Semi-Pelagianism

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Semi-Pelagianism is a Christian theological view that teaches human free will can make the initial move toward God in salvation, with divine grace then assisting and completing the process.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Semi-Pelagianism canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (43)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Christian theological doctrine
doctrine concerning grace and free will
soteriological position
affirms necessity of divine grace for the completion of salvation
significant role of human free will in the beginning of conversion
associatedWithConcept prevenient human will
synergism in salvation
condemnationDate 529
condemnedAs heresy in the Western Church
condemnedBy Second Council of Orange
contrastsWith Augustinian theology
surface form: Augustinianism

Pelagianism
Calvinism
surface form: classical Calvinism
criticizedFor attributing too much to human initiative in salvation
undermining the primacy of divine grace
denies that grace alone makes the decisive first move in conversion
total inability of the human will to turn toward God prior to grace
differsFrom Augustinianism by assigning the first movement toward God to human free will rather than to grace
Pelagianism by affirming the necessity of grace for salvation
etymology the prefix 'semi-' indicates a partial or modified form of Pelagianism
hasCoreClaim divine grace assists and completes the process of salvation after the human initiative
the initial movement toward God in salvation can be made by human free will
historicalContext arose in the context of debates over Pelagianism and Augustinianism
developed in the 5th and 6th centuries
influenced later synergistic views in some Christian traditions
influencedBy Pelagian emphasis on human responsibility
Western Christian debates on original sin and grace
languageOfTerm Latin
oftenLabeledAs a mediating position between Pelagianism and Augustinianism
opposedBy Augustine of Hippo
later Augustinian theologians
rejectedBy Eastern Orthodox Christianity
surface form: Eastern Orthodox Church

Roman Catholicism
surface form: Roman Catholic Church

most Protestant traditions
relatedToDoctrine free will
justification
original sin
prevenient grace
teaches grace cooperates with a prior human decision to seek God
the human will is not totally incapacitated by sin in relation to the first step toward God
viewOnGrace grace is necessary but not solely initiating in conversion
viewOnHumanWill the human will can cooperate with grace after an initial self-movement toward God
viewOnOriginalSin original sin weakens but does not destroy the human capacity to seek God

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Augustinian theology opposes Semi-Pelagianism
Pelagian controversy hasPart Semi-Pelagianism