A treatise of St Augustine on St John's gospel
You will come to the spring and see light itself |
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We Christians are the light, at least by comparison with unbelievers. Thus the Apostle says: Once you were darkness, but now you are light in the Lord; walk then as sons of the light. And elsewhere he says: The
night is far spent, the day is drawing near. Let us therefore lay aside
the works of darkness and put on the armor of light; let us walk
uprightly as in the day.
Nevertheless, since the days in which we are now
living are still dark compared to the light which we shall see, hear
what the apostle Peter says. He speaks of a voice that came from the
Supreme Glory and said to the Lord Jesus Christ: You are my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased. This voice, he says, we heard coming from heaven, when we were with him on the holy mountain. Because we ourselves were not present there and did not hear that voice from heaven, Peter says to us: And
we possess a more certain prophetic word to which you do well to
attend, as to a lamp shining in a dark place, until the day dawns and
the morning star rises in your hearts.
When, therefore, our Lord Jesus Christ comes and, as the apostle Paul says, brings
to light things hidden in darkness and makes plain the secrets of the
heart, so that everyone may receive his commendation from God, then
lamps will no longer be needed. When that day is at hand, the prophet
will not be read to us, the book of the Apostle will not be opened, we
shall not require the testimony of John, we shall have no need of the
Gospel itself. Therefore all Scriptures will be taken away from us,
those Scriptures which in the night of this world burned like lamps so
that we might not remain in darkness.
When all these things are removed as no longer
necessary for our illumination, and when the men of God by whom they
were ministered to us shall themselves together with us behold the true
and dear light without such aids, what shall we see? With what shall our
minds be nourished? What will give joy to our gaze? Where will that
gladness come from, which eye has not seen, and ear has not heard, which has not even been conceived by the heart of man? What shall we see?
I implore you to love with me and, by believing, to
run with me; let us long for our heavenly country, let us sigh for our
heavenly home, let us truly feel that here we are strangers. What shall
we then see? Let the gospel tell us: In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God.
You will come to the fountain, with whose dew you have already been
sprinkled. Instead of the ray of light which was sent through slanting
and winding ways into the heart of your darkness, you will see the light
itself in all its purity and brightness. It is to see and experience
this light that you are now being cleansed. Dearly beloved, John himself says, we
are the sons of God, and it has not yet been disclosed what we shall
be; but we know that when he appears we shall be like him, because we
shall see him as he is.
I feel that your spirits are being raised up with mine to the heavens above; but the body which is corruptible weighs down the soul, and this earthly tent burdens the thoughtful mind.
I am about to lay aside this book, and you are soon going away, each to
his own business. It has been good for us to share the common light,
good to have enjoyed ourselves, good to have been glad together. When we
part from one another, let us not depart from him.
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