Title: Reading Augustine's Confessions Lecture 2: Books I and II
1Reading Augustine's ConfessionsLecture 2 Books
I and II
2Three Part Analysis
- Historical and philosophical background on each
Book - Historical and social context
- Intellectual movements
- People
- Key aspects of the Book itself
- Truth about human nature
- Epistemology
- Language
- Evil and sin
- Love and Happiness
- Truth about Creation
- Truth about God
- Connections between Book understudy and other
Books - Influence of Confessions
- Impact in later intellectual history
- How does this theological reflection touch us
3Roman Africa
- Ancient Roman Province, dating to Roman conquest
of Carthage in last Punic Wars, 146 BC - Economically prosperous
- Capital city Carthage, rebuilt after the wars
- By Augustines time, it was proudly Roman
- One of few areas of Mediterranean where Greek was
not much spoken - Greatest Latin orators were said to come from
Africa
4Roman Africa (cont.)
- http//people.usd.edu/clehmann/pir/map.gif
5Roman Family
- Defined very broadly
- Husband, wife, children
- Business clients
- Servants, slaves
- Common practice of adult adoption
- Ruled by father, paterfamilia
- Sons and others governed by father until his death
6Roman Education
- Primary school most boys
- 7 to 12 years old
- Teacher magister taught mixed age class
- Reading, writing and arithmetic
- Discipline through corporal punishment
- Secondary School,
- Wealthy and precocious boys, 12 15
- Teacher grammaticus
- Emphasis on Latin language and some Greek
- Orator School 15 - 20
- In major cities, for most ambitious and brightest
students - Teacher was orator
- Emphasis on rhetoric
- Preparation for important careers in law courts
and administration
7Virgil and the Aeneid
- Virgil (70 19 BC) most famous and important
Roman poet - Aeneid most famous work
- Roman children learned Latin by studying Aenied
- Learned the great myth of Roman history
- Story of Aeneas after fall of Troy
- Travels around the Mediterranean
- Meets Dido in Carthage, falls in love but must
leave her to continue to Italy and Rome - Already an old classic by Augustines time
8Christianity in Fourth Century Africa
- Earliest Latin theologians come from Africa
- Tertullian (d. 212)
- St. Cyprian (d. 257)
- Embroiled in questions of how pure should
Church be - No one should seriously sin after Baptism
- Those who did should not be forgiven and admitted
back into Church - Majority of Christians were Donatists, who
believed in the Church of the Pure - Effectiveness of sacraments was dependent on
personal holiness of minister - Bitter, bitter foes of Augustine
- Baptism as adults (Catholics and Donatists)
9Confessions Structure
- Augustine's Reflection on His Past
- Book I From God birth and relationship of
infant with mother - Book II Bondage of Flesh
- Book III Slavery of eyes and mind problem of
evil - Book IV Ambition of World
- Book V Encounter with Faustus, Manichaeism,
philosophy moving from Carthage to Rome - Book VI Recognition of emptiness of worlds
ambition - Book VII Freedom of mind resolution of problem
of evil - Book VIII Liberation from bondage of flesh
- Book IX Relation to Monica, her death, return to
God - Augustines Present
- Book X Memory
- Book XI Time
- Book XII Interpreting Scripture
- Book XIII Trinity and Church
10Outline of Book I
- Opening Prayer I.i.1 I.v.6
- Infancy I.vi.7 I.vii.12
- Natural Learning and Primary School I.viii.13
I.x.16 - Early Illness I.xi.17 I.xi.18
- Secondary School I.xii.19 I.xviii.29
- Early Sins I.xix.30
- Closing Prayer I.xix.31
11Book I Opening Prayer I.i.1 I.v.6
- Begins with a prayer, a Psalm
- But quickly includes references to 2 Cor., Rom.,
and Mt. - Includes one of most famous lines from Augustine
Our heart is restless until it rests in You.
(I.i.1) - Note the importance of questions, many of which
will not be directly answered - Note the importance of paradoxes about Gods
nature (and our limited ability to understand
God) in I.iv.4 - This prayer is echoed at the end of Book XIII
- Sets the tone of the entire work as a
theological reflection
12Book IInfancy I.6.7 I.7.12
- infantia Latin, noun meaning inability to speak
- Note I.6.7 begins with Augustine asking God to
allow him to speak in Gods presence - Trace development of babies
- Helpless (but only because of weakness)
- Laughter
- Not innocent
- Parents care for babies, and babies grow, as part
fo Gods plan, in accordance with eternal law - Note how adults react to babies
- An enduring, unanswered question for Augustine
does human soul pre-exist conception - Discussion of God and time will be significantly
expanded in Book XI
13Book I Natural Learning and Primary School
I.8.13 I.10.16
- Augustine becomes a boy when he can talk
- Learns to talk so that he can make his desires
better understood - Relationship between actual object and words
which signify them - Forced learning at school nothing like natural
learning of language - First prayer was to avoid being beaten at school
- Note how adults are like children, although
adults laugh at children
14Book I Early Illness I.11.17 I.11.18
- Augustine almost baptized due to early illness
- Common practice not to baptize until later in
adult life - Example of Ambrose
- Note comparisons between bodily health and
physical health - Jesus as physician of the soul
- Church as hospital for the sinful
- Note more said about baptism here than in Book IX
15Book I Secondary School I.12.19 I.18.29
- Augustine must be forced to learn
- Sinfulness of parents and teachers who put
pressure on him to succeed in thinks of the world - Sinfulness of himself as a boy unwilling to learn
So tiny a child, so great a sinner - Augustine does not learn Greek
- Greek language of the Bible
- Differences between natural and forced language
learning - Comparison of wanderings and love of Aeneas and
Dido and his own wanderings in search for true
Love - Use of language in education to teach errors, not
the Truth - Problems with rhetoric as a career
16Book I Early Sins I.19.30 I.20.31
- Is this childhood innocence?
- Lying
- Stealing
- Cheating
- My sin consisted in this, that I sought
pleasure, sublimity and truth not in God but in
his creatures, in myself and in other created
beings.
17Book II Outline
- Developing Sexuality II.i.1 II.ii.4
- His Parents Reaction II.iii.5 II.iii.8
- Stealing the Pears II.iv.9 II.x.18
18Book II Developing Sexuality II.i.1 II.ii.4
- Dual wakening of sexual desire and personal
ambition in Augustine - But erotic awakening does not lead to happiness,
quite the contrary - Where was I in the sixteenth year?
- Only concern of family was his career
- Both ambition and lust resolved in Book VIII
19Book II His Parents Reaction II.iii.5 II.iii.8
- Patricius
- Augustine writes very little about him a convert
very late in life - Worked hard to save money to send Augustine to
best school in Carthage, my father had more
enthusiasm than cash - No moral guidance from his father
- Patricius very happy over prospect fo
grandchildren - Monica
- A main character
- Born into a Catholic family
- Some moral guidance for Augustine, at least dont
get involved with a married woman - Also eager for grandchildren see how this will
change at conclusion of Book VIII
20Book II Stealing the Pears II.iv.9 II.x.18
- Augustine and a group of friends steal pears
after carousing late one night - A great meditation on true and false friendships
- Effect of community and society on actions
- Note especially how turning to the wrong things,
away from God leads to sins (II.vi.13) - Sins as disordered desires
- Sins which have the wrong object
- Sins cannot satisfy these desires
- Note that the great climax in Book VIII also
occurs in a garden under a tree
21Influence of Confessions Book I and II
- New Literary Genre
- Theory of Language
22New Literary Genre
- Biographies and autobiographies were part of
ancient literature - But a soul-searching prayer and theological
reflection are new - Includes some elements of autobiography, BUT
- Augustine gives us little specifics,
- Certainly does not cast himself in the best light
- His prayer as a way to help his fellow
pilgrimsBook X
23Language Augustines Theory of Signs
- A thing (res) is an external reality
- Sign (signum) is something sensed which shows the
mind something else - Natural signs, e.g. smoke indicating fire
- Conventional or given (data) signs
- Words (verbum) are a type (but not the only type)
of given signs - De Doctrina Christiana (Teaching Christianity)
24Augustines Theory of Language
- Human communication of reality is by the signs of
words - Inherent ambiguity of how to use words
- Denotation vs connotation
- Language is not unique
- Multiple languages not only with different words
but with different structures - Same sounding word can mean different things in
different languages (e.g., lege)
25Relation Between Language and Thought
- What is to be said is in the heart, the inner man
- Only when it is to be communicated is the choice
of specific language made - Matching the differences in your audience you
employ different languages in order to produce
the word you have conceived but what you have
conceived in your heart was confined to no
language. (Tractates on John 3.14.7) - We learn language as a child by learning to
associate words with thoughts, feelings and things
26The Unambiguous Word Jesus Christ
- The Word is the perfect eternal Truth (no
ambiguity) - Word became flesh to cure our corrupt souls
- Perfect Word becomes perfect man
- Mediator of grace to us
- Confessions VII, Epistles and Tractates on John
27Augustine and Sacraments
- Sacraments are a movement from visible to
invisible, from ordinary experience to spiritual
reality - Sacraments as visible divine word
- Sacrament both sign and reality of the mystery
(spiritual reality) of Christ - Scripture as a sacrament
- Interpretation of Scripture as a Sacrament
- Creed and Lords Prayer as Sacraments
- Triduum
- Church is the authority that mediates sacraments
(including Scripture) - Baptism
- Eucharist theory of sacrifice CoG X.4-6
- Sermon 272, 228
28Ludwig Wittgenstein
- Born in Vienna in 1889
- Moved to Cambridge in 1911 and developed close
relation with Bertrand Russell - Returned to Austria and fought in WW I
- POW
- After WWI settled permanently in Cambridge
- Died in 1951
29Wittgenstein and Language
- The only problem in philosophy is language
- Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus was first
published in German in 1921, shortly after in
English - Thought is more like a picture than language
- Language used to express thoughts
- Philosophical Investigations was published
posthumously in 1953 (translated and edited by
G.E.M. Anscombe) - A type of reconsideration of earlier work
- Begins with Augustine and language
- Augustines ostensible model of language too
limiting in particular does not account for how
words change within context of use - Develops language-game as a way to describe
language but rules of game are not static
30Some Things To Notice As you Read
- Augustine is always asking questions, even if he
never gets to an answer - Augustine's use of Scripture, especially Psalms,
as he reflects on his life - The difference between true and false friendship
- Effects on Augustines education of
- Family
- Friends
- Teachers
- Reading
31Book I and II Questions to Consider
- Are babies cute and innocent? What might this
imply about human nature? - What do you think of his parents reaction to his
sexuality as a teenager? - What was our earliest prayer? Do we have any
prayers other than prayers of petition?
32Questions to ask in all Books
- How is Augustine modern?
- What is love?
- What is friendship?
- What is sin and evil?
- What role does faith play in Augustine's life?
- Where is happiness found?
33Assignment
- Read carefully Confessions Books I and II
- On Christian Teaching, Book II (optional)
- Brown, Augustine of Hippo, Chapters 1, 2 and 3
- Post one long paragraph by Friday June 4
- Post two responses by Sunday June 6
- Remember
- Focus on Augustine, not secondary sources
- References should be Book.Chapter.Paragraph
(e.g., I.i.1) NOT page numbers