Bad Advertisement? Are you a Christian? Online Store: | PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP The occasion and date of the composition of this treatise are indicated in a statement which Augustin makes in the seventeenth chapter of the First Book of his Retractations. From this we learn that, in its original form, it was a discourse which Augustin, when only a presbyter, was requested to deliver in public by the bishops assembled at the Council of Hippo-Regius, and that it was subsequently issued as a book at the desire of friends. The general assembly of the North African Church, which was thus convened at what is now Bona, in the modern territory of Algiers, took place in the year 393 A.D., and was otherwise one of some historical importance, on account of the determined protest which it emitted against the position elsewhere allowed to Patriarchs in the Church, and against the admittance of any more authoritative or magisterial title to the highest ecclesiastical official than that of simply “Bishop of the first Church” (primæ sedis episcopus). The work constitutes an exposition of the several clauses of the so-called Apostles’ Creed. The questions concerning the mutual relations of the three Persons in the Godhead are handled with greatest fullness; in connection with which, especially in the use made of the analogies of Being, Knowledge, and Love, and in the cautions thrown in against certain applications of these and other illustrations taken from things of human experience, we come across sentiments which are also repeated in the City of God, the books on the Trinity, and others of his doctrinal writings. The passage referred to in the Retractations is as follows: About the same period, in presence of the bishops, who gave me orders to that effect, and who were holding a plenary Council of the whole of Africa at Hippo-Regius, I delivered, as presbyter, a discussion on the subject of Faith and the Creed. This disputation, at the very pressing request of some of those who were on terms of more than usual intimacy and affection with us, I threw into the form of a book, in which the themes themselves are made the subjects of discourse, although not in a method involving the adoption of the particular connection of words which is given to the competentes1515
[Additional Note by the American Editor.] [Another English edition of this treatise De Fide et Symbolo was prepared by the Rev. Charles a. Heurtley, D.D., Margaret Professor of Divinity and Canon of Christ Church, Oxford, and published by Parker & Co., Oxford and London, 1886. The following text of the Apostles’ Creed may be collected from this book of St. Augustin, and was current in North Africa towards the close of the fourth century: 1. I Believe in God the Father Almighty. Chs. 2 and 3. 2. (And) In Jesus Christ, the Son of God, the Only-Begotten of the Father, or, His Only Son, Our Lord. Ch. 3. 3. Who Was Born Through the Holy Spirit of the Virgin Mary. Ch. 4 (§ 8.) 4. Who Under Pontius Pilate Was Crucified and Buried. Ch. 5 (§ 11.) 5. On the Third Day He Rose Again from the Dead. Ch. 5 (§ 12.) 6. He Ascended into Heaven. Ch. 6 (§ 13.) 7. He Sitteth at the Right Hand of the Father. Ch. 7 (§ 14.) 8. From Thence He Will Come and Judge the Living and the Dead. Ch. 8 (§ 15.) 9. (and I Believe) in the Holy Spirit. Ch. 9 (§ 16–19.) 10. I Believe the Holy Church (Catholic). Ch. 10 (§ 21.) 11. The Forgiveness of Sin. Ch. 10 (§ 23.) 12. The Resurrection of the Body. Ch. 10 (§ 23, 24.) 13. The Life Everlasting. Ch. 10 (§ 24.)]
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