Augustine\'s City of God has profoundly influenced the course of Western political philosophy, but there are few guides to its labyrinthine argumentation that hold together the delicate interplay of religion and philosophy in Augustine\'s thought.
The essays in this volume offer a rich examination of those themes, using the central, contested distinction between a heavenly City on earthly pilgrimage and an earthly City bound for perdition to elaborate aspects of Augustine\'s political and moral.
Augustine\'s City of God has profoundly influenced the course of Western political philosophy, but there are few guides to its labyrinthine argumentation that hold together the delicate interplay of religion and philosophy in Augustine\'s thought