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Life of St. Augustine of Hippo
The great St. Augustine's life is unfolded to us in documents of unrivaled
richness, and of no great character of ancient times have we information
comparable to that contained in the Confessions,
which relate the touching
story of his soul, the Retractations,
which give the history of his mind, and
the Life of Augustine,
written by his friend Possidius, telling of the saint's
apostolate.
We will confine ourselves to sketching the three periods of this great life:
(1) the young wanderer's gradual return to the Faith;
(2) the doctrinal development of the Christian philosopher to the time of
his episcopate; and
(3) the full development of his activities upon the Episcopal throne of
Hippo.
I. FROM HIS BIRTH TO HIS CONVERSION (354-386)
Augustine was born at Tagaste on 13 November, 354. Tagaste, now Souk-Ahras, about 60 miles from Bona (ancient Hippo-Regius), was at that time a small free city of proconsular Numidia which had recently been converted from Donatism. Although eminently respectable, his family was not rich, and his father, Patricius, one of the curiales of the city, was still a pagan. However, the admirable virtues that made Monica the ideal of Christian mothers at length brought her husband the grace of baptism and of a holy death, about the year 371.
Augustine received a Christian education. His mother had him signed with the
cross and enrolled among the catechumens. Once, when very ill, he asked for
baptism, but, all danger being soon passed, he deferred receiving the sacrament,
thus yielding to a deplorable custom of the times. His association with men of
prayer
left three great ideas deeply engraven upon his soul: a Divine
Providence, the future life with terrible sanctions, and, above all, Christ the
Saviour. From my tenderest infancy, I had in a manner sucked with my mother's
milk that name of my Saviour, Thy Son; I kept it in the recesses of my heart;
and all that presented itself to me without that Divine Name, though it might be
elegant, well written, and even replete with truth, did not altogether carry me
away
(Confessions, I, iv).
But a great intellectual and moral crisis stifled for a time all these
Christian sentiments. The heart was the first point of attack. Patricius, proud
of his son's success in the schools of Tagaste and Madaura determined to send
him to Carthage to prepare for a forensic career. But, unfortunately, it
required several months to collect the necessary means, and Augustine had to
spend his sixteenth year at Tagaste in an idleness which was fatal to his
virtue; he gave himself up to pleasure with all the vehemence of an ardent
nature. At first he prayed, but without the sincere desire of being heard, and
when he reached Carthage, towards the end of the year 370, every circumstance
tended to draw him from his true course: the many seductions of the great city
that was still half pagan, the licentiousness of other students, the theatres,
the intoxication of his literary success, and a proud desire always to be first,
even in evil. Before long he was obliged to confess to Monica that he had formed
a sinful liaison with the person who bore him a son (372), the son of his sin
- an entanglement from which he only delivered himself at Milan after fifteen
years of its thralldom. Two extremes are to be avoided in the appreciation of
this crisis. Some, like Mommsen, misled perhaps by the tone of grief in the
Confessions,
have exaggerated it: in the Realencyklopädie
(3d ed., II, 268)
Loofs reproves Mommsen on this score, and yet he himself is to lenient towards
Augustine, when he claims that in those days, the Church permitted concubinage.
The Confessions
alone prove that Loofs did not understand the 17th canon of
Toledo. However, it may be said that, even in his fall, Augustine maintained a
certain dignity and felt a compunction which does him honour, and that, from the
age of nineteen, he had a genuine desire to break the chain. In fact, in 373, an
entirely new inclination manifested itself in his life, brought about by the
reading Cicero's Hortensius
whence he imbibed a love of the wisdom which
Cicero so eloquently praises. Thenceforward Augustine looked upon rhetoric
merely as a profession; his heart was in philosophy.
Unfortunately, his faith, as well as his morals, was to pass though a terrible crisis. In this same year, 373, Augustine and his friend Honoratus fell into the snares of the Manichæans. It seems strange that so great a mind should have been victimized by Oriental vapourings, synthesized by the Persian Mani (215-276) into coarse, material dualism, and introduced into Africa scarcely fifty years previously. Augustine himself tells us that he was enticed by the promises of a free philosophy unbridled by faith; by the boasts of the Manichæans, who claimed to have discovered contradictions in Holy Writ; and, above all, by the hope of finding in their doctrine a scientific explanation of nature and its most mysterious phenomena. Augustine's inquiring mind was enthusiastic for the natural sciences, and the Manichæans declared that nature withheld no secrets from Faustus, their doctor. Moreover, being tortured by the problem of the origin of evil, Augustine, in default of solving it, acknowledged a conflict of two principles. And then, again, there was a very powerful charm in the moral irresponsibility resulting from a doctrine which denied liberty and attributed the commission of crime to a foreign principle.
Once won over to this sect, Augustine devoted himself to it with all the
ardour of his character; he read all its books, adopted and defended all its
opinions. His furious proselytism drew into error his friend Alypius and
Romanianus, his Mæcenas of Tagaste, the friend of his father who was defraying
the expenses of Augustine's studies. It was during this Manichæan period that
Augustine's literary faculties reached their full development, and he was still
a student at Carthage when he embraced error. His studies ended, he should in
due course have entered the forum litigiosum, but he preferred the career of
letters, and Possidius tells us that he returned to Tagaste to teach grammar
.
The young professor captivated his pupils, one of whom, Alypius, hardly younger
than his master, loath to leave, him after following him into error, was
afterwards baptized with him at Milan, eventually becoming Bishop of Tagaste,
his native city. But Monica deeply deplored Augustine's heresy and would not
have received him into her home or at her table but for the advice of a saintly
bishop, who declared that the son of so many tears could not perish.
Soon
afterwards Augustine went to Carthage, where he continued to teach rhetoric. His
talents shone to even better advantage on this wider stage, and by an
indefatigable pursuit of the liberal arts his intellect attained its full
maturity. Having taken part in a poetic tournament, he carried off the prize,
and the Proconsul Vindicianus publicly conferred upon him the corona agonistica.
It was at this moment of literary intoxication, when he had just completed his
first work on æsthetics, now lost that he began to repudiate Manichæism. Even
when Augustine was in his first fervour, the teachings of Mani had been far from
quieting his restlessness, and although he has been accused of becoming a priest
of the sect, he was never initiated or numbered among the elect,
but remained
an auditor
the lowest degree in the hierarchy. He himself gives the reason for
his disenchantment. First of all there was the fearful depravity of Manichæan
philosophy - They destroy everything and build up nothing
; then, the dreadful
immorality in contrast with their affectation of virtue; the feebleness of their
arguments in controversy with the Catholics, to whose Scriptural arguments their
only reply was: The Scriptures have been falsified.
But, worse than all, he
did not find science among them - science in the modern sense of the word - that
knowledge of nature and its laws which they had promised him. When he questioned
them concerning the movements of the stars, none of them could answer him. Wait
for Faustus,
they said, he will explain everything to you.
Faustus of Mileve,
the celebrated Manichæan bishop, at last came to Carthage; Augustine visited and
questioned him, and discovered in his responses the vulgar rhetorician, the
utter stranger to all scientific culture. The spell was broken, and, although
Augustine did not immediately abandon the sect, his mind rejected Manichæan
doctrines. The illusion had lasted nine years.
But the religious crisis of this great soul was only to be resolved in Italy, under the influence of Ambrose. In 383 Augustine, at the age of twenty-nine, yielded to the irresistible attraction which Italy had for him, but his mother suspected his departure and was so reluctant to be separated from him that he resorted to a subterfuge and embarked under cover of the night. He had only just arrived in Rome when he was taken seriously ill; upon recovering he opened a school of rhetoric, but, disgusted by the tricks of his pupils, who shamelessly defrauded him of their tuition fees, he applied for a vacant professorship at Milan, obtained it, and was accepted by the prefect, Symmachus. Having visited Bishop Ambrose, the fascination of that saint's kindness induced him to become a regular attendant at his preachings. However, before embracing the Faith, Augustine underwent a three years' struggle during which his mind passed through several distinct phases. At first he turned towards the philosophy of the Academics, with its pessimistic scepticism; then neo-Platonic philosophy inspired him with genuine enthusiasm. At Milan he had scarcely read certain works of Plato and, more especially, of Plotinus, before the hope of finding the truth dawned upon him. Once more he began to dream that he and his friends might lead a life dedicated to the search for it, a life purged of all vulgar aspirations after honours, wealth, or pleasure, and with celibacy for its rule (Confessions, VI). But it was only a dream; his passions still enslaved him. Monica, who had joined her son at Milan, prevailed upon him to become betrothed, but his affianced bride was too young, and although Augustine dismissed the mother of Adeodatus, her place was soon filled by another. Thus did he pass through one last period of struggle and anguish. Finally, through the reading of the Holy Scriptures light penetrated his mind. Soon he possessed the certainty that Jesus Christ is the only way to truth and salvation. After that resistance came only from the heart. An interview with Simplicianus, the future successor of St. Ambrose, who told Augustine the story of the conversion of the celebrated neo-Platonic rhetorician, Victorinus (Confessions, VIII, i, ii), prepared the way for the grand stroke of grace which, at the age of thirty-three, smote him to the ground in the garden at Milan (September, 386). A few days later Augustine, being ill, took advantage of the autumn holidays and, resigning his professorship, went with Monica, Adeodatus, and his friends to Cassisiacum, the country estate of Verecundus, there to devote himself to the pursuit of true philosophy which, for him, was now inseparable from Christianity.
II. FROM HIS CONVERSION TO HIS EPISCOPATE (386-395)
Augustine gradually became acquainted with Christian doctrine, and in his
mind the fusion of Platonic philosophy with revealed dogmas was taking place.
The law that governed this change of thought has of late years been frequently
misconstrued; it is sufficiently important to be precisely defined. The solitude
of Cassisiacum realized a long-cherished dream. In his books Against the
Academics,
Augustine has described the ideal serenity of this existence,
enlivened only by the passion for truth. He completed the education of his young
friends, now by literary readings in common, now by philosophical conferences to
which he sometimes invited Monica, and the accounts of which, compiled by a
secretary, have supplied the foundation of the Dialogues.
Licentius, in his
Letters
, would later on recall these delightful philosophical mornings and
evenings, at which Augustine was wont to evolve the most elevating discussions
from the most commonplace incidents. The favourite topics at their conferences
were truth, certainty (Against the Academics), true happiness in philosophy (On
a Happy Life), the Providential order of the world and the problem of evil (On
Order) and finally God and the soul (Soliloquies, On the Immortality of the
Soul).
Here arises the curious question propounded modern critics: Was Augustine a
Christian when wrote these Dialogues
at Cassisiacum? Until now no one had
doubted it; historians, relying upon the Confessions,
had all believed that
Augustine's retirement to the villa had for its twofold object the improvement
of his health and his preparation for baptism. But certain critics nowadays
claim to have discovered a radical opposition between the philosophical
Dialogues
composed in this retirement and the state of soul described in the
Confessions.
According to Harnack, in writing the Confessions
Augustine must
have projected upon the recluse of 386 the sentiments of the bishop of 400.
Others go farther and maintain that the recluse of the Milanese villa could not
have been at heart a Christian, but a Platonist; and that the scene in the
garden was a conversion not to Christianity, but to philosophy, the genuinely
Christian phase beginning only in 390. But this interpretation of the Dialogues
cannot withstand the test of facts and texts. It is admitted that Augustine
received baptism at Easter, 387; and who could suppose that it was for him a
meaningless ceremony? So too, how can it be admitted that the scene in the
garden, the example of the recluses, the reading of St. Paul, the conversion of
Victorinus, Augustine's ecstasies in reading the Psalms with Monica were all
invented after the fact? Again, as it was in 388 that Augustine wrote his
beautiful apology On the Holiness of the Catholic Church,
how is it
conceivable that he was not yet a Christian at that date? To settle the argument,
however, it is only necessary to read the Dialogues
themselves. They are
certainly a purely philosophical work - a work of youth, too, not without some
pretension, as Augustine ingenuously acknowledges (Confessions, IX, iv);
nevertheless, they contain the entire history of his Christian formation. As
early as 386, the first work written at Cassisiacum reveals to us the great
underlying motive of his researches. The object of his philosophy is to give
authority the support of reason, and for him the great authority, that which
dominates all others and from which he never wished to deviate, is the authority
of Christ
; and if he loves the Platonists it is because he counts on finding
among them interpretations always in harmony with his faith (Against the
Academics, III, c. x). To be sure such confidence was excessive, but it remains
evident that in these Dialogues
it is a Christian, and not a Platonist, that
speaks. He reveals to us the intimate details of his conversion, the argument
that convinced him (the life and conquests of the Apostles), his progress in the
Faith at the school of St. Paul (ibid., II, ii), his delightful conferences with
his friends on the Divinity of Jesus Christ, the wonderful transformations
worked in his soul by faith, even to that victory of his over the intellectual
pride which his Platonic studies had aroused in him (On The Happy Life, I, ii),
and at last the gradual calming of his passions and the great resolution to
choose wisdom for his only spouse (Soliloquies, I, x).
It is now easy to appreciate at its true value the influence of neo-Platonism
upon the mind of the great African Doctor. It would be impossible for anyone who
has read the works of St. Augustine to deny the existence of this influence.
However, it would be a great exaggeration of this influence to pretend that it
at any time sacrificed the Gospel to Plato. The same learned critic thus wisely
concludes his study: So long, therefore, as his philosophy agrees with his
religious doctrines, St. Augustine is frankly neo-Platonist; as soon as a
contradiction arises, he never hesitates to subordinate his philosophy to
religion, reason to faith. He was, first of all, a Christian; the philosophical
questions that occupied his mind constantly found themselves more and more
relegated to the background
(op. cit., 155). But the method was a dangerous one;
in thus seeking harmony between the two doctrines he thought too easily to find
Christianity in Plato, or Platonism in the Gospel. More than once, in his
Retractations
and elsewhere, he acknowledges that he has not always shunned
this danger. Thus he had imagined that in Platonism he discovered the entire
doctrine of the Word and the whole prologue of St. John. He likewise disavowed a
good number of neo-Platonic theories which had at first misled him - the
cosmological thesis of the universal soul, which makes the world one immense
animal - the Platonic doubts upon that grave question: Is there a single soul
for all or a distinct soul for each? But on the other hand, he had always
reproached the Platonists, as Schaff very properly remarks (Saint Augustine, New
York, 1886, p. 51), with being ignorant of, or rejecting, the fundamental points
of Christianity: first, the great mystery, the Word made flesh; and then love,
resting on the basis of humility.
They also ignore grace, he says, giving
sublime precepts of morality without any help towards realizing them.
It was this Divine grace that Augustine sought in Christian baptism. Towards
the beginning of Lent, 387, he went to Milan and, with Adeodatus and Alypius,
took his place among the competentes, being baptized by Ambrose on Easter Day,
or at least during Eastertide. The tradition maintaining that the Te Deum was
sung on that occasion by the bishop and the neophyte alternately is groundless.
Nevertheless this legend is certainly expressive of the joy of the Church upon
receiving as her son him who was to be her most illustrious doctor. It was at
this time that Augustine, Alypius, and Evodius resolved to retire into solitude
in Africa. Augustine undoubtedly remained at Milan until towards autumn,
continuing his works: On the Immortality of the Soul
and On Music.
In the
autumn of 387, he was about to embark at Ostia, when Monica was summoned from
this life. In all literature there are no pages of more exquisite sentiment than
the story of her saintly death and Augustine's grief (Confessions, IX).
Augustine remained several months in Rome, chiefly engaged in refuting
Manichæism. He sailed for Africa after the death of the tyrant Maximus (August
388) and after a short sojourn in Carthage, returned to his native Tagaste.
Immediately upon arriving there, he wished to carry out his idea of a perfect
life, and began by selling all his goods and giving the proceeds to the poor.
Then he and his friends withdrew to his estate, which had already been alienated,
there to lead a common life in poverty, prayer, and the study of sacred letters.
Book of the LXXXIII Questions
is the fruit of conferences held in this
retirement, in which he also wrote De Genesi contra Manichæos,
De Magistro
,
and, De Vera Religione.
Augustine did not think of entering the priesthood, and, through fear of the
episcopacy, he even fled from cities in which an election was necessary. One day,
having been summoned to Hippo by a friend whose soul's salvation was at stake,
he was praying in a church when the people suddenly gathered about him, cheered
him, and begged Valerius, the bishop, to raise him to the priesthood. In spite
of his tears Augustine was obliged to yield to their entreaties, and was
ordained in 391. The new priest looked upon his ordination as an additional
reason for resuming religious life at Tagaste, and so fully did Valerius approve
that he put some church property at Augustine's disposal, thus enabling him to
establish a monastery the second that he had founded. His priestly ministry of
five years was admirably fruitful; Valerius had bidden him preach, in spite of
the deplorable custom which in Africa reserved that ministry to bishops.
Augustine combated heresy, especially Manichæism, and his success was prodigious.
Fortunatus, one of their great doctors, whom Augustine had challenged in public
conference, was so humiliated by his defeat that he fled from Hippo. Augustine
also abolished the abuse of holding banquets in the chapels of the martyrs. He
took part, 8 October, 393, in the Plenary Council of Africa, presided over by
Aurelius, Bishop of Carthage, and, at the request of the bishops, was obliged to
deliver a discourse which, in its completed form, afterwards became the treatise
De Fide et symbolo.
III. AS BISHOP OF HIPPO (396-430)
Enfeebled by old age, Valerius, Bishop of Hippo, obtained the authorization of Aurelius, Primate of Africa, to associate Augustine with himself as coadjutor. Augustine had to resign himself to consecration at the hands of Megalius, Primate of Numidia. He was then forty two, and was to occupy the See of Hippo for thirty-four years. The new bishop understood well how to combine the exercise of his pastoral duties with the austerities of the religious life, and although he left his convent, his episcopal residence became a monastery where he lived a community life with his clergy, who bound themselves to observe religious poverty. Was it an order of regular clerics or of monks that he thus founded? This is a question often asked, but we feel that Augustine gave but little thought to such distinctions. Be that as it may, the episcopal house of Hippo became a veritable nursery which supplied the founders of the monasteries that were soon spread all over Africa and the bishops who occupied the neighbouring sees. Possidius (Vita S. August., xxii) enumerates ten of the saint's friends and disciples who were promoted to the episcopacy. Thus it was that Augustine earned the title of patriarch of the religious, and renovator of the clerical, life in Africa.
But he was above all the defender of truth and the shepherd of souls. His doctrinal activities, the influence of which was destined to last as long as the Church itself, were manifold: he preached frequently, sometimes for five days consecutively, his sermons breathing a spirit of charity that won all hearts; he wrote letters which scattered broadcast through the then known world his solutions of the problems of that day; he impressed his spirit upon divers African councils at which he assisted, for instance, those of Carthage in 398, 401, 407, 419 and of Mileve in 416 and 418; and lastly struggled indefatigably against all errors. To relate these struggles were endless; we shall, therefore, select only the chief controversies and indicate in each the doctrinal attitude of the great Bishop of Hippo.
A. The Manichæan Controversy and the Problem of Evil
After Augustine became bishop the zeal which, from the time of his baptism,
he had manifested in bringing his former co-religionists into the true Church,
took on a more paternal form without losing its pristine ardour - let those
rage against us who know not at what a bitter cost truth is attained. … As for
me, I should show you the same forbearance that my brethren had for me when I
blind, was wandering in your doctrines
(Contra Epistolam Fundamenti, iii).
Among the most memorable events that occurred during this controversy was the
great victory won in 404 over Felix, one of the elect
of the Manichæans and
the great doctor of the sect. He was propagating his errors in Hippo, and
Augustine invited him to a public conference the issue of which would
necessarily cause a great stir; Felix declared himself vanquished, embraced the
Faith, and, together with Augustine, subscribed the acts of the conference. In
his writings Augustine successively refuted Mani (397), the famous Faustus (400),
Secundinus (405), and (about 415) the fatalistic Priscillianists whom Paulus
Orosius had denounced to him. These writings contain the saint's clear,
unquestionable views on the eternal problem of evil, views based on an optimism
proclaiming, like the Platonists, that every work of God is good and that the
only source of moral evil is the liberty of creatures (De Civitate Dei, XIX, c.
xiii, n. 2). Augustine takes up the defence of free will, even in man as he is,
with such ardour that his works against the Manichæan are an inexhaustible
storehouse of arguments in this still living controversy.
In vain have the Jansenists maintained that Augustine was unconsciously a
Pelagian and that he afterwards acknowledged the loss of liberty through the sin
of Adam. Modern critics, doubtless unfamiliar with Augustine's complicated
system and his peculiar terminology, have gone much farther. In the Revue
d'histoire et de littérature religieuses
(1899, p. 447), M. Margival exhibits
St. Augustine as the victim of metaphysical pessimism unconsciously imbibed from
Manichæan doctrines. Never,
says he, will the Oriental idea of the necessity
and the eternity of evil have a more zealous defender than this bishop.
Nothing
is more opposed to the facts. Augustine acknowledges that he had not yet
understood how the first good inclination of the will is a gift of God
(Retractions, I, xxiii, n, 3); but it should be remembered that he never
retracted his leading theories on liberty, never modified his opinion upon what
constitutes its essential condition, that is to say, the full power of choosing
or of deciding. Who will dare to say that in revising his own writings on so
important a point he lacked either clearness of perception or sincerity?
B. The Donatist Controversy and the Theory of the Church
The Donatist schism was the last episode in the Montanist and Novatian controversies which had agitated the Church from the second century. While the East was discussing under varying aspects the Divine and Christological problem of the Word, the West, doubtless because of its more practical genius, took up the moral question of sin in all its forms. The general problem was the holiness of the Church; could the sinner be pardoned, and remain in her bosom? In Africa the question especially concerned the holiness of the hierarchy. The bishops of Numidia, who, in 312, had refused to accept as valid the consecration of Cæcilian, Bishop of Carthage, by a traditor, had inaugurated the schism and at the same time proposed these grave questions: Do the hierarchical powers depend upon the moral worthiness of the priest? How can the holiness of the Church be compatible with the unworthiness of its ministers?
At the time of Augustine's arrival in Hippo, the schism had attained immense
proportions, having become identified with political tendencies - perhaps with a
national movement against Roman domination. In any event, it is easy to discover
in it an undercurrent of anti-social revenge which the emperors had to combat by
strict laws. The strange sect known as Soldiers of Christ,
and called by
Catholics Circumcelliones (brigands, vagrants), resembled the revolutionary
sects of the Middle Ages in point of fanatic destructiveness - a fact that must
not be lost sight of, if the severe legislation of the emperors is to be
properly appreciated.
The history of Augustine's struggles with the Donatists is also that of his change of opinion on the employment of rigorous measures against the heretics; and the Church in Africa, of whose councils he had been the very soul, followed him in the change. This change of views is solemnly attested by the Bishop of Hippo himself, especially in his Letters, xciii (in the year 408). In the beginning, it was by conferences and a friendly controversy that he sought to re-establish unity. He inspired various conciliatory measures of the African councils, and sent ambassadors to the Donatists to invite them to re-enter the Church, or at least to urge them to send deputies to a conference (403). The Donatists met these advances at first with silence, then with insults, and lastly with such violence that Possidius Bishop of Calamet, Augustine's friend, escaped death only by flight, the Bishop of Bagaïa was left covered with horrible wounds, and the life of the Bishop of Hippo himself was several times attempted (Letter lxxxviii, to Januarius, the Donatist bishop). This madness of the Circumcelliones required harsh repression, and Augustine, witnessing the many conversions that resulted therefrom, thenceforth approved rigid laws. However, this important restriction must be pointed out: that St. Augustine never wished heresy to be punishable by death - Vos rogamus ne occidatis (Letter c, to the Proconsul Donatus). But the bishops still favoured a conference with the schismatics, and in 410 an edict issued by Honorius put an end to the refusal of the Donatists. A solemn conference took place at Carthage, in June, 411, in presence of 286 Catholic, and 279 Donatist bishops. The Donatist spokesmen were Petilian of Constantine, Primian of Carthage, and Emeritus of Cæsarea; the Catholic orators, Aurelius and Augustine. On the historic question then at issue, the Bishop of Hippo proved the innocence of Cæcilian and his consecrator Felix, and in the dogmatic debate he established the Catholic thesis that the Church, as long as it is upon earth, can, without losing its holiness, tolerate sinners within its pale for the sake of converting them. In the name of the emperor the Proconsul Marcellinus sanctioned the victory of the Catholics on all points. Little by little Donatism died out, to disappear with the coming of the Vandals.
So amply and magnificently did Augustine develop his theory on the Church
that, according to Specht he deserves to be named the Doctor of the Church as
well as the Doctor of Grace
; and Möhler (Dogmatik, 351) is not afraid to write:
For depth of feeling and power of conception nothing written on the Church
since St. Paul's time, is comparable to the works of St. Augustine.
He has
corrected, perfected, and even excelled the beautiful pages of St. Cyprian on
the Divine institution of the Church, its authority, its essential marks, and
its mission in the economy of grace and the administration of the sacraments.
The Protestant critics, Dorner, Bindemann, Böhringer and especially Reuter,
loudly proclaim, and sometimes even exaggerate, this rôle of the Doctor of Hippo;
and while Harnack does not quite agree with them in every respect he does not
hesitate to say (History of Dogma, II, c. iii): It is one of the points upon
which Augustine specially affirms and strengthens the Catholic idea. … He was
the first [!] to transform the authority of the Church into a religious power,
and to confer upon practical religion the gift of a doctrine of the Church.
He
was not the first, for Dorner acknowledges (Augustinus, 88) that Optatus of
Mileve had expressed the basis of the same doctrines. Augustine, however,
deepened, systematized, and completed the views of St. Cyprian and Optatus. But
it is impossible here to go into detail. (See Specht, Die Lehre von der Kirche
nach dem hl. Augustinus, Paderborn, l892.)
C. The Pelagian Controversy and the Doctor of Grace
The close of the struggle against the Donatists almost coincided with the
beginnings of a very grave theological dispute which not only was to demand
Augustine's unremitting attention up to the time of his death, but was to become
an eternal problem for individuals and for the Church. Farther on we shall
enlarge upon Augustine's system; here we need only indicate the phases of the
controversy. Africa, where Pelagius and his disciple Celestius had sought refuge
after the taking of Rome by Alaric, was the principal centre of the first
Pelagian disturbances; as early as 412 a council held at Carthage condemned
Pelagians for their attacks upon the doctrine of original sin. Among other books
directed against them by Augustine was his famous De naturâ et gratiâ.
Thanks
to his activity the condemnation of these innovators, who had succeeded in
deceiving a synod convened at Diospolis in Palestine, was reiterated by councils
held later at Carthage and Mileve and confirmed by Pope Innocent I (417). A
second period of Pelagian intrigues developed at Rome, but Pope Zosimus, whom
the stratagems of Celestius had for a moment deluded, being enlightened by
Augustine, pronounced the solemn condemnation of these heretics in 418.
Thenceforth the combat was conducted in writing against Julian of Eclanum, who
assumed the leadership of the party and violently attacked Augustine. Towards
426 there entered the lists a school which afterwards acquired the name of
Semipelagian, the first members being monks of Hadrumetum in Africa, who were
followed by others from Marseilles, led by Cassian, the celebrated abbot of
Saint-Victor. Unable to admit the absolute gratuitousness of predestination,
they sought a middle course between Augustine and Pelagius, and maintained that
grace must be given to those who merit it and denied to others; hence goodwill
has the precedence, it desires, it asks, and God rewards. Informed of their
views by Prosper of Aquitaine, the holy Doctor once more expounded, in De
Prædestinatione Sanctorum,
how even these first desires for salvation are due
to the grace of God, which therefore absolutely controls our predestination.
D. Struggles against Arianism and Closing Years
In 426 the holy Bishop of Hippo, at the age of seventy-two, wishing to spare his episcopal city the turmoil of an election after his death, caused both clergy and people to acclaim the choice of the deacon Heraclius as his auxiliary and successor, and transferred to him the administration of externals. Augustine might then have enjoyed some rest had Africa not been agitated by the undeserved disgrace and the revolt of Count Boniface (427). The Goths, sent by the Empress Placidia to oppose Boniface, and the Vandals, whom the latter summoned to his assistance, were all Arians. Maximinus, an Arian bishop, entered Hippo with the imperial troops. The holy Doctor defended the Faith at a public conference (428) and in various writings. Being deeply grieved at the devastation of Africa, he laboured to effect a reconciliation between Count Boniface and the empress. Peace was indeed re stablished, but not with Genseric, the Vandal king. Boniface, vanquished, sought refuge in Hippo, whither many bishops had already fled for protection and this well fortified city was to suffer the horrors of an eighteen months' siege. Endeavouring to control his anguish, Augustine continued to refute Julian of Eclanum; but early in the siege he was stricken with what he realized to be a fatal illness, and, after three months of admirable patience and fervent prayer, departed from this land of exile on 28 August, 430, in the seventy-sixth year of his age.
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