Letter 192: 1. I was at a considerable distance from home when the letter of your Holiness addressed to me at Hippo arrived by the hands of the clerk Projectus. When I had returned home, and, having read your letter, felt myself to be owing you a reply, I was still waiting for some means of communicating with you, when, lo!

Augustine of HippoCelestine|c. 417 AD|augustine hippo
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Augustine to Celestine, greetings.

A brief letter on an urgent matter. Certain followers of Pelagius have been circulating a document that claims the support of several respected bishops — including, I am told, the suggestion that I myself hold views sympathetic to their position.

This is false. I have never agreed with Pelagius on the matters in dispute, and I never will. The idea that human beings can achieve righteousness without the direct assistance of divine grace contradicts everything I have experienced, everything I have read in Scripture, and everything I have written for the past twenty years.

If anyone quotes me in support of Pelagian teaching, they are either lying or misunderstanding me. I ask you to make this clear wherever the claim has gained currency.

Farewell.

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

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