St Augustine's Treatise on the City of God

Saint Augustine of Hippo (354 - 430)
Translated by F. R. Montgomery Hitchcock (1867 - 1951)

After the storming and the sack of Rome by the Goths under their king, Alaric, the worshippers of false gods or heathen, as we call them, tried to prove that this calamity was due to the Christian religion, and began more fiercely and bitterly than ever to blaspheme the true God. This it was that kindled my zeal for the House of God, and induced me to defend the City of God against the calumny and misrepresentations of her foes. After many serious interruptions this great undertaking, which was extended over many years, was at length finished in twenty-two books. Of these, the first five are written in answer to those who believe that worldly prosperity is insured by the old polytheistic religion of Rome, and that calamities have followed by reason of its neglect. The next five are addressed to those who admit that the human race is always exposed to such misfortunes, and yet believe that the old religion is a good preparation for the life to come; . . . while the last twelve books of this extensive work are devoted to a comparison of the different origins, histories, and destinies of the City of God and the City of the World. (Augustine) As a complete version of the De Civitate would not be possible within the limits of this series, the author has adopted the plan of selecting the most important passages for translation, linking these together by arguments in brackets. (Abridger) - Summary by Augustine of Hippo

Genre(s): Christianity - Other

Language: English

Section Chapter Reader Time
Play 01 The Church's Answer to Paganism InTheDesert
00:15:32
Play 02 The Church's Indictment of Paganism InTheDesert
00:01:40
Play 03 Exposure of the Pagan Deities InTheDesert
00:01:59
Play 04 Traces of Spiritual Religion Among the Pagans InTheDesert
00:02:59
Play 05 The Liberty of Christian and the Freedom of Pagan Rome — A Contrast InTheDesert
00:08:35
Play 06 The Deities of Rome, Unable to Confer Eternal Life, Unworthy of Worship InTheDesert
00:09:15
Play 07 Natural Theology Insufficient InTheDesert
00:01:49
Play 08 Platonism, the Highest Philosophy of the Pagan World, Inferior to Christianity InTheDesert
00:12:43
Play 09 The Demons of Paganism and the Angels of Christianity InTheDesert
00:02:23
Play 10 The Worship of the Triune God, and the Doctrine of the Incarnation InTheDesert
00:25:41
Play 11 The Creation of the World — Its Significance, Purpose and Goodness InTheDesert
00:16:35
Play 12 The Creation of Man and the Origin of Evil InTheDesert
00:08:48
Play 13 The Fall of Man and its Consequences InTheDesert
00:06:08
Play 14 The Two States InTheDesert
00:05:41
Play 15 Biblical Account of the Course of the Two States InTheDesert
00:01:39
Play 16 Same Subject Continued InTheDesert
00:00:40
Play 17 Prophetical Reference to These States InTheDesert
00:00:50
Play 18 Augury versus Prophecy InTheDesert
00:08:08
Play 19 The Ideals of Life and the Objects of Existence InTheDesert
00:03:30
Play 20 The Life to Come InTheDesert
00:01:29
Play 21 Sin — Its Punishment and Forgiveness InTheDesert
00:08:59
Play 22 Righteousness, Its Rest and Freedom InTheDesert
00:11:53