Werke
Augustinus von Hippo (354-430)
De Civitate Dei
Übersetzung
ausblenden
The City of God
Book XXII.
Argument--This book treats of the end of the city of God, that is to say, of the eternal happiness of the saints; the faith of the resurrection of the body is established and explained; and the work concludes by showing how the saints, clothed in immortal and spiritual bodies, shall be employed.
Edition
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De civitate Dei (CCSL)
Liber XXII
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Editionen dieses Werks
De civitate Dei (CCSL) |
Übersetzungen dieses Werks
La cité de dieu | vergleichen |
The City of God | |
Zweiundzwanzig Bücher über den Gottesstaat (BKV) | vergleichen |
Kommentare zu diesem Werk
The City of God - Translator's Preface |
Inhaltsangabe
Alle aufklappen
- The City of God.
- Book I.
- Book II.
- Book III.
- Book IV.
- Book V.
- Book VI.
- Book VII.
- Book VIII.
- Book IX.
- Book X.
- Book XI.
- Book XII.
- Book XIII.
- Book XIV.
- Book XV.
- Book XVI.
- Book XVII.
- Book XVIII.
- Book XIX.
- Book XX.
- Book XXI.
- Book XXII.
- Chapter 1.--Of the Creation of Angels and Men.
- Chapter 2.--Of the Eternal and Unchangeable Will of God.
- Chapter 3.--Of the Promise of Eternal Blessedness to the Saints, and Everlasting Punishment to the Wicked.
- Chapter 4.--Against the Wise Men of the World, Who Fancy that the Earthly Bodies of Men Cannot Be Transferred to a Heavenly Habitation.
- Chapter 5.--Of the Resurrection of the Flesh, Which Some Refuse to Believe, Though the World at Large Believes It.
- Chapter 6.--That Rome Made Its Founder Romulus a God Because It Loved Him; But the Church Loved Christ Because It Believed Him to Be God.
- Chapter 7.--That the World's Belief in Christ is the Result of Divine Power, Not of Human Persuasion.
- Chapter 8.--Of Miracles Which Were Wrought that the World Might Believe in Christ, and Which Have Not Ceased Since the World Believed.
- Chapter 9.--That All the Miracles Which are Done by Means of the Martyrs in the Name of Christ Testify to that Faith Which the Martyrs Had in Christ.
- Chapter 10.--That the Martyrs Who Obtain Many Miracles in Order that the True God May Be Worshipped, are Worthy of Much Greater Honor Than the Demons, Who Do Some Marvels that They Themselves May Be Supposed to Be God.
- Chapter 11.--Against the Platonists, Who Argue from the Physical Weight of the Elements that an Earthly Body Cannot Inhabit Heaven.
- Chapter 12.--Against the Calumnies with Which Unbelievers Throw Ridicule Upon the Christian Faith in the Resurrection of the Flesh.
- Chapter 13.--Whether Abortions, If They are Numbered Among the Dead, Shall Not Also Have a Part in the Resurrection.
- Chapter 14.--Whether Infants Shall Rise in that Body Which They Would Have Had Had They Grown Up.
- Chapter 15.--Whether the Bodies of All the Dead Shall Rise the Same Size as the Lord's Body.
- Chapter 16.--What is Meant by the Conforming of the Saints to the Image of The Son of God.
- Chapter 17.--Whether the Bodies of Women Shall Retain Their Own Sex in the Resurrection.
- Chapter 18.--Of the Perfect Man, that Is, Christ; And of His Body, that Is, The Church, Which is His Fullness.
- Chapter 19.--That All Bodily Blemishes Which Mar Human Beauty in This Life Shall Be Removed in the Resurrection, the Natural Substance of the Body Remaining, But the Quality and Quantity of It Being Altered So as to Produce Beauty.
- Chapter 20.--That, in the Resurrection, the Substance of Our Bodies, However Disintegrated, Shall Be Entirely Reunited.
- Chapter 21.--Of the New Spiritual Body into Which the Flesh of the Saints Shall Be Transformed.
- Chapter 22.--Of the Miseries and Ills to Which the Human Race is Justly Exposed Through the First Sin, and from Which None Can Be Delivered Save by Christ's Grace.
- Chapter 23.--Of the Miseries of This Life Which Attach Peculiarly to the Toil of Good Men, Irrespective of Those Which are Common to the Good and Bad.
- Chapter 24.--Of the Blessings with Which the Creator Has Filled This Life, Obnoxious Though It Be to the Curse.
- Chapter 25.--Of the Obstinacy of Those Individuals Who Impugn the Resurrection of the Body, Though, as Was Predicted, the Whole World Believes It.
- Chapter 26.--That the Opinion of Porphyry, that the Soul, in Order to Be Blessed, Must Be Separated from Every Kind of Body, is Demolished by Plato, Who Says that the Supreme God Promised the Gods that They Should Never Be Ousted from Their Bodies.
- Chapter 27.--Of the Apparently Conflicting Opinions of Plato and Porphyry, Which Would Have Conducted Them Both to the Truth If They Could Have Yielded to One Another.
- Chapter 28.--What Plato or Labeo, or Even Varro, Might Have Contributed to the True Faith of the Resurrection, If They Had Adopted One Another's Opinions into One Scheme.
- Chapter 29.--Of the Beatific Vision.
- Chapter 30.--Of the Eternal Felicity of the City of God, and of the Perpetual Sabbath.