Augustine of Hippo/Introduction to Augustine of Hippo/Augustine's Spiritual Journey

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Augustine is a rich, hot-blooded, highly complex and introspective personality, passionately Christian, but exquisitely and delicately human, sensitive and courageous, looking with reverence on Rome, possessed, with Virgil and Cicero, of a Roman love of authority and law, and an African touch of earth, yet ever withal having the nostalgia of the infinite. Within Augustine there struggles two personalities, a mystic, who could forego all forms... and fly straight - 'the alone to the Alone' - with a champion of ecclesiastical order, resolute to secure the rights of the Church.
John Neville Figgis in The Political Aspects of S. Augustine's 'City of God' (Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith, 1963)

The Setting[edit | edit source]

With these words we begin a look at the single most important theologian in the history of the Western Church and a significant philosopher in his own right. Augustine of Hippo was born in a village called Thagaste in what is today Algeria in the northernmost part of Africa. His parents, the Christian Saint Monica and the pagan Patricius, represent in a certain sense the world into which he was born. It was a world not quite Christianized, yet no longer pagan; a world in which mother Church was still in covert competition with the state for the allegiance of their children. And yet, just like Patricius, the empire had already turned to embrace Christianity on its deathbed.

The Child Is the Father of the Man[1][edit | edit source]

Augustine was an active child, competitive and smart, but lazy in his studies. He was much more interested in games and stealing pears from a neighbor's tree than in Latin grammar. He was brought up in his mother's faith and was almost baptized at the age of six when he was seriously ill. He recovered before the rites were administered, however, and his mother thought it best to postpone the cleansing of his sins in baptism until after he had a chance to get the worst of them out of the way in adolescence.

At the age of 17, after his father's death, Augustine left Thagaste for the big city of Carthage to study law. Like any number of students today, he left his mother's religion behind when he left the strictures of his home. He fell in lust and moved in with a girl who, a year later, presented him with a baby boy they named Adeodatus (lit., given by God). All his mother's worst fears, however, were realized when Augustine embraced Manichaeism, a syncretistic religion combining elements of Christianity, Zoroastrianism and Gnosticism.

Wouldn't you like to be a Manichee, too?[edit | edit source]

The chief attraction of Manichaeism for Augustine was its simple approach to the problem of theodicy, the conundrum that arises from accepting all three of these premises: God is omnipotent, God is good, evil exists. (You can accept any two of these premises with no problem, but to take all three requires some strange loops of logic.) The Manichaean system proposed moral dualism, the doctrine of two equally powerful, positive principles underlying all reality - one purely good and the other purely evil. Creation, then, is the cosmic battlefield between these two principles, and the destiny of individuals is determined by which of these principles they embrace. Augustine, being a philosophical materialist at this point, also appreciated that his new religion did not require any non-material beings, a concept he considered utter nonsense, such as the Christian God.

When in Rome...[edit | edit source]

After some years of teaching Latin rhetoric in Carthage, Augustine decided to move to Rome where the students supposedly were reputed to be not so unruly and disrespectful to their teachers. What he didn't realize, though, was that getting those polite Roman students to pay fees was like pulling dentia. They had the disconcerting habit of switching to another professor just as the teaching fees were due. Upon realizing this, Augustine moved on to Milan.

Country Roads, Take Me Home[edit | edit source]

Augustine's move from Carthage to Milan for professional reasons paralleled his spiritual journey from Manichaeism back to Christianity. This journey actually began before he left that famous North African city when he had the opportunity to meet with Faustus, a famous Manichaean bishop, and discovered that the logical inconsistencies of Manichaeism that had been troubling him could not be addressed satisfactorily even by one so far advanced. While working through his disillusionment, Augustine dabbled in astrology and flirted with Skepticism. This was the philosophy of the successors to Plato's Academy, beginning with Carneades, who held that certainty (or truth) exists, but can never be attained: the best that one can hope for is probable truth, which they then made their guide to moral action.

The Neo-Platonist[edit | edit source]

At Rome, Augustine discovered Neo-Platonism, particularly the writings of Plotinus. His exposure to these writings gave him a way of thinking about God as an immaterial being; about evil as privation, a negative principle; and about the soul as a rational (rather than material) substance.[2]

God, grant me chastity...[edit | edit source]

Upon moving to Milan, Augustine came under the preaching of Ambrose, an experience which sent him back to a study of the scriptures he had learned as a child. This completed what Copleston called his intellectual conversion.[3] Augustine's moral conversion took a little more work as we can see from his prayer at this time: "Give me chastity and self-control, but not just yet!"[4] He was caught up in an anguish like what St. Paul described in Romans 7:21-24.[5] He knew the right, but felt powerless to give himself over to it.

Augustine's mother, Monica, was in Milan at this time and she set out to help reform her son by arranging a marriage for him with a good family. So, in preparation for settling down and getting married, Augustine sent away the mother of his twelve-year-old son, with whom he had been living all those years. Unfortunately, the required engagement period, which included waiting for the bride-to-be to come of age, became too much for him, and Augustine again took on a live-in girlfriend - all the while struggling with why he could not seem to make a commitment.

Take it and read it[edit | edit source]

It was in such a state of mind that Augustine heard the story of Victorinus, a famous professor of rhetoric from a previous generation - and also from Africa - who converted to Christianity late in life. This story moved Augustine to want to emulate his famous countryman, but it wasn't until he heard another story, quite by chance, that he achieved a moral breakthrough. While visiting at a friend's villa, Augustine encountered two guests who told him about Antony of Egypt, the third century Desert Father whose reputation for holiness was preserved by the monastic communities he had founded. This immediatedly precipitated a psychological and spiritual crisis in which Augustine, walking alone in his friend's garden, overheard a child playing some game and chanting in a sing-song voice: "Take it and read it."!"[6] Accepting this as divine direction, Augustine picked up the scriptures and read where they opened onto Romans 13:13 - "let us live honorably as in the day, not in reveling and drunkenness, not in debauchery and licentiousness, not in quarreling and jealousy." (New Revised Standard Version) This secured the conversion of Augustine's will, which is to say, his moral conversion.

The Rest of the Story[edit | edit source]

Augustine's Baptism

On Holy Saturday in 387, Augustine was baptized by Ambrose, along with his now fifteen-year-old son and a friend. He had put aside his most recent mistress and broken off his engagement, intending to return to Thagaste to found a monastic community there. Monica accompanied the three of them as far as Ostia on the Tyrrhenian seacoast, where she died before they could set sail. Then, shortly after they arrived in North Africa, Adeodatus also died - the gift of God now given back, a dedicated soul.

Over the next ten years, Augustine became a monk, a priest and a bishop - the latter two under duress. He accommodated himself to the needs of the church, but continued to live an ascetic life while serving as priest and bishop. He also wrote - voluminously. On 28 August 430, while the Vandals were besieging the city of Hippo, Augustine died, reciting the Penitential Psalms. Much of the city was eventually destroyed by the invaders, but, fortunately for us, Augustine's writings were spared.

Footnotes[edit | edit source]

  1. "The child is the father of the man;/And I could wish my days to be/Bound each to each by natural piety." From Wordsworth's My Heart Leaps up [1807]
  2. Frederick Copleston, A History of Philosophy, Vol. II (1950), p. 42f
  3. Frederick Copleston, A History of Philosophy, Vol. II (1950), p. 43
  4. Confessions, Book 8, Section 17, trans. Garry Wills (2006)
  5. So I find it to be a law that when I want to do what is good, evil lies close at hand. For I delight in the law of God in my inmost self, but I see in my members another law at war with the law of my mind, making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members. Wretched man that I am! Who will rescue me from this body of death? (New Revised Standard Version)
  6. In the Latin, tolle, lege;Confessions, Book 8, Section 29, my own translation


A journey of a thousand miles...

Follow-up Assignment[edit | edit source]

Go to Fun Facts, choose "edit this page" tab and type in whatever facts you can remember from the reading.