Augustine and the Architecture of Theological Governance: From Roman Institutional Collapse to the Metaphysics of Ordered Love
The intellectual legacy of Augustine of Hippo is often framed in purely doctrinal terms—original sin, grace, predestination, and the City of God. This framing is insufficiently structural. Augustine is not merely a theologian of salvation history; he is, more precisely, a...
This analysis operates in **Constructive Mode**, treating Augustine’s framework as a foundational intellectual architecture rather than a media narrative. The strongest version of the argument presents Augustine as a systemic thinker who addressed governance crises by redefining authority’s boundaries. His dual-city model and emphasis on grace as an "anti-capture mechanism" offer a compelling analogy to modern constitutional checks and balances, where external constraints prevent systemic closur...
