“Christ Is Speaking”: The Psalms as the Grammar of Augustine’s Sermons
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Psalms in the Early Church
3. The Psalms in Augustine’s Life
Augustine believed that the Psalms refuted his pride as well as kindled and fired his faith. One is reminded of the pivotal role that his mother Monica played in his life and faith. The Psalms are set alongside her in this passage as profoundly influential in the spiritual development of this theologian.14My God, how I cried to you when I read the Psalms of David, songs of faith, utterances of devotion which allow no pride of spirit to enter in! I was but a beginner in authentic love of you, a catechumen resting at a country villa of another catechumen, Alypius. My mother stayed near by us in the clothing of a woman but with a virile faith, an older woman’s serenity, a mother’s love, and a Christian devotion. How I cried to you in those Psalms, and how they kindled my love for you! I was fired by an enthusiasm to recite them, were it possible, to the entire world in protest against the pride of the human race. Yet they are being sung in all the world and ‘there is none who can hide himself from your heat’ (Ps. 18:7).
The acute sense of the inadequacy of words explains why Augustine at the beginning of the Confessions experiences difficulty in finding any way of addressing God. … The answer to the question he finds in …scripture. … The Bible consists of words, human indeed but for the believing community a gift of God so that within the sign there is also a divine reality. … So Augustine can address God in the way the psalmist did.
4. The Psalms in Augustine’s Sermons
One observes Augustine’s prosopological exegesis in various sermons. For example, we find it in his exposition of Psalm 57:1: “Have mercy on me, O God, have mercy, for my soul trusts in you. Christ is praying in his passion, Have mercy on me, O God. God is saying to God, Have mercy on me” (Augustine 2015b, p. 163).27 In his second exposition of Psalm 31:1–11,28 Augustine proclaims:Augustine’s tool for distinguishing Christ’s voice behind the other voices in the text came from adapting a standard practice of his grammatical and rhetorical training called “prosopological exegesis” … [which] refers to the work of literary analysis that identifies the various speaking voices of a poetic text. The speaking person, prosopon in Greek (literally, “face,” which Latin writers often translated as persona, “person”), had to be identified … without cues, line breaks, punctuation or even spaces between letters.
In Psalm 57:3, Augustine hears in the psalmist’s joy at divine deliverance “the prayer of Christ, as a man of flesh, praising God for rescuing and raising him up” (Burns 2022, p. 207). Augustine used this hermeneutical approach to discern which words in the Psalms were to be attributed directly to Christ. This was no simple matter. Patout Burns explains that Augustine “had to distinguish not only different modes of reference—particularly the historical and prophetic or typological—but also three different senses in which Christ was the subject or object of the biblical speech,” as follows: “First, Christ could speak and be spoken of as the Word of God”; “second, the scripture refers to Christ as the Word of God incarnate,” not only in such texts as the Johannine Prologue but also in Psalm 2:7; and “third, scripture can refer to ‘the whole Christ in the fullness of the church’” understood as Christ’s Body (Burns 2022, p. 15).Christ is speaking here in the prophet; no, I would dare go further and say simply, Christ is speaking. He is going to say certain things in this psalm that we might think inappropriate to Christ, to the excellent dignity of our Head, and especially to the Word who was God with God in the beginning. Some of the things said here may not even seem suitable for him in the form of a servant, that form which he took from the Virgin; and yet it is Christ who is speaking, because in the members of Christ there is Christ. I want you to understand that Head and body together are called one Christ. … Let Christ speak, then, because in Christ the Church speaks, and in the Church Christ speaks, and the body speaks in the Head, and the Head in the body.
The voice of Christ in the Psalms mirrors Christ’s incarnation. “The Psalms represent the unifying of the divine and human voice in Christ” (Williams 2016, p. 27).[In the Enarrationes, Augustine employs] an incarnational hermeneutic: God the Son in assuming humanity assumes all that humanity says to God, making his own even the cries of pain and doubt uttered by humans, so as to show that the transforming grace of God can work in situations of the gravest human extremity. Revelation in the words of Scripture does not come simply in the words we consider edifying and positive. And because the Son is eternally turned towards the Father in adoration and self-offering, what humans say can be taken up in that movement towards the Source of all, can become part of what the Son “says” to the Father and so brought into the reality which alone can heal and unite the fractured voices of creation.
Evident in this passage is the claim that the Psalms are the Lord’s and not merely the psalmist’s. Also, evident here is Augustine’s understanding of Christ’s salvific work of descent into creation to raise it back up to God.Let us now listen to the Lord Jesus Christ speaking in our psalm’s prophetic words and remember that, though the psalms were sung long before the Lord was born of Mary, they were not sung before he was Lord. … That divine person, equal to the Father, became a sharer in our mortality, a mortality that belonged not to him but to us, so that we might share the divine nature that belongs not to us but to him.
The totus Christus is the head (Christ) and the body (the church) and was an important aspect of Augustine’s doctrine of the incarnation.32Christ speaks in this psalm. Many things have been said in the name of his body, but the head is speaking too, though not in the sense that they are distinct from each other like two persons: now the head and now the body. To distinguish them like that would be to divide them, and then they would not be two in one flesh. But if they are two in one flesh, do not be surprised if the two speak with one voice.
This passage shows that Augustine never lost sight of the distinction between Christ and the Christian community. Christ and the church “are two, undeniably, for we are not the Word, we were not with God in the beginning, not through us were all things made”. In an important sense, Christ is Christ (head and body), and the church is not. Yet, Augustine also argues that when Christians consider Christ in the flesh, there they find not only Christ but “both him and ourselves”.Christ and the Church, two in one flesh. The fact that they are two points to the distance between us and the majesty of God. They are two, undeniably, for we are not the Word, we were not with God in the beginning, not through us were all things made. But when we consider the flesh, there we find Christ, and in Christ we find both him and ourselves. Small wonder that we find this mystery in the psalms. There he says many things in his own name as head and many others in the name of his members, yet all of it is said as though one single individual were speaking. Wonder not that there are two with one voice, if there are two in one flesh.
5. The Psalms, Preaching, and Christian Formation
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1 | Biblical scholar W. H. Bellinger makes use of this metaphor in relation to the Psalms (Bellinger 2019). |
2 | The only serious rival to the Psalms is the book of Isaiah, Bellinger claims (Bellinger 2019, p. 2). |
3 | All Scripture quotations that are not embedded within another quotation are taken from the NRSVUE (National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America 2022). |
4 | Reading as prohphetic typically non-prophetic biblical material became more prominent in the Second Temple period. One sees this in writings from Qumran. For instance, see the Rule of the Community (1QS) 8:13–16a, which references Isaiah 40:3 and reads, “… the expounding of the Law, decreed by God through Moses for obedience, that being defined by what has been revealed for each age, and by what the prophets have revealed by His holy spirit” (Parry and Tov 2014, 1 p. 25). More directly related to the Psalms is 11Q5 27:2: “Now David the son of Jesse was wise and shone like the light of the sun, a scribe and man of discernment, blameless in all his ways before God and men. The LORD gave him a brilliant and discerning spirit, so that he wrote: psalms, three thousand six hundred; songs to sing before the altar accompanying the daily perpetual burnt offering, for all the days of the year, three hundred and sixty-four; for the Sabbath offerings, fifty-two songs; and for the New Moon offerings, all the festival days, and the Day of Atonement, thirty songs. The total of all the songs that he composed was four hundred and forty-six, not including four songs for charming the demon-possessed with music. The sum total of everything, psalms and songs, was four thousand and fifty. All these he composed through prophecy given him by the Most High” (Wise et al. 1996, p. 452). The point here is that texts like the Psalms were being considered prophetic by Jewish communities even before the first century. |
5 | Luke departs from a standard tripartite formula, “the Law, the Prophets, and the Writings,” transposing “the psalms” in place of “the Writings,” which “signals the special significance of the Psalter as a medium of revelation of Jesus’s identity” (Hays 2016, p. 234). |
6 | See also Heb 2:12 and 10:5–7. |
7 | For more on the significance of this, see (Hays 2005, p. 105; Dodd 1952, pp. 57–60). |
8 | The significance of this was not lost on Augustine. As Michael Cameron observes, “It is impossible to overstate the importance of [Psalm 22] for Augustine” (Cameron 2015b, p. 217). |
9 | A somewhat conventional practice. For example, Alan of Lille noted seven centuries later that the Psalms were good texts to preach (Alan of Lille 1981, p. 20). |
10 | Possidius relates that Augustine spent his last days weeping over his sins and praying the Psalms: “He had ordered that the four psalms of David that deal with penance to be copied out. From his sick-bed, he could see these sheets of paper every day, hanging on his walls, and would read them, crying constantly and deeply” (Possidius as quoted in Brown 2000, p. 436). |
11 | “Purely formally, the whole of the Confessions is a prayer; to work out who I am, I need to be speaking to and listening to God” (Williams 2016, p. 3). |
12 | “Once we have recognized how obscure we are to ourselves we somehow see that only in relation to the infinity of God can we get any purchase on the sort of beings we are” (Williams 2016, p. 4). |
13 | Henry Chadwick makes a statement similar to Brown’s: “Citations from the Psalms are even made integral to the literary structure of the work, so that in several cases a citation links the books together like a coupling” (Chadwick 1991, p. xxii). |
14 | It is not surprising—though not without a touch of irony—to see Augustine quoting a psalm in stride in the middle of this passage about the role the Psalms have played in his life! |
15 | Regarding the givenness of God’s word and the reliance on the given word of God to speak for and to God, preachers may be reminded of the words of Karl Barth, that “preaching must conform to revelation” and “the point of the event of preaching is God’s own speaking (Deus loquitur)” (Barth 1991, p. 47). Without God’s words, what do preachers have to say? |
16 | |
17 | One also hears the theology and writing of Bonhoeffer: “Therefore we must learn to pray. The child learns to speak because the parent speaks to the child. The child learns the language of the parent. So we learn to speak to God because God has spoken and speaks to us. In the language of the Father in heaven, God’s children learn to speak with God. Repeating God’s own words, we begin to pray to God. We ought to speak to God, and God wishes to hear us, not in the false and confused language of our heart but in the clear and pure language that God has spoken to us in Jesus Christ” (Bonhoeffer 1996, p. 156). |
18 | “You have made us for yourself, and our heart is restless until it rests in you” (Augustine 1992, p. 3). |
19 | William Harmless also makes a connection between the Psalms and affect: “The Psalms provided a paradigm for the affections, offering a path both of purgation and of delight that instilled in the faithful the graced courage to make the often grueling journey to God” (Harmless 2010, p. 196). |
20 | David Wilhite briefly discusses the influence of Cicero and the Neoplatonists on Augustine. See (Wilhite 2017, p. 242). In another place, Wilhite remarks that “virtually all of the surviving sermonic material [from the pre-Nicene period] owe a big debt to the classical rhetoricians, such as Aristotle, Cicero, and Quintilian”. He follows with an illustration of Augustine’s dependence on these sources (Wilhite 2019, pp. 55–56). |
21 | Augustine “read the psalms … primarily in relationship to Christ” (Brown 2014, pp. 8–9). O. C. Edwards notes, “What he found [in the Psalms] was very different from the intention of the psalmist, but it is certainly consistent with the faith of the New Testament. What he came up with is the sort of thing one immersed in the Christian faith and spirituality is likely to think when reading a psalm” (Edwards 2004, p. 115). |
22 | Augustine’s sermons do not typically enjoy the attention his other writings receive. As one scholar said, Augustine’s Bible is “primarily the Bible of a preacher” (La Bonnardière 1999, p. 212). Augustine’s preaching seems to be gaining attention in recent years. For a few notable examples, see (Harmless 2010; Kolbet 2010; Sanlon 2014; Burns 2022; and Glowasky 2020). |
23 | It is not known whether Augustine actually preached every one of these expositions himself. For a brief overview of the Enarrationes in Psalmos, see (Old 1998, pp. 358–60). |
24 | As just one example (chosen arbitrarily), Augustine’s short Christmas sermon (sermo CLXXXVII) contains at least three references to the Psalms. See (Augustine 2002). |
25 | Of those Church Fathers who commentated on the Psalms, Augustine is the “most consistently christological” (Price 2011, p. 14). |
26 | See also (Cameron 2012, p. 171). Cameron mentions Drobner, who has conducted more thorough investigations of this practice. See (Drobner 1990, pp. 49–63). |
27 | Augustine’s Psalm 56:2. In the Septuagint, Psalms 9 and 10 constitute a single psalm; the LXX numbering of Psalm 10 through Psalm 147 is one behind the numbering in translations based on the Hebrew text. |
28 | Augustine’s Psalm 30:1–11. |
29 | For instance, he says in one place, “It was by humility that [Christ] opened a way for us. … God himself became humble”. (Augustine 2015a, p. 117). |
30 | The logic of deification is often present (such as in these sermons) whether it is ever named as such. It is true, in fact, that Augustine seldom deploys the term “deification”. Robert Puchniak suggests a reason for this, drawing on City of God. Augustine writes in a pagan context in which human beings were all too eager to deify themselves. The result would be that “false gods” are worshipped while the “‘living god’ is neglected”. Augustine hesitates to use the term lest he be misunderstood (Puchniak 2006, p. 131). For the concept of deification in Augustine, see (Meconi 2008; 2013, pp. 135–174; 2014). |
31 | Pauline passages stand behind this concept, such as Eph 1:22–23; 5:22ff; Col 1:18; 2:18; and 1 Cor 12:12ff. |
32 | “The human collectivity that is the Church is one homo with Jesus, and so fully one with the Word” (Williams 2018, p. 74). |
33 | Burns emphasizes this aspect of Augustine’s thought: “As human, Christ had become the head of a social body, the church, in which the baptized were joined to him and to one another. The sin and weakeness of the members were symbolized in the mortality and the suffering of Christ, their head. The immortality and new life of the head was realized in the moral renewal of the members and, eventually, their bodily resurrection. As Christ really died and rose in his own flesh, he symbolically died and rose in the baptism of his members. His bodily resurection was realized in their spirits: their minds were lifted up to him; their hearts were moved to love God and neighbor; they lived in expectation of joining him physically” (Burns 2012, p. 435). |
34 | For aid in preaching the Psalms, see (Fleer and Bland 2005; Langley 2021; Long 2014, pp. 557–68; Long 1989, esp. pp. 43–52; and McCann and Howell 2001). |
35 | Annette Brownlee underscores that the task of preaching concerns discerning the body and helping congregants understand the Christ-given reality they inhabit as Christians. “Preaching is a practice in which we are called to discern the body as a way of life. Preaching, as Augustine described it, is an ‘audible sign’ with bread and wine as ‘visible words.’ In preaching we have the privilege of naming and describing the reality already present in the church as it gathers in the name of the risen Christ and breaks bread together. It is our priviledge to describe the way of life springing from this reality” (Brownlee 2018, p. 101; see also Jenson 1978, pp. 4–5; Fitzgerald 1999, p. 744). |
36 | An anecdotal example of the problem is seen in the work of Sally Brown and Luke Powery, Ways of the Word, which helpfully includes an essay on “Preaching and Christian Formation”. Brown delineates three stages of development: from discovering or rediscovering the Christian faith to becoming a true disciple, and finally to learning to live out one’s faith (Brown and Powery 2016, p. 238). These phases are fine, insofar as they go; they accurately describe levels of growth. Yet, it is possible to conceive of these sorts of thresholds in individualistic ways which leave the disciple unincorporated in Christ’s body. The possibility of Christian formation often fails to be theologically grounded in the person and work of Christ or aimed at the consummation of Christian history, the “gather[ing] up [of] all things in [Christ], things in heaven and things on earth” (Eph 1:10). |
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Love, M.D. “Christ Is Speaking”: The Psalms as the Grammar of Augustine’s Sermons. Religions 2024, 15, 414. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040414
Love MD. “Christ Is Speaking”: The Psalms as the Grammar of Augustine’s Sermons. Religions. 2024; 15(4):414. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040414
Chicago/Turabian StyleLove, Matthew D. 2024. "“Christ Is Speaking”: The Psalms as the Grammar of Augustine’s Sermons" Religions 15, no. 4: 414. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040414
APA StyleLove, M. D. (2024). “Christ Is Speaking”: The Psalms as the Grammar of Augustine’s Sermons. Religions, 15(4), 414. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040414