Digital Verbum Edition
This one-stop resource offers introductory essays and critical commentary on Augustine’s City of God. The book makes Augustine’s thought accessible, explains his ideas clearly, and prompts further reading.
Augustine is the most influential thinker in Western Christianity, and City of God is arguably his greatest work. However, its length and complexity make its argument difficult to follow, even for specialists.
This one-stop resource offers introductory essays, essential selections from City of God, and critical commentary on the text, enabling readers to study Augustine for themselves. It makes Augustine’s thought accessible, explains his ideas clearly, and prompts further reading.
Constructed and composed with the classroom in mind, this volume introduces Augustine’s text by abridging and explaining the primary source material. These selections focus on Augustine's social and political thought while indicating the larger contours of his work.
This book retrieves ancient wisdom for the modern world, presenting an enduring vision for faithfulness and hope in times of social instability.
Augustine’s City of God is at once perennial and puzzling. It wrestles with fundamental questions that face every generation but was written from and for a context that is now deeply foreign. Gregory W. Lee has created an incredible resource to help readers today and in the future encounter this classic. He has curated the best anthology of City of God that exists, surrounded the primary readings with incredibly helpful notes and commentary, and left room for readers to wrestle with Augustine for themselves.
—James K. A. Smith, professor of philosophy, Calvin University
Augustine is always relevant, and in the twenty-first century even moreso. Gregory W. Lee’s selection of passages from Augustine’s masterpiece, City of God, together with Lee’s own astute commentary on those passages, makes for an exceptional work for students and interested general readers. Highly recommended.
—Charles Mathewes, University of Virginia
Augustine desperately needs not just an editor but a wingman—someone to track his flight as he deep dives into cultural critique, metaphysical speculation, exegetical acrobatics, and otherworldly musings. Gregory W. Lee, one of the best of the new generation of political theologians, offers readers a framework for reading City of God: an introduction to the text and its context within Augustine’s political theology, an outline of the book’s contents, chapter intros, explanatory notes, expository essays.
—James Wetzel, professor of philosophy and Augustinian Chair, Villanova University