Sep 24, 2010
I remember how it happened, just like it was yesterday. I was sitting in my office at home. I was surrounded by theological books. I had "reverted" back to the faith only months before, and I found myself rereading St. Augustine’s Confessions as a man with nascent faith, breathless at the beauty of such mystical reflections. Late have I loved you, beauty so old and so new: late have I loved you (St. Augustine, Confessions, X. xxvii).
I was looking at vocations websites.
The tenth book of the Confessions is a reflection on the nature of memory, which is an amazing and mysterious faculty. Memory is our access to the greatest and most sublime of events in our life; it is also the constant reminder of our sins and of our past failures, of horrors past and of losses we would prefer to forget.
But St. Augustine sees memory as not just the recollection of the graces and the faults of the past, but as something created by God to be redeemed by him. Thus, memory redeemed by God offers us something more than recollection: it offers the opportunity to see the reality of grace, a reality that can exist in contrast to our memory.