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| Chapter IV. Leporius together with some others recants his Pelagianism. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter IV.
Leporius together with some others recants his
Pelagianism.
But still as those who
were the outcome of this stock of pestilent thorns have already by the
Divine help and goodness been healed, we should also now pray to our
Lord God that as in some points that older heresy and this new one are
akin to each other, He would grant a like happy ending to those which
had a like bad beginning. For Leporius, then a monk, now a presbyter,
who followed the teaching or rather the evil deeds of Pelagius, as we
said above, and was among the earliest and greatest champions of the
aforesaid heresy in Gaul, was admonished by us and corrected by God,
and so nobly condemned his former erroneous persuasion that his
amendment was almost as much a matter for congratulation as is the
unimpaired faith of many. For it is the best thing never to fall into
error: the second best thing to make a good repudiation of it. He then
coming to himself confessed his mistake with grief but without shame
not only in Africa, where he was then and is now,2371
2371 The after history
of Leporius appears to have been this. Having come under
Augustine’s influence, he was persuaded by him to give up all his
property, and renounce the temporal care of a monastery which he had
previously founded in a garden at Hippo; where also he had begun to
build a xenodochium or house of refuge for strangers, partly at
his own expense, and partly out of the alms of the faithful. He also at
Augustine’s suggestion, built a church in memory of the
“eight martyrs” (see Aug. Serm. 356). This complete
renunciation of the world must have taken place about 425; and in the
following year we find that he was present at the election of Eraclius
to succeed Augustine (Aug. Ep. 213); but subsequent to this nothing is
known of his history except that he was still living when Cassian
wrote. It is right to mention that doubts have been raised by
Tillemont whether the presbyter of Hippo is identical with the quondam
heretic, but on scarcely sufficient grounds. | but also gave to all the cities of Gaul
penitent letters containing his confession and grief; in order that his
return to the faith might be made known where his deviation from it had
been first published, and that those who had formerly been witnesses of
his error might also afterwards be witnesses of his
amendment.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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