As with very many of Augustine's works, Instructing Beginners in Faith is a response to a request, an answer to questions put to him by others. In this case we know from the first words of the work itself that the one making the request is named Deogratias (Augustine calls him "brother"), and a couple of lines later we learn that he is a deacon in Carthage, the principal city of Proconsular Africa, where he enjoys popularity as a teacher of the faith. In the most general terms, he wanted Augustine to send him "something in writing which might be of use to him on the question of instructing beginners in faith (de catechizandis rudibus)". The term used in this expression referred specifically to people who were approaching the Church for the first time with the wish to become Christians.