City of GodPenguin UK, 27 нояб. 2003 г. - Всего страниц: 1184 City of God is an enduringly significant work in the history of Christian thought, by one of its central figures |
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... religion of a few fishermen but was, in fact, the religion of an Empire accepting its intellectual responsibility. This superficial change, which was wrought through assimilation, absorption, reaction and, it might be, rejection, was ...
... religion of a few fishermen but was, in fact, the religion of an Empire accepting its intellectual responsibility. This superficial change, which was wrought through assimilation, absorption, reaction and, it might be, rejection, was ...
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... religion, a form of polytheism, had been prolonged, bitter and serious in its consequences. From the time of Constantine onwards, there had been a succession of edicts against paganism, twenty of them in the last twenty years of the ...
... religion, a form of polytheism, had been prolonged, bitter and serious in its consequences. From the time of Constantine onwards, there had been a succession of edicts against paganism, twenty of them in the last twenty years of the ...
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... religion has civilized the world, driven the Gauls from the Capitol and Hannibal from the city. St Ambrose, however, was a doughty opponent, as his domination of the Arian Empress Justina in 385–386 and of the Emperor Theodosius (with ...
... religion has civilized the world, driven the Gauls from the Capitol and Hannibal from the city. St Ambrose, however, was a doughty opponent, as his domination of the Arian Empress Justina in 385–386 and of the Emperor Theodosius (with ...
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... religion, as causes or explanations of success in Empire or failure. Augustine replied in a letter to a friend of Marcellinus and in a further one to Marcellinus himself. The themes of these two letters (Letters 137 and 138) foreshadow ...
... religion, as causes or explanations of success in Empire or failure. Augustine replied in a letter to a friend of Marcellinus and in a further one to Marcellinus himself. The themes of these two letters (Letters 137 and 138) foreshadow ...
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... religion had done so before him, and amongst those was one especially well known to him, Porphyry. Porphyry's search for a universal way to salvation, and his rejection of Christ as that way, is the high point of the tenth book of the ...
... religion had done so before him, and amongst those was one especially well known to him, Porphyry. Porphyry's search for a universal way to salvation, and his rejection of Christ as that way, is the high point of the tenth book of the ...
Содержание
Book XI | |
Book XII | |
Book XIII | |
Book XIV | |
Book XV | |
Book XVI | |
Book XVII | |
Book XVIII | |
Book V | |
Book VI | |
Book VII | |
Book VIII | |
Book IX | |
Book X | |
Part II | |
Book XIX | |
Book XX | |
Book XXI | |
Book XXII | |
Bibliography | |
Suggested Further Reading Follow Penguin | |
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according Aeneas angels animals Apostle Apuleius assert Augustine Augustine’s believe birth blessed blessedness body called cause certainly Christ Christian Cicero citizens City of God corruption created creation Creator death deities demons desire divine earth earthly city Empire enemy eternal evil existence fact faith father fear felicity flesh give given glory God’s goddess gods Greek happened happiness heaven Hebrew Hence holy honour human immortal Janus judgement Jupiter kind king Lamech light living Lord lust man’s mankind means men’s mind misery mortal nations nature Numa Pompilius offered pagans passions philosophers Plato Platonists Plotinus poets Porphyry praise prophet punishment reason rites Roman Roman Empire Rome Romulus sacrifice Sallust Saturn says Scripture Second Punic War seed sense shows sins sons soul speaking spirit suppose supreme temple temporal theology theurgy things true religion truth Varro victory virtue whole wisdom words worship