Enchiridion / St. Augustine, about faith, hope, love, edited by a new editor. Author: Henry Paolucci, St. Augustine's Adolf von Harnack through the analysis and evaluation of the history of Hippopotamus
Saint Augustine St. Augustine (354-430) is known as Cava Augustine and is an indigenous native to North Africa. Most of his life was spent in the Cabaregus of North Africa as a bishop of Christianity, and he also won his hippopotamus of his common name Augustine here. He was born in a small town called Tageste (contemporary Algeria), and as his age changed his view on life changed with life. - The basic belief for Christianity is God's perfect good. God can not do evil, all his actions are completely pure. But this principle raises many questions about obvious pain and cheating spreading all over the world. Where does evil come from? And how can evil exist when the only eternal entity is perfect, innocent, and ultimately a good god?
Augustine or St. Augustine's Hippo (November 13, 354 - August 28, 430) is a bishop of Hippo, one of the most important people in the development of Christianity. His writings such as "Confession" and "City of God" show the depth of his faith and the theological skills of trained rhetoricists. His interpretation of God's teaching, free will, evil, original sin, grace, light and destiny are the norms of most Christians. His confession is often called the first autobiography of the West. His God town defended accusations of heathens and condemned the collapse of the Roman Empire.