Wednesday, 12 August 2015

Augustine on Happiness



From Ellen T. Charry, God and the Art of Happiness (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2010)

“To know and possess God is to enjoy oneself. This is the most important theme of Augustine’s great corpus. Enjoyment of God is the light of life. Holding fast to it is the challenge…Happiness is perfectly knowing and enjoying God who leads us into truth and connects us with himself. We can hasten towards this culmination through faith, hope, and love…but cannot finally arrive there in this life.”

“Happiness is knowing, loving, and enjoying God securely. For that, one must seek and find God, and this seeking proceeds by cultivating wisdom. It is the highest end of human life. Wisdom requires virtue but is not itself virtue, for wisdom resides in God revealed in Christ.”

“This very early work [De Beata Vita] has accomplished the following: all people want to be happy, and God has made this possible; humans are defined as both body and soul, implying (against the Stoics and Plotinus) that the well-being of the body is important. Further, human life is purposeful: to become wise and filled by enjoying God as much as possible in this life is to achieve our purpose, knowing that here we will never be completely safe from suffering and distress. Only those who know or have God to the fullest experience this spiritual joy. Yet, as well as we may know, love, and enjoy God in this life, happiness will never be complete until fulfilled in the eschaton. While being filled with the wisdom of God surfaces here early on as central to Augustine’s teaching on happiness, it will eventually be eclipsed by love.”

“Happiness characterizes God-lovers, and loving well is the key to happiness…We flourish when we enjoy our chief good, the end for which we are made – enjoyment of God.”

“Happiness is high-quality loving by means of which one extracts the best that life has to offer…To be good is to love in a manner consistent with one’s God-given nature. Living wisely is living virtuously – that is, in obedience to the self God created us to be.”

From a summary of Sermon 368 (“Whoever loves his soul will lose it”): “What does this mean? Some loves are harmful while others are helpful; when we pursue helpful ones and let them push out harmful ones, better self-love will prevail. Therefore, one way to grasp the healing of the soul is to see it as learning to love oneself well. This is not in any way individualistic, antisocial, or prideful, because, for Augustine, self-love exists always in the context of comprehensive Christian identity – in relationship with God and others.”

“[The] instability of love is the greatest impediment to the training of love unto salvation. Vanity and greed are distorted forms of love that create psychological and spiritual dysfunction. Augustine realizes that the specific form this dysfunction takes depends on individual differences, but the conflicted self is a universal human experience essential to Augustine’s theological psychology. Finally, he argues, divine grace is the only way that the divided soul can truly be healed. However, our ultimate reliance on God for this healing does not absolve us of the responsibility to be guided and to guide others in loving as best we can here and now.”

“People say they want to be happy; they say that they want the truth and do not want to be deceived by falsehood. But they are unwilling to be convicted by the truth when it criticizes their distorted love…people love truth only when it confirms and supports them.” Augustine “understands the power of defense mechanisms that entrench us in patterns of thought and behavior and that resist insight and change.”

“The journey into God is a healing journey into one’s soul, for each step deeper into God heals and strengthens love. In this journey, love of material goods loses its power as the soul is perfected in the love of God which is perfect self-love.” (Cf. O’Donovan on self-love in Augustine)

“Augustine concludes that only those who have everything they want – and want nothing wrongly – can be happy…The best thing to want in this life is a will to love well and desire good things in proportion to their goodness, the getting of which will make the seeker happy as possible for as long as possible. A good will that aspires to God can bring a person near to complete happiness, but Augustine holds tenaciously to the view that life is so challenging that true happiness eludes us. Temporal happiness, then, is wanting and having what is good – righteous love of self, neighbor, material things, and al these in God – in proportion to their goodness. This requires spiritual training.”

“The implicit teaching on happiness in The Trinity is soteriological. Salvation is the healing of the soul through the slow and painful recovery of the shattered and lost image of God that we are intrinsically by the grace of creation.” “Augustine’s therapeutic soteriology is the primary handhold for the current effort to reclaim a Christian doctrine of happiness.”


Augustine’s “doctrine of happiness remains hopeful that we can have and enjoy what we seek and be healed by that enjoyment. It is cautious in that it discourages high expectations of persistent flourishing as life proceeds. Perhaps the most distinctive feature of Augustine’s doctrine of happiness is that it heals the soul. It is a christologically grounded eschatological theory of happiness that is salvific. To be healed is to be happy. If we cannot be happy in this life, it is because we cannot be fully healed here – not that we cannot be healed here at all. The soul’s rest in God is its healing…happiness is not just that we enjoy seeking God but that his goodness, wisdom, and beauty actually do heal us to the extent that we know, love, and enjoy him.”