In this brief and incisive book, Pulitzer Prize-winning
historian Garry Wills tells the story of the "Confessions"--what
motivated Augustine to dictate it, how it asks to be read, and the
many ways it has been misread in the one-and-a-half millennia since
it was composed. Following Wills's biography of Augustine and his
translation of the "Confessions," this is an unparalleled
introduction to one of the most important books in the Christian
and Western traditions.
Understandably fascinated by the story of Augustine's life,
modern readers have largely succumbed to the temptation to read the
"Confessions" as autobiography. But, Wills argues, this is a
mistake. The book is not autobiography but rather a long prayer,
suffused with the language of Scripture and addressed to God, not
man. Augustine tells the story of his life not for its own
significance but in order to discern how, as a drama of sin and
salvation leading to God, it fits into sacred history. "We have to
read Augustine as we do Dante," Wills writes, "alert to rich layer
upon layer of Scriptural and theological symbolism." Wills also
addresses the long afterlife of the book, from controversy in its
own time and relative neglect during the Middle Ages to a renewed
prominence beginning in the fourteenth century and persisting to
today, when the "Confessions" has become an object of interest not
just for Christians but also historians, philosophers,
psychiatrists, and literary critics.
With unmatched clarity and skill, Wills strips away the
centuries of misunderstanding that have accumulated around
Augustine's spiritual classic.
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