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St. Augustine
On Christian Doctrine
IntraText CT - Text
BOOK II.
chap. 25. In human institutions which are not superstitious, there are some things superfluous and some convenient and necessary
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chap
.
25
.
In
human
institutions
which
are
not
superstitious
,
there
are
some
things
superfluous
and
some
convenient
and
necessary
But
when
all
these
have
been
cut
away
and
rooted
out
of
the
mind
of
the
Christian
,
we
must
then
look
at
human
institutions
which
are
not
superstitious
,
that
is
,
such
as
are
not
set
up
in
association
with
devils
,
but
by
men
in
association
with
one
another
.
For
all
arrangements
that
are
in
force
among
men
,
because
they
have
agreed
among
themselves
that
they
should
be
in
force
,
are
human
institutions
;
and
of
these
,
some
are
matters
of
superfluity
and
luxury
,
some
of
convenience
and
necessity
.
For
if
those
signs
which
the
actors
make
in
dancing
were
of
force
by
nature
,
and
not
by
the
arrangement
and
agreement
of
men
,
the
public
crier
would
not
in
former
times
have
announced
to
the
people
of
Carthage
,
while
the
pantomime
was
dancing
,
what
it
was
he
meant
to
express
,
a
thing
still
remembered
by
many
old
men
from
whom
we
have
frequently
heard
it
.
And
we
may
well
believe
this
,
because
even
now
,
if
any
one
who
is
unaccustomed
to
such
follies
goes
into
the
theatre
,
unless
some
one
tells
him
what
these
movements
mean
,
he
will
give
his
whole
attention
to
them
in
vain
.
Yet
all
men
aim
at
a
certain
degree
of
likeness
in
their
choice
of
signs
,
that
the
signs
may
as
far
as
possible
be
like
the
things
they
signify
.
But
because
one
thing
may
resemble
another
in
many
ways
,
such
signs
are
not
always
of
the
same
significance
among
men
,
except
when
they
have
mutually
agreed
upon
them
.
But
in
regard
to
pictures
and
statues
,
and
other
works
of
this
kind
,
which
are
intended
as
representations
of
things
,
nobody
makes
a
mistake
,
especially
if
they
are
executed
by
skilled
artists
,
but
every
one
,
as
soon
as
he
sees
the
likenesses
recognizes
the
things
they
are
likenesses
of
.
And
this
whole
class
are
to
be
reckoned
among
the
superfluous
devices
of
men
,
unless
when
it
is
a
matter
of
importance
to
inquire
in
regard
to
any
of
them
,
for
what
reason
,
where
,
when
,
and
by
whose
authority
it
was
made
.
Finally
,
the
thousands
of
fables
and
fictions
,
in
whose
lies
men
take
delight
,
are
human
devices
,
and
nothing
is
to
be
considered
more
peculiarly
man
'
s
own
and
derived
from
himself
than
,
anything
that
is
false
and
lying
.
Among
the
convenient
and
necessary
arrangements
of
men
with
men
are
to
be
reckoned
whatever
differences
they
choose
to
make
in
bodily
dress
and
ornament
for
the
purpose
of
distinguishing
sex
or
rank
;
and
the
countless
varieties
of
signs
without
which
human
intercourse
either
could
not
be
carried
on
at
all
,
or
would
be
carried
on
at
great
inconvenience
;
and
the
arrangements
as
to
weights
and
measures
,
and
the
stamping
and
weighing
of
coins
,
which
are
peculiar
to
each
state
and
people
,
and
other
things
of
the
same
kind
.
Now
these
,
if
they
were
not
devices
of
men
,
would
not
be
different
in
different
nations
,
and
could
not
be
changed
among
particular
nations
at
the
discretion
of
their
respective
sovereigns
.
This
whole
class
of
human
arrangements
,
which
are
of
convenience
for
the
necessary
intercourse
of
life
,
the
Christian
is
not
by
any
means
to
neglect
,
but
on
the
contrary
should
pay
a
sufficient
degree
of
attention
to
them
,
and
keep
them
in
memory
.
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