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St' Augustine

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Developed around the medieval tendency to treat ancient sources (including the ... to teach, to delight, and to move, but changed them to serve Christianity. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: St' Augustine


1
Comunicación y Gerencia
  • St. Augustine
  • Or
  • Augustine of Hippo

On Christian Doctrine
2
History of Christian Rhetoric
  • Christianity rose with the fall of the Roman
    Empire
  • It eventually dominated Europe and took control
    of public and private life
  • Legislative assemblies were no longer needed

3
Scholasticism
  • Developed around the medieval tendency to treat
    ancient sources (including the Bible) as
    authoritive.
  • Sententiae isolated statements from ancient
    sources.
  • Quaestiones disputes centered on debatable
    points suggested by one or more sententiae.

4
Scholasticism
  • In this way rhetoric made its way into the Middle
    Ages.
  • Unfortunately sentences separated from original
    context usually lost their original meanings.

5
The Life of St. Augustine
  • Born in Thagaste, North Africa (part of the
    waning Roman Empire) in 353 A.D. to Berber
    parents
  • Converted to Christianity after hearing a divine
    voice in a country garden in 386
  • Baptized in 387, also had his illegitimate son
    baptized at this time
  • Ordained as priest in 391
  • In around 396, became Bishop of Hippo largest
    port city in Roman North Africa
  • Died in 430, three months into the siege of Hippo
    by the Vandals

6
  • The Triumph of St. Augustine
  • By Claudio Coello
  • 1664
  • Museo del Prado, Madrid

7
Augustine sought a true art of rhetoric that
could be used in the service of transcendent
truth, in his case, the truth of the Christian
scripture. Herrick
8
Augustines 3 Tasks
  • Set 2 tasks on Christian teachers
  • -- to discover and teach the contents of the
    scripture
  • 3rd task came later
  • -- to defend scriptural truth when it was
    attacked (using rhetoric)

9
On Christian Doctrine
  • Consists of four books
  • The first three instructs the Christian pastor on
    how to correctly interpret the Scriptures
  • And book four instructs the pastor on how to
    convey their truth to diverse audiences.

10
Divides World into Categories
  • Implies separation of things (truths, realities)
    and words (signs pointing to things)
  • Leads to the Platonic conclusion that language
    is only a means to the final, silent
    contemplation of divine truth. Bizzell and
    Herzberg
  • So a tree in the Bible, may be a sign of a thing,
    such as eternal life.

11
Books I II
  • Book I
  • discusses things to be enjoyed and things to
    be used (Platonic)
  • Book II
  • discusses signs unknown literal, unknown
    figurative, ambiguous literal, and ambiguous
    figurative
  • says its better to have truth than logic
  • commends Platonists as knowing some truth

12
Books III IV
  • Book III
  • discusses ambiguous signs ambiguous literal
    and ambiguous figurative
  • Book IV
  • discusses the relationship between Christian
    truth and eloquence
  • shows how the Christian preacher can use
    precepts from classical rhetoric

13
On Christian Doctrine
  • For those who speak eloquently are listened to
    with pleasure those who speak with wisdom are
    heard with profit (8, p. 459) .
  • One who teaches will avoid all words which do
    not teach and if in place of them he can use
    other correct expressions which are intelligible,
    he will choose these by preference, but if he
    cannot, he will use words even less correct,
    provided, however, that the matter itself be
    taught and learned correctly (24, p. 465).

14
Augustine and Cicero
Augustine used Ciceros ideas of rhetoric to
teach, to delight, and to move, but changed them
to serve Christianity. (27, p. 466) The
preacher must know subject matter to teach it
well. He must also know how to reach his
congregations emotions (to delight), and to
pursuade them to Christian living (to move). --
Herrick
15
On Rhetoric
  • Uses rhetoric to try to convince the reader that
    rhetoric charm should not be used if it is used
    for falsehood. (29, 30, p. 467)
  • Uses Bible passages to make points or to
    illustrate examples of styles to be used as
    teaching tools (sententiae).
  • Encourages teachers to mix styles to achieve the
    most success.

16
Questions
  • How does Augustines approach to rhetoric
    resemble Platos?
  • Excluding preaching itself, which rhetorical
    practices of our own time seek goals similar to
    those of medieval preaching?
  • How did Augustine use Ciceros rhetoric ideas for
    the Church?
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