Originally Posted by
Akoue
Joe,
Origen is tricky on these issues. He sometimes seems to have held the view that there are multiple falls and multiple returns to God (though some scholars, e.g., Crouzel, argue that he didn't in fact hold this view). A futher complication is the fact that he argues for apokatastasis, or the view that all creation, including the devil, will ultimately be saved. This was anathematized by the Fourth Ecumenical Council in 553. (It's so hard with Origen because his principle work on this, On Principles [Peri Archon], has not fared particularly well over the years: We have all of it in a really bad Latin translation, and the Greek of some, but not all, of the really crucial bits.)
Augustine is very suspicious of the idea that we can know, or really even predict, much about the "end times". He discusses it at some length in bk.20 of the City of God, but he is tentative: He often says that we should be really careful about arrogating to ourselves a knowledge of things that Christ himself claimed not to have had ("only the Father knows").
That said, he does think that the Church is in for some rough times. His focus is on the Church--it is the Church that will suffer. And, as he makes clear, particularly in his anti-Donatist works, the Church is the communion of the faithful under the authority of the bishops, the Mystical Body with Christ as its Head. In any event, in the passage you cite, Augustine isn't talking about THE tribulation; he's just talking about plain old tribulation, the stuff each of us has to contend with.
In ch. 7 of bk. 20, Augustine does reject the 1,000 years business, stating that he also "entertained this notion at one time" but has since thought better of it. He refers to those who do hold this view a "materialists" and "millenarians". He then proceeds to explain what he thinks is really going on in Rev.20.
It's worth noting that he also says that God has been judging all along, since Adam and Eve. In other words, he takes a fairly deflationary attitude toward some of this apocalypticism.