the former
voluntary
by we may escape the latter, v.
Augustine - Exposition on the Psalms - v6
heathen holi part of the earth, vi.
424.
from it the days, iii.
120.
(see Circus, Shows.
) rich man could see Lazarus at Holocaust, sacrifice, the whole of rest, i.
38.
two regions therein, an
upper and a lower, iv. 263. the pnins of hell overtake sinners, v. 293. wilful sinners go down alive into hell, iii. 43. Christ alone hath de livered His Soul from the hand of hell, iv. 266.
2. (Gehenna,) the place of tor ment after Judgment -- better to en dure any temporal suffering, than the fire of hell, iii. 358. the fire of hell not threatened under the old Law, v. 181. the fearof hell strength ened the martyrs, v. 533.
Hen, our Lord compares Himself to one, because of its tender care for its chickens, iii. 136. iv. 287.
Heresies, torrents that run violently for a while, and then are dry, iii. 116. why God allows them, i. 57, 85. the first heresy arose among Christ's own followers, iii. 50. chiefs of heresies called mountains, v. 540; i. 411.
which burnt, ii. 350, 386 iii. 255, 289 vi. 178. we are to he holocausts to God, by being wholly set on fire with love, ib.
Holy Ghost, the, the Finger of God, 65 iv. 307. the undefiled Law of God, 135. a mighty River, iv. 338.
the Sword of God, iv. 332. signified by oil and by water, v. 226. the Pledge given by Christ to His Spouse, iv. 312. sent down by Christ after His Ascension, iv. 308. to strengthen Christ's members, v. 226. came on the fiftieth day after the Passion, iv. 312. the river that makes glad the City of God, ii. 268. a fire, puri fying the gold, burning the hay,
135. gave the Apostles power to speak with tongues, to signify the union of all nations in one faith,
136. His gifts signified by stars, vi. 156. His seven-fold operation, vi. 450. the groanings of Christians, His speech within them, 191.
love, iv. 70.
481
Heretics, called dogs, vi. 397. beasts
of the reed, iii. 348. serpents, iii.
114. bulls, iii. 349. false prophets,
i. 50. assail the truth while pro
fessing to defend 64. all heretics Hope, its firmness in the Christian, of part, and among the few, 290;
v. 202. heretics unable to bear the strong meat of the Gospel, vi. 82. seek not amendment, but strife, iii. 350. they are given over as a pu nishment to error, 57. do all they can to destroy God's praise out of the mouth of babes, 98. falsely call themselves God's servants, v. 302. whatever gifts they have, have not
love, v. 75. administer the Sacra ments, but never able to give love, 157. belong to God's people in so far as they have the same Sacraments, v. 202. wage civil war in the Church, v. 195. benefit the Church, by warning, and bringing out true doctrine, v. 203; 57; iii. 49, 349. make the truth more sweet,
85. prove the sound members of the Church, iii. 49. imperial laws against heretics, iii. 114, 163. v. 25.
Herman, meaning of the word, and mystical interpretation, vi. 119. an other, iv. 250.
VOL. VI.
iv. 173. compared to an anchor, iii. 253. God has given us sure pledges for our hope, vi. 422. present hope, of God's aid; future hope, of His reward, v. 375. our whole hope must be in God's mercy, 208. in God
80. we must hope for nothing from God, but Himself, ii. 137. our hope will hereafter be changed to reality, iv. 314; vi. 70. hope for this life only, ib ground for thank fulness, iv. 314. our hope goes first, our life should follow, vi. 176. bet ter in hand than in hope,' a worldly proverb, v. 532. hope kindles love, v. 292. drives out fear,
forts our pilgrimaee, vi. 336, 343. causes joy, vi. 337. the saints re joice here hope, in heaven in en joyment, v. 308 vi. 36. the godly blessed in hope, v. 317. the hope of immortality, the life of immortality, v. 145.
Hope in sin, deadly, vi. 326. the day of death uncertain, to prevent
Honey, from the rock, the wisdom of Christ, iv. 132. open teaching, ho
ney: mysteries, the honeycomb, v. 411. Christ an hive, v. 307.
193. com
I i
i.
in ;
a
i. by
5,
5, i.
i.
i.
'
is
a
i.
i.
it, i.
i.
i. i. i.
a
i.
i.
;
i. ;
is
;
false hope, v. J2. our hope in the midst of daily sins, humble con fession, vi. 255, 337.
252. the wicked will be humbled at the day of Judgment, vi. 144. he that humbleth not himself by con
livered from evils, v. 447. hum- hie weakness stronger than proud strength, iv. 336.
466; vi. 431. an everlasting hymn the reward of the Saints, ib. used to be sung in churches, ii. 216.
Hypocrisy, a wbited wall, bright
without, mud within, iv. 401. (see
Heart. )
Hyssop, a lowly herb, but medicinal,
ii. 377. typical of purification of the heart, ib.
A married woman that humble, better than a proud virgin, iv. 20, 476.
Humbled, to be humbled by God at once a punishment and a blessing, ii. 119. truth we are humbled to death, mercy restored to life, v. 395. two ways of being humbled, by confession, or by tribulation, v. 374.
the former voluntary by we may escape the latter, v. 388. God draws near to the humble, v. 186.
a man give up his own righteous ness, and humble himself, God's Righteousness will exalt him, iv.
them,' ii. 95; iii. 184 iv. 24. to whom is
INDEX.
Hope in worldly things, vain, fession, will be humbled by the
weight of God's Hand, 293. Christ lofty in His Humiliation, v. 120.
i. 80, 248; ii. 403, 404. we must
not hope in man, ii. 136; v. 450;
vi. 345. he who hopes not in the
Lord, stumbles among the wicked, Humility, taught by Christ, not by
i. 180. no Christian should hope in himself, ii. 192; iv. 269. who hopes in himself, wretched ; who hopes in another man, yet more wretched, i. 363.
Horse, represents worldly honours, i. 338 ; vi. 378. horse and mule, the proud, i. 300.
Houie, a permanent abode, tent, for pilgrims, and soldiers, i. 195. house of God, the Church triumphant, ii. 202 ; vi. 99. is now being built, iv. 398. one house made up of all the faithful and the Angels, vi. 19. they are stones of the house who are built in by charity, vi. 98. we enter earthly houses, to dwell in them,
God's House, to be indwelt, ib. be thou God's House and He will be thine, i. 270.
heathen philosophers, 297. Chris tians should imitate Christ's, iv. 363. Christ's exaltation, a consequence of His humility, v. 242. humility the road to life, 113. our perfection, vi. 88. our strength, iv. 333. to turn from things of God to earthly things, a false humility, iv. 272. humility comes first, wisdom follows, v. 412. the prodigal son a pattern of hu mility, 132. humility in sin less displeasing to God than pride in good works, iv. 363. the trembling of humility better than the confidence
of pride, v. 144. humility must be in deed, not in tongue only, v. 319. the humility of the centurion, ii. 121. of the publican, ii. 152. some men exalted to make them the more humble, iv. 239.
Humble, the, unwilling to take praise
to themselves, i. 355. praise God
in all things, ib. how God gives
them grace, v. 201. attribute all
their good to God, v. 205. none but
the humble walk in the path of love,
vi. 268. God exalteth the humble,
yet maketh them not proud, v. 270.
the humble heart bringeth down
God from heaven to be near iv.
365 v. 186. God lofty, yet reached
by the humble, iii. 519. God would
have us humble, yet lofty, to take in Husbandman, God [our, iii. 295. we
General commendations of humi lity, 362, 371; ii. 121; iv. 58, 306, 407; v. 110, 142, 254, 268, 459; vi. 22, 89, 106, 108.
Hunger, part of the punishment of sin, ii. 72; v. 520. requires the remedy of food, ib. in what sense the righ teous never seem to hunger, ii. 49. now our time of hunger, hereafter of plenty, 338. the Church hungers after the conversion of sinners, 254.
wisdom, vi. 85, 86. the humble en must bring Him forth fruit, which ters by the door, the proud climbeth His, not ours, v. 38.
in another way, iv. 401. the proud Hymn, song of praise to God, iii. humbled by evils, the humble de
Idilhun, means 'overleaping
applied, ib.
Idols, how those who worship them are
like unto them, vi. 148. their mad ness, vi. 174, 445. the worship of
if
; it
is
;
I.
i.
i.
it
by by
is a
is i.
i.
i.
;
i.
it,
i.
INDEX. 483
them forbidden by law in Augus
tine's time, vi. 198. and destruction Innocence, must be in heart, not in
of idols almost completed, iv. 466. the Jews readily turned to idols, because they loved earthly happiness, i. 415. refutation of idolatry, iv. 423 -- 427. rage of idolaters against the kingdom of Christ, iv. 445. covetousness, idolatry, v. 147.
Idumreans, or Edomites, their name means ' earthly,' ii. 390. or ' men of blood,' iv. 142.
hand only, iv. 81. true, harms not even an enemy, i. 51. all righteous ness included in, iv. 485. to be pre ferred to riches, iv. 165. blesses God
even in sleep, v. 36. pretended in nocence twofold guilt, iii. 239. we should keep innocence, as a miser does his money, ii. 63. innocence will prevail before God as Judge, though it fail before man, ii. 88.
Image of God, is in man's soul, not Innocent, he is, who harms neither
others nor himself, iv. 485. whose heart is blameless, vi. 10. he is not, who wishes to do harm, though he does it not, iv. 343.
his body, ii. 205,333. we keep God's
Image by clinging to Him, iii. 439.
God claims His own Image of us,
v. 130. they who neglect God's
Image in them, deserve to have Innocents, the, crowned by Christ, ii.
their image brought to nought, iii. 485. we may wish to be like God in a wrong way, in independence, not in holiness, iii. 438. we banish God's Image from within us by sin, recall it by confession, iv. 6.
292.
Intention, known to God only, vi. 268.
scarce known to man himself, ib. men to be judged by their, ii. 173. makes a man's work good or bad, i. 281. evil inteDtion blinds men, vi. 271. the left hand said to work what is done with worldly intention, the right hand, what for eternal life, v. 483.
Iniquity, (see Sin. )
Imitate. Christians imitate better Chris
tians, they Christ, ii. 135. we must
not imitate man, i. 260. to imitate
Christ in all things, to enter by the
gate, iv. 282. wherein we should Intercession, the great power of, set
try to imitate Him, wherein not, ib.
iii. 437, 438.
Immortality, free from all pain, because
forth in Moses, v. 180.
upper and a lower, iv. 263. the pnins of hell overtake sinners, v. 293. wilful sinners go down alive into hell, iii. 43. Christ alone hath de livered His Soul from the hand of hell, iv. 266.
2. (Gehenna,) the place of tor ment after Judgment -- better to en dure any temporal suffering, than the fire of hell, iii. 358. the fire of hell not threatened under the old Law, v. 181. the fearof hell strength ened the martyrs, v. 533.
Hen, our Lord compares Himself to one, because of its tender care for its chickens, iii. 136. iv. 287.
Heresies, torrents that run violently for a while, and then are dry, iii. 116. why God allows them, i. 57, 85. the first heresy arose among Christ's own followers, iii. 50. chiefs of heresies called mountains, v. 540; i. 411.
which burnt, ii. 350, 386 iii. 255, 289 vi. 178. we are to he holocausts to God, by being wholly set on fire with love, ib.
Holy Ghost, the, the Finger of God, 65 iv. 307. the undefiled Law of God, 135. a mighty River, iv. 338.
the Sword of God, iv. 332. signified by oil and by water, v. 226. the Pledge given by Christ to His Spouse, iv. 312. sent down by Christ after His Ascension, iv. 308. to strengthen Christ's members, v. 226. came on the fiftieth day after the Passion, iv. 312. the river that makes glad the City of God, ii. 268. a fire, puri fying the gold, burning the hay,
135. gave the Apostles power to speak with tongues, to signify the union of all nations in one faith,
136. His gifts signified by stars, vi. 156. His seven-fold operation, vi. 450. the groanings of Christians, His speech within them, 191.
love, iv. 70.
481
Heretics, called dogs, vi. 397. beasts
of the reed, iii. 348. serpents, iii.
114. bulls, iii. 349. false prophets,
i. 50. assail the truth while pro
fessing to defend 64. all heretics Hope, its firmness in the Christian, of part, and among the few, 290;
v. 202. heretics unable to bear the strong meat of the Gospel, vi. 82. seek not amendment, but strife, iii. 350. they are given over as a pu nishment to error, 57. do all they can to destroy God's praise out of the mouth of babes, 98. falsely call themselves God's servants, v. 302. whatever gifts they have, have not
love, v. 75. administer the Sacra ments, but never able to give love, 157. belong to God's people in so far as they have the same Sacraments, v. 202. wage civil war in the Church, v. 195. benefit the Church, by warning, and bringing out true doctrine, v. 203; 57; iii. 49, 349. make the truth more sweet,
85. prove the sound members of the Church, iii. 49. imperial laws against heretics, iii. 114, 163. v. 25.
Herman, meaning of the word, and mystical interpretation, vi. 119. an other, iv. 250.
VOL. VI.
iv. 173. compared to an anchor, iii. 253. God has given us sure pledges for our hope, vi. 422. present hope, of God's aid; future hope, of His reward, v. 375. our whole hope must be in God's mercy, 208. in God
80. we must hope for nothing from God, but Himself, ii. 137. our hope will hereafter be changed to reality, iv. 314; vi. 70. hope for this life only, ib ground for thank fulness, iv. 314. our hope goes first, our life should follow, vi. 176. bet ter in hand than in hope,' a worldly proverb, v. 532. hope kindles love, v. 292. drives out fear,
forts our pilgrimaee, vi. 336, 343. causes joy, vi. 337. the saints re joice here hope, in heaven in en joyment, v. 308 vi. 36. the godly blessed in hope, v. 317. the hope of immortality, the life of immortality, v. 145.
Hope in sin, deadly, vi. 326. the day of death uncertain, to prevent
Honey, from the rock, the wisdom of Christ, iv. 132. open teaching, ho
ney: mysteries, the honeycomb, v. 411. Christ an hive, v. 307.
193. com
I i
i.
in ;
a
i. by
5,
5, i.
i.
i.
'
is
a
i.
i.
it, i.
i.
i. i. i.
a
i.
i.
;
i. ;
is
;
false hope, v. J2. our hope in the midst of daily sins, humble con fession, vi. 255, 337.
252. the wicked will be humbled at the day of Judgment, vi. 144. he that humbleth not himself by con
livered from evils, v. 447. hum- hie weakness stronger than proud strength, iv. 336.
466; vi. 431. an everlasting hymn the reward of the Saints, ib. used to be sung in churches, ii. 216.
Hypocrisy, a wbited wall, bright
without, mud within, iv. 401. (see
Heart. )
Hyssop, a lowly herb, but medicinal,
ii. 377. typical of purification of the heart, ib.
A married woman that humble, better than a proud virgin, iv. 20, 476.
Humbled, to be humbled by God at once a punishment and a blessing, ii. 119. truth we are humbled to death, mercy restored to life, v. 395. two ways of being humbled, by confession, or by tribulation, v. 374.
the former voluntary by we may escape the latter, v. 388. God draws near to the humble, v. 186.
a man give up his own righteous ness, and humble himself, God's Righteousness will exalt him, iv.
them,' ii. 95; iii. 184 iv. 24. to whom is
INDEX.
Hope in worldly things, vain, fession, will be humbled by the
weight of God's Hand, 293. Christ lofty in His Humiliation, v. 120.
i. 80, 248; ii. 403, 404. we must
not hope in man, ii. 136; v. 450;
vi. 345. he who hopes not in the
Lord, stumbles among the wicked, Humility, taught by Christ, not by
i. 180. no Christian should hope in himself, ii. 192; iv. 269. who hopes in himself, wretched ; who hopes in another man, yet more wretched, i. 363.
Horse, represents worldly honours, i. 338 ; vi. 378. horse and mule, the proud, i. 300.
Houie, a permanent abode, tent, for pilgrims, and soldiers, i. 195. house of God, the Church triumphant, ii. 202 ; vi. 99. is now being built, iv. 398. one house made up of all the faithful and the Angels, vi. 19. they are stones of the house who are built in by charity, vi. 98. we enter earthly houses, to dwell in them,
God's House, to be indwelt, ib. be thou God's House and He will be thine, i. 270.
heathen philosophers, 297. Chris tians should imitate Christ's, iv. 363. Christ's exaltation, a consequence of His humility, v. 242. humility the road to life, 113. our perfection, vi. 88. our strength, iv. 333. to turn from things of God to earthly things, a false humility, iv. 272. humility comes first, wisdom follows, v. 412. the prodigal son a pattern of hu mility, 132. humility in sin less displeasing to God than pride in good works, iv. 363. the trembling of humility better than the confidence
of pride, v. 144. humility must be in deed, not in tongue only, v. 319. the humility of the centurion, ii. 121. of the publican, ii. 152. some men exalted to make them the more humble, iv. 239.
Humble, the, unwilling to take praise
to themselves, i. 355. praise God
in all things, ib. how God gives
them grace, v. 201. attribute all
their good to God, v. 205. none but
the humble walk in the path of love,
vi. 268. God exalteth the humble,
yet maketh them not proud, v. 270.
the humble heart bringeth down
God from heaven to be near iv.
365 v. 186. God lofty, yet reached
by the humble, iii. 519. God would
have us humble, yet lofty, to take in Husbandman, God [our, iii. 295. we
General commendations of humi lity, 362, 371; ii. 121; iv. 58, 306, 407; v. 110, 142, 254, 268, 459; vi. 22, 89, 106, 108.
Hunger, part of the punishment of sin, ii. 72; v. 520. requires the remedy of food, ib. in what sense the righ teous never seem to hunger, ii. 49. now our time of hunger, hereafter of plenty, 338. the Church hungers after the conversion of sinners, 254.
wisdom, vi. 85, 86. the humble en must bring Him forth fruit, which ters by the door, the proud climbeth His, not ours, v. 38.
in another way, iv. 401. the proud Hymn, song of praise to God, iii. humbled by evils, the humble de
Idilhun, means 'overleaping
applied, ib.
Idols, how those who worship them are
like unto them, vi. 148. their mad ness, vi. 174, 445. the worship of
if
; it
is
;
I.
i.
i.
it
by by
is a
is i.
i.
i.
;
i.
it,
i.
INDEX. 483
them forbidden by law in Augus
tine's time, vi. 198. and destruction Innocence, must be in heart, not in
of idols almost completed, iv. 466. the Jews readily turned to idols, because they loved earthly happiness, i. 415. refutation of idolatry, iv. 423 -- 427. rage of idolaters against the kingdom of Christ, iv. 445. covetousness, idolatry, v. 147.
Idumreans, or Edomites, their name means ' earthly,' ii. 390. or ' men of blood,' iv. 142.
hand only, iv. 81. true, harms not even an enemy, i. 51. all righteous ness included in, iv. 485. to be pre ferred to riches, iv. 165. blesses God
even in sleep, v. 36. pretended in nocence twofold guilt, iii. 239. we should keep innocence, as a miser does his money, ii. 63. innocence will prevail before God as Judge, though it fail before man, ii. 88.
Image of God, is in man's soul, not Innocent, he is, who harms neither
others nor himself, iv. 485. whose heart is blameless, vi. 10. he is not, who wishes to do harm, though he does it not, iv. 343.
his body, ii. 205,333. we keep God's
Image by clinging to Him, iii. 439.
God claims His own Image of us,
v. 130. they who neglect God's
Image in them, deserve to have Innocents, the, crowned by Christ, ii.
their image brought to nought, iii. 485. we may wish to be like God in a wrong way, in independence, not in holiness, iii. 438. we banish God's Image from within us by sin, recall it by confession, iv. 6.
292.
Intention, known to God only, vi. 268.
scarce known to man himself, ib. men to be judged by their, ii. 173. makes a man's work good or bad, i. 281. evil inteDtion blinds men, vi. 271. the left hand said to work what is done with worldly intention, the right hand, what for eternal life, v. 483.
Iniquity, (see Sin. )
Imitate. Christians imitate better Chris
tians, they Christ, ii. 135. we must
not imitate man, i. 260. to imitate
Christ in all things, to enter by the
gate, iv. 282. wherein we should Intercession, the great power of, set
try to imitate Him, wherein not, ib.
iii. 437, 438.
Immortality, free from all pain, because
forth in Moses, v. 180.
