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Part 11:
Tractate 11:4:
He goes on regarding Nicodemus…
Tractate 11:5:
Tractate 11:4:
The way Augustine begins talking about the story of Nicodemus is he brings up the story of Moses leading the people through the Red Sea. What does he believe the Red Sea symbolizes? Baptism. He says the Red Sea is a figure of Baptism. What happens after they crossed the Red Sea? They received Manna from heaven to eat. What happens when we are Baptized? We receive the Eucharist to eat. That is the whole point of Augustine. He is making the connection between Red Sea and Manna to Baptism and Eucharist. What is interesting about that is he quotes from John 6 yet again when talking about the Eucharist.
- Therefore, since Nicodemus was of that number, he came to the Lord, but came by night; and this perhaps pertains to the matter. Came to the Lord, and came by night; came to the Light, and came in the darkness. But what do they that are born again of water and of the Spirit hear from the apostle? “You were once darkness, but now light in the Lord; walk as children of light;” Ephesians 5:8 and again, “But we who are of the day, let us be sober.” Therefore they who are born again were of the night, and are of the day; were darkness, and are light. Now Jesus trusts Himself to them, and they come to Jesus, not by night, like Nicodemus; not in darkness do they seek the day. For such now also profess: Jesus has come near to them, has made salvation in them; for He said, “Except a man eat my flesh, and drink my blood, he shall not have life in him.” John 6:54 And as the catechumens have the sign of the cross on their forehead, they are already of the great house; but from servants let them become sons. For they are something who already belong to the great house. But when did the people Israel eat the manna? After they had passed the Red Sea. And as to what the Red Sea signifies, hear the apostle: “Moreover, brethren, I would not have you ignorant, that all our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea.” To what purpose passed they through the sea? As if you were asking of him, he goes on to say, “And all were baptized by Moses in the cloud and in the sea.” 1 Corinthians 10:1 Now, if the figure of the sea had such efficacy, how great will be the efficacy of the true form of baptism! If what was done in a figure brought the people, after they had crossed over, to the manna, what will Christ impart, in the verity of His baptism, to His own people, brought over through Himself? By His baptism He brings over them that believe; all their sins, the enemies as it were that pursue them, being slain, as all the Egyptians perished in that sea. Whither does He bring over, my brethren? Whither does Jesus bring over by baptism, of which Moses then showed the figure, when he brought them through the sea? Whither? To the manna. What is the manna? “I am,” says He, “the living bread, which came down from heaven.” John 6:51 The faithful receive the manna, having now been brought through the Red Sea? Why Red Sea? Besides sea, why also “red”? That “Red Sea” signified the baptism of Christ. How is the baptism of Christ red, but as consecrated by Christ’s blood? Whither, then, does He lead those that believe and are baptized? To the manna. Behold, “manna,” I say: what the Jews, that people Israel, received, is well known, well known what God had rained on them from heaven; and yet catechumens know not what Christians receive. Let them blush, then, for their ignorance; let them pass through the Red Sea, let them eat the manna, that as they have believed in the name of Jesus, so likewise Jesus may trust Himself to them.
He goes on regarding Nicodemus…
Tractate 11:5:
This is VERY telling here. This says it all in regards to what Augustine means by LITERALLY eating Christ’s flesh. He is not talking about “we do NOT eat Christ’s flesh in the Eucharist” but he is talking about the Jews at the time were NOT to eat His flesh right then and there. He was speaking about something sacramental. This is what Augustine means by figurative. He is not taking away from the RP, he is taking away from the understanding of the Jews AT THAT TIME they were with Jesus. They understood him carnally and not spiritually. The reason why Augustine brings this up is because Nicodemus is understanding Jesus carnally by thinking of the flesh and thinking “being born again” being returning to your mother’s womb and being born a second time. Jesus is not talking about that, He is talking about conversion and Baptism (at least according to what Saint Augustine is saying and according to what the Catholic Church teaches).
- Therefore mark, my brethren, what answer this man who came to Jesus by night makes. Although he came to Jesus, yet because he came by night, he still speaks from the darkness of his own flesh. He understands not what he hears from the Lord, understands not what he hears from the Light, “which lights every man that comes into this world.” John 1:9 Already has the Lord said to him, “Except a man be born again, he shall not see the kingdom of God. Nicodemus says unto Him, How can a man be born again when he is old?” The Spirit speaks to him, and he thinks of the flesh. He thinks of his own flesh, because as yet he thinks not of Christ’s flesh. For when the Lord Jesus had said, “Except a man eat my flesh, and drink my blood, he shall not have life in him,” some who followed Him were offended, and said among themselves, “This is a hard saying; who can hear it?” For they fancied that, in saying this, Jesus meant that they would be able to cook Him, after being cut up like a lamb, and eat Him: horrified at His words, they went back, and no more followed Him.
