Total depravity and unconditional election in infant baptism The controversy over
infant baptism with the Pelagians contributed to Augustine's change.
Tertullian (c. 155 – c. 220) was the first Christian to mention infant baptism. He argued against it by saying children should have their
Baptism delayed (although he believed all should have baptism delayed.) Even by 400, there was no consensus regarding why infants should be baptized. The Pelagians taught infant baptism merely allowed children to enter the
kingdom of God (viewed as different than
heaven), so that unbaptized infants could still be in heaven. In response, Augustine responded that infants are baptized to remove
Adam's original guilt (guilt resulting in eternal damnation). Inherited
original sin was previously limited to
physical death, moral weakness, and a
sin propensity. Another key element within infant baptism was Augustine's early training in Stoicism, an
ancient philosophy in which a meticulous god predetermines every detailed event in the
universe. This included the falling of a leaf from a tree to its exact location on the ground and the subtle movements of muscles in roosters' necks as they fight, which he explained in his first work,
De providentia (
On Providence). Augustine taught that God foreordained, or
predestined, newborn babies who were baptized by actively helping or causing the parents to reach the
bishop for baptism while the baby lived. By baptism, these babies would be saved from damnation. Augustine reasoned further that God actively blocked the parents of other
infants from reaching the baptismal waters before their baby died. These babies were condemned to
hell due to lack of baptism (according to Augustine). His view remains controversial, even some
Roman Catholic Augustinian scholars refute this idea, and scholars cite the view's origin as derived as from
Platonism, Stoicism, and Manichaeism. Augustine then expanded this concept from infants to adults. Since babies have no "will" to desire their baptisms, Augustine expanded the implication to all humans. He concluded that God must predestine by
predeterminism all humans prior to them making any choice. Although earlier Christians taught original sin, the concept of total depravity (total inability to believe on Christ) was borrowed from Gnostic Manichaeism. Manichaeism taught that unborn babies and unbaptized infants were damned to hell because of a physical body. Like the Gnostics, the Manichaean god had to
resurrect the dead will by infusing faith and grace. Augustine changed the cause of total depravity to Adam's guilt but kept the Stoic, Manichaean, and Neoplatonic concepts of the human dead will requiring God's infused grace and faith to respond.
Limited atonement (1502).
St. Augustine in His Study [detail]. Augustine attempted numerous explanations of
1 Timothy 2:4. The Pelagians assumed 1 Tim. 2:4 taught that God gave the gift of faith to all persons, which Augustine easily refuted by changing wills/desires to "provides opportunity". In 414, Augustine's new theology has "all kinds/classes" definitively replacing "all" as absolute. In 417, he repeated this change of "all" to "all kinds". In 421 Augustine altered the text to read "all who are saved" meaning those who are saved are only saved by God's will, which he repeats the next year. People fail to be
saved, "not because they do not will it, but because God does not". Despite their certain damnation, God makes other Christians desire their impossible salvation.
John Rist identifies this as "the most pathetic passage." By 429, Augustine quotes
1 Corinthians 1:18 adding "such" to 1 Tim. 2:4, redefines all to mean as "all those elected," and implies an irresistible calling. Hwang noted, Augustine attempted at least five answers over a decade of time trying to explain 1 Tim. 2:4 regarding the extent of Christ's
redeeming sacrifice. His major premise was the pagan idea that God receives everything he desires.
Omnipotence (Stoic and Neoplatonic) is doing whatever the One desires, ensuring everything that occurs in the universe is exactly the Almighty's will and so must come to pass. Augustine's new theology has "all kinds/classes" definitively replacing "all" as absolute. In 417, he repeated this change of "all" to "all kinds". He concluded that because God gets everything he wants, God does not desire all persons to be saved, otherwise every human would be saved.
Henry Chadwick concluded that because Augustine's God does not desire and so refuses to save all persons, Augustine elevated
God's sovereignty as absolute and God's justice was trampled. This also logically demanded that Christ could not have died for those who would not be saved. Therefore, Christ only died for the elect since God does not waste causation or energy.
Irresistible grace Augustine developed the concept of "
prevenient grace". In response to
Pelagianism, he argued that prevenient grace is necessary to prepare the human will for
conversion. When
Pelagius appealed to St.
Ambrose (c. 339 – c. 397) to support his view, Augustine replied with a series of quotations from Ambrose which indicated the need for prevenient grace. Augustine described
free will without the spiritual aid of
grace as, "captive free will" (). Through the influence of grace, however, this will becomes a spiritually "freed will" or literally a "liberated free will" (). Prevenient grace first imparts essential spiritual enlightenment, after which the power to believe is granted exclusively to the
elect. Augustine viewed the grace leading to justification as unfailing for the elect, though he did not explicitly call it "irresistible grace". Some
Protestant theologians interpret Augustine’s teachings as implying that justifying grace is indeed irresistible.
Perseverance of the saints Since Augustine believed that the
Holy Spirit is received at water baptism, producing
regeneration, he had to explain why some baptized individuals continued in the faith while others
fell away and lived
immoral lives. Augustine taught that among those regenerated through baptism, some are given an additional
gift of perseverance () which enables them to maintain their faith and prevents them from falling away. Without this second gift, a baptized
Christian with the Holy Spirit would not persevere and ultimately would not be saved. Augustine developed this doctrine of perseverance in (). While this doctrine theoretically gives security to the
elect who receive the gift of perseverance, individuals cannot ascertain whether they have received it.
Hilary of Galeata (476–558) expressed concern that many Christians resisted Augustine’s radical view of perseverance. Hilary complained, "[T]hey do not want this perseverance to be preached if it means that it can neither be
merited by
prayer nor lost by rebellion".
Double predestination Double predestination, or the double decree, is the doctrine that God actively decrees both the
damnation of some individuals and the salvation of those He has elected. After 411, Augustine made statements supporting this view. While his earlier writings are ambiguous on the matter, his later teachings more clearly affirm
predestination by
predeterminism.
Prosper of Aquitaine (c. 390 – c. 455) expressed concerns that many Christians resisted Augustine’s new and controversial view of predestination. The opposition arose because Augustine’s view rejected the traditional view of
election based upon God's foreknowledge, replacing it with a predestination as "
necessity based upon
fate". Similarly, the
Council of Arles (475) condemned the idea that "some have been condemned to death, others have been predestined to life". In 529, the
Second Council of Orange explicitly rejected the notion of predestination to
evil.
Catholic scholars tend to deny Augustine held double predestination while some Protestants and secular scholars have held that Augustine did believe in it. Current scholarly debates suggest that this doctrine is at least implied by his later thought. == Later influence of Augustinian soteriology ==