Letter 50027: To my lord, holy and venerable, and worthy of the highest praise in Christ, my brother Paulinus -- Augustine sends...

Augustine of HippoHim|c. 405 AD|Augustine of Hippo
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To my lord, holy and venerable, and worthy of the highest praise in Christ, my brother Paulinus -- Augustine sends greetings in the Lord.

1. Exceptional man, exceptional brother -- there was a time when you were unknown to my mind. And I charge my mind to bear patiently the fact that you are still unknown to my eyes, but it almost -- no, entirely -- refuses to obey. Does it bear this patiently? If so, why does the longing for your presence rack my inmost soul? If I were enduring bodily pain without it disturbing my peace of mind, I might rightly claim patience. But since I cannot bear with equanimity the privation of not seeing you, it would be intolerable to call my condition patience. And yet, perhaps it would be still more intolerable if I were patient in your absence -- since you are who you are. It is good, then, that I am dissatisfied with a privation that, if I were satisfied with it, everyone would be rightly dissatisfied with me.

What has happened to me is strange but true: I grieve because I do not see you, and the grief itself comforts me. I neither admire nor envy a fortitude easily consoled by the absence of good people like yourself. Do we not long for the heavenly Jerusalem? And the more impatiently we long for it, do we not the more patiently endure everything else for its sake? Who can so restrain their joy at seeing you as to feel no pain when you are gone? I at least can do neither. And since doing so would mean trampling on right and natural feeling, I rejoice that I cannot -- and in this rejoicing I find some consolation. It is not the removal of this sorrow that comforts me, but the contemplation of it.

Do not blame me, I beg, with that devout seriousness of spirit that so eminently distinguishes you. Do not say I am wrong to grieve over not yet knowing you, when you have already revealed to me your mind -- your inner self. For if, when visiting any place, I had come to know you as my brother, friend, and as so eminent a Christian and noble a man, would you really think it no disappointment to me if I were not allowed to see your home? How then can I help but mourn that I have not yet seen your face -- the dwelling-place of the mind I have come to know as though it were my own?

2. For I have read your letter -- flowing with milk and honey, displaying the simplicity of heart with which, guided by devotion, you seek the Lord, and bringing glory and honor to Him. The brothers have read it too, and find boundless, indescribable satisfaction in the rich and excellent gifts God has given you. Everyone who reads it carries it away with them -- because as they read, it carries them away.

Words cannot express how sweet is the fragrance of Christ that your letter breathes. How powerfully it awakens the desire to know you more fully, by bringing you before our eyes! It both allows us to discern you and compels us to long for you. The more effectively it gives us a sense of your presence, the more it makes us impatient with your absence. Everyone who reads it loves the person they find in it, and wants to be loved by him in return. Praise and thanksgiving rise to God, by whose grace you are what you are.

In your letter, Christ is awakened to calm the winds and waves for you, directing your steps toward His perfect steadfastness. In it, the reader sees a wife who does not weaken her husband but through union with him is brought to share the strength of his nature -- and to her, in you, as completely one with you and bound to you by spiritual ties whose strength lies in their purity, we send our greetings with all the respect due to your Holiness.

In it, the cedars of Lebanon, brought low and shaped by the skillful craft of love into the form of the Ark, cleave the waves of this world, fearless of decay. In it, worldly glory is scorned in order to be truly won, and the world is given up in order to be truly gained. In it, the little ones -- the mightier offspring of Babylon, the sins of turbulence and pride -- are dashed against the Rock.

3. These and other such beautiful and hallowed visions appear before the reader of your letter -- a letter that displays true faith, a sure hope, and a pure love. How it conveys your thirst, your longing and yearning for the courts of the Lord! What holy love inspires it! How it overflows with the abundant treasure of a genuine heart! What thanks it renders to God! What blessings it draws from Him!

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

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