Handbook on Faith, Hope, and Love
I recently finished reading Handbook on Faith, Hope, and Love by Saint Augustine, which is a letter written in response to one of his devotees who had asked him for spiritual guidance. It’s actually very interesting once you cut through his brainy and often overly complex writing style (which is indicative of both Augustine’s intellect, and most likely the writing style of that period). Now, I am not exactly sure where the title of “handbook” came from, as it is not like any handbook I have ever seen. It doesn’t have easily accessible solutions (i.e. “Crisis of faith – page 27″), which one might expect from a volume given the title “Handbook…”. Instead, it reads like a letter, with Augustine tackling some very paradoxical ideas, most of which support or affirm the others. His ideas flow almost like a logical succession with each idea building on the previous, supported by his logic and reasoning.
Here are the main ideas I took away from the book:
- All which God created is inherently and completely good because it was made by God, in the image of God.
- Evil is simply the absence of good, just as darkness is simply the absence of light.
- Because all that God created is good, and evil is the absence of good, one could never be completely evil without ceasing to be (to exist).
- The only reason evil is allowed to exist is to show God’s mercy, to show that God’s creation can be redeemed.
- We are saved by our faith in God and God’s redeeming power, but it is only by the grace of God that our faith is even possible.
- We are in need of redemption because we have been separated from God by the Fall.
- Since the fall, every human has been born into a life of sin, both original sin, and our own. Thus, we are responsible for not only our own sin, but the sins of our parents, and so on.
- Jesus Christ, who is simultaneously God (without origin) and human (with divine origin), was sent as mediator to reconcile Gods creation to God.
- Since Christ was born of Holy Spirit (God’s grace, divine origin), he is free from the bonds of sin, yet because he is born of the flesh, he is called sin (though it is our own, not his).
- When Christ’s flesh dies on the cross, so to does his connection original sin, and in his resurrection shows us how we can live a life free from sin.
- Following Christ’s example, it is though baptism that we may also break our connection to original sin, and be reborn into a life free from sin.
I have to say that while most of these ideas aren’t completely new to me (at least in some form), I had never thought about them quite in this way. What I mean is, the main ideas are not new ones, but the logical progression from one to the next is new to me.
For example, the idea that evil is allowed to exist, albeit for a greater purpose, is difficult to wrap my head around. It almost alludes to the popular idea of “God’s Plan,” but without being tied to specific events (i.e. “God allowed my puppy to die so that I could learn a lesson about ________ “). Instead, it remains at a macro level, tying the specific events to evil, not to God. Bad things don’t happen because God allows them to, bad things happen because there is evil in the world, which God allows to exist in order that His grace may be revealed.
We have hope that we can be saved. We have faith that God can save us. God’s redeeming power, God’s grace, is God’s love and it’s God’s grace that both justifies our hope, and saves us.
Note: It is entirely possible that my conclusions are theologically unsound. However, seeing as I am not a theologian, I would expect a little latitude. If you find that I am off, please (in a very kind, and teaching manner) feel free to correct me.
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get fed this blog
Okay several things…
1) I see you have one of those ’spam’ bloggers…I get that too, and I dont understand where it comes from! It’s like there’s random blogs created just to search for other blogs, steal your story and publish it on theres – that annoys me. Anyway…
2) I wonder if Relevant (the publishers’ I believe) added the “Handbook” part, because I believe I actually checked this book out from the Dillon Library (and kept it for MANY years before returning it as we packed for WI), it was this really cute little blue hardback book. Very vintage and cool. Anyway – I dont remember the ‘handbook’ part in the title
3) The idea that God allows evil to exist, not that He created it, but allows it…but he isnt necessarily responsible for things going wrong, just responsible for allowing evil to exist….. was really hard for me to understand too. I really ‘understood’ and ‘heard’ that for the first time when I read Phillip Yancey’s, Where is God When it Hurts? and he talks about the importance of Pain, why it exists, etc.
http://www.amazon.com/Where-When-Hurts-Philip-Yancey/dp/0310245729/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/103-2346363-3382213?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1192303545&sr=8-1
Good post
i am dealing with a very hard thing in my life as my son
( http://www.cadenwhite.com ) has a childhood cancer, and so this particular area about bad or evil things stuck out to me when i read your post. I also am not a theologian (whew) but I have known Christ for a long time, and have studied the Bible quite a bit, so this is my understanding of the scriptures. I do not claim to have full understanding (“For we know in part…”)<–disclaimer
Your text said…
“For example, the idea that evil is allowed to exist, albeit for a greater purpose, is difficult to wrap my head around. It almost alludes to the popular idea of “God’s Plan,” but without being tied to specific events (i.e. “God allowed my puppy to die so that I could learn a lesson about ________ “). Instead, it remains at a macro level, tying the specific events to evil, not to God. Bad things don’t happen because God allows them to, bad things happen because there is evil in the world, which God allows to exist in order that His grace may be revealed.”
I think that if we look through scripture we see that God does allows pain, suffering, sickness, evil and sin etc. There are many reasons that he does this, many I am sure we don’t understand. “His ways are higher than our ways, and his thoughts deeper than our thoughts” I think of Job. Satan came before God and God asks Satan if he has considered his servant Job. Satan asks permission to test Job’s faith and God grants Satan this right.
Also, once sin entered the world, bad things do happen, evil exists and it does destroy. God is in control, none of this is out of his control. So I come back to say that God does allow these things to happen, whatever his reasons might be. i.e – Getting us to look to Him, helping draw others to Him, letting us be part of pointing others to Him. We have a choice in this equation as well. We can also choose to sin which causes pain and suffering and destroys. This is not the only reason that these things are in are life though. God is God and we can’t tell this potter what to do. Our job is to reflect his glory back to him.
I can say from my experience, even though God has allowed things to happen that I do not like, do not want and have trouble understanding, I know he is a good God and I will “praise him in all things”. Not easy, not fun and very difficult to understand, but I pray that through these things he will be praised and glorified.
I will need to come back and read this tomorrow to remind myself of this again and again.
Thankfully I am reminded that we are all in process, and not yet perfected.
http://darinwhite.wordpress.com
Don’t you love trying to wrap your mind around things you know you won’t be able to wrap your mind around…but you do it anyway? *lol* I do… which is why Augustine is so fun to me. I actually had to read this for a class this week…and my response was immediately on his references to goodness and evil…and how they do not exist solely as a balance…but rather as a superiority (goodness of course) and a corruption.
However, I found myself asking questions after reading “Thus, every entity,” in chapter iv at the end of 13, “even if it is a defective one, is so far as it is an entity is good. In so far as it is defective, it is evil.” In relation to your statement that God doesn’t necessarily allow bad things to happen–evil is the cause of bad things and God allows evil (which of course would conclude that God would “allow” bad things…like we could wrap our minds around that, right?) , my questions were regarding that of pain…as it has been previously stated in your other comments… is pain itself “defective” and thus “evil?” All pain? “What you mean for evil, God means for good,” right? So if God allows evil…and thus allows pain as an entity… and He means good for His people…who, by existence, experience pain… is that pain not, ultimately, good? *lol* wow I’ve confused myself…
I think I really just meant to say I enjoyed reading
Meg, you definitely bring up some interesting points. As far as whether or not pain is ultimately good, I think it begs another question: Is pain a result of the Fall? In other words, would pain exist in a world free from sin? Is disease a product of nature, or do we bring it upon ourselves as a result of the Fall? Once an understanding has been reached regarding these questions, it makes the question of whether or not pain is good much easier to answer.
Suffice to say, Augustine is not exactly rainy-day reading. While his conclusions are supported by his logic and reasoning, they still leave some things open, leading to more questions.
I am curious to find out if the other authors in the “Foundations of Faith” series are as difficult to wrap my head around as this one.