ONLINE FIRST
published on July 30, 2025
Jesse Couenhoven
https://doi.org/10.5840/augstudies2025729102
A ¡°Kind Harshness¡±
Augustine on Divine Forgiveness
Augustine¡¯s theology of divine forgiveness has received surprisingly little sustained attention. This is unfortunate, not least because his approach offers a thought-provoking contrast to the way forgiveness is typically conceived in our own day. We commonly understand forgiveness in therapeutic terms, as overcoming resentment or anger. For Augustine, God¡¯s forgiveness is ¡°metaphysical¡±¡ªan other-oriented action that changes the moral and spiritual status of those who are forgiven. God forgives preveniently, to free sinners from their sin, so that they can be who they were meant to be. Forgiveness, therefore, is a divine attempt to restore sinners to the good. Yet although God acts out of love, Augustine did not consider forgiveness incompatible with paternalistic anger or punishment. This essay draws on Augustine¡¯s theologies of baptism and the cross to explore these ideas, and their implications for the relationship between human and divine agency in giving and receiving forgiveness. It concludes by raising some questions about how Christians should think about human forgiveness in light of Augustine¡¯s account of God¡¯s transformative love.