Chapter 21 - ST. AUGUSTINE, PART 1 (AD 354-430)
The church in the north of Africa has hardly been mentioned since
the time of St. Cyprian (Chapter VIII). But we must now look towards
it again, since in the days of St. Chrysostom it produced a man
who was perhaps the greatest of all the old Christian fathers--St.
Augustine.
Augustine was born at Thagaste, a city of Numidia, in the year
354. His mother, Monica, was a pious Christian, but his father,
Patricius, was a heathen, and a man of no very good character. Monica
was resolved to bring up her son in the true faith: she entered
him as a catechumen of the Church when a little child, and carefully
taught him as much of religious things as a child could learn. But
he was not then baptized, because (as has been mentioned already--p
39) people were accustomed in those days to put off baptism, out
of fear lest they should afterwards fall into sin, and so should
lose the blessing of the sacrament. This, as we know, was a mistake:
but it was a very common practice nevertheless.
When Augustine was a boy, he was one day suddenly taken ill, so
that he seemed likely to die. Remembering what his mother had taught
him, he begged that he might be baptized, and preparations were
made for the purpose; but all at once he began to grow better, and
the baptism was put off for the same reason as before.
As he grew up, he gave but little promise of what he was afterwards
to become. Much of his time was spent in idleness; and through idleness
he fell into bad company, and was drawn into sins of many kinds.
When he was about seventeen, his father died. The good Monica had
been much troubled by her husband's heathenism and misconduct, and
had earnestly tried to convert him from his errors. She went about
this wisely, not lecturing him or arguing with him in a way that
might have set him more against the Gospel, but trying rather to
show him the beauty of Christian faith by her own loving, gentle,
and dutiful behaviour. And at length her pains were rewarded by
seeing him before his death profess himself a believer, and receive
Christian baptism.
Monica was left rather badly off at her husband's death. But a
rich neighbour was kind enough to help her in the expense of finishing
her son's education, and the young man himself now began to show
something of the great talents which God had been pleased to bestow
on him. Unhappily, however, he sank deeper and deeper in vice, and
poor Monica was bitterly grieved by his ways. A book which he happened
to read led him to feel something of the shamefulness and wretchedness
of his courses; but, as it was a heathen book (although written
by one of the wisest of the heathens, Cicero), it could not show
him by what means he might be able to reach to a higher life. He
looked into Scripture, in the hope of finding instruction there
but he was now in that state of mind to which, as St. Paul says
(1 Cor. i. 23), the preaching of Christ sounds like "foolishness,"
so that he fancied himself to be above learning anything from a
book so plain and homely as the Bible then seemed to him, and he
set out in search of some other teaching. And a very strange sort
of teaching he met with.
About a hundred years before this time, a man named Manes appeared
in Persia (AD 270), and preached a religion which he pretended to
have received from Heaven, but which was really made up by himself,
from a mixture of Christian and heathen notions. It was something
like the doctrines which had been before taught by the Gnostics,
and was as wild nonsense as can well be imagined. He taught that
there were two gods--a good god of light, and a bad god of darkness.
And he divided his followers into two classes, the lower of which
were called "hearers," while the higher were called "elect".
These elect were supposed to be very strict in their lives. They
were not to eat flesh at all;--they might not even gather the fruits
of the earth, or pluck a herb with their own hands. They were supported
and were served by the hearers, and they took a very odd way of
showing their gratitude to these; for it is said that when one of
the elect ate a piece of bread, he made this speech to it:--"It
was not I who reaped or ground or baked thee; may they who did so
be reaped and ground and baked in their turn!" And it was believed
that the poor "hearers" would after death become corn,
and have to go through the mill and the oven, until they should
have suffered enough to clear away their offences and make them
fit for the blessedness of the elect.
The Manichaeans (as the followers of Manes were called) soon found
their way into Africa, where they gained many converts; and, although
laws were often made against their heresy by the emperors, it continued
to spread secretly; for they used to hide their opinions, when there
was any danger, so that persons who were really Manichaeans pretended
to be Catholic Christians, and there were some of them even among
the monks and clergy of the Church.
In the humour in which Augustine now was, this strange sect took
his fancy; for the Manichaeans pretended to be wiser than any one
else, and laughed at all submission to doctrines which had been
settled by the Church. So Augustine at twenty became a Manichaean,
and for nine years was one of the hearers,--for he never got to
be one of the elect, or to know much about their secrets. But before
he had been very long in the sect, he began to notice some things
which shocked him in the behaviour of the elect, who professed the
greatest strictness. In short, he could not but see that their strictness
was all a pretence, and that they were really a very worthless set
of men. And he found out, too, that, besides bad conduct, there
was a great deal very bad and disgusting in the opinions of the
Manichaeans, which he had not known of at first. After learning
all this, he did not know what to turn to, and he seems for a time
to have believed nothing at all,--which is a wretched state of mind
indeed, and so he found it.
PART II
Augustine now set up as a teacher at Carthage, the chief city of
Africa; but among the students there he found a set of wild young
men who called themselves "Eversors"--a name which meant
that they turned everything topsy-turvy; and Augustine was so much
troubled by the behaviour of these unruly lads, that he resolved
to leave Carthage and go to Rome. Monica, as we may easily suppose,
had been much distressed by his wanderings, but she never ceased
to pray that he might be brought round again. One day she went to
a learned bishop, who was much in the habit of arguing with people
who were in error, and begged that he would speak to her son; but
the good man understood Augustine's case, and saw that to talk to
him while he was in such a state of mind would only make him more
self-wise than he was already. "Let him alone awhile,"
he said, "only pray God for him, and he will of himself find
out by reading how wrong the Manichaeans are, and how impious their
doctrine is." And then he told her that he had himself been
brought up as a Manichaean, but that his studies had shown him the
error of the sect and he had left it. Monica was not satisfied with
this, and went on begging, even with tears, that the bishop would
talk with her son. But he said to her, "Go thy ways, and may
God bless thee, for it is not possible that the child of so many
tears should perish." And Monica took his words as if they
had been a voice from Heaven, and cherished the hope which they
held out to her.
Monica was much against Augustine's plan of removing to Rome; but
he slipped away and went on shipboard while she was praying in a
chapel by the seaside, which was called after the name of St. Cyprian.
Having got to Rome, he opened a school there, as he had done at
Carthage; but he found that the Roman youth, although they were
not so rough as those of Carthage, had another very awkward habit--
namely, that, after having heard a number of his lectures, they
disappeared without paying for them. While he was in distress on
this account, the office of a public teacher at Milan was offered
to him, and he was very glad to take it. While at Rome, he had a
bad illness, but he did not at that time wish or ask for baptism
as he had done when sick in his childhood.
The great St. Ambrose was then Bishop of Milan. Augustine had heard
so much of his fame, that he went often to hear him, out of curiosity
to know whether the bishop were really as fine a preacher as he
was said to be; but by degrees, as he listened, he felt a greater
and greater interest. He found, from what Ambrose said, that the
objections by which the Manichaeans had set him against the Gospel
were all mistaken; and, when Monica joined him, after he had been
some time at Milan, she had the delight of finding that he had given
up the Manichaean sect, and was once more a catechumen of the Church.
Augustine had still to fight his way through many difficulties.
He had learnt that the best and highest wisdom of the heathens could
not satisfy his mind and heart; and he now turned again to St. Paul's
epistles, and found that Scripture was something very different
from what he had supposed it to be in the pride of his youth. He
was filled with grief and shame on account of the vileness of his
past life; and these feelings were made still stronger by the accounts
which a friend gave him of the strict and self-denying ways of Antony
and other monks. One day, as he lay in the garden of his lodging,
with his mind tossed to and fro by anxious thoughts, so that he
even wept in his distress, he heard a voice, like that of a child,
singing over and over, "Take up and read! take up and read!"
At first he fancied that the voice came from some child at play;
but he could not think of any childish game in which such words
were used. And then he remembered how St. Antony had been struck
by the words of the Gospel which he heard in church (p 60); and
it seemed to him that the voice, wherever it might come from, was
a call of the same kind to himself. So he eagerly seized the book
of St. Paul's Epistles, which was lying by him, and, as he opened
it, the first words on which his eyes fell were these, --"Let
us walk honestly, as in the day; not in rioting and drunkenness,
not in chambering and wantonness, not in strife and envying; but
put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make not provision for the
flesh, to fulfil the lusts thereof." (Rom. xiii. 13f) And,
as he read, the words all at once sank deeply into his heart, and
from that moment he felt himself another man. As soon as he could
do so without being particularly noticed, he gave up his office
of professor and went into the country, where he spent some months
in the company of his mother and other friends; and at the following
Easter (AD 387), he was baptized by St. Ambrose. The good Monica
had now seen the desire of her heart fulfilled; and she soon after
died in peace, as she was on her way back to Africa, in company
with her son.
Augustine, after her death, spent some time at Rome, where he wrote
a book against the Manichaeans, and then, returning to his native
place Thagaste, he gave himself up for three years to devotion and
study. In those days, it was not uncommon that persons who were
thought likely to be useful to the Church should be seized on and
ordained, whether they liked it or not; and if they were expected
to make very strong objections, their mouths were even stopped by
force. Now Augustine's fame grew so great, that he was afraid lest
something of this kind should be done to him; and he did not venture
to let himself be seen in any town where the bishopric was vacant,
lest he should be obliged to become bishop against his will. He
thought, however, that he was safe in accepting an invitation to
Hippo, because it was provided with a bishop named Valerius. But,
as he was one day listening to the bishop's sermon, Valerius began
to say that his church was in want of another presbyter, whereupon
the people laid hold of Augustine, and presented him to the bishop,
who ordained him without heeding his objections (AD 391). And four
years later (AD 395), he was consecrated a bishop, to assist Valerius,
who died soon after.
Augustine was bishop of Hippo for five-and-thirty years, and, although
there were many other sees of greater importance in Africa, his
uncommon talents, and his high character, made him the foremost
man of the African church. He was a zealous and exemplary bishop,
and he wrote a great number of valuable books of many kinds. But
the most interesting of them all is one which may be read in English,
and is of no great length--namely, the "Confessions",
in which he gives an account of the wanderings through which he
had been brought into the way of truth and peace, and humbly gives
thanks to God, whose gracious providence had guarded and guided
him.
PART III
Augustine had a great many disputes with heretics and others who
separated from the Church, or tried to corrupt its doctrine. But
only two of his controversies need be mentioned here. One of these
was with the Donatists, and the other was with the Pelagians.
The sect of the Donatists had arisen soon after the end of the
last heathen persecution, and was now nearly a hundred years old.
We have seen that St. Cyprian had a great deal of trouble with people
who fancied that, if a man were put to death, or underwent any other
considerable suffering, for the name of Christ, he deserved to be
held in great honour, and his wishes were to be attended to by other
Christians, whatever his character and motives might have been (p
27). The same spirit which led to this mistake continued in Africa
after St Cyprian's time; and thus, when the persecution began there
under Diocletian and Maximian (AD 303--see Chap. IX), great numbers
rushed into danger, in the hope of being put to death, and of so
obtaining at once the blessedness and the glory of martyrdom. Many
of these people were weary of their lives, or in some other respect
were not of such character that they could be reckoned as true Christian
martyrs. The wise fathers of the Church always disapproved of such
foolhardy doings, and would not allow people who acted in a way
so unlike our Lord and His apostle St. Paul to be considered as
martyrs; and Mensurius, who was the bishop of Carthage, stedfastly
set his face against all such things.
One of the ways by which the persecutors hoped to put down the
Gospel, was to get hold of all the copies of the Scriptures, and
to burn them; and they required the clergy to deliver them up. But
most of the officers who had to execute the orders of the emperors
did not know a Bible from any other book; and it is said that, when
some of them came to Mensurius, and asked him to deliver up his
books, he gave them a quantity of books written by heretics, which
he had collected (perhaps with the intention of burning them himself),
and that all the while he had put the Scriptures safely out of the
way, until the tyranny of the heathens should be overpast. When
the persecution was at an end, some of the party whom he had offended
by setting himself against their wrong notions as to martyrdom,
brought up this matter against the bishop. They said that his account
of it was false, that the books which he had given up were not what
he said, but that he had really given up the Scriptures; and that,
even if his story were true, he had done wrong in using such deceit.
They gave the name of "traditors" (or, as we should say,
"traitors," from a Latin word meaning someone who hands
something over) to those who confessed that they had been frightened
into giving up the Scriptures; and they were for showing no mercy
to any traditor, however much he night repent of his weakness.
This severe party, then, tried to get up an opposition to Mensurius.
They found, however, that they could make nothing of it. But when
he died, and then Caecilian, who had been his archdeacon and his
righthand man, was chosen bishop in his stead, these people made
a great outcry, and set up another bishop of their own against him.
All sorts of people who had taken offence at Caecilian or Mensurius
thought this a fine opportunity for having their revenge; and thus
a strong party was formed. It was greatly helped by the wealth of
a lady named Lucilla, whom Caecilian had reproved for the superstitious
habit of kissing a bone, which she supposed to have belonged to
some martyr, before communicating at the Lord's table. The first
bishop of the party was one Majorinus, who had been a servant of
some sort to Lucilla; and, when Majorinus was dead, they set up
a second bishop, named Donatus, after whom they were called Donatists.
This Donatus was a clever and a learned man, and lived very strictly;
but he was exceedingly proud and ill-tempered, and used very violent
language against all who differed from him, and his sect copied
his pride and bitterness. Many of them, however, while they professed
to be extremely strict, neglected the plainer and humbler duties
of Christian life.
The Donatists said that every member of their sect must be a saint:
whereas our Lord himself had declared that evil members would always
be mixed with the good in His Church on earth, like tares growing
in a field of wheat, or bad fishes mixed with good ones in a net;
and that the separation of the good from the bad would not take
place until the end of the world (St. Matt. xiii 24-30, 36-43, 47-50).
And they said that their own sect was the only true Church of Christ,
although they had no congregations out of Africa, except one which
was set up to please a rich lady in Spain, and another at Rome.
Whenever they made a convert from the Church, they baptized him
afresh, as if his former baptism were good for nothing. They pretended
to work miracles, and to see visions; and they made a very great
deal of Donatus himself, so as even to pay him honours which ought
not to have been given to any child of man; for they sang hymns
to him, and swore by his grey hairs.
Shortly after Constantine got possession of Africa by his victory
over Maxentius, and declared liberty of religion to the Christians
(AD 311-313, p 37), the Donatists applied to him against the Catholics
(p 44),-- and it was curious that they should have been the first
to call in the emperor as judge in such a matter, because they were
afterwards very violent against the notion of an earthly sovereign's
having any right to concern himself with the management of religious
affairs. Constantine tried to settle the question by desiring some
bishops to judge between the parties; and these bishops gave judgment
in favour of the Catholics. The Donatists were dissatisfied, and
asked for a new trial, whereupon Constantine gathered a council
for the purpose at Arles, in France (AD 314). This was the greatest
council that had at that time been seen: there were about two hundred
bishops at it, and among them were some from Britain. Here again
the decision was against the Donatists, and they thereupon begged
the emperor himself to examine their case; which he did, and once
more condemned them (AD 316). Some severe laws were then made against
them; their churches were taken away; many of them were banished,
and were deprived of all that they had; and they were even threatened
with death, although none of them suffered it during Constantine's
reign.
The emperor, after a while, saw that they were growing wilder and
wilder, that punishment had no effect on them, except to make them
more unmanageable, and that they were not to be treated as reasonable
people. He then did away with the laws against them, and tried to
keep them quiet by kindness, and in the last years of his reign
his hands were so full of the Arian quarrels nearer home that he
had little leisure to attend to the affairs of the Donatists.
PART IV
After the death of Constantius, Africa fell to the share of his
youngest son, Constans, who sent some officers into the country
with orders to make presents to the Donatists, in the hope of thus
bringing them to join the Church. But Donatus flew out into a great
fury when he heard of this--"What has the emperor to do with
the Church?" he asked; and he forbade the members of his sect
(which was what he meant by "the Church") to touch any
of the money that was offered to them.
By this time a stranger set of wild people called "Circumcellions"
had appeared among the Donatists. They got their name trom two Latin
words which mean "around the cottages"; because, instead
of maintaining themselves by honest labour, they used to go about,
like sturdy beggars, to the cottages of the country people, and
demand whatever they wanted. They were of the poorest class, and
very ignorant, but full of zeal for their religion. But, instead
of being "pure and peaceable", (St. James iii. 17), this
religion was fierce and savage and allowed them to go on without
any check, in drunkenness and all sorts of misconduct. Their women,
whom they called "sacred virgins," were as bad as the
men, or worse. Bands of both sexes used to rove about the country,
and keep the peaceable inhabitants in constant fear. As they went
along, they sang or shouted "Praises be to God!" and this
song, says St. Augustine, was heard with greater dread than the
roaring of a lion. At first they thought that they must not use
swords, on account of what our Lord had said to Peter (St. Matt.
xxvi. 52.); so they carried heavy clubs, which they called "Israels",
and with these they used to beat people, and often so severely as
to kill them. But afterwards the Circumcellions got over their scruples,
and armed themselves not only with swords, but with other weapons
of steel, such as spears and hatchets. They attacked and plundered
the churches of the Catholics, and the houses of the clergy; and
they handled any clergyman whom they could get hold of very roughly.
Besides this, they were fond of interfering in all sorts of affairs.
People did not dare to ask for the payment of debts, or to reprove
their slaves for misbehaviour, lest the Circumcellions should be
called in upon them. And things got to such a pass, that the officers
of the law were afraid to do their duty.
But the Circumcellions were as furious against themselves as against
others. They used to court death in all manner of ways. Sometimes
they stopped travellers on the roads, and desired to be killed,
threatening to kill the travellers if they refused. And if they
met a judge going on his rounds, they threatened him with death
if he would not hand them over to his officers for execution. One
judge whom they assailed in this way played them a pleasant trick.
He seemed quite willing to humour them, and told his officers to
bind them as if for execution; and when he had thus made them harmless
and helpless, instead of ordering them to be put to death, he turned
them loose, leaving them to get themselves unbound as best they
could. Many Circumcellions drowned themselves, rushed into fire,
or threw themselves from rocks and were dashed to pieces; but they
would not put an end to themselves by hanging, because that was
the death of the "traditor" (or "traitor") Judas.
The Donatists were not all so mad as these people, and some of their
councils condemned the practice of self-murder. But it went on nevertheless,
and those who made away with themselves, or got others to kill them
in such ways as have been mentioned, were honoured as martyrs by
the more violent part of the sect.
Constans made three attempts to win over the Donatists by presents,
but they held out against all; and when the third attempt was made,
in the year 347, by means of an officer named Macarius, the Circumcellions
broke out into rebellion, and fought a battle with the emperor's
troops. In this battle the Donatists were defeated, and two of their
bishops, who had been busy in stirring up the rebels, were among
the slain. Macarius then required the Donatists to join the Church,
and threatened them with banishment if they should refuse, but they
were still obstinate: and it would seem that they were treated hardly
by the government, although the Catholic bishops tried to prevent
it. Donatus himself and great numbers of his followers were sent
into banishment; and for a time the sect appeared to have been put
down.
PART V
Thus they remained until the death of the emperor Constantius (AD
361), and Donatus had died in the mean time. Julian, on succeeding
to the empire, gave leave to all whom Constantius had banished on
account of religion to return to their homes (p 56). But the Donatists
were not the better for this, as they had not been banished by Constantius,
but by Constans, before Constantius got possession of Africa: so
they petitioned the emperor that they might be recalled from banishment;
and in their petition they spoke of Julian in a way which disagreed
strangely with their general defiance of governments, and which
was especially ill-suited for one who had forsaken the Christian
faith and was persecuting it at that very time. Julian granted their
request, and forthwith they returned home in great triumph, and
committed violent outrages against the Catholics. They took possession
of a number of churches, and, professing to consider everything
that had been used by the Catholics unclean, they washed the pavement,
scraped the walls, burnt the communion tables, melted the plate,
and cast the holy sacrament to the dogs. They soon became strong
throughout the whole north of Africa, and in one part of it, Numidia,
they were stronger than the Catholics. After the death of Julian,
laws were made against them from time to time, but do not seem to
have been carried out. And although the Donatists quarrelled much
among themselves, and split up into a number of parties, they were
still very powerful in Augustine's day. In his own city of Hippo
he found that they were more in number than the Catholics; and such
was their bitter and pharisaical spirit that the bishop of the sect
at Hippo would not let any of his people so much as bake for their
Catholic neighbours.
Augustine did all that he could to make something of the Donatists,
but it was mostly in vain. He could not get their bishops or clergy
to argue with him. They pretended to call themselves "the children
of the martyrs" on account of the troubles which their forefathers
had gone through in the reign of Constans, and they said that the
children of the martyrs could not stoop to argue with sinners and
traditors. Although they professed that their sect was made up of
perfect saints, they took in all sorts of worthless converts for
the sake of swelling their numbers, whereas Augustine would not
let any Donatists join the Church without inquiring into their characters,
and, if he found that they had done anything for which they had
been condemned by their sect to do penance, he insisted that they
should go through a penance before being admitted into the Church.
But, notwithstanding the difficulties which he found in dealing
with them, he and others succeeded in drawing over a great number
of Donatists to the Church. And this made the Circumcellions so
furious that they fell on the Catholic clergy whenever they could
find them, and tried to do them all possible mischief. They beat
and mangled some of them cruelly; they put out the eyes of some
by throwing a mixture of lime and vinegar into their faces; and,
among other things, they laid a plan for waylaying Augustine himself,
which, however, he escaped, through the providence of God. Many
reports of these savage doings were carried to the emperor, Honorius,
and some of the sufferers appeared at his court to tell their own
tale: whereupon the old laws against the sect were revived, and
severe new laws were also made. In these even death was threatened
against Donatists who should molest the Catholics; but Augustine
begged that this penalty might be withdrawn, because the Catholic
clergy, who knew more about the sect than any one else, would not
give information against it, if the punishment of the Donatists
were to be so great. And he and his brethren requested that the
emperor would appoint a meeting to be held between the parties,
in order that they might talk over their differences, and, if possible,
might come to some agreement.
The emperor consented to do so; and a meeting took place accordingly,
at Carthage, in 411, in the presence of a commissioner named Marcellinus.
Two hundred and eighty-six Catholic bishops found their way to the
city by degrees. But the Donatists, who were two hundred and seventy-nine
in number, entered it in a body, thinking to make all the effect
that they could by the show of a great procession. At the conference
(or meeting), which lasted three days, the Donatists behaved with
their usual pride and insolence. When Marcellinus begged them to
sit down, they refused, because our Lord had stood before Pilate.
On being again asked to seat themselves, they quoted a text from
the Psalms, "I will not sit with the wicked" (Ps. xxvi.
5); meaning that the Catholics were the wicked, and that they themselves
were too good to sit in such company. And when Augustine called
them "brethren," they cried out in anger that they did
not own any such brotherhood. They tried to throw difficulties in
the way of arguing the question fairly; but on the third day their
shifts would serve them no longer. Augustine then took the lead
among the Catholics, and showed at great length both how wrongly
the Donatists had behaved in the beginning of their separation from
the Church, and how contrary to Scripture their principles were.
Marcellinus, who had been sent by the emperor to hear both parties,
gave judgment in favour of the Catholics. Such of the Donatist bishops
and clergy as would join the Church were allowed to keep possession
of their places; but the others were to be banished. Augustine had
at first been against the idea of trying to force people in matters
of religion. But he saw that many were brought by these laws to
join the Church, and after a time he came to think that such laws
were good and useful; nay, he even tried to find a Scripture warrant
for them in the text, "Compel them to come in" (St. Luke
xiv. 23). And thus, unhappily, this great and good man was led to
lend his name to the grievous error of thinking that force, or even
persecution, may be used rightly, and with good effect, in matters
of religion. It was one of the mistakes to which people are liable
when they form their opinions without having the opportunity of
seeing how things work in the long run, and on a large scale. We
must regret that Augustine seemed in any way to countenance such
means; but even although he erred in some measure as to this, we
may be sure that he would have abhorred the cruelties which have
since been done under pretence of maintaining the true religion,
and of bringing people to embrace it.
While some of the Donatists were thus brought over to the Church,
others became more outrageous than ever. Many of them grew desperate,
and made away with themselves. One of their bishops threatened that,
if he were required by force to join the Catholics, he should shut
himself up in a church with his people, and that they would then
set the building on fire and perish in the flames. There were many
among the Donatists who would have been mad enough to do a thing
of this kind; but it would seem that the bishop was not put to the
trial which he expected.
The Donatists dwindled away from this time, and were little heard
of after Augustine's days, although there were still some in Africa
two hundred years later, as we learn from the letters of St Gregory
the Great.
PART VI
Of all the disputes in which Augustine was engaged, that with the
Pelagians was the most famous. The leader of these people, Pelagius,
was a Briton. His name would mean, either in Latin or in Greek,
a "man of the sea," and it is said that his British name
was Morgan-- meaning the same as the Greek or Latin name. Pelagius
was the first native of our own island who gained fame as a writer
or as a divine; but his fame was not of a desirable kind, as it
arose from the errors which he ran into. He was a man of learning,
and of strict life; and at Rome, where he spent many years, he was
much respected, until in his old age he began to set forth opinions
which brought him into the repute of a heretic. At Rome he became
acquainted with a man named Celestius, who is said by some to have
been an Italian, while others suppose him an Irishman. It is not
known whether Celestius learnt his opinions from Pelagius, or whether
each of them had come to think in the same way before they knew
one another. But, however this may be, they became great friends,
and joined in teaching the same errors.
Augustine, as we have seen, had passed through such trials of the
spirit that he thoroughly felt the need of God's gracious help in
order to do, or even to will, any good thing. Pelagius, on the contrary,
seems to have always gone on steadily in the way of his religion.
Now this was really a reason why he should have thanked that grace
and mercy of God which had spared him the dangers and the terrible
sufferings which others have to bear in the course of their spiritual
life. But unhappily Pelagius overlooked the help of grace. He owned,
indeed, that all is from God; but, instead of understanding that
the power of doing any good, or of avoiding any sin, is the especial
gift of the Holy Spirit, he fancied that the power of living without
sin was given to us by God as a part of our nature. He saw that
some people make a wrong use of the doctrine of our natural corruption.
He saw that, instead of throwing the blame of their sins on their
own neglect of the grace which is offered to us through Christ,
they spoke of the weakness and corruption of their nature as if
these were an excuse for their sins. This was, indeed, a grievous
error, and one which Pelagius would have done well to warn people
against. But, in condemning it, he went far wrong in an opposite
way: he said that man's nature is not corrupt; that it is nothing
the worse for the fall of our first parents; that man can be good
by his own natural power, without needing any higher help; that
men might live without sin, and that many have so lived. These notions
of his are mentioned and are condemned in the ninth Article of our
own Church, where it is said that "Original sin standeth not
in the following of Adam, as the Pelagians do vainly talk"
[that is to say, original sin is not merely the actual imitation
of Adam's sin]; "but it is the fault and corruption of the
nature of every man that naturally is engendered of the offspring
of Adam; whereby man is very far gone from original righteousness"
[that is, he is very far gone from that righteousness which Adam
had at the first]. And then it is said in the next Article--"The
condition of man, after the fall of Adam, is such that he cannot
turn and prepare himself by his own natural strength and good works
to faith and calling upon God. Wherefore we have no power to do
good works, pleasing and acceptable to God, without the grace of
God by Christ preventing us [or "going before" us], that
we may have a good will, and working with us when we have that good
will." Thus at every step there is a need of grace from above
to help us on the way of salvation.
After Rome had been taken by the Goths, in the year 410 (p 93),
Pelagius and Celestius passed over into Africa, from which Pelagius,
after a short stay, went into the Holy Land. Celestius tried to
get himself ordained by the African church; but objections were
made to him, and a council was held which condemned and excommunicated
him. Augustine was too busy with the Donatists to attend this council;
but he was very much alarmed by the errors of the new teachers,
and soon took the lead in writing against them, and in opposing
them by other means.
Pelagius was examined by some councils in the Holy Land, and contrived
to persuade them that there was nothing wrong in his doctrines.
He and Celestius even got a bishop of Rome, Zosimus, to own them
as sound in the faith, and to reprove the African bishops for condemning
them. The secret of this was, that Pelagius used words in a crafty
way, which neither the synods in the Holy Land nor the bishop of
Rome suspected. When be was charged with denying the need of grace,
he said that he owned it to be necessary; but, instead of using
the word grace in its right meaning, to signify the working of the
Holy Spirit on the heart, he used it as a name for other means by
which God helps us; such as the power which Pelagius supposed to
be bestowed on us as a part of our nature; the forgiveness of our
sins in baptism; the offer of salvation, the knowledge and instruction
given to us through Holy Scripture, or in other ways. By such tricks
the Pelagians imposed on the bishop of Rome and others; but the
Africans, with Augustine at their head, stood firm. They steadily
maintained that Pelagius and Celestius were unsound in their opinions;
they told Zosimus that he had no right to meddle with Africa, and
that he had been altogether deceived by the heretics. So, after
a while, the bishop of Rome took quite the opposite line, and condemned
Pelagius with his followers; and they were also condemned in several
councils, of which the most famous was the General Council of Ephesus,
held in the year 431. Augustine did great service in opposing these
dangerous doctrines; but in doing so, he said some things as to
God's choosing of his elect, and predestinating them (or "marking
them out beforehand") to salvation, which are rather startling,
and might lead to serious error. But as to this deep and difficult
subject, I shall content myself with quoting a few words from our
Church's seventeenth Article--"We must receive God's promises
in such wise as they be generally set forth to us in Holy Scripture;
and in our doings, that will of God is to be followed, which we
have expressly declared to us in the word of God."
PART VII
Augustine was still busied in the Pelagian controversy when a fearful
calamity burst upon his country. The commander of the troops in
Africa, Boniface, had been an intimate friend of his, and had been
much under his influence. A rival of Boniface, Aetius, persuaded
the empress, Placidia, who governed in the name of her young son,
Valentinian the Third, to recall the general from Africa; and at
the same time he persuaded Boniface to disobey her orders, telling
him that his ruin was intended. Boniface, who was a man of open
and generous mind, did not suspect the villainy of Aetius; and,
as the only means of saving himself, he rebelled against the emperor,
and invited the Vandals from Spain to invade Africa. These Vandals
were a savage nation, which had overrun part of Spain about twenty
years before. They now gladly accepted Boniface's invitation, and
passed in great numbers into Africa, where the Moors joined them,
and the Donatists eagerly seized the opportunity of avenging themselves
on the Catholics, by assisting the invaders. The country was laid
waste, and the Catholic clergy were treated with especial cruelty,
both by the Vandals (who were Arians) and by the Donatists.
Augustine had urged Boniface to return to his duty as a subject
of the empire. Boniface, who was disgusted by the savage doings
of the Vandals, and had discovered the tricks by which Aetius had
tempted him to revolt, begged the Vandal leader Genseric to return
to Spain; but he found that he had rashly raised a power which he
could not manage, and the barbarians laughed at his entreaties.
As he could not prevail with them by words, he fought a battle with
them; but he was defeated, and he then shut himself up in Augustine's
city, Hippo.
During all these troubles Augustine was very active in writing
letters of exhortation to his brethren, and in endeavouring to support
them under their trials. And when Hippo was crowded by a multitude
of all kinds, who had fled to its walls for shelter, he laboured
without ceasing among them. In June, 430, the Vandals laid siege
to the place, and soon after, the bishop fell sick in consequence
of his labours. He felt that his end was near, and he wished, during
his short remaining time, to be free from interruption in preparing
for death. He therefore would not allow his friends to see him,
except at the hours when he took food or medicine. He desired that
the penitential psalms--(the seven Psalms which are read in church
on Ash Wednesday, and which especially express sorrow for sin)--
should be hung up within his sight, and he read them over and over,
shedding floods of tears as he read. On the 28th of August, 430,
he was taken to his rest, and in the following year Hippo fell into
the hands of the Vandals, who thus became masters of the whole of
northern Africa.
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