Letter 202: 1. The holy presbyter Innocentius, who is the bearer of this letter, did not last year take with him a letter from me to your Eminences, as he had no expectation of returning to Africa. We thank God, however, that it so happened, as it afforded you an opportunity of overcoming [evil with good in requiting] our silence by your letter.

Augustine of HippoAlypius and Augustine (A.D. 419)|c. 419 AD|augustine hippo
pelagianismwomen
Theological controversy; Church council; Travel & mobility

From Alypius and Augustine to Optatus, greetings in the Lord.

We are writing jointly about a matter that concerns us both — the continuing influence of Pelagian teaching in certain quarters, even after its formal condemnation.

We have learned that some clergy are continuing to teach, in private if not in public, that infants born to Christian parents do not need baptism for the remission of sins — since, according to the Pelagian view, they have no sin to remit.

This teaching must be stopped. The Church has always baptized infants. The universal practice of the Church, stretching back to the apostles, carries the weight of apostolic authority. To deny infant baptism is to deny original sin, and to deny original sin is to deny the need for a savior.

We ask you to be vigilant in your diocese. Identify those who are teaching this error. Correct them if possible. Remove them from their teaching positions if necessary. The truth of the faith is not a matter of opinion — it is the foundation on which everything else rests.

Farewell.

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

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