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* HeWhoFightsMonsters: St. Augustine, in his commentary on the Psalms, recommends forgiveness as a means of ''defying'' this, as refusing to forgive makes you no better than the one who has wronged you.
--> "Remember the peace that binds you, remember the promise that is your life. What good will it do you, if you insist on inflicting injuries in returning for those you have received? Does revenge make you feel better? Or will you enjoy someone else's misfortune? A bad person has harmed you: very well, forgive him, or there will be two bad people. 'Usury and deceit are never lacking in its streets'."



* NoSympathyForGrudgeHolders: St. Augustine, in his commentary on the Psalms, recommends forgiving someone who has wronged you, as refusing to do so makes you no better.
--> "Remember the peace that binds you, remember the promise that is your life. What good will it do you, if you insist on inflicting injuries in returning for those you have received? Does revenge make you feel better? Or will you enjoy someone else's misfortune? A bad person has harmed you: very well, forgive him, or there will be two bad people. 'Usury and deceit are never lacking in its streets'."



* {{Revenge}}: St. Augustine routinely discourages this and recommends forgiveness instead. Refusal to forgive makes you no better than the person who has wronged you.
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* HeWhoFightsMonsters: St. Augustine, in his commentary on the psalms, recommends forgiveness as a means of ''defying'' this.

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* HeWhoFightsMonsters: St. Augustine, in his commentary on the psalms, Psalms, recommends forgiveness as a means of ''defying'' this.this, as refusing to forgive makes you no better than the one who has wronged you.

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* HeWhoFightsMonsters: St. Augustine, in his commentary on the psalms, recommends forgiveness as a means of ''defying'' this.
--> "Remember the peace that binds you, remember the promise that is your life. What good will it do you, if you insist on inflicting injuries in returning for those you have received? Does revenge make you feel better? Or will you enjoy someone else's misfortune? A bad person has harmed you: very well, forgive him, or there will be two bad people. 'Usury and deceit are never lacking in its streets'."



* OmniscientMoralityLicense: St. Augustine answers that God, in His omniscience and omnibenevolence, permits evil to occur so that a greater good would come out of it in his ''Enchiridion''.

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* OmniscientMoralityLicense: St. Augustine answers that God, God never allows evil to come to be unless, in His omniscience and omnibenevolence, permits evil to occur so that a greater good would come out of it in his ''Enchiridion''.


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* {{Revenge}}: St. Augustine routinely discourages this and recommends forgiveness instead. Refusal to forgive makes you no better than the person who has wronged you.
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* ''The {{Literature/Confessions}}'' (398 A.D.): Perhaps St. Augustine's most famous work. Here, St. Augustine chronicles his life, from living a life of sin to changing his life completely upon converting to the Christian faith. In the meantime, he also wrestles with some philosophical concepts and recognises that the Christian faith is true. His work is typically titled ''The Confessions of Saint Augustine'' so it would not be confused with other works of the same name, like that by Creator/JeanJacquesRousseau.

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* ''The {{Literature/Confessions}}'' Literature/{{Confessions|SaintAugustine}}'' (398 A.D.): Perhaps St. Augustine's most famous work. Here, St. Augustine chronicles his life, from living a life of sin to changing his life completely upon converting to the Christian faith. In the meantime, he also wrestles with some philosophical concepts and recognises that the Christian faith is true. His work is typically titled ''The Confessions of Saint Augustine'' so it would not be confused with other works of the same name, like that by Creator/JeanJacquesRousseau.



* {{Autobiography}}: His {{Literature/Confessions}} serves as the UrExample.

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* {{Autobiography}}: His {{Literature/Confessions}} {{Literature/Confessions|SaintAugustine}} serves as the UrExample.

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Saint Augustine of Hippo (13 November 354 - 28 August 430) was a theologian, philosopher and bishop of Hippo Regius (modern-day Annaba, UsefulNotes/{{Algeria}}). His writings helped influence the development of Western philosophy and Western Christian theology and he is seen as one of the most influential Christian theologians of the Western Church.

St. Augustine was born in Thagaste (modern-day Souk Ahras) on 13 November, 354 to a respectable, albeit not wealthy, family. His father Patricius was one of the curiales of the city but a pagan. His wife was (later St.) Monica, a Christian. They had three children: Augustine, the eldest child; Navigius, the middle child; and Perpetua, their daughter. Patricius's marriage to St. Monica was not particularly happy; her almsgiving and prayers annoyed Patricius. However, he always held her in a sort of reverence, and due to St. Monica's patience and virtues that made her the ideal of Christian mothers, Patricius himself ended up becoming a Christian. About the year 371, shortly after his reception into the Church, Patricius died and St. Monica resolved not to marry again.

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Saint Augustine of Hippo (13 November 354 - 28 August 430) was a theologian, philosopher and bishop of Hippo Regius (modern-day Annaba, UsefulNotes/{{Algeria}}). His writings helped influence the development of Western philosophy and Western Christian theology theology, and he is seen as one of the most influential Christian theologians of the Western Church.

St. Augustine was born in Thagaste (modern-day Souk Ahras) on 13 November, November 354 to a respectable, albeit not wealthy, family. His father Patricius father, Patricius, was one of the curiales of the city but a pagan. His wife was (later St.) Monica, a Christian. They had three children: Augustine, the eldest child; Navigius, the middle child; and Perpetua, their daughter. Patricius's marriage to St. Monica was not particularly happy; her almsgiving and prayers annoyed Patricius. However, he always held her in a sort of reverence, and due to St. Monica's patience and virtues that made her the ideal of Christian mothers, Patricius himself ended up becoming a Christian. About the year 371, shortly after his reception into the Church, Patricius died and St. Monica resolved not to marry again.



Meanwhile, St. Augustine wrote a (now lost) work on aesthetics and began to doubt Manichaeanism. For one thing, he was disturbed by the Manichaean's teaching that man is not responsible for any evil deeds he commits; they taught those deeds are because of the movements of the stars. He also did not get a satisfactory answer from the Manichaeans about Scriptural problems, to which they insisted that "the Scriptures have been falsified." Worst of all, he did not obtain the scientific explanation and all its natural phenomena as the Manichaeans promised. [[BrokenPedestal Disillusioned with the false promises of Manichaeanism]], he discarded their beliefs and followed the skepticism of the Academics.

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Meanwhile, St. Augustine wrote a (now lost) work on aesthetics and began to doubt Manichaeanism. For one thing, he was disturbed by the Manichaean's teaching that man is not responsible for any evil deeds he commits; they taught those deeds are because of the movements of the stars. He also did not get a satisfactory answer from the Manichaeans about Scriptural problems, to which they insisted that "the Scriptures have been falsified." Worst of all, he did not obtain the scientific explanation and all its natural phenomena as the Manichaeans promised. [[BrokenPedestal Disillusioned with the false promises of Manichaeanism]], he discarded their beliefs and followed the skepticism scepticism of the Academics.



* ''The City of God'' (410-426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 410, and finally completed it in 426. Here, he explains the concept of the two cities: the City of Man, which is created and driven by man's self-love; and the City of God, created and driven by man's love of God. In the meantime, he also writes in defence of the Christian faith against the pagans who accuse it of leading to the downfall of the Roman empire.
* ''Enchiridion on Faith, Hope and Charity'' (421 A.D.): A handbook written for a Laurentius, who wanted a handbook explaining the basics of the Catholic faith. In this work, St. Augustine writes that true wisdom is the worship of God and that God is to be worshipped with faith, hope, and love. He then writes how these three are essential to growing in Christian wisdom.

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* ''The City of God'' (410-426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 410, and finally completed it in 426. Here, he explains the concept of the two cities: the City of Man, which is created and driven by man's self-love; self-love, and the City of God, created and driven by man's love of God. In the meantime, he also writes in defence defense of the Christian faith against the pagans who accuse it of leading to the downfall of the Roman empire.
* ''Enchiridion on Faith, Hope Hope, and Charity'' (421 A.D.): A handbook written for a Laurentius, who wanted a handbook explaining the basics of the Catholic faith. In this work, St. Augustine writes that true wisdom is the worship of God and that God is to be worshipped with faith, hope, and love. He then writes how these three are essential to growing in Christian wisdom.



* EvilStoleMyFaith: Addressed in his ''Enchiridion''. For example:

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* EvilStoleMyFaith: Addressed MenAreBetterThanWomen: The physical, mental and spiritual inferiority of women compared to men is taken completely for granted by Augustine (as it was by everyone of his time), and it shows in many of his writings.
* OmniscientMoralityLicense: St. Augustine answers that God, in His omniscience and omnibenevolence, permits evil to occur so that a greater good would come out of it
in his ''Enchiridion''. For example:''Enchiridion''.



* MenAreBetterThanWomen: The physical, mental and spiritual inferiority of women compared to men is taken completely for granted by Augustine (as it was by everyone of his time), and it shows in many of his writings.



--> "As for the fable of the antipodes—that is, the fable that there are people who live on the opposite side of the earth, where the sun rises when it sets for us, whose footprints stand opposite ours—there is no reason to believe this. No one claims to have learned this on the basis of any sound historical knowledge. Rather, they make a conjecture based on the reasoning that the earth is suspended in the sphere of the heavens and that the world is the same both above and below."

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--> "As -->"As for the fable of the antipodes—that is, the fable that there are people who live on the opposite side of the earth, where the sun rises when it sets for us, whose footprints stand opposite ours—there is no reason to believe this. No one claims to have learned this on the basis of any sound historical knowledge. Rather, they make a conjecture based on the reasoning that the earth is suspended in the sphere of the heavens and that the world is the same both above and below."



* SexIsEvil: Discussed. St. Augustine taught that concupiscence came to be as a consequence of the Fall. As a result, sex, though in itself not a sinful act, now straddles a very fine line between being this trope and not. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful; sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even when possible, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'' because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate.
** Though considering the context of Augustine's time and those with whom he had to frequently debate (such as the Manichaeans, who regarded all sex and procreation as abominations, or monks like Tertullian, who came to regard marriage itself as sinful), Augustine admitting that there were circumstances one could licitly have sex at all would have been regarded as scandalously permissive.

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* SexIsEvil: Discussed. St. Augustine taught that concupiscence came to be as a consequence of the Fall. As a result, sex, though in itself not a sinful act, now straddles a very fine line between being this trope and not. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful; sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even when possible, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'' because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate. \n** Though considering the context of Augustine's time and those with whom he had to frequently debate (such as the Manichaeans, who regarded all sex and procreation as abominations, or monks like Tertullian, who came to regard marriage itself as sinful), Augustine admitting that there were circumstances one could licitly have sex at all would have been regarded as scandalously permissive.
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St. Augustine then went to Italy to teach rhetoric. He started in Rome but was disgusted by his students defrauding him of their tuition fees. He then went to Milan to obtain a professorship, where he encountered St. Ambrose, its bishop. His fascination with the bishop's kindness drew St. Augustine to attend St. Ambrose's preachings regularly. It was through listening to St. Ambrose's preaching that he realised that a lot of the Bible's passages make more sense when []FromACertainPointOfView interpreted in an allegorical sense]]. In the meantime, he came across the works of the Platonic philosophers, particularly Creator/{{Plato}} and the Neoplatonist Plotinus. Reading their works stirred him into finding truth again, yet his passions still enslaved him.

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St. Augustine then went to Italy to teach rhetoric. He started in Rome but was disgusted by his students defrauding him of their tuition fees. He then went to Milan to obtain a professorship, where he encountered St. Ambrose, its bishop. His fascination with the bishop's kindness drew St. Augustine to attend St. Ambrose's preachings regularly. It was through listening to St. Ambrose's preaching that he realised that a lot of the Bible's passages make more sense when []FromACertainPointOfView [[FromACertainPointOfView interpreted in an allegorical sense]]. In the meantime, he came across the works of the Platonic philosophers, particularly Creator/{{Plato}} and the Neoplatonist Plotinus. Reading their works stirred him into finding truth again, yet his passions still enslaved him.
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However, St. Augustine and a friend of his, Honoratus, joined a [[UsefulNotes/{{Gnosticism}} Gnostic]] dualistic religion known as UsefulNotes/{Manichaeanism}} during his studies in Carthage. He was drawn in by the Manichaean's promises of free philosophy unbridled by faith, their boasts, especially their claims to have found contradictions in the Bible; and the hope of finding in their doctrine a scientific explanation of nature and all its natural phenomena. It also taught that good and evil are two conflicting principles. Those teachings won over St. Augustine, and he eventually studied it under Faustus, its most celebrated proponent. He eventually finished his studies and returned to Thagaste to teach rhetoric.

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However, St. Augustine and a friend of his, Honoratus, joined a [[UsefulNotes/{{Gnosticism}} Gnostic]] dualistic religion known as UsefulNotes/{Manichaeanism}} UsefulNotes/{{Manichaeanism}} during his studies in Carthage. He was drawn in by the Manichaean's promises of free philosophy unbridled by faith, their boasts, especially their claims to have found contradictions in the Bible; and the hope of finding in their doctrine a scientific explanation of nature and all its natural phenomena. It also taught that good and evil are two conflicting principles. Those teachings won over St. Augustine, and he eventually studied it under Faustus, its most celebrated proponent. He eventually finished his studies and returned to Thagaste to teach rhetoric.
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St. Augustine was born in Thagaste (modern-day Souk Ahras) on 13 November, 354 to a respectable, albeit not wealthy, family. His father Patricius was one of the curiales of the city but a pagan. His wife was St. Monica, a Christian. They had three children: Augustine, the eldest child; Navigius, the middle child; and Perpetua, their daughter. Patricius's marriage to St. Monica was not particularly happy; her almsgiving and prayers annoyed Patricius. However, he always held her in a sort of reverence, and due to St. Monica's patience and virtues that made her the ideal of Christian mothers, Patricius himself ended up becoming a Christian. About the year 371, shortly after his reception into the Church, Patricius died and St. Monica resolved not to marry again.

St. Augustine was signed with the cross and enrolled as a catechumen. At one point, he developed a sickness of the stomach and was in danger of dying, so he asked for the sacrament of baptism. However, he recovered, so baptism was deferred (in the early days of the Christian faith, one of the steps of baptism is that the catechumen makes a profession of faith and renouncement of sin, meaning that the catechumen must come of age first). In the meantime, he took language, literature, and rhetoric classes in Thagaste and Madauros. His studies, however, were interrupted when his father sought to prepare him for a forensic career. This required several months of getting the money necessary for the career, so St. Augustine spent his sixteenth year in idleness in Thagaste. At that time, he gave himself up to sin and became [[TheHedonist hedonistic]], indulging in lust, theatres, and the company of licentious delinquents. One time, St. Augustine and his peers saw a pear tree and [[ForTheEvulz stole the pears from the tree just for fun]], an incident he analyses in length in his Confessions (he admits that were he on his own, he would never have committed the deed). In spite of these, St. Augustine maintained some dignity and had a compunction that did him honor, and in his nineteenth year, he sought to break free from his sins. At one point, he came across a (now lost) work of {{Creator/Cicero}} known as ''Hortensius". The work exhorted St. Augustine to pursue philosophy, or "love of wisdom". With that, St. Augustine began to see his studies in rhetoric as a mere profession; his heart was in philosophy.

However, St. Augustine and a friend of his, Honoratus, joined a Gnostic dualistic religion known as Manichaeanism during his studies in Carthage. He was drawn in by the Manichaean's promises of free philosophy unbridled by faith, their boasts, especially their claims to have found contradictions in the Bible; and the hope of finding in their doctrine a scientific explanation of nature and all its natural phenomena. It also taught that good and evil are two conflicting principles. Those teachings won over St. Augustine, and he eventually studied it under Faustus, its most celebrated proponent. He eventually finished his studies and returned to Thagaste to teach rhetoric.

to:

St. Augustine was born in Thagaste (modern-day Souk Ahras) on 13 November, 354 to a respectable, albeit not wealthy, family. His father Patricius was one of the curiales of the city but a pagan. His wife was St. (later St.) Monica, a Christian. They had three children: Augustine, the eldest child; Navigius, the middle child; and Perpetua, their daughter. Patricius's marriage to St. Monica was not particularly happy; her almsgiving and prayers annoyed Patricius. However, he always held her in a sort of reverence, and due to St. Monica's patience and virtues that made her the ideal of Christian mothers, Patricius himself ended up becoming a Christian. About the year 371, shortly after his reception into the Church, Patricius died and St. Monica resolved not to marry again.

St. Augustine was signed with the cross and enrolled as a catechumen. At one point, he developed a sickness of the stomach and was in danger of dying, so he asked for the sacrament of baptism. However, he recovered, so baptism was deferred (in the early days of the Christian faith, one of the steps of baptism is that the catechumen makes a profession of faith and renouncement of sin, meaning that the catechumen must come of age first). In the meantime, he took language, literature, and rhetoric classes in Thagaste and Madauros. His studies, however, were interrupted when his father sought to prepare him for a forensic career. This required several months of getting the money necessary for the career, so St. Augustine spent his sixteenth year in idleness in Thagaste. At that time, he gave himself up to sin and became [[TheHedonist hedonistic]], indulging in lust, theatres, and the company of licentious delinquents. One time, St. Augustine and his peers saw a pear tree and [[ForTheEvulz stole the pears from the tree just for fun]], an incident he analyses in length in his Confessions (he admits that were he on his own, he would never have committed the deed). In spite of these, St. Augustine maintained some dignity and had a compunction that did him honor, and in his nineteenth year, he sought to break free from his sins. At one point, he came across a (now lost) work of {{Creator/Cicero}} Creator/{{Cicero}} known as ''Hortensius". The work exhorted St. Augustine to pursue philosophy, or "love of wisdom". With that, St. Augustine began to see his studies in rhetoric as a mere profession; his heart was in philosophy.

However, St. Augustine and a friend of his, Honoratus, joined a Gnostic [[UsefulNotes/{{Gnosticism}} Gnostic]] dualistic religion known as Manichaeanism UsefulNotes/{Manichaeanism}} during his studies in Carthage. He was drawn in by the Manichaean's promises of free philosophy unbridled by faith, their boasts, especially their claims to have found contradictions in the Bible; and the hope of finding in their doctrine a scientific explanation of nature and all its natural phenomena. It also taught that good and evil are two conflicting principles. Those teachings won over St. Augustine, and he eventually studied it under Faustus, its most celebrated proponent. He eventually finished his studies and returned to Thagaste to teach rhetoric.



St. Augustine then went to Italy to teach rhetoric. He started in Rome but was disgusted by his students defrauding him of their tuition fees. He then went to Milan to obtain a professorship, where he encountered St. Ambrose, its bishop. His fascination with the bishop's kindness drew St. Augustine to attend St. Ambrose's preachings regularly. It was through listening to St. Ambrose's preaching that he realised that a lot of the Bible's passages make more sense when interpreted in an allegorical sense. In the meantime, he came across the works of the Platonic philosophers, particularly {{Creator/Plato}} and the Neoplatonist Plotinus. Reading their works stirred him into finding truth again, yet his passions still enslaved him.

to:

St. Augustine then went to Italy to teach rhetoric. He started in Rome but was disgusted by his students defrauding him of their tuition fees. He then went to Milan to obtain a professorship, where he encountered St. Ambrose, its bishop. His fascination with the bishop's kindness drew St. Augustine to attend St. Ambrose's preachings regularly. It was through listening to St. Ambrose's preaching that he realised that a lot of the Bible's passages make more sense when []FromACertainPointOfView interpreted in an allegorical sense. sense]]. In the meantime, he came across the works of the Platonic philosophers, particularly {{Creator/Plato}} Creator/{{Plato}} and the Neoplatonist Plotinus. Reading their works stirred him into finding truth again, yet his passions still enslaved him.



* SexIsEvil: Discussed. St. Augustine taught that concupiscence came to be as a consequence of the Fall. As a result, sex, though in itself not a sinful act, now straddles a very fine line between being this trope and not. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful. Sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even then, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'' because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate.
** Though considering the context of Augustine's time and those with whom he had to frequently debate (such as the Manichaeans, who regarded all sex and procreation as abominations; or monks like Tertullian, who came to regard marriage itself as sinful), Augustine admitting that there were circumstances one could licitly have sex at all would have been regarded as scandalously permissive.

to:

* SexIsEvil: Discussed. St. Augustine taught that concupiscence came to be as a consequence of the Fall. As a result, sex, though in itself not a sinful act, now straddles a very fine line between being this trope and not. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful. Sex sinful; sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even then, when possible, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'' because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate.
** Though considering the context of Augustine's time and those with whom he had to frequently debate (such as the Manichaeans, who regarded all sex and procreation as abominations; abominations, or monks like Tertullian, who came to regard marriage itself as sinful), Augustine admitting that there were circumstances one could licitly have sex at all would have been regarded as scandalously permissive.
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-->--'''St. Augustine of Hippo''', The Confessions (John K. Ryan translation)

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-->--'''St.-->-- '''St. Augustine of Hippo''', The Confessions (John K. Ryan translation)
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St. Augustine would then go on to be canonised by popular acclaim and become a majorly influential theologian in both Catholic ''and'' Protestant circles due to his writings on original sin, grace, and salvation. Pope Boniface VIII declared St Augustine a Doctor of the Church in 1298, and a lot of subsequent Catholic theologians like St. Creator/{{Boethius}}, St. Anselm of Canterbury, St. Bonaventure, St. Creator/ThomasAquinas, and St. John Henry Newman built on St. Augustine's philosophical and theological teachings. At the same time, the Protestants, particularly the Lutherans and Calvinists, hold St. Augustine in high regard and consider him one of the theological fathers of the Protestant Reformation; Martin Luther was an Augustinian friar until his excommunication in 1521 and John Calvin cited St Augustine as a major influence in establishing Calvinism, writing "Augustine is so wholly within me, that if I wished to write a confession of my faith, I could do so with all fullness and satisfaction to myself out of his writings."

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St. Augustine would then go on to be canonised by popular acclaim and become a majorly influential theologian in both Catholic ''and'' Protestant circles due to his writings on original sin, grace, and salvation. Pope Boniface VIII declared St Augustine a Doctor of the Church in 1298, and a lot of subsequent Catholic theologians like St. Creator/{{Boethius}}, St. Anselm of Canterbury, St. Bonaventure, St. Creator/ThomasAquinas, and St. John Henry Newman Creator/JohnHenryNewman built on St. Augustine's philosophical and theological teachings. At the same time, the Protestants, particularly the Lutherans and Calvinists, hold St. Augustine in high regard and consider him one of the theological fathers of the Protestant Reformation; Martin Luther was an Augustinian friar until his excommunication in 1521 and John Calvin cited St Augustine as a major influence in establishing Calvinism, writing "Augustine is so wholly within me, that if I wished to write a confession of my faith, I could do so with all fullness and satisfaction to myself out of his writings."

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Saint Augustine of Hippo (13 November 354 - 28 August 430) was a theologian, philosopher and bishop of Hippo Regius (modern-day Annaba, Algeria). His writings helped influence the development of Western philosophy and Western Christian theology and he is seen as one of the most influential Christian theologians of the Western Church.

to:

Saint Augustine of Hippo (13 November 354 - 28 August 430) was a theologian, philosopher and bishop of Hippo Regius (modern-day Annaba, Algeria).UsefulNotes/{{Algeria}}). His writings helped influence the development of Western philosophy and Western Christian theology and he is seen as one of the most influential Christian theologians of the Western Church.



* WomanlinessAsPathos: One particular founding myth of Athens related in ''The City of God'' tells that after King Cecrops and his people have begun to build a new city, both Poseidon and Athena offer themselves as patron gods of the city. The people vote on which deity should be their patron god and after whom accordingly the city will be named. It turns out that all men vote for Poseidon and all women for Athena; as the women outnumber the men by one, Athena wins and the city is called Athens. Poseidon is furious at this and causes the sea to flood the land; the Athenians consult the Oracle of Delphi which instructs them that to appease Poseidon's wrath, the women of Athens must be punished by losing the right to cast votes, by the Athenians not using matronymic names, and by Athenian women not being called Athenians. The Athenians follow this advice, implicitly blaming the women for causing Poseidon's wrath and framing their reduction to second-class citizens as their own fault.

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* WomanlinessAsPathos: One particular founding myth of Athens related in ''The City of God'' tells that after King Cecrops and his people have begun to build a new city, both Poseidon and Athena offer themselves as patron gods of the city. The people vote on which deity should be their patron god and after whom accordingly the city will be named. It turns out that all men vote for Poseidon and all women for Athena; as the women outnumber the men by one, Athena wins and the city is called Athens. Poseidon is furious at this and causes the sea to flood the land; the Athenians consult the Oracle of Delphi which instructs them that to appease Poseidon's wrath, the women of Athens must be punished by losing the right to cast votes, by the Athenians not using matronymic names, and by Athenian women not being called Athenians. The Athenians follow this advice, implicitly blaming the women for causing Poseidon's wrath and framing their reduction to second-class citizens as their own fault.fault.
----
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** Though considering the context of Augustine's time and those with whom he had to frequently debate (such as the Manichaeans, who regarded all sex and procreation as abominations; or monks like Tertullian, who came to regard marriage itself as sinful), Augustine admitting at all that there were circumstances one could licitly have sex would have been regarded as scandalously permissive.

to:

** Though considering the context of Augustine's time and those with whom he had to frequently debate (such as the Manichaeans, who regarded all sex and procreation as abominations; or monks like Tertullian, who came to regard marriage itself as sinful), Augustine admitting at all that there were circumstances one could licitly have sex at all would have been regarded as scandalously permissive.
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** Though considering the context of Augustine's time and those with whom he had to frequently debate (such as the Manichaeans, who regarded all sex and procreation as abominations; or monks like Tertullian, who came to regard marriage itself as sinful), even Augustine's harsh positions would have been regarded as scandalously permissive.

to:

** Though considering the context of Augustine's time and those with whom he had to frequently debate (such as the Manichaeans, who regarded all sex and procreation as abominations; or monks like Tertullian, who came to regard marriage itself as sinful), even Augustine's harsh positions Augustine admitting at all that there were circumstances one could licitly have sex would have been regarded as scandalously permissive.
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Added DiffLines:

** Though considering the context of Augustine's time and those with whom he had to frequently debate (such as the Manichaeans, who regarded all sex and procreation as abominations; or monks like Tertullian, who came to regard marriage itself as sinful), even Augustine's harsh positions would have been regarded as scandalously permissive.

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St. Augustine was born in Thagaste (modern-day Souk Ahras) on 13 November, 354 to a respectable, albeit not wealthy, family. His father Patricius was one of the curiales of the city but is a pagan. His wife was St. Monica, a Christian. They had three children: Augustine, the eldest child; Navigius, the middle child; and Perpetua, their daughter. Patricius's marriage to St. Monica was not particularly happy; her almsgiving and prayers annoyed Patricius. However, he always held her in a sort of reverence, and due to St. Monica's patience and virtues that made her the ideal of Christian mothers, Patricius himself ended up becoming a Christian. About the year 371, shortly after his reception into the Church, Patricius died and St. Monica resolved not to marry again.

St. Augustine was signed with the cross and enrolled as a catechumen. At one point, he developed a sickness of the stomach and was in danger of dying, so he asked for the sacrament of baptism. However, he recovered, so baptism was deferred (in the early days of the Christian faith, one of the steps of baptism is that the catechumen makes a profession of faith and renouncement of sin, suggesting that the catechumen must come of age first). In the meantime, he took language, literature, and rhetoric classes in Thagaste and Madauros. His studies, however, were interrupted when his father sought to prepare him for a forensic career. This required several months of getting the money necessary for the career, so St. Augustine spent his sixteenth year in idleness in Thagaste. At that time, he gave himself up to sin. He indulged in lust, theatres, and the company of licentious delinquents. One time, St. Augustine and his peers saw a pear tree and stole the pears from the tree just for fun, an incident he analyses in length in his Confessions (he admits that were he on his own, he would never have committed the deed). In spite of these, St. Augustine maintained some dignity and had a compunction that did him honor, and in his nineteenth year, he sought to break free from his sins. At one point, he came across a (now lost) work of {{Creator/Cicero}} known as ''Hortensius". The work exhorted St. Augustine to pursue philosophy, or "love of wisdom". With that, St. Augustine began to see his studies in rhetoric as a mere profession; his heart was in philosophy.

However, St. Augustine and a friend of his, Honoratus, joined a Gnostic dualistic religion known as Manichaeanism during his studies in Carthage. He was drawn in by the Manichaean's promises of free philosophy unbridled by faith, their boasts, especially their claims to have found contradictions in the Bible; and the hope of finding in their doctrine a scientific explanation of nature and all its natural phenomena. It also taught that good and evil are two conflicting principles. Those won over St. Augustine and he eventually studied it under Faustus, its most celebrated proponent. He eventually finished his studies and returned to Thagaste to teach rhetoric.

Meanwhile, St. Augustine wrote a (now lost) work on aesthetics and began to doubt Manichaeanism. For one thing, he was disturbed by the Manichaean's teaching that man is not responsible for any evil deeds he commits; they taught those deeds are because of the movements of the stars. He also did not get a satisfactory answer from the Manichaeans about Scriptural problems, to which they insisted that "the Scriptures have been falsified." Worst of all, he did not obtain the scientific explanation and all its natural phenomena as the Manichaeans promised. Disillusioned with the false promises of Manichaeanism, he discarded their beliefs and followed the skepticism of the Academics.

to:

St. Augustine was born in Thagaste (modern-day Souk Ahras) on 13 November, 354 to a respectable, albeit not wealthy, family. His father Patricius was one of the curiales of the city but is a pagan. His wife was St. Monica, a Christian. They had three children: Augustine, the eldest child; Navigius, the middle child; and Perpetua, their daughter. Patricius's marriage to St. Monica was not particularly happy; her almsgiving and prayers annoyed Patricius. However, he always held her in a sort of reverence, and due to St. Monica's patience and virtues that made her the ideal of Christian mothers, Patricius himself ended up becoming a Christian. About the year 371, shortly after his reception into the Church, Patricius died and St. Monica resolved not to marry again.

St. Augustine was signed with the cross and enrolled as a catechumen. At one point, he developed a sickness of the stomach and was in danger of dying, so he asked for the sacrament of baptism. However, he recovered, so baptism was deferred (in the early days of the Christian faith, one of the steps of baptism is that the catechumen makes a profession of faith and renouncement of sin, suggesting meaning that the catechumen must come of age first). In the meantime, he took language, literature, and rhetoric classes in Thagaste and Madauros. His studies, however, were interrupted when his father sought to prepare him for a forensic career. This required several months of getting the money necessary for the career, so St. Augustine spent his sixteenth year in idleness in Thagaste. At that time, he gave himself up to sin. He indulged sin and became [[TheHedonist hedonistic]], indulging in lust, theatres, and the company of licentious delinquents. One time, St. Augustine and his peers saw a pear tree and [[ForTheEvulz stole the pears from the tree just for fun, fun]], an incident he analyses in length in his Confessions (he admits that were he on his own, he would never have committed the deed). In spite of these, St. Augustine maintained some dignity and had a compunction that did him honor, and in his nineteenth year, he sought to break free from his sins. At one point, he came across a (now lost) work of {{Creator/Cicero}} known as ''Hortensius". The work exhorted St. Augustine to pursue philosophy, or "love of wisdom". With that, St. Augustine began to see his studies in rhetoric as a mere profession; his heart was in philosophy.

However, St. Augustine and a friend of his, Honoratus, joined a Gnostic dualistic religion known as Manichaeanism during his studies in Carthage. He was drawn in by the Manichaean's promises of free philosophy unbridled by faith, their boasts, especially their claims to have found contradictions in the Bible; and the hope of finding in their doctrine a scientific explanation of nature and all its natural phenomena. It also taught that good and evil are two conflicting principles. Those teachings won over St. Augustine Augustine, and he eventually studied it under Faustus, its most celebrated proponent. He eventually finished his studies and returned to Thagaste to teach rhetoric.

Meanwhile, St. Augustine wrote a (now lost) work on aesthetics and began to doubt Manichaeanism. For one thing, he was disturbed by the Manichaean's teaching that man is not responsible for any evil deeds he commits; they taught those deeds are because of the movements of the stars. He also did not get a satisfactory answer from the Manichaeans about Scriptural problems, to which they insisted that "the Scriptures have been falsified." Worst of all, he did not obtain the scientific explanation and all its natural phenomena as the Manichaeans promised. [[BrokenPedestal Disillusioned with the false promises of Manichaeanism, Manichaeanism]], he discarded their beliefs and followed the skepticism of the Academics.



St. Monica found him in Milan and arranged a marriage for him, but St. Augustine found the woman too young, so he agreed to wait until she comes of age. In the meantime, he had an affair that resulted in a son, Adeodatus. Realising this, St. Augustine felt ashamed. He then went through one more period of struggle and turmoil until he was prompted to read from the Bible. He read Romans 13:13-14: "Let us pass our time honourably, as by the light of day, not in revelling and drunkenness, not in lust and wantonness, not in quarrels and rivalries. Rather, arm yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ; spend no more thought on nature and nature’s appetites." (Knox) With that, St. Augustine possessed certainty that Jesus Christ is the only way to truth and salvation. He then resigned from his professorship and went to Cassisiacum with St. Monica and his friends to be baptised.

St. Augustine went on to be ordained into the priesthood in 391 A.D. and was consecrated as a bishop in 396 A.D. He then occupied the See of Hippo for thirty-four years. During his episcopacy, he wrote works defending the Christian faith against Manichaeanism, of which he was formerly a member; Donatism, a rigorist schismatic heresy that taught that the clergy must be without fault to be effective in their ministry and for the sacraments to be valid; Pelagianism, which taught that man could earn righteousness by simply using his free choice to follow God's commandments (in practice, the Pelagians trivialized the role of grace); and Arianism, which taught that Jesus was not God, but rather a creation of God made out of a similar substance.

to:

St. Monica found him in Milan and arranged a marriage for him, but St. Augustine found the woman too young, so he agreed to wait until she comes came of age. In the meantime, he had an affair that resulted in a son, Adeodatus. Realising this, St. Augustine felt ashamed. He then went through one more period of struggle and turmoil until he was prompted to read from the Bible. He read Romans 13:13-14: "Let us pass our time honourably, as by the light of day, not in revelling and drunkenness, not in lust and wantonness, not in quarrels and rivalries. Rather, arm yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ; spend no more thought on nature and nature’s appetites." (Knox) With that, St. Augustine possessed certainty that Jesus Christ is the only way to truth and salvation. He then resigned from his professorship and went to Cassisiacum with St. Monica and his friends to be baptised.

St. Augustine went on to be ordained into the priesthood in 391 A.D. and was consecrated as a bishop in 396 A.D. He then occupied the See of Hippo for thirty-four years. During his episcopacy, he wrote works defending the Christian faith against Manichaeanism, of which he was formerly a member; Donatism, a rigorist schismatic heresy that taught that the clergy must be without fault to be effective in their ministry and for the sacraments to be valid; Pelagianism, which taught that man could earn righteousness by simply using his free choice to follow God's commandments (in practice, the Pelagians trivialized trivialised the role of grace); that grace played for salvation); and Arianism, which taught that Jesus was not God, but rather a creation of God made out of a similar substance.



On 28 August 430, St. Augustine of Hippo died. Shortly after his death, the Vandals initially lifted the siege of Hippo, but returned to raze the city; St. Augustine's church and library were left untouched. He would then go on to be canonised by popular acclaim and become a majorly influential theologian in both Catholic ''and'' Protestant circles due to his writings on original sin, grace, and salvation. Pope Boniface VIII declared St Augustine a Doctor of the Church in 1298, and a lot of subsequent Catholic theologians like St. Creator/{{Boethius}}, St. Anselm of Canterbury, St. Bonaventure, St. Creator/ThomasAquinas, and St. John Henry Newman built on St. Augustine's philosophical and theological ideas. At the same time, the Protestants, particularly the Lutherans and Calvinists, hold St. Augustine in high regard and consider him one of the theological fathers of the Protestant Reformation; Martin Luther was an Augustinian friar until his excommunication in 1521 and John Calvin cited St Augustine as a major influence in establishing Calvinism, writing "Augustine is so wholly within me, that if I wished to write a confession of my faith, I could do so with all fullness and satisfaction to myself out of his writings."

to:

On 28 August 430, St. Augustine of Hippo died. Shortly after his death, the Vandals initially lifted the siege of Hippo, but returned to raze the city; St. Augustine's church and library were left untouched. He untouched.

St. Augustine
would then go on to be canonised by popular acclaim and become a majorly influential theologian in both Catholic ''and'' Protestant circles due to his writings on original sin, grace, and salvation. Pope Boniface VIII declared St Augustine a Doctor of the Church in 1298, and a lot of subsequent Catholic theologians like St. Creator/{{Boethius}}, St. Anselm of Canterbury, St. Bonaventure, St. Creator/ThomasAquinas, and St. John Henry Newman built on St. Augustine's philosophical and theological ideas.teachings. At the same time, the Protestants, particularly the Lutherans and Calvinists, hold St. Augustine in high regard and consider him one of the theological fathers of the Protestant Reformation; Martin Luther was an Augustinian friar until his excommunication in 1521 and John Calvin cited St Augustine as a major influence in establishing Calvinism, writing "Augustine is so wholly within me, that if I wished to write a confession of my faith, I could do so with all fullness and satisfaction to myself out of his writings."



St. Augustine was a prolific writer, having written '''''132''''' works. Some of his works include...
* ''On Christian Doctrine'' (397, 426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 397, but he did not return to writing this until around 426 when he finally completed it. In this work, St. Augustine explains how one must read the Bible.
* ''The {{Literature/Confessions}}'' (398 A.D.): Perhaps St. Augustine's most famous work. Here, St. Augustine chronicles his life, from living a life of sin to having a total conversion of the heart. In the meantime, he also wrestles with some philosophical concepts and recognises that the Christian faith is true. His work is typically titled ''The Confessions of Saint Augustine'' so it would not be confused with other works of the same name, like that by Creator/JeanJacquesRousseau.
* ''The City of God'' (410-426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 410, and finally completed it in 426. Here, he explains the concept of the two cities: the City of Man, which is created and driven by man's self-love; and the City of God, created and driven by man's love of God. In the meantime, he also writes in defense of the Christian faith against the pagans who accuse it of leading to the downfall of the Roman empire.

to:

St. Augustine was a prolific writer, having written '''''132''''' 132 works. Some of his works include...
* ''On Christian Doctrine'' (397, 426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 397, but he did not return to writing this until around 426 426, when he finally completed it. In this work, St. Augustine explains how one must read the Bible.
* ''The {{Literature/Confessions}}'' (398 A.D.): Perhaps St. Augustine's most famous work. Here, St. Augustine chronicles his life, from living a life of sin to having a total conversion of changing his life completely upon converting to the heart.Christian faith. In the meantime, he also wrestles with some philosophical concepts and recognises that the Christian faith is true. His work is typically titled ''The Confessions of Saint Augustine'' so it would not be confused with other works of the same name, like that by Creator/JeanJacquesRousseau.
* ''The City of God'' (410-426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 410, and finally completed it in 426. Here, he explains the concept of the two cities: the City of Man, which is created and driven by man's self-love; and the City of God, created and driven by man's love of God. In the meantime, he also writes in defense defence of the Christian faith against the pagans who accuse it of leading to the downfall of the Roman empire.



* ''Retractations'' (427 A.D.): More accurately his "Revisions". This is the last work St. Augustine wrote, wherein he reviews and summarizes nearly all of his works. Sometimes, he would come across something he expressed in an earlier work which he no longer believes.

to:

* ''Retractations'' (427 A.D.): More accurately his "Revisions". This is the last work St. Augustine wrote, wherein he reviews and summarizes summarises nearly all of his works. Sometimes, he would come across something he expressed in an earlier work which he he, by the time of writing his Revisions, no longer believes.

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Meanwhile, St. Augustine wrote a (now lost) work on aesthetics, and he began to develop doubts about Manichaeanism. For one thing, he was disturbed by the Manichaean's teaching that man is not responsible for any evil deeds he commits; they taught those deeds are because of the movements of the stars. He also did not get a satisfactory answer from the Manichaeans about Scriptural problems, to which they insisted that "the Scriptures have been falsified." Worst of all, he did not obtain the scientific explanation and all its natural phenomena as the Manichaeans promised. Disillusioned with the false promises of Manichaeanism, he discarded their beliefs and followed the skepticism of the Academics.

St. Augustine then went to Italy to teach rhetoric. He started in Rome but was disgusted by his students defrauding him of their tuition fees. He then went to Milan to obtain a professorship, where he encountered St. Ambrose, its bishop. His fascination with the bishop's kindness drew St. Augustine to become a regular attendant of St. Ambrose's preachings. It was through listening to St. Ambrose's preaching that he realised that a lot of the Bible's passages make more sense when interpreted in an allegorical sense. In the meantime, he came across the works of the Platonic philosophers, particularly {{Creator/Plato}} and the Neoplatonist Plotinus. Reading their works stirred him into finding truth again, yet his passions still enslaved him.

to:

Meanwhile, St. Augustine wrote a (now lost) work on aesthetics, aesthetics and he began to develop doubts about doubt Manichaeanism. For one thing, he was disturbed by the Manichaean's teaching that man is not responsible for any evil deeds he commits; they taught those deeds are because of the movements of the stars. He also did not get a satisfactory answer from the Manichaeans about Scriptural problems, to which they insisted that "the Scriptures have been falsified." Worst of all, he did not obtain the scientific explanation and all its natural phenomena as the Manichaeans promised. Disillusioned with the false promises of Manichaeanism, he discarded their beliefs and followed the skepticism of the Academics.

St. Augustine then went to Italy to teach rhetoric. He started in Rome but was disgusted by his students defrauding him of their tuition fees. He then went to Milan to obtain a professorship, where he encountered St. Ambrose, its bishop. His fascination with the bishop's kindness drew St. Augustine to become a regular attendant of attend St. Ambrose's preachings.preachings regularly. It was through listening to St. Ambrose's preaching that he realised that a lot of the Bible's passages make more sense when interpreted in an allegorical sense. In the meantime, he came across the works of the Platonic philosophers, particularly {{Creator/Plato}} and the Neoplatonist Plotinus. Reading their works stirred him into finding truth again, yet his passions still enslaved him.



He spent the last years of his life ministering to the people of Hippo while the Visigoths attacked Rome in 410; that was when he started writing one of his most important works, ''The City of God'', which he continued writing until he completed it in 426. Later, the Vandals, a Germanic tribe that converted to Arianism, invaded Hippo and besieged it in the spring of 430. At that time, however, St. Augustine developed what he recognised was a fatal illness. He spent his final days with patience and prayer, requesting that the penitential Psalms of David be hung on the walls for him to read. He also directed the library of the church in Hippo that all the books inside be preserved.

to:

He spent the last years of his life ministering to the people of Hippo while the Visigoths attacked Rome in 410; that was when he started writing one of his most important works, ''The City of God'', which he continued writing until he completed it in 426. Later, the Vandals, a Germanic tribe that converted to Arianism, invaded Hippo and besieged it in the spring of 430. At that time, however, St. Augustine developed what he recognised was as a fatal illness. He spent his final days with patience and prayer, requesting that the penitential Psalms of David be hung on the walls for him to read. He also directed the library of the church in Hippo that all the books inside be preserved.



* ''On Christian Doctrine'' (397, 426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 397, but he did not return to writing this until around 426, when he finally completed it. In this work, St. Augustine explains how one must read the Bible.
* ''The {{Literature/Confessions}}'' (398 A.D.): Perhaps St. Augustine's most famous work. Here, St. Augustine chronicles his life, from living a life of sin to having a total conversion of the heart. In the meantime, he also wrestles with some philosophical concepts and recognises that the Christian faith is true. His work is typically titled ''The Confessions of Saint Augustine'' so it would not be confused with the work of the same name by Creator/JeanJacquesRousseau.

to:

* ''On Christian Doctrine'' (397, 426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 397, but he did not return to writing this until around 426, 426 when he finally completed it. In this work, St. Augustine explains how one must read the Bible.
* ''The {{Literature/Confessions}}'' (398 A.D.): Perhaps St. Augustine's most famous work. Here, St. Augustine chronicles his life, from living a life of sin to having a total conversion of the heart. In the meantime, he also wrestles with some philosophical concepts and recognises that the Christian faith is true. His work is typically titled ''The Confessions of Saint Augustine'' so it would not be confused with the work other works of the same name name, like that by Creator/JeanJacquesRousseau.



* ''Retractations'' (427 A.D.): More accurately his "Revisions". This is the last work St. Augustine wrote, where he reviews and summarises nearly all of his works. Sometimes, he would come across something in an earlier work he no longer believes.

to:

* ''Retractations'' (427 A.D.): More accurately his "Revisions". This is the last work St. Augustine wrote, where wherein he reviews and summarises summarizes nearly all of his works. Sometimes, he would come across something he expressed in an earlier work which he no longer believes.



* SexIsEvil: Mostly played straight. St. Augustine taught that concupiscence came to be as a consequence of the Fall. As a result, sex (which in itself is not a sinful act), now straddles a very fine line between being sinful and not sinful. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful. Sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even then, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'' because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate.
%%* SexIsEvilAndIAmHorny: Following on from the above, some speculate Augustine's desperate desire to cut himself off from his sexuality and his inability to do so (and subsequent feelings of guilt and shame) contributed to his theory that humans can't control themselves and are wholly incapable of reform, and only God can save them.
* WomanlinessAsPathos: One particular founding myth of Athens related in ''The City of God'' tells that after King Cecrops and his people have begun to build a new city, both Poseidon and Athena offer themselves as patron gods of the city. The people vote on which deity should be their patron god and after whom accordingly the city will be named. It turns out that all men vote for Poseidon and all women for Athena; as the women outnumber the men by one, Athena wins and the city is called Athens. Poseidon is furious at this and causes the sea to flood the land; the Athenians consult the Oracle of Delphi which instructs them that to appease Poseidon's wrath, the women of Athens must be punished by losing the right to cast votes, by the Athenians not using matronymic names, and by Athenian women not being called Athenians. The Athenians follow this advice, implicitly blaming the women for causing Poseidon's wrath and framing their reduction to second-class citizens as their own fault.
%%* YouCantFightFate: John Calvin draws from St. Augustine to develop the teaching that humans have no free will to choose good. Human nature was completely destroyed by Original Sin, and humans can't do anything but evil. Therefore humans can in no way "merit" salvation. God will permit a few people to enter Heaven - not because of any good things that they have done, but purely as an act of mercy. Everyone else is going straight to Hell and there's nothing they can do about it. For this reason Augustine was one of the favorite theologians of Protestants over a thousand years later, when his hardcore theories experienced a resurgence under the likes of Calvin and Jansen.

to:

* SexIsEvil: Mostly played straight.Discussed. St. Augustine taught that concupiscence came to be as a consequence of the Fall. As a result, sex (which sex, though in itself is not a sinful act), act, now straddles a very fine line between being sinful this trope and not sinful.not. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful. Sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even then, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'' because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate.
%%* SexIsEvilAndIAmHorny: Following on from the above, some speculate Augustine's desperate desire to cut himself off from his sexuality and his inability to do so (and subsequent feelings of guilt and shame) contributed to his theory that humans can't control themselves and are wholly incapable of reform, and only God can save them.
celibate.
* WomanlinessAsPathos: One particular founding myth of Athens related in ''The City of God'' tells that after King Cecrops and his people have begun to build a new city, both Poseidon and Athena offer themselves as patron gods of the city. The people vote on which deity should be their patron god and after whom accordingly the city will be named. It turns out that all men vote for Poseidon and all women for Athena; as the women outnumber the men by one, Athena wins and the city is called Athens. Poseidon is furious at this and causes the sea to flood the land; the Athenians consult the Oracle of Delphi which instructs them that to appease Poseidon's wrath, the women of Athens must be punished by losing the right to cast votes, by the Athenians not using matronymic names, and by Athenian women not being called Athenians. The Athenians follow this advice, implicitly blaming the women for causing Poseidon's wrath and framing their reduction to second-class citizens as their own fault.
%%* YouCantFightFate: John Calvin draws from St. Augustine to develop the teaching that humans have no free will to choose good. Human nature was completely destroyed by Original Sin, and humans can't do anything but evil. Therefore humans can in no way "merit" salvation. God will permit a few people to enter Heaven - not because of any good things that they have done, but purely as an act of mercy. Everyone else is going straight to Hell and there's nothing they can do about it. For this reason Augustine was one of the favorite theologians of Protestants over a thousand years later, when his hardcore theories experienced a resurgence under the likes of Calvin and Jansen.
fault.

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%%* LostInTranslation: Augustine was only fluent in Latin, had little knowledge of Greek, and had no knowledge of Hebrew. Therefore the only version of the Bible he could read was an early Latin translation. For esoteric grammatical reasons, Augustine understood a passage discussing how death came into the world "because all have sinned" as "''in him'' all have sinned," (meaning Adam). Augustine took this to mean all humanity suffers not only the consequences of Adam's first sin but shares in his ''guilt'' as well. [[ForWantOfANail This mistranslation]] gave Augustine basis for his theories of humanity's absolute depravity, inherited guilt, limited salvation and so on, which influence Christian theology to this day.

to:

%%* LostInTranslation: Augustine was only fluent in Latin, had little knowledge of Greek, and had no knowledge of Hebrew. Therefore the only version of the Bible he could read was an early Latin translation. For esoteric grammatical reasons, Augustine understood a passage discussing how death came into the world "because all have sinned" as "''in him'' all have sinned," (meaning Adam). Augustine took this to mean all humanity suffers not only the consequences of Adam's first sin but shares * EvilStoleMyFaith: Addressed in his ''guilt'' as well. [[ForWantOfANail This mistranslation]] gave Augustine basis for his theories of humanity's absolute depravity, inherited guilt, limited salvation and so on, ''Enchiridion''. For example:
-->"In this universe even that
which influence Christian theology is called evil, well ordered and kept in its place, sets the good in highest relief, so that good things are more pleasing and praiseworthy than evil ones. Nor would Almighty God, 'to whom,' as even the pagans confess, 'belongs supreme power,' since he is supremely good, in any way allow anything evil to this day. exist among his works were he not so omnipotent and good that he can bring good even out of evil."



--> "A law which is not just does not seem to me to be a law."
* SexIsEvil: Mostly played straight. St. Augustine taught that concupiscence came to be as a consequence of the Fall. As a result, there is a very fine line between sex being sinful and not sinful. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful. Sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even then, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'' because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate.

to:

--> "A -->"A law which is not just does not seem to me to be a law."
* SexIsEvil: Mostly played straight. St. Augustine taught that concupiscence came to be as a consequence of the Fall. As a result, there sex (which in itself is not a sinful act), now straddles a very fine line between sex being sinful and not sinful. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful. Sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even then, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'' because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* SexIsEvil: Downplayed. St. Augustine taught that concupiscence came to be as a consequence of the Fall. As a result, there is a very fine line between sex being sinful and not sinful. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful. Sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even then, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'' because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate.

to:

* SexIsEvil: Downplayed.Mostly played straight. St. Augustine taught that concupiscence came to be as a consequence of the Fall. As a result, there is a very fine line between sex being sinful and not sinful. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful. Sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even then, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'' because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate.
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%%* SexIsEvil: He considered sex to be nearly always sinful. Sex Is Evil was a widespread belief at the time, not only among Christians but also among Manichaeans and others, and particularly among North Africans like Augustine. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful. Sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even then, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'', in his view, because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. [[note]] He observed that men can seemingly control all others parts of their body, but their penis seems to have a mind of its own. He reasoned that in the Garden of Eden before the Fall human men must have been able to make their penis erect or flaccid simply by dispassionate mental will, just like moving their arms and legs, and therefore have "pure" sexual intercourse, while post-Fall men lost this ability and are subject to "sinful" sexual arousal. [[NotMakingThisUpDisclaimer Seriously.]][[/note]] The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate.
* SexIsEvilAndIAmHorny: Following on from the above, some speculate Augustine's desperate desire to cut himself off from his sexuality and his inability to do so (and subsequent feelings of guilt and shame) contributed to his theory that humans can't control themselves and are wholly incapable of reform, and only God can save them.

to:

%%* * SexIsEvil: He considered sex Downplayed. St. Augustine taught that concupiscence came to be nearly always sinful. Sex Is Evil was as a widespread belief at consequence of the time, Fall. As a result, there is a very fine line between sex being sinful and not only among Christians but also among Manichaeans and others, and particularly among North Africans like Augustine.sinful. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful. Sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even then, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'', in his view, sin-''adjacent'' because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. [[note]] He observed that men can seemingly control all others parts of their body, but their penis seems to have a mind of its own. He reasoned that in the Garden of Eden before the Fall human men must have been able to make their penis erect or flaccid simply by dispassionate mental will, just like moving their arms and legs, and therefore have "pure" sexual intercourse, while post-Fall men lost this ability and are subject to "sinful" sexual arousal. [[NotMakingThisUpDisclaimer Seriously.]][[/note]] The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate.
* %%* SexIsEvilAndIAmHorny: Following on from the above, some speculate Augustine's desperate desire to cut himself off from his sexuality and his inability to do so (and subsequent feelings of guilt and shame) contributed to his theory that humans can't control themselves and are wholly incapable of reform, and only God can save them.

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On 28 August 430, St. Augustine of Hippo died. Shortly after his death, the Vandals initially lifted the siege of Hippo, but returned to raze the city; St. Augustine's church and library were left untouched. He would then be canonised by popular acclaim and declared Doctor of the Church in 1298 by Pope Boniface VIII.

St. Augustine proved to be a majorly influential theologian in both Catholic ''and'' Protestant circles due to his writings on original sin, grace, and salvation. The Catholic Church, as stated above, recognises him as a Doctor of the Church, and a lot of subsequent theologians like St. Creator/{{Boethius}}, St. Anselm of Canterbury, St. Bonaventure, St. Creator/ThomasAquinas, and St. John Henry Newman built on St. Augustine's philosophical and theological ideas. At the same time, the Protestants, particularly the Lutherans and Calvinists, hold him in high regard and consider him one of the theological fathers of the Protestant Reformation; Martin Luther was an Augustinian friar until his excommunication in 1521 and John Calvin cited St Augustine as a major influence in establishing Calvinism, writing "Augustine is so wholly within me, that if I wished to write a confession of my faith, I could do so with all fullness and satisfaction to myself out of his writings."

to:

On 28 August 430, St. Augustine of Hippo died. Shortly after his death, the Vandals initially lifted the siege of Hippo, but returned to raze the city; St. Augustine's church and library were left untouched. He would then go on to be canonised by popular acclaim and declared Doctor of the Church in 1298 by Pope Boniface VIII.

St. Augustine proved to be
become a majorly influential theologian in both Catholic ''and'' Protestant circles due to his writings on original sin, grace, and salvation. The Catholic Church, as stated above, recognises him as Pope Boniface VIII declared St Augustine a Doctor of the Church, Church in 1298, and a lot of subsequent Catholic theologians like St. Creator/{{Boethius}}, St. Anselm of Canterbury, St. Bonaventure, St. Creator/ThomasAquinas, and St. John Henry Newman built on St. Augustine's philosophical and theological ideas. At the same time, the Protestants, particularly the Lutherans and Calvinists, hold him St. Augustine in high regard and consider him one of the theological fathers of the Protestant Reformation; Martin Luther was an Augustinian friar until his excommunication in 1521 and John Calvin cited St Augustine as a major influence in establishing Calvinism, writing "Augustine is so wholly within me, that if I wished to write a confession of my faith, I could do so with all fullness and satisfaction to myself out of his writings."



* ''The City of God'' (410-426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 410, and finally completed it in 426. Here, he explains the concept of the two cities: the City of Man and the City of God. In the meantime, he also writes in defense of the Christian faith against the pagans who accuse it of leading to the downfall of the Roman empire.

to:

* ''The City of God'' (410-426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 410, and finally completed it in 426. Here, he explains the concept of the two cities: the City of Man Man, which is created and driven by man's self-love; and the City of God, created and driven by man's love of God. In the meantime, he also writes in defense of the Christian faith against the pagans who accuse it of leading to the downfall of the Roman empire.



* ScienceMarchesOn: Augustine did not believe that people live on the other half of the globe. He writes in ''The City of God'':

to:

* ScienceMarchesOn: St. Augustine did not believe that people live on the other half of the globe. He writes in ''The City of God'':



* SexIsEvil: He considered sex to be nearly always sinful. Sex Is Evil was a widespread belief at the time, not only among Christians but also among Manichaeans and others, and particularly among North Africans like Augustine. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful. Sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even then, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'', in his view, because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. [[note]] He observed that men can seemingly control all others parts of their body, but their penis seems to have a mind of its own. He reasoned that in the Garden of Eden before the Fall human men must have been able to make their penis erect or flaccid simply by dispassionate mental will, just like moving their arms and legs, and therefore have "pure" sexual intercourse, while post-Fall men lost this ability and are subject to "sinful" sexual arousal. [[NotMakingThisUpDisclaimer Seriously.]][[/note]] The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate.

to:

* %%* SexIsEvil: He considered sex to be nearly always sinful. Sex Is Evil was a widespread belief at the time, not only among Christians but also among Manichaeans and others, and particularly among North Africans like Augustine. Any sexual act not strictly intended to conceive a child between a husband and wife was sinful. Sex between even a married couple for pleasure, or at any time when conception was not possible for any reason, was a sin. Even then, the act between a husband and wife to conceive a child was sin-''adjacent'', in his view, because sexual arousal is required to have sex, which is too close to lust. The only truly pure sexual act would be one which was purely intellectual without any passion, which for humans after the Fall was impossible. [[note]] He observed that men can seemingly control all others parts of their body, but their penis seems to have a mind of its own. He reasoned that in the Garden of Eden before the Fall human men must have been able to make their penis erect or flaccid simply by dispassionate mental will, just like moving their arms and legs, and therefore have "pure" sexual intercourse, while post-Fall men lost this ability and are subject to "sinful" sexual arousal. [[NotMakingThisUpDisclaimer Seriously.]][[/note]] The only way to remain completely pure was to be celibate.



%%* YouCantFightFate: John Calvin cites St. Augustine was the first major Christian theologian to defend the idea that humans have no free will to choose good. Human nature was completely destroyed by Original Sin, and humans can't do anything but evil. Therefore humans can in no way "merit" salvation. God will permit a few people to enter Heaven - not because of any good things that they have done, but purely as an act of mercy. Everyone else is going straight to Hell and there's nothing they can do about it. For this reason Augustine was one of the favorite theologians of Protestants over a thousand years later, when his hardcore theories experienced a resurgence under the likes of Calvin and Jansen.

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%%* YouCantFightFate: John Calvin cites draws from St. Augustine was to develop the first major Christian theologian to defend the idea teaching that humans have no free will to choose good. Human nature was completely destroyed by Original Sin, and humans can't do anything but evil. Therefore humans can in no way "merit" salvation. God will permit a few people to enter Heaven - not because of any good things that they have done, but purely as an act of mercy. Everyone else is going straight to Hell and there's nothing they can do about it. For this reason Augustine was one of the favorite theologians of Protestants over a thousand years later, when his hardcore theories experienced a resurgence under the likes of Calvin and Jansen.
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St. Augustine then went to Italy to teach rhetoric. He started at Rome, but was disgusted by his students defrauding him of their tuition fees. He then went to Milan to obtain a professorship, where he encountered St. Ambrose, its bishop. His fascination with the bishop's kindness drew St. Augustine to become a regular attendant of St. Ambrose's preachings. It was through listening to St. Ambrose's preaching when he realised that a lot of the Bible's passages make more sense when interpreted in an allegorical sense. In the meantime, he came across the works of the Platonic philosophers, particularly {{Creator/Plato}} and the Neoplatonist Plotinus. Reading their works stirred him into finding truth again, yet his passions still enslaved him.

St. Monica found him in Milan and had arranged a marriage for him, but St. Augustine found the woman too young, so he agreed to wait until she comes of age. In the meantime, he had an affair that resulted in a son, Adeodatus. Realising this, St. Augustine felt ashamed. He then went through one more period of struggle and turmoil until he was prompted to read from the Bible. He read Romans 13:13-14: "Let us pass our time honourably, as by the light of day, not in revelling and drunkenness, not in lust and wantonness, not in quarrels and rivalries. Rather, arm yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ; spend no more thought on nature and nature’s appetites." (Knox) With that, St. Augustine possessed certainty that Jesus Christ is the only way to truth and salvation. He then resigned from his professorship and went to Cassisiacum with St. Monica and his friends to be baptised.

St. Augustine went on to be ordained into the priesthood in 391 A.D. and was consecrated a bishop in 396 A.D. He then occupied the See of Hippo for thirty-four years. During his episcopacy, he wrote works defending the Christian faith against Manichaeanism, of which he was formerly a member; Donatism, a rigorist schismatic heresy that taught that the clergy must be without fault to be effective in their ministry and for the sacraments to be valid; Pelagianism, which taught that man could earn righteousness by simply using his free choice to follow God's commandments (in practice, the Pelagians trivialized the role of grace); and Arianism, which taught that Jesus was not God, but rather a creation of God made out of a similar substance.

to:

St. Augustine then went to Italy to teach rhetoric. He started at Rome, in Rome but was disgusted by his students defrauding him of their tuition fees. He then went to Milan to obtain a professorship, where he encountered St. Ambrose, its bishop. His fascination with the bishop's kindness drew St. Augustine to become a regular attendant of St. Ambrose's preachings. It was through listening to St. Ambrose's preaching when that he realised that a lot of the Bible's passages make more sense when interpreted in an allegorical sense. In the meantime, he came across the works of the Platonic philosophers, particularly {{Creator/Plato}} and the Neoplatonist Plotinus. Reading their works stirred him into finding truth again, yet his passions still enslaved him.

St. Monica found him in Milan and had arranged a marriage for him, but St. Augustine found the woman too young, so he agreed to wait until she comes of age. In the meantime, he had an affair that resulted in a son, Adeodatus. Realising this, St. Augustine felt ashamed. He then went through one more period of struggle and turmoil until he was prompted to read from the Bible. He read Romans 13:13-14: "Let us pass our time honourably, as by the light of day, not in revelling and drunkenness, not in lust and wantonness, not in quarrels and rivalries. Rather, arm yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ; spend no more thought on nature and nature’s appetites." (Knox) With that, St. Augustine possessed certainty that Jesus Christ is the only way to truth and salvation. He then resigned from his professorship and went to Cassisiacum with St. Monica and his friends to be baptised.

St. Augustine went on to be ordained into the priesthood in 391 A.D. and was consecrated as a bishop in 396 A.D. He then occupied the See of Hippo for thirty-four years. During his episcopacy, he wrote works defending the Christian faith against Manichaeanism, of which he was formerly a member; Donatism, a rigorist schismatic heresy that taught that the clergy must be without fault to be effective in their ministry and for the sacraments to be valid; Pelagianism, which taught that man could earn righteousness by simply using his free choice to follow God's commandments (in practice, the Pelagians trivialized the role of grace); and Arianism, which taught that Jesus was not God, but rather a creation of God made out of a similar substance.



St Augustine proved to be a majorly influential theologian in both Catholic ''and'' Protestant circles due to his writings on original sin, grace, and salvation. The Catholic Church recognises him as a Doctor of the Church, and St Augustine influenced other theologians like St Creator/{{Boethius}}, St Anselm of Canterbury, St Bonaventure, St Creator/ThomasAquinas, and St John Henry Newman, who built on his philosophical and theological ideas. At the same time, the Protestants, particularly the Lutherans and Calvinists, hold him in high regard and consider him one of the theological fathers of the Protestant Reformation due to his teachings on grace and salvation; Martin Luther was an Augustinian friar until his excommunication on 1521 and John Calvin cited St Augustine as a major influence in establishing Calvinism, writing "Augustine is so wholly within me, that if I wished to write a confession of my faith, I could do so with all fullness and satisfaction to myself out of his writings."

to:

St St. Augustine proved to be a majorly influential theologian in both Catholic ''and'' Protestant circles due to his writings on original sin, grace, and salvation. The Catholic Church Church, as stated above, recognises him as a Doctor of the Church, and St Augustine influenced other a lot of subsequent theologians like St St. Creator/{{Boethius}}, St St. Anselm of Canterbury, St St. Bonaventure, St St. Creator/ThomasAquinas, and St St. John Henry Newman, who Newman built on his St. Augustine's philosophical and theological ideas. At the same time, the Protestants, particularly the Lutherans and Calvinists, hold him in high regard and consider him one of the theological fathers of the Protestant Reformation due to his teachings on grace and salvation; Reformation; Martin Luther was an Augustinian friar until his excommunication on in 1521 and John Calvin cited St Augustine as a major influence in establishing Calvinism, writing "Augustine is so wholly within me, that if I wished to write a confession of my faith, I could do so with all fullness and satisfaction to myself out of his writings."



%%* YouCantFightFate: Augustine was the first major Christian theologian to defend the idea that humans have no free will to choose good. Human nature was completely destroyed by Original Sin, and humans can't do anything but evil. Therefore humans can in no way "merit" salvation. God will permit a few people to enter Heaven - not because of any good things that they have done, but purely as an act of mercy. Everyone else is going straight to Hell and there's nothing they can do about it. For this reason Augustine was one of the favorite theologians of Protestants over a thousand years later, when his hardcore theories experienced a resurgence under the likes of Calvin and Jansen.

to:

%%* YouCantFightFate: John Calvin cites St. Augustine was the first major Christian theologian to defend the idea that humans have no free will to choose good. Human nature was completely destroyed by Original Sin, and humans can't do anything but evil. Therefore humans can in no way "merit" salvation. God will permit a few people to enter Heaven - not because of any good things that they have done, but purely as an act of mercy. Everyone else is going straight to Hell and there's nothing they can do about it. For this reason Augustine was one of the favorite theologians of Protestants over a thousand years later, when his hardcore theories experienced a resurgence under the likes of Calvin and Jansen.

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* BlackAndWhiteMorality: Dualism was particularly popular in Augustine's time. In general, physical things were considered evil (sometimes even including physical reality itself), while spiritual things were considered good. In his own lifetime and ever since, there were those who pointed out that much of Augustine's particular theology shared not a few things in common with Manichaeism, the religion to which he belonged before converting to Christianity.



* LostInTranslation: Augustine was only fluent in Latin, had little knowledge of Greek, and had no knowledge of Hebrew. Therefore the only version of the Bible he could read was an early Latin translation. For esoteric grammatical reasons, Augustine understood a passage discussing how death came into the world "because all have sinned" as "''in him'' all have sinned," (meaning Adam). Augustine took this to mean all humanity suffers not only the consequences of Adam's first sin but shares in his ''guilt'' as well. [[ForWantOfANail This mistranslation]] gave Augustine basis for his theories of humanity's absolute depravity, inherited guilt, limited salvation and so on, which influence Christian theology to this day.

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* %%* LostInTranslation: Augustine was only fluent in Latin, had little knowledge of Greek, and had no knowledge of Hebrew. Therefore the only version of the Bible he could read was an early Latin translation. For esoteric grammatical reasons, Augustine understood a passage discussing how death came into the world "because all have sinned" as "''in him'' all have sinned," (meaning Adam). Augustine took this to mean all humanity suffers not only the consequences of Adam's first sin but shares in his ''guilt'' as well. [[ForWantOfANail This mistranslation]] gave Augustine basis for his theories of humanity's absolute depravity, inherited guilt, limited salvation and so on, which influence Christian theology to this day.
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St Augustine proved to be a majorly influential theologian in both Catholic ''and'' Protestant circles. The Catholic theologians he influenced include St. Creator/{{Boethius}}, St. Anselm of Canterbury, St. Creator/ThomasAquinas, St. Bonaventure, and St. John Henry Newman. Among the Protestants, he influenced Martin Luther, a Protestant Reformer who was an Augustinian friar before his excommunication in 1521; and John Calvin, another Protestant Reformer who drew extensively from St Augustine.

to:

St Augustine proved to be a majorly influential theologian in both Catholic ''and'' Protestant circles. circles due to his writings on original sin, grace, and salvation. The Catholic Church recognises him as a Doctor of the Church, and St Augustine influenced other theologians he influenced include St. like St Creator/{{Boethius}}, St. St Anselm of Canterbury, St. St Bonaventure, St Creator/ThomasAquinas, St. Bonaventure, and St. St John Henry Newman. Among Newman, who built on his philosophical and theological ideas. At the same time, the Protestants, he influenced Martin Luther, a particularly the Lutherans and Calvinists, hold him in high regard and consider him one of the theological fathers of the Protestant Reformer who Reformation due to his teachings on grace and salvation; Martin Luther was an Augustinian friar before until his excommunication in 1521; on 1521 and John Calvin, another Protestant Reformer who drew extensively from Calvin cited St Augustine.
Augustine as a major influence in establishing Calvinism, writing "Augustine is so wholly within me, that if I wished to write a confession of my faith, I could do so with all fullness and satisfaction to myself out of his writings."






* YouCantFightFate: Augustine was the first major Christian theologian to defend the idea that humans have no free will to choose good. Human nature was completely destroyed by Original Sin, and humans can't do anything but evil. Therefore humans can in no way "merit" salvation. God will permit a few people to enter Heaven - not because of any good things that they have done, but purely as an act of mercy. Everyone else is going straight to Hell and there's nothing they can do about it. For this reason Augustine was one of the favorite theologians of Protestants over a thousand years later, when his hardcore theories experienced a resurgence under the likes of Calvin and Jansen.

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* %%* YouCantFightFate: Augustine was the first major Christian theologian to defend the idea that humans have no free will to choose good. Human nature was completely destroyed by Original Sin, and humans can't do anything but evil. Therefore humans can in no way "merit" salvation. God will permit a few people to enter Heaven - not because of any good things that they have done, but purely as an act of mercy. Everyone else is going straight to Hell and there's nothing they can do about it. For this reason Augustine was one of the favorite theologians of Protestants over a thousand years later, when his hardcore theories experienced a resurgence under the likes of Calvin and Jansen.

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* ''On Christian Doctrine'' (397, 426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 397, but he did not return to writing this until around 426, when he finally completed it. In this work, St. Augustine explains how one must read the Bible.



* ''The City of God'' (426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 410, and finally completed it in 426. Here, he explains the concept of the two cities: the City of Man and the City of God. In the meantime, he also writes in defense of the Christian faith against the pagans who accuse it of leading to the downfall of the Roman empire.
* ''On Christian Doctrine'' (426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 397, but he did not return to writing this until around 426, when he finally completed it. In this work, St. Augustine explains how one must read the Bible.
* ''Retractations'' (427 A.D.): More accurately his "Revisions". This is the last work St. Augustine wrote. Here, he reviews and summarises nearly all of his works. Sometimes, he would come across something in an earlier work he no longer believes.

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* ''The City of God'' (426 (410-426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 410, and finally completed it in 426. Here, he explains the concept of the two cities: the City of Man and the City of God. In the meantime, he also writes in defense of the Christian faith against the pagans who accuse it of leading to the downfall of the Roman empire.
* ''On Christian Doctrine'' (426 ''Enchiridion on Faith, Hope and Charity'' (421 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 397, but he did not return to writing this until around 426, when he finally completed it.A handbook written for a Laurentius, who wanted a handbook explaining the basics of the Catholic faith. In this work, St. Augustine explains writes that true wisdom is the worship of God and that God is to be worshipped with faith, hope, and love. He then writes how one must read the Bible.
these three are essential to growing in Christian wisdom.
* ''Retractations'' (427 A.D.): More accurately his "Revisions". This is the last work St. Augustine wrote. Here, wrote, where he reviews and summarises nearly all of his works. Sometimes, he would come across something in an earlier work he no longer believes.
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Saint Augustine of Hippo (13 November 354 - 28 August 430) was a theologian, philosopher and bishop of Hippo Regius (modern-day Annaba, Algeria). His writings helped influence the development of Western philosophy and Western Christian theology and is seen as one of the most influential Christian theologians of the Western Church.

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Saint Augustine of Hippo (13 November 354 - 28 August 430) was a theologian, philosopher and bishop of Hippo Regius (modern-day Annaba, Algeria). His writings helped influence the development of Western philosophy and Western Christian theology and he is seen as one of the most influential Christian theologians of the Western Church.



Ironically, though he championed what he thought was Catholic orthodoxy in the early 5th century, most of his theological conclusions would later be rejected by the Catholic Church, turning out to be hardly more orthodox than many of those he accused of heresy. In fact, Augustinian theology would form the foundation for many Protestant movements over a thousand years later. However, since Augustine was already considered a saint and had contributed significantly to the development of Catholic thought, he could hardly be retroactively declared a heretic, so Catholics variously claim his theology has been "misinterpreted," "misunderstood" or "exaggerated." Augustine's own views evolved over the course of his life (generally becoming more hard-line as he got older), and the fact that his prodigious works span decades on nearly every subject means there's probably an Augustinian quote out there for anyone who wants to suggest he supported one position over another.

to:

Ironically, though he championed what he thought was St Augustine proved to be a majorly influential theologian in both Catholic orthodoxy in the early 5th century, most of his theological conclusions would later be rejected by the Catholic Church, turning out to be hardly more orthodox than many of those he accused of heresy. In fact, Augustinian theology would form the foundation for many ''and'' Protestant movements over a thousand years later. However, since Augustine was already considered a saint and had contributed significantly to the development of circles. The Catholic thought, theologians he could hardly be retroactively declared a heretic, so Catholics variously claim his theology has been "misinterpreted," "misunderstood" or "exaggerated." Augustine's own views evolved over influenced include St. Creator/{{Boethius}}, St. Anselm of Canterbury, St. Creator/ThomasAquinas, St. Bonaventure, and St. John Henry Newman. Among the course of his life (generally becoming more hard-line as Protestants, he got older), and the fact that his prodigious works span decades on nearly every subject means there's probably influenced Martin Luther, a Protestant Reformer who was an Augustinian quote out there for anyone friar before his excommunication in 1521; and John Calvin, another Protestant Reformer who wants to suggest he supported one position over another.
drew extensively from St Augustine.



* ''The City of God'' (426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 410, and finally completed it 426. Here, he explains the concept of the two cities: the City of Man and the City of God. In the meantime, he also writes in defense of the Christian faith against the pagans who accuse the Christian faith of leading to the downfall of the Roman empire.

to:

* ''The City of God'' (426 A.D.): St. Augustine started writing this work around 410, and finally completed it in 426. Here, he explains the concept of the two cities: the City of Man and the City of God. In the meantime, he also writes in defense of the Christian faith against the pagans who accuse the Christian faith it of leading to the downfall of the Roman empire.

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