the Holy
Communion during those days. But if any one out of profound respect
does not presume to do it, she is to be commended; yet if she
receives it, she is not to be judged. For it is the part of noble
minds in some manner to acknowledge their faults, even when there
is no fault; because very often that is done without a fault,
which, nevertheless, proceeded from a fault. Thus, when we are
hungry, it is no sin to eat; yet our being hungry proceeds from the
sin of the first man. The courses are no sin in women, because they
happen naturally; yet, because our nature itself is so depraved,
that it appears to be defiled even without the concurrence of the
will, a defect arises from sin, and thereby human nature may itself
know what it is become by judgement. And let man, who wilfully
committed the offence, bear the guilt of that offence against his
will. And, therefore, let women consider with themselves, and if
they do not presume, during their courses, to approach the
Sacrament of the Body and Blood of our Lord, they are to be
commended for their praiseworthy consideration; but when they are
carried away with love of the same Mystery to receive it according
to the custom of the religious life, they are not to be restrained,
as we said before. For as in the Old Testament the outward works
are observed, so in the New Testament, that which is outwardly
done, is not so diligently regarded as that which is inwardly
thought, that the punishment may be with discernment. For whereas
the Law forbids the eating of many things as unclean, yet our Lord
says in the Gospel, <span class="tei tei-q">“Not that which goeth
into the mouth defileth <span id="page059">[pg
059]</span><SPAN name="Pg059" id="Pg059" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN> a
man; but that which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth a
man.”</span> And afterwards he added, expounding the same,
<span class="tei tei-q">“Out of the heart proceed evil
thoughts.”</span> Where it is abundantly shown, that that is
declared by Almighty God to be polluted in deed, which springs from
the root of a polluted thought. Whence also Paul the Apostle says,
<span class="tei tei-q">“Unto the pure all things are pure, but
unto them that are defiled and unbelieving, nothing is
pure.”</span> And presently, declaring the cause of that
defilement, he adds, <span class="tei tei-q">“For even their mind
and conscience is defiled.”</span> If, therefore, meat is not
unclean to him whose mind is not unclean, why shall that which a
woman suffers according to nature, with a clean mind, be imputed to
her as uncleanness?</p>
<p>A man who has
approached his own wife is not to enter the church unless washed
with water, nor is he to enter immediately although washed. The Law
prescribed to the ancient people, that a man in such cases should
be washed with water, and not enter into the church before the
setting of the sun. Which, nevertheless, may be understood
spiritually, because a man acts so when the mind is led by the
imagination to unlawful concupiscence; for unless the fire of
concupiscence be first driven from his mind, he is not to think
himself worthy of the congregation of the brethren, while he sees
himself burdened by the iniquity of a perverted will. For though
divers nations have divers opinions concerning this affair, and
seem to observe different rules, it was always the custom of the
Romans, from ancient times, for such an one to seek to be cleansed
by washing, and for some time reverently to forbear entering the
church. Nor do we, in so saying, assign matrimony to be a fault;
but forasmuch as lawful intercourse cannot be had without the
pleasure of the flesh, it is proper to forbear entering the holy
place, because the pleasure itself cannot be without a fault. For
he was not born of adultery or fornication, but of lawful marriage,
who said, <span class="tei tei-q">“Behold I was conceived in
iniquity, and in sin my mother brought me forth.”</span> For he who
knew himself to have been conceived in iniquity, lamented that he
<span id="page060"></span><SPAN name="Pg060" id="Pg060" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN> was born from sin,
because he bears the defect, as a tree bears in its bough the sap
it drew from the root. In which words, however, he does not call
the union of the married couple iniquity, but the will itself. For
there are many things which are lawful and permitted, and yet we
are somewhat defiled in doing them. As very often by being angry we
correct faults, and at the same time disturb our own peace of mind;
and though that which we do is right, yet it is not to be approved
that our mind should be disturbed. For he who said, <span class="tei tei-q">“My eye was disturbed with anger,”</span> had been
angry at the vices of sinners. Now, seeing that only a calm mind
can rest in the light of contemplation, he grieved that his eye was
disturbed with anger; because, whilst he was correcting evil
actions below, he was obliged to be confused and disturbed with
regard to the contemplation of the highest things. Anger against
vice is, therefore, commendable, and yet painful to a man, because
he thinks that by his mind being agitated, he has incurred some
guilt. Lawful commerce, therefore, must be for the sake of
children, not of pleasure; and must be to procure offspring, not to
satisfy vices. But if any man is led not by the desire of pleasure,
but only for the sake of getting children, such a man is certainly
to be left to his own judgement, either as to entering the church,
or as to receiving the Mystery of the Body and Blood of our Lord,
which he, who being placed in the fire cannot burn, is not to be
forbidden by us to receive. But when, not the love of getting
children, but of pleasure prevails, the pair have cause to lament
their deed. For this the holy preaching concedes to them, and yet
fills the mind with dread of the very concession. For when Paul the
Apostle said, <span class="tei tei-q">“Let him that cannot contain
have his own wife;”</span> he presently took care to subjoin,
<span class="tei tei-q">“But this I say by way of permission, not
of commandment.”</span> For that is not granted by way of
permission which is lawful, because it is just; and, therefore,
that which he said he permitted, he showed to be an offence.</p>
<p>It is seriously
to be considered, that when God was about to speak to the people on
Mount Sinai, He first <span id="page061">[pg
061]</span><SPAN name="Pg061" id="Pg061" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN>
commanded them to abstain from women. And if purity of body was
there so carefully required, where God spoke to the people by the
means of a creature as His representative, that those who were to
hear the words of God should abstain; how much more ought women,
who receive the Body of Almighty God, to preserve themselves in
purity of flesh, lest they be burdened with the very greatness of
that inestimable Mystery? For this reason also, it was said to
David, concerning his men, by the priest, that if they were clean
in this particular, they should receive the shewbread, which they
would not have received at all, had not David first declared them
to be clean. Then the man, who, afterwards, has been washed with
water, is also capable of receiving the Mystery of the Holy
Communion, when it is lawful for him, according to what has been
before declared, to enter the church.</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Augustine's Ninth
Question.</span></span>—Whether after an illusion, such as is wont
to happen in a dream, any man may receive the Body of our Lord, or
if he be a priest, celebrate the Divine Mysteries?</p>
<p><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gregory
answers.</span></span>—The Testament of the Old Law, as has been
said already in the article above, calls such a man polluted, and
allows him not to enter into the church till the evening, after
being washed with water. Which, nevertheless, a spiritual people,
taking in another sense, will understand in the same manner as
above; because he is imposed upon as it were in a dream, who, being
tempted with uncleanness, is defiled by real representations in
thought, and he is to be washed with water, that he may cleanse
away the sins of thought with tears; and unless the fire of
temptation depart before, may know himself to be in a manner guilty
until the evening. But a distinction is very necessary in that
illusion, and one must carefully consider what causes it to arise
in the mind of the person sleeping; for sometimes it proceeds from
excess of eating or drinking; sometimes from the superfluity or
infirmity of nature, and sometimes from the thoughts. And when it
happens either through superfluity or infirmity of nature, such an
illusion is not <span id="page062">[pg
062]</span><SPAN name="Pg062" id="Pg062" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN>
to be feared at all, because it is to be lamented, that the mind of
the person, who knew nothing of it, suffers the same, rather than
that he occasioned it. But when the appetite of gluttony commits
excess in food, and thereupon the receptacles of the humours are
oppressed, the mind thence contracts some guilt; yet not so much as
to hinder the receiving of the Holy Mystery, or celebrating Mass,
when a holy day requires it, or necessity obliges the Mystery to be
shown forth, because there is no other priest in the place; for if
there be others who can perform the ministry, the illusion
proceeding from over-eating ought not to exclude a man from
receiving the sacred Mystery; but I am of opinion he ought humbly
to abstain from offering the sacrifice of the Mystery, but not from
receiving it, unless the mind of the person sleeping has been
disturbed with some foul imagination. For there are some, who for
the most part so suffer the illusion, that their mind, even during
the sleep of the body, is not defiled with filthy thoughts. In
which case, one thing is evident, that the mind is guilty, not
being acquitted even in its own judgement; for though it does not
remember to have seen anything whilst the body was sleeping, yet it
calls to mind that, when the body was awake, it fell into gluttony.
But if the illusion of the sleeper proceeds from evil thoughts when
he was awake, then its guilt is manifest to the mind; for the man
perceives from what root that defilement sprang, because what he
had consciously thought of, that he afterwards unconsciously
endured. But it is to be considered, whether that thought was no
more than a suggestion, or proceeded to delight, or, what is worse,
consented to sin. For all sin is committed in three ways, viz., by
suggestion, by delight, and by consent. Suggestion comes from the
Devil, delight from the flesh, and consent from the spirit. For the
serpent suggested the first offence, and Eve, as flesh, took
delight in it, but Adam, as the spirit, consented. And when the
mind sits in judgement on itself, it must clearly distinguish
between suggestion and delight, and between delight and consent.
For when the evil spirit suggests a sin to the mind, if there ensue
<span id="page063"></span><SPAN name="Pg063" id="Pg063" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN> no delight in the
sin, the sin is in no way committed; but when the flesh begins to
take delight in it, then sin begins to arise. But if it
deliberately consents, then the sin is known to be full-grown. The
seed, therefore, of sin is in the suggestion, the nourishment of it
in delight, its maturity in the consent. And it often happens that
what the evil spirit sows in the thought, in that the flesh begins
to find delight, and yet the soul does not consent to that delight.
And whereas the flesh cannot be delighted without the mind, yet the
mind struggling against the pleasures of the flesh, is after a
manner unwillingly bound by the carnal delight, so that through
reason it opposes it, and does not consent, yet being bound by
delight, it grievously laments being so bound. Wherefore that great
soldier of our Lord's host, groaned and said, <span class="tei tei-q">“I see another law in my members warring against the
law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin,
which is in my members.”</span> Now if he was a captive, he did not
fight; but he did fight; wherefore he was a captive and at the same
time therefore fought against the law of the mind, which the law
that is in the members opposed; but if he fought, he was no
captive. Thus, then, man is, as I may say, a captive and yet free.
Free on account of justice, which he loves, a captive by the
delight which he unwillingly bears within him.</p>
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