CHRISTIAN SELF-FORMATION: AN AUGUSTINIAN CONTRIBUTION

Augustine’s dense and probing thought about the imprint of the Trinitarian God upon human persons in De Trinitate (AD 399-422/426) provides an alternative spirituality of the self to that of a more individualistic Western liberal search for self-fulfilment through self-discovery. By referring to th...

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Main Author: F. England
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Free State 2021-06-01
Series:Acta Theologica
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Online Access:https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/5450
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author F. England
author_facet F. England
author_sort F. England
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description Augustine’s dense and probing thought about the imprint of the Trinitarian God upon human persons in De Trinitate (AD 399-422/426) provides an alternative spirituality of the self to that of a more individualistic Western liberal search for self-fulfilment through self-discovery. By referring to the Trinitarian images in De Trinitate and recurring to Augustine’s self-searching mode in the Confessiones (AD 397-401), his quest may be said to inspire a mode of Christian self-formation that, sub specie humanitatis, rejects the “discovery” of one’s “true self” – the sense that one really does possess a stable authentic core self, and that one can find it by following some process of interior self-scrutiny. Rather, for Augustine, it appears that to be human is to pursue the quest of self-knowing in a relational formation that opens into the life of the being who called one into existence. Consequently, the search for God (Confessiones) and for the Trinitarian imprints of God (De Trinitate) appear to raise the more serious questions that inform and shape Christian self-formation: Can one “know oneself”? What does it mean to be founded by a Trinitarian God? How does one know which goods to choose in order to construct a holy life? How would one construe a “Trinitarian life” for oneself?
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spelling doaj-art-b1474b2149c546fb81b5a8caf76497172025-02-11T09:37:07ZengUniversity of the Free StateActa Theologica1015-87582309-90892021-06-0141110.38140/at.v41i1.5450CHRISTIAN SELF-FORMATION: AN AUGUSTINIAN CONTRIBUTIONF. England0University of Cape Town Augustine’s dense and probing thought about the imprint of the Trinitarian God upon human persons in De Trinitate (AD 399-422/426) provides an alternative spirituality of the self to that of a more individualistic Western liberal search for self-fulfilment through self-discovery. By referring to the Trinitarian images in De Trinitate and recurring to Augustine’s self-searching mode in the Confessiones (AD 397-401), his quest may be said to inspire a mode of Christian self-formation that, sub specie humanitatis, rejects the “discovery” of one’s “true self” – the sense that one really does possess a stable authentic core self, and that one can find it by following some process of interior self-scrutiny. Rather, for Augustine, it appears that to be human is to pursue the quest of self-knowing in a relational formation that opens into the life of the being who called one into existence. Consequently, the search for God (Confessiones) and for the Trinitarian imprints of God (De Trinitate) appear to raise the more serious questions that inform and shape Christian self-formation: Can one “know oneself”? What does it mean to be founded by a Trinitarian God? How does one know which goods to choose in order to construct a holy life? How would one construe a “Trinitarian life” for oneself? https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/5450Self-formationTrinityDesireMemory
spellingShingle F. England
CHRISTIAN SELF-FORMATION: AN AUGUSTINIAN CONTRIBUTION
Acta Theologica
Self-formation
Trinity
Desire
Memory
title CHRISTIAN SELF-FORMATION: AN AUGUSTINIAN CONTRIBUTION
title_full CHRISTIAN SELF-FORMATION: AN AUGUSTINIAN CONTRIBUTION
title_fullStr CHRISTIAN SELF-FORMATION: AN AUGUSTINIAN CONTRIBUTION
title_full_unstemmed CHRISTIAN SELF-FORMATION: AN AUGUSTINIAN CONTRIBUTION
title_short CHRISTIAN SELF-FORMATION: AN AUGUSTINIAN CONTRIBUTION
title_sort christian self formation an augustinian contribution
topic Self-formation
Trinity
Desire
Memory
url https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/5450
work_keys_str_mv AT fengland christianselfformationanaugustiniancontribution