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Pelagianism

A Wisdom Archive on Pelagianism

Pelagianism

A selection of articles related to Pelagianism

We recommend this article: Pelagianism - 1, and also this: Pelagianism - 2.
pelagianism, Pelagianism, Pelagianism - Pelagius, Semipelagianism, Charles Finney, Erasmus, The Fall of Man

ARTICLES RELATED TO Pelagianism

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Ambrosius Aurelianus - Other accounts of Aurelianus

The Historia Britonum preserves several snippets of lore about Ambrosius. The most significant of these is the story about Ambrosius, Vortigern, and the two dragons beneath Dinas Emrys 'Fortress of Ambrosius' in Chapters 40–42. This story was later retold with more detail by Geoffrey of Monmouth in his fictional Historia Regum Britanniae, conflating the personage of Ambrosius with the Welsh tradition of Merlin the visonary, known for oracular utterances that foretold the coming victories of the ...

See also:

Ambrosius Aurelianus, Ambrosius Aurelianus - Aurelianus according to Gildas, Ambrosius Aurelianus - Other accounts of Aurelianus, Ambrosius Aurelianus - Aurelianus in fiction

Read more here: » Ambrosius Aurelianus: Encyclopedia II - Ambrosius Aurelianus - Other accounts of Aurelianus

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - School of Salamanca - Law and justice

The juridical doctrine of the School of Salamanca represented the end of medieval concepts of law, with a revindication of liberty not habitual in Europe of that time. The natural rights of man came to be, in one form or another, the center of attention, including rights as a corporeal being (right to life, economic rights such as the right to own property) and spiritual rights (the right to freedom of thought and to human dignity). Sch ...

See also:

School of Salamanca, School of Salamanca - Law and justice, School of Salamanca - Natural law and human rights, School of Salamanca - Sovereignty, School of Salamanca - The law of peoples and international law, School of Salamanca - Just war, School of Salamanca - The conquest of America, School of Salamanca - Economics, School of Salamanca - Antecedents, School of Salamanca - Private property, School of Salamanca - Money value and price, School of Salamanca - Interest on money, School of Salamanca - Theology, School of Salamanca - Morality, School of Salamanca - The polemic De auxiliis, School of Salamanca - The existence of evil in the world

Read more here: » School of Salamanca: Encyclopedia II - School of Salamanca - Law and justice

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Heresy - Religious heresy

Heresy - Christianity. The use of the term heresy in the context of Christianity is less common today, with some notable exceptions: see for example Rudolf Bultmann and the character of debates over ordaining women and gay priests. Popular imagination relegates "heresy" to the Middle Ages, when the Church's power in Europe was at its height, but the case of the scholar and humanist Giordano Bruno was not the last execution for heresy. Heresy remained an officially punishable offense in Roman Catholi ...

See also:

Heresy, Heresy - Etymology, Heresy - Religious heresy, Heresy - Christianity, Heresy - Heresy in Judaism, Heresy - Heresy in Islam, Heresy - Contemporary heresy

Read more here: » Heresy: Encyclopedia II - Heresy - Religious heresy

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Saint Patrick - Mission

His first converted patron was Saint Dichu, who made a gift of a large sabhall (barn) for a church sanctuary. This first sanctuary dedicated by St Patrick became in later years his chosen retreat. A monastery and church were erected there, and there Patrick died; the site, Saul County Down, retains the name Sabhall (pronounced "Sowel"). Patrick set up his see at Armagh and organized the church into territorial sees, as elsewhere in the West and East. While Patrick encouraged the Irish to become monks and nuns, it is not ...

See also:

Saint Patrick, Saint Patrick - Early life, Saint Patrick - Mission, Saint Patrick - The cult of Patrick

Read more here: » Saint Patrick: Encyclopedia II - Saint Patrick - Mission

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - School of Salamanca - Economics

Much attention has been drawn to the economic thought of the School of Salamanca by Joseph Schumpeter's History of Economic Analysis (1954). It did not coin, but certainly consolidated, the use of the term School of Salamanca in economics. Schumpeter studied scholastic doctrine in general and Spanish scholastic doctrine in particular, and praised the high level of economic science in Spain in the 16th century. He argued that the School of Salamanca most deserve to be considered the founders of economics as a science. The School did no ...

See also:

School of Salamanca, School of Salamanca - Law and justice, School of Salamanca - Natural law and human rights, School of Salamanca - Sovereignty, School of Salamanca - The law of peoples and international law, School of Salamanca - Just war, School of Salamanca - The conquest of America, School of Salamanca - Economics, School of Salamanca - Antecedents, School of Salamanca - Private property, School of Salamanca - Money value and price, School of Salamanca - Interest on money, School of Salamanca - Theology, School of Salamanca - Morality, School of Salamanca - The polemic De auxiliis, School of Salamanca - The existence of evil in the world

Read more here: » School of Salamanca: Encyclopedia II - School of Salamanca - Economics

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Protestant Reformation - English Reformation

See articles at Category:English Reformation Protestant Reformation - Political Reformation. The course of the Reformation was different in England. There had long been a strong strain of anti-clericalism, and England had already given rise to the Lollard movement, which had inspired the Hussites in Bohemia. By the 1520s, however, the Lollards were not an active force, or, at least, certainly not a mass movement. The different character of the English Reformation came rather from the fact that it wa ...

See also:

Protestant Reformation, Protestant Reformation - History and origins, Protestant Reformation - Roots and precursors: 14th century and 15th century, Protestant Reformation - 16th century, Protestant Reformation - Humanism to Protestantism, Protestant Reformation - Religious influences for the Reformation, Protestant Reformation - The Radical Reformation, Protestant Reformation - Lutheranism adopted by the German territorial princes, Protestant Reformation - English Reformation, Protestant Reformation - Political Reformation, Protestant Reformation - Early Puritan movement, Protestant Reformation - Resources, Protestant Reformation - Scholarly secondary resources, Protestant Reformation - Primary sources in translation, Protestant Reformation - Online resources

Read more here: » Protestant Reformation: Encyclopedia II - Protestant Reformation - English Reformation

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Saint Patrick - Early life

In the Confessio Patrick mentions his father Calpornius, a deacon, civil official, and a town councillor, son of Potitus, who was a Romano-British priest. An old tradition makes his mother from the upper-class Gaulish family of Martin of Tours, though Patrick himself makes no such claim. According to his Confessio, at the age of about sixteen Patrick was captured and taken to Ireland as a slave to a Druidic chieftain named Milchu in Dalriada, County Antrim. Some speculate that Fochil ...

See also:

Saint Patrick, Saint Patrick - Early life, Saint Patrick - Mission, Saint Patrick - The cult of Patrick

Read more here: » Saint Patrick: Encyclopedia II - Saint Patrick - Early life

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Augustine of Hippo - Influence as a theologian and thinker

Augustine remains a central figure, both within Christianity and in the history of Western thought. In both his philosophical and theological reasoning, he was greatly influenced by Stoicism, Platonism and Neoplatonism, particularly by the work of Plotinus, author of the Enneads. His generally favorable outlook upon Neoplatonic thought contributed to the "baptism" of Greek thought and its entrance into the Christian and subsequently the European intellectual tradition. His early and influential writing on the human will, a central topic in ethics, wou ...

See also:

Augustine of Hippo, Augustine of Hippo - Life, Augustine of Hippo - Influence as a theologian and thinker, Augustine of Hippo - Augustine and the Jews, Augustine of Hippo - Books, Augustine of Hippo - Letters, Augustine of Hippo - Notes, Augustine of Hippo - Related topics, Augustine of Hippo - Bibliography

Read more here: » Augustine of Hippo: Encyclopedia II - Augustine of Hippo - Influence as a theologian and thinker

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Heresy - Etymology

The word "heresy" comes from the Greek αιρεσις, hairesis (from αιρεομαι, haireomai, "choose"), which means either a choice of beliefs or a faction of dissident believers. It was given wide currency by Irenaeus in his tract Contra Haereses (Against Heresies) to describe and discredit his opponents in the early Christian Church. He described his own position as orthodox (from ortho- "straight" + doxa "thinking") and his position eventually evolved into the pos ...

See also:

Heresy, Heresy - Etymology, Heresy - Religious heresy, Heresy - Christianity, Heresy - Heresy in Judaism, Heresy - Heresy in Islam, Heresy - Contemporary heresy

Read more here: » Heresy: Encyclopedia II - Heresy - Etymology

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Heresy - Contemporary heresy

Today, heresy can be without a religious context as the holding of ideas that are in fundamental disagreement with the status quo in any practice and branch of knowledge. Religion is not a necessary component of the term's definition. [1] For example, Charles Darwin of natural selection fame was considered a heretic of his day. Other people considered heretics were Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein, Leonardo da Vinci, Copernicus, and many others. The revisionist paleontologist Robert T. Bakker, who published his findings as The Dinosaur Heresies, jokingly treated the mainstream ...

See also:

Heresy, Heresy - Etymology, Heresy - Religious heresy, Heresy - Christianity, Heresy - Heresy in Judaism, Heresy - Heresy in Islam, Heresy - Contemporary heresy

Read more here: » Heresy: Encyclopedia II - Heresy - Contemporary heresy

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Ambrosius Aurelianus - Aurelianus according to Gildas

Ambrosius Aurelianus is one of the few people Gildas identifies by name in his sermon De Excidio Britanniae. Following the destructive assault of the Saxons, the survivors gather together under the leadership of Ambrosius, who is described as "a gentleman who, perhaps alone of the Romans, had survived the shock of this notable storm. Certainly his parents, who had worn the purple, were slain in it. His descendants in our day have become greatly inferior to their grandfather's [avita] excellence." According to Gildas, Ambrosius organis ...

See also:

Ambrosius Aurelianus, Ambrosius Aurelianus - Aurelianus according to Gildas, Ambrosius Aurelianus - Other accounts of Aurelianus, Ambrosius Aurelianus - Aurelianus in fiction

Read more here: » Ambrosius Aurelianus: Encyclopedia II - Ambrosius Aurelianus - Aurelianus according to Gildas

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Protestant Reformation - English Reformation

See articles at Category:English Reformation Protestant Reformation - Political Reformation. The course of the Reformation was different in England. There had long been a strong strain of anti-clericalism, and England had already given rise to the Lollard movement, which had inspired the Hussites in Bohemia. By the 1520s, however, the Lollards were not an active force, or, at least, certainly not a mass movement. The different character of the English Reformation came rather from the fact that it wa ...

See also:

Protestant Reformation, Protestant Reformation - History and origins, Protestant Reformation - Roots and precursors: 14th Century and 15th Century, Protestant Reformation - 16th century, Protestant Reformation - Humanism to Protestantism, Protestant Reformation - Religious Influences for the Reformation, Protestant Reformation - The Radical Reformation, Protestant Reformation - Lutheranism adopted by the German Territorial Princes, Protestant Reformation - English Reformation, Protestant Reformation - Political Reformation, Protestant Reformation - Early Puritan Movement, Protestant Reformation - Resources, Protestant Reformation - Scholarly secondary resources, Protestant Reformation - Primary sources in translation, Protestant Reformation - Online Resources

Read more here: » Protestant Reformation: Encyclopedia II - Protestant Reformation - English Reformation

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Original sin - Original sin Christian doctrine

There are wide-ranging disagreements among Christian groups as to the exact understanding of the doctrine about a state of sinfulness or absence of holiness affecting all human beings, even children, with some Christian groups denying it altogether. Original sin - Original sin in the New Testament. The New Testament teaching on original sin is thought by some to be summarized by the Apostle Paul: "Therefore as sin came into the world through one man and death through sin, and so d ...

See also:

Original sin, Original sin - The original sin the Fall, Original sin - Classical Biblical and Orthodox Jewish view, Original sin - Reform and Conservative Judaism's views, Original sin - The original sin in Gnosticism, Original sin - The original sin in the Unification Church, Original sin - The original sin in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Original sin - The original sin according to Muslims, Original sin - Original sin Christian doctrine, Original sin - Original sin in the New Testament, Original sin - Original sin in Roman Catholicism, Original sin - Original sin in Eastern Orthodoxy, Original sin - Original sin in mainstream Protestantism, Original sin - Original sin in Restoration Movement

Read more here: » Original sin: Encyclopedia II - Original sin - Original sin Christian doctrine

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Mithraism - History of Mithraism

Mithraism - Mithraism In Persia Iran. Mithraism is generally considered to be of Persian origins, specifically an outgrowth of Zoroastrian culture, though not of Zoroaster's teachings. For Zoroaster was a monotheist, for whom Ahuramazda was the One god. Darius the Great was equally stringent in the official monotheism of his reign: no god but Ahuramazda is ever mentioned in any of the numerous insc ...

See also:

Mithraism, Mithraism - Principles of Mithraism, Mithraism - The mithraeum, Mithraism - Mithraic ranks, Mithraism - The iconography of Mithraism, Mithraism - History of Mithraism, Mithraism - Mithraism In Persia Iran, Mithraism - Mithraism in early Rome, Mithraism - Mithraism in the Roman Empire, Mithraism - The demise of Mithraism, Mithraism - Connections, Mithraism - Parallels to Christianity, Mithraism - Mithraic studies, Mithraism - Places to see

Read more here: » Mithraism: Encyclopedia II - Mithraism - History of Mithraism

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Mithraism - Parallels to Christianity

According to Martin A. Larson, in The Story of Christian Origins (1977), Mithraism and Christianity derived from the same sources, originally from the savior cult of Osiris. However, Larson believes that the Essenes were Jewish Pythagoreans, whose members not only gave birth to Christianity as Essenes, but were directly influenced by Zoroastrian doctrine as Pythagoreans. Mithraism, an established but exclusive sect devoted to social justice, was assimilated by state-s ...

See also:

Mithraism, Mithraism - Principles of Mithraism, Mithraism - The mithraeum, Mithraism - Mithraic ranks, Mithraism - The iconography of Mithraism, Mithraism - History of Mithraism, Mithraism - Mithraism In Persia Iran, Mithraism - Mithraism in early Rome, Mithraism - Mithraism in the Roman Empire, Mithraism - The demise of Mithraism, Mithraism - Connections, Mithraism - Parallels to Christianity, Mithraism - Mithraic studies, Mithraism - Places to see

Read more here: » Mithraism: Encyclopedia II - Mithraism - Parallels to Christianity

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Mithraism - Mithraic studies

The First International Congress of Mithraic Studies was held in 1971 at Manchester, England. Franz Cumont (1868 - 1947) was the main proponent of the theory that Mithraism came originally from Persia. Cumont's student, Maarten J. Vermaseren, author of Mithras, the Secret God (1963), was very active in translating Mithraic inscriptions. Walter Burkert, Ancient Mystery Cults, Harvard University Press, 1987. A book, based on his Jackson Lectures at Harvard University in 1982 ...

See also:

Mithraism, Mithraism - Principles of Mithraism, Mithraism - The mithraeum, Mithraism - Mithraic ranks, Mithraism - The iconography of Mithraism, Mithraism - History of Mithraism, Mithraism - Mithraism In Persia Iran, Mithraism - Mithraism in early Rome, Mithraism - Mithraism in the Roman Empire, Mithraism - The demise of Mithraism, Mithraism - Connections, Mithraism - Parallels to Christianity, Mithraism - Mithraic studies, Mithraism - Places to see

Read more here: » Mithraism: Encyclopedia II - Mithraism - Mithraic studies

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Mithraism - Connections

There is much speculation that Christian beliefs were influenced by Mithraic belief. Ernest Renan, in The Origins of Christianity, promoted the idea that Mithraism was the prime competitor to Christianity in the second through the fourth century AD, although most scholars feel the written claims that the emperors Nero, Commodus, Septimius Severus, Caracalla, and the Tetrarchs were initiates are dubious at best, and there is no evidence that Mithraic worship was accorded any official status as a Roman cult, except in its official form as 'Sol Invictus,' the first uni ...

See also:

Mithraism, Mithraism - Principles of Mithraism, Mithraism - The mithraeum, Mithraism - Mithraic ranks, Mithraism - The iconography of Mithraism, Mithraism - History of Mithraism, Mithraism - Mithraism In Persia Iran, Mithraism - Mithraism in early Rome, Mithraism - Mithraism in the Roman Empire, Mithraism - The demise of Mithraism, Mithraism - Connections, Mithraism - Parallels to Christianity, Mithraism - Mithraic studies, Mithraism - Places to see

Read more here: » Mithraism: Encyclopedia II - Mithraism - Connections

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Augustine of Hippo - Augustine and the Jews

Augustine wrote in Book 18, Chapter 46 of The City of God [2] (one of his most celebrated works along with The Confessions): "The Jews who slew Him, and would not believe in Him, because it behooved Him to die and rise again, were yet more miserably wasted by the Romans, and utterly rooted out from their kingdom, where aliens had already ruled over them, and were dispersed through the lands (so that indeed there is no place where they are not), and are thus by their own Scriptures a testimon ...

See also:

Augustine of Hippo, Augustine of Hippo - Life, Augustine of Hippo - Influence as a theologian and thinker, Augustine of Hippo - Augustine and the Jews, Augustine of Hippo - Books, Augustine of Hippo - Letters, Augustine of Hippo - Notes, Augustine of Hippo - Related topics, Augustine of Hippo - Bibliography

Read more here: » Augustine of Hippo: Encyclopedia II - Augustine of Hippo - Augustine and the Jews

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Jeremy Taylor - A Royalist prisoner

During the next fifteen years Taylors movements are not easily traced. He seems to have been in London during the last weeks of Charles I, from whom he is said to have received his watch and some jewels which had ornamented the ebony case in which he kept his Bible. He had been taken prisoner with other Royalists while besieging Cardigan castle on the 4th of February 1645. In 1646 he is found in partnership with two other deprived clergymen, keeping a school at Newton Hall, in the parish of Llanvihangel-Aberbythych, Carmarthenshire. Here he ...

See also:

Jeremy Taylor, Jeremy Taylor - Career under Laud, Jeremy Taylor - A Royalist prisoner, Jeremy Taylor - Writings, Jeremy Taylor - Made a bishop in Ireland at the Restoration, Jeremy Taylor - His thoughts, Jeremy Taylor - His literary style and influence

Read more here: » Jeremy Taylor: Encyclopedia II - Jeremy Taylor - A Royalist prisoner

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Jeremy Taylor - Writings

Much of his best work was produced at Golden Grove. In 1646 appeared his famous plea for toleration, A Discourse of the Liberty of Prophesying. In 1649 he published the complete edition of his Apology for authorized and set farms of Liturgy against the Pretence of the Spirit, as well as his Great Exemplar . . . a History of . . . Jesus Christ, a book which was inspired, its author tells us, by his earlier intercourse with the earl of Northampton. Then followed in rapid succession the Twenty-seven Sermons (1651), f ...

See also:

Jeremy Taylor, Jeremy Taylor - Career under Laud, Jeremy Taylor - A Royalist prisoner, Jeremy Taylor - Writings, Jeremy Taylor - Made a bishop in Ireland at the Restoration, Jeremy Taylor - His thoughts, Jeremy Taylor - His literary style and influence

Read more here: » Jeremy Taylor: Encyclopedia II - Jeremy Taylor - Writings

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Jeremy Taylor - His thoughts

Taylor's fame has been maintained by the popularity of his sermons and devotional writings rather than by his influence as a theologian or his importance as an ecclesiastic. His mind was neither scientific nor speculative, and he was attracted rather to questions of casuistry than to the problems of pure theology. His wide reading and capacious memory enabled him to carry in his mind the materials of a sound historical theology, but these materials were unsifted by criticism. His immense learning served him rather as a storehouse of illustra ...

See also:

Jeremy Taylor, Jeremy Taylor - Career under Laud, Jeremy Taylor - A Royalist prisoner, Jeremy Taylor - Writings, Jeremy Taylor - Made a bishop in Ireland at the Restoration, Jeremy Taylor - His thoughts, Jeremy Taylor - His literary style and influence

Read more here: » Jeremy Taylor: Encyclopedia II - Jeremy Taylor - His thoughts

Pelagianism: Encyclopedia II - Christian theological controversy - Present-day distinctions

Most present day controversy revolves around the Pentecostal/Charismatic movements, largely a product of the 20th century. Conservative Evangelical/Reformed theology typically teaches that the charismata, or "sign gifts" of the Holy Spirit, were only given to the early church, and died out permanently after that. These views are in opposition to many Pentecostal denominations and churches that are a growing feature of modern Christianity, as well as to charismatic movements in mainline Protestant denominations and the Roman Catholic C ...

See also:

Christian theological controversy, Christian theological controversy - Background, Christian theological controversy - Pre-Reformational distinctions, Christian theological controversy - Post-Reformation distinctions, Christian theological controversy - Present-day distinctions

Read more here: » Christian theological controversy: Encyclopedia II - Christian theological controversy - Present-day distinctions




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