<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>The Confessions of St. Augustine has been translated into more languages than any Latin writings except Virgil's. Now this great classic appears in a distinguished new translation for the modern reader by celebrated translator, John K. Ryan.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>Heartfelt, incisive, and timeless, <i>The Confessions of Saint Augustine</i> has captivated readers for more than fifteen hundred years. Retelling the story of his long struggle with faith and ultimate conversion -- the first such spiritual memoir ever recorded -- Saint Augustine traces a story of sin, regret, and redemption that is both deeply personal and, at the same time, universal. <p/>Starting with his early life, education, and youthful indiscretions, and following his ascent to influence as a teacher of rhetoric in Hippo, Rome, and Milan, Augustine is brutally honest about his proud and amibitious youth. In time, his early loves grow cold and the luster of wordly success fades, leaving him filled with a sense of inner absence, until a movement toward Christian faith takes hold, eventually leading to conversion and the flourishing of a new life. Philosophically and theologically brilliant, sincere in its feeling, and both grounded in history and strikingly contemporary in its resonance, <i>The Confessions of Saint Augustine</i> is a timeless classic that will persist as long as humanity continues to long for meaning in life and peace of soul.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"In plain words--if you can accept them as plain--Christianity is the life and death and resurrection of Christ going on day after day in the souls of individual men and in the heart of society. It is this Christ-life, this incorporation into the Body of Christ, this union with His death and resurrection as a matter of conscious experience, that St. Augustine wrote of in his Confessions."<br>--Thomas Merton<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><p> Saint Augustine was one of those towering figures who so dominated his age that the age itself bears his name. the Age of Augustine was a time of transition, and Augustine was a genius of such stature that, according to Christopher Dawson, he was, to a far greater degree than any emperor or general or barbarian war-lord, a maker of history and a builder of the bridge which was to lead him from the old world to the new.<br> He was the ablest religious thinker and controversialist at a period when theological controversy reached a level of intellectual refinement never achieved before or since. He was a tireless preacher and he wrote 118 treatises, including the most famous spiritual autobiography of all time, <i>The Confessions</i>. Of all these works, the one most prized by Augustine was his <i>City of God</i>, a veritable encyclopedia of information on the lives, thoughts and aspirations of ancient and early Christian man.</p>
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