Saint Augustine — "Love, and do what you will."
Love, and do what you will.
Love, and do what you will.
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"The law detects, grace alone conquers sin."
"There is no possible source of evil except good."
"The punishment of every disordered mind is its own disorder."
"Woman is subject to man."
"I have decided that there is nothing I should avoid so much as marriage."
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If genuine love guides your actions, you will naturally want what is good and right. True love—not sentiment, but deep moral commitment to another's wellbeing—aligns your will with virtue. When love is your foundation, freedom follows, because love itself constrains you from harm. Do whatever flows from that love, and your choices will be righteous without needing a rulebook for every situation.
Augustine spent his youth pursuing pleasure without moral anchor, famously praying 'grant me chastity, but not yet.' His conversion transformed his understanding of desire itself. As Bishop of Hippo, he built his entire theology around ordered love—caritas versus cupiditas. This quote distills his mature insight: sin isn't action but misdirected love. Right love properly ordered toward God and neighbor becomes the only moral law needed.
Fifth-century Roman North Africa was fracturing—barbarian invasions, theological controversies like Pelagianism and Donatism tearing the Church apart. Augustine wrote against legalistic Christianity and moralism that reduced faith to rule-following. His era debated whether humans could earn salvation through deeds. This declaration cut through that anxiety: interior transformation of love matters more than external compliance, a radical reorientation of Christian ethics in a collapsing empire.
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