tailieunhanh - NPNF1-02. St. Augustin's City of God and Christian Doctrine

Concurrently, shifting political attitudes and disillusionment with the policies that have been tried are giving rise to a new surge of debate and reform. Most visible in the 1990s is the effort to reform the welfare system to increase work incentives and to limit its use as a long-term source of support for able-bodied adults, even when they have small chil- dren. Behind this policy change has been a decade-long ideological debate about the nature and causes of poverty, pitting conservatives against liberals. This article does not describe that debate, except where directly necessary. Rather, we concentrate on research about poverty and its relation to the conditions. | NPNF1-02. St. Augustin s City of God and Christian Doctrine by Philip Schaff About NPNF1-02. St. Augustin s City of God and Christian Doctrine by Philip Schaff Title NPNF1-02. St. Augustin s City of God and Christian Doctrine URL http ccel schaff Author s Schaff Philip 1819-1893 Publisher Grand Rapids MI Christian Classics Ethereal Library Print Basis New York The Christian Literature Publishing Co. 1890 Rights Public Domain CCEL Subjects Proofed Early Church All Classic LC Call no BR60 LC Subjects Christianity Early Christian Literature. Fathers of the Church etc. NPNF1-02. St. Augustin s City of God and Christian Doctrine Philip Schaff Table of Contents About This . ii Title . 1 Table of . 2 Editor s . 3 City of . 6 Translator s . 6 Augustin censures the pagans who attributed the calamities of the world and especially the recent sack of Rome by the Goths to the Christian religion and its prohibition of the worship of the . 12 Preface Explaining His Design in Undertaking This . 12 Of the Adversaries of the Name of Christ Whom the Barbarians for Christ s Sake Spared When They Stormed the . 13 That It is Quite Contrary to the Usage of War that the Victors Should Spare the Vanquished for the Sake of Their . 14 That the Romans Did Not Show Their Usual Sagacity When They Trusted that They Would Be Benefited by the Gods Who Had Been Unable to Defend . 15 Of the Asylum of Juno in Troy Which Saved No One from the Greeks And of the Churches of the Apostles Which Protected from the Barbarians All Who Fled to . 16 Casar s Statement Regarding the Universal Custom of an Enemy When Sacking a . 17 That Not Even the Romans When They Took Cities Spared the Conquered in Their . 18 That the Cruelties Which Occurred in the Sack of Rome Were in Accordance with the Custom of War Whereas the Acts of Clemency Resulted from the Influence of Christ s . 19 Of the .