Pelagius
A British monk who came to Rome in about 383. “His ardent zeal for holy living was wedded to a rather unorthodox theology.”1 He was active from 383 until 417.
Although [Pelagius’s] doctrine of God was Catholic enough (he believed in the Nicene doctrine of the Trinity), his beliefs about human nature sparked off a storm of controversy which ended with his condemnation for heresy. Pelagius held that all human beings were born into the world as sinless as Adam was before he fell; the apostasy of Adam had not corrupted humanity’s nature, but had merely set a fatally bad example, which most of Adam’s sons and daughters had freely followed. However, there were some people (according to Pelagius) who had managed to remain sinless throughout their lives by a proper use of their free-will, e.g. some Old Testament saints like Daniel. In fact, anyone could become sinlessly perfect if only he tried hard enough.
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1From 2000 Years of Christ’s Power by N. R. Needham.
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