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While studies frequently concern preachers and their audiences, this chapter avoids the word “audience” and relies more upon the phrase that Augustine uses for the people who stand before him when he preaches: fratres mei (my brethren). The chapter first considers Augustine as preacher with a critical use of Possidius’s Life of Augustine. One of Augustine’s most devoted episcopal friends, Possidius knew him for nearly 40 years and heard him preach many times. The chapter then considers how Augustine understood the people before him. It treats how he spoke to them and how he allows us to glimpse something of who they are and how they think, with a focus on the descriptions of his people in ep. 29. Attending to this biography and letter can help us have a greater appreciation for the study of Augustine as a preacher and those with him when we focus on the extant sermon collection.
The epilogue recapitulates the course of this investigation into Augustine’s theology of the resurrection. It then considers how Augustine prepared both the members of the Catholic Church in Hippo for its life after his death and himself for his resurrection after his death. It looks forward in hope of encountering Augustine, living again and forever in the flesh, at the eschatological resurrection.
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