Table of Contents
|
Words
:
Alphabetical
-
Frequency
-
Inverse
-
Length
-
Statistics
|
Help
|
IntraText Library
St. Augustine
Enchiridion
IntraText CT - Text
CHAPTER II - The Creed and the Lord's Prayer as Guides to the Interpretation of the Theological Virtues of Faith, Hope, and Love
Previous
-
Next
Click here to hide the links to concordance
CHAPTER
II
-
The
Creed
and
the
Lord
'
s
Prayer
as
Guides
to
the
Interpretation
of
the
Theological
Virtues
of
Faith
,
Hope
,
and
Love
7
.
Let
us
begin
,
for
example
,
with
the
Symbol
11
and
the
Lord
'
s
Prayer
.
What
is
shorter
to
hear
or
to
read
?
What
is
more
easily
memorized
?
Since
through
sin
the
human
race
stood
grievously
burdened
by
great
misery
and
in
deep
need
of
mercy
,
a
prophet
,
preaching
of
the
time
of
God
'
s
grace
,
said
, "
And
it
shall
be
that
all
who
invoke
the
Lord
'
s
name
will
be
saved
."
12
Thus
,
we
have
the
Lord
'
s
Prayer
.
Later
,
the
apostle
,
when
he
wished
to
commend
this
same
grace
,
remembered
this
prophetic
testimony
and
promptly
added
, "
But
how
shall
they
invoke
him
in
whom
they
have
not
believed
?"
13
Thus
,
we
have
the
Symbol
.
In
these
two
we
have
the
three
theological
virtues
working
together
:
faith
believes
;
hope
and
love
pray
.
Yet
without
faith
nothing
else
is
possible
;
thus
faith
prays
too
.
This
,
then
,
is
the
meaning
of
the
saying
, "
How
shall
they
invoke
him
in
whom
they
have
not
believed
?"
8
.
Now
,
is
it
possible
to
hope
for
what
we
do
not
believe
in
?
We
can
,
of
course
,
believe
in
something
that
we
do
not
hope
for
.
Who
among
the
faithful
does
not
believe
in
the
punishment
of
the
impious
?
Yet
he
does
not
hope
for
it
,
and
whoever
believes
that
such
a
punishment
is
threatening
him
and
draws
back
in
horror
from
it
is
more
rightly
said
to
fear
than
to
hope
.
A
poet
,
distinguishing
between
these
two
feelings
,
said
,
"
Let
those
who
dread
be
allowed
to
hope
,"
14
but
another
poet
,
and
a
better
one
,
did
not
put
it
rightly
:
"
Here
,
if
I
could
have
hoped
for
[
i.e.
,
foreseen
]
such
a
grievous
blow
..."
15
Indeed
,
some
grammarians
use
this
as
an
example
of
inaccurate
language
and
comment
, "
He
said
'
to
hope
'
when
he
should
have
said
'
to
fear
.'"
Therefore
faith
may
refer
to
evil
things
as
well
as
to
good
,
since
we
believe
in
both
the
good
and
evil
.
Yet
faith
is
good
,
not
evil
.
Moreover
,
faith
refers
to
things
past
and
present
and
future
.
For
we
believe
that
Christ
died
;
this
is
a
past
event
.
We
believe
that
he
sitteth
at
the
Father
'
s
right
hand
;
this
is
present
.
We
believe
that
he
will
come
as
our
judge
;
this
is
future
.
Again
,
faith
has
to
do
with
our
own
affairs
and
with
those
of
others
.
For
everyone
believes
,
both
about
himself
and
other
persons
-
and
about
things
as
well
-
that
at
some
time
he
began
to
exist
and
that
he
has
not
existed
forever
.
Thus
,
not
only
about
men
,
but
even
about
angels
,
we
believe
many
things
that
have
a
bearing
on
religion
.
But
hope
deals
only
with
good
things
,
and
only
with
those
which
lie
in
the
future
,
and
which
pertain
to
the
man
who
cherishes
the
hope
.
Since
this
is
so
,
faith
must
be
distinguished
from
hope
:
they
are
different
terms
and
likewise
different
concepts
.
Yet
faith
and
hope
have
this
in
common
:
they
refer
to
what
is
not
seen
,
whether
this
unseen
is
believed
in
or
hoped
for
.
Thus
in
the
Epistle
to
the
Hebrews
,
which
is
used
by
the
enlightened
defenders
of
the
catholic
rule
of
faith
,
faith
is
said
to
be
"
the
conviction
of
things
not
seen
."
16
However
,
when
a
man
maintains
that
neither
words
nor
witnesses
nor
even
arguments
,
but
only
the
evidence
of
present
experience
,
determine
his
faith
,
he
still
ought
not
to
be
called
absurd
or
told
, "
You
have
seen
;
therefore
you
have
not
believed
."
For
it
does
not
follow
that
unless
a
thing
is
not
seen
it
cannot
be
believed
.
Still
it
is
better
for
us
to
use
the
term
"
faith
,"
as
we
are
taught
in
"
the
sacred
eloquence
,"
17
to
refer
to
things
not
seen
.
And
as
for
hope
,
the
apostle
says
: "
Hope
that
is
seen
is
not
hope
.
For
if
a
man
sees
a
thing
,
why
does
he
hope
for
it
?
If
,
however
,
we
hope
for
what
we
do
not
see
,
we
then
wait
for
it
in
patience
."
18
When
,
therefore
,
our
good
is
believed
to
be
future
,
this
is
the
same
thing
as
hoping
for
it
.
What
,
then
,
shall
I
say
of
love
,
without
which
faith
can
do
nothing
?
There
can
be
no
true
hope
without
love
.
Indeed
,
as
the
apostle
James
says
, "
Even
the
demons
believe
and
tremble
."
19
Yet
they
neither
hope
nor
love
.
Instead
,
believing
as
we
do
that
what
we
hope
for
and
love
is
coming
to
pass
,
they
tremble
.
Therefore
,
the
apostle
Paul
approves
and
commends
the
faith
that
works
by
love
and
that
cannot
exist
without
hope
.
Thus
it
is
that
love
is
not
without
hope
,
hope
is
not
without
love
,
and
neither
hope
nor
love
are
without
faith
.
11
The
Apostles
'
Creed
.
Cf
.
Augustine
'
s
early
essay
On
Faith
and
the
Creed
.
12
Joel
2
:
32
.
13
Rom
.
10
:
14
.
14
Lucan
,
Pharsalia
,
II
,
15
.
15
Virgil
,
Aeneid
,
IV
,
419
.
The
context
of
this
quotation
is
Dido
'
s
lament
over
Aeneas
'
prospective
abandonment
of
her
.
She
is
saying
that
if
she
could
have
foreseen
such
a
disaster
,
she
would
have
been
able
to
bear
it
.
Augustine
'
s
criticism
here
is
a
literalistic
quibble
.
16
Heb
.
11
:
1
.
17
Sacra
eloquia
-
a
favorite
phrase
of
Augustine
'
s
for
the
Bible
.
18
Rom
.
8
:
24
,
25
(
Old
Latin
).
19
James
2
:
19
.
Previous
-
Next
Table of Contents
|
Words
:
Alphabetical
-
Frequency
-
Inverse
-
Length
-
Statistics
|
Help
|
IntraText Library
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText®
(V89) - Some rights reserved by
EuloTech SRL
- 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a
Creative Commons License