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     Relevant 
    books 
     available at Amazon 
    Many Augustine 
    translations 
    and studies with links to Amazon 
    
    A selection below 
      
      
     
    Peter Brown biography 
    -------- 
    
      
     Allan Fitzgerald -------- 
      
     Henry Chadwick 
    a short indroduction -------- 
      
     William Harmless. 
    Extracts from several of Augustine's main works -------- 
      
     Henry Chadwick's translation of "Confessions" -------- 
      
     R.W.Dyson's translation of "The City of God" -------- 
      
 R.P.H. Green's translation of "On Christian Teaching" -------- 
      
 Gareth Matthews' translation of "On The Trinity" (books 8 - 15)    | 
    
 1. FAUSTUS said: If you ask why we do not believe Moses, it is on account of our 
love and reverence for Christ. The most reckless man cannot regard with pleasure 
a person who has cursed his father. So we abhor Moses, not so much for his 
blasphemy of everything human and divine, as for the awful curse he has 
pronounced upon Christ the Son of God, who for our salvation hung on the tree. 
Whether Moses did this intentionally or not is your concern. Either way, he 
cannot be excused, or considered worthy of belief. His words are, "Cursed is 
every one that hangeth on a tree." You tell me to believe this man, though, if 
he was inspired, he must have cursed Christ knowingly and intentionally; and if 
he did it in ignorance, he cannot have been divine. Take either alternative. 
Moses was no prophet, and while cursing in his usual manner, he fell ignorantly 
into the sin of blasphemy against God. Or he was indeed divine, and foresaw the 
future; and from ill-will to our salvation, he directs the venom of his 
malediction against Him who was to accomplish that salvation on a tree. He who 
thus injures the Son cannot surely have seen or known the Father. He who knew 
nothing of the final ascension of the Son, cannot surely have foretold His 
advent. Moreover, the extent of the injury inflicted by this curse is to be 
considered. For it denounces all the righteous men and martyrs, and sufferers of 
every kind, who have died in this way, as Peter and Andrew, and the rest. Such a 
cruel denunciation could never have come from Moses if he had been a prophet, 
unless he was a bitter enemy of these sufferers. For he pronounces them cursed 
not only of men but of God. What hope, then, of blessing remains to Christ, or 
his apostles, or to us if we happen to be crucified for Christ’s sake? It 
indicates great thoughtlessness in Moses, and the want of all divine 
inspiration, that he overlooked the fact that men are hung on a tree for very 
different reasons, some for their crimes, and others who suffer in the cause of 
God and of righteousness. In this thoughtless way he heaps all together without 
distinction under the same curse; whereas if he had had any sense, not to say 
inspiration, if he wished to single out the punishment of the cross from all 
others as specially detestable, he would have said, Cursed is every guilty and 
impious person that hangeth on a tree. This would have made a distinction 
between the guilty and the innocent. And yet even this would have been 
incorrect, for Christ took the malefactor from the cross along with himself into 
the Paradise of his Father. What becomes of the curse on every one that hangeth 
on a tree? Was Barabbas, the notorious robber, who certainly was not hung on a 
tree, but was set free from prison at the request of the Jews, more blessed than 
the thief who accompanied Christ from the cross to heaven? Again, there is a 
curse on the man that worships the sun or the moon. Now if under a heathen 
monarch I am forced to worship the sun, and if from fear of this curse I refuse, 
shall I incur this other curse by suffering the punishment of crucifixion? 
Perhaps Moses was in the habit of cursing everything good. We think no more of 
his denunciation than of an old wife’s scolding. So we find him pronouncing a 
curse on all youths of both sexes, when he says: "Cursed is every one that 
raiseth not up a seed in Israel." This is aimed directly at Jesus, who, 
according to you, was born among the Jews, and raised up no seed to continue his 
family. It points too at his disciples, some of whom he took from the wives they 
had married, and some who were unmarried he forbade to take wives. We have good 
reason, you see, for expressing our abhorrence of the daring style in which 
Moses hurls his maledictions against Christ, against light, against chastity, 
against everything divine. You cannot make much of the distinction between 
hanging on a tree and being crucified, as you often try to do by way of apology; 
for Paul repudiates such a distinction when he says, "Christ hath redeemed us 
from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us; as it is written, Cursed 
is every one that hangeth on a tree." 
 
2. AUGUSTIN replied: The pious Faustus is pained because Christ is cursed by 
Moses. His love for Christ makes him hate Moses. Before explaining the sacred 
import and the piety of the words, "Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree," 
I would ask these pious people why they are angry with Moses, since his curse 
does not affect their Christ. If Christ hung on the tree, He must have been 
fastened to it with nails, the marks of which He showed to His doubting disciple 
after His resurrection. Accordingly He must have had a vulnerable and mortal 
body, which the Manichæans deny. Call the wounds and the marks false, and it 
follows that His hanging on the tree was false. This Christ is not affected by 
the curse, and there is no occasion for this indignation against the person 
uttering the curse. If they pretend to be angry with Moses for cursing what they 
call the false death of Christ, what are we to think of themselves, who do not 
curse Christ, but, what is much worse, make Him a liar? If it is wrong to curse 
mortality, it is a much more heinous offense to sully the purity of truth. But 
let us make these heretical cavils an occasion for explaining this mystery to 
believers. 
 
3. Death comes upon man as the punishment of sin, and so is itself called sin; 
not that a man sins in dying, but because sin is the cause of his death. So the 
word tongue, which properly means the fleshy substance between the teeth and the 
palate, is applied in a secondary sense to the result of the tongue’s action. In 
this sense we speak of a Latin tongue and a Greek tongue. The word hand, too, 
means both the members of the body we use in working, and the writing which is 
done with the hand. In this sense we speak of writing as being proved to be the 
hand of a certain person, or of recognizing the hand of a friend. The writing is 
certainly not a member of the body, but the name hand is given to it because it 
is the hand that does it. So sin means both a bad action deserving punishment, 
and death the consequence of sin. Christ has no sin in the sense of deserving 
death, but He bore for our sakes sin in the sense of death as brought on human 
nature by sin. This is what hung on the tree; this is what was cursed by Moses. 
Thus was death condemned that its reign might cease, and cursed that it might be 
destroyed. By Christ’s taking our sin in this sense, its condemnation is our 
deliverance, while to remain in subjection to sin is to be condemned. 
 
4. What does Faustus find strange in the curse pronounced on sin, on death, and 
on human mortality, which Christ had on account of man’s sin, though He Himself 
was sinless? Christ’s body was derived from Adam, for His mother the Virgin Mary 
was a child of Adam. But God said in Paradise, "On the day that ye eat, ye shall 
surely die." This is the curse which hung on the tree. A man may deny that 
Christ was cursed who denies that He died. But the man who believes that Christ 
died, and acknowledges that death is the fruit of sin, and is itself called sin, 
will understand who it is that is cursed by Moses, when he hears the apostle 
saying "For our old man is crucified with Him." The apostle boldly says of 
Christ, "He was made a curse for us;" for he could also venture to say, "He died 
for all." "He died," and "He was cursed," are the same. Death is the effect of 
the curse; and all sin is cursed, whether it means the action which merits 
punishment, or the punishment which follows. Christ, though guiltless, took our 
punishment, that He might cancel our guilt, and do away with our punishment. 
 
5. These things are not my conjectures, but are affirmed constantly by the 
apostle, with an emphasis sufficient to rouse the careless and to silence the 
gainsayers. "God," he says, "sent His Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, that 
by sin He might condemn sin in the flesh." Christ’s flesh was not sinful, 
because it was not born of Mary by ordinary generation; but because death is the 
effect of sin, this flesh, in being mortal, had the likeness of sinful flesh. 
This is called sin in the following words, "that by sin He might condemn sin in 
the flesh." Again he says: "He hath made Him to be sin for us who knew no sin, 
that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him." Why should not Moses 
call accursed what Paul calls sin? In this prediction the prophet claims a share 
with the apostle in the reproach of the heretics. For whoever finds fault with 
the word cursed in the prophet, must find fault with the word sin in the 
apostle; for curse and sin go together. 
 
6. If we read, "Cursed of God is every one that hangeth on a tree," the addition 
of the words "of God" creates no difficulty. For had not God hated sin and our 
death, He would not have sent His Son to bear and to abolish it. And there is 
nothing strange in God’s cursing what He hates. For His readiness to give us the 
immortality which will be had at the coming of Christ, is in proportion to the 
compassion with which He hated our death when it hung on the cross at the death 
of Christ. And if Moses curses every one that hangeth on a tree, it is certainly 
not because he did not foresee that righteous men would be crucified, but rather 
because He foresaw that heretics would deny the death of the Lord to be real, 
and would try to disprove the application of this curse to Christ, in order that 
they might disprove the reality of His death. For if Christ’s death was not 
real, nothing cursed hung on the cross when He was crucified, for the 
crucifixion cannot have been real. Moses cries from the distant past to these 
heretics: Your evasion in denying the reality of the death of Christ is useless. 
Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree; not this one or that, but absolutely 
every one. What! the Son of God? Yes, assuredly. This is the very thing you 
object to, and that you are so anxious to evade. You will not allow that He was 
cursed for us, because you will not allow that He died for us. Exemption from 
Adam’s curse implies exemption from his death. But as Christ endured death as 
man, and for man; so also, Son of God as He was, ever living in His own 
righteousness, but dying for our offences, He submitted as man, and for man, to 
bear the curse which accompanies death. And as He died in the flesh which He 
took in bearing our punishment, so also, while ever blessed in His own 
righteousness, He was cursed for our offences, in the death which He suffered in 
bearing our punishment. And these words "every one" are intended to check the 
ignorant officiousness which would deny the reference of the curse to Christ, 
and so, because the curse goes along with death, would lead to the denial of the 
true death of Christ. 
 
7. The believer in the true doctrine of the gospel will understand that Christ 
is not reproached by Moses when he speaks of Him as cursed, not in His divine 
majesty, but as hanging on the tree as our substitute, bearing our punishment, 
any more than He is praised by the Manichæans when they deny that He had a 
mortal body, so as to suffer real death. In the curse of the prophet there is 
praise of Christ’s humility, while in the pretended regard of the heretics there 
is a charge of falsehood. If, then, you deny that Christ was cursed, you must 
deny that He died; and then you have to meet, not Moses, but the apostles. 
Confess that He died, and you may also confess that He, without taking our sin, 
took its punishment. Now the punishment of sin cannot be blessed, or else it 
would be a thing to be desired. The curse is pronounced by divine justice, and 
it will be well for us if we are redeemed from it. Confess then that Christ 
died, and you may confess that He bore the curse for us; and that when Moses 
said, "Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree," he said in fact, To hang on 
a tree is to be mortal, or actually to die. He might have said, "Cursed is every 
one that is mortal," or "Cursed is every one dying;" but the prophet knew that 
Christ would suffer on the cross, and that heretics would say that He hung on 
the tree only in appearance, without really dying. So he exclaims, Cursed; 
meaning that He really died. He knew that the death of sinful man, which Christ 
though sinless bore, came from that curse, "If ye touch it, ye shall surely 
die." Thus also, the serpent hung on the pole was intended to show that Christ 
did not feign death, but that the real death into which the serpent by his fatal 
counsel cast mankind was hung on the cross of Christ’s passion. The Manichæans 
turn away from the view of this real death, and so they are not healed of the 
poison of the serpent, as we read that in the wilderness as many as looked were 
healed. 
 
8. It is true, some ignorantly distinguish between hanging on a tree and being 
crucified. So some explain this passage as referring to Judas. But how do they 
know whether he hung himself from wood or from stone? Faustus is right in saying 
that the apostle obliges us to refer the words to Christ. Such ignorant 
Catholics are the prey of the Manichæans. Such they get hold of and entangle in 
their sophistry. Such were we when we fell into this heresy, and adhered to it. 
Such were we, when, not by our own strength, but by the mercy of God, we were 
rescued. 
 
9. What attacks on divine things does Faustus speak of when he charges Moses 
with sparing nothing human or divine? He makes the charge without stopping to 
prove it. We know, on the contrary, that Moses gave due praise to everything 
really divine, and in human affairs was a just ruler, considering his times and 
the grace of his dispensation. It will be time to prove this when we see any 
proof of Faustus’ charges. It may be clever to make such charges cautiously, but 
there is great incaution in the cleverness which ruins its possessor. It is good 
to be clever on the side of truth, but it is a poor thing to be clever in 
opposition to the truth. Faustus says that Moses spared nothing human or divine; 
not that he spared no god or man. If he said that Moses did not spare God, it 
could easily be shown in reply that Moses everywhere does honor to the true God, 
whom he declares to be the Maker of heaven and earth. Again, if he said that 
Moses spared none of the gods, he would betray himself to Christians as a 
worshipper of the false gods that Moses denounces; and so he would be prevented 
from gathering what he has not brought forth, by the brood taking refuge under 
the wings of the Mother Church. Faustus tries to ensnare the babes, by saying 
that Moses spared nothing divine, wishing not to frighten Christians with a 
profession of belief in the gods, which would be plainly opposed to 
Christianity, and at the same time appearing to take the side of the Pagans 
against us; for they know that Moses has said many plain and pointed things 
against the idols and gods of the heathen, which are devils. 
 
10. If the Manichæans disapprove of Moses on this account, let them confess that 
they are worshippers of idols and devils. This, indeed, may be the case without 
their being aware of it. The apostle tells us that "in the last days some shall 
depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and to doctrines of 
devils, speaking lies in hypocrisy." Whence but from devils, who are fond of 
falsehood, could the idea have come that Christ’s sufferings and death were 
unreal, and that the marks which He showed of His wounds were unreal? Are these 
not the doctrines of lying devils, which teach that Christ, the Truth itself, 
was a deceiver? Besides, the Manichæans openly teach the worship, if not of 
devils, still of created things, which the apostle condemns in the words, "They 
worshipped and served the creature rather than the Creator."  
 
11. As there is an unconscious worship of idols and devils in the fanciful 
legends of the Manichæans, so they knowingly serve the creature in their worship 
of the sun and moon. And in what they call their service of the Creator they 
really serve their own fancy, and not the Creator at all. For they deny that God 
created those things which the apostle plainly declares to be the creatures of 
God, when he says of food, "Every creature of God is good, and nothing to be 
refused, if it is received with thanksgiving." This is sound doctrine, which you 
cannot bear, and so turn to fables. The apostle praises the creature of God, but 
forbids the worship of it; and in the same way Moses gives due praise to the sun 
and moon, while at the same time he states the fact of their having been made by 
God, and placed by Him in their courses,—the sun to rule the day, and the moon 
to rule the night. Probably you think Moses spared nothing divine, simply 
because he forbade the worship of the sun and moon, whereas you turn towards 
them in all directions in your worship. But the sun and moon take no pleasure in 
your false praises. It is the devil, the transgressor, that delights in false 
praises. The powers of heaven, who have not fallen by sin, wish their Creator to 
be praised in them; and their true praise is that which does no wrong to their 
Creator. He is wronged when they are said to be His members, or parts of His 
substance. For He is perfect and independent, underived, not divided or 
scattered in space, but unchangeably self-existent, self-sufficient, and blessed 
in Himself. In the abundance of His goodness, He by His word spoke, and they 
were made: He commanded, and they were created. And if earthly bodies are good, 
of which the apostle spoke when he said that no food is unclean, because every 
creature of God is good, much more the heavenly bodies, of which the sun and 
moon are the chief; for the apostle says again, "The glory of the terrestrial is 
one, and the glory of the celestial is another."  
 
12. Moses, then, casts no reproach on the sun and moon when he prohibits their 
worship. He praises them as heavenly bodies; while he also praises God as the 
Creator of both heavenly and earthly, and will not allow of His being insulted 
by giving the worship due to Him to those who are praised only as dependent upon 
Him. Faustus prides himself on the ingenuity of his objection to the curse 
pronounced by Moses on the worship of the sun and moon. He says, "If under a 
heathen monarch I am forced to worship the sun, and if from fear of this curse I 
refuse, shall I incur this other curse by suffering the punishment of 
crucifixion?" No heathen monarch is forcing you to worship the sun: nor would 
the sun itself force you, if it were reigning on the earth, as neither does it 
now wish to be worshipped. As the Creator bears with blasphemers till the 
judgment, so these celestial bodies bear with their deluded worshippers till the 
judgment of the Creator. It should be observed that no Christian monarch could 
enforce the worship of the sun. Faustus instances a heathen monarch, for he 
knows that their worship of the sun is a heathen custom. Yet, in spite of this 
opposition to Christianity, the partridge takes the name of Christ, that it may 
gather what it has not brought forth. The answer to this objection is easy, and 
the force of truth will soon break the horns of this dilemma. Suppose, then, a 
Christian threatened by royal authority with being hung on a tree if he will not 
worship the sun. If I avoid, you say, the curse pronounced by the law on the 
worshipper of the sun, I incur the curse pronounced by the same law on him that 
hangs on a tree. So you will be in a difficulty; only that you worship the sun 
without being forced by anybody. But a true Christian, built on the foundation 
of the apostles and prophets, distinguishes the curses, and the reasons of them. 
He sees that one refers to the mortal body which is hung on the tree, and the 
other to the mind which worships the sun. For though the body bows in 
worship,—which also is a heinous offence,—the belief or imagination of the 
object worshipped is an act of the mind. The death implied in both curses is in 
one case the death of the body, and in the other the death of the soul. It is 
better to have the curse in bodily death,—which will be removed in the 
resurrection,—than the curse in the death of the soul, condemning it along with 
the body to eternal fire. The Lord solves this difficulty in the words: "Fear 
not them that kill the body, but cannot kill the soul; but fear him who has 
power to cast both soul and body into hell-fire." In other words, fear not the 
curse of bodily death, which in time is removed; but fear the curse of spiritual 
death, which leads to the eternal torment of both soul and body. Be assured, 
Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree is no old wife’s railing, but a 
prophetical utterance. Christ, by the curse, takes the curse away, as He takes 
away death by death, and sin by sin. In the words, "Cursed is every one that 
hangeth on a tree," there is no more blasphemy than in the words of the apostle, 
"He died," or, "Our old man was crucified along with Him," or, "By sin He 
condemned sin," or, "He made Him to be sin for us who knew no sin," and in many 
similar passages. Confess, then, that when you exclaim against the curse of 
Christ, you exclaim against His death. If this is not an old wife’s railing on 
your part, it is devilish delusion, which makes you deny the death of Christ 
because your own souls are dead. You teach people that Christ’s death was 
feigned, making Christ your leader in the falsehood with which you use the name 
of Christian to mislead men. 
 
13. If Faustus thinks Moses an enemy of continence or virginity because he says, 
"Cursed is everyone that raiseth not up seed in Israel," let them hear the words 
of Isaiah: "Thus saith the Lord to all eunuchs; To them who keep my precepts, 
and choose the things that please me, and regard my covenant, will I give in my 
house and within my walls a place and a name better than of sons and of 
daughters; I will give them an everlasting name, that shall not be cut off." 
Though our adversaries disagree with Moses, if they agree with Isaiah it is 
something gained. It is enough for us to know that the same God spoke by both 
Moses and Isaiah, and that every one is cursed who raiseth not up seed in 
Israel, both then when begetting children in marriage (for the continuation of 
the people was a civil duty), and now because no one spiritually born should 
rest content without seeking spiritual increase in the production of Christians 
by preaching Christ, each one according to his ability. So that the times of 
both Testaments are briefly described in the words, "Cursed is every one that 
raiseth not up seed in Israel."  
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