41.—Restoration of Nature Understood by Pelagius as Forgiveness of Sins.
In this same work he says in another passage: “Now, if even without God men show of what character they have been made by God, see what Christians have it in their power to do, whose nature has been through Christ restored to a better condition, and who are, moreover, assisted by the help of divine grace.”99 Epistle to Demetrias, ch. 3. By this restoration of nature to a better state he would have us understand the remission of sins. This he has shown with sufficient clearness in another passage of this epistle, where he says: “Even those who have become in a certain sense obdurate through their long practice of sinning, can be restored through repentance.”100 Epistle to Demetrias, ch. 17. But he may even here too make the assistance of divine grace consist in the revelation of teaching.
41. Item in eodem opere alio loco: «Quod si etiam sine Deo,» inquit, «homines ostendunt, quales a Deo facti sunt; vide quid Christiani facere possint, quorum in melius per Christum instaurata natura est, et qui divinae quoque gratiae juvantur auxilio.» Naturam in melius instauratam, remissionem vult intelligi peccatorum: quod alio loco in hoc ipso libro satis demonstravit, ubi ait, «Etiam illi qui longo peccandi usu quodam modo obduruere, instaurari per poenitentiam possunt.» Auxilium vero divinae gratiae potest et hic ponere in revelatione doctrinae.