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Letters, Volume 6 (1*-29*) - Vol. 81 (Paperback)
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Letters, Volume 6 (1*-29*) - Vol. 81 (Paperback)
Series: Fathers of the Church Series
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Most of the works of St. Augustine of Hippo (354-430) have been
extant and studied for centuries by Christians throughout the
world. Since this Doctor of the Western Church has long been the
best known and most widely read of the Latin Fathers, it is so much
more unexpected that a previously unknown work should be found.
Johannes Divjak found not only a single work but in fact a whole
collection of letters, which he published in a critical Latin
edition in 1980. This volume contains the first English translation
of these newly discovered letters. The letters range in size from
short memoranda to long treatises on various subjects. In addition,
there are three other previously unknown letters: two written to
Augustine by Consentius, a North African rhetorician, and one
written by Saint Jerome to Aurelius of Carthage. These letters,
taken as a whole, present a vivid and fascinating view of life in
North Africa at the beginning of the fifth century. In addition to
the comments about ecclesiastical and episcopal affairs, there are
also letters on various threats to peace and security common in
this period of the late empire, on slavery and the growth of the
slave trade, and on Roman involvement in African affairs, both
ecclesiastical and civil. There are letters dealing with moral
questions and pastoral problems, in both marriage and the family,
as well as in larger areas of doctrine and discipline in the
Church. The conflict resulting from the end of the Donatist schism
becomes clearer, as does the refrain of desperation stemming from
an inadequate supply of clergy for parishes needing to be served. A
large number of these letters illustrate the day-to-day worries of
a fifth century North African bishop: clerical scandals, Church
finances, people seeking sanctuary in a church (and the ensuing
problems with the civil authorities), and disputed episcopal
succession. Until the time as scholars agree on a numbering system
that will integrate these letters into a previously known corpus of
Augustinian letters, they are numbered 1*-29*, with the asterick
added to distinguish them from letters 1-29 of the traditional body
of letters.
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