Medieval Literature On Augustines Confessions
The text provides a more expanded and versatile understanding of the problem of evil as opposed to classical texts such as Platos Republic as it assumes that evil is not merely caused by ignorance as Plato argued or darkness residing within ones soul as the Manicheans argued but is due to an individuals inability to commune with God (Augustine, 2009). He argues that the cause of evil is the wills separation from God (Augustine, 2009). Such is the case since even if one wills to do good, if one refuses to commune with God then it is impossible for an individual to follow his good desires and intentions (Augustine, 2009).
Augustines Confessions thereby manifest the conditions in his time as the inner spiritual conflict that he narrates in his text also mirrors the social and cultural conflict that occurred during the period. It is important to note that Augustine existed during the initial growth of power of the Christian religion. It was thereby a period wherein individuals were forced to shift from a Roman to a Christian worldview (ODonnell, 2001). His internal struggle in his Confessions provides an example of both the internal and external struggles experienced by individuals whose social and cultural conditions shifted from one which glorified the human being to one, which glorified the divine.
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