HUMAN DEVELOPMENT: A LONG AND WINDING ROAD.
HISTORY, REGULATIONS AND CASE LAW
b) SAINT AUGUSTINE.
According to B
URY (1920, pp. 14 ff.), ST. AUGUSTINE was the first author who
emphatically insisted on an ecumenical idea, on the concept of a history of mankind and,
therefore, was the first one who introduced a technical idea of progress. The fact of
incorporating God’s action in history allowed him to break the Greek idea of cycles and to
think about a lineal development of human events that had to tend to an ultimate end.
A clear illustration of such a statement is the title of chapter 17 of Book XII of The City of
God: “What defence is made by sound faith regarding God's unchangeable counsel and will,
against the reasonings of those who hold that the works of god are eternally repeated in
revolving cycles that restore all things as they were”
4
, or that of chapter 20 of the same Book:
“Of the impiety of those who assert that the souls which enjoy true and perfect blessedness,
must yet again and again in these periodic revolutions return to labour and misery”.
It was him who also raised the idea of a division of historical time in stages, even when it
is not simple to identify them all through his work
5
.
N
ISBET claims that AUGUSTINE’S contribution to these ideas was the most important
during that period because it allowed to think of a progress of mankind and of a final moment
4
In that chapter the author says: “…they say it must be that the same things are always repeated, and that as they
pass, so they are destined always to return, whether amidst all these changes the world remains the same —the
world which has always been, and yet was created,— or that the world in these revolutions is perpetually dying
out and being renewed; otherwise, if we point to a time when the works of God were begun, it would be believed
that He considered His past eternal leisure to be inert and indolent, and therefore condemned and altered it as
displeasing to Himself. Now if God is supposed to have been indeed always making temporal things, but different
from one another, and one after the other, so, that He thus came at last to make man, whom He had never made
before, then it may seem that He made man not with knowledge (for they suppose no knowledge can
comprehend the infinite succession of creatures), but at the dictate of the hour, as it struck him at the moment,
with a sudden and accidental change of mind. On the other hand, say they, if those cycles be admitted, and if we
suppose that the same temporal things are repeated, while the world either remains identical through all these
rotations, or else dies away and is renewed, then there is ascribed to God neither the slothful ease of a past
eternity, nor a rash and unforeseen creation. And if the same things be not thus repeated in cycles, then they
cannot by any science or prescience be comprehended in their endless diversity. Even though reason could not
refute, faith would smile at these argumentations, with which the godless endeavour to turn our simple piety from
the right way, that we may walk with them in a circle. But by the help of the Lord our God, even reason, and that
readily enough, shatters these revolving circles which conjecture frames. For that which specially leads these men
astray to refer their own circles to the straight path of truth, is, that they measure by their own human,
changeable, and narrow intellect the divine mind, which is absolutely unchangeable, infinitely capacious, and
without succession of thought, counting all things without number”.
5
For example, towards the end of The City of God, the Bishop of Hippo states: “This Sabbath shall appear still
more clearly if we count the ages as days, in accordance with the periods of time defined in Scripture, for that
period will be found to be the seventh. The first age, as the first day, extends from Adam to the deluge; the
second from the deluge to Abraham, equalling the first, not in length of time, but in the number of generations,
there being ten in each. From Abraham to the advent of Christ there are, as the evangelist Matthew calculates,
three periods, in each of which are fourteen generations, one period from Abraham to David, a second from
David to the captivity, a third from the captivity to the birth of Christ in the flesh. There are thus five ages in all.
The sixth is now passing, and cannot be measured by any number of generations …” (XXII:30).
REVISTA DERECHO DE LAS MINORIAS VOLUME 2 2020 Page 6