the fall: biblical event in which Adam and Eve disobeyed God's command and ate the fruit from the forbidden tree in the Garden of Eden
Will: part of human nature that makes free choices
Sin: disobeying the will and commands of God
Neoplatonism: philosophical thinking arising from the ideas of Plato
Redeemed: the theological world for saved from sin due to Christ's sacrifice
Concordia: human friendship
Cupiditas: selfish love
Caritas: generous love
Concupiscence: uncontrollable desire for physical desires and pleasures
ecclesia: heavenly society => contrast with earthly society
summum bonum: the highest most supreme good
Augustine's history:
Augustine's mother was a devout Christian while his father was quite hostile to the Christian ways
He was born in North Africa, apart of the Roman empire
As a young man, he followed the teachings of the Manichees and became a missionary for them ==> to which his mother was displeased
He became interested in Plato's ideas especially those which influenced Plotinus' teachings on the shame of living in the body and the Form of the Good
Heard preaching from the Bishop of Milan and was affected by the content
Augustine cont'd:
At age 32, he converted to Christianity but this meant leaving his mistress and child which was painful for all
In CONFESSIONS => wrote about his pre-Christian life which involved struggling with sexual promiscuity
became a bishop
laid the groundwork for confession in Catholicism
Augustine's view on humans before the fall:
based on the beginning of Genesis and the letter of Paul to the romans
we depend on the same form of Adam ==> similar to Plato's beliefs on the world of forms
Platonic thought and key concepts of Manicheism
three key parts with our relationship with God: 1. people are created by God, 2. they are fallen in nature, 3. they can be redeemed
we were purposely planned by God, to have a special place in the universe
enjoyed harmony
not physically made in God's image => imago Dei
After the Fall:
the fall led to lust and desire which was a punishment => 'your desire will be for your husband'
they felt shame when naked => 'before the fall they were naked and felt no shame'
childbirth was now painful and Adam would have to work the land
barrier between us and God that is guarded by angels
Human nature and will: the fall
for humans to have a healthy life and friendship was essential
friendship increases happiness and decreases sadness
Adam and Eve lived in this 'friendship' meaning to not have ulterior motives
humans have freewill
we are born into sin => Original Sin => we are descendents of Adam and Eve which means we have to inherit Adam's guilt and sin
Augustine was interested in the problem of Evil as he believed that God was good and perfect (like Plato's belief in the Form of Good). In his book, 'On Free Will', he argues against the Manichee belief by saying that there is one power: God. God made Adam in his own image, meaning God gave Adam freewill to chose his own actions. This means Augustine believes that evil is entirely caused by our misuse of freewill
Caritas- this generous love is an expression of God's love
Cupiditas- error of will and or selfish love
In book 2 of On Free Will:
all good things come from God, but not all human actions come from God
Locke argued Augustine's belief on human nature is wrong as we are born as blank slates
Tabula Rasa = blank slate
Sartre states there is no such thing as human nature; environment and culture affect each unique individual.
Aquinas => The Synderisis => Humans are naturally inclined to do good and avoid evil
Original Sin and its effects on the will and human societies:
original sin marks humanity as a whole
tendency to sin => passed through generations
flawed human nature
Augustine and Pelagius disagreed as Pelagius believed that people could live morally if they try hard enough
After the Fall Augustine saw the human will as being divided
People have corrupted this will as they are inclined to do wrong and become selfish
This is seen in Romans 7 where Paul is describing the struggle between his spiritual inclinations and his selfish desires
Romans 7: key quotes
we know that the law is spiritual; but I am unspiritual
sold as a slave to sin
I myself in my mind am a slave to God's law, but in my sinful nature a slave to the law of sin
Original Sin and its effects on the will and human societies:
in Romans 7 Paul describes how he longs to be free from sin
once we know something is wrong, it makes is more desirable
Paul emphasises that Christians are forgiven sinners but they have not stopped sinning
Augustine could relate to this => stole a pear from a tree as a child
he stole simply for pleasure
sin was a part of human nature ==> we are all born with it so children face it
Augustine and Edicia:
Augustine wrote to a woman named Edicia and told her off as she decided to not have sex with her husband
as a result her husband had committed adultery => 'against the 10 commandments'
she had also given away her her family jewels and expensive clothes to become more spiritual
Augustine told her that she should have waited for her husband to agree with her and renounce physical pleasure
Augustine on men, women and sexuality:
In Confessions: Augustine describes his issue with staying celibate as he has had a mistress and wife. He finds it hard to control his own sexual desire.
Lust, sexual desire and jealousy are distractions from loving and obeying God
He had contradictory views as he believed that in marriage man and woman should take a pledge of celibacy yet this was not the case in his letter to Edicia
Augustine lived plainly
Augustine and Women:
his view on women has had a profound effect on Christianity and many of it denominations
when describing his mothers faith in Confessions, he uses the male adjective “virile”
Augustine is usually more sympathetic toward women than other writers at the time
he believed that women were not inferior to men but were just more passive => man should be the main decision maker
What is the difference whether it is in a wife or a mother, it is still Eve the temptress that we must beware of in any woman. . . I fail to see what use woman can be to man, if one excludes the function of bearing children.
Augustine on Original Sin and human society:
before the Fall, people were capable of living together in harmony => no need for any kind of repressive political authority
without the fall, society would still need a leader but they'd be more like a father figure
however due to original sin, we need a forceful authority otherwise we won't behave
he believed that people were meant to rule over everything