Posted on 08/28/2008 4:09:51 PM PDT by Teófilo
Folks, today we remember St. Augustine of Hippo, Father and Doctor of the Church at least of the Latin Church since he is not as prominent in the East for a variety of reasons, which I may discuss some other time. Nevertheless, his influence on Catholic theology has been profound and lasts to this very day.
St. Augustine's legacy to us has not been a method as much as an attitude. This attitude can be summarized in one sentence that reverberates from his Confessions, rich in meaning and overtones. In fact, it summarizes the angst and the want for total and perpetual happiness that is to be found in the heart of every man and woman:
Nos fecisti ad te et inquietum est cor nostrum donec requiescat in te. Thou hast made us for Thyself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in Thee.In one bold stroke, St. Augustine defined the ultimate object of Catholic theology and of our Christian pilgrimage to this very day. This quote is, in fact, the core of his theology.
PING!
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Thinker, Intellectual, Father of the Inquisition.
Thinker, Intellectual, Father of the Inquisition.
I disagree. He was more like the Inquisition’s great-great-great-great-great-grandfather on the mother’s side.
Check the history books. It is there.
I do happen to read history. And to call St. Augustine “the Father of the Inquisition” is quite an exaggeration, in my opinion. Can a connection be made? I suppose so, in the same way that a connection can be made between Bob Jones and Paul Z. Myers. Tenous, but arguable.
“Who shall grant me to rest in Thee? By Whose Gift wilt Thou enter into my heart, and fill it so compellingly that I shall turn no more to my sins, but embrace Thee, my only Good?
“What art Thou to me? Have mercy, that I may tell. What rather am I to Thee, that Thou shouldst demand my love, and if I do not love Thee, threaten such great woe? Surely, not to love Thee is already a great woe!”
—St. Augustine
I was reading a book about +Augustine’s prayers, and when I read this, long before I became Catholic, was the moment Christ came into my heart. Still, I almost slipped away, until circumstances brought me to do volunteer work with a very holy nun who became a dear friend and brought me (and my husband and children eventually) into the church.
The moment of reading this bit for the first time was so compelling that I memorized it on the spot. Even now, to write it down, brings back in brilliant memory the shock of the knowledge of the presence of Christ, the incredible breathtaking Love He is, and the utter unshakeable Reality of God.
When I read that +Augustine is the “Father of the Inquisition,” I realize that if it IS so, it is because he first turned the questions on himself, and his relationship to God, and in the light of that truth, helped to define some of the great demonic errors that threatened the Church.
My 2 cents.
Greetings Judith,
Excellent reflection! Thank you for sharing it.
-Theo
I checked the history books and this what I found out. Augustine apparently had no problem with civil authority involved in opposing heresies. Is that different than using the state to oppose gay marriage? Or alchol sales on Sundays or “blue laws”? HMMMM?
My pleasure. St. Augustine may have been a giant intellect with an interesting life, but he was also a human standing before Christ the Savior with his heart in his hand, just as are we all. His clear and compelling statement of the near-inexpressible has always touched me deeply. The man understood the Mystery of Salvation.
Augustine, on the other hand, saw the church of his day as a mixture of believers and unbelievers, in which purity and evil should be allowed to exist side by side for the sake of unity. He used the power of the state to compel church attendance: "Whoever was not found within the Chruch was not asked the reason, but was to be corrected and converted." Augustine compelled attendance by threat (and worse) against the citizenery. Frend says of Augustine, "The questing, sensitive youth had become the the father of the inquisition. Though he (Augustine) preferred persuasion if possible, Augustine supported military force against those who were rebaptized as believers after conversion to Christ and for other alleged heretics. In his controvery with the Donatists, using a distorted and un-CKhristian interpretation of Luke 14:23, Augustine declared:
Why therefore should not the Chruch use force in compelling her lost sons to return?..The Lord Himself said, "Go out into the highways and hedges and compel them to come in..." Wherefore is the power which the Church has received theough the religious character and faith of kings the instrument by which those who are found in the highways and hedges - that is, in heresies and schisms - are compelled to come in, and let them not find fault with being compelled.
There is no question Augustine played an major role in propagating church thinking,theology and its subsequent action.
His prescriptions were a little more than the state opposing gay marriage. I don't recall the state sending the military in to arrest and torture these homosexuals to "get their minds right." Augustine did just that. He taught the requirement to torture as a technique to convert the lost by prescribing burning unto death, and other horrors. And he, himself, characterized his action as a mercy he showed the victim.
Your analogies are not serious comparisons. Your rivisionist history does not wash with me. Keep it to yourself.
Arent he Donatists the one who beleived marriage and baptism was invalid if the minster became an apostate later? Is that biblical? How so? SOunds like a recipe for chaos.
ping
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