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St. Augustine
On Christian Doctrine
IntraText CT - Text
Preface - Showing that to teach rules for the interpretation of Scripture is not a superfluous task
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Preface
-
Showing
that
to
teach
rules
for
the
interpretation
of
Scripture
is
not
a
superfluous
task
There
are
certain
rules
for
the
interpretation
of
Scripture
which
I
think
might
with
great
advantage
be
taught
to
earnest
students
of
the
word
,
that
they
may
profit
not
only
from
reading
the
works
of
others
who
have
laid
open
the
secrets
of
the
sacred
writings
,
but
also
from
themselves
opening
such
secrets
to
others
.
These
rules
I
propose
to
teach
to
those
who
are
able
and
willing
to
learn
,
if
God
our
Lord
do
not
withhold
from
me
,
while
I
write
,
the
thoughts
He
is
wont
to
vouchsafe
to
me
in
my
meditations
on
this
subject
.
But
before
I
enter
upon
this
undertaking
,
I
think
it
well
to
meet
the
objections
of
those
who
are
likely
to
take
exception
to
the
work
,
or
who
would
do
so
,
did
I
not
conciliate
them
beforehand
.
And
if
,
after
all
,
men
should
still
be
found
to
make
objections
,
yet
at
least
they
will
not
prevail
with
others
(
over
whom
they
might
have
influence
,
did
they
not
find
them
forearmed
against
their
assaults
),
to
turn
them
back
from
a
useful
study
to
the
dull
sloth
of
ignorance
.
There
are
some
,
then
,
likely
to
object
to
this
work
of
mine
,
because
they
have
failed
to
understand
the
rules
here
laid
down
.
Others
,
again
,
will
think
that
I
have
spent
my
labour
to
no
purpose
,
because
,
though
they
understand
the
rules
,
yet
in
their
attempts
to
apply
them
and
to
interpret
Scripture
by
them
,
they
have
failed
to
clear
up
the
point
they
wish
cleared
up
;
and
these
,
because
they
have
received
no
assistance
from
this
work
themselves
,
will
give
it
as
their
opinion
that
it
can
be
of
no
use
to
anybody
.
There
is
a
third
class
of
objectors
who
either
really
do
understand
Scripture
well
,
or
think
they
do
,
and
who
,
because
they
know
(
or
imagine
)
that
they
have
attained
a
certain
power
of
interpreting
the
sacred
books
without
reading
any
directions
of
the
kind
that
I
propose
to
lay
down
here
,
will
cry
out
that
such
rules
are
not
necessary
for
any
one
,
but
that
everything
rightly
done
towards
clearing
up
the
obscurities
of
Scripture
could
be
better
done
by
the
unassisted
grace
of
God
.
To
reply
briefly
to
all
these
.
To
those
who
do
not
understand
what
is
here
set
down
,
my
answer
is
,
that
I
am
not
to
be
blamed
for
their
want
of
understanding
.
It
is
just
as
if
they
were
anxious
to
see
the
new
or
the
old
moon
,
or
some
very
obscure
star
,
and
I
should
point
it
out
with
my
finger
:
if
they
had
not
sight
enough
to
see
even
my
finger
,
they
would
surely
have
no
right
to
fly
into
a
passion
with
me
on
that
account
.
As
for
those
who
,
even
though
they
know
and
understand
my
directions
,
fail
to
penetrate
the
meaning
of
obscure
passages
in
Scripture
,
they
may
stand
for
those
who
,
in
the
case
I
have
imagined
,
are
just
able
to
see
my
finger
,
but
cannot
see
the
stars
at
which
it
is
pointed
.
And
so
both
these
classes
had
better
give
up
blaming
me
,
and
pray
instead
that
God
would
grant
them
the
sight
of
their
eyes
.
For
though
I
can
move
my
finger
to
point
out
an
object
,
it
is
out
of
my
power
to
open
men
'
s
eyes
that
they
may
see
either
the
fact
that
I
am
pointing
,
or
the
object
at
which
I
point
.
But
now
as
to
those
who
talk
vauntingly
of
Divine
Grace
,
and
boast
that
they
understand
and
can
explain
Scripture
without
the
aid
of
such
directions
as
those
I
now
propose
to
lay
down
,
and
who
think
,
therefore
,
that
what
I
have
undertaken
to
write
is
entirely
superfluous
.
I
would
such
persons
could
calm
themselves
so
far
as
to
remember
that
,
however
justly
they
may
rejoice
in
God
'
s
great
gift
,
yet
it
was
from
human
teachers
they
themselves
learnt
to
read
.
Now
,
they
would
hardly
think
it
right
that
they
should
for
that
reason
be
held
in
contempt
by
the
Egyptian
monk
Antony
,
a
just
and
holy
man
,
who
,
not
being
able
to
read
himself
,
is
said
to
have
committed
the
Scriptures
to
memory
through
hearing
them
read
by
others
,
and
by
dint
of
wise
meditation
to
have
arrived
at
a
thorough
understanding
of
them
;
or
by
that
barbarian
slave
Christianus
,
of
whom
I
have
lately
heard
from
very
respectable
and
trustworthy
witnesses
,
who
,
without
any
teaching
from
man
,
attained
a
full
knowledge
of
the
art
of
reading
simply
through
prayer
that
it
might
be
revealed
to
him
;
after
three
days
'
supplication
obtaining
his
request
that
he
might
read
through
a
book
presented
to
him
on
the
spot
by
the
astonished
bystanders
.
But
if
any
one
thinks
that
these
stories
are
false
,
I
do
not
strongly
insist
on
them
.
For
,
as
I
am
dealing
with
Christians
who
profess
to
understand
the
Scriptures
without
any
directions
from
man
(
and
if
the
fact
be
so
,
they
boast
of
a
real
advantage
,
and
one
of
no
ordinary
kind
),
they
must
surely
grant
that
every
one
of
us
learnt
his
own
language
by
hearing
it
constantly
from
childhood
,
and
that
any
other
language
we
have
learnt
,
Greek
,
or
Hebrew
,
or
any
of
the
rest
,
we
have
learnt
either
in
the
same
way
,
by
hearing
it
spoken
,
or
from
a
human
teacher
.
Now
,
then
,
suppose
we
advise
all
our
brethren
not
to
teach
their
children
any
of
these
things
,
because
on
the
outpouring
of
the
Holy
Spirit
the
apostles
immediately
began
to
speak
the
language
of
every
race
;
and
warn
every
one
who
has
not
had
a
like
experience
that
he
need
not
consider
himself
a
Christian
,
or
may
at
least
doubt
whether
he
has
yet
received
the
Holy
Spirit
?
No
,
no
;
rather
let
us
put
away
false
pride
and
learn
whatever
can
be
learnt
from
man
;
and
let
him
who
teaches
another
communicate
what
he
has
himself
received
without
arrogance
and
without
jealousy
.
And
do
not
let
us
tempt
Him
in
whom
we
have
believed
,
lest
,
being
ensnared
by
such
wiles
of
the
enemy
and
by
our
own
perversity
,
we
may
even
refuse
to
go
to
the
churches
to
hear
the
gospel
itself
,
or
to
read
a
book
,
or
to
listen
to
another
reading
or
preaching
,
in
the
hope
that
we
shall
be
carried
up
to
the
third
heaven
, "
whether
in
the
body
or
out
of
the
body
,"
as
the
apostle
says
,
and
there
hear
unspeakable
words
,
such
as
it
is
not
lawful
for
man
to
utter
,
or
see
the
Lord
Jesus
Christ
and
hear
the
gospel
from
His
own
lips
rather
than
from
those
of
men
.
Let
us
beware
of
such
dangerous
temptations
of
pride
,
and
let
us
rather
consider
the
fact
that
the
Apostle
Paul
himself
,
although
stricken
down
and
admonished
by
the
voice
of
God
from
heaven
,
was
yet
sent
to
a
man
to
receive
the
sacraments
and
be
admitted
into
the
Church
;
and
that
Cornelius
the
centurion
,
although
an
angel
announced
to
him
that
his
prayers
were
heard
and
his
alms
had
in
remembrance
,
was
yet
handed
over
to
Peter
for
instruction
,
and
not
only
received
the
sacraments
from
the
apostle
'
s
hands
,
but
was
also
instructed
by
him
as
to
the
proper
objects
of
faith
,
hope
,
and
love
.
And
without
doubt
it
was
possible
to
have
done
everything
through
the
instrumentality
of
angels
,
but
the
condition
of
our
race
would
have
been
much
more
degraded
if
God
had
not
chosen
to
make
use
of
men
as
the
ministers
of
His
word
to
their
fellow-men
.
For
how
could
that
be
true
which
is
written
, "
The
temple
of
God
is
holy
,
which
temple
ye
are
,"
if
God
gave
forth
no
oracles
from
His
human
temple
,
but
communicated
everything
that
He
wished
to
be
taught
to
men
by
voices
from
heaven
,
or
through
the
ministration
of
angels
?
Moreover
,
love
itself
,
which
binds
men
together
in
the
bond
of
unity
,
would
have
no
means
of
pouring
soul
into
soul
,
and
,
as
it
were
,
mingling
them
one
with
another
,
if
men
never
learnt
anything
from
their
fellow-men
.
And
we
know
that
the
eunuch
who
was
reading
Isaiah
the
prophet
,
and
did
not
understand
what
he
read
,
was
not
sent
by
the
apostle
to
an
angel
,
nor
was
it
an
angel
who
explained
to
him
what
he
did
not
understand
,
nor
was
he
inwardly
illuminated
by
the
grace
of
God
without
the
interposition
of
man
;
on
the
contrary
,
at
the
suggestion
of
God
,
Philip
,
who
did
understand
the
prophet
,
came
to
him
,
and
sat
with
him
,
and
in
human
words
,
and
with
a
human
tongue
,
opened
to
him
the
Scriptures
.
Did
not
God
talk
with
Moses
,
and
yet
he
,
with
great
wisdom
and
entire
absence
of
jealous
pride
,
accepted
the
plan
of
his
father-in-law
,
a
man
of
an
alien
race
,
for
ruling
and
administering
the
affairs
of
the
great
nation
entrusted
to
him
?
For
Moses
knew
that
a
wise
plan
,
in
whatever
mind
it
might
originate
,
was
to
be
ascribed
not
to
the
man
who
devised
it
,
but
to
Him
who
is
the
Truth
,
the
unchangeable
God
.
In
the
last
place
,
every
one
who
boasts
that
he
,
through
divine
illumination
,
understands
the
obscurities
of
Scripture
,
though
not
instructed
in
any
rules
of
interpretation
,
at
the
same
time
believes
,
and
rightly
believes
,
that
this
power
is
not
his
own
,
in
the
sense
of
originating
with
himself
,
but
is
the
gift
of
God
.
For
so
he
seeks
God
'
s
glory
,
not
his
own
.
But
reading
and
understanding
,
as
he
does
,
without
the
aid
of
any
human
interpreter
,
why
does
he
himself
undertake
to
interpret
for
others
?
Why
does
he
not
rather
send
them
direct
to
God
,
that
they
too
may
learn
by
the
inward
teaching
of
the
Spirit
without
the
help
of
man
?
The
truth
is
,
he
fears
to
incur
the
reproach
: "
Thou
wicked
and
slothful
servant
,
thou
oughtest
to
have
put
my
money
to
the
exchangers
."
Seeing
,
then
,
that
these
men
teach
others
,
either
through
speech
or
writing
,
what
they
understand
,
surely
they
cannot
blame
me
if
I
likewise
teach
not
only
what
they
understand
,
but
also
the
rules
of
interpretation
they
follow
.
For
no
one
ought
to
consider
anything
as
his
own
,
except
perhaps
what
is
false
.
All
truth
is
of
Him
who
says
, "
I
am
the
truth
."
For
what
have
we
that
we
did
not
receive
?
And
if
we
have
received
it
,
why
do
we
glory
,
as
if
we
had
not
received
it
?
He
who
reads
to
an
audience
pronounces
aloud
the
words
he
sees
before
him
:
he
who
teaches
reading
,
does
it
that
others
may
be
able
to
read
for
themselves
.
Each
,
however
,
communicates
to
others
what
he
has
learnt
himself
.
Just
so
,
the
man
who
explains
to
an
audience
the
passages
of
Scripture
he
understands
is
like
one
who
reads
aloud
the
words
before
him
.
On
the
other
hand
,
the
man
who
lays
down
rules
for
interpretation
is
like
one
who
teaches
reading
,
that
is
,
shows
others
how
to
read
for
themselves
.
So
that
,
just
as
he
who
knows
how
to
read
is
not
dependent
on
some
one
else
,
when
he
finds
a
book
,
to
tell
him
what
is
written
in
it
,
so
the
man
who
is
in
possession
of
the
rules
which
I
here
attempt
to
lay
down
,
if
he
meet
with
an
obscure
passage
in
the
books
which
he
reads
,
will
not
need
an
interpreter
to
lay
open
the
secret
to
him
,
but
,
holding
fast
by
certain
rules
,
and
following
up
certain
indications
,
will
arrive
at
the
hidden
sense
without
any
error
,
or
at
least
without
falling
into
any
gross
absurdity
.
And
so
although
it
will
sufficiently
appear
in
the
course
of
the
work
itself
that
no
one
can
justly
object
to
this
undertaking
of
mine
,
which
has
no
other
object
than
to
be
of
service
,
yet
as
it
seemed
convenient
to
reply
at
the
outset
to
any
who
might
make
preliminary
objections
,
such
is
the
start
I
have
thought
good
to
make
on
the
road
I
am
about
to
traverse
in
this
book
.
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