Augustine’s dense and probing thought about the imprint of the Trinitarian God upon human persons in De Trinitate (AD 399-422/426) provides an alternative spirituality of the self to that of a more individualistic Western liberal search for self-fulfilment through self-discovery. By referring to the Trinitarian images in De Trinitate and recurring to Augustine’s self-searching mode in the Confessiones (AD 397-401), his quest may be said to inspire a mode of Christian self-formation that, sub specie humanitatis, rejects the “discovery” of one’s “true self” – the sense that one really does possess a stable authentic core self, and that one can find it by following some process of interior self-scrutiny. Rather, for Augustine, it appears that ...
Augustine’s Confessions detail the Catholic philosopher’s reflection on his faith journey, a journey...
The focus of this study is actually narrower than the title suggests. With the understanding that Au...
Augustine’s great speculative work, On the Trinity, is something of a conundrum for scholars interes...
Despite the noble efforts of modern Christian theologians in attempting to revive popular level inte...
grantor: University of St. Michael's CollegeThe notion that humans are to become divine b...
This study aims to investigate Self-Seeking towards Self-Knowledge which plays an essential role for...
In this thesis I provide a critical exposition of the theme of the reform of the image of God in hum...
This study aims to investigate Self-Seeking towards Self-Knowledge which plays an essential role for...
One persistent strand of commentary treats Augustine’s de trinitate (trin.) as most significantly an...
One persistent strand of commentary treats Augustine’s de trinitate (trin.) as most significantly an...
Since the end of the 19th century a debate has began about the dependence of Augustine\u27s speculat...
The present article seeks to address an important point of contact between early Christian ascetic p...
In the beginning of book XIII of the Confessions, Augustine interprets the first verses of the Genes...
Thorough analyses of the formative process prove that it is effective only when at a certain stage i...
Augustine's understanding of the knowledge of God being made manifest in a vision following the...
Augustine’s Confessions detail the Catholic philosopher’s reflection on his faith journey, a journey...
The focus of this study is actually narrower than the title suggests. With the understanding that Au...
Augustine’s great speculative work, On the Trinity, is something of a conundrum for scholars interes...
Despite the noble efforts of modern Christian theologians in attempting to revive popular level inte...
grantor: University of St. Michael's CollegeThe notion that humans are to become divine b...
This study aims to investigate Self-Seeking towards Self-Knowledge which plays an essential role for...
In this thesis I provide a critical exposition of the theme of the reform of the image of God in hum...
This study aims to investigate Self-Seeking towards Self-Knowledge which plays an essential role for...
One persistent strand of commentary treats Augustine’s de trinitate (trin.) as most significantly an...
One persistent strand of commentary treats Augustine’s de trinitate (trin.) as most significantly an...
Since the end of the 19th century a debate has began about the dependence of Augustine\u27s speculat...
The present article seeks to address an important point of contact between early Christian ascetic p...
In the beginning of book XIII of the Confessions, Augustine interprets the first verses of the Genes...
Thorough analyses of the formative process prove that it is effective only when at a certain stage i...
Augustine's understanding of the knowledge of God being made manifest in a vision following the...
Augustine’s Confessions detail the Catholic philosopher’s reflection on his faith journey, a journey...
The focus of this study is actually narrower than the title suggests. With the understanding that Au...
Augustine’s great speculative work, On the Trinity, is something of a conundrum for scholars interes...