On the Proceedings of Pelagius

 1.—Introduction.

 2. [I.]—The First Item in the Accusation, and Pelagius’ Answer.

 3.—Discussion of Pelagius’ First Answer.

 4. [II.]—The Same Continued.

 5. [III.]—The Second Item in the Accusation And Pelagius’ Answer.

 6.—Pelagius’ Answer Examined.

 7.—The Same Continued.

 8.—The Same Continued.

 9.—The Third Item in the Accusation And Pelagius’ Answer.

 10.—Pelagius’ Answer Examined. On Origen’s Error Concerning the Non-Eternity of the Punishment of the Devil and the Damned.

 11.—The Same Continued.

 12. [IV.]—The Fourth Item in the Accusation And Pelagius’ Answer.

 13. [V.]—The Fifth Item of the Accusation And Pelagius’ Answer.

 14.—Examination of This Point. The Phrase “Old Testament” Used in Two Senses. The Heir of the Old Testament. In the Old Testament There Were Heirs of

 15.—The Same Continued.

 16. [VI.]—The Sixth Item of the Accusation, and Pelagius’ Reply.

 17.—Examination of the Sixth Charge and Answers.

 18.—The Same Continued.

 19.—The Same Continued.

 20.—The Same Continued. Pelagius Acknowledges the Doctrine of Grace in Deceptive Terms.

 [VII.] and for the obtaining of which we pray that we may not be led into temptation. This grace is not nature, but that which renders assistance to f

 21. [VIII.]—The Same Continued.

 21. [IX.]—The Same Continued.

 22. [X.]—The Same Continued. The Synod Supposed that the Grace Acknowledged by Pelagius Was that Which Was So Thoroughly Known to the Church.

 23. [XI.]—The Seventh Item of the Accusation: the Breviates of Cœlestius Objected to Pelagius.

 24.—Pelagius’ Answer to the Charges Brought Together Under the Seventh Item.

 25.—The Pelagians Falsely Pretended that the Eastern Churches Were on Their Side.

 26.—The Accusations in the Seventh Item, Which Pelagius Confessed.

 27. [XII.]—The Eighth Item in the Accusation.

 28.—Pelagius’ Reply to the Eighth Item of Accusation.

 29. [XIII.]—The Ninth Item of the Accusation And Pelagius’ Reply.

 30. [XIV.]—The Tenth Item in the Accusation. The More Prominent Points of Cœlestius’ Work Continued.

 31.—Remarks on the Tenth Item.

 32.—The Eleventh Item of the Accusation.

 33.—Discussion of the Eleventh Item Continued.

 34.—The Same Continued. On the Works of Unbelievers Faith is the Initial Principle from Which Good Works Have Their Beginning Faith is the Gift of G

 35.—The Same Continued.

 36.—The Same Continued. The Monk Pelagius. Grace is Conferred on the Unworthy.

 37—The Same Continued. John, Bishop of Jerusalem, and His Examination.

 38. [XV.]—The Same Continued.

 39. [XVI.]—The Same Continued. Heros and Lazarus Orosius.

 40. [XVII.]—The Same Continued.

 41.—Augustin Indulgently Shows that the Judges Acted Incautiously in Their Official Conduct of the Case of Pelagius.

 42. [XVIII.]—The Twelfth Item in the Accusation. Other Heads of Cœlestius’ Doctrine Abjured by Pelagius.

 43. [XIX.]—The Answer of the Monk Pelagius and His Profession of Faith.

 44. [XX.]—The Acquittal of Pelagius.

 45. [XXI.]—Pelagius’ Acquittal Becomes Suspected.

 46. [XXII.]—How Pelagius Became Known to Augustin Cœlestius Condemned at Carthage.

 47. [XXIII.]—Pelagius’ Book, Which Was Sent by Timasius and Jacobus to Augustin, Was Answered by the Latter in His Work “On Nature and Grace.”

 48. [XXIV.]—A Letter Written by Timasius and Jacobus to Augustin on Receiving His Treatise “On Nature and Grace.”

 49. [XXV.]—Pelagius’ Behaviour Contrasted with that of the Writers of the Letter.

 50.—Pelagius Has No Good Reason to Be Annoyed If His Name Be at Last Used in the Controversy, and He Be Expressly Refuted.

 51. [XXVI.]—The Nature of Augustin’s Letter to Pelagius.

 52. [XXVII. And XXVIII.]—The Text of the Letter.

 53. [XXIX.]—Pelagius’ Use of Recommendations.

 54. [XXX.]—On the Letter of Pelagius, in Which He Boasts that His Errors Had Been Approved by Fourteen Bishops.

 55.—Pelagius’ Letter Discussed.

 56. [XXXI.]—Is Pelagius Sincere?

 57. [XXXII.]—Fraudulent Practices Pursued by Pelagius in His Report of the Proceedings in Palestine, in the Paper Wherein He Defended Himself to Augus

 [XXXIII.] But I could not help feeling annoyance that he can appear to have defended sundry sentences of Cœlestius, which, from the Proceedings, it is

 58.—The Same Continued.

 59. [XXXIV.]—Although Pelagius Was Acquitted, His Heresy Was Condemned.

 60. [XXXV.]—The Synod’s Condemnation of His Doctrines.

 61.—History of the Pelagian Heresy. The Pelagian Heresy Was Raised by Sundry Persons Who Affected the Monastic State.

 62.—The History Continued. Cœlestius Condemned at Carthage by Episcopal Judgment. Pelagius Acquitted by Bishops in Palestine, in Consequence of His De

 63.—The Same Continued. The Dogmas of Cœlestius Laid to the Charge of Pelagius, as His Master, and Condemned.

 64.—How the Bishops Cleared Pelagius of Those Charges.

 65.—Recapitulation of What Pelagius Condemned.

 66.—The Harsh Measures of the Pelagians Against the Holy Monks and Nuns Who Belonged to Jerome’s Charge.

55.—Pelagius’ Letter Discussed.

What, then, is the meaning of those vaunting words of theirs in this epistle, wherein they boast of having induced the fourteen bishops who sat in that trial to believe not merely that a man has ability but that he has “facility” to abstain from sinning, according to the position laid down in the “Chapters” of this same Pelagius,—when, in the draft of the proceedings, notwithstanding the frequent repetition of the general charge and full consideration bestowed on it, this is nowhere found? How, indeed, can this word fail to contradict the very defence and answer which Pelagius made; since the Bishop John asserted that Pelagius put in this answer in his presence, that “he wished it to be understood that the man who was willing to labour and agonize for his salvation was able to avoid sin,” while Pelagius himself, at this time engaged in a formal inquiry and conducting his defence,147    Ch. 16. At the synod of Diospolis. The proceedings before John, bishop of Jerusalem, were not duly registered. See above, 39. said, that “it was by his own labour and the grace of God that a man is able to be without sin?” Now, is a thing easy when labour is required to effect it? For I suppose that every man would agree with us in the opinion, that wherever there is labour there cannot be facility. And yet a carnal epistle of windiness and inflation flies forth, and, outrunning in speed the tardy record of the proceedings, gets first into men’s hands; so as to assert that fourteen bishops in the East have determined, not only “that a man is able to be without sin, and to keep God’s commandments,” but “easily to keep.” Nor is God’s assistance once named: it is merely said, “If he wishes;” so that, of course, as nothing is affirmed of the divine grace, for which the earnest fight was made, it remains that the only thing one reads of in this epistle is the unhappy and self-deceiving—because represented as victorious—human pride. As if the Bishop John, indeed, had not expressly declared that he censured this statement, and that, by the help of three inspired texts of Scripture,148    See above, 37. he had, as if by thunderbolts, struck to the ground the gigantic mountains of such presumption which they had piled up against the still over-towering heights of heavenly grace; or as if again those other bishops who were John’s assessors could have borne with Pelagius, either in mind or even in ear, when he pronounced these words: “We said that a man is able to be without sin and to keep the commandments of God, if he wishes,” unless he had gone on at once to say: “For the ability to do this God has given to him” (for they were unaware that he was speaking of nature, and not of that grace which they had learnt from the teaching of the apostle); and had afterwards added this qualification: “We never said, however, that any man could be found, who at no time whatever from his infancy to his old age had committed sin, but that if any person were converted from his sins, he could by his own exertion and the grace of God be without sin.” Now, by the very fact that in their sentence they used these words, “he has answered correctly, ‘that a man can, when he has the assistance and grace of God, be without sin;’” what else did they fear than that, if he denied this, he would be doing a manifest wrong not to man’s ability, but to God’s grace? It has indeed not been defined when a man may become without sin; it has only been judicially settled, that this result can only be reached by the assisting grace of God; it has not, I say, been defined whether a man, whilst he is in this flesh which lusts against the Spirit, ever has been, or now is, or ever can be, by his present use of reason and free will, either in the full society of man or in monastic solitude, in such a state as to be beyond the necessity of offering up the prayer, not in behalf of others, but for himself personally: “Forgive us our debts;”149    Matt. vi. 12. or whether this gift shall be consummated at the time when “we shall be like Him, when we shall see Him as He is,”150    1 John iii. 2.—when it shall be said, not by those that are fighting: “I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind,”151    Rom. vii. 23. but by those that are triumphing: “O death, where is thy victory? O death, where is thy sting?”152    1 Cor. xv. 55. Now, this is perhaps hardly a question which ought to be discussed between catholics and heretics, but only among catholics with a view to a peaceful settlement.153    This point, however, was definitely settled a year or two afterwards, at a council held in Carthage. (See its Canons 6–8.) See also above, the Preface to the treatise On the Perfection of Man’s Righteousness.

55. Quid sibi ergo vult, quod in hac epistola ita gloriari ausi sunt, ut non solum possibilitatem non peccandi, sed etiam facilitatem, sicut in libro Capitulorum ejusdem Pelagii positum est, judicantibus quatuordecim episcopis se persuasisse jactarent, cum toties eadem objecta gestis atque repetita nusquam hoc habere inveniantur? Quomodo enim etiam ipsi defensioni et responsioni Pelagii non est hoc verbum contrarium, cum et episcopus Joannes sic eum apud se respondisse dixerit, ut «eum vellet intelligi posse non peccare, qui voluerit pro salute sua laborare et agonizare;» et ipse jam gestis agens seque defendens, «proprio labore et Dei gratia,» dixerit, «hominem posse esse sine peccato?» Quomodo ergo facile fit, si laboratur ut fiat? Puto enim omnem sensum hominum nobiscum agnoscere quod ubi labor est, facilitas non est. Et tamen epistola carnalis ventositatis et elationis volat, et gestorum tarditate procurata, celeritate praecedens, in manus hominum praevolat, ut quatuordecim episcopis orientalibus placuisse dicatur, non solum «posse esse hominem sine peccato, et Dei mandata custodire,» sed et «facile custodire;» nec nominato Deo juvante, sed tantum, «si velit:» ut videlicet tacita, pro qua vehementissime pugnabatur, divina gratia, restet, ut sola in epistola legatur infelix, et se ipsam decipiens velut victrix, humana superbia. Quasi non hoc se dixerit culpasse Joannes episcopus, et velut giganteos montes adversus supereminentiam gratiae coelestis structos tribus divinorum testimoniorum tanquam fulminum ictibus dejecisse: aut vero cum illo etiam caeteri episcopi judices, vel mente, vel ipsis auribus ferrent Pelagium dicentem, «Posse quidem hominem sine peccato esse, et Dei mandata custodire, si velit, diximus;» nisi continuo sequeretur, «Hanc enim possibilitatem Deus illi dedit» (quod nesciebant illi, eum dicere de natura, non de illa, quam in apostolica praedicatione noverant, 0352 gratia); ac deinde conjungeret, «Non autem diximus, quod inveniatur aliquis, ab infantia usque ad senectam, qui nunquam peccaverit; sed quoniam a peccatis conversus, proprio labore et Dei gratia possit esse sine peccato.» Quod etiam sua sententia declararunt, dicentes, eum recte respondisse, hominem cum adjutorio Dei et gratia posse esse sine peccato:» quid aliud metuentes, nisi ne hoc negando, non possibilitati hominis, sed ipsi Dei gratiae facere viderentur injuriam? Nec tamen definitum est, quando fiat homo sine peccato, quod fieri posse adjuvante Dei gratia, judicatum est: non est, inquam, definitum, utrum in hac carne concupiscente adversus spiritum, fuerit, vel sit, vel futurus sit aliquis, jam ratione utens et voluntatis arbitrio, sive in ista frequentia hominum, sive in solitudine monachorum, cui non sit jam necessarium, non propter alios, sed etiam propter se ipsum dicere in oratione, Dimitte nobis debita nostra (Matth. VI, 12): an vero tunc perficiatur hoc donum, quando similes ei erimus, quando videbimus eum, sicuti est (I Joan. III, 2); quando dicetur, non a pugnantibus, Video aliam legem in membris meis repugnantem legi mentis meae (Rom. VII, 23); sed a triumphantibus, Ubi est, mors, victoria tua? ubi est, mors, aculeus tuus (I Cor. XV, 55)? Quod non inter Catholicos et haereticos, sed inter ipsos Catholicos fortasse pacifice requirendum est .