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Books That Matter: The City of God
- Narrated by: Charles Mathewes
- Length: 12 hrs and 45 mins
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Publisher's Summary
Augustine of Hippo's masterpiece The City of God is one of the greatest books ever written, yet its size - nearly 1,000 pages - too often intimidates even serious readers. Composed in the years after the sack of Rome in the fifth century, it ushers you on an astounding historical and theological journey through the final years of the ancient world. What made this book so powerful? What mysteries lie within it? What relevance does the 1,600-year-old text have for our world today? And how should contemporary readers approach this monumental text?
Now is your chance to answer these questions and more with this profound survey of one of the world's truly great books. Over the course of 24 in-depth lectures, Professor Mathewes guides you chapter by chapter through Augustine's magnum opus, introducing you not only to the book's key arguments but also to the historical context necessary to comprehend The City of God's true power.
Here, you'll discover that Augustine was a surprisingly modern man with a clear-eyed outlook on a world in transition - and whose ideas continue to influence us today. Witness how he wrestled with some of the thorniest philosophical challenges of any time, including the problem of evil, faith versus reason, fate versus free will, and the very nature of God. Although there are no easy answers, Augustine's approach is ultimately therapeutic, helping readers live "happy in hope", which, he argues, is the only true happiness in a fallen world.
Whether you come to this book as a Christian, a philosopher, a historian, a literature lover, or simply someone who wants fresh insight into our world today, Augustine will revolutionize the way you think about politics, religion, history, and our relationship to the divine. Professor Mathewes delivers a magnificent introduction to one of the world's truly great books.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.
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What listeners say about Books That Matter: The City of God
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Daniel McCormick
- 12-12-16
Incredible presentation of an incredible work
Join in this pilgrimage through Augustine's City of God - it's well worth your time!
10 people found this helpful
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- Eric Roush
- 04-17-17
Gloriassisima
Exceptional lecturer, funny and insightful, on a topic worthy of reflection. Looking forward to more lectures from him.
9 people found this helpful
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- Eric S. Bindewald
- 01-14-17
Engaging and insightful<br />
This is a book that has long sat on my shelf - barely started and abandoned. These lectures make the themes of the book accessible and give a context for understanding Augustine and the world he lived in.
9 people found this helpful
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- Lucy Joukhajian
- 04-27-17
truly, a great course! + essential for historians!
This has to be my favorite "audiobook" by far! I've enjoyed these lectures so much, from the style of the narrative, to the content, to the wisdom of the commentary. I will listen to it again for sure.
I especially want to recommend this to all my historian friends. Whether they're believers or not, they should listen to this audiobook and read the City of God. It's relevant for understanding the ancient, medieval, and modern world, and illuminates so much of the context we live in today.
Oh, and Professor Mathewes is an excellent lecturer. I hope I can attend a lecture of his live some day, now that I've listened to this.
8 people found this helpful
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- BeZot
- 07-15-17
May Take a Few Listens
In short, the professor is obviously well versed in the material and seems excellent. The only tricky part is that he uses lots of 10-dollar words. They're the kind that are super precise and you kind of know the meaning of them, but when three or four are used in the same sentence, your mind just glazes. It's sort of like a rocket scientist explaining what he does with technical terms. He's certainly being more accurate than if he used layman terms, but it would be nice to throw in some more common words to assist the poor layman who is trying to wrap his head around the unfamiliar subject.
That being said, taking on the City of God is a huge task, and I know more than I did before I started. I like the professor and hope to listen someday again and see if I can glean a little more from this sophisticated lesson.
6 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 11-25-16
A Wonderful Journey Through Abstractions
Fantastic listen for anybody with a Christian background or interest in antiquity. The course succeeds in providing it's listeners with a fresh perspective on politics and daily life in general. It's a great aerial perspective on human nature.
8 people found this helpful
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- TolkienJunky7
- 07-14-19
informative and helpful
informative and helpful in reaching a deeper understanding of Augustine's work. I suggest reading or listening to City of God as it is sectioned here to understand this commentary.
3 people found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 02-03-21
The Best in Any Category
I listen again and again and keep getting new insights. The voice personifies a thinker who gently reasons with me. This course speaks to my mind and my soul. It seeks out and allies itself with my nobler instincts.
2 people found this helpful
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- John
- 07-15-21
An Insightful Guide to an Essential Book
There is so much good stuff here. You will gain a solid understanding of the theological, philosophical, historical, and cultural soil out of which the City of God grew, the audiences for which it was written, the message St. Augustine intended to convey to those audiences, and the impact his book had at the time and in the centuries since—all essential background before embarking on the book itself. And these lectures provide a healthy mental reset, too. Even among those who take the Judeo-Christian story seriously, we tend to take it for granted, forgetting that it was then (and remains now) the only exit from the blind alley of pagan spiritualism. These are twelve and three-quarters hours very well spent.
Of course, the argot and attitudes of the contemporary academy are unavoidable. No point of view is “true”, just “privileged”. Christianity is an “ideology”. In a discussion of martyrdom, Professor Mathewes dockets Christ’s willing sacrifice as somehow “political”. And I wish I could share his bland confidence that Christianity is so “baked in” to our culture as to make any regression, even in our radically post-Christian age, unlikely.
However, Mathewes is a professor, not a priest. And, as the course proceeds, the academic argot and attitude tend to fall away as he lets Augustine speak for himself. Between the practical roadmap of the book’s structure and the historical and philosophical background that our good professor provides, you’ll walk away with a much clearer understanding of Augustine’s vision--along with salutary reminders to never think you'll have a lock on it. Especially helpful is the clarification of many popular misapprehensions. “If you manage to hear what he is trying to say”, Mathewes suggests, “[Augustine] is more fundamentally affirming…than condemning” than many of us (including myself) have been led to believe.
Admittedly, while discussing towering concepts and subtle connections, he tends to speak perhaps a shade too rapidly at times. But that’s what the rewind button is for.
1 person found this helpful
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- Kimberlee Barrett-Johnson
- 04-09-19
Best course I’ve bought yet
From the beginning this course delighted me. Professor Mathewes delivers a course which shows why Augustine deserves his centrality to the Western tradition, in a way that respects both Augustine in his setting and us in ours. He is always clear, a master teacher at the height of his craft. He is not seeking to impress with his erudition, which impresses anyway, but rather, having surveyed a vast territory, to communicate its delights.
1 person found this helpful
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- Roisin Deighan
- 03-17-17
A tour de force
I thoroughly recommend Professor Mathewes course on one of the great books in human history. He addresses the major themes of The City of God with passion, eloquence and erudition. It will inspire any serious thinker who wants to explore the great questions of human existence.
1 person found this helpful
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- Sheila
- 08-23-20
Very very good
An excellent series of insightful lectures. Thank you.
I had to listen at 80% speed 🥴