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An Analysis of St. Augustine's Confessions

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An Analysis of St. Augustine's Confessions Synopsis

St. Augustine's Confessions is one of the most important works in the history of literature and Christian thought. Written around 397, when Augustine was the Christian bishop of Hippo (in modern-day Algeria), the Confessions were designed both to spiritually educate those who already shared Augustine's faith, and to convert those who did not. Augustine did this through the original maneuver of writing what is now recognized as being the first Western autobiography - letting readers share in his own experiences of youth, sin, and eventual conversion. The Confessions are a perfect example of using reasoning to subtly bring readers around to a particular point of view - with Augustine inviting them to accompany him on his own spiritual journey towards God so they could make their own conversion. Carefully structured, the Confessions run from describing the first 43 years of Augustine's life in North Africa and Italy, to discussing the nature of memory, before moving on to analyzing the Bible itself. In order, the sections form a carefully structured argument, moving from the personal to the philosophical to the contemplative. In the hundreds of years since they were first published, they have persuaded hundreds of thousands of readers to recognize towards the same God that Augustine himself worshipped.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781912303830
Publication date:
Author: Jonathan Teubner
Publisher: Routledge an imprint of Macat Library
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 96 pages
Series: The Macat Library
Genres: Religion: general
Literary theory
Study and learning skills: general
Political science and theory
Philosophy
Psychology