Colegio San Agustín (Chile)

Colegio San Agustin
Educando desde el corazon
Teaching from heart
Address
Dublé Almeyda 450
Region Metropolitana
Nunoa, Santiago,  Chile
Information
Type Private
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic;
Order of Saint Augustine
Established 1885
Enrollment 2,000
Language Spanish
Campus size 50,000 square metres (5.0 ha)
Color(s) Blue and Yellow         
Yearbook Toma y Lee
Rector Bernardo Abad
Vice-Rector Fr. Pedro Bustos OSA
Website

Colegio San Agustin (Spanish for "St. Augustine School") in Santiago, Chile is an institution of learning specializing in elementary and secondary education founded in 1885. It is a private school that belongs to the Order of St. Augustine or OSA.

Patron Saint

The College is named in honour of the 4th century saint, St. Augustine of Hippo. Augustine was a key figure in the doctrinal development of Western Christianity and is often referred to as a "Doctor of the Church" by Roman Catholics. Two of his surviving works, namely "The Confessions" (his autobiography) and "The City of God", are regarded as Western Classics and are still read by Christians around the world. Augustine is often considered to be one of the theological fountainheads of Reformation, because of his teaching on salvation and grace; Martin Luther himself also having been an Augustinian friar. Augustine was not a Biblical fundamentalist.