On the City of God Against the Pagans (better known as The City of God or just City of God) is a non-fiction book written by Saint Augustine of Hippo. First published in the year 426, the book serves as an examination of Christianity's influence on the world and the fall of Rome.
Publisher's summary[]
The City of God was written by St Augustine to show that salvation is attained by the worship of the one true God and by the rejection of all false gods.
As a challenge to the Roman neo-paganism that threatened to overwhelm Christianity in the early fifth century, it embraces religious lore, philosophy, theology and history.
Augustine discussed first the ancient polytheistic religion of Rome; secondly, the arguments of the Greek philosophers, with emphasis on the Neo-Platonists; last, creation, time and eternity as presented in the Bible. His thesis is that Rome, as the earthly City of God, should bring together the revelation of the Bible, the wisdom of Greek philosophy and the honour and dignity of her own tradition, and so enable the members of her church to enter into the eternal City of Heaven through regeneration in Christ. In representing this thesis, Augustine created a charter for a Christian future that has become one of the great cornerstones in the history of Western thought.
Sources[]
- Wikipedia
- Goodreads