The feast of St Augustine is placed just one day after that of his mother St Monica. Spending her entire life praying for his conversion, she certainly deserved to become a Saint herself. Augustine was born in the city of Tagaste, Algeria, in 354 AD to a Christian mother. He was educated in North Africa and resisted his mother's pleas to become Christian. Living as a pagan intellectual, he took a concubine and became a Manichean. Later he converted to Christianity, being baptized by St Ambrose, and became a bishop of Hippo, a Latin Father and Doctor of the Church, and is one of the most important figures in the development of Western Christianity. Some of his writings are strictly autobiographical, even though very theological in thought. The Confessions, which is often called the first Western autobiography are still read around the world. His mother prayed for his conversion all her life, and she died just before returning back to Africa, where she was born in Algeria. She had two other children Navigius and Perpetua from her husband Patricius, who was not nice to his wife, although he converted before his death.
As a young man before his conversion, Augustine taught in
North Africa, Carthage and Rome. It was only when he arrived in Milan that his
life started to change. In the summer of 386, after having read an account of
the life of Saint Anthony of the Desert which greatly inspired him, Augustine
underwent a profound personal crisis and decided to convert to Catholic
Christianity, abandon his career in rhetoric, quit his teaching position in
Milan, give up any ideas of marriage, and devote himself entirely to serving
God and the practices of priesthood, which included celibacy. Key to this
conversion was the voice of an unseen child he heard while in his garden in
Milan telling him in a sing-song voice to tolle lege ("take
up and read"). He grabbed the nearest text to him, which was Paul's
Epistle to the Romans and opened it at random to 13:13-14, which read: "Let us walk honestly, as in the day; not in rioting and
drunkenness, not in chambering and wantonness, not in strife and envying; but
put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to gratify
its desires." Ambrose baptized Augustine, along with
his son, Adeodatus, on Easter Vigil in 387 in Milan, and soon thereafter in 388
he returned to Africa. In 391 he was ordained a priest and became a famous preacher,
while 5 years later he was made bishop of Hippo. Augustine died on August 28,
430.
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