St. Augustine's Analysis

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St Augustine instilled a profound impact in the interpretation of the new religion of Christianity. Augustine was well versed in various subjects such as metaphysics and politics but the most important was his engrossment in the Platonic Ideas. His understanding of the body and the soul made him one of the founding philosophers to define Christianity and how one must interpret the scriptures of God. In his era, 400 BC Christianity was emerging as a young faith with know concrete bounds; St. Augustine created a sophisticated doctrine of Christian way of life by not only incorporating but appropriating ideas taken from Platonic ideas as well as Neo-Platonism beliefs. In this philosopher’s eyes, Plato’s idea of a universal being was God himself; …show more content…

Augustine’s appropriation of Plato’s two level analysis of the material world compared to Godly truth has created the idea that God is an immaterial substance that exerts His existence throughout space and time. The appropriation of these ideas in religion consequentially causes St. Augustine to face his trespasses; The Confessions sole purpose is to narrate Augustine’s life in comparison to how the bible believes a person of the faith should live. By breaking down each damnation Augustine not only corrects his way of life but shows how the journey his soul takes to obtain purity as Plato would explain is one in the same in correlation to earning his spot inside of the gates of …show more content…

Augustine could fully interpret the Word by using the influences of Plato and Neo-Platonists Augustine could assertively face his trespasses and record the events of his spiritual journey. Augustine makes his sole purpose of this novel to ask God for redemption and mercy; The Confessions becomes an actual confession between him and his Lord. This also influenced the structure of the book; in the beginning nine books Augustine describes all his major life events including the heavy loss he endured when his mother, mistress and son died. For example, in book one Augustine states. “But my sin was this, that I looked for pleasure, beauty, and truth not in him but in myself and his other creatures, and the search led me instead to pain, confusion, and error” (Augustine). This statement summarizes the general idea of what sin is in Christianity, he details all his sins and tells his readers how each sin wasn’t a sinful pleasure but instead a distraction from his connection with God. As he concludes The Confessions, he ends his autobiography with the last four books by detailing his spiritual journey and discussing the importance of God’s scripture and the philosophies that tie in to Christianity. He summarizes his belief in book seven, stating, “All who know the truth know this Light, and all who know this Light know eternity. By saying this Augustine asserts that light, truth, and the universal being that is God are synonymous. Overall the structure of Confessions

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