D
djeter
Guest
Been doing a lot of reading on St. Augustine."This is the very perfection of a man, to find out his own imperfections."
– Saint Augustine
Sometimes you come across references to St. Augustine in other readings – sort of “asides” that illuminate a lot of what Augustine was or meant to the writer. These are some instances that I encountered the past several years and probably resulted in my reading even more deeply into the man and his thought. When you survey the depth of these observations, it makes you stand in awe of the man that Augustine was.
A collection of these “asides” here:
payingattentiontothesky.com/2009/08/14/the-majesty-of-st-augustine/
And much more in a category I’ve devoted to him here:
payingattentiontothesky.com/category/great-men-of-the-church/st-augustine-great-men-of-the-church/
which features selections from John Paul II’s AUGUSTINUM HIPPONSENSEM.
I always found this amazing for a 4th Century man:
Augustine teaches no less insistently freedom from time, a freedom that Christ, the eternal Word, has come to bring us by his entry into the world in the incarnation: “O Word that exists before time, through whom time was made,” he exclaims, “born in time although You are eternal life, calling those who exist in time and making them eternal!” It is well known that St. Augustine studied deeply the mystery of time and both felt and stated the need to transcend time in order to exist truly. “That you may be truly yourself, transcend time. But who shall transcend it by his own power? Let Christ lift him up, as He said to the Father: ‘I wish that they too may be with me where I am.’”
Regards
dj