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1. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
François Dolbeau

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Noting how an hypothesis can turn into a truth simply by being repeated, this article examines carefully the basis for the date normally given for this sermon and the frailty of the textual tradition that is the basis for the Morin edition of this sermon. After a careful analysis of the factors that might help to date it, it is assigned an uncertain date. It remains, however, plausible to think that it was delivered ad mensam Cypriani. The analysis of the transmission of this sermon includes several new manuscripts, a new stemma and several general observations about its transmission. This article concludes with comments about the content and a new edition of the Latin text of the sermon.
2. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Margaret R. Miles

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St. Augustine, pictured by Western painters holding in his hand his heart blazing with passionate love, consistently and repeatedly insisted―from his earliest writings until close to his death―that the essential characteristic of God is “God is love” (1 John 4:16). Yet he also insisted on the doctrines of original sin and everlasting punishment for the massa damnata. This article will not explore the rationale or semantics of his arguments, nor the detail and nuance of the doctrines of predestination and perseverance. Rather, I seek to understand, from Augustine’s last writings, how he reconciled his strong conviction that God is love with doctrines requiring belief in a God who determined the fate of individuals to eternal reward or punishment “before the foundation of the world” (Eph. 1:4), a God indifferent to individuals’ actions, struggles, or longings. My primary interest is not on Augustine’s ability to render these two apparently opposing ideas of God intellectually compatible, but rather on his feeling, gathered from his last sermons, as he approached death. In brief, how could Augustine love the God in whom he believed?
3. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Adam Ployd Orcid-ID

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This article investigates the place of De magistro within Augustine’s developing theology of words and the Word through a reverse chronological reading. This is necessary because, despite its emphasis on words, De magistro never refers to Christ as the “Word.” It would be easy, therefore, to see it as unrelated to the theological emphasis on that title in later works such as De trinitate. A reverse chronological reading, however, establishes Augustine’s developing understanding of the relationship between words and the Word in a way that moves us from a full-throated theology of divine and human speech backward into more exploratory engagements with nascent ideas. When this reverse trail is traced, we can begin to see De magistro as one key starting point for it by providing warrant for seeing the inner Christ as necessarily the Word of God, even if not explicitly named as such. Such a reading adds deeper theological significance to a text often read only in terms of its contribution to semiotics and epistemology. In this reading, De magistro is an essential text for understanding Augustine’s fuller theology of language not only because of its early sign theory but because it sets the soteriological stage for our growth into the likeness of Christ the Word.
4. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Oriol Ponsatí-Murlà Orcid-ID

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This article aims to offer an overview of the problem of suicide in Augustine of Hippo, from the anti-Manichean texts of the late 380s CE to De ciuitate dei and the rejoinder to Gaudentium (Contra Gaudentium). A transversal analysis of the evolution of the concept of voluntary death throughout the work of Augustine allows us to identify up to four different conceptions of suicide, each of them corresponding to a rather well-defined chronological period: a philosophical conception, that we find in De libero arbitrio; a moral one, that we can excerpt from De mendacio; a polemical approach in the context of controversy against Donatism, which we can retrace in a set of writings from 400 to 412 CE, and especially in Contra epistulam Parmeniani; and, finally, the conception of suicide as homicide, that appears in De ciuitate dei and that will define the decisive and most widespread doctrine of Augustine in this matter. In this way, this paper aims to enrich, from a transversal and chronological perspective, the studies that have been carried out over the last decades on suicide in Augustine.

book reviews

5. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Trevor Williams

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6. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Paul Krause

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7. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Adam Ployd

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8. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Br. Robert McFadden

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9. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Matthew Bryan Gillis

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10. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Jennifer Ebbeler

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11. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Melvin L. Sensenig

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12. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Bradley G. Green

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13. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Hannibal Hamlin

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14. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Miles Hollingworth

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15. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1
Christina M. Carlson

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books received

16. Augustinian Studies: Volume > 54 > Issue: 1

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