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The Confessions of Saint Augustine by Saint Augustine
Book, page 101 / 441


which was very easily weakened. Whatever his motive was in so
doing, it was doubtless, in such a man, a good one.

      4. But actually I could find no opportunity of putting the
questions I desired to that holy oracle of thine in his heart,
unless it was a matter which could be dealt with briefly.
However, those surgings in me required that he should give me his
full leisure so that I might pour them out to him; but I never
found him so. I heard him, indeed, every Lord's Day, "rightly
dividing the word of truth"[154] among the people. And I became
all the more convinced that all those knots of crafty calumnies
which those deceivers of ours had knit together against the divine
books could be unraveled.

      I soon understood that the statement that man was made after
the image of Him that created him[155] was not understood by thy
spiritual sons -- whom thou hadst regenerated through the Catholic
Mother[156] through grace -- as if they believed and imagined that
thou wert bounded by a human form, although what was the nature of
a spiritual substance I had not the faintest or vaguest notion.
Still rejoicing, I blushed that for so many years I had bayed, not
against the Catholic faith, but against the fables of fleshly
imagination. For I had been both impious and rash in this, that I
had condemned by pronouncement what I ought to have learned by
inquiry. For thou, O Most High, and most near, most secret, yet
most present, who dost not have limbs, some of which are larger
and some smaller, but who art wholly everywhere and nowhere in
space, and art not shaped by some corporeal form: thou didst
create man after thy own image and, see, he dwells in space, both
head and feet.

                           CHAPTER IV

      5. Since I could not then understand how this image of thine
could subsist, I should have knocked on the door and propounded
the doubt as to how it was to be believed, and not have
insultingly opposed it as if it were actually believed.
Therefore, my anxiety as to what I could retain as certain gnawed
all the more sharply into my soul, and I felt quite ashamed
because during the long time I had been deluded and deceived by

 
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