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AUGUSTINE OF HIPPO:
TIRELESS SEARCHER AFTER TRUTH
VATICAN CITY, 9 JAN 2008 (VIS)
- Pope Benedict XVI
Pope Benedict XVI dedicated his
catechesis during today's general audience, held in the Vatican's
Paul VI Hall, to St. Augustine, bishop of Hippo, "a man of passion
and of faith, of exalted intelligence and of tireless pastoral
activity", he said.
The Pope made it clear that he intended to dedicate this catechesis
to St. Augustine's biography, leaving the saint's numerous works to
be considered in coming weeks. It could be affirmed, said the Holy
Father, that "all the threads of Latin Christian literature lead to
Hippo" and that "many of the subsequent developments in
Christianity, and in Western culture itself, lead out from this city
of Roman Africa where St. Augustine was bishop from 395 to 430".
The author of the "Confessions", that "extraordinary spiritual
autobiography ... with its great concern for the mystery of the
self, for the mystery of God hidden in the self", was born in
Tagaste in the year 354, the son of Patricius and of St. Monica. His
mother educated him in the Christian faith, which the saint would
later abandon despite his persistent interest in the figure of
Christ.
Augustine studied rhetoric and grammar, a subject he went on to
teach. While in Carthage, he read Cicero's "Hortensius" because
although he had abandoned the practices of the Church he still
always sought the truth. The book "awoke in him the love of wisdom",
but "being convinced that without Jesus it is not possible to
discover the truth", and as "Hortensius" contained no mention of
Christ, he began to read Sacred Scripture.
However his encounter with the Bible left him disappointed, not only
because of the poor Latin style of the translations, but also
because "the content matter itself did not satisfy him. In the
biblical accounts of wars and other human vicissitudes, he did not
find that exalted philosophy," or "that splendour of the search for
truth which characterises it", said the Pope.
Yet Augustine did not want to live without God and continued to seek
"a religion that responded to his desire to find truth ... and to
draw close to Jesus". For this reason he was attracted by
Manichaeism, the followers of which claimed that theirs was a
"completely rational religion". Their dualist morality attracted the
future bishop of Hippo who was convinced he had found the right
fusion between "rationality, search for truth, and love for Jesus
Christ"; yet Manichaeism proved incapable of resolving the saint's
doubts.
When Augustine moved to Milan he began to frequent the sermons of
Ambrose, as a way of improving his own rhetoric. The bishop of Milan
taught "a typological interpretation of the Old Testament, as the
road that leads to Jesus Christ". Thus it was that Augustine
"discovered the key to understanding the beauty, and even the
philosophical profundity, of the Old Testament, and he came to
understand all the unity of the mystery of Christ in history, and
the synthesis between philosophy, rationality and faith in the
Logos, in Christ the eternal Word made flesh".
Augustine converted to Christianity on 15 August 386, "the end of a
long and painful interior journey", and was baptised on 24 April
387. Ordained a priest in 391 following his return to Africa, he
became a bishop four years later. "In his tireless pastoral
commitment", said the Pope, "he was an exemplary bishop, ... he
supported the poor, ... concerned himself with the formation of the
clergy and the organisation of monasteries and convents", and in a
very short space of time became "one of the most important exponents
of Christianity of that time".
"The bishop of Hippo", the Holy Father went on, "exercised a huge
influence in his guidance of the Catholic Church in Roman Africa"
and stood up against "tenacious and disruptive religious movements
and heresies such as Manichaeism, Donatism and Pelagianism".
Pope Benedict recalled how "Augustine entrusted himself to God every
day, until the end of his life", and how shortly before his death
"he asked for the penitential psalms to be written in large letters
and hung on the wall so he could see and read them from his bed".
The bishop died on 28 August 430.
VIS 080109
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