Whoever I May Be,
Lord, I Lie Exposed to Your Scrutiny
But
the abyss of the human conscience lies naked to your eyes, O Lord, so would
anything be secret even if I were unwilling to confess to you? I would be
hiding you from myself, but not myself from you. But now that my groans bear
witness that I find no pleasure in myself, you shed light upon me and give me
joy, you offer yourself, lovable and longed for, that I may thrust myself away
in disgust and choose you, and be pleasing no more either to you or to myself
except in what I have from you.
To
you, then, Lord, I lie exposed, exactly as I am. I have spoken of what I hope
to gain by confessing to you. My confession to you is made not with words of
tongue and voice, but with the words of my soul and the clamour of my thought,
to which your ear is attuned; for when I am bad, confession to you is simply
disgust with myself, but when I am good, confession to you consists in not
attributing my goodness to myself, because though you, Lord, bless the person
who is just, it is only because you have first made him just when he was
sinful. This is why, O Lord, my confession in your presence is silent, yet not
altogether silent: there is no noise to it, but it shouts by love.
For it
is you, Lord, who judge me. No-one knows what he himself is made of, except his
own spirit within him, yet there is still some part of him which remains hidden
even from his own spirit; but you, Lord, know everything about a human being
because you have made him. And though in your sight I may despise myself and
reckon myself dust and ashes, I know something about you which I do not know
about myself.
It is
true that we now see only a tantalising reflection in a mirror, and so it is
that while I am on pilgrimage far from you I am more present to myself than to
you; yet I do know that you cannot be defiled in any way whatever, whereas I do
not know which temptations I may have the strength to resist, and to which ones
I shall succumb. Our hope is that, because you are trustworthy, you do not
allow us to be tempted more fiercely than we can bear, but along with the
temptation you ordain the outcome of it, so that we can endure.
Let
me, then, confess what I know about myself, and confess too what I do not know,
because what I know of myself I know only because you shed light on me, and
what I do not know I shall remain ignorant about until my darkness becomes like
bright noon before your face.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of
Readings
From The
Confessions of Saint Augustine
Photo taken from Waiting for the Word
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