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November 4th @ 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm

The Works and Legacy of St. Augustine

Nov 04
Triunfo_de_San_Agustín

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6:00 Dinner | 6:30 Lecture (last 20 Q & A) | 7:30 End

This event is designated for current University of Chicago graduate and undergraduate students. University of Chicago faculty and staff are also welcome to attend. Others interested in auditing should contact William Hurley at whurley@lumenchristi.org.

In his first public address, Pope Leo XIV declared himself “a son of St. Augustine, who once said, ‘With you I am a Christian, and for you I am a bishop.’” This moment served as an ode to the Augustinian order, of which he is a member, and marked St. Augustine as a central influence to his papacy. 

In order to understand Pope Leo XIV, we must return to St. Augustine. 

St. Augustine of Hippo (A.D. 354–430) was a North African bishop and theologian whose writings, like The Confessions and The City of God, shaped Christian thought. After a life of searching and struggling with what is true, he embraced the Christian faith. His philosophy ultimately centers on the idea of the restless soul finding rest in God.

Join us as we survey one of the most prominent theologians in the history of Christianity and explore his enduring legacy on the Church today.

 

Schedule:

Oct 7 – Week 1: City of God pt 1

Willemien Otten (Dorothy Grant Maclear Professor of Theology and the History of Christianity; also in the College; Associate Faculty in the Department of History, Social Sciences Division, The University of Chicago)

The City of God is a  major historical-theological work that gives both a macrohistory of the world but also a microhistory of Adam and Eve folded within it. The first two sessions of the class will deal respectively with the dynamics of the macro- and the microhistorical view.

To focus on City of God, books 1, 5 and 11-13. See also the article by James Wetzel, “Augustine on the Origin of Evil: Myth and Metaphysics.”

Oct 14 – Week 2: City of God pt 2

Willemien Otten

The City of God is a  major historical-theological work that gives both a macrohistory of the world but also a microhistory of Adam and Eve folded within it. The first two sessions of the class will deal respectively with the dynamics of the macro- and the microhistorical view.

To focus on City of God, books 14-15 and 19. See also the article by Willemien Otten, “Between Exegesis and Naturalization: Gender and Creation in Augustine.”

Oct 21 – Week 3: Confessions

Ryan Coyne (Associate Professor of the Philosophy of Religions and Theology; also in the College, The University of Chicago)

Oct 28 – Week 4: On The Trinity

Bernard McGinn (Naomi Shenstone Donnelley Professor Emeritus of Historical Theology and of the History of Christianity in the Divinity School and the Committees on Medieval Studies and on General Studies, The University of Chicago)

Augustine’s “De Trinitate” is one of his longer and most difficult writings. The book makes three significant contributions to Christian theology of the Trinity: (1) sorting out the biblical basis for the Trinity; (2)  establishing a “grammar” of correct speaking about the doctrine, and (3) exploring the inner appropriation of the Trinity into the life of the believer.

Nov 4 – Week 5: On Christian Teaching

Scott Moringiello (Chair of the Department of Catholic Studies, Associate Professor, DePaul University)

Augustine’s On Christian Teaching (De Doctrina Christiana) is in some ways an overlooked classic. But this book gets to the heart of Augustine’s theological vision. In explaining the proper way to interpret the Scriptures and to preach Augustine offers a vision of how to do theology. If you read the Scriptures, and love does not increase in you, you’re misreading them.

Nov 11 – Week 6: Augustine and the Sociology of the Self

Cassandra Sever (Postdoctoral Fellow, The Lumen Christi Institute)

What if the key to understanding today’s cultural crises is hidden in an ancient vision of the self? This lecture explores Augustine’s idea of the self as ordered to the sacred and meaning-seeking—and shows how this vision can illuminate the sociology of who we are, what we long for, and the fractures of the contemporary world.

Nov 18 – Week 7: History of the Augustinian Order

Fr. Peter Funk, O.S.B. (Prior of the Monastery of the Holy Cross)



Presenters:

Cass Sever Headshot 4x5
Cassandra Sever
moringiello
Scott Moringiello
Ryan Coyne
Ryan Coyne
Otten
Willemien Otten
Prior-Peter-640
Fr. Peter Funk, OSB
McGinn Photo
Bernard McGinn

Categories:

Location:

Gavin House

1220 E 58th St.
Chicago, IL 60637