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BENEDICT XVI
GENERAL AUDIENCE
Paul VI
Audience Hall
Wednesday, 9 January 2008
Saint Augustine of Hippo (1)
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
After the great Christmas festivities, I
would like to return to the meditations on the Fathers
of the Church and speak today of the greatest Father of
the Latin Church, 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.
A civilization has seldom encountered
such a great spirit who was able to assimilate
Christianity's values and exalt its intrinsic wealth,
inventing ideas and forms that were to nourish the
future generations, as Paul VI also stressed: "It may
be said that all the thought-currents of the past meet
in his works and form the source which provides the
whole doctrinal tradition of succeeding ages" (Inaugural
Address at the Patristic Institute of the "Augustinianum",
4 May 1970; L'Osservatore Romano English edition,
21 May 1970, p. 8). Augustine is also the Father of
the Church who left the greatest number of works.
Possidius, his biographer, said that it seemed
impossible that one man could have written so many
things in his lifetime. We shall speak of these
different works at one of our meetings soon. Today, we
shall focus on his life, which is easy to reconstruct
from his writings, in particular the Confessions,
his extraordinary spiritual autobiography written in
praise of God. This is his most famous work; and rightly
so, since it is precisely Augustine's Confessions,
with their focus on interiority and psychology, that
constitute a unique model in Western literature, and not
only Western but even non-religious, to modern times.
This attention to the spiritual life, to the mystery of
the "I", to the mystery of God who is concealed in the
"I", is something quite extraordinary, without
precedent, and remains for ever, as it were, a spiritual
"peak".
But to come back to his life: Augustine
was born in Tagaste in the Roman Province of Numidia,
Africa, on 13 November 354 to Patricius, a pagan who
later became a catechumen, and Monica, a fervent
Christian. This passionate woman, venerated as a saint,
exercised an enormous influence on her son and raised
him in the Christian faith. Augustine had also received
the salt, a sign of acceptance in the catechumenate, and
was always fascinated by the figure of Jesus Christ;
indeed, he said that he had always loved Jesus but had
drifted further and further away from ecclesial faith
and practice, as also happens to many young people
today.
Augustine also had a brother, Navigius,
and a sister whose name is unknown to us and who, after
being widowed subsequently became the head of a
monastery for women. As a boy with a very keen
intelligence, Augustine received a good education
although he was not always an exemplary student.
However, he learned grammar well, first in his native
town and then in Madaura, and from 370, he studied
rhetoric in Carthage, the capital of Roman Africa. He
mastered Latin perfectly but was not quite as successful
with Greek and did not learn Punic, spoken by his
contemporaries. It was in Carthage itself that for the
first time Augustine read the Hortensius, a
writing by Cicero later lost, an event that can be
placed at the beginning of his journey towards
conversion. In fact, Cicero's text awoke within him love
for wisdom, as, by then a Bishop, he was to write in his
Confessions: "The book changed my feelings", to
the extent that "every vain hope became empty to me, and
I longed for the immortality of wisdom with an
incredible ardour in my heart" (III, 4, 7).
However, since he was convinced that
without Jesus the truth cannot be said effectively to
have been found and since Jesus' Name was not mentioned
in this book, immediately after he read it he began to
read Scripture, the Bible. But it disappointed him. This
was not only because the Latin style of the translation
of the Sacred Scriptures was inadequate but also because
to him their content itself did not seem satisfying. In
the scriptural narratives of wars and other human
vicissitudes, he discovered neither the loftiness of
philosophy nor the splendour of the search for the truth
which is part of it. Yet he did not want to live without
God and thus sought a religion which corresponded to his
desire for the truth and also with his desire to draw
close to Jesus. Thus, he fell into the net of the
Manicheans, who presented themselves as Christians and
promised a totally rational religion. They said that the
world was divided into two principles: good and evil.
And in this way the whole complexity of human history
can be explained. Their dualistic morals also pleased St
Augustine, because it included a very high morality for
the elect: and those like him who adhered to it could
live a life better suited to the situation of the time,
especially for a young man. He therefore became a
Manichean, convinced at that time that he had found the
synthesis between rationality and the search for the
truth and love of Jesus Christ. Manicheanism also
offered him a concrete advantage in life: joining the
Manicheans facilitated the prospects of a career. By
belonging to that religion, which included so many
influential figures, he was able to continue his
relationship with a woman and to advance in his career.
By this woman he had a son, Adeodatus, who was very dear
to him and very intelligent, who was later to be present
during the preparation for Baptism near Lake Como,
taking part in those "Dialogues" which St Augustine has
passed down to us. The boy unfortunately died
prematurely. Having been a grammar teacher since his
twenties in the city of his birth, he soon returned to
Carthage, where he became a brilliant and famous teacher
of rhetoric. However, with time Augustine began to
distance himself from the faith of the Manicheans. They
disappointed him precisely from the intellectual
viewpoint since they proved incapable of dispelling his
doubts. He moved to Rome and then to Milan, where the
imperial court resided at that time and where he
obtained a prestigious post through the good offices and
recommendations of the Prefect of Rome, Symmacus, a
pagan hostile to St Ambrose, Bishop of Milan.
In Milan, Augustine acquired the habit
of listening - at first for the purpose of enriching his
rhetorical baggage - to the eloquent preaching of Bishop
Ambrose, who had been a representative of the Emperor
for Northern Italy. The African rhetorician was
fascinated by the words of the great Milanese Prelate;
and not only by his rhetoric. It was above all the
content that increasingly touched Augustine's heart. The
great difficulty with the Old Testament, because of its
lack of rhetorical beauty and lofty philosophy was
resolved in St Ambrose's preaching through his
typological interpretation of the Old Testament:
Augustine realized that the whole of the Old Testament
was a journey toward Jesus Christ. Thus, he found the
key to understanding the beauty and even the
philosophical depth of the Old Testament and grasped the
whole unity of the mystery of Christ in history, as well
as the synthesis between philosophy, rationality and
faith in the Logos, in Christ, the Eternal Word
who was made flesh.
Augustine soon realized that the
allegorical interpretation of Scripture and the
Neo-Platonic philosophy practised by the Bishop of Milan
enabled him to solve the intellectual difficulties
which, when he was younger during his first approach to
the biblical texts, had seemed insurmountable to him.
Thus, Augustine followed his reading of
the philosophers' writings by reading Scripture anew,
especially the Pauline Letters. His conversion to
Christianity on 15 August 386 therefore came at the end
of a long and tormented inner journey - of which we
shall speak in another catechesis -, and the African
moved to the countryside, north of Milan by Lake Como -
with his mother Monica, his son Adeodatus and a small
group of friends - to prepare himself for Baptism. So it
was that at the age of 32 Augustine was baptized by
Ambrose in the Cathedral of Milan on 24 April 387,
during the Easter Vigil.
After his Baptism, Augustine decided to
return to Africa with his friends, with the idea of
living a community life of the monastic kind at the
service of God. However, while awaiting their departure
in Ostia, his mother fell ill unexpectedly and died
shortly afterwards, breaking her son's heart. Having
returned to his homeland at last, the convert settled in
Hippo for the very purpose of founding a monastery. In
this city on the African coast he was ordained a priest
in 391, despite his reticence, and with a few companions
began the monastic life which had long been in his mind,
dividing his time between prayer, study and preaching.
All he wanted was to be at the service of the truth. He
did not feel he had a vocation to pastoral life but
realized later that God was calling him to be a pastor
among others and thus to offer people the gift of the
truth. He was ordained a Bishop in Hippo four years
later, in 395. Augustine continued to deepen his study
of Scripture and of the texts of the Christian tradition
and was an exemplary Bishop in his tireless pastoral
commitment: he preached several times a week to his
faithful, supported the poor and orphans, supervised the
formation of the clergy and the organization of mens'
and womens' monasteries. In short, the former
rhetorician asserted himself as one of the most
important exponents of Christianity of that time. He was
very active in the government of his Diocese - with
remarkable, even civil, implications - in the more than
35 years of his Episcopate, and the Bishop of Hippo
actually exercised a vast influence in his guidance of
the Catholic Church in Roman Africa and, more generally,
in the Christianity of his time, coping with religious
tendencies and tenacious, disruptive heresies such as
Manichaeism, Donatism and Pelagianism, which endangered
the Christian faith in the one God, rich in mercy.
And Augustine entrusted himself to God
every day until the very end of his life: smitten by
fever, while for almost three months his Hippo was being
besieged by vandal invaders, the Bishop - his friend
Possidius recounts in his Vita Augustini - asked
that the penitential psalms be transcribed in large
characters, "and that the sheets be attached to the
wall, so that while he was bedridden during his illness
he could see and read them and he shed constant hot
tears" (31, 2). This is how Augustine spent the last
days of his life. He died on 28 August 430, when he was
not yet 76. We will devote our next encounters to his
work, his message and his inner experience. |