Compare And Contrast Augustine And Perpetua

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Perpetua and Augustine were both Christian saints who lived in different time periods of Christianity. Perpetua lived during a time when Christianity was largely an underground religion, while Augustine lived later once the Christian faith had been declared the official religion of Rome. Due to these differences in the way in which the religion was viewed, people of the Christian faith held differing views, lived different lives, and were regarded in different ways by their family members. Perpetua and Augustine’s writings help demonstrate these distinctions.
Perpetua lived in the early 200s CE, when Christianity was still in its infancy. She died a martyr after being arrested and executed by the Roman government due to Christianity being forbidden. …show more content…

Although Augustine grew up knowing about Christianity, as his mother, Monica, was a devout Christian, he spent much of his early years indulging in worldly pleasures until finally converting to Christianity at the age of 32. This is unlike Perpetua in the fact that she became a member of the faith at a young age, against her father’s wishes while Augustine chose to rebel against Christianity. The fact that Augustine’s mother was a Christian who urged him to also convert is also contrasting from Perpetua’s story, as is apparent by Monica’s reaction upon her son telling her that he is no longer a Manichee, but still not a Christian. In Augustine’s words, “she did not leap for joy . . . for which she wept over me as a person dead but to be revived by you [God].” Therefore, Monica was saddened by the fact that her son was not a Christian, while Perpetua’s father was distraught over the opposite, her decision to be a Christian. Once Augustine had finally converted to Christianity, he interpreted his faith differently than Perpetua had. He believed that God is good and humans are also by nature good, but that “free will was the cause of our doing ill.” To him, being a Christian meant that he must not use his free will for evil, that he must resist the urge of temptation and follow God’s path of goodness. While Augustine believed in sacrificing desires of the flesh for God, there was no emphasis in his time on giving up his life for his religion as it was in Perpetua’s. These dissimilar qualities between the lives of Perpetua and Augustine are the effect of Christianity’s movement from a secretive, minority faith to a legitimate, national

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