Pelagius

was a British monk who lived from approximately 360 to 435. A preacher, Pelagius found himself in Rome, and became concerned about the moral laxity of society he saw there. He blamed this laxity on the theology of divine grace preached by St Augustine_of_Hippo, among others. Pelagius was of the opinion that Augustine's teaching amounted to nothing short of introducing Manicheanism into Christianity. He accused Augustine of elevating evil to the same status as God and teaching pagan fatalism as if it were a Christian doctrine. While he is held up as the originator of the doctrine of Pelagianism, it can be argued that the monk may have never actually held that doctrine and has been subject to revision by his enemies. When Alaric sacked Rome in 410, Pelagius fled to Carthage, where he came into further conflict with Augustine. His follower Coelestius was condemned by a church council there. Pelagius then fled to Jerusalem, but Augustine's followers were soon on his trail; Orosius went to Jerusalem to warn St Jerome against him. Augustine's version of Pelagius's teachings about sin and atonement were condemned as heresy at the local Council_of_Carthage in 417.

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Pelagius's Expositions of Thirteen Epistles of St. Paul: Introduction, No. 1 (Texts and Studies: Contributions to Biblical and Patristic L)

by Alexander Souter

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