One in a Thousand. Counterpoint on Predestination in Augustine

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54103/2035-7362/19493

Keywords:

Augustine, Predestination, Grace, Destiny, Character

Abstract

A reflection, sometimes questionable, on a central problem in the study of history, that is, on how to understand the sensibility of men of the past, trying to approach it to the sensibility of our contemporary men. We investigate, as an exemplary and particularly difficult case, Augustine's reflection on the subject of grace and predestination. Any transposition of doctrines even along the historical timeline is certainly a betrayal of the author's original intentions, but a necessary betrayal to hope to understand him. The interweaving of theses on predestination, grace, destiny, and character can help, but only on the condition of being aware that these are nevertheless analogies that never succeed in fully clarifying, but can help.

Published

2023-06-01

Most read articles by the same author(s)

<< < 1 2 3