From Pope Benedict XVI's January 30, 2008, general audience, the third of five audiences dedicated to the great Doctor:
• "Augustine’s 'Confessions' and the Harmony of Faith and Reason" (July 26, 2010)
Related Book from Ignatius Press:
• Church Fathers and Teachers: From Leo The Great to Peter Lombard | Pope Benedict XVI
• Church Fathers: From Clement of Rome to Augustine | Pope Benedict XVI
• Benedict XVI: An Intimate Portrait | Peter Seewald
• Christ, Our Joy: The Theological Vision of Pope Benedict XVI | Msgr. Joseph Murphy
• Pope Benedict XVI: The Conscience of Our Age (A Theological Portrait) | Fr. D. Vincent Twomey, S.V.D.
Today's Catechesis, however, is dedicated to the subject of faith and reason, a crucial, or better, the crucial theme for St Augustine's biography. As a child he learned the Catholic faith from Monica, his mother. But he abandoned this faith as an adolescent because he could no longer discern its reasonableness and rejected a religion that was not, to his mind, also an expression of reason, that is, of the truth. His thirst for truth was radical and therefore led him to drift away from the Catholic faith. Yet his radicalism was such that he could not be satisfied with philosophies that did not go to the truth itself, that did not go to God and to a God who was not only the ultimate cosmological hypothesis but the true God, the God who gives life and enters into our lives.• Benedict and Augustine (April 21, 2007)
Thus, Augustine's entire intellectual and spiritual development is also a valid model today in the relationship between faith and reason, a subject not only for believers but for every person who seeks the truth, a central theme for the balance and destiny of every human being. These two dimensions, faith and reason, should not be separated or placed in opposition; rather, they must always go hand in hand. As Augustine himself wrote after his conversion, faith and reason are "the two forces that lead us to knowledge" (Contra Academicos, III, 20, 43). In this regard, through the two rightly famous Augustinian formulas (cf. Sermones, 43, 9) that express this coherent synthesis of faith and reason: crede ut intelligas ("I believe in order to understand") - believing paves the way to crossing the threshold of the truth - but also, and inseparably, intellige ut credas ("I understand, the better to believe"), the believer scrutinizes the truth to be able to find God and to believe.
Augustine's two affirmations express with effective immediacy and as much corresponding depth the synthesis of this problem in which the Catholic Church sees her own journey expressed. This synthesis had been acquiring its form in history even before Christ's coming, in the encounter between the Hebrew faith and Greek thought in Hellenistic Judaism. At a later period this synthesis was taken up and developed by many Christian thinkers. The harmony between faith and reason means above all that God is not remote: he is not far from our reason and our life; he is close to every human being, close to our hearts and to our reason, if we truly set out on the journey.
• "Augustine’s 'Confessions' and the Harmony of Faith and Reason" (July 26, 2010)
Related Book from Ignatius Press:
• Church Fathers and Teachers: From Leo The Great to Peter Lombard | Pope Benedict XVI
• Church Fathers: From Clement of Rome to Augustine | Pope Benedict XVI
• Benedict XVI: An Intimate Portrait | Peter Seewald
• Christ, Our Joy: The Theological Vision of Pope Benedict XVI | Msgr. Joseph Murphy
• Pope Benedict XVI: The Conscience of Our Age (A Theological Portrait) | Fr. D. Vincent Twomey, S.V.D.
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