THE TRINITY OF THE MIND
From a treatise by St Augustine1
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Now this trinity of the mind is the image of God, not because the mind
remembers, understands, and loves itself, but because it also has the power to
remember, understand, and love its Maker. And in doing this it attains wisdom.
If it does not do this, the memory, understanding and love of itself is no more
than an act of folly. Therefore, let the mind remember its God, to whose image
it was made, let it understand and love Him.
In brief, let it worship the uncreated God who created it with the capacity
for himself, and in whom it can be made partaker. Hence it is written: “Behold,
the worship of God is wisdom“. By participating in that supreme Light, wisdom
will belong to the mind not by its own light, and it will reign in bliss only where
the eternal Light is. The wisdom is so called human wisdom as to be also that of
God. If wisdom were only human, it would be vain, for only God’s wisdom is
true wisdom. Yet when we call it God’s wisdom, we do not mean the wisdom by
which God is wise: He is not wise by partaking in himself as the mind is wise by
partaking in God. It is more like speaking of the justice of God not only to mean
that God is just but to mean the justice he gives to us when he “justifies the
ungodly“: to which the Apostle alludes when speaking to those who “being
ignorant of God’s justice, and wanting to establish their own justice, were not
subject to the justice of God”. In this way we might speak of those who, ignorant
of the wisdom of God and wanting to establish their own, were not subject to
the wisdom of God.
There is an uncreated Being who has made all other beings great and
small, certainly more excellent than everything he made, and thus also more
excellent than the rational and intellectual being which we have been8
discussing, namely, the human mind, made to the image of its Creator. And the
Being more excellent than all others is God. Indeed, he is “not far from any one
of us,” as the Apostle says, adding, “for in him we live and move and have our
being“. Were this said in a material sense we could understand it of our material
world: for in it also, in respect to our body, we live and move and are. The text
should be taken, however, in a more excellent and also invisible and intelligible
way, namely, with respect to the mind that has been made to his image.
In fact, what is there that is not in him of whom Holy Scripture says: “For
from him and through him and in him are all things“? If all things are in Him, in
whom except in him in whom they are can the living live or the moving more? Yet
all are not with him in the sense in which he says “I am always with you”. Nor is
he with all things in the sense in which we say, “The Lord be with you.” Our great
misery, therefore, is not to be with him without whom we cannot exist.
Unquestionably, we are never without him in whom we are; but if one does not
remember him, does not understand him or love him, he is not with him.