Letter 145: 1. A most satisfactory opportunity of saluting your genuine worth is furnished by our brethren Lupicinus and Concordialis, honourable servants of God, from whom, even without my writing, you might learn all that is going on among us here. But knowing, as I do, how much you love us in Christ, because of your knowing how warmly your love is recipr...

Augustine of HippoAnastasius|c. 410 AD|augustine hippo
education booksfamine plaguegrief deathillnessimperial politicsproperty economicsslavery captivity
Persecution or exile; Travel & mobility; Natural disaster/crisis

Augustine to Anastasius, greetings.

I thank you for your letter, brother. Your question — about the relationship between the active life and the contemplative life — is one I have thought about for years, and I still do not have a fully satisfying answer. But let me share what I have.

The contemplative life — the life of prayer, study, and silence before God — is, in itself, the higher calling. Mary chose the better part. The soul that rests in God has found its home. If we could spend our entire lives in contemplation, we would be doing what the angels do, and what we ourselves will do for all eternity.

But we are not yet in eternity. We are in time, in a fallen world, surrounded by people who need us. And the need of the neighbor creates an obligation that even the sweetest contemplation cannot cancel. The bishop who locks himself in his study while his people starve is not contemplating God — he is hiding from God's commands.

The solution is not to choose one or the other but to hold both together in tension. Contemplation without action becomes self-indulgence. Action without contemplation becomes mere busyness — energetic, exhausting, and ultimately empty.

I know this from experience. Some of my happiest hours have been spent in the study of Scripture, alone with the Word, lost in thought. Some of my most important hours have been spent in the courtroom, settling disputes between angry parishioners, mediating fights over property and honor and wounded pride. Neither is complete without the other.

Find the rhythm, brother. Pray, and then act. Act, and then pray. And in both, seek the face of God.

Farewell.

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

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