DC10 St. Augustine of Hippo (part 2) – The Doctors of the Church: The Charism of Wisdom with Dr. Matthew Bunson


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Jun 22 2022 31 mins   4

Dr. Matthew Bunson discusses the life, times and teachings of St. Augustine of Hippo (part 2)








Born: 13 November 354



Died: 28 August 430






For more on St. Augustine of Hippo and his teachings


Augustine of Hippo

Confessions

Letters

City of God

Christian Doctrine

On the Holy Trinity

The Enchiridion

On the Catechising of the Uninstructed

On Faith and the Creed

Concerning Faith of Things Not Seen

On the Profit of Believing

On the Creed: A Sermon to Catechumens

On Continence

On the Good of Marriage

On Holy Virginity

On the Good of Widowhood

On Lying

To Consentius: Against Lying

On the Work of Monks

On Patience

On Care to be Had For the Dead

On the Morals of the Catholic Church

On the Morals of the Manichaeans

On Two Souls, Against the Manichaeans

Acts or Disputation Against Fortunatus the Manichaean

Against the Epistle of Manichaeus Called Fundamental

Reply to Faustus the Manichaean

Concerning the Nature of Good, Against the Manichaeans

On Baptism, Against the Donatists

Answer to Letters of Petilian, Bishop of Cirta

Merits and Remission of Sin, and Infant Baptism

On the Spirit and the Letter

On Nature and Grace

On Man’s Perfection in Righteousness

On the Proceedings of Pelagius

On the Grace of Christ, and on Original Sin

On Marriage and Concupiscence

On the Soul and its Origin

Against Two Letters of the Pelagians

On Grace and Free Will

On Rebuke and Grace

The Predestination of the Saints/Gift of Perseverance

Our Lord’s Sermon on the Mount

The Harmony of the Gospels

Sermons on Selected Lessons of the New Testament

Tractates on the Gospel of John

Homilies on the First Epistle of John

Soliloquies

The Enarrations, or Expositions, on the Psalms









From Vatican.va, an excerpt from the teachings of Pope Benedict XVI General Audience 2008



After his Baptism, Augustine decided to return to Africa with his friends, with the idea of living a community life of the monastic kind at the service of God. However, while awaiting their departure in Ostia, his mother fell ill unexpectedly and died shortly afterwards, breaking her son’s heart. Having returned to his homeland at last, the convert settled in Hippo for the very purpose of founding a monastery. In this city on the African coast he was ordained a priest in 391, despite his reticence, and with a few companions began the monastic life which had long been in his mind, dividing his time between prayer, study and preaching. All he wanted was to be at the service of the truth. He did not feel he had a vocation to pastoral life but realized later that God was calling him to be a pastor among others and thus to offer people the gift of the truth. He was ordained a Bishop in Hippo four years later, in 395. Augustine continued to deepen his study of Scripture and of the texts of the Christian tradition and was an exemplary Bishop in his tireless pastoral commitment: he preached several times a week to his faithful, supported the poor and orphans, supervised the formation of the clergy and the organization of mens’ and womens’ monasteries. In short, the former rhetorician asserted himself as one of the most important exponents of Christianity of that time. He was very active in the government of his Diocese – with remarkable, even civil, implications – in the more than 35 years of his Episcopate, and the Bishop of Hippo actually exercised a vast influence in his guidance of the Catholic Church in Roman Africa and, more generally, in the Christianity of his time, coping with religious tendencies and tenacious, disruptive heresies such as Manichaeism, Donatism and Pelagianism, which endangered the Christian faith in the one God, rich in mercy.


And Augustine entrusted himself to God every day until the very end of his life: smitten by fever, while for almost three months his Hippo was being besieged by vandal invaders, the Bishop – his friend Possidius recounts in his Vita Augustini – asked that the penitential psalms be transcribed in large characters, “and that the sheets be attached to the wall, so that while he was bedridden during his illness he could see and read them and he shed constant hot tears” (31, 2). This is how Augustine spent the last days of his life. He died on 28 August 430, when he was not yet 76. We will devote our next encounters to his work, his message and his inner experience.






For more visit Vatican.va







Dr. Matthew Bunson, Senior Fellow of the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology, is one of the United States’ leading authorities on the papacy and the Church.


His books include: The Encyclopedia of Catholic History; The Encyclopedia of Saints; Papal Wisdom; All Shall Be Well; Encyclopedia of the Roman Empire; and The Angelic Doctor: The Life and World of St. Thomas Aquinas; The Pope Encyclopedia; We Have a Pope! Benedict XVI, the first Catholic biography of the Holy Father in the English language; the Encyclopedia of U.S. Catholic History; Pope Francis. His also the editor of OSV’s “The Catholic Answer” magazine.



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