2.1. Happiness and God
Augustine (354–430) held to the premise ‘we want to be happy,’ and he points to Cicero’s
Hortensius, which he read at the age of 19 (
St. Augustine 1999, I, 4). The
Hortensius stimulated him to the “study of wisdom” (
St. Augustine 1944, III, 4). In his dialogue
On the Happy Life, Augustine compares the search for meaning in life to sailors searching for a harbor. He includes himself among those sailors who travel the open seas but still keep thinking about their beloved homeland. They roam around the world for quite some time until a calamity forces back into harbor, back to the quiet life they long for (
St. Augustine 1999, I, 2).
Augustine was rhetor at the emperor’s court. He relates that, on the night before he was to deliver a eulogy to the emperor, he met a beggar in one of the streets of Milan who was cheerful because his begging had brought him enough food and drink for the day. He experienced the joy of temporary happiness, while Augustine himself, who was so successful as an orator, was consumed with worry. His learning was suddenly no longer a source of happiness for him (
St. Augustine 1944, VI, 6).
His conversion to Christianity occurred in 386, and during the period before his baptism in 387, he resided at the Cassiciacum estate near Milan. There, he discussed the nature of a happy life with friends, his mother, and his son.
How, according to Augustine’s dialogue
On the Happy Life, does a person become happy? We have to find something permanent, i.e., something that does not depend on fate or chance (
St. Augustine 1999, II.11). Could wealth meet that criterion? It is possible for a rich man to possess everything he wants, despite setbacks. But it can still be objected that rich people fear losing something they love. So, the rich man who has everything could also be unhappy because he is afraid of losing what he loves. So, we should instead pursue what is truly permanent. Augustine’s conclusion is that the one who possesses God is happy (ibid., II.11). The happy life is nothing but the perfect knowledge of God.
At this point, Augustine still sees happiness in connection with earthly life. He sees it as something experienced primarily by the soul or spirit and only briefly touches on the influence of the physical situation on happiness. “The soul, which is perfect, has no needs” (ibid., IV, 25). Happiness is spiritual happiness and involves developing the soul and attaining wisdom. It is “fullness” or an abundance that implies that there is no lack of anything that contributes to one’s well-being (ibid., IV, 31). In addition, Augustine recalls that he had said in the foregoing that happiness lies in the knowledge of God. Wisdom and truth are from God. To be happy is to be permeated with truth, to have God in one’s soul, and to “enjoy God wholly” (
Deo perfrui) (ibid., IV, 33–34). Whoever has wisdom is happy, and this wisdom is the wisdom of God or of Christ (ibid., IV, 34). This is not to be understood in an intellectual way: the one who possesses God lives well and does what God wills (ibid., III, 17).
1 2.2. Eternal Life
At the end of his life, Augustine wrote his
Retractions and revised his earlier thinking. He amended his dialogue
On the Happy Life and now spoke of happiness as a matter of eternal life: “that life alone may be called happy, where also the imperishable and immortal body is given without any effort and resistance to its spirit [the spirit of the man] is subjected.”
2 This eschatological view of happiness can also be found in his later writings, such as his
Confessions and
The City of God.
In his
Confessions (397–398), Augustine recounts his own search for the happy life, for God (
St. Augustine 1944, X, 20). He starts with desire: “our hearts are restless till they rest in Thee” (ibid., I, 1). In his search for the source of evil, he continued to experience restlessness in his soul (ibid., VII.7). Just before the death of his mother, Monnica, the two of them talked about eternal life. No earthly enjoyment can be compared with the glory of that life. Augustine had a mystical experience of that life: it is the land of inexhaustible fertility; it is eternity: there is no “has been” and no “shall be hereafter” (ibid., IX, 10). He desires the kingdom of God, not earthly things (ibid., XI, 2), and he confesses his sins to God and hopes that he will be happy in God, as Jesus indicates in the Beatitudes: “For thou hast called us to be poor in spirit, and meek, and mourning, and hungry, and thirsting for righteousness, and merciful, and pure in heart and peaceable” (ibid., XI, 1).
3 The
Confessions culminates in a discussion of the biblical creation story and an exegesis of the seventh day on which God rested. As in
The City of God, Augustine interprets this as an eschatological view of the eternal Sabbath (ibid., XIII, 35–38). Here, his restless heart finds rest. The Sabbath peace “has no evening”; it is everlasting (ibid., XIII, 35–36). The conception of complete happiness, according to Augustine, is incompatible with time.
4 “Behold my life is but a scattering” (
ecce distentio est vita mea) (ibid., XI, 29), but those who are given eternal life are happy because they are then no longer subject to changing time (ibid., XII, 11–12). The conclusion of his
Confessions opens with a prayer: “O Lord God, grant us … the peace of repose, the peace of Thy Sabbath, the peace that has no evening”. (ibid., XIII.35).
Augustine elaborates on happiness in his The City of God (412–426). This book was written during the decline of the Roman Empire for which Christianity was held responsible. He therefore gave an apology for the Christian religion, but it was not limited to Rome and the indictment of Christianity.
The City of God describes the origin, history, and final destination of the city of God and the earthly city. The origins of this twofold history extends back beyond even the creation of human beings to the rebellion of the angels against God (
St. Augustine 2006, XI). The history of both cities on earth begins with Cain and Abel (ibid., XV.1). The term
civitas as an earthly city can be broadly understood as a political state that includes a certain religion, a community in which the political and the religious are interrelated. Augustine describes both cities in different terms, using, for example, Paul’s distinction between flesh and spirit: “the one consists of those who wish to live after the flesh, the other of those who wish to live after the spirit” (ibid., XIV.1).
5 The city of God, the Christian community, is still mixed with the earthly city today. The members of the city of God are strangers and sojourners on this earth and look forward to eternal life. Augustine repeatedly describes the life of Christians as a pilgrimage:
“Thus in this world, in these evil days, not only from the time of the bodily presence of Christ and His apostles, but even from that of Abel, whom first his wicked brother slew because he was righteous, and thenceforth even to the end of this world, the Church has gone forward on pilgrimage amid the persecutions of the world and the consolations of God.”
(ibid., XVIII)
Concerning the final destination of both cities, Augustine speaks of what philosophy and Christian teaching say about the highest good, human happiness.
6 The first seeks the highest good in humanity itself and considers it attainable in earthly life (ibid., XIX, 1–3). The citizens of the city of God, however, know that the highest good is eternal life (ibid., XIX, 4). So, the highest good, true happiness, and real peace cannot be found in this world, but only in the hereafter. With a reference to Paul (2 Cor. 5:6), he writes: “And because, so long as [the human being] is in this mortal body, he is a stranger to God” (ibid., XIX, 14).
Augustine views life on earth as a miserable existence. “For what flood of eloquence can suffice to detail the miseries of this life?” (ibid., XIX, 4). The world is evil because of, for example, the unjust judgments made by judges (ibid., XIX, 6) or the international crises that arise because nations speak different languages (ibid., XIX, 7). He describes believers’ sojourn on earth as an “abode of weakness” (ibid., XIX, 10). That, however, encourages them “to seek with keener longing for that security where peace is complete and unassailable … This is the final blessedness, this the ultimate consummation, the unending end” (ibid., XIX, 10). Life as such is eternal and happy, according to Augustine. If one has to fear an end to life, then one can no longer speak of life.
7Was Augustine’s view of earthly life as miserable determined by the living conditions at the time and more specifically by his reason for writing
The City of God, i.e., that Christianity was being blamed for Rome’s decline? Or does his judgment as such apply to earthly life and thus to his eschatological view of happiness? I will come back to this below (
Section 3).
In Book XIX of
The City of God, Augustine repeatedly extols the happiness of eternal peace in God:
But, in that final peace to which all our righteousness has reference, and for the sake of which it is maintained, as our nature shall enjoy a sound immortality and incorruption, and shall have no more vices, and as we shall experience no resistance either from ourselves or from others…
(ibid., XIX, 27; cf. XIX, 20)
Happiness has to do with the enjoyment of God and of one’s fellow human beings in God (ibid., XIX, 13). The life of the believer leads to great happiness and thus to the praise of God. “How great shall be that felicity, which shall be tainted with no evil, which shall lack no good, and which shall afford leisure for the praises of God, who shall be all in all!” (ibid., XXII, 30).
Like the Confessions, he also ends The City of God with the eschatological view of happiness: “There shall be the great Sabbath which has no evening, which God celebrated among His first works …,” referring to the seventh day of the creation story on which God rested from his works. We have also been promised that rest, to enjoy eternal rest, and to see that He is God. “There we shall rest and see, see and love, love and praise. This is what shall be in the end without end” (ibid., XXII, 30).
2.3. The Good Earthly Life and Heavenly Happiness
The believer’s life on earth is that of a traveler on a pilgrimage to eternal peace with God, to heavenly happiness. Augustine limits the full enjoyment of God as the greatest happiness in eternal, heavenly life (ibid., XXII, 30) Among the several questions this view raises are the following: Is there no happiness on earth? How does the believer’s earthly life relate to that of the expected heavenly happiness?
The answer to the first question is yes, but this happiness is limited if compared with the perfect heavenly happiness. God is the creator of this world and God created human beings and placed them on earth “as its greatest ornament” (ibid., XIX, 19, cf. XIX, 13; XXII, 24). Earthly goods are God’s good gifts that fit this earthly life, such as the temporary peace that exists in our well-being and survival and in community with our kind. God also gives everything that is necessary to perpetuate that peace, such as all those things that present themselves to our senses: “light, night, the air, and waters suitable for us, and everything the body requires to sustain, shelter, heal, or beautify it” (ibid., XIX, 13).
To the second question, Augustine’s answer is that to arrive at the blissful life, we must live a “well-directed life”. A just life has proper emotions and a wrong life has wrong ones (ibid., XIV, 9). In this context, Augustine’s distinction between “enjoy” (
frui) and “use” (
uti) in his ethics is important. With this, he indicates how the believer should deal with earthly goods, with things, with people, and with God. Fruit (fructus) has to do with enjoyment (frui) and use (usus) with use (uti). Frui is to love for itself, and uti to use for something else. God alone may be enjoyed (frui), and the temporal should be used (
uti) only for sustenance (ibid., XI, 25). For example, the beauty of the body is indeed created by God, but the body should not be loved in the wrong way, at the expense of the eternal good, putting God in second place. Enjoying God is of a different order than dealing with other earthly goods (ibid., XV, 22): “Whoever enjoys a good is not its lord; for in order to enjoy it he must adhere to it, and indeed for the sake of good” and that is true only of God (
Böhner and Gilson 1954, p. 223).
Martha Nussbaum criticizes Augustine because his focus on the future life could lead to the neglect of justice and love in the earthly. She criticizes his “insistent otherworldly direction”: “Death is irrelevant, real suffering in this world is irrelevant, all that is relevant is coming into God’s presence” (
Nussbaum 2001, p. 552). Is this critique justified if we look at what Augustine says about the good life on earth in our pursuit of love and justice? The driving force of the moral life is love. Virtue is the “straight order of love” (
St. Augustine 2006, XV, 22). Although this love concerns (neighborly) love towards people, it is primarily about love towards God. An essential characteristic of the city of God is that it enjoys God (ibid., XI, 24). Augustine’s explanation of the double commandment of love is that
we must help our neighbor love God (ibid., XIX, 14, italics mine). God comes first, then our neighbor.
8 He uses a similar line of thought with respect to having friends.
Having friends is a gift from God, according to Augustine (
Woldring 1994, p. 72). Friendship does not begin with the love of one for the other, but with the love of God for both. Love of friendship implies a calling to bring friends to God (
St. Augustine 1944, IV, 12). Friends should keep their connection to God alive, which will bring them an eternal connection. True friendship is a school of love (
caritas) and is completed in heaven (
Woldring 1994, p. 73).
Augustine speaks of eternal peace in a superlative way, but that does not make earthly peace in the Roman state community unimportant to him. “Here, indeed, we are said to be blessed when we have such peace as can be enjoyed in a good life; but such blessedness. is mere misery compared to that final felicity” (ibid., XIX, 10, italics mine). The Christian community participates in earthly peace and thereby participates in the political community. Augustine discusses, among other things, Cicero’s view of the Roman respublica and of the origin of justice. “Justice is that virtue which gives every one his due” (ibid., XIX, 21) and “Domestic peace is the well-ordered concord between those of the family who rule and those who obey. Civil peace is a similar concord among the citizens” (ibid., XIX, 13). As long as believers live in the earthly city as if they are foreigners, “no scruple to obey the laws of the earthly city, whereby the things necessary for the maintenance of this mortal life are administered” exists (ibid., XIX, 17).
If, as in the (later) Augustine, happiness is understood as perfect happiness in mind and body (ibid., XIX, 27; XXII, 24), then it can only be understood as heavenly. That is the difference between the early Augustine of
De Beata Vita, in which he conceived of perfect happiness solely in a spiritual sense (see above), and the later Augustine, who viewed perfect happiness as both spiritual and physical in combination and in conjunction with the other in the
City of God. Thus, happiness cannot be conceived as anything other than heavenly.
9Is Nussbaum’s criticism that the focus on the future life could lead to the neglect of justice and love in the earthly life justified? Cohou wants to refute Nussbaum and concludes from his reading of the later Augustine that the latter does not view happiness in an individual sense. He also argues that, in contrast to the Graeco-Roman philosophical tradition, “his good involves the mutual love and excellent conditions of all members of the city of God, he sees how he can contribute to happiness by loving them now and feeling sorrow and anger alongside with them” (
Cohou 2020, p. 34). That is correct, but does this answer Nussbaum’s objection? After all, according to Augustine, the Christian recognizes his own sinfulness, following Paul, but that does not alter the fact that the Christian must commit himself to a morally good life (
St. Augustine 2006, XIV, 9). Thus, Nussbaum’s criticism can be nuanced, but the fact remains that, in the pursuit of a morally good life, the focus is more on heaven than on earth. This focus on God and on the heavenly future is the context in which Augustine speaks of charity, friendship, earthly peace, and justice.
Lekkerkerker concludes his article on happiness in Augustine that Augustine’s ethics:
has suggested to many simple people that the Christian life is about salvation, that the highest Christian desire is: I want to go to heaven… the salvation of the soul is separated from the salvation of the world and all emphasis is placed on the enjoyment of heavenly bliss.
I conclude that the eschatological view of happiness bears the risk that the concentration on heaven will lead to a neglect of the good life on earth.
2.4. Scripture as the Source of His View of Happiness
How does Augustine come to speak of the heavenly Jerusalem as the place of happiness? He points to the Psalms (
St. Augustine 2006, XI, 1), referring to Psalm 87:3
10, where Zion is spoken of as the city of God; Psalm 48:2, 3, and 9, which talk about the city of God on the holy mountain, Mt. Zion; and Psalm 46:5. In my opinion, these psalms do not describe an antithesis between the two cities in the Augustinian sense. They are talking about the earthly Jerusalem and not the heavenly one. Augustine, however, reads those texts from the perspective of Paul’s letter to the Galatians where Paul speaks of the two covenants. Hagar, Abraham’s slave girl, represents, according to Paul, the covenant of Mount Sinai, the present-day Jerusalem. “But the heavenly Jerusalem is free, and she is our mother” (4:26). Augustine quotes this passage (Gal. 4:21–31) repeatedly in
The City of God (e.g., ibid., XVII, 3 and 7; XV, 2). Van Oort rightly concludes that the texts from the psalms quoted by Augustine never refer to Jerusalem as the heavenly city (
Van Oort 1986, pp. 263, 297). Augustine was also familiar with Paul’s letter to the Philippians (3:20) where it talks about our citizenship in heaven (
St. Augustine 2006, XX, 9) and the already quoted 2 Corinthians 5:6, where Paul says that as long as we are in this body, “we far from dwell in the Lord” (ibid., XIX, 14). Augustine explains Paul in a unilateral way and stops short of the cosmic component of salvation. In Paul, reconciliation also applies to “everything on earth” (Col. 1:15–20).
11In short, in The City of God, Augustine’s view of heavenly happiness is determined by his concept of the two antithetical cities and their role in history. All emphasis is on the future. As a result, heavenly happiness is dualistically placed over against earthly happiness.