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Hierarch · 5th century

Blessed Augustine Bishop of Hippo

Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Augustine, Bishop of Hippo

354–430

Also known as Augustine of Hippo · Aurelius Augustine

A restless seeker of North Africa who, after long wandering through error and passion, was brought to Christ through the prayers of his mother Monica and the preaching of St Ambrose, and became bishop of Hippo and a great teacher of grace and the inner life.

Life

Augustine of Hippo (born 13 November 354 in Thagaste, modern Souk Ahras, Algeria, then a municipium in the Roman province of Numidia) was a bishop, preacher, and one of the most influential teachers of the early Christian West. Of Romanized Berber background, he was the son of Patricius, a pagan official who was baptized near the end of his life around 371, and of Saint Monica, a devout Christian whose long perseverance is traditionally credited with her son's conversion.

After a youth marked by hedonism and intellectual restlessness, Augustine spent some fifteen years in error and passion: he formed a long relationship that produced a son, Adeodatus, around 372, and adhered for roughly nine years to Manichaeism. Trained as a rhetorician at Carthage, he taught at Thagaste, Carthage, Rome, and finally Milan, where the preaching of Saint Ambrose and the study of Scripture brought on a crisis that ended in his conversion in 386 and his baptism by Ambrose at the Easter Vigil of 387.

Returning to North Africa, he gave away his wealth, took up a monastic life, was ordained priest at Hippo Regius in 391, and was made bishop there in the mid-390s, an office he held for roughly thirty-five years until his death on 28 August 430 during the Vandal siege of the city. A prolific author whose works combated the Manichaean, Donatist, and Pelagian movements, he is commemorated by the Orthodox Church on June 15.

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Timeline

  1. 13 November 354 Birth in Thagaste Born in Thagaste (modern Souk Ahras, Algeria) in the Roman province of Numidia, about sixty miles from Hippo Regius, to the pagan official Patricius and the Christian Monica. He was enrolled as a catechumen in infancy.
  2. c. 365 Schooling Sent at about age eleven to school in Madaurus, and later, around age seventeen, to Carthage to study rhetoric, supported by a fellow citizen. He mastered Latin but never became fluent in Greek.
  3. c. 372 Birth of Adeodatus During his student years he formed a long relationship that produced his son Adeodatus. Reading Cicero's Hortensius around this time kindled in him a love of wisdom.
  4. 373 Embraces Manichaeism He embraced Manichaeism, in which he remained an auditor at the lowest level for roughly nine years before becoming disillusioned with its inability to explain natural phenomena.
  5. 373–384 Career as rhetorician Taught grammar at Thagaste and rhetoric at Carthage over nine years, then moved to Rome in 383 and to Milan in late 384, where he encountered Bishop Ambrose and the writings of the Neoplatonists.
  6. 386 Conversion in Milan In late August 386, at about age thirty-one, he was converted in a garden after hearing the words 'take up and read' and turning to Romans 13:13–14.
  7. 24–25 April 387 Baptism by Ambrose Ambrose baptized Augustine together with his son Adeodatus at the Easter Vigil in Milan. After the death of his mother Monica he returned to Africa, sold his possessions, and established a monastic community at Thagaste.
  8. 391 Ordained priest at Hippo Against his own wishes he was ordained a priest at Hippo Regius by Valerius, the bishop of Hippo.
  9. 395–396 Bishop of Hippo Made coadjutor bishop of Hippo with right of succession, he became full bishop after Valerius's death and served for roughly thirty-five years, maintaining a monastic life in his episcopal residence.
  10. 397–398 Confessions Composed the Confessions, an autobiographical account of his wandering and conversion that became one of his most renowned works.
  11. c. 413–426 The City of God Wrote The City of God over more than a decade, alongside a vast output of treatises, letters, and sermons; more than 350 of his preserved sermons are believed authentic.
  12. 28 August 430 Death during the Vandal siege Died at about age seventy-five during the Vandal siege of Hippo, reportedly encouraging the city's resistance against the Arian Christianity of the Vandals.

Contributions & Legacy

Early Life and Wandering

Augustine's family were Romanized, Latin-speaking Berbers of Thagaste. His mother Monica was a devout Christian and his father Patricius a pagan official whom Monica is traditionally said to have brought to baptism near the end of his life around 371; Augustine also had a brother, Navigius, and a sister, Perpetua. He was enrolled as a catechumen in infancy but not baptized.

Educated first at Madaurus and then at Carthage, he excelled in rhetoric and literary competition. By his own later account he lived hedonistically as a young man, and during his student years formed a relationship that produced his son Adeodatus around 372. The reading of Cicero's Hortensius turned his mind toward the pursuit of wisdom, but he sought it for some nine years in Manichaeism before growing disillusioned with that sect.

Conversion and Baptism

Augustine's teaching career took him from Thagaste and Carthage to Rome in 383 and to Milan in late 384. In Milan the preaching of Bishop Ambrose, together with the reading of the Neoplatonists and of Scripture, provoked a deep crisis in his soul.

In a garden in late August 386 he heard the words 'take up and read,' opened the Scriptures to Romans 13:13–14, and was decisively converted. Ambrose baptized him along with his son Adeodatus at the Easter Vigil of 387. After his mother Monica died, Augustine returned to North Africa, distributed his wealth to the poor, and took up the monastic life.

Priesthood and Episcopate

In 391 the people of Hippo Regius pressed Augustine, against his wishes, to be ordained a priest by their bishop Valerius. Around 395–396 he was made coadjutor bishop of Hippo with right of succession, and after Valerius's death he became full bishop, an office he held for roughly thirty-five years.

As bishop he maintained a monastic manner of life within his episcopal residence and drew up a rule for his community, which produced numerous bishops and monastic founders; for this he is sometimes called a patron of clergy who live under a rule. He was a tireless preacher: more than 350 of his sermons are believed to be authentic, many of them directed against the Manichaean teaching he had once held.

Writings and Controversies

Augustine was an extraordinarily prolific author; the OCA life numbers his works at roughly 1,030. They engaged the major controversies of his day, refuting the Manichaeans on the problem of evil, the Donatists on the nature of the Church, and the Pelagians on grace and human nature.

Among his best-known writings are the Confessions, The City of God, On Christian Doctrine, On the Trinity, the Enchiridion (or Handbook of Christian Knowledge), and works such as On Nature and Grace directed against Pelagian doctrine. He prized clarity for the sake of his hearers, remarking that it was better for them to fault his grammar than to fail to understand him.

Death and Legacy

Augustine died on 28 August 430, at about age seventy-five, during the Vandal siege of Hippo, which is reported to have lasted some eighteen months; according to the accounts he encouraged the city's resistance against the Arian Christianity of the Vandals.

His teaching shaped the Christian West profoundly. Within the Orthodox tradition his standing was affirmed in conciliar settings — the Fifth Ecumenical Council (553) listed him among the Church Fathers, the Sixth Ecumenical Council called him 'the most excellent and blessed Augustine' and 'the most wise teacher,' and the Council of Constantinople of 1166 referred to him as 'Saint Augustine.'

Veneration in the Orthodox Church

The Orthodox Church commemorates Blessed Augustine on June 15, while the Western churches keep his death date, August 28. He is to be distinguished from Augustine of Canterbury.

Orthodox assessments of him have varied: some regard him as a saint chiefly on the strength of his confessional and devotional writings rather than his speculative theology, while others have questioned particular points of his teaching — notably his Triadology, which is held to have influenced the later Filioque addition to the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed. No single conciliar position governs every aspect of this question. His works were largely unknown in the Greek East until they were translated around 1360 by Demetrios Cydones.

Relics & Shrines

Augustine's body was translated from North Africa to Cagliari in Sardinia, and around the year 720 to the church of San Pietro in Ciel d'Oro in Pavia, Italy, where his relics remain; portions are also reported in Greece.

In 1842 a portion of his right arm was returned to Annaba (ancient Hippo) in Algeria, where it is enshrined in the Basilica of Saint Augustine.

Notable Works

Notes

Pre-schism Western saint; not Augustine of Canterbury (OS-1243).

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints