On Patience (De Patientia)
by Saint Augustine of Hippo
Saint and Doctor of the Church
It is indeed a Greater Fight of Patience,
when it is not a Visible Enemy that by
Persecution and Rage would urge us into
Crime; which Enemy may Openly and in Broad-Day be, by not consenting,
overcome; but the Devil Himself,
(he who doth likewise by means of the
Children of Infidelity, as by his Vessels,
Persecute the Children of Light) doth by
himself Hiddenly Attack us, by
his Rage putting us on
to do or say something Against
God. As such, had Holy Job
experience of him, by both Temptations
vexed, but in both through Steadfast Strength of Patience and Arms of
Piety, Unconquered. For First, his
Body being left Unhurt, he Lost all that he had, in order that the
Mind, before Excruciation of the
Flesh, might through Withdrawal of the things which Men are wont to Prize Highly, be Broken,
and he might say something Against God upon
Loss of the Things for the sake of which he was thought to
Worship Him. He (Job) was
Smitten also with Sudden Bereavement of all his Sons so that whom he had
begotten one-by-one he should Lose all-at-once, as though their numerousness had been not
for the Adorning of his Felicity, but for the
Increasing of his
Calamity. But where, having endured these things, he remained Immovable in his
God, he cleaved to His Will, Whom
it was not possible to Lose but by his own Will;
and in place of the Things he had Lost he held Him
Who took them away, in Whom he should find what should never be
Lost. For He that took them away was not
that Enemy who had Will of
Hurting, but He Who had given to that
Enemy the Power of Hurting.
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Satan inflicts Job with Boils
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The Enemy Next
Attacked also the Body, and now not those things which were in the
Man from without, but the Man himself, in whatever part he could,
he Smote. From the Head to the
Feet were Burning Pains, were
Crawling Worms, were Running Sores; still in
the Rotting Body the
Mind remained Entire, and Horrid as were
the Tortures of the Consuming
Flesh, with Inviolate Piety and
Uncorrupted Patience it endured Them all.
There stood the Wife, and instead of giving her Husband any Help, was
suggesting Blasphemy Against
God. For we are not to think that the Devil,
in leaving her when he took-away the Sons, went to work as one Unskilled-in-Mischief; rather,
how Necessary she was to the Tempter, he
had already learned in Eve. But now, he had not found a
Second Adam whom he might Take by-means-of a Woman. More cautious was
Job in his hours of Sadness, than Adam in his bowers of
Gladness, the one (Adam) was overcome
in the midst of Pleasant Things, the other (Job)
overcame in the midst of Pains; the one (Adam)
consented to that which seemed Delightsome, this other
(Job) quailed not in Torments most
Affrightsome.
There stood his Friends too, not to Console him in his
Evils, but to suspect Evil in him.
For while he Suffered so Great Sorrows, they
believed him not Innocent, nor did their tongue forbear to say that which his
Conscience had not to say; that so amid Ruthless
Tortures of the Body, his Mind
also might be beaten with Truthless Reproaches. But he, bearing in his
Flesh his own Pains, in his
Heart others' Errors:
Reproved his Wife for her Folly,
Taught his Friends Wisdom,
Preserved Patience in each and all.

From the 'Triptych of the Virtue of Patience' - by Bernaert van Orley . . . .
Job has recovered his earlier wealth and descends the steps of his Palace
towards his former friends who implore his intercession
Links to other Pages on Virtues
and Vices
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Three (3) Theological Virtues
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Four (4) Main Moral Virtues
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Faith
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Hope
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Charity
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Prudence
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Justice
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Temperance
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Fortitude
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Species of
Faith
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Species of
Hope
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Species of
Charity
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Species of
Prudence
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Species of
Justice
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Species of
Temperance
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Species of
Fortitude
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No Species exist for the
Three (3) Theological Virtues
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Wisdom
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Religion
Piety
Gratitude
Liberality
Affability
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Abstinence
Sobriety
Chastity
Continence
Humility
Meekness
Modesty
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Patience
Munificence
Magnanimity
Perseverance
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Vices
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