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 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 Present Times of the Church.

10. But if it happens that his answer is to the effect that he has met with some divine warning, or with some divine terror, prompting him to become a Christian, this opens up the way most satisfactorily for a commencement to our discourse, by suggesting the greatness of God’s interest in us. His thoughts, however, ought certainly to be turned away from this line of things, whether miracles or dreams, and directed to the more solid path and the surer oracles of the Scriptures; so that he may also come to understand how mercifully that warning was administered to him in advance,44    Prærogata sit previous to his giving himself to the Holy Scriptures. And assuredly it ought to be pointed out to him, that the Lord Himself would neither thus have admonished him and urged him on to become a Christian, and to be incorporated into the Church, nor have taught him by such signs or revelations, had it not been His will that, for his greater safety and security, he should enter upon a pathway already prepared in the Holy Scriptures, in which he should not seek after visible miracles, but learn the habit of hoping for things invisible, and in which also he should receive monitions not in sleep but in wakefulness. At this point the narration ought now to be commenced, which should start with the fact that God made all things very good,45    Gen. i. 31 and which should be continued, as we have said, on to the present times of the Church. This should be done in such a manner as to give, for each of the affairs and events which we relate, causes and reasons by which we may refer them severally to that end of love from which neither the eye of the man who is occupied in doing anything, nor that of the man who is engaged in speaking, ought to be turned away. For if, even in handling the fables of the poets, which are but fictitious creations and things devised for the pleasure46    Reading ad voluptatem. But many mss. give ad voluntatem = according to the inclination, etc. of minds whose food is found in trifles, those grammarians who have the reputation and the name of being good do nevertheless endeavor to bring them to bear upon some kind of (assumed) use, although that use itself may be only something vain and grossly bent upon the coarse nutriment of this world:47    Avidam saginæ sœcularis how much more careful does it become us to be, not to let those genuine verities which we narrate, in consequence of any want of a well-considered account of their causes, be accepted either with a gratification which issues in no practical good, or, still less, with a cupidity which may prove hurtful! At the same time, we are not to set forth these causes in such a manner as to leave the proper course of our narration, and let our heart and our tongue indulge in digressions into the knotty questions of more intricate discussion. But the simple truth of the explanation which we adduce48    Reading veritas adhibitœ rationis, for which we also find adhibita rationis = the applied truth, etc.; and adhibita rationi = the truth applied to our explanation. ought to be like the gold which binds together a row of gems, and yet does not interfere with the choice symmetry of the ornament by any undue intrusion of itself.49    Non tamen ornamenti seriem ulla immoderatione perturbans

CAPUT VI.

10. Exordium catechismi, et narratio ab historia creationis mundi usque ad praesens tempus Ecclesiae. Quod si forte se divinitus admonitum vel territum esse responderit, ut fieret christianus, laetissimum nobis exordiendi aditum praebet, quanta Deo sit cura pro nobis. Sane ab hujusmodi miraculorum sive somniorum, ad Scripturarum solidiorem viam et oracula certiora transferenda est ejus intentio; ut et illa admonitio quam misericorditer ei praerogata sit, noverit antequam Scripturis sanctis inhaereret. Et utique demonstrandum est ei quod ipse Dominus non eum admoneret aut compelleret fieri christianum et incorporari Ecclesiae, seu talibus signis aut revelationibus erudiret, nisi jam praeparatum iter in Scripturis sanctis, ubi non quaereret visibilia miracula, sed invisibilia sperare consuesceret, neque dormiens, sed vigilans moneretur, eum securius et tutius carpere voluisset. Inde jam exordienda narratio est, ab eo quod fecit Deus omnia bona valde (Gen. I), et perducenda, ut diximus, usque ad praesentia tempora Ecclesiae: ita ut singularum rerum atque gestorum quae narramus, causae rationesque reddantur, quibus ea referamus ad illum finem dilectionis, unde neque agentis aliquid neque loquentis oculus avertendus est. Si enim fictas poetarum fabulas, et ad voluptatem excogitatas animorum quorum cibus nugae sunt, tamen boni qui habentur atque appellantur grammatici, ad aliquam utilitatem referre conantur, quanquam et ipsam vanam et avidam saginae saecularis; quanto nos decet esse cautiores, ne illa quae vera narramus, sine suarum causarum redditione digesta, aut inani suavitate, aut etiam perniciosa cupiditate credantur? Non tamen sic asseramus has causas, ut relicto narrationis tractu, cor nostrum et lingua in nodos difficilioris disputationis excurrat; sed ipsa veritas adhibitae rationis , quasi aurum sit gemmarum ordinem ligans, non tamen ornamenti seriem ulla immoderatione perturbans.