Introduction: "Augustine will never be alone."[1]
Augustine
the Friend
According to Augustine, "In this world two things are essential: a healthy life and friendship. God created humans so that they might exist and live: this is life. But if they are not to remain solitary, there must be friendship."[2] By all accounts, he was intent on living by the ideology he preached: it was a "simple fact that Augustine hardly ever spent a moment of his life without some friend close by."[3]
The product of a "close-knit" environment, Augustine learned to value community from his youth up.[4] As Sellner has written, "This is surely one of the predominant patterns in Augustine's life: the constant presence of his friends, and his obvious appreciation of them."[5] Even from his own description in the Confessions, it seems that regardless of his emotional, physical, or spiritual state, Augustine was surrounded by people at all times.
Even his dramatic conversion at the age of thirty-three in a Milanese garden took place in the presence of his friend, Alypius, who is practically holding the book that Augustine takes up to read. When Alypius himself, following the example of his former teacher, is immediately converted, the two of them rush to Augustine's mother who is evidently not all that far away.[6]
That friendship and companionship played a significant role in Augustine's life is somewhat obvious; what is significant is that this was true for his entire life, and was something about which he was passionate.
As Carolinne White has brought out, friendship for Augustine was not any more of a reality either earlier or later in his life, but was a constant throughout. Though his view of friendship changed over time (primarily pre-conversion / post-conversion[7]), the presence of friendship in his day-to-day routine did not. In book IV of the Confessions he speaks of the intensity of love that he had for a friend who died in his youth. While he was a middle-aged man (in letter 130, written in his mid-fifties) he could write that there is nothing enjoyable without good friends, and right near the end of his life, toward the end of the City of God, he could still ask rhetorically, "What gives us consolation in this human society filled as it is with errors and troubles, if not the sincere loyalty and mutual love of true and good friends?"[8]
It is said that "no thinker in the
Given the scope of this paper, it seems most appropriate to focus on
the human aspects of friendship in the City
of
The Loss
of Friendship: The brokenness of society in the City of
Though
Augustine was always looking to be a friend and to make friends, he was no
idealist when it came to the nature of friendships in this world (the "City of
Etienne
Gilson ably brings out another basic obstacle to friendship. According to the
philosophy of the City of
considers the moral life as something interwoven with social life. In his eyes, the individual is never separated from the city. To find the basic reason for this, however, we must return once more to the root of all moral life, i.e. to love and therefore, to the will.[10]
When it is seen
that the issues of affections and will are closely tied to the philosophy of
friendship in Augustine's thought, one can easily understand how this would
result in fundamental barriers to true friendship for all those outside of
Christ.[11]
Rather, as Augustine argues in the City
of
A third obstacle to friendship in
the City of God is the expectation
that hurt will inevitably result from relationships. Augustine argues from the
lesser to the greater in XIX.5, when he puts forth the example of broken
relationships in the home. If a person can count on being hurt in the very
place where he should be able to assume that he is surrounded by friends (even
blood-relatives!) then how much more ought he to expect to be betrayed in the
City of
Not only are there obstacles to
initiating friendships in the City of
Another limitation imposed on
friendship in the City of
Friendships in the City of
Augustine does not stop there in
limiting friendships, however. Rather, he warns that one might not even make it
until his friend dies before he loses his friendship. In XIX.5, he points out
that one can simply never know how long a friend will remain a friend. Even
peace, he says, "is a doubtful good, since we do not know the hearts of those
with whom we wish to maintain peace, and even if we could know them today, we
should not know what they might be like tomorrow." The plain truth is that
humans are fickle and friendships may not last. To compound the problem, as he
presents it, Augustine quotes
Even if one finds himself in a friendship, despite its obstacles and limitations, he must be careful to avoid the negative influence it can quite easily become. In I.9, Augustine notes that out of a fear of losing friends, we oftentimes refrain from speaking to our friends as we ought, correcting them of their wrongs. Even though we may know that something is clearly wrong, we are persuaded because of our friendship to merely go along.
Friendship may also be used inappropriately. For example, it may be used improperly as a servant of bodily pleasure, to attract the people necessary to fulfil fleshly desire.[16] Friendship with demons mistaken for angels or gods may also lead one into grave peril, even for his eternal soul.[17] Lastly, friendship can be a negative influence by holding one back from making a decision for the truth. Augustine here gives the example of Porphyry. Though he knows all that Augustine has adduced, he yet refuses to reject the polytheism held by his friends.[18]
Despite all the negatives that are
present in friendships in the temporal world, friendship itself is redeemable. One
wonderful potential example is given by Augustine in the City of
In Augustine's thought, genuine friendship is also assumed to be present in familial relationships. Thus, in the marrying of someone from another family (with Adam and Eve the example of how it is not to be done), one may multiply his friends. Affections are now spread further abroad amongst more people because of the increase of family, which is presumed to be affectionate and friendly.[19]
That friendship is redeemable should
really go without saying, since the City of
The philosophies hold the view that the life of the wise man should be social; and in this we support them much more heartily. For here we are, with the nineteenth book in hand on the subject of the City of God; and how could that city have made its first start, how could it have advanced along its course, how could it attain its appointed goal, if the life of the saints were not social?[20]
In other words,
it is fine to talk about the fallenness of the City of
The Redemption of Friendship: The Society
of the City of
To gain a
fuller comprehension of what friendship looks like in Augustine's life, his
friendships will be evaluated in two categories: pre-conversion and
post-conversion. Though Augustine was one who delighted in friendship
throughout his entire life, there is a marked change in his friendships around
the time of his conversion, and this will illumine for us, in practice rather
than in theory, what friendship in the City of
As
Brown has noted, Augustine grew up in a "close-knit world" where relationships
were always integral. This experience in his formative years would serve to
shape his whole perspective on how life should be lived in community.[21]
It is significant to note that when Augustine wrote the Confessions he
was already a mature Christian. Thus, when he looks back at his friendships
before his conversion, he is evaluating them in his descriptions and his
choices of wording become very important.
This
is particularly intriguiging for Carolinne White, who takes careful note of
Augustine's use of Classical images for friendship in his pre-conversion days.
The use of
so many Classical allusions in talking about his early, sinful friendships is
significant; it appears to reflect the author's attempt to express the
imbalance, the lack of perspective in his view of human friendship at that
time, and to indicate how far he was still entangled in an anthropocentric view
of the world, so characteristic of pagan thought.[22]
Augustine, then, in his descriptions of his
friendships before his conversion is attempting to show that he too was
hopelessly man-centred, and that his friendships were not perfect by any means.
It
is also important to note that although his relationships were not perfect,
since they did not point to God, they still would and could bring joy. Like all
earthly gifts, friendship was given as a gift through which man could enjoy the
Creator. When the enjoyment of the gift takes the place of the enjoyment of the
Creator, it becomes sin, but it does not negate the fact that there is still
joy to be had in friendship. Friendship is a beautiful thing, a "delightful
bond, uniting many souls in one." But it is vanity if the souls are not united
thereby in God.[23]
Prior
to conversion, friendship functions as a vehicle driving men further into their
sin. This is especially true in Augustine's recounting of the friendships of
his youth. "For I heard them bragging of their depravity, and the greater the
sin the more they gloried in it, so that I took pleasure in the same vices, not
only for the enjoyment of what I did, but also for the applause I won." His
friendships led him further yet into sin as he bragged of sin to achieve high
standing in his peer group:
If I had
not sinned enough to rival other sinners, I used to pretend that I had done
things I had not done at all, because I was afraid that innocence would be
taken for cowardice and chastity for weakness. These were the companions with
whom I walked the streets of
The folly of these friendships continued to
lead Augustine down the path to more sin, and he engaged in his infamous pear
theft. Reflecting on the incident later, he recalls, "I am quite sure that I
would not have done it on my own." But as it was, he had "need to kindle my
glowing desire by rubbing shoulders with a gang of accomplices. But as it was
not the fruit that gave me pleasure, I must have got it from the crime itself,
from the thrill of having partners in sin."[25]
In
his pre-conversion days, Augustine's friendships are formed and held together
by things that he and his companions hold in common. As one author has
summarized, "Two human beings cannot be
brought together as friends without some agreement about the goods they want,
the goals that they have in common."[26] For
Augustine and his friends, it is plain to be seen that they had much in common.
When Augustine describes his "very dear friend" in IV.4, he says "We were both
the same age, both together in the heyday of youth, and both absorbed in the
same interests." They had grown up together, gone to school together, and
played together. Whatever could be done together, they did, and these were the
things they had in common.
When that friend died, Augustine
would finally find solace from his sorrow in his other friends: "My greatest
comfort and relief was in the solace of other friends who shared my love of the
huge fable which I loved instead of you, my God, the long-drawn lie which our
minds were always itching to hear."[27]
Thus, they had a lie in common instead of Truth. He went on from there to give
his classic description of friendship, with its charms that captivated his
heart: They would laugh and talk, exchange small acts of kindness, read books,
get in occasional tussles, and teach each other. While these are not wrong
things, they are not the true foundation that Christian friendship is to have,
as Augustine would discover.
As Augustine and his friends
matured, they continued to share common interests, but those interests changed
as they began to pursue truth in earnest. Now, whenever something crossed his
mind that would disturb him, or cause him to think about what he was lacking in
knowledge or happiness, he would turn immediately to his friends to discuss it
with them, who were equally as disturbed that they could not find happiness.[28]
Together they would "constantly" discuss the pursuit of truth and happiness
which consumed them all and Augustine describes their plight with this picture:
[Nebridius']
distress was not less than mine and, like me, he wavered between one course and
another, desperately seeking the way of happiness and prying closely into the
problems which troubled us most. We [with Alypius] were like three hungry
mouths, able only to gasp out our needs to one another, while our eyes were on
you, waiting for you to grant us, in due time, our nourishment (Ps
145.15)[29]
Fortunately,
for Augustine and company, these days would soon come to an end as God would
call each of them to himself in the coming years. At that point their
friendship took a most remarkable turn. No longer was their friendship hopeless
and ultimately temporal (like Augustine's experience of losing his friend in
book IV), but it provided a hope and future for them all.
Perhaps
the most profoundly visible contrast in Augustine's view of friendship pre and
post-conversion is how he dealt with the death of his friends. Where he had
mourned hopelessly for an extended period of time when his unnamed friend had
died, he mourns the death of Nebridius with a calm realization that their
friendship was to be eternal. He simply describes the death of one of his
closest friends this way:
You freed
him from this life. By then he too had become a faithful catholic. ... Now he
lives in Abraham's bosom, and whatever may be the meaning of that bosom, there,
Nebridius lives, my very dear friend, taken by you to be your son.... He no
longer lays his ear to my lips, but with the lips of his spirit he drinks in
wisdom at your fountain. ... And I cannot believe that the draught intoxicates
him so that he forgets me, for it is you, O Lord, whom he drinks in and you are
mindful of your servants.[30]
The transformation of friendship in
Augustine's mind here is remarkable. No longer is he without hope and full of
despair over losing a friend, but rather, he almost seems to exude a serene joy
that is happy for his friend and excited at the prospect of continuing their
friendship again one day. Gone is the hopelessness of temporality, here is the
hope and the confidence of eternal life and friendship in God himself, of whom
he and all his friends will one day drink.[31]
Another
change is the basis of commonality in friendship. While it remains true that
they are friends because of what they have in common, they no longer build
their friendship on books or jokes or token acts of kindness. Rather now, their
commonality is God, and inasmuch as what they now have in common is greater, so
their friendship now is qualitatively greater![32]
Now,
for [Augustine],
the only true friendship is sent by God
to those who love each other in Him. This is the heart of Augustine's
conception of friendship and his great innovation. It is God alone who can join
two persons to each other. In other words friendship is beyond the scope of
human control.[33]
It is at this point in particular (the
theocentricity of friendship) where Augustine departs from philosophers who had
come before him and had attempted to define true friendship. "While friendship by
classical writers is described as a search together for beauty, truth, and
wisdom, in Christian friendship, the search ultimately leads friends to the
source who is Beauty, Wisdom, Truth, and Love."[34]
God being the ultimate object of all human desire is not a new theme to
Augustine in the Confessions, but here it is introduced as the very
basis of all Christian friendship: Helping one another pursue our Sovereign
Joy.
On
this point Augustine is still painfully aware that there are many ways for
friendship to fall short of its intended goal, so he spells it out at length:
If your
delight is in souls, love them in God, because they too are frail and stand
firm only when they cling to him. If they do not, they go their own way and are
lost. Love them, then, in him and draw as many with you to him as you can. Tell
them, 'He is the one we should love. He made the world and he stays close to
it.' For when he made the world he did not go away and leave it. By him it was
created and in him it exists. Where we taste the truth, God is there. He is in
our very inmost hearts, but our hearts have strayed from him.[35]
As with all of creation, which was given for
man to delight in the glory of the Creator, not the created thing, so it is
with friendship also. This is friendship based on God, pointing others to God, to
the glory of God.
It
is this type of friendship which can now yield the true fruit of commonality.
The openness cultivated partly through years of friendship, and partly through
brokenness before God enables friends to begin leading each other to God
instead of into sin! When Augustine is confronted with his own sinfulness and
desperate need of regeneration, he turns to his friend Alypius in a panic and
pours out his heart, "What is the matter with us?" A free exchange follows and
when Augustine flees to the garden, Alypius' presence "was no intrusion on
[his] solitude."[36]
In fact, when Augustine reads the verse in Romans which leads to his
conversion, it is the very next phrase which pushes Alypius to follow. As God
had worked it, these friends who had pursued truth for so long together
suddenly felt Truth find them... and he found them together. Nebridius was not
long behind, nor was Adeodatus, Augustine's son. This is the fruit of finding a
common purpose in God.
Burt
puts it this way,
Like a delicate rake caressing soft sand, the love of friendship has a
leveling power, smoothing out the differences which come from our being unique
individuals. We must love both ourselves and our friends in the same way, not
as ends in themselves but as means whereby we can together each achieve our one
eternal good: God himself.[37]
Where these young men had pushed each other
before toward evil, now they find that it is their role to encourage each other
on in their pursuit of God. For Augustine, the discussions that he and his
friends would have would now begin to produce the material for his books.[38]
As they were journeying together, they met Evodius who remained with them in
order that they might all together live more perfectly "the devout life."[39]
This
community of companions ("all my friends and relations"[40])
that travelled with Augustine was altogether with one heart pursuing God and
challenging each other to pursue him as well. This is effective friendship,
since "a man will not imitate any but his friends."[41]
Augustine sees this in the very creation, where each was made according to its
own kind; so it is in friendship, that each of us will become like our friends.
In this way friends can spur each other on to a more godly life. This was the
desperate hope and goal of friendship for Augustine: "My soul, tell this to the
souls that you love. Let them weep in this valley of tears, and so take them
with you to God. For if, as you speak, the flame of charity burns in you, it is
by his Spirit that you tell them this."[42]
Yet
perhaps the most profound element of friendship in Augustine's thought is the
idea that in friendship, one will fulfil the twofold commandment. Augustine
here adapts
This
friendship which is centred entirely on God and his goodness benefits all
involved by helping them to gain a clearer vision of him. "Sage has observed
that the anima una 'est pour S.Augustin, à partir de 407,
l'énigme et le miroir par excellence où il nous est donné dès ici-bas à
comprendre, comme nous le pouvons, le mystère de Dieu'."[44]
To Augustine, the
most valuable friend in the world is the one who can best reveal God to him and
push him to pursue God. In short, "Augustine thinks of friendship as beginning,
continuing and ending in God--friendship is participation in the life of God."[45]
Conclusion: "Ah, for the City of
Augustine
never reached the goal of friendship he desired in this life, because what he
desired was none other than God himself, and the pure unadulterated fellowship
with fellow humans which flowed out of that. "His ideal was no earthly society
but a heavenly community of mutually loving members of the City of God
(described as 'a perfectly ordered and perfectly harmonious fellowship in the
enjoyment of God and a mutual fellowship in God') and only here would men be
able to know one another completely and to form a perfect intimacy, as friends
aimed to do."[46]
But that day has now come for Augustine, and will soon come for us. The lesson
for us in the meantime is to pursue God and to pursue friendships in which we
can push others in their pursuit of God and find ourselves encouraged as well,
with all the strength and vigour that Augustine did.
These types of
friendships bear fruit. Hundreds of years later, Aelred of Rievaulx, the famous
Mediæval Cistercian monk would
quote Augustine on this very topic, saying "This personal God of the Christians
is a God of love, 'and he who abides in love abides in God.'"[47]
So if the fruit of friendship is a greater love for God in ourselves and in
others, and a greater love for others, then there should be nothing to
deter us from seeking this type of spiritual, God-centred, delight-filled
friendship today.
Works
Referenced
Augustine, trans. Henry Bettenson. City of
1963.
Augustine, trans. R.S. Pine-Coffin. Confessions. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin,
1961.
Brown, Peter. Augustine of
Hippo.
Burt, Donald X. Friendship and
Society: an introduction to Augustine's practical
philosophy.
http://www41.homepage.villanova.edu/donald.burt/friendship/table.htm.
Gilson, Etienne. The Christian Philosophy of
1967.
McNamara, Marie Aquinas. Friendship
in
1964.
Sellner, Edward C.
"Like a Kindling Fire: Meanings of Friendship in the Life and
Writings of Augustine." Spirituality Today. Fall 1991, Vol. 43
No. 3, pp. 240-257.
"Ten Augustinian Values: An Introduction."
Available online at
http://www.angfrayle.net/values/value9.html
White, Carolinne. Christian
Friendship in the Fourth Century.
University Press, 1992.
[1] Peter Brown, Augustine of Hippo (Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1969), 61.
[2] Sermon 299D.1.
[3] Edward C. Sellner, "Like a Kindling Fire: Meanings of Friendship in the Life and Writings of Augustine," Spirituality Today (Fall 1991, v.43.3), pp 24-257. Also available online at http://www.spiritualitytoday.org/spir2day/91433sellner.html. All citations will be taken from the article on the website, and therefore page numbers will not be given.
[4] Brown, Augustine, 32.
[5] "Like a Kindling Fire."
[6] Ibid.
[7] Carolinne White, Christian Friendship in the Fourth Century (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992), 186ff. This topic will be developed in more depth later.
[8] From book 19, as cited in White, Christian Friendship, 187.
[9] Brown, Augustine, 32.
[10] The Christian Philosophy of
[11] That is, of course, assuming one is familiar with Augustine's theology of grace and how it interacts with the affections, and therefore, the will.
[12] City of
[13] See the City of
[14] See the Confessions, book IV.
[15] City of
[16] Ibid., V.20.
[17] Cf. Books II and III; V.23; IX; XIX.9; etc.
[18] City of
[19] Ibid., XV.16.
[20] Ibid., XIX.5.
[21] Brown, Augustine, 32.
[22] Christian Friendship, 187-188.
[23] The Confessions, II.5.
[24] Ibid., II.3.
[25] Ibid., II.8. See also VI.8, 12; IX.8.
[26] Donald X. Burt, Friendship and Society: an introduction to Augustine's practical philosophy (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999). Or available online at http://www41.homepage.villanova.edu/donald.burt/friendship/table.htm. Since the online edition will be used for quotes, page numbers cannot be given.
[27] The Confessions, IV.8.
[28] See The Confessions, IV.13; V.6; VI.6, 7, 10, and 14.
[29] Ibid., VI.10.
[30] Ibid., IX.3.
[31] In IV.9 he puts it this way: "Blessed are those who love you, O God, and love their friends in you and their enemies for your sake. They alone will never lose who are dear to them, for they love them in one who is never lost, in God, our God who made heaven and earth and fills them with his presence, because by filling them he made them."
[32] See above quote from IV.9 on delighting in God through the souls of our friends, rather than simply in our friends.
[33] Marie Aquinas McNamara, Friendship
in
[34] Sellner, "Like a Kindling Fire."
[35] The Confessions, IV.12.
[36] Ibid., VIII.8.
[37] "Friendship and Society."
[38] The Confessions, IX.4.
[39] Ibid., IX.8.
[40] Ibid., IX.4.
[41] Ibid., XIII.21.
[42] Ibid., IV.12.
[43] White, Christian Friendship, 197.
[44] As quoted in White, Christian Friendship, 210.
[45] "Ten Augustinian Values: An Introduction." Available online at http://www.angfrayle.net/values/value9.html.
[46] White, Christian Friendship, 205.
[47] Sellner, "Like a Kindling Fire."