Sermons to the People: Advent, Christmas, New Year, Epiphany
By (Author) Augustine of Hippo
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group Inc
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group
15th October 2002
United States
General
Non Fiction
252
Paperback
272
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 15mm
340g
A superb new translation brings the words of Augustine the preacher stirringly to life!
When the great Saint Augustine was called from his country home to become Bishop of Hippo in the fourth century, his new responsibilities took him away from the solitude of his writing and into the glare of the public eye. The author of two of the greatest works of religious literature, Confessions and City of God, Augustine became a shepherd to the people, inspiring and enlightening them with his sermons. His skills as a speaker were as greatif not greaterthan his skills as a writer. According to his friend Possidius, Those who read what Augustine wrote on the divine topics do get something out of them. But those who saw and heard him in personthey were the ones who got heaven and Earth.
Sermons to the People collects the homilies on the liturgical seasons of the Church Saint Augustine delivered over the course of his lifetime. This Image edition includes the first sermons in that vast collection: from Advent, Christmas, New Years, and the Epiphany. Newly translated by William Griffin, they address timeless concerns, including the problems of materialism and the intellectual difficulties of faith. Griffin renders the sermons with such immediacy, it is as though he had been present when Augustine spoke to his flock.
"These sermons come alive in Griffin's marvelous translation." William Barry, SJ, coauthor of The Practice of Spiritual Direction
While Augustine was writing landmark theology, he was also preaching earthy, colloquial, witty, Christ-honoring sermons to his African congregation. Now, thanks to this lively translation, he's preaching them to us.
Eugene Peterson, professor emeritus, Regent College, Vancouver, British Columbia; translator, The Message
In this delightful translation, Mr. Griffin has recovered the Augustine's homilies, delivering them all the way into the contemporary idiom, where yet another generation might hear his living voice. Scott Cairns, author of Philokalia
Henry William Griffin is a writer, editor, translator, and journalist living in Alexandria, Louisiana. He has most recently translated The Imitation of Christ and has also done major biographical work on C. S. Lewis and Billy Graham.