
“You made us for yourself, and our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” The man we know as Augustine of Hippo, bishop and church doctor, made this passionate declaration to God in his Confessions written in Africa in the 4th century. A prolific writer and even more famous orator, it’s no wonder he’s the patron saint of printers today: He practically kept book-makers in business in his day. Despite the fact that he wrote and talked so much, and knew everyone worth knowing in the Mediterranean world from Saints Ambrose to Jerome, some things aren’t known about Augustine. The color of his skin is debated, for example. That he was an impassioned thinker and Christian convert, however, is unquestioned.
Augustine is significant for so many reasons it’s hard to condense them. He wrote some of the earliest extended scripture commentaries and shaped our understanding of the Book Genesis, at least, irrevocably. He left an indelible mark on teachings concerning baptism, original sin, chastity, and doctrines about Jesus as well. He chased suspicious ideas around the church tirelessly—the 4th century had the lion’s share of these—and defined orthodoxy on many issues. His preaching style still affects the modern practice of this art, and his ideas about liturgy remain captivating and fresh. One begins to wonder: Is there anything about Catholicism that Augustine didn’t influence?
While Augustine has been called the most important thinker in Western Christianity and remains the elephant in the room in any modern theological debate, a lot of folks don’t remember him for his ideas at all. Augustine fascinates as a person: He was arguably a sexually promiscuous young man who contracted a bad case of religion and couldn’t get rid of it. Sexual desire and intellectual craving for knowledge were the twin demons of his life. His restless heart found repose in the mystery of God reluctantly—but not without a considerable struggle which he chose to document personally for us. “Late have I loved you, O Beauty ever ancient, ever new!” he writes in his Confessions—sounding both rueful and relieved.
The man who would become Saint Augustine was once a faithless lover, an unreliable dad, a lousy prospect for a husband, and a guy who regularly broke his mother’s heart. That he also became an irreplaceable paving stone in church thought is wonderfully encouraging for all of us who currently fall short of who we might yet be.
Scripture
• Psalm 131; Jeremiah 20:7-9; 2 Corinthians 12:1-10
Online resources
• Augustine in the Christian Classics Ethereal Library
• University of Notre Dame Satellite Theological Education Program online course: The Confessions of St. Augustine
Books
• Confessions by Saint Augustine (Penguin Classics, 2006)
• Augustine of Hippo: A Biography by Peter Brown (University of California Press, 2000)
• Augustine of Hippo: A Life by Henry Chadwick (Oxford University Press, 2010)
Ask Alice a question.

More questions...and responses
What’s so important about the Council of Trent?
What are the “Precepts of the Church”?
Do Catholics take the biblical creation story literally?
Why can’t a woman be ordained?
Is Purgatory still “on the books”?
Why is it important to participate regularly in the Mass?
Why can people go to Mass on Saturday evening instead of Sunday?
Did King David compose the psalms?
Who were Jesus' “brothers and sisters”?
Is there really a Catholic Index of Forbidden Books?
What are the corporal and spiritual works of mercy?
What’s the difference between celibacy and chastity?
Is it “Catholic” to be vegetarian? Do Catholics care about animal suffering?
What does the Bible say about Judgment Day?
Why do Christians believe Jesus is God incarnate?
What’s that picture of Jesus with rays flowing from him?
Who chose the "Seven Deadly Sins"?
"What should I believe about hell?"
Is the Mass a “holy sacrifice” or a “celebration”—or both?
Pulpit, lectern, ambo: What’s the difference?
What is “discernment of spirits”?
Is environmentalism “Catholic” or a political football?
Why do Catholics believe in the Immaculate Conception?
Do Catholics believe in ghosts?
What is the Liturgy of the Hours?
How does God “answer” prayers?
What does “salvation history” mean?
Why do Catholics believe in the Assumption of Mary?
Why do priests wear vestments?
What is Catholic decision-making?
How does the Catholic Church view other religions?
What's the difference between chapels, churches, cathedrals, and basilicas?
Where do the Stations of the Cross come from?
What's the relationship between the Old Testament and the New Testament?
When and where is it appropriate to bow inside Catholic churches?
Can I come back to the church?
Why does the priest talk after the readings at Mass?
What's the difference between catechesis and evangelization?
Didn't Saint Paul write all the letters attributed to him?
Are we supposed to believe in angels and demons in the 21st century?
Who are the saints and why do we pray to them?
Who are the "Doctors of the Church"?
How were the books of the Bible chosen?
What's the difference between saying "set" prayers and prayers in my own words?
What do Catholics have to believe?
Who were the prophets? Does God still call people to prophecy?
Why do Catholics bless themselves, genuflect, and so on?
What do we mean by the church’s “magisterium”?
Is there salvation outside the Catholic Church?
What do people in religious life do for fun?
Why is celibacy important to religious life?
Vocation: For all of life, or only "religious life"?
Is my vocation from God or just my imagination?
What does the Bible say about discipleship?
How do I know whether be an order priest or a diocesan priest?
What do Catholics believe about scripture and tradition?
"Sin" is such a negative word. Can't we just talk about “failure”?
