*** DEBUG START ***
*** DEBUG END ***

Angela Tilby: Augustine knew history is incomplete

17 November 2023

Jorisvo/iStock

A fresco depicting St Augustine in the Collegiate Church of San Gimignano, Italy

A fresco depicting St Augustine in the Collegiate Church of San Gimignano, Italy

ST AUGUSTINE’s The City of God — or, more correctly, The City of God against the Pagans — is one of the most influential works of Western philosophy. Augustine, facing the collapse of the Roman Empire, writes of two cities: the City of God, which God is building invisibly through time, and the doomed Earthly City, built of unchecked human desire, division, and conflict.

The City of God is worth turning to in these weeks between All Saints’ Day and Advent: the Kingdom season. First, because Augustine criticised any sacred ideology, whether pagan or Christian; second, because Augustine’s writing challenges the contemporary view that history is progressive.

It is because the focus of Christian life is heaven, not earth, that there is a need for secular politics. But they will always be the politics of imperfection, the art of the possible rather than the perfect.

Augustine would have had problems with the much quoted view of Martin Luther King, Jr, that “The arc of the moral universe . . . bends towards justice.” Much preaching about the Kingdom today assumes that this is true, and that the values of the Kingdom are discernible to any right-thinking (and, usually, Left-voting) person.

For Augustine, this is not so. What we experience on earth is a relentless conflict between good and evil — not only around us, but within us. Our best judgements are flawed by self-interest. God does not endorse our moral values, however noble they may seem to us, but calls us to radical repentance. Discerning what is of God, and what is of the evil one, is not straightforward. We should realise this from the Lord’s Prayer, which does not look for the Kingdom to come on earth, but for God’s will to be done on earth, as in heaven.

In my theology finals, I wrote an essay about The City of God. I was inspired by Robert Markus’s book Saeculum, which suggested that the two cities were like opposing threads running through history, and yet so closely wound together that they will be distinguished only when they are reeled in at the end of the world. This led me to the marvellous metaphor in Gerard Manley Hopkins’s poem “Spelt from Sibyl’s Leaves”:


Óur tale, O óur oracle! ’ Lét life,
       wáned,
     ah lét life wind

Off hér once skéined stained
   véined varíety ’ upon áll on twó
   spools; párt, pen, páck
Now her áll in twó flocks, twó
   folds — black, white; ’ right,
  wrong; reckon but, reck but,
  mind

But thése two; wáre of a wórld
    where bút these ’ twó tell, each
    off the óther. . .


We are not in heaven yet. What contemporary Christianity often lacks is any real grappling with the tragic incompletion of human history. Instead, it is too easily assumed that tragedy is always someone’s fault, and can be ironed out by enough money, more bureaucracy, and better safeguarding. It is not true.

Browse Church and Charity jobs on the Church Times jobsite

Letters to the editor

Letters for publication should be sent to letters@churchtimes.co.uk.

Letters should be exclusive to the Church Times, and include a full postal address. Your name and address will appear alongside your letter.

Forthcoming Events

 

Church Times/Sarum College:

Traditions of Christian Spirituality

January - May 2024

This is a five-part series on major strands of the Christian spiritual tradition.

Book individual session tickets or sign up for the full programme

 

Companions on the Way: a retreat in preparation for Lent:

Saturday 10 February 2024 - 10am - 1pm GMT

Jay Hulme, Rachel Mann, Rob Marshall, Nick Papadopulos, Richard Carter and worship by the St Martin’s Voices

Online Tickets available

 

RS Thomas & ME Eldridge Society in association with Church Times:

RS Thomas Winter webinar 2024

Saturday 17 February 2024 - 4pm - 5.15pm GMT

Malcolm Guite in conversation with Jon Gower

Online Tickets available

 

Church Times/RSCM:

Festival of Faith and Music

26 - 28 April 2024

See the full programme on the festival website. 

Early bird tickets available

 

 

Green Church Awards

Closing date: 30 June 2024

Read more details about the awards

 

The Church Times Archive

Read reports from issues stretching back to 1863, search for your parish or see if any of the clergy you know get a mention.

FREE for Church Times subscribers.

Explore the archive

Welcome to the Church Times

​To explore the Church Times website fully, please sign in or subscribe.

Non-subscribers can read four articles for free each month. (You will need to register.)