The City of God, Volume One
The Refutation of Pagan Religion (Books 1–10)
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Augustine
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A Classic Christian Apologetic, Revised for Modern Readers
Written in the aftermath of Rome’s fall, Augustine’s City of God confronts the charge that Christianity was responsible for the empire’s decline and exposes the theological emptiness of pagan religion.
Books 1–10 of Augustine’s monumental City of God
A sustained refutation of Roman pagan religion and philosophy
Revised from the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers for clarity and readability
Ideal for students, pastors, and serious readers of early Christian theology
In the first ten books of The City of God, Augustine addresses one of the central accusations of his age: that the abandonment of the traditional gods had brought disaster upon Rome. With historical argument, theological reasoning, and sharp rhetorical skill, he demonstrates that Rome’s gods neither preserved the city from calamity nor provided moral transformation or true happiness to their worshipers.
Augustine examines Roman religion at every level, from popular cultic practice to its most sophisticated philosophical defenses. He exposes the moral incoherence of the traditional gods, the impotence of religious ritual to restrain vice or suffering, and the failure of pagan theology to account for the realities of human history. His critique culminates in a sustained engagement with Platonism, which he treats with respect but ultimately rejects for its reliance on intermediary beings and its inability to reconcile humanity to God.
This volume represents a coherent unit within Augustine’s larger work. Books 1–10 are devoted entirely to dismantling pagan claims to religious and philosophical sufficiency. Only after completing this task does Augustine turn, in the later books, to a constructive account of creation, history, and the destiny of the two cities.
The text of this edition is based on the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, Volume 2, and has been carefully revised to improve clarity and accessibility for modern readers. Archaic language has been moderated, punctuation and formatting updated, and minor inconsistencies corrected, while preserving the substance and argument of the original translation.
The City of God, Volume One serves both as a stand-alone treatment of Augustine’s refutation of pagan religion and as the opening volume of a two-part presentation of one of the most influential works in the history of Christian thought.
This revision was prepared through an AI-assisted process, combining digital tools with traditional editorial work.