paramaline
spockvarietyhour

Pelagianism

You are Pelagianism! Named after its most famous proponent, the British monk Pelagius, Pelagianism taught that human nature is not compromised by original sin and that the will is therefore capable of choosing to follow the moral good without God’s aid. Pelagius’s fiercest opponent was St Augustine of Hippo, whose writings insisted upon the reality of original sin and the need for divine grace to perform any good works. Augustine’s position won out over that of Pelagius, and Pelagianism was condemned as a heresy by the Council of Carthage in 418, a decision that was confirmed at the Council of Ephesus in 431. Despite this apparent victory for Augustinianism, the precise relationship between grace and free will remained controversial, and a variety of “semi-Pelagian” positions were taught throughout the fifth and early sixth centuries.

40 notes

  1. loveliestoftrees reblogged this from zeldahime
  2. fallynleaf reblogged this from paramaline
  3. val-kyrie reblogged this from spockvarietyhour
  4. phasersonstun reblogged this from paramaline
  5. shiny-shell reblogged this from spockvarietyhour and added:
    Sabellianism You are Sabellianism! Sabellianism, named after the early third-century priest Sabellius, taught that the...
  6. spockvarietyhour reblogged this from paramaline
  7. paramaline reblogged this from the-tzimisce
  8. twinky-dinky-doo reblogged this from the-tzimisce
  9. the-tzimisce posted this