Teaching Templates
Learn with the eBook
Augustine scholars and educators have prepared teaching documents for the first 10 books of Augustine's Confessions. These templates each focus on a specific passage, and provide suggestions for out-of-class assignments and in-class discussions. Useful for students and teachers of the Confessions alike, each template integrates with the unique features of the Confessions eBook.
Download all the Template PDFs in a zip file, or browse individual templates below.

Select an Individual Teaching Template
Choose from the templates below, organized by book and passage
Augustine opens with an invocation of God, revealing his unquiet heart, and raising a central paradox in the act of confession: do we call upon God in order to know God, or must we know God before we can call God? View PDF
Augustine recalls his experience stealing pears as a youth, plumbing the depths and complexities of his motives through confession. View PDF
Augustine questions the pleasure he gets by suffering through watching tragedies that show the grief of others. View PDF
Augustine recalls his grief after the death of a friend. He questions his motives for grieving, and examines the beauty and perils of friendship. View PDF
Augustine earns a teaching post in Milan, meets Bishop Ambrose for the first time, starts to question his uncertainty about the Catholic religion. View PDF
Augustine, in deep doubt over his secular ambitions, encounters a drunken beggar on the streets of Milan. He reflects on this encounter in terms of happiness and prosperity. View PDF
Augustine, still struggling with the truth of the Christian faith, comes upon "some books of the Platonists" that transform his view of God. View PDF
Augustine recalls his experience in a garden in Milan overhearing a children's game as he wept over his sins, and how it led him to open the Bible once again. View PDF
Having searched through the caverns of his memory for God, Augustine finds there and interrogates the universal desire for happiness. But if everyone wants to be happy, not everyone finds it in the same place; why is that? View PDF
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