May 22, 2026
You have made us for yourself, and our heart is restless until it repose in Thee.
Augustine wrote this in his early fifth century autobiography, addressing God directly while reflecting on decades of his own life spent chasing status, pleasure, and intellectual approval in Roman North Africa. He had been a successful rhetorician and a devoted follower of Manichaeism before his conversion, and he was writing specifically about how none of it settled the restlessness he carried. The line speaks to identity because Augustine is naming something most people recognize but rarely say out loud: that building a self around what impresses other people leaves you chronically unsatisfied. He is not being pious here, he is being honest about a specific personal failure that took him most of his adult life to admit.
Reflection
Augustine spent years performing a version of himself that earned approval but felt hollow. What is one thing you are currently doing primarily because other people expect it of you?
More from Augustine of Hippo