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         Augustine Saint:     more books (100)
  1. The Works Of Aurelius Augustine, Bishop Of Hippo: The Letters Of Saint Augustine V1 (1872) by Marcus Dods, 2010-09-10
  2. Handbook on Faith, Hope, and Love (Foundations of Faith) by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 2006-05-16
  3. Confessions, Vol. 1: Books 1-8 (Loeb Classical Library, No. 26) (v. 1) by Bishop of Hippo Augustine Saint, 1912-01-01
  4. The works of Aurelius Augustine, Bishop of Hippo: a new translation by Marcus Dods, 2010-09-04
  5. The works of Aurelius Augustine, Bishop of Hippo: a new translation
  6. Confessions (Hendrickson Christian Classics) by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 2004-08-30
  7. The Confessions of Saint Augustine by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 2003-02
  8. Tractates on the Gospel of John 1-10 (The Fathers of the Church, 78) by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 2000-04
  9. Confessions by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 1987-03
  10. Confessions Of St Augustine by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 1996-09-01
  11. The Confessions of Saint Augustine by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 2005-03-30
  12. The confessions of Saint Augustine by E B. 1800-1882 Pusey, Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell, 2010-08-16
  13. The confessions of Saint Augustine.
  14. The Confessions of Saint Augustine by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 2003-02

61. Journal Of Early Christian Studies, Volume 5 - Table Of Contents
30600. Reviewer Wilken, Robert Louis, 1936-. Augustine, Saint, Bishopof Hippo. Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. Rettig, John W., tr.
http://www.press.jhu.edu/journals/earl/toc/earl5.1.html
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E-ISSN: 1086-3184
Print ISSN: 1067-6341
Journal of Early Christian Studies 5.1, Spring 1997
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62. Augustine, Saint
Augustine, Saint Lat. Aurelius Augustinus, 354430, one of the four Latin Fathers,Bishop of Hippo (near present-day Annaba, Algeria), b. Tagaste (c.40 mi/60
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    Augustine, Saint Lat. Aurelius Augustinus, 354-430, one of the four Latin Fathers, bishop of Hippo (near present-day Annaba, Algeria), b. Tagaste (c.40 mi/60 km S of Hippo).
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  • 63. LitSearch: An Online Literary Database
    Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo (00) Works by this author
    http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeAuthor?name=Augustine, Saint

    64. Encyclopædia Britannica
    Augustine the African School of Arts Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania Brief biographical essay on Saint Augustine, Bishop of Hippo from 396 to 430
    http://search.britannica.com/search?query= Augustine

    65. SAINT POLYCARP
    OF Hippo, DOCTOR OF THE CHURCH. (430). The Saint, who described himself publiclyas a great sinner in his “Confessions”, was Bishop Augustine, one of the
    http://www.martyrsandsaints.org/main/era_of_martyrdom/05th_century/SAINT_AUGUSTI
    SAINT AUGUSTINE OF HIPPO, DOCTOR OF THE CHURCH The saint, who described himself publicly as a great sinner in his “Confessions”, was bishop Augustine, one of the greatest fathers of the Church, who shaped theology, from the fifth century on. He was born, Aurelius Augustine in Algeria, in 354. His father was a pagan, but his mother was a devout Christian. She was Saint Monica, who converted her pagan husband later, and by her care and tears saved Augustine, the prodigal son. She delayed his baptism until his penitence. Augustine grew less interested in religion, and more interested in flesh desires. From intrusion, stealing the pears from neighboring gardens, to immerse in sex with typical friends, he ran his life in the fast lane. He took a concubine at age seventeen, after his formal education in law and rhetoric in Carthage, and had a son, named Adeodatus, to mean ‘given by God’. After about two years he started reading Cicero, and became interested in philosophy of ‘Plato’. He taught rhetoric for a short time in his hometown ‘Tagaste’, and then he moved back to Carthage in 376, to run his own school. He joined the ‘Manichees’, a strict religious sect, but he continued his restlessness. St. Monica, his mother, reached her peak of worry, care, and despair when her beloved son Augustine, moved to Milan, a big city with its worldly attraction, where he was appointed a professor of rhetoric. But, she followed him with her prayers and tears, to find him moved to Rome, and then again back to Milan. She attempted to arrange a good marriage for him, but he refused. While she was in constant prayers and tears, he was on the other hand groaning in lamentations: “And Thou, O Lord, how long? How long? Is it to be tomorrow and tomorrow? Why not this very hour put an end to shame?”

    66. Saint Augustine Of Hippo
    Saint Augustine OF Hippo Bishop, DOCTOR OF THE CHURCH—354430A.D.Feast August 28. Pope Leo I, during whose pontificate Augustine
    http://www.ewtn.com/library/MARY/AUGUSTN2.htm
    SAINT AUGUSTINE OF HIPPO BISHOP, DOCTOR OF THE CHURCH—354-430A.D. Feast: August 28 Pope Leo I, during whose pontificate Augustine was canonized, ordered that the feast of this saint should be observed with the same honors as that of an Apostle. In every succeeding age his memory has been held in the highest veneration and his writings have been an inspiration to Catholics and non-Catholics alike. Augustine was born on November 13, 354, at Tagaste, a small town of Numidia, North Africa, not far from the episcopal city of Hippo. His parents were citizens of good standing, though not wealthy. The father was one Patricius, a hot-tempered man and a pagan, who, under the influence of his Christian wife, the saintly Monica, learned patience and humility and was baptized shortly before his death. Of this union there were three children: Augustine, another son, Navigius, and a daughter, Perpetua, who became an abbess. He wrote the book, he says, for "a people curious to know the lives of others, but careless to amend their own," to demonstrate God's mercy as shown in the life of one sinner, and to make sure that no one should think him any better than he really was. With the utmost candor Augustine divulges the sins and follies of his youth, and at the end enumerates the weaknesses which still beset him. With a copy of the book which he sent to a friend, he wrote: "See now what I am from this book; believe me who bear testimony against myself, and regard not what others say of me."

    67. Saint Augustine Of Hippo Statue
    Saint Augustine of Hippo. Bishop, Doctor of the Church. - Patronof Conversion. - Feast Day August 28th. This statue features
    http://imagesofheaven.org/StAugustineHippo.html
    Saint Augustine of Hippo
    Bishop, Doctor of the Church.
    Patron of Conversion.
    Feast Day: August 28th.
    This statue features a magnificent hand painted face and details such as fingernails and eyelashes, exquisite filigree detail on vestments, and golden halo. St. Augustine hold his book of ‘Confessions’ in one hand and shows his heart with flames, cross and piercing arrow in the other hand.
    12“ size - Donation: $64 + $10 shipping
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    Call Images of Heaven at (610) 374-0237 to order,
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    “Late have I loved you, O Beauty ever ancient, O Beauty ever new”
    St. Augustine of Hippo by Images of Heaven About Us Home Order Statue Prayer to Saint Augustine O Saint Augustine, pray with me your prayer to God. O God, to turn from you is to fall, to turn to you is to rise, and to stand with you is to abide forever. Grant me help in all I do, guidance in all my confusion, protection in all my dangers, and a place in all my sorrows, through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen. QUICK JUMP TO: Order Statue JESUS: Divine Mercy Holy Face bust Holy Family Holy Spirit ... Scourged OUR LADY: Blessed Sacrament Divine Providence Fatima Grace ... Rosa Mystica SAINTS: Agnes Angel of Fatima Anthony Augustine of Hippo ... Veronica

    68. HOS: Augustine
    Augustine, Saint. Augustine was born November 13, 354 and died August 28, 430. theologiansof early Christianity and, while serving (396430) as Bishop of Hippo
    http://www.rit.edu/~flwstv/augustine.html
    Prof. Fred L. Wilson
    Rochester Institute of Technology
    Teaching at RIT
    HISTORY OF SCIENCE
    Augustine
    From Greece to Augustine
    Ptolemy warned his reader in the opening section of his Planetary Hypotheses that one could secure, by using mechanical analogies, only a superficial look, hardly a real insight into the nature of the planetary motions.1 For, as he explained it in the second book of his work, to understand the motion of planets one should think of the case of birds whose motions were due to a vital principle residing within them. From this source came the impulse that spread into their muscles and from there to their wings, without disturbing nearby birds or the surroundings in general. "Of the situation among celestial bodies we should think in the same manner, and also uphold the opinion that each of them possesses a vital force, moves of itself and imparts motion to bodies united with it."2 True, the master teacher of epicycles, deferents, and equants could hardly be expected to deny a basic interconnectedness between the motion of planets. Yet, even here his most expressive simile was again taken not from the realm of dead machinery but from the realm of living beings, and this time of intelligent beings too. Coordination without mechanical connection of constraint, as displayed by a group of dancers or by soldiers drilling with weapons, was for Ptolemy what came closest to a true description of the heavenly motions.3 Among them were the Romans, whose practicality had no taste for Greek theorizing and who took pride in restricting their study of mathematics to the useful. Yet the Romans, who as Cicero tells us thanked the gods for not being dreamers like the Greeks, showed an unrestrained liking for the organismic concept of the universe, which they had learned mainly from Stoic sources. What is more, in this organismic ideology their juridical mind was quick to make certain statements more precise and some details more elaborate. Thus Cicero presented a passage attributed to Zeno in the following syllogistic pattern: "Nothing that is without a soul and reason can generate of itself anything endowed with life and reason; the world however generates beings with soul and reason; therefore the world is itself living and possessed of mind."4

    69. Saint Augustine
    Lengthy article on Aurelius Augustinus by Michael Mendelson.Category Society Religion and Spirituality......Saint Augustine. Augustine of Hippo, often simply Augustine (354430 CE) rhetor,Christian Neoplatonist, North African Bishop, Doctor of the Roman
    http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/augustine/
    version
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    THIS ENTRY
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
    A B C D ... Z content revised
    OCT
    Saint Augustine
    Aurelius Augustinus [more commonly "St. Augustine of Hippo," often simply "Augustine"] (354-430 C.E.): rhetor
    Context
    Confessions massa damnata De Civitate Dei XXI.12], the overwhelming majority who are justly predestined to eternal punishment by an omnipotent God, intermingled with a small minority whom God, with unmerited mercy, has predestined to be saved. The sheer quantity of the writing that unites these two extremes, much of which survives, is truly staggering. There are well over 100 titles [listed at Fitzgerald 1999, pp. xxxv-il], many of which are themselves voluminous and composed over lengthy periods of time, not to mention over 200 letters [listed at Fitzgerald 1999, pp. 299-305] and close to 400 sermons [listed at Fitzgerald 1999, pp. 774-789]. It is arguably impossible to construct any moderate sized and manageable list of his major philosophical works that would not occasion some controversy in terms of what is omitted, but surely any list would have to include Contra Academicos Against the Academicians , 386-387 C.E.]

    70. St. Augustine The Great
    a Christian whom we venerate as Saint Monica At Tagaste, Augustine and his friendscontinued their quasi years later he was consecrated coadjutor Bishop of Hippo
    http://www.stthomasirondequoit.com/SaintsAlive/id393.htm
    var TlxPgNm='id393'; Saints Alive A B C D ... Z A Caring Christian Community in the image of Christ St. Augustine the Great home Saints Alive Index Bulletins Calendar ... Deacon's Bench St. Thomas the Apostle Roman Catholic Church 4536 St. Paul Blvd. Rochester, New York 14617 e-Mail Augustine of Hippo ranks high among the saints of God: a man whose influence among us as a person, churchman, philosopher and theologian, still runs strong. One reason why he is so admired, I am sure, is that he was a sinner before he became a saint. This offers encouragement to the rest of us sinners. Augustine was a native of Tagaste in Numidia, a Roman colony on the Mediterranean coast of Africa. (He was not a black, as some people have concluded because of his "African" origin.) The father was Patricius, a pagan. The mother was Monica, a Christian whom we venerate as Saint Monica. She bore several children. Her exemplary Christian faith eventually led to the deathbed conversion of Patricius. However, her brilliant son Augustine, although enrolled as a catechumen for baptism, and taught Christian basics by Monica, drifted away from Christian faith and morality, and caused her years of pain by his thought-style and life-style. Augustine was to admit to all this years later in his famous spiritual autobiography, the

    71. St. Augustine Of Hippo - Augustinian Saints
    Saint Augustine of Hippo. Augustine of Hippo (354430) envisioned a form of religiouscommunity A Bishop in Hippo (now known as Souk Ahras, Algeria), Augustine
    http://www.midwestaugustinians.org/saints_augustine.html
    Augustinians of the Midwest
    Order of St. Augustine
    Province of Our Mother of Good Counsel
    Saint Augustine of Hippo
    August 28
    Augustine of Hippo (354-430) envisioned a form of religious community life in which the members would "live in harmony, being united in mind and heart intent upon God." He wrote a Rule outlining the basic principles of this sort of life. Today Augustinians and many other religious orders and congregations still use this Rule as their guide. A Bishop in Hippo (near modern-day Annaba, Algeria), Augustine was an influential leader in the African Church. As Christians were growing in their knowledge of God and Christ, Augustine helped to shape Christian theological teachings, particularly those about the role of Divine Grace and the nature of the Holy Trinity. In the process, he combatted many theological errors. The son of Monica, a holy Christian, and Patricius, a pagan, Augustine was born in 354 in Tagaste (now known as Souk Ahras, Algeria). He was educated in the best secular schools of his day. As a young man, he led a distinctly non-Christian and immoral life. He lived with a young woman without the benefit of marriage. Together they had a son, Adeodatus. The young Augustine was continually searching with a restless heart for meaning in life. Each time that he would be attracted to a particular philosophy or group, he would become disillusioned the more familiar he became with its thought.

    72. Augustine
    five years later he was consecrated Bishop of Hippo. Augustine could have allowedthe church to remember him only as the powerful Saint, Bishop, and church
    http://www.garythomas.com/resources/classics/augustine.html
    Historical Profile
    Augustine

    by Gary Thomas Augustine is a giant in Christian history, arguably one of the five most influential Christians of all time. He was born in 354 and died in 430. His best-known works include The Confessions, The City of God, and On The Trinity. As Augustine grew older he moved to Carthage, but there things went from bad to worse. He writes in his confessions that he found himself "in the midst of a hissing cauldron of lust." He eventually entered a period of uncharacteristic faithfulness to a woman who later bore him a son. The two lived together, but never married. This was a time of "being and becoming" in Augustine's life, as he tried out new philosophies, religions, and possible vocations. He entered a poetry contest (which he won), and flirted with astrology, but quickly dropped it. Augustine's dream was to become a famous speaker, so when he encountered the writings of the renowned pagan writer Cicero, he was riveted and turned his passion toward "the wisdom of eternal truth." His main problem with Christianity at the time was his horror of the Bible's rather blunt "barbarity." He began teaching public speaking at the age of 19, and continued this course until he was 28. His official title was Master of Rhetoric at the Imperial Court. In his confessions, Augustine laments this period as a time when he "was led astray and led others astray."

    73. Early Church Personalities: Athanasius, Athenagoras, Augustine - Resources For C
    Augustine of Hippo, Bishop and Theologian; Patron Saints Index Augustine of Hippo;St. Augustine of Hippo Short hagiography; Images of Saint Augustine of Hippo;
    http://www.silk.net/RelEd/epeople2.htm
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    74. Augustine Of Hippo
    itself as the standard account of Saint Augustine's life and the changes in scholarshipabout Augustine since the his acclaimed portrait of the Bishop of Hippo
    http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/1110001.html
    Entire Site Books Journals E-Editions The Press
    Peter Brown
    Augustine of Hippo
    A Biography, Revised Edition with a New Epilogue
    Publication Date: November 2000 Subjects: Classics Autobiographies and Biographies Rights: Not available in Ireland, Iraq, British Commonwealth, except South Africa 576 pages Clothbound
    Available Now Paperback
    Available Now Read an excerpt Description About the Author Related Books
    "I salute Brown's achievement in bringing Augustine out of the tomb of theological doctrine, and setting his mind and emotions working before our eyes."Richard Southern, New Statesman "Justly applauded for its intelligence, and for the skill with which it relates the life and thought of a man dead for more than 1,500 years to the life we live now."Frank Kermode, The Observer "He has attained to the true stature of his subject."Owen Chadwick, Catholic Herald "A great work, likely to be esteemed a classic, and very remarkable as coming from so young a scholar. It is an intellectual biography, a portrait in depth of the man, and a brilliant study of the period."J. M. Cameron, New York Review of Books "A model biography. Mr. Brown is an impeccable scholar but also a vivid biographer and a delightful writer; he brings Augustine and his whole age persuasively to life."Hugh Trevor-Roper

    75. St. Augustine
    Through his 35 years as a Bishop of Hippo, Saint Augustine had todefend the faith against one heresy or another. He opposed the
    http://www.saintmark.com/topics/synexarion/augustine.html
    Baramhat 22, 1719
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    Saint Augustine
    Bishop of Hippo, Doctor of the Church (A.D. 430)
    Introduction
      "And Thou, O Lord, how long? How long? Is it to be tomorrow and tomorrow? Why not now? Why not this very hour put an end to shame?"
    These words of repentance marked the beginning of Augustine's new life. A few years after he came in contact with God, he said, "Our hearts, O Lord, were made for you, and they are restless until the rest in you." Saint Augustine is one of the greatest Fathers of the Church. He was an original thinker who became recognized as a remarkable leader of Christian faith. One of the guiding forces in Saint Augustine's life was his Christian mother, Saint Monica. His Childhood and Youth Saint Augustine, who used commonly to be called Austin in English, was born on November 13, 354 at Tagaste, a small town of Numidia in north Africa, not far from Hippo. His father, Patricius, was a pagan and of a violent disposition; but through the example and prudent conduct of his wife, Saint Monica, he was baptized a little before his death.

    76. Listings Of The World Society Religion And Spirituality
    Saints/AugustineHippo.html Added Nov-27-02; CoptNet Saint Augustine Post ReviewCoptic Synexarion profile of St. Augustine, Bishop of Hippo, Doctor of the
    http://listingsworld.com/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/Christianity/People/S

    77. Microsoft Reader Catalog Of EBooks
    Saint Augustine ISBN 1931305803 / New Albion Press / Pub Date May 2002 / FileSize 445K Heretic, Libertine, Bishop, Saint Agustine, Bishop of Hippo Regius
    http://www.mslit.com/default.asp?srch=1&ath2=Saint Augustine

    78. McKillop Library - Videos
    Paul, the Apostle, Saint Criticism and interpretation ; Plotinus Criticismand interpretation ; Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo Criticism and
    http://inside.salve.edu/mckillop/process_video.cfm?valu=G&key=series

    79. Augustine Of Hippo
    The Saint Augustine who springs to mind most easily for us as Anglicans is Augustineof Canterbury, who was sent by the Bishop of Rome in the
    http://www.pastornet.net.au/jmm/afam/afam0033.htm
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    Augustine Of Hippo
    SAINT GEORGE'S CATHEDRAL Perth, Western Australia A Sermon preached by The Precentor, Canon Nigel B. Mitchell 27 August 2000 Email the Preacher Tomorrow the Church remembers Saint Augustine of Hippo. There are two great saints of the church called Augustine. Both were Bishops, and both had a huge influence over the church of their day. Indeed, without them the history of the Christian faith, and perhaps the entire western world, would be very different. The saint Augustine who springs to mind most easily for us as Anglicans is Augustine of Canterbury, who was sent by the Bishop of Rome in the middle of the sixth century to convert the Church of England to Roman Catholicism Ð a task in which he succeeded so well that it remained in the Roman Catholic church for nearly a thousand years, before breaking away again during the reign of King Henry the eighth. Although he is important in our history as Anglicans, it is not that saint Augustine we remember today. The other Saint Augustine, Augustine of Hippo, lived about 200 years before Saint Augustine of Canterbury. He was born, raised and educated in the Roman province of Africa, in the parts of the world we know today as Algeria and Tunisia. Augustine's early adulthood was spent in Rome and Milan, where he had a distinguished career as a politician and teacher of philosophy. Like many ambitious people in the Roman empire of his day, Augustine was nominally a Christian, but also flirted with several other religious cults and philosophies. As well, he seems to have devoted quite a bit of his time and energy into chasing after women and attending drinking parties.

    80. The Saint Genesius Society
    today's Algeria, where the Saint was born on Nov. 13, 354. Depardieu will also goto Hippo, ancient capital of Numidia, where Augustine was Bishop and where he
    http://www.saintgenesius.org/news/depardieupope.html
    At Pope's Request, French Actor Will Recite Texts of St. Augustine Gerard Depardieu Hopes to Make a Film on the Bishop of Hippo ROME, SEPT. 20, 2002 ( Zenit.org )- French actor Gerard Depardieu announced that, at the Pope's request, he will recite passages of St. Augustine in squares and churches around the world. Speaking to journalists Thursday in Rome, where he attended the presentation of the film "Mission Cleopatra," Depardieu explained that "it will not be a performance but a way of enriching the faithful worldwide." The actor, who won international recognition with the 1989 film "Cyrano de Bergerac," said the idea came to him two years ago, during a meeting with the Pope. "John Paul II saw me and immediately said, 'St. Augustine,' seeing what he thought was my resemblance to the saint of Hippo," the actor said. Depardieu also is thinking of working with Lux Vide Productions on plans for a film on the saint. Depardieu has discussed this with Cardinal Paul Poupard, president of the Pontifical Council for Culture. The film industry, especially television, is interested in filling spaces it has become its nightmare, the actor told the cardinal during their meeting.

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