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St. Augustine
On Christian Doctrine
IntraText CT - Text
BOOK II.
chap. 28. To what extent history is an aid
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chap
.
28
.
To
what
extent
history
is
an
aid
Anything
,
then
,
that
we
learn
from
history
about
the
chronology
of
past
times
assists
us
very
much
in
understanding
the
Scriptures
,
even
if
it
be
learnt
without
the
pale
of
the
Church
as
a
matter
of
childish
instruction
.
For
we
frequently
seek
information
about
a
variety
of
matters
by
use
of
the
Olympiads
,
and
the
names
of
the
consuls
;
and
ignorance
of
the
consulship
in
which
our
Lord
was
born
,
and
that
in
which
He
suffered
,
has
led
some
into
the
error
of
supposing
that
He
was
forty-six
years
of
age
when
He
suffered
,
that
being
the
number
of
years
He
was
told
by
the
Jews
the
temple
(
which
He
took
as
a
symbol
of
His
body
)
was
in
building
.
Now
we
know
on
the
authority
of
the
evangelist
that
He
was
about
thirty
years
of
age
when
He
was
baptized
;
but
the
number
of
years
He
lived
afterwards
,
although
by
putting
His
actions
together
we
can
make
it
out
,
yet
that
no
shadow
of
doubt
might
arise
from
another
source
,
can
be
ascertained
more
clearly
and
more
certainly
from
a
comparison
of
profane
history
with
the
gospel
.
It
will
still
be
evident
,
however
,
that
it
was
not
without
a
purpose
it
was
said
that
the
temple
was
forty
and
six
years
in
building
;
so
that
,
as
this
cannot
be
referred
to
our
Lord
'
s
age
,
it
may
be
referred
to
the
more
secret
formation
of
the
body
which
,
for
our
sakes
,
the
only
begotten
Son
of
God
,
by
whom
all
things
were
made
,
condescended
to
put
on
.
As
to
the
utility
of
history
,
moreover
,
passing
over
the
Greeks
,
what
a
great
question
our
own
Ambrose
has
set
at
rest
!
For
,
when
the
readers
and
admirers
of
Plato
dared
calumniously
to
assert
that
our
Lord
Jesus
Christ
learnt
all
those
sayings
of
His
,
which
they
are
compelled
to
admire
and
praise
,
from
the
books
of
Plato
because
(
they
urged
)
it
cannot
be
denied
that
Plato
lived
long
before
the
coming
of
our
Lord
!
did
not
the
illustrious
bishop
,
when
by
his
investigations
into
profane
history
he
had
discovered
that
Plato
made
a
journey
into
Egypt
at
the
time
when
Jeremiah
the
prophet
was
there
,
show
that
it
is
much
more
likely
that
Plato
was
through
Jeremiah
'
s
means
initiated
into
our
literature
,
so
as
to
be
able
to
teach
and
write
those
views
of
his
which
are
so
justly
praised
?
For
not
even
Pythagoras
himself
,
from
whose
successors
these
men
assert
Plato
learnt
theology
,
lived
at
a
date
prior
to
the
books
of
that
Hebrew
race
,
among
whom
the
worship
of
one
God
sprang
up
,
and
of
whom
as
concerning
the
flesh
our
Lord
came
.
And
thus
,
when
we
reflect
upon
the
dates
,
it
becomes
much
more
probable
that
those
philosophers
learnt
whatever
they
said
that
was
good
and
true
from
our
literature
,
than
that
the
Lord
Jesus
Christ
learnt
from
the
writings
of
Plato
,
a
thing
which
it
is
the
height
of
folly
to
believe
.
And
even
when
in
the
course
of
an
historical
narrative
former
institutions
of
men
are
described
,
the
history
itself
is
not
to
be
reckoned
among
human
institutions
;
because
things
that
are
past
and
gone
and
cannot
be
undone
are
to
be
reckoned
as
belonging
to
the
course
of
time
,
of
which
God
is
the
author
and
governor
.
For
it
is
one
thing
to
tell
what
has
been
done
,
another
to
show
what
ought
to
be
done
.
History
narrates
what
has
been
done
,
faithfully
and
with
advantage
;
but
the
books
of
the
haruspices
,
and
all
writings
of
the
same
kind
,
aim
at
teaching
what
ought
to
be
done
or
observed
,
using
the
boldness
of
an
adviser
,
not
the
fidelity
of
a
narrator
.
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