Sunday, June 28, 2026

Robert F. Evans on Pelagius's Understanding of "Faith Alone" (Sola Fide) in his Commentary on the Pauline Epistles

  

Pelagius' teaching concerning baptism may be summarized conveniently by saying that it is the sacrament of justification by faith alone. Interesting it is that Pelagius can not infrequently supply the adjective sola to fides in this connection and thus go even beyond the Apostle in the terms by which he states the sufficiency of faith. Faith he seems clearly to understand as not simply intellectual assent but "trust from the whole heart"; faith is also "faith in the promises of God." In the act of baptism the believing man is absolved from his past sins without respect to merit, the forgiving grace of God making him to be in that moment "righteous. " Righteousness in this context then means the condition of being without the guilt of past sins; the man who believes in Christ has the status of one who has fulfilled the whole of the law. (Robert F. Evans, Pelgius: Inquiries and Reappraisals [New York: The Seabury Press, 1968], 113)

 

 

is not infrequently at pains to argue that faith is only the beginning and that justification in the fullest sense is not by faith alone but by faith followed by works of righteousness. Repeatedly he urges his correspondents so to act that they will merit the heavenly rewards, and he warns of the dire consequences of not doing so. He obviously writes with the assumption that some, perhaps many, who have believed will not enter the kingdom of heaven. It would be quite trivial, on Pelagius' terms, to suppose that the divine initiative in choosing some and rejecting others should be based upon foreknowledge of their faith, rather than, say, their performance of works of righteousness. (Ibid., 116)

 

 

There is then the problem of the origin of faith and of the "merit" attaching to faith. Pelagius frequently gives expression to the idea that justification by faith alone takes place without respect to human merits, and can also speak of "deserving" the grace of God by the "merit" of faith. Here is no real problem in respect of Pelagius' own consistency, although his language is perhaps misleading. It must be remembered that he conceives the power of sin to be a power over what man concretely does; sin is particular act, and sins are particular acts of disobedience to the law of God. That man is justified freely apart from merit means that he is accounted guiltless before God even though his actions have brought guilt upon him. The power of sin over concrete actions is not a complete power over the inner motions of mind, soul, or will. The only analysis which Pelagius provides of this entire problem is one in which, commenting on the Apostle Paul, he sees the fundamental problem to man as being posed by the law of Moses. That law in the time of grace produces within man the paralyzing schism by which he recognizes sin to be sin and even wills to be without it but is unable to bring his will to effect. When the fullness of God's law breaks through to man in the person and teaching of Christ, the same rational will which even under the old law desired to be free of sin possesses now freedom sufficient to the positing of faith in Christ. Faith "merits" grace in the sense that fr is the indispensable and freely chosen condition of the effectual working of grace. Faith is not "act" in the decisive sense in which act under the old law either brought guilt or established "merit." Nor does faith itself work the forgiveness of sins; it is God who graciously forgives sins when the believer comes to him in trust. Whether this, within the context either of the fifth or of the twentieth century, is a theologically acceptable account of faith in its relation to grace, it is fortunately not our business here to say. (Ibid., 117-18)

 

 

We have seen that Pelagius teaches the justification of the sinner by faith alone in the act of baptism. He also teaches that men are justified by works. The key to understanding his language is to notice that the formula "faith alone" applies to the unique situation of the individual at his conversion and baptism. "Righteousness" (iustitia) as a term applying to the Christian after baptism, and pre-eminently at the judgment, is unthinkable without the performance of "works of righteousness, " i.e., without obedience to the moral precepts of Christ and of the Apostles. When the Apostle, referring to justification in this wider sense, writes that "man is justified by faith apart from works of the law" (Rom. 3: 28), he means to say that man is justified apart from ceremonial works of the law such as circumcision and the observance of new moons and Sabbaths, not apart from works of righteousness. The whole of the Christian life as it is stretched out between baptism and the judgment is one in which Christians avail themselves of the grace of teaching and example; always exercising that freedom of choice which has been made effectual by grace, they obey the precepts of the gospel and so merit the rewards of the final kingdom of heaven. Pelagius sums up his whole teaching on faith in its relation to righteousness in the following words: "Faith in the first instance is reckoned as righteousness for this reason, that [ a man] is absolved as to the past, justified as to the present, and prepared for the future works of faith." (Ibid., 119)

 

 

Plinval is certainly wrong in suggeting (" Points de vues recents sur la theologie de Pélage," RSR 46, 1958, p. 229) that Pelagius' words on justification by faith alone cannot be taken seriously as representing his real view but are to be attributed to the necessity imposed by Pauline exegesis. If this were the case, the words sola {ides would not appear so repeatedly as they do in Pelagius, nor would Pelagius have added the non-Pauline word sola to his formulation. He clearly distinguishes the righteousness of faith from the righteousness of works, both of which he wants to uphold; see Exp. 8 1 , 19-82, 1 . (Ibid., 163-64 n. 109)

 

 

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