08.08.2015 Views

Christian Unity (the book) - The Maranatha Community

Christian Unity (the book) - The Maranatha Community

Christian Unity (the book) - The Maranatha Community

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Protestants. He was born in Tagaste in Numidia (Algeria today) of a paganfa<strong>the</strong>r and a devout <strong>Christian</strong> mo<strong>the</strong>r, Monnica. After some schooling locallyhe went to Carthage where he studied rhetoric. Here, at 17, he began to livewith a woman by whom he had a son, Adeodatus (‘gift of God’). <strong>The</strong>y stayedtoge<strong>the</strong>r for 14 years until he came under <strong>the</strong> conviction that <strong>the</strong> relationshipwas wrong.Reading Cicero turned Augustine’s mind to concepts of prayer and faith; hebegan to read <strong>the</strong> <strong>Christian</strong> Scriptures but found <strong>the</strong>m uninspiring. <strong>The</strong> Persiandualistic philosophy of Manichaeism attracted him with its rigorous asceticism,and he followed its teachings for nine years. Manichaeism was an amalgam offaiths with some smatterings of <strong>Christian</strong>ity. It taught that man was trapped inan evil prison amid <strong>the</strong> conflict of light against darkness and spirit againstmatter. Religious messengers such as Jesus and <strong>the</strong> Buddha could bring light,but in <strong>the</strong> individual struggle against <strong>the</strong> passions and appetites lay <strong>the</strong> way ofliberation.Augustine became disillusioned with Manichaeism, and he moved to Rome in383 AD and <strong>the</strong>n on to Milan, in <strong>the</strong> north of Italy, where <strong>the</strong>re was a powerfulCatholic bishop, Ambrose, to teach rhetoric. Augustine was still not free fromfighting his passions, especially his sexual appetite, but he became more andmore open to <strong>the</strong> teaching of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Christian</strong> church. He began to accept a neo-Platonist concept of God as <strong>the</strong> One supreme existence to which man canaspire to be joined.In his autobiographical Confessions, Augustine tells <strong>the</strong> delightful story of how,depressed by his low spiritual state, he entered a garden and heard, fromsomewhere nearby, a child chanting or singing, ‘Pick up to read, pick up toread.’ This caused him to take up a letter of Paul he had been reading earlier.<strong>The</strong>re his eyes fell on <strong>the</strong>se words:‘Let us live honourably as in <strong>the</strong> day, not in revelling and drunkenness, notin debauchery and licentiousness, not in quarrelling and jealousy. Insteadput on <strong>the</strong> Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for <strong>the</strong> flesh to gratifyits desires.’ (Romans 13.13-14)He came to a living faith, and was no longer a religious dilettante trying out <strong>the</strong>various philosophies of <strong>the</strong> age, but a child of Christ and a son of <strong>the</strong> Church.He was baptized in 387 AD by Ambrose, along with his son Adeodatus.Page 40

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!