| Part ofa series on |
| Augustinianism |
|---|
Other similar developments |
Contrary positions |
Augustinianism is the philosophical and theological system ofAugustine of Hippo and its subsequent development by other thinkers, notablyBoethius,Anselm of Canterbury andBonaventure.[1][2][3] Among Augustine's most important works areThe City of God,De doctrina Christiana, andConfessions.
Originally, Augustinianism developed in opposition toPelagianism;[4] it was widespread inmedieval western philosophy until the arrival ofThomism andAristotelianism.[5]
Plato andPlotinus influenced Augustine in many ways, and he is considered aNeoplatonic philosopher.[6][7] TheAugustinian theodicy and other Augustinian doctrines such as thedivine illumination and theinvisible church show a strong Platonic influence.[8][9][10]
Pope Benedict XVI cautioned that all of theWestern Church teaching leads to him:
St Augustine. This man of passion and faith, of the highest intelligence and tireless in his pastoral care, a great Saint and Doctor of the Church is often known, at least by hearsay, even by those who ignore Christianity or who are not familiar with it, because he left a very deep mark on the cultural life of the West and on the whole world. Because of his special importance St Augustine's influence was widespread. It could be said on the one hand that all the roads of Latin Christian literature led to Hippo (today Annaba, on the coast of Algeria), the place where he was Bishop from 395 to his death in 430, and, on the other, that from this city of Roman Africa, many other roads of later Christianity and of Western culture itself branched out.[11]
| Part ofa series on | ||||
| Catholic philosophy | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
"Augustine considered the human race as a compact mass, a collective body, responsible in its unity and solidarity. Carrying out his system in all its logical consequences, he laid down the following rigid proposition as his doctrine: 'As all men have sinned inAdam; they are subject to the condemnation ofGod on account of this hereditary sin and the guilt thereof'"[12][13][who?]
According to Augustine, even the world and corporeal entities, being fruits ofdivine love, have their value and meaning, while the some Platonists tended instead to devalue them.[14] This attempt to place history and earthly existence within a heavenly perspective, where even evil finds explanation in some way, always remained at the center of its philosophical concerns.
These are the most important values for an Augustinian.[15]
Augustine offered theDivine command theory, a theory which proposes that an action's status asmorallygood is equivalent to whether it is commanded byGod.[16][17] Augustine's theory began by casting ethics as the pursuit of the supreme good, which delivers human happiness, Augustine argued that to achieve this happiness, humans must love objects that are worthy of human love in the correct manner; this requires humans to love God, which then allows them to correctly love that which is worthy of being loved. Augustine's ethics proposed that the act of loving God enables humans to properly orient their loves, leading to human happiness and fulfilment.[18]
TheJust war theory is a doctrine that ensurewar is morally justifiable through a series of criteria, all of which must be met for a war to be considered just. In Romans 13:4 Augustine claims that, while individuals should not resort immediately to violence, God has given the sword to government for good reason. Augustine argues thatChristians, as part of a government, need not be ashamed of protecting peace and punishing wickedness when forced to do so by a government. Augustine asserted that this was a personal, philosophical stance: "What is here required is not a bodily action, but an inward disposition. The sacred seat of virtue is the heart."[19][20]
Augustine's ethics is that of ancienteudaimonism,[21] but he defers happiness to the afterlife and blames the ancient ethicists saying that their arrogant conviction resulting from their ignorance of the fallen condition of humanity that they could reach happiness in this life by philosophical endeavor,[22][23] Augustine takes it as axiomatic that happiness is the ultimate goal pursued by all human beings.[24][25][26] For Augustine Happiness or the good life is brought about by the possession of the greatest good in nature that humans can attain and that one cannot lose against one's will.[7]
Augustine emphasised the role ofdivine illumination in our thought, saying that "The mind needs to be enlightened by light from outside itself, so that it can participate in truth, because it is not itself the nature of truth. You will light my lamp, Lord,"[27]
For Augustine, God does not give us certain information, but rather gives us insight into the truth of the information we received for ourselves.
Thomas Aquinas criticizes thedivine illumination, denying that in this life we have divine ideas as an object of thought, and that divine illumination is sufficient on its own, without thesenses. Aquinas also denied that there is a special continuing divine influence on human thought. People have sufficient capacity for thought on their own, without needing "new illumination added onto their natural illumination".[29]
Saint Augustine was one of the first Christianancient Latin authors with very clear anthropological vision. Augustine saw the human being as a perfect unity of two substances: soul and body.[30] He was much closer in this anthropological view to Aristotle than to Plato.[31][32] In his late treatiseOn Care to Be Had for the Dead sec. 5 (420 AD) he insisted that the body pertains to the essence of the humanperson:
In no wise are the bodies themselves to be spurned. (...) For these pertain not to ornament or aid which is applied from without, but to the very nature of man.[33]
Augustine's favourite figure to describebody-soul unity is marriage:caro tua, coniunx tua – your body is your wife.[34][35][36] According to N. Blasquez, Saint Augustine's dualism of substances of the body and soul doesn't stop him from seeing the unity of body and soul as a substance itself.[32][37] Following ancient philosophers he defined man as arational mortal animal –animal rationale mortale.[38][39]

Augustine wrote that original sin is transmitted byconcupiscence and enfeebles freedom of the will without destroying it.[40] For Augustine, Adam's sin[41] is transmitted by concupiscence, or "hurtful desire",[42][43] resulting in humanity becoming amassa damnata (mass of perdition, condemned crowd), with much enfeebled, though not destroyed, freedom of will. When Adam sinned, human nature was thenceforth transformed. Adam and Eve, via sexual reproduction, recreated human nature. Their descendants now live in sin, in the form of concupiscence, a term Augustine used in ametaphysical, not apsychological sense.[44] Augustine insisted that concupiscence was nota being but abad quality, theprivation of good or a wound.[45] He admitted that sexual concupiscence (libido) might have been present in the perfect human nature inparadise, and that only later it became disobedient to human will as a result of the first couple's disobedience to God's will in the* original sin.[46] In Augustine's view (termed "Realism"), all of humanity was really present in Adam when he sinned, and therefore all have sinned. Original sin, according to Augustine, consists of the guilt of Adam which all humans inherit. Justo Gonzalez interprets Augustine's teaching that humans are utterly depraved in nature and grace isirresistible, results in conversion, and leads toperseverance.[47]
Augustine's understanding of the consequences of original sin and the necessity of redeeming grace was developed in the struggle againstPelagius and hisPelagian disciples,Caelestius andJulian of Eclanum,[47] who had been inspired byRufinus of Syria, a disciple ofTheodore of Mopsuestia.[48] They refused to agree that original sin wounded human will and mind, insisting that human nature was given the power to act, to speak, and to think when God created it. Human nature cannot lose its moral capacity for doing good, but a person is free to act or not to act in a righteous way. Pelagius gave an example of eyes: they have capacity for seeing, but a person can make either good or bad use of it.[49]
TheCatholic Church accepts the doctrine of original sin as Augustine taught.[50]
| Part ofa series on |
| Augustine of Hippo |
|---|
Augustine inThe Four Doctors of the Western Church |
| Augustinianism |
| Works |
| Influences and followers |
| Related topics |
| Related categories |
For Augustine God orders all things while preserving human freedom.[51] Prior to 396, Augustine believed thatpredestination was based on God's foreknowledge of whether individuals would believe, that God's grace was "a reward for human assent".[51] Later, in response toPelagius, Augustine said that the sin ofpride consists in assuming that "we are the ones who choose God or that God chooses us (in his foreknowledge) because of something worthy in us", and argued that it is God's grace that causes the individual act of faith.[51]
Some Catholics dispute that Augustine believed predestination in the latter way, and claim that Augustine affirmedfree will in the choice of being saved or not.[52]
Theproblem of evil is the question of how to reconcile the existence ofevil with anomnipotent,omnibenevolent, andomniscientGod.[53][54]
Augustine develops key ideas regarding his response to suffering. InConfessions, Augustine wrote that his previous work was dominated bymaterialism and that reading the works ofPlato enabled him to consider the existence of a non-physicalsubstance. This helped him develop a response to the problem of evil from a theological (and non-Manichean) perspective,[10]
Augustine rejected the notion that evil exists in itself, proposing instead that it is a privation of (or falling away from) good, and a corruption of nature.[55] He wrote that "evil has no positive nature; but the loss of good has received the name 'evil.'"[56] Both moral andnatural evil occurs, Augustine argued, owing to an evil use of free will,[57] which could be traced back to the original sin ofAdam and Eve.[58] He believed that this evil will, present in thehuman soul, was a corruption of the will given to humans by God, making suffering a just punishment for the sin of humans.[59] Because Augustine believed that all of humanity was "seminally present in the loins of Adam", he argued that all of humanity inherited Adam's sin and his just punishment.[60] However, in spite of his belief that free will can be turned to evil, Augustine maintained that it is vital for humans to have free will, because they could not live well without it. He argued that evil could come from humans because, although humans contained no evil, they were also not perfectly good and hence could be corrupted.[61]
Pelagius' teachings on human nature, divine grace, and sin were opposed to those of Augustine, who declared Pelagius "the enemy of the grace of God".[62][63][a] Augustine distilled what he called Pelagianism into three heretical tenets: "to think that God redeems according to some scale of human merit; to imagine that some human beings are actually capable of a sinless life; to suppose that the descendants of the first human beings to sin are themselves born innocent".[65][b] In Augustine's writings, Pelagius is a symbol ofhumanism who excluded God from human salvation.[63] Pelagianism shaped Augustine's ideas in opposition to his own on free will, grace, and original sin,[67][68][69] and much ofThe City of God is devoted to countering Pelagian arguments.[70] Another major difference in the two thinkers was that Pelagius emphasized obedience to God for fear of hell, which Augustine considered servile. In contrast, Augustine argued that Christians should be motivated by the delight and blessings of theHoly Spirit and believed that it was treason "to do the right deed for the wrong reason".[71] According to Augustine, credit for all virtue and good works is due to God alone,[72] and to say otherwise caused arrogance, which is the foundation of sin.[73]
According to Peter Brown, "For a sensitive man of the fifth century, Manichaeism, Pelagianism, and the views of Augustine were not as widely separated as we would now see them: they would have appeared to him as points along the great circle of problems raised by the Christian religion".[74]John Cassian argued for a middle way between Pelagianism and Augustinianism, in which the human will is not negated but presented as intermittent, sick, and weak,[75] and Jerome held a middle position on sinlessness.[76] In Gaul, the so-called "semi-Pelagians" disagreed with Augustine onpredestination (but recognized the three Pelagian doctrines as heretical) and were accused by Augustine of being seduced by Pelagian ideas.[77] According to Ali Bonner, the crusade against Pelagianism and other heresies narrowed the range of acceptable opinions and reduced theintellectual freedom of classical Rome.[78] When it came to grace and especially predestination, it was Augustine's ideas, not Pelagius', which were novel.[79][80][81]
| Belief | Pelagianism | Augustinianism |
|---|---|---|
| Fall of man | Sets a bad example, but does not affecthuman nature[82][83] | Every human's nature is corrupted byoriginal sin, and they also inherit moral guilt[82][83] |
| Free will | Absolute freedom of choice[62][84] | Original sin renders men unable to choose good[85] |
| Status of infants | Blameless[86] | Corrupted by original sin and consigned to hell if unbaptized[87][82][83] |
| Sin | Comes about by free choice[82] | Inevitable result of fallen human nature[82] |
| Forgiveness for sin | Given to those who sincerely repent and merit it[c] | Part of God's grace, disbursed according to His will[89] |
| Sinlessness | Theoretically possible, although unusual[62][90] | Impossible due to the corruption of human nature[87] |
| Salvation | Humans will be judged for their choices[62] | Salvation is bestowed by God's grace[91] |
| Predestination | Rejected[92] | Goddecides who is saved andprevents them from falling away.[93] Though the explicit teaching ofdouble predestination by Augustine is debated,[94][95] it is at least implied.[96] |
According to Nelson, Pelagianism is a solution to theproblem of evil that invokeslibertarian free will as both the cause of human suffering and a sufficient good to justify it.[97] By positing that man could choose between good and evil without divine intercession, Pelagianism brought into question Christianity's core doctrine ofJesus' act ofsubstitutionary atonement to expiate the sins of mankind.[98] For this reason, Pelagianism became associated withnontrinitarian interpretations of Christianity which rejected thedivinity of Jesus,[99] as well as other heresies such asArianism,Socinianism, andmortalism (which rejected theexistence of hell).[100] Augustine argued that if man "could have become just by the law of nature and free will ... amounts to rendering the cross of Christ void".[97] He argued that no suffering was truly undeserved, and that grace was equally undeserved but bestowed by God's benevolence.[101] Augustine's solution, while it was faithful to orthodox Christology, worsened the problem of evil because according to Augustinian interpretations, God punishes sinners who by their very nature are unable not to sin.[100] The Augustinian defense of God's grace against accusations of arbitrariness is that God's ways are incomprehensible to mere mortals.[100][102] Yet, as later critics such asGottfried Wilhelm Leibniz asserted, asking "it is good and just because God wills it or whether God wills it because it is good and just?", this defense (although accepted by many Catholic andReformed theologians) creates aGod-centered morality, which, in Leibniz' view "would destroy the justice of God" and make him into a tyrant.[103]
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)Modernity begins with Descartes' mutation of Augustinianism. Taylor emphasizes that "Descartes is in many ways profoundly Augustinian".