In One Book.

 Chapter 1.—How Augustin Writes in Answer to a Favor Asked by a Deacon of Carthage.

 Chapter 2.—How It Often Happens that a Discourse Which Gives Pleasure to the Hearer is Distasteful to the Speaker And What Explanation is to Be Offer

 Chapter 3.—Of the Full Narration to Be Employed in Catechising.

 Chapter 4.—That the Great Reason for the Advent of Christ Was the Commendation of Love.

 Chapter 5.—That the Person Who Comes for Catechetical Instruction is to Be Examined with Respect to His Views, on Desiring to Become a Christian.

 Chapter 6.—Of the Way to Commence the Catechetical Instruction, and of the Narration of Facts from the History of the World’s Creation on to the Prese

 Chapter 7.—Of the Exposition of the Resurrection, the Judgment, and Other Subjects, Which Should Follow This Narration.

 Chapter 8.—Of the Method to Be Pursued in Catechising Those Who Have Had a Liberal Education.

 Chapter 9.—Of the Method in Which Grammarians and Professional Speakers are to Be Dealt with.

 Chapter 10.—Of the Attainment of Cheerfulness in the Duty of Catechising, and of Various Causes Producing Weariness in the Catechumen.

 Chapter 11.—Of the Remedy for the Second Source of Weariness.

 Chapter 12.—Of the Remedy for the Third Source of Weariness.

 Chapter 13.—Of the Remedy for the Fourth Source of Weariness.

 Chapter 14.—Of the Remedy Against the Fifth and Sixth Sources of Weariness.

 Chapter 15.—Of the Method in Which Our Address Should Be Adapted to Different Classes of Hearers.

 Chapter 16.—A Specimen of a Catechetical Address And First, the Case of a Catechumen with Worthy Views.

 Chapter 17.—The Specimen of Catechetical Discourse Continued, in Reference Specially to the Reproval of False Aims on the Catechumen’s Part.

 Chapter 18.—Of What is to Be Believed on the Subject of the Creation of Man and Other Objects.

 Chapter 19.—Of the Co-Existence of Good and Evil in the Church, and Their Final Separation.

 Chapter 20.—Of Israel’s Bondage in Egypt, Their Deliverance, and Their Passage Through the Red Sea.

 Chapter 21.—Of the Babylonish Captivity, and the Things Signified Thereby.

 Chapter 22.—Of the Six Ages of the World.

 Chapter 23.—Of the Mission of the Holy Ghost Fifty Days After Christ’s Resurrection.

 Chapter 24.—Of the Church in Its Likeness to a Vine Sprouting and Suffering Pruning.

 Chapter 25.—Of Constancy in the Faith of the Resurrection.

 Chapter 26.—Of the Formal Admission of the Catechumen, and of the Signs Therein Made Use of.

 Chapter 27.—Of the Prophecies of the Old Testament in Their Visible Fulfillment in the Church.

Chapter 5.—That the Person Who Comes for Catechetical Instruction is to Be Examined with Respect to His Views, on Desiring to Become a Christian.

9. Moreover, it is on the gound of that very severity of God,40    De ipsa etiam severitate Dei…caritas ædificanda est by which the hearts of mortals are agitated with a most wholesome terror, that love is to be built up; so that, rejoicing that he is loved by Him whom he fears, man may have boldness to love Him in return, and yet at the same time be afraid to displease His love toward himself, even should he be able to do so with impunity. For certainly it very rarely happens, nay, I should rather say, never, that any one approaches us with the wish to become a Christian who has not been smitten with some sort of fear of God. For if it is in the expectation of some advantage from men whom he deems himself unlikely to please in any other way, or with the idea of escaping any disadvantage at the hands of men of whose displeasure or hostility he is seriously afraid, that a man wishes to become a Christian, then his wish to become one is not so earnest as his desire to feign one.41    Non fieri vult potius quam fingere For faith is not a matter of the body which does obeisance,42    Or = “signifying assent by its motions,” adopting the reading of the best mss., viz. salutantis corporis. Some editions give salvandi, while certain mss. have salutis, and others saltantis. but of the mind which believes. But unmistakeably it is often the case that the mercy of God comes to be present through the ministry of the catechiser, so that, affected by the discourse, the man now wishes to become in reality that which he had made up his mind only to feign. And so soon as he begins to have this manner of desire, we may judge him then to have made a genuine approach to us. It is true, indeed, that the precise time when a man, whom we perceive to be present with us already in the body, comes to us in reality with his mind,43    Reading quando veniat animo, for which quo veniat animo also occurs = the mind in which a man comes…is a matter hidden from us. is a thing hidden from us. But, notwithstanding that, we ought to deal with him in such a manner that this wish may be made to arise within him, even should it not be there at present. For no such labor is lost, inasmuch as, if there is any wish at all, it is assuredly strengthened by such action on our part, although we may be ignorant of the time or the hour at which it began. It is useful certainly, if it can be done, to get from those who know the man some idea beforehand of the state of mind in which he is, or of the causes which have induced him to come with the view of embracing religion. But if there is no other person available from whom we may gather such information, then, indeed, the man himself is to be interrogated, so that from what he says in reply we may draw the beginning of our discourse. Now if he has come with a false heart, desirous only of human advantages or thinking to escape disadvantages, he will certainly speak what is untrue. Nevertheless, the very untruth which he utters should be made the point from which we start. This should not be done, however, with the (open) intention of confuting his falsehood, as if that were a settled matter with you; but, taking it for granted that he has professed to have come with a purpose which is really worthy of approbation (whether that profession be true or false), it should rather be our aim to commend and praise such a purpose as that with which, in his reply, he has declared himself to have come; so that we may make him feel it a pleasure to be the kind of man actually that he wishes to seem to be. On the other hand, supposing him to have given a declaration of his views other than what ought to be before the mind of one who is to be instructed in the Christian faith, then by reproving him with more than usual kindness and gentleness, as a person uninstructed and ignorant, by pointing out and commending, concisely and in a grave spirit the end of Christian doctrine in its genuine reality, and by doing all this in such a manner as neither to anticipate the times of a narration, which should be given subsequently, nor to venture to impose that kind of statement upon a mind not previously set for it, you may bring him to desire that which, either in mistake or in dissimulation, he has not been desiring up to this stage.

CAPUT V.

9. Accedens ad catechismum scrutandus quo fine velit fieri christianus. De ipsa etiam severitate Dei, qua corda mortalium saluberrimo terrore quatiuntur, charitas aedificanda est; ut ab eo quem timet, amari se gaudens, eum redamare audeat, ejusque in se dilectioni, etiamsi impune posset, tamen displicere vereatur. Rarissime quippe accidit, imo vero nunquam, ut quisquam veniat volens fieri christianus, qui non sit aliquo Dei timore perculsus. Si enim aliquod commodum exspectando ab hominibus, quibus se aliter placiturum non putat, aut aliquod ab hominibus incommodum devitando, quorum offensionem aut inimicitias reformidat, vult fieri christianus; non fieri vult potius quam fingere. Fides enim non res est salutantis corporis, sed credentis animi. Sed plane saepe adest misericordia Dei per ministerium catechizantis, ut sermone commotus jam fieri velit quod decreverat fingere: quod cum velle coeperit, tunc eum venisse deputemus. Et occultum quidem nobis est quando veniat animo, quem jam corpore praesentem videmus: sed tamen sic cum eo debemus agere, ut fiat in illo haec voluntas, etiamsi non est. Nihil enim deperit, quando si est, utique tali nostra actione firmatur, quamvis quo tempore, vel qua hora coeperit, ignoremus. Utile est sane ut praemoneamur antea, si fieri potest, ab iis qui eum norunt, in quo statu animi sit, vel quibus causis commotus ad suscipiendam religionem venerit. Quod si defuerit alius a quo id noverimus, etiam ipse interrogandus est, ut ex eo quod responderit ducamus sermonis exordium. Sed si ficto pectore accessit, humana commoda cupiens, vel incommoda fugiens, utique mentiturus est: tamen ex eo ipso quod mentitur, capiendum est principium; non ut refellatur ejus mendacium, quasi tibi certum sit, sed ut si dixerit eo proposito se venisse quod vere approbandum est, sive ille verum sive falsum dicat, tale tamen propositum quali se venisse respondit, approbantes atque laudantes, faciamus eum delectari esse se talem, qualem videri cupit. Si autem aliud dixerit, quam oportet esse in animo ejus qui christiana fide imbuendus est; blandius et lenius reprehendendo tanquam rudem et ignarum, et christianae doctrinae finem verissimum demonstrando atque laudando breviter et graviter, ne aut tempora futurae narrationis occupes, aut eam non prius collocato animo audeas imponere, facias eum velle quod aut per 0317 errorem aut per simulationem nondum volebat.