← LineageHeresy Condemnation for · Saturday, 1 May 2027

Heresy Condemnation · 418

Pelagius condemned at Carthage

354420

Portrait of Pelagius.
Pelagius became the name attached to the Western dispute over grace and the first movement of faith. via Wikimedia Commons · Public domain

Pelagius was condemned because his moral seriousness seemed to make grace secondary. The African bishops, with Augustine's theology behind them, insisted that grace is needed not only to do the good but even to begin desiring it rightly. The dispute was about more than human effort; it asked whether salvation starts with God's mercy or with the unaided will. Carthage answered in Augustine's direction.

How it happened

What happened

African bishops condemned Pelagian teaching in the wake of Augustine's long anti-Pelagian campaign.

The argument

Can human beings begin choosing God without grace, or is grace needed even for the first movement of faith?

What changed

The council made anti-Pelagian grace doctrine a formal Western boundary.

Why it matters

It shaped later debates about sin, freedom, baptism, merit, and salvation.

Cover of Enchiridion on Faith, Hope, and Love by St. Augustine
Daily reading

Book of the day

Enchiridion

Augustine of Hippo

A reading pick tied to today's figure, quote, era, or event. A compact Augustinian map of faith, hope, love, grace, and salvation after the Pelagian fight.

·XFacebookRedditEmail

Daily Patristic Wisdom in your inbox

Get one early Church quote each morning, with historical context in plain English. Free. Unsubscribe whenever.

Today: Pelagius — Patristic Lineage