
There quickly surfaces the intensity with which he lived his
life, whether his path led away from or toward God. The tears of his mother, the instructions of
Ambrose and, most of all, God himself speaking to him in the Scriptures redirected Augustine’s love
of life to a life of love.
Having been so deeply immersed in
creature-pride of life in his early days and having drunk deeply of its bitter dregs, it is not
surprising that Augustine should have turned, with a holy fierceness, against the many demon-thrusts
rampant in his day. His times were truly decadent—politically, socially, morally. He was both feared
and loved, like the Master. The perennial criticism leveled against him: a fundamental rigorism.
In his day, he providentially fulfilled the office of prophet. Like Jeremiah and other greats, he was hard-pressed but could not keep quiet. “I say to myself, I will not mention him,/I will speak in his name no more./But then it becomes like fire burning in my heart,/imprisoned in my bones;/I grow weary holding it in,/I cannot endure it” (Jeremiah 20:9).
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