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Augustine


20 Nov 2004

Augustine (354-430)

Major works

          City of God

          On Christian Doctrine

          On the Trinity (self-proclaimed most important work)

          Confessions

Importance

          Antiquity’s greatest theologian and most important church theologian until the Reformation

          Father of orthodox theology

          Developed theology as an academic discipline

          Council of Carthage decided for Augustine’s views on grace and sin and condemned Pelagianism

          Saved when he heard a child say, “Tolle lege” (“take up and read”)

          He adopted an amillennial view when Ambrose taught him it was okay to allegorize the OT

Theological/Doctrinal Views

Trinity

          Held to the eternal subordination of the Son

          Distinctions within the Trinity are primarily relational

          Viewed the Holy Spirit as the bond of love

Soteriology

                      Augustine is first father to seriously address soteriology; discussed areas such as predestination, original sin, and free will

                      Man’s election is based upon God’s eternal decree of predestination

                      Faith itself is a gift of God

                      Avoids extremes of Manicheans and Pelagains—both grace and free will are to be affirmed

                      Changed views on free will–from free will to free will held captive

                      Free will is not lost but incapacitated and can be healed by grace

                      The free will of the individual before salvation is only capable of evil—only after regeneration (operative grace) is free will capable of responding positively to God with the aid of continuing grace (co-operative grace)

                      God’s prevenient grace prepares man’s will for justification

                      Grace is intimately connected with the sacrament of baptism (thus no salvation w/o baptism)

                      His view of justification underwent significant development

                      He says “to justify” means to “make righteous” not “declare righteous” (this became the view of the Roman Catholic Church); thus righteousness is “inherent” and not “imputed”

                      Justification is an event and a process

                      Righteousness is located within man

                      His view of justification is close to the Greek concept of justification

                      Merit is important but even this comes from God

                      By justification, Augustine comes close to understanding the restoration of the entire universe to its original order

                      The motif of the “love of God” dominates his theology of justification

                      Faith is adherence to the Word of God

Ecclesiology

          Said failed brethren should be accepted back into fellowship

          Said sacraments are not invalid because of a bad administrator (contra Donatists)

Eschatology

          Known as the father of amillennialism