Medallas de San Agustín de Hipona
La medalla de San Agustín honra a una de las inteligencias y almas transformadas más destacadas en la historia de la Iglesia, un hombre cuyo día festivo es el 28 de agosto y que es el santo patrón de los cerveceros, impresores, teólogos y, lo más importante, de los conversos. Nacido en el año 354 d.C. en Tagaste, África del Norte, Agustín pasó su juventud persiguiendo ambición y placer a través de Cartago, Roma y Milán, mientras su madre Mónica oraba incesantemente por su conversión. Esa conversión llegó en un jardín de Milán en el año 386 d.C. cuando escuchó la voz de un niño que decía "toma y lee", abrió la carta de Pablo a los Romanos y se transformó. Bautizado por San Ambrosio en la Vigilia Pascual del año 387 d.C., Agustín se convirtió en Obispo de Hipona, autor de las Confesiones y la mente teológica definitoria del cristianismo occidental.
Los católicos usan una medalla de San Agustín como un recordatorio tangible de que ninguna alma está demasiado perdida para la gracia, una verdad que el propio Agustín encarnó. Sus Confesiones comienzan con la frase que ha resonado durante dieciséis siglos: "Nuestro corazón está inquieto hasta que descansa en Ti". Esta medalla habla directamente a los conversos que han recorrido su propio camino sinuoso hacia la Iglesia, a los cerveceros que lo reclaman como su patrón gremial y a los estudiantes de teología que se apoyan en el fundamento que él construyó. Las dos ocasiones de regalo más preciadas son la Vigilia Pascual de la RCIA (Rito de Iniciación Cristiana para Adultos), cuando los nuevos católicos reciben los sacramentos, y un aniversario de conversión, cuando un católico se detiene a conmemorar el día en que su vida cambió. Una medalla de San Agustín entregada en cualquiera de esos momentos lleva el peso de su propia historia.
Cada medalla de San Agustín de nuestra colección está fabricada en EE. UU. por Bliss Manufacturing y cuenta con garantía de por vida. Elija entre plata de ley, chapado en oro de 14 quilates u oro macizo de 14 quilates, con varias longitudes de cadena para adaptarse a cualquier preferencia. Estas son medallas de calidad de reliquia construidas para ser usadas a diario y transmitidas de generación en generación. Explore nuestra gama completa de medallas de santos patronos, o examine nuestras medallas de Santa Mónica, un significativo regalo complementario en honor a la madre cuyas oraciones trajeron a Agustín de vuelta a casa.

Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida 
Vista rápida -
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is St. Augustine the patron saint of?
St. Augustine of Hippo is the patron saint of brewers, printers, theologians, and converts, and he is also invoked for relief from sore eyes. His patronage of converts is the most personally rooted of all his patronages — his own conversion from a life of indulgence and Manichaeism to Catholic Christianity, accomplished after seventeen years of his mother Monica's prayers, is one of the most documented and celebrated conversions in Church history. His feast day is celebrated on August 28, the anniversary of his death in 430 AD.
What is the story of St. Augustine's conversion?
Augustine's conversion unfolded over years of intellectual and moral struggle, reaching its crisis point in a Milan garden in the summer of 386 AD. Tormented by his inability to break from habitual sin despite being intellectually convinced of Christianity's truth, he heard a child's voice repeating 'tolle, lege' — take up and read — and opened Paul's Letter to the Romans to a passage calling readers to put on Christ and make no provision for fleshly desires. He later wrote that a light of certainty flooded his heart at that moment and all his resistance dissolved. He was baptized by St. Ambrose at the Easter Vigil of 387 AD alongside his son Adeodatus, returned to North Africa, and within a decade had become Bishop of Hippo, a role he would hold for thirty-five years.
What does the St. Augustine medal look like?
The St. Augustine medal most commonly depicts him in his bishop's vestments and mitre, often holding a flaming or pierced heart — the symbol most associated with him, drawn from the burning love for God he describes throughout the Confessions. Some versions show him holding a book, referencing his vast written output, while others incorporate the image of a child on a beach, recalling the legend about human reason's limits before the mystery of the Trinity. The reverse of many medals carries a short prayer or his most famous line, 'Our heart is restless until it rests in You.' Our medals are struck by Bliss Manufacturing in the USA and are available in sterling silver, 14kt gold filled, and 14kt solid gold.
Is a St. Augustine medal a good gift for someone going through RCIA?
A St. Augustine medal is one of the most historically meaningful gifts a sponsor or godparent can give an RCIA candidate, precisely because Augustine's own baptism at an Easter Vigil is the archetype of adult conversion in Catholic tradition. Receiving this medal on the night of their own Baptism, Confirmation, and First Eucharist connects the new Catholic to a sixteen-hundred-year story of people who arrived at the Church by a long and winding road. It is also a gift that grows in meaning over time — many converts find themselves returning to Augustine's Confessions at different stages of their faith life and discovering new resonance. Our medals arrive in gift-ready packaging and ship free on orders over forty dollars.
Was St. Monica really the mother of St. Augustine?
Yes — St. Monica was Augustine's mother, and her role in his conversion is inseparable from his story. Monica was a devout Christian who prayed and wept for her son's conversion for approximately seventeen years while he pursued Manichaeism, a career in rhetoric, and a series of relationships she found troubling. She followed him from North Africa to Rome and then to Milan, and she was present at his baptism by St. Ambrose in 387 AD. Monica died shortly after his baptism, at the port of Ostia, and Augustine's account of their final conversation in the Confessions — a shared mystical experience of God — is among the most moving passages in all of Christian literature. Our St. Monica medals make a natural companion gift to the Augustine medal, honoring the intercessor behind the conversion.
Are the St. Augustine medals at rosarycard.net made in the USA?
Every St. Augustine medal we carry is manufactured in the United States by Bliss Manufacturing, a company with a long heritage of producing Catholic religious jewelry to exacting standards. Bliss medals are struck from genuine sterling silver, 14kt gold filled, or 14kt solid gold — not plated base metals — which means they hold their appearance through years of daily wear. Each medal comes backed by our lifetime guarantee: if it fails under normal conditions of wear, we replace it. We believe a patron saint medal is not a disposable item but a devotional object meant to accompany a person through decades of faith, and our manufacturing standards reflect that conviction.
The Story of St. Augustine of Hippo
Augustine was born on November 13, 354 AD, in Thagaste, a small city in the Roman province of Numidia — present-day Algeria. His mother Monica was a devout Christian; his father Patricius was a pagan who converted only on his deathbed. Augustine showed extraordinary intellectual gifts from childhood, and his education took him first to Carthage, where he fell into a life of sensual indulgence and joined the Manichaean sect, a dualist religious movement he would later spend years refuting. Monica followed him to Rome and then to Milan, weeping and praying for seventeen unbroken years. In Milan, Augustine came under the influence of Bishop Ambrose, whose allegorical preaching dissolved the intellectual objections Augustine had raised against Christianity. The decisive moment came in the summer of 386 AD in a garden in Milan. Tormented by his inability to break from his old life, Augustine heard a child's voice chanting "tolle, lege" — take up and read. He opened Paul's Letter to the Romans to chapter 13 and read words about putting on Christ. He later wrote that a light of certainty flooded his heart. He was baptized by Ambrose at the Easter Vigil of 387 AD, returned to North Africa, founded a monastic community, was ordained a priest against his will by popular demand, and was consecrated Bishop of Hippo in 395 AD. He governed that diocese for thirty-five years until his death on August 28, 430 AD, as Vandal armies besieged the city walls.
Why Catholics Wear a St. Augustine Medal
The spiritual tradition of wearing a St. Augustine medal is rooted in his identity as the patron of those who have traveled a difficult road to faith. His patronage of converts is not ceremonial — it flows directly from his biography. When a person completing RCIA receives a St. Augustine medal at the Easter Vigil, they are being told: the Church has always welcomed those who arrived late and by a winding path. The medal typically depicts Augustine in his bishop's vestments and mitre, often holding a flaming heart — the symbol most associated with him, representing the burning love for God described in the Confessions. Some medals include a book, referencing his prolific writings, or the image of a child on a beach, recalling the legend of Augustine meeting a boy trying to empty the ocean into a hole, a parable about the limits of human reason before the mystery of the Trinity. His patronage of brewers traces to medieval guild traditions; his patronage of printers acknowledges that his works were among the first texts reproduced after Gutenberg's press. Theologians wear his medal as a mark of the tradition they have inherited — a tradition that runs from his Confessions and City of God through Aquinas and beyond.
Our St. Augustine Medal Collection
Every St. Augustine medal at rosarycard.net is manufactured in the United States by Bliss Manufacturing, one of the oldest and most respected religious jewelry makers in the country. Our collection is available in three metals: sterling silver for those who want a classic, durable everyday medal; 14kt gold filled for a warm gold appearance at an accessible price; and 14kt solid gold for a heirloom piece meant to last generations. Medals are available in multiple sizes, and chains come in standard lengths to suit both men and women. Every medal ships with a lifetime guarantee — if it ever fails under normal wear, we make it right. Orders over forty dollars ship free. If you are shopping for a newly baptized Catholic, consider pairing a St. Augustine medal with one of our St. Monica medals to honor the mother whose intercession made his conversion possible. Theology students and professors will find our St. Thomas Aquinas medals a natural companion, honoring the theologian who built most directly on Augustine's foundation. Browse our complete patron saint medals collection for the full range of options, or visit our patron saint of converts page for more gifts suited to the RCIA journey.
Giving a St. Augustine Medal as a Gift
The single most powerful gift occasion for a St. Augustine medal is the RCIA Easter Vigil — the Mass at which adult converts receive Baptism, Confirmation, and First Eucharist together in one night. Sponsors, godparents, and RCIA directors frequently give a patron saint medal as a tangible keepsake of that night, and Augustine's medal carries particular resonance because his own baptism at an Easter Vigil is the most famous adult conversion in Church history. A second occasion is a conversion anniversary — the yearly commemoration of the date a person entered the Church. Many converts mark this date as seriously as a birthday, and a sterling silver or gold Augustine medal engraved with the year makes a lasting memorial. Theology students graduating with a degree in theology or religious studies represent a third natural recipient: Augustine is the patron of theologians, and a medal given at graduation acknowledges both the academic achievement and the spiritual vocation behind it. Finally, August 28 — his feast day — is an occasion for Augustinian religious communities and parishes with Augustine as their patron to give medals to parishioners, students, or members. All medals from rosarycard.net arrive in gift-ready packaging, and orders over forty dollars ship free anywhere in the United States.















