Heavenly Pilgrim said:
HP: Have I missed your promised post today with those freshly imprinted words of Pelagius? Still waiting.
Yes...i did say that. Well I gave you links where you can order his works, his letters and his book on romans.
But there are other words we can read by Pelagius. Some i'm sure you have already read. Lets start with Synod Of Lydda To Investigate Pelagius' Teachings, 415 AD. Others please forgive me as I post this. This is rather long, but freewillers would love to read this stuff to see what one of the great freewill leads said. This will be many post. Unjoy...
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Synopsis: In 415 a second ecclesiastical trial was held against Pelagius, this time being instigated by two deposed
Western bishops, Heros of Arles and Lazarus of Aix. The records are lost with only fragments of it remaining and
what follows was taken from Augustine of Hippo's "On The Proceedings Of Pelagius". The Synod was presided over
by Eulogius, bishop of Caesarea and metropolitan and was attended by thirteen other bishops: John of Jerusalem,
Ammonianus, Eutonius, two Porphyrys, Fidus, Zomnus, Zoboennus, Nymphidius, Chromatius, Jovinus, Eleutherius,
and Clematius. The two accusers were absent from the hearing owing to the illness of one of them, but a document
was handed in containing the principal charges. In the end Pelagius was acknowledged as being Orthodox in
doctrine and in full communion with the church.
Synod: [Pelagius writes in a certain book of his that] ‘No man can be without sin unless he has acquired a knowledge
of the law.’
Synod: Did you, Pelagius, express yourself thus?
Pelagius: I certainly used the words, but not in the sense in which they understand them. I did not say that a man is
unable to sin who has acquired a knowledge of the law; but that he is by the knowledge of the law assisted towards
not sinning, even as it is written, ‘He hath given them a law for help’.
Synod: The words which have been spoken by Pelagius are not different from the Church.
Synod: Let another section be read. [It was then read from his book that] ‘all men are ruled by their own will.’
Pelagius: This I stated in the interest of free will. God is its helper whenever it chooses good; man, however, when
sinning is himself in fault, as under the direction of a free will.
Synod: Nor again is this opposed to the doctrine of the Church.
Synod: [Pelagius has written in his book that] ‘In the day of judgment no forbearance will be shown to the ungodly and
the sinners, but they will be consumed in eternal fires.’ [To this Synod this statement seems to be worded in such a
way as to imply that all sinners whatever were to be punished with an eternal punishment, without excepting even
those who hold Christ as their foundation, although ‘they build thereupon wood, hay, stubble,’ concerning whom the
apostle writes: ‘If any man’s work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss; but he shall himself be saved, yet so as by fire.’]
Pelagius: I made this assertion in accordance with the Gospel, in which it is written concerning sinners, ‘These shall
go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into life eternal.’ [He] who believes differently is an Origenist.
Synod: [What you are saying then is] not opposed to the Church.
Synod: [Pelagius has written in his book that] ‘evil does not enter our thoughts [if we are Christians].’
Pelagius: We made no such statement. What we did say was, that ‘the Christian ought to be careful not to have evil
thoughts.’
Synod: [What you are saying then is not opposed to the teachings of the Church.]
Synod: [Pelagius has written in his book that] ‘The kingdom of heaven was promised even in the Old Testament.’
Pelagius: This can be proved by the Scriptures: but heretics, in order to disparage the Old Testament, deny this. I,
however, simply followed the authority of the Scriptures when I said this; for in the prophet Daniel it is written: 'The
saints shall receive the kingdom of the Most High.'
Synod: Neither is this opposed to the Church's faith.
Synod: [Pelagius has written in his book that] ‘A man is able, if he likes, to be without sin’ [and in a letter to a certain
widow he wrote flatteringly that] ‘In thee piety may find a dwelling-place, such as she finds nowhere else; in thee
righteousness, though a stranger, can find a home; truth, which no one any longer recognizes, can discover an abode
and a friend in thee; and the law of God, which almost everybody despises, may be honoured by thee alone.’
[Elsewhere in this same letter he wrote] ‘O how happy and blessed art thou, when that righteousness which we must
believe to flourish only in heaven has found a shelter on earth only in thy heart!’ [In another work addressed to this
same woman Pelagius, after reciting the Lord’s prayer and then proceeding to teach her in what manner saints ought
to pray, says] ‘He worthily raises his hands to God, and with a good conscience does he pour out his prayer, who is
able to say, “Thou, O Lord, knowest how holy, and harmless, and pure from all injury and iniquity and violence, are
the hands which I stretch out to Thee; how righteous, and pure, and free from all deceit, are the lips with which I offer
to Thee my supplication, that Thou wouldst have mercy upon me.”’
Pelagius: We asserted that a man could be without sin, and could keep God's commandments if he wished; for this
capacity has been given to him by God. But we never said that any man could be found who at no time whatever, from
infancy to old age, had committed sin: but that if any person were converted from his sins, he could by his own labour
and God's grace be without sin; and yet not even thus would he be incapable of change ever afterwards. As for the
other statements which they have made against us, they are not to be found in our books, nor have we at any time
said such things.
Synod: You have denied having ever written such words; are you therefore ready to anathematize those who do hold
these opinions?
Pelagius: I anathematize them as fools, not as heretics, for there is no dogma.
Synod: Since now Pelagius has with his own mouth anathematized this vague statement as foolish verbiage, justly
declaring in his reply, 'That a man is able with God's assistance and grace to be without sin,' let him now proceed to
answer the other heads of accusation against him.
Synod: [Your disciple Coelestius has been charged with making the following statements:] “Adam was created mortal,
and would have died whether he had sinned or not sinned”, “that Adam's sin injured only himself and not the human
race”, “that the law no less than the gospel leads us to the kingdom”, “that there were sinless men previous to the
coming of Christ”, “that new-born infants are in the same condition as Adam was before the fall”, [and] “that the whole
human race does not, on the one hand, die through Adam's death or transgression, nor, on the other hand, does the
whole human race rise again through the resurrection of Christ.”
Pelagius: Concerning a man's being able indeed to be without sin, we have spoken already; concerning the fact,
however, that before the Lord's coming there were persons without sin, we say now that, previous to Christ's advent,
some men lived holy and righteous lives, according to the teaching of the sacred Scriptures. The rest were not said by
me, as even their testimony goes to show, and for them, I do not feel that I am responsible. But for the satisfaction of
the holy synod, I anathematize those who either now hold, or have ever held, these opinions.
More coming in part 2...