Manoel de Sa

 Angel de Saavedra Remírez de Baquedano

 Saba and Sabeans

 Sabaoth

 St. Sabbas

 Sabbatarians, Sabbatarianism

 Sabbath

 Sabbatical Year

 Sabbatine Privilege

 St. Sabina

 Sabina

 Pope Sabinianus

 Louis de Sabran

 Sabrata

 Raineiro Sacchoni (Reiner)

 Sacra Jam Splendent

 Sacramentals

 Diocese of Sacramento

 Sacraments

 Brothers of the Sacred Heart

 Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus

 Missionaries of the Sacred Heart of Jesus

 Society of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (Paccanarists)

 Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament of the Altar

 Sacrifice

 Sacrilege

 Sacris Solemniis

 Sacristan

 Sacristy

 Sadducees

 Thomas Vincent Faustus Sadler

 Mary Anne Madden Sadlier

 Jacopo Sadoleto

 Sagalassus

 Théodat-Gabriel Sagard

 Bernardino de Sahagún

 Sahaptin Indians

 Vicariate Apostolic of Sahara

 Johann Michael Sailer

 Claude de Sainctes

 Abbey of Saint Albans

 Diocese of Saint Albert

 Archdiocese of Saint Andrews and Edinburgh

 University of Saint Andrews

 Priory of Saint Andrews

 Ancient Diocese of Saint Asaph

 Abbey of Saint Augustine

 Saint Bartholomew's Day

 Medal of Saint Benedict

 College of Saint Bonaventure

 Archdiocese of Saint Boniface

 Diocese of Saint-Brieuc

 Diocese of Saint-Claude

 Diocese of Saint Cloud

 Jean-François Buisson de Saint-Cosme

 Abbey of Saint-Denis

 Diocese of Saint-Denis

 Diocese of Saint-Dié

 Charles Sainte-Claire Deville

 Henri-Etienne Sainte-Claire Deville

 Abbey of Sainte-Geneviève

 Diocese of Saint-Flour

 Saint Francis Mission

 Diocese of Saint Gall

 Orders of St. George

 Diocese of Saint George's

 Diocese of Saint Hyacinthe

 College of Saint Isidore

 Order of Saint James of Compostela

 Diocese of Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne

 Ambrose Saint-John

 Diocese of Saint John

 Archdiocese of Saint John's

 Diocese of Saint Joseph

 St. Louis (Missouri)

 Monastery of Saint Lucius

 University of Saint Mark

 College of Saint Omer

 Abbey of Saint-Ouen

 Archdiocese of Saint Paul

 St. Paul-without-the-Walls

 Basilica of St. Peter

 Tomb of St. Peter

 Saint Petersburg

 Prefecture Apostolic of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon

 Louis de Rouvroy, Duc de Saint-Simon

 Saint-Simon and Saint-Simonism

 Society of Saint-Sulpice

 Abbey of Saints Vincent and Anastasius

 Order of Saint Sylvester

 Diocese of Saint Thomas

 University of Saint Thomas

 Diocese of Saint Thomas of Guiana

 Diocese of Saint Thomas of Mylapur

 Jean-Baptiste de Saint-Vallier

 Abbey of Saint-Victor

 Achard de Saint-Victor

 Society of Saint Vincent de Paul

 George Augustus Henry Sala

 Diocese of Salamanca

 Salamis

 Epiphanius of Salamis

 Louis-Siffren-Joseph Salamon

 Domingo de Salazar

 Diocese of Sale

 Salem

 Diocese of Salerno

 Salesian Society

 Diocese of Salford

 Salimbene degli Adami

 Ancient Diocese of Salisbury

 Saliva Indians

 Salmanticenses and Complutenses

 Salmas

 Alphonsus Salmeron

 Salome

 Salt

 Diocese of Salta

 Diocese of Saltillo

 Diocese of Salt Lake

 Diocese of Salto

 Coluccio di Pierio di Salutati

 Diocese of Saluzzo

 Juan Maria Salvatierra

 Salvation

 Salve Mundi Salutare

 Salve Regina

 Salvete Christi Vulnera

 Salvianus

 Archdiocese of Salzburg

 Joseph Salzmann

 Sámar and Leyte

 Samaria

 Samaritan Language and Literature

 Joseph Anton Sambuga

 Samoa

 Diocese of Samogitia

 Samos

 Samosata

 Richard Sampson

 St. Samson

 Samson (1)

 Samson (2)

 Samuco Indians

 Diocese of San Antonio

 Diocese of San Carlos de Ancud

 Alonzo Sánchez

 Alonzo Coello Sánchez

 José Bernardo Sánchez

 Thomas Sanchez

 Sanction

 Sanctity (Mark of the Church)

 Sanctorum Meritis

 Sanctuary (1)

 Sanctuary (2)

 Sanctus

 Episcopal Sandals

 Sandemanians

 Felino Maria Sandeo

 Anton Sander

 Nicholas Sander

 Diocese of Sandhurst

 Diocese of Sandomir

 Sands

 Vicariate Apostolic of the Sandwich Islands

 Ven. John Sandys

 Sanetch Indians

 Archdiocese of San Francisco

 San Gallo

 Sanhedrin

 Diocese of San José de Costa Rica

 Diocese of San Juan

 Diocese of Sankt Pölten

 Prefecture Apostolic of San León del Amazonas

 Diocese of San Luis Potosí

 Diocese of San Marco and Bisignano

 San Marino

 San Martino al Cimino

 San Miniato

 Jacopo Sannazaro

 Diocese of San Salvador

 San Salvador

 Piero da San Sepolcro

 Diocese of San Severino

 Gaetano Sanseverino

 Diocese of San Severo

 Andrea Contucci del Sansovino

 Diocese of Santa Agata dei Goti

 Santa Casa di Loreto

 Diocese of Santa Catharina

 Diocese of Santa Cruz de la Sierra

 Archdiocese of Santa Fe

 Diocese of Santa Fe

 Prelature Nullius of Santa Lucia del Mela

 Diocese of Santa Maria

 Abbey Nullius of Santa Maria de Monserrato

 Diocese of Santa Marta

 Diocese of Santander

 Diocese of Sant' Angelo de' Lombardi

 Diocese of Sant' Angelo in Vado and Urbania

 Prelature nullius of Santarem

 Diocese of Santa Severina

 University of Santiago

 Archdiocese of Santiago de Chile

 Diocese of Santiago del Estero

 Giovanni Sante Gaspero Santini

 Archdiocese of Santo Domingo

 Joao dos Santos

 Mission of San Xavier del Bac

 Diocese of São Carlos do Pinhal

 Diocese of São Luiz de Cáceres

 Diocese of São Luiz de Maranhão

 Archdiocese of São Paulo

 Archiocese of São Salvador de Bahia de Todos os Santos

 Archdiocese of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro

 Diocese of São Thiago de Cabo Verde

 Diocese of Sappa

 Sara

 Sarabaites

 Diocese of Saragossa

 Sarayacú Mission

 Mathias Casimir Sarbiewski

 Sardes

 Sardica

 Council of Sardica

 Sardinia

 Sarepta

 Januarius Maria Sarnelli

 Paolo Sarpi

 Patrick Sarsfield

 Diocese of Sarsina

 Andrea del Sarto

 Sarum Rite

 Sasima

 Saskatchewan and Alberta

 Archdiocese of Sassari

 Giovanni Battista Salvi da Sassoferrato

 Satala

 Francesco Satolli

 St. Saturninus

 Sauatra

 Saul

 Diocese of Sault Sainte Marie

 Diocese of Savannah

 Savaric

 Savary

 Abbey of Savigny

 Diocese of Savona and Noli

 Girolamo Savonarola

 Savoy

 Jean de Saxe

 Saxe-Altenburg

 Saxe-Coburg and Gotha

 Saxe-Meiningen

 Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach

 Saxo Grammaticus

 Saxony

 Albert of Saxony

 Scala Sancta (Holy Stairs)

 Julius Caesar Scaliger

 Scalimoli

 Ellakim Parker Scammon

 Scandal

 Filippo Scannabecchi

 Scapular

 Giovanni Battista Scaramelli

 Pierfrancesco Scarampi

 Alessandro Scarlatti

 Paul Scarron

 Scepticism

 Friedrich Wilhelm Schadow

 Herman Schaepman

 Schäftlarn

 Johann Adam Schall von Bell

 Johann Friedrich Schannat

 Hans Leonhard Schäufelin

 Schaumburg-Lippe

 Constantine, Baron von Schäzler

 Hartmann Schedel

 Matthias Joseph Scheeben

 John James Scheffmacher

 Christopher Scheiner

 Johann Nepomuk Schelble

 Emmanuel Schelstrate

 Maurus von Schenkl

 Schenute

 Georg Scherer

 Theodore, Count von Scherer-Boccard

 Matthæus Schinner

 Schism

 The Eastern Schism

 Western Schism

 Friedrich von Schlegel

 Schleswig

 Aloysius Schlör

 John Frederick Henry Schlosser

 Francis Xavier Schmalzgrueber

 Christoph von Schmid

 Friedrich von Schmidt

 Gerard Schneemann

 Matthias von Schoenberg

 Peter Schöffer

 Schola Cantorum

 Scholasticism

 Herman Scholliner

 Charles Mathieu Schols

 John Martin Augustine Scholz

 Schönborn

 Martin Schongauer

 Schöningh

 Schools

 Apostolic Schools

 Clerks Regular of the Pious Schools

 Burghard Freiherr von Schorlemer-Alst

 Gaspar Schott

 Schottenklöster

 Clement Schrader

 Dominic Schram

 Franz Paula von Schrank

 Johann Schraudolph

 Franz Schubert

 Joseph Schwane

 Theodor Schwann

 Ludwig von Schwanthaler

 Berthold Schwarz

 Schwarzburg

 Friedrich, Prince of Schwarzenberg

 Schwenckfeldians

 Moritz von Schwind

 Science and the Church

 Scillium

 Martyrs of Scillium

 Archdiocese of Scopia

 Ven. William Maurus Scot

 Scotism and Scotists

 Scotland

 Established Church of Scotland

 Scoto-Hibernian Monasteries

 The Scots College

 Ven. Montford Scott

 Diocese of Scranton

 Scribes

 Scriptorium

 Scripture

 Scruple

 Scrutiny

 Sculpture

 Archdiocese of Scutari

 Scythopolis

 Seal

 Law of the Seal of Confession

 Diocese of Seattle

 Sebaste

 Armenian Catholic Diocese of Sebastia

 St. Sebastian

 Bl. Sebastian Newdigate

 Sebastopolis

 Diocese of Sebenico

 Angelo Secchi

 Sechelt Indians

 St. Sechnall

 Diocese of Seckau

 Secret (Secernere)

 Secret

 Sect and Sects

 Secular Clergy

 Secularism

 Secularization

 Thomas Sedgwick

 Sedia Gestatoria

 Sedilia

 Seduction

 Sedulius

 Sedulius Scotus

 Seekers

 Francis X. Seelos

 Seerth

 Diocese of Séez

 Charles John Seghers

 Paolo Segneri, the Elder

 Segni

 Diocese of Segorbe

 Diocese of Segovia

 Louis Gaston de Ségur

 Sophie Rostopchine, Comtesse de Ségur

 Diocese of Sehna

 Johann Gabriel Seidl

 Alexander Maximilian Seitz

 Diocese of Sejny

 Sekanais

 Seleucians

 Seleucia Pieria

 Seleucia Trachæa

 Seleucids

 Self-Defence

 José Selgas y Carrasco

 Selge

 Selinus

 Giulio Lorenzo Selvaggio

 Selymbria

 Sem

 Semiarians and Semiarianism

 Ecclesiastical Seminary

 Semipelagianism

 Semites

 Semitic Epigraphy

 Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis

 Raphael Semmes

 Balthasar Seña

 St. Senan

 José Francisco de Paula Señan

 Sénanque

 Seneca Indians

 Aloys Senefelder

 Vicariate Apostolic of Senegambia

 Archdiocese of Sens

 Councils of Sens

 Sentence

 Notre-Dame de Saint-Lieu Sept-Fons

 Septimius Severus

 Septuagesima

 Septuagint Version

 Archdiocese of Serajevo

 Seraphim

 St. Seraphin of Montegranaro

 Bl. Seraphina Sforza

 St. Serapion

 Serapion

 Diocese of La Serena

 John Sergeant

 Ven. Richard Sergeant

 Sergiopolis

 Sergius and Bacchus

 Pope St. Sergius I

 Pope Sergius II

 Pope Sergius III

 Pope Sergius IV

 Girolamo Seripando

 Jean-Baptiste-Louis-George Seroux d'Agincourt

 Alessandro Serpieri

 Junípero Serra

 Serrae

 Congregation of the Servants of the Most Blessed Sacrament

 Servia

 Order of Servites

 Servus servorum Dei

 Diocese of Sessa-Aurunca

 Benedict Sestini

 Setebo Indians

 Elizabeth Ann Seton

 William Seton

 Desiderio da Settignano

 Seven-Branch Candlestick

 Seven Deacons

 Seven Robbers

 Severian

 Pope Severinus

 Alexander Severus

 Severus Sanctus Endelechus

 Marie de Rabutin-Chantal, Madame de Sévigné

 Archdiocese of Seville

 University of Seville

 Sexagesima

 St. Sexburga

 Sext

 Sexton

 Celestino Sfondrati

 The Religion of Shakespeare

 Shamanism

 Shammai

 Vicariate Apostolic of Northern Shan-si

 Vicariate Apostolic of Southern Shan-si

 Vicariate Apostolic of Eastern Shan-tung

 Vicariate Apostolic of Northern Shan-tung

 Vicariate Apostolic of Southern Shan-tung

 James Sharpe

 John Dawson Gilmary Shea

 Sir Ambrose Shea

 Richard Lalor Sheil

 Edward Sheldon

 Richard Shelley

 Vicariate Apostolic of Northern Shen-si

 Vicariate Apostolic of Southern Shen-si

 John Shepherd

 Sherborne Abbey

 Diocese of Sherbrooke

 Philip Henry Sheridan

 Martin Sherson

 William Sherwood

 James Shields

 Shi-koku

 Vicariate Apostolic of Shire

 William Shirwood

 Diocese of Shrewsbury

 Shrines of Our Lady and the Saints in Great Britain and Ireland

 The Holy Shroud (of Turin)

 Shrovetide

 Shuswap Indians

 Vicariate Apostolic of Siam

 Joseph Sibbel

 Siberia

 Marie-Dominique-Auguste Sibour

 Sibylline Oracles

 Sicard

 Sicca Veneria

 Sichem

 Sicily

 Sidon (1)

 Sidon (2)

 Sidonius Apollinaris

 Sidyma

 Archdiocese of Siena

 University of Siena

 Cyril Sieni

 Vicariate Apostolic of Sierra Leone (Sierræ Leonis, Sierra-Leonensis)

 St. Sigebert

 Sigebert of Gembloux

 Siger of Brabant

 Sigismund

 Sign of the Cross

 Luca Signorelli

 Diocese of Sigüenza

 Sikhism

 Silandus

 Silence

 Silesia

 Siletz Indians

 Siloe

 Ven. Gonçalo Da Silveira

 Pope St. Silverius

 Francis Silvester

 St. Silvia

 Simeon

 Holy Simeon

 Simeon of Durham

 St. Simeon Stylites the Elder

 St. Simeon Stylites the Younger

 Archdiocese of Simla

 St. Simon the Apostle

 Simone da Orsenigo

 Simonians

 Simon Magus

 Bl. Simon of Cascia

 Simon of Cramaud

 Simon of Cremona

 Simon of Sudbury

 Simon of Tournai

 St. Simon Stock

 Volume 15

 Simony

 Pope St. Simplicius

 Simplicius, Faustinus, and Beatrice

 Richard Simpson

 Sin

 Sinai

 Diocese of Sinaloa

 Diocese of Sinigaglia

 Sinis

 Sinope

 Diocese of Sion

 Sion

 Diocese of Sioux City

 Diocese of Sioux Falls

 Sioux Indians

 Sipibo Indians

 Pope St. Siricius

 Guglielmo Sirleto

 Diocese of Sirmium

 Jacques Sirmond

 Pope Sisinnius

 Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati, Ohio

 Sisters of the Little Company of Mary

 Sistine Choir

 Sitifis

 Buenaventura Sitjar

 Siunia

 Pope St. Sixtus I

 Pope St. Sixtus II

 Pope St. Sixtus III

 Pope Sixtus IV

 Pope Sixtus V

 Peter Skarga

 Josef Skoda (Schkoda)

 Slander

 Slavery

 Ethical Aspect of Slavery

 Slaves

 Slavonic Language and Liturgy

 The Slavs

 The Slavs in America

 Anton Martin Slomšek

 John Slotanus

 Sloth

 Thomas Slythurst

 Smalkaldic League

 Ardo Smaragdus

 James Smith

 Richard Smith (1)

 Richard Smith (2)

 Thomas Kilby Smith

 Latin Archdiocese of Smyrna

 Snorri Sturluson

 Ven. Peter Snow

 Sobaipura Indians

 John Sobieski

 Socialism

 Socialistic Communities

 Catholic Societies

 American Federation of Catholic Societies

 Secret Societies

 Society

 Catholic Church Extension Society

 Society of Foreign Missions of Paris

 Society of Jesus

 Society of the Blessed Sacrament

 Society of the Sacred Heart of Jesus

 Socinianism

 Sociology

 Diocese of Socorro

 Socrates (1)

 Socrates (2)

 Sodality

 Sodoma

 Sodom and Gomorrha

 Ancient Diocese of Sodor and Man

 Diocese of Soissons

 Solari

 Solemnity

 Abbey of St. Solesmes

 Soli

 Solicitation

 Prefecture Apostolic of Solimôes Superiore

 Solomon

 Psalms of Solomon

 Prefecture Apostolic of Northern Solomon Islands

 Prefecture Apostolic of Southern Solomon Islands

 Diocese of Solsona

 Somaliland

 Somaschi

 Thomas Somerset

 Religious Song

 Songish Indians

 Franciscus Sonnius

 Son of God

 Son of Man

 Diocese of Sonora

 Sophene

 Sophists

 Sophonias

 St. Sophronius

 Sophronius

 Sora

 Paul de Sorbait

 Sorbonne

 Edward Sorin

 Archdiocese of Sorrento

 Feasts of the Seven Sorrows of the Blessed Virgin Mary

 Dominic Soto

 Soul

 South Carolina

 South Dakota

 Ven. William Southerne

 Diocese of Southwark

 Ven. Robert Southwell

 Ven. John Southworth

 Diocese of Sovana and Pitigliano

 Salaminius Hermias Sozomen

 Sozopolis

 Sozusa

 Space

 Andrea Spagni

 Spain

 Spanish Language and Literature

 Spanish-American Literature

 Diocese of Spalato-Macarsca (Salona)

 Martin John Spalding

 Lazzaro Spallanzani

 Sparta

 Species

 Josef Speckbacher

 Speculation

 Nicola Spedalieri

 Friedrich von Spee

 Bl. John Speed

 Hon. George Spencer

 John Spenser

 Ven. William Spenser

 Diocese of Speyer

 Johann and Wendelin von Speyer

 Joseph Spillmann

 Alphonso de Spina

 Bartolommeo Spina

 Christopher Royas de Spinola

 Benedict Spinoza

 Spire

 Spirit

 Spiritism

 Diocese of Spirito Santo

 Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius

 Spiritualism

 Spirituals

 Spokan Indians

 Archdiocese of Spoleto

 Henri Spondanus

 Gasparo Luigi Pacifico Spontini

 Patritius Sporer

 Ven. Cæsar Sportelli

 Diocese of Springfield

 Ven. Thomas Sprott

 Squamish Indians

 Herbert Goldsmith Squiers

 Diocese of Squillace

 Stabat Mater

 John Evangelist Stadler

 Stained Glass

 Stalls

 Stanbrook Abbey

 William Clarkson Stanfield

 St. Stanislas Kostka

 St. Stanislaus of Cracow

 Diocese of Stanislawow

 Vicariate Apostolic of Stanley Falls

 Valentin Stansel

 Richard Stanyhurst

 Stanza

 Joseph Ambrose Stapf

 Friedrich Staphylus

 Theobald Stapleton

 Thomas Stapleton

 Simon Starowolski

 Eliza Allen Starr

 State and Church

 State or Way

 States of the Church

 Station Days

 Ecclesiastical Statistics

 Statistics of Religions

 Benedict Stattler

 Franz Anton Staudenmaier

 Johann von Staupitz

 Stauropolis

 Stedingers

 Giacomo Gaetani Stefaneschi

 Agostino Steffani

 Diocese of Steinamanger

 Eduard von Steinle

 Ferdinand Steinmeyer

 Nicolaus Steno

 St. Stephen (1)

 St. Stephen (2)

 Pope St. Stephen I

 Pope Stephen II

 Pope Stephen (II) III

 Pope Stephen (III) IV

 Pope Stephen (IV) V

 Pope Stephen (V) VI

 Pope Stephen (VI) VII

 Pope Stephen (VII) VIII

 Pope Stephen (VIII) IX

 Pope Stephen (IX) X

 St. Stephen Harding

 Stephen of Autun

 Stephen of Bourbon

 St. Stephen of Muret

 Stephen of Tournai

 Henry Robert Stephens

 Thomas Stephens

 Agostino Steuco

 Joseph Stevenson

 Simon Stevin

 Adalbert Stifter

 Mystical Stigmata

 Stipend

 Stockholm

 Albert Stöckl

 Charles Warren Stoddard

 Stoics and Stoic Philosophy

 Stolberg

 Stole

 Alban Isidor Stolz

 Corner Stone

 Mary Jean Stone

 Marmaduke Stone

 Precious Stones in the Bible

 Stoning in Scripture

 James Stonnes

 Stonyhurst College

 Veit Stoss

 Antonio Stradivari

 Abbey of Strahov

 John Strain

 Ven. Edward Stransham

 Diocese of Strasburg

 Stratonicea

 Franz Ignaz von Streber

 Franz Seraph Streber

 Hermann Streber

 Joseph Georg Strossmayer

 Henry Benedict Maria Clement Stuart

 Studion

 Diocese of Stuhlweissenburg (Székes-Fehérvàr)

 Stylites (Pillar Saints)

 Styria

 Francisco Suárez

 Subdeacon

 Subiaco

 Subreption

 Episcopal Subsidies

 Substance

 Suburbicarian Dioceses

 Vicariate Apostolic of Sudan

 Sufetula

 Ven. John Sugar

 Suger

 Suicide

 Suidas

 St. Suitbert

 Alexander Martin Sullivan

 Peter John Sullivan

 Maurice de Sully

 Sulpicians in the United States

 Sulpicius Severus

 Sulpitius

 Prefecture Apostolic of Sumatra

 Summæ

 Catholic Summer Schools

 Sunday

 Diocese of Superior

 Supernatural Order

 Superstition

 The Last Supper

 Supremi disciplinæ

 Sura

 Jean-Joseph Surin

 Laurentius Surius

 Surplice

 Diocese of Susa

 Susa

 Suspension

 Ven. Robert Sutton

 Sir Richard Sutton

 Order of the Swan

 Sweden

 Swedenborgians

 Sophie-Jeanne Soymonof Swetchine

 Konrad Sweynheim

 Swinomish Indians

 St. Swithin

 Switzerland

 Archdiocese of Sydney

 Syene

 Edmund Sykes

 Syllabus

 Pope St. Sylvester I

 Pope Sylvester II

 Bernard Sylvester

 St. Sylvester Gozzolini

 Sylvestrines

 Francis Sylvius

 Symbolism

 Pope St. Symmachus

 Symmachus the Ebionite

 St. Symphorosa

 Synagogue

 Synaus

 Synaxarion

 Synaxis

 Syncelli

 Syncretism

 Synderesis

 Apostolic Syndic

 Syndicalism

 Synesius of Cyrene

 Synnada

 Synod

 National Synods

 Synoptics

 Syntagma Canonum

 Syon Monastery

 Diocese of Syra

 Archdiocese of Syracuse

 Diocese of Syracuse

 Syria

 Syriac Hymnody

 Syriac Language and Literature

 East Syrian Rite

 West Syrian Rite

 Stephan Szántó (Arator)

 Diocese of Szatmár

 Vicariate Apostolic of Eastern Sze-Ch'wan

 Vicariate Apostolic of North-western Sze-ch'wan

 Vicariate Apostolic of Southern Sze-ch'wan

 Martin Szentiványi

 Joseph Szujski

 Simon Szymonowicz

Semipelagianism


A doctrine of grace advocated by monks of Southern Gaul at and around Marseilles after 428. It aimed at a compromise between the two extremes of Pelagianism and Augustinism, and was condemned as heresy at the Œcumenical Council of Orange in 529 after disputes extending over more than a hundred years. The name Semipelagianism was unknown both in Christian antiquity and throughout the Middle Ages; during these periods it was customary to designate the views of the Massilians simply as the "relics of the Pelagians" ( reliquiœ Pelagianorum), an expression found already in St. Augustine (Ep. ccxxv, n. 7, in P. L., XXXIII, 1006). The most recent investigations show that the word was coined between 1590 and 1600 in connexion with Molina's doctrine of grace, in which the opponents of this theologian believed they saw a close resemblance to the heresy of the monks of Marseilles (cf. "Revue des sciences phios. et théol.", 1907, pp. 506 sqq.). After this confusion had been exposed as an error, the term Semipelagianism was retained in learned circles as an apt designation for the early heresy only.

I. ORIGIN OF SEMIPELAGIANISM ( A.D. 420-30)

In opposition to Pelagianism, it was maintained at the General Council of Carthage in 418 as a principle of faith that Christian grace is absolutely necessary for the correct knowledge and performance of good, and that perfect sinlessness is impossible on earth even for the justified. Since these declarations coincided only with a portion of St. Augustine's doctrine of grace, the anti-Pelagians could without reproof continue their opposition to other points in the teaching of the African Doctor. This opposition Augustine was soon to encounter in his immediate neighbourhood. In 420 he found himself compelled to direct to a certain Vitalis of Carthage, who was an opponent of Pelagius and recognized the Synod of Carthage (418), paternal instructions concerning the necessity of grace at the very beginning of the assent of the will in faith and concerning the absolute gratuity of grace (Ep. ccxvii in P. L., XXXIII, 978 sqq.). As is clear from the tenor of this writing, Vitalis was of the opinion that the beginning of faith springs from the free will of nature, and that the essence of "prevenient grace" consists in the preaching of the Christian doctrine of salvation. On the basis of such faith man, as Vitalis held, attains justification before God. This view was entirely "Semipelagian". To controvert it, Augustine pointed out that the grace preceding faith must be an interior enlightenment and strengthening, and that the preaching of the Word of God could not, unassisted, accomplish this; consequently the implanting of grace in the soul by God is necessary as a preliminary condition for the production of real faith, since otherwise the customary prayer of the Church for the grace of conversion for unbelievers would be superfluous. Augustine also introduces his view of an absolute predestination of the elect, without however especially emphasizing it, by remarking: "Cum tam multi salvi non fiant, non quia ipsi, sed quia Deus non vult" (Since so many are not saved, not because they themselves do not will it, but because God does not will it). Vitalis seems to have acquiesced and to have disclaimed the "error of Pelagius".

The second dispute, which broke out within the walls of the African monastery of Hadrumetum in 424, was not so easily settled. A monk named Florus, a friend of St. Augustine, had while on a journey sent to his fellow-monks a copy of the long epistle which Augustine had addressed in 418 to the Roman priest, afterwards Pope Pope Sixtus III (Ep. cxciv in P. L., XXXIII, 874 sqq.). In this epistle all merit before the reception of grace was denied, faith represented as the most gratuitous gift of God, and absolute predestination to grace and glory defended. Aroused to great anger by this letter, "more than five monks" inflamed their companions to such an extent that the tumult seemed destined to overwhelm the good abbot, Valentinus. On his return, Florus was loaded with the most violent reproaches for sending such a present, and he and the majority, who were followers of Augustine, were accused of maintaining that free will was no longer of any account, that on the last day all would not be judged according to their works, and that monastic discipline and correction ( correptio) were valueless. Informed of the outbreak of this unrest by two young monks, Cresconius and Felix, Augustine sent to the monastery in 426 or 427 the work, "De gratia et libero arbitrio" (P. L., XLIV, 881 sqq.), in which he maintains that the efficacy of Divine grace impairs neither the freedom of the human will nor the meritoriousness of good works, but that it is grace which causes the merits in us. The work exercised a calming influence on the heated spirits of Hadrumetum.

Apprised of the good effect of this book by Florus himself, Augustine dedicated to the abbot and his monks a second doctrinal writing, "De correptione et gratia" (P. L., XLIV, 915 sqq.), in which he explains in the clearest fashion his views upon grace. He informed the monks that correction is by no means superfluous, since it is the means by which God works. As for the freedom to sin, it is in reality not freedom, but slavery of the will. True freedom of the will is that effected by grace, since it makes the will free from the slavery of sin. Final perseverance is likewise a gift of grace, inasmuch as he to whom God has granted it will infallibly persevere. Thus, the number of those predestined to heaven from eternity is so determined and certain that "no one is added or subtracted". This second work seems to have been also received approvingly by the mollified monks; not so by subsequent ages, since this ominous book, together with other utterances, has given occasion to the most violent controversies concerning the efficacy of grace and predestination. All advocates of heretical predestinarianism, from Lucidus and Gottschalk to Calvin, have appealed to Augustine as their crown-witness, while Catholic theologians see in Augustine's teaching at most only a predestination to glory, with which the later "negative reprobation" to hell is parallel. Augustine is entirely free from Calvin's idea that God positively predestined the damned to hell or to sin. Many historians of dogma (Harnack, Loofs, Rottmanner, etc.) have passed a somewhat different censure on the work, maintaining that the Doctor of Hippo, his rigorism increasing with his age, has here expressed most clearly the notion of "irresistible grace" ( gratia irresistibilis), on which Jansenism later erected, as is known, its entire heretical system of grace. As the clearest and strongest proof of this contention, the following passage (De correptione et gratia, xxxviii) is cited: "Subventum est igitur infirmitati voluntatis humanæ, ut divina gratia indeclinabiliter et insuperabiliter ageretur et ideo, quamvis infirma, non tamen deficeret neque adversitate aliqua vincerctur." Is this not clearly the "inevitable and unconquerable grace" of Jansenism? The mere analysis of the text informs us better. The antithesis and the position of the words do not allow us to refer the terms "inevitably and unconquerably" to the grace as such, they must be referred to the "human will" which, in spite of its infirmity, is, by grace, made "unyielding and unconquerable" against the temptation to sin. Again the very easily misunderstood term ageretur is not to be explained as "coercion against one's will" but as "infallible guidance", which does not exclude the continuation of freedom of will (cf. Mausbach, "Die Ethik des hl. Augustins", II, Freiburg, 1909, p. 35).

The monks of Southern Gaul, who dwelt in peace at Marseilles and on the neighbouring island of Lerinum (Lérins), read the above-cited and other passages of Augustine with other and more critical eyes than the monks at Hadrumetum. Abbot John Cassian of the monastery of St. Victor at Marseilles, a celebrated and holy man, was, together with his fellow-monks, especially repelled by the arguments of St. Augustine. The Massilians, as they were called, were known throughout the Christian world as holy and virtuous men, conspicuous for their learning and asceticism. They had heartily acquiesced in the condemnation of Pelagianism by the Synod of Carthage (418) and the "Tractoria" of Pope Zosimus (418), and also in the doctrines of original sin and grace. They were, however, convinced that Augustine in his teaching concerning the necessity and gratuity especially of prevenient grace ( gratia prœcedens seu prœveniens) far overshot the mark. Cassian had a little earlier expressed his views concerning the relation of grace and freedom in his "Conferences" (Collatio xxiv in P.L., XLIX, 477 sqq.). As a man of Eastern training and a trusted disciple of St. John Chrysostom, he had taught that the free will was to be accorded somewhat more initiative than he was accustomed to find in the writings of Augustine. With unmistakable reference to Hippo, he had endeavoured in his thirteenth conference to demonstrate from Biblical examples that God frequently awaits the good impulses of the natural will before coming to its assistance with His supernatural grace; while the grace often preceded the will, as in the case of Matthew and Peter, on the other hand the will frequently preceded the grace, as in the case of Zacchæus and the Good Thief on the cross. This view was no longer Augustinian; it was really "half Pelagianisin". To such a man and his adherents, among whom the monk Hilarius (already appointed Bishop of Arles in 428) was conspicuous, the last writings from Africa must have appeared a masked reproof and a downright contradiction.

Thus, from being half friendly, the Massilians developed into determined opponents of Augustine. Testimony as to this change of feeling is supplied by two non-partisan laymen, Prosper of Aquitaine and a certain Hilarius, both of whom in their enthusiasm for the newly-blossoming monastic life voluntarily shared in the daily duties of the monks. In two distinct writings (St. Augustine, Epp. ccxxv-xxvi in P. L., XXXIII, 1002-12) they gave Augustine a strictly matter-of-fact report of the theological views of the Massilians. They sketched in the main the following picture, which we complete from other sources:


  • In distinguishing between the beginning of faith ( initium fidei) and the increase of faith ( augmentum fidei), one may refer the former to the power of the free will, while the faith itself and its increase is absolutely dependent upon God;
  • the gratuity of grace is to be maintained against Pelagius in so far as every strictly natural merit is excluded; this, however, does not prevent nature and its works from having a certain claim to grace;
  • as regards final perseverance in particular, it must not be regarded as a special gift of grace, since the justified man may of his own strength persevere to the end;
  • the granting or withholding of baptismal grace in the case of children depends on the Divine prescience of their future conditioned merits or misdeeds.

This fourth statement, which is of a highly absurd nature, has never been condemned as heresy; the three other propositions contain the whole essence of Semipelagianism.

The aged Augustine gathered all his remaining strength to prevent the revival of Pelagianism which had then been hardly overcome. He addressed (428 or 429) to Prosper and Hilarius the two works "De prædestinatione sanctorum" (P. L., XLIV, 959 sqq.) and "De dono perseverantiæ" (P. L., XLIV, 993 sqq.). In refuting their errors, Augustine treats his opponents as erring friends, not as heretics, and humbly adds that, before his episcopal consecration (about 396), he himself had been caught in a "similar error", until a passage in the writings of St. Paul (I Cor., iv, 7) had opened his eyes, "thinking that the faith, by which we believe in God, is not the gift of God, but is in us of ourselves, and that through it we obtain the gifts whereby we may live temperately, justly, and piously in this world" (De prædest. sanct., iii, 7). The Massilians, however, remained unappeased, the last writings of Augustine making no impression upon them. Offended at this obstinacy, Prosper believed the time had arrived for public polemics. He first described the new state of the question in a letter to a certain Rufinus (Prosper Aquit., "Ep. ad Rufinum de gratia et libero arbitrio", in P. L., XLI 77 sqq.), lashed in a poem of some thousand hexameters ( Peri achariston, "hoc est de ingratis", in P.L., LI, 91 sqq.) the ingratitude of the "enemies of grace", and directed against an unnamed assailant - perhaps Cassian himself - his "Epigrammata in obtrectatorem Augustini" (P. L., XLI, 149 sqq.), written in clegiacs. At the time of the composition of this poem (429-30), Augustine was still alive.


II. THE CULMINATION OF SEMIPELAGIANISM (430-519)

On 29 Aug., 430, while the Vandals were besieging his episcopal city, St. Augustine died. As his sole champions, he left his disciples, Prosper and Hilarius, on the scene of conflict in Southern Gaul. Prosper, rightly known as his "best disciple", alone engaged in writing, and, immersed as he was in the rich and almost inexhaustible mind of the greatest of all the Doctors of the Church, he subsequently devoted the utmost pains to soften down with noble tact the roughness and abruptness of many of his master's propositions. Filled with the conviction that they could not successfully engage such learned and respected opponents, Prosper and Hilary journeyed to Rome about 431 to urge Pope Celestine I to take official steps against the Semipelagians. Without issuing any definitive decision, the pope contented himself with an exhortation to the bishops of Gaul (P. L., L, 528 sqq.), protecting the memory of Augustine from calumniation and imposing silence on the innovators. On his return Prosper could claim henceforth to be engaging in the conflict "in virtue of the authority of the Apostolic See" (cf. P. L., LI, 178: "ex auctoritate apostolicæ sedis). His war was "pro Augustino", and in every direction he fought on his behalf. Thus, about 431-32, he repelled the "calumnies of the Gauls" against Augustine in his "Responsiones ad capitula objectionum Gallorum" (P. L., LI, 155 sqq.), defended temperately in his "Responsiones ad capitula objectionum Vincentianarum" (P. L., LI 177 sqq.), the Augustinian teaching concerning predestination, and finally, in his "Responsiones ad excerpta Genuensium (P. L., LI, 187 sqq.), explained the sense of excerpts which two priests of Genoa had collected from the writings of Augustine concerning predestination, and had forwarded to Prosper for interpretation. About 433 (434) he even ventured to attack Cassian himself, the soul and head of the whole movement, in his book, "De gratia et libero arbitrio contra Collatorem" (P. L., LI, 213 sqq.). The already delicate situation was thereby embittered, notwithstanding the friendly concluding sentences of the work. Of Hilary, Prosper's friend, we hear nothing more. Prosper himself must have regarded the fight as hopeless for the time being, since in 434 - according to Loofs; other historians give the year 440 - he shook the dust of Gaul from his feet and left the land to its fate. Settling at Rome in the papal chancery, he took no further part directly in the controversy, although even here he never wearied propagating Augustine's doctrine concerning grace, publishing several treatises to spread and defend it. The Massilians now took the field, confident of victory. One of their greatest leaders, the celebrated Vincent of Lérins, under the pseudonym of Peregrinus made in 434 concealed attacks on Augustine in his classical and otherwise excellent work, "Commonitorium pro catholicæ fidei veritate" (P. L., L, 637 sqq), and in individual passages frankly espoused Semipelagianism. This booklet should probably be regarded as simply a "polemical treatise against Augustine".

That Semipelagianism remained the prevailing tendency in Gaul during the following period, is proved by Arnobius the Younger, so called in contrast to Arnobius the Elder of Sicca (about 303). A Gaul by birth, and skilled in exegesis, Arnobius wrote about 460 extensive explanations of the Psalms ("Commentarii in Psalmos" in P. L., LIII, 327 sqq.) with a tendency towards allegorizing and open tilts at Augustine's doctrine of grace. Of his personal life nothing is known to us. Certain works from other pens have been wrongly ascribed to him. Thus, the collection of scholia ("Adnotationes ad quædam evangeliorum loca" in P. L., LIII, 569 sqq.), formerly attributed to him, must be referred to the pre-Constantine period, as B. Grundl has recently proved (cf. "Theol. Quartalschr.", Tübingen, 1897, 555 sqq.). Likewise, the work "Conflictus Arnobii catholici cum Serapione Ægyptio" (P. L., LIII, 239 sqq.) cannot have been written by our Arnobius, inasmuch as it is entirely Augustinian in spirit. When Bäumer wished to assign the authorship to Faustus of Riez ("Katholik" II, Mainz, 1887, pp. 398 sqq.), he overlooked the fact that Faustus also was a Semipelagian (see below), and that, in any case, so dilettante a writing as the above could not be ascribed to the learned Bishop of Riez. The true author is to be sought in Italy, not in Gaul. His chief object is to prove against Monophysitism, in the form of a disputation, the agreement in faith between Rome and the Greek champions of Orthodoxy, Athanasius and Cyril of Alexandria. Naturally Arnobius overcomes the Egyptian Serapion. One can therefore scarcely err in regarding the "Catholic Arnobius" as an obscure monk living in Rome. Until recent times the authorship of the work called the "Liber prædestinatus" was also commonly ascribed to our Arnobius. The sub-title reads: "Prædestinatorum hæresis et libri S. Angustino temere adscripti refutatio" (P. L., LIII, 587 sqq.). Dating from the fifth century and divided into three parts, this work, which was first published by J. Sirmond in 1643, attempts under the mask of ecclesiastical authority to refute Augustine's doctrine of grace together with the heretical Predestinarianism of pseudo-Augustine. As the third part is not merely Semipelagianism but undisguised Pelagianism, von Schubert has of late rightly concluded ("Der sog. Prædestinatus, ein Beitrag zur Gesch. des Pelagianismus", Leipzig, 1903) that the author wrote about 440 in Italy, perhaps at Rome itself, and was one of the associates of Julian of Eclanum (for further particulars see PREDESTINARIANISM).

The most important representative of Semipelagianism after Cassian was undoubtedly the celebrated Bishop Faustus of Riez. When the Gallic priest Lucidus had drawn on himself, on account of his heretical predestinationism, the condemnation of two synods (Arles, 473; Lyons 474), Faustus was commissioned by the assembled bishops to write a scientific refutation of the condemned heresy; hence his work, "De gratia libri II" (P. L., LVIII, 783 sqq.). Agreeing neither with the "pestifer doctor Pelagius" nor with the "error prædestinationis" of Lucidus, he resolutely adopted the standpoint of John Cassian. Like him, he denied the necessity of prevenient grace at the beginning of justification, and compares the will to a "small hook" (quædam voluntatis ansula) which reaches out and seizes grace. Of predestination to heaven and final perseverance as a "special grace" ( gratia specialis, personalis) he will not hear. That he sincerely believed that by these propositions he was condemning not a dogma of the Church, but the false private views of St. Augustine, is as certain in his case as in that of his predecessors Cassian and Hilary of Arles (see above). Consequently, their objectively reprehensible but subjectively excusable action has not prevented France from honouring these three men as Saints even to this day. The later Massilians were as little conscious as the earlier that they had strayed from the straight line of orthodoxy, and the infallible authority of the Church had not yet given a decision.

One should, however, speak only of a predominance, and not of a supremacy, of Semipelagianism at this period. In proof of this statement we may cite two anonymous writings, which appeared most probably in Gaul itself. About 430 an unknown writer, recognized by Pope Gelasius as "probatus ecclesiæ magister", composed the epoch-making work, "De vocatione omnium gentium" (P. L., LI, 647 sq.). It is an honest and skilful attempt to soften down the contradictions and to facilitate the passage from Semipelagianism to a moderate Augustinism. To harmonize the universality of the will of redemption with restricted predestination, the anonymous author distinguishes between the general provision of grace ( benignitas generalis) which excludes no one, and the special care of God ( gratia specialis), which is given only to the elect. As suggestions towards this distinction are already found in St. Augustine, we may say that this work stands on Augustinian ground (cf. Loofs, "Dogmengesch.", 4th ed., Leipzig, 1906, p. 391). Another anonymous writing dating from the middle of the fifth century, reckoned among the works of Augustine, and edited by the Academy of Vienna, bears the title: "Hypomnesticon contra Pelagianos et Cœlestianos" (Corpus scriptor. ecclesiast. latin., X, 1611 sqq.). It contains a refutation of Semipelagianism, as it condemns the foundation of predestination on the "faith foreseen" by God ( fides prœvisa). But it also sharply challenges the irresistibility of grace and predestination to hell. As the ground for eternal damnation the Divine foresight of sin is given, although the author cannot help seeing that eternal punishment as the consequence of sin is settled from all eternity. A third work deserves special attention, inasmuch as it reflects the views of Rome towards the end of the fifth century; it is entitled: "Indiculus seu præteritorum Sedis Apostolicæ episcoporum auctoritates" (in Denzinger-Bannwart, "Enchiridion", Freiburg, 1908, nn. 129-42), and emphasizes in twelve chapters the powerlessness of man to raise himself, the absolute necessity of grace for all salutary works, and the special grace-character of final perseverance. The "deeper and more difficult questions" concerning grace, as they emerged in the course of the discussion, were passed over as superfluous. The Augustinian standpoint of the compiler is as unmistakable as the anti-Semipelagian tendency of the whole work. Regarded in earlier times and to some extent even to-day as a papal instruction sent by Celestine I to the bishops of Gaul together with the document mentioned above, this appendix, or "indiculus" is now considered unauthentic and its origin referred to the end of the fifth century. It is certain that about A. D. 500 this work was recognized as the official expression of the views of the Apostolic See.


III. DECLINE AND END OF SEMIPELAGIANISM (519-30)

Not at Rome or in Gaul, but after a roundabout passage through Constantinople, the Semipelagian strife was to break out with new violence. It happened in this wise: In 519, Scythian monks under Johannes Maxentius who was versed in Latin literature, appeared at Constantinople with the intention of having inserted in the symbol of the Council of Chalcedon (451) the Christological formula, "Unus de s. Trinitate in carne crucifixus est", in view of the Theopaschite quarrel, which was then raging. In this clause the fanatical monks saw the "standard of orthodoxy", and regarded the solemn reception of the same into the symbol as the most efficacious means of overthrowing Monophysitism. With their untimely proposition they importuned even the papal legates, who were entrusted with the negotiations for the re-establishment of official relations between Rome and Byzantium. When Bishop Possessor from Africa approached the hesitating legates with quotations from the works of the recently-deceased Faustus of Riez, Maxentius did not hesitate to denounce Possessor and his abettors curtly as "partisans of Pelagius" ( sectatores Pelagii; cf. Maxentius, "Ep. ad legatos" in P. G., LXXXVI, 85). Thus the question of the orthodoxy of Faustus suddenly arose, and simultaneously that of Semipelagianism in general; henceforth, the conflict never abated until its final settlement. As no decision could be reached without the concurrence of Rome, Maxentius started for Rome in June, 519, with several fellow-monks to lay their petition before Pope Hormisdas. During their fourteen months' residence at Rome they left no means untried to induce the pope to recognize the Christological formula and to condemn Faustus. Hormisdas, however, refused to yield to either request. On the contrary, in a reply to Bishop Possessor of 20 Aug., 520, he complains bitterly of the tactless and fanatical conduct of the Scythian monks at Rome (cf. A. Thiel, "Epistolæ Romanor. Pontif. genuinæ", I, Braunsberg, 1868, 929). As for Faustus, Hormisdas declares in the same letter that his works certainly contain much that is distorted ( incongrua) and is, moreover, not included among the recognized writings of the Fathers. The sound doctrine on grace and freedom could be taken from the writings of St. Augustine.

This evasive answer of the pope, showing no inclination to meet their wishes, was far from pleasing to Maxentius and his companions. Turning elsewhere for support Maxentius formed a league of the African bishops, who, in consequence of the Vandal persecution of the Catholics under King Thrasamund (496-523), were living in exile on the Island of Sardinia. Fulgentius of Ruspe, the most learned of the exiles, inquired into the matter on behalf of his fellow-bishops. In a long epistle (Fulgentius, Ep. xvii, "De incarnatione et gratia", in P. L., LXV, 451 sqq.), he gratified the Scythian monks by approving the orthodoxy of the Christological formula and the condemnation of Faustus of Riez. Unfortunately his polemical work in seven books against Faustus is lost, but in his numerous writings, which he composed partly during his exile in Sardinia and partly after his return to Africa, there breathes a spirit so truly Augustinian that he has been rightly called the "epitomized Augustine". The blow dealt to Faustus had its effect both in Gaul and at Rome. Bishop Cæsarius of Arles, although a pupil of Lérins, subscribed to the Augustinian doctrine of grace, and his views were shared by many of the Gallic episcopate. Other bishops were indeed still inclined towards Semipelagianism. At a Synod of Valence (528 or 529) Cæsarius was attacked on account of his teaching, but was able to reply effectively. Having been assured of the "authority and support of the Apostolic See", he summoned on 3 July, 529, the sharers of his views to the Second Synod of Orange, which condemned Semipelagianism as heresy. In twenty-five canons the entire powerlessness of nature for good, the absolute necessity of prevenient grace for salutary acts, especially for the beginning of faith, the absolute gratuity of the first grace and of final perseverance, were defined, while in the epilogue the predestination of the will to evil was branded as heresy (cf. Denzinger-Bannwart, nn. 174-200). As Pope Boniface II solemnly ratified the decrees in the following year (530), the Synod of Orange was raised to the rank of an œcumenical council. It was the final triumph of the dead Augustine, the "Doctor of Grace".

SUAREZ, Proleg. de gratia, V, v, Sqq.; ELEUTHERIUS (LIVINUS MEYER), De Pelagianis et Semipelag. erroribus (Antwerp, 1705); GEFFKEN, Historia semipelagianismi (Göttingen, 1826); WIGGERS, Gesch. des Pelagianismus (Hamburg, 1835) ; KOCH, Der hl. Faustus v. Riez (Stuttgart, 1893); ARNOLD, Cäsarius von Arelate (Leipzig, 1894); HOCH, Die Lehre des Joh. Cassian von Natur u. Gnade (Freiburg, 1895); SUBLET, Le semipélagianisme des origines dans ses rapports avec Augustin, le pélagianisme et l'église (Namur, 1897); WÖRTER, Beitrage zur Dogmengesch. des Semipelagianismus (Paderborn, 1898); IDEM, Zur Dogmengesch. des Semipelagianismus (Münster, 1900); HEFELE-LECLERCQ, Hist. des conciles, II (Paris, 1908); TIXERONT, Hist. des dogmes, II (2nd ed., Paris, 1909); HARNACK, Dogmengesch., III (4th ed., Freiburg, 1910). On questions of literary history see BARDENHEWER, Patrologie (3rd ed., Freiburg, 1910), passim, tr. SHAHAN (St. Louis, 1908); on the Middle Ages cf. MINGES, Die Gnadenlehre des Duns Scotus auf ihren angeblichen Pelagianismus u. Semipelag. geprüft (Münster, 1906); on the internal development of Augustine's teaching Consult WEINAND, Die Gottesidee der Grundzug der Weltanschauung des hl. Augustinus (Paderborn, 1910).

J. POHLE