Saint Augustine's Sin (Confessiones)
Books / Hardcover
Books › Religion › Christian Theology › General
ISBN: 0670032417 / Publisher: Viking Adult, October 2003
A third volume in a series of translations from Saint Augustine's "Confessiones" contends that Augustine sought to understand humanity's capacity for evil despite its good nature, analyzing three founding biblical sins.
Read More
In Saint Augustine's Sin, Garry Wills gives a fresh interpretation of Book Two of the original text, the section that is most read and discussed by modern readers.As Wills argues, for most readers "Augustine + sin = sex," and people are so blinded by this equation that they often misinterpret the events of Augustine's life, and fail fully to understand Augustine's concept of sin. Contrary to what readers have assumed, there is no evidence that Augustine was sexually promiscuous. He took a common-law wife in his teens and remained true to her alone until just before his conversion. When he reflects on the nature of man's sinfulness in the Confessiones, sexual indiscretion is not Augustine's main focus. Instead it is man's power to transgress that occupies Augustine as he struggles to fathom how good creatures can choose to perform evil deeds. Meditating on an event from his own life, Augustine describes his shame after participating in a minor theft as a teenager and interprets this act - and all other acts of sin - in light of the three "founding sins": the fallen angels' rebellion, the temptation of Adam, and Cain's fratricide.Again, Wills frames this section of the Confessiones with a sweeping introduction, concluding commentary, and incisive notes throughout. In addition, Wills provides a rich discussion of the three founding sins in an appendix, with analysis of passages from scripture and from Augustine's own City of God. It is a rewarding examination of one of the most controversial parts of Augustine's influential work, translated with new vividness and authority. The next volume in this series will be Saint Augustine's Conversion.
Read Less