As the western Roman Empire was declining, Augustine of Hippo (354-430 CE) wrote his enormously influential book The City of God. Augustine recognized that all human organizations, all Cities of Men, eventually fail and disappear. The only institution that was permanent, he argued, was the City of God. He said,
The City of God
The City of God
The City of God
As the western Roman Empire was declining, Augustine of Hippo (354-430 CE) wrote his enormously influential book The City of God. Augustine recognized that all human organizations, all Cities of Men, eventually fail and disappear. The only institution that was permanent, he argued, was the City of God. He said,