"By faithfulness we are collected and wound up into unity within ourselves, whereas we had been scattered abroad in multiplicity"
About this Quote
Faithfulness, for Augustine, is less a haloed virtue than a psychic technology: it gathers the self back from the cheap seductions of dispersion. The line is built on a vivid spatial metaphor - “collected,” “wound up,” “unity” versus being “scattered abroad in multiplicity” - that turns the spiritual life into a problem of attention and coherence. You can almost feel the torque of it. Faith is not merely believing the right propositions; it is the act of tightening the loose threads of desire until a person becomes a single, directed will.
The subtext is Augustine’s diagnosis of the human condition as fragmentation. Late antique life offered plenty of “multiplicity”: competing schools, civic ambitions, pleasures, social performances. Augustine knew that world intimately, and his Confessions reads like an inventory of how easily a person can be pulled into many selves - lover, rhetorician, status-seeker, skeptic - none of them stable. “Scattered abroad” isn’t poetic exaggeration; it’s a moral psychology in which sin is literally dis-integration, a life lived in pieces.
Context matters: Augustine is writing as a Christian intellectual steeped in Platonism, translating philosophical ideas of the One and the many into a pastoral key. Faithfulness becomes the counterforce to restlessness, a discipline that orders love (what he calls the ordo amoris). The rhetorical genius is that it makes salvation feel less like escaping the world and more like finally inhabiting your own life without being yanked around by it.
The subtext is Augustine’s diagnosis of the human condition as fragmentation. Late antique life offered plenty of “multiplicity”: competing schools, civic ambitions, pleasures, social performances. Augustine knew that world intimately, and his Confessions reads like an inventory of how easily a person can be pulled into many selves - lover, rhetorician, status-seeker, skeptic - none of them stable. “Scattered abroad” isn’t poetic exaggeration; it’s a moral psychology in which sin is literally dis-integration, a life lived in pieces.
Context matters: Augustine is writing as a Christian intellectual steeped in Platonism, translating philosophical ideas of the One and the many into a pastoral key. Faithfulness becomes the counterforce to restlessness, a discipline that orders love (what he calls the ordo amoris). The rhetorical genius is that it makes salvation feel less like escaping the world and more like finally inhabiting your own life without being yanked around by it.
Quote Details
| Topic | Faith |
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