COR
UNUM
1.
The search for God 2.
Love as the centre of Christian life 3.
Love of God as love of each other 4.
The parable of the Last Judgement
(Matthew 25) 5.
Christian community and friendship 6.
The love of Scripture 7.
Interiority 8. The Total
Christ 9.
Faith-Hope-Love Augustine's
theology of the theological virtues of faith, hope and love is really the key to
his entire spirituality. He sees these three virtues as both gifts and actions
of God, the Almighty acting in creatures in ways they are incapable of acting on
their own. Through
faith, God makes Himself present to human beings. This faith is bound up with
hope and love. These three virtues or powers are divine actions that have their
origin in eternity and their effect in time. They allow mere humans to be
transformed and achieve an initial union with God while continuing to live in
and be limited by the world. 10.
Grace and Freedom Freedom
comes to the faithful through grace. Christ makes people free. He is God's love
made present to humankind. The more He is allowed to take hold in the lives of
Christians, the freer they become. For Augustine this freedom supersedes freedom
of choice. For him, the greatest freedom is to have no choice at all.
A longing, or desire, for a deeper meaning to life, a kind of homesickness for
God is interwoven with our lives. Only when a person enquires about God, seeks
him, desires him, and goes towards him, does he find meaning and fulfillment for
his life. If Augustine were alive today he might say ' A religious is a person
who has determined to seek God and God's kingdom in everything.' Augustine
prayed once : "Let
me not grow tired of seeking you ".
(De Trinitate. XV 28, 51)
Augustine's spirituality is characterized by the fact that the light, in which
he views the whole Gospel, is love, the New Song of the New Testament.
Everything can be reduced to love. All forms of wrongdoing are to be reduced to
false self-love.
A change of vision for Augustine from a sharp distinction between love of God
and of people, to, 'authentic love for a human being is at the some time love of
God'. 'Honor God in each other' is the worship of God. God is love; and love is
the same as our human love. Our love for a human being is far more concrete than
our love of God. It is harder to delude ourselves here, we become more conscious
of our failures.
For Augustine the Christian Adventure consists in experiencing love of God as
love for each other. Love of neighbor is the sole norm. We meet God in people.
Building up community among people becomes the most important motif in
Augustine's spirituality.
Poverty means a'community of goods' or 'sober living' for Augustine - to share
with the other person, both material goods and spiritual goods. Sober life helps
the community to contribute to helping the needy outside the community. Celibacy
is seen as being totally available for the Other.
Obedience,
or willingness to listen, are acts of love, listening is an act of compassion,
authority is the serving of a group. The communitarian ideal culminates in
friendship which after love of neighbor (does not ask for a response) is the
highest form of human relationship (mutual love, loving and being loved.)
One of the great services Augustine renders to the spiritual life of his
followers is to bring them to Scripture and to help them develop a thirst for
the Word of God. Paul and John are the focus of much of Augustine's challenge
from Scripture. The words of Paul, "Put on the Lord Jesus Christ,"
burned within him.
Augustine saw himself as a facilitator from without. The real teacher was
within. "To
me your ears, to Him your heart, that both may be filled."
[ John 1.7 ] Augustine's conviction that a person must return to his
heart if he hopes to find God. Returning to your heart has different shades of
meaning. First, it is a return to your senses and stop wayward behavior.
Secondly, it has to do with the image of God within. Generally it deals with not
being able to find God if one does not find oneself. The God who dwells
able
to find God if one does not find oneself. The God who dwells within is an active
God.
Augustine never stopped searching for the Christ he found a first time in so
dramatic a way as the moment of conversion when he "put on the Lord Jesus
Christ." Augustine continued to find Him, to be possessed by Him more
fully.
If Augustine can speak of Christians as other Christs, it is because he looks
beyond the birth of the Child Jesus for the full meaning of the Incarnation of
Jesus into the human race. Every Christian shares in the Incarnation. They are
carriers of Christ in every aspect of their lives.
To know of Augustine's sense of wonder and awe at the "Whole Christ"
is to be ready to understand that his great drive in his life was to know man
and to know God. To know man was to know God.
Perfect love gives perfect freedom and both are the result of grace. Augustine
taught that every aspect of the spiritual life, every step of the way, is a gift
of God. This is the first meaning of grace for him. The second is that grace is
a person: Christ given to us that we may live.
Back to the Augustinian Homepage