
Predictive History - The Story of "Civilization" Civilization #27 - Augustine's Empire of God
Oct 7, 2025
Explore Augustine's pivotal role as an architect of the Catholic Church and his thoughts on the 'end of history'. Discover how he distinguished between earthly Rome and the spiritual Jerusalem amid crises of faith. Unpack his autobiography and the concept of original sin, emphasizing the importance of internal obedience over external justice. Delve into his views on pride, love, and the nature of sin, alongside his impact on the Church's relationship with state power. Finally, consider how dissenting views contributed to the emergence of Islam.
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Church As History’s Outside Authority
- Augustine reframes the Church as an eternal, legitimate power outside normal history that guarantees rulers' authority.
- This idea solved rulers' needs for legitimacy, cohesion, and differentiation across medieval Europe.
The Pear‑Stealing Confession
- Augustine recounts stealing pears as youthful sin that revealed enjoyment of wrongdoing rather than need.
- He uses this episode to illustrate original sin's persistence and human pleasure in sin.
Sin As Inherent Human Nature
- Augustine asserts humans are born in sin and enjoy wrongdoing, not merely err by mistake.
- This radical original-sin view makes obedience and Church mediation the only path to goodness.






