Letter 4: Lucidus, a sinner, to the holy Bishop Faustus.
Lucidus, a sinner, to the holy Bishop Faustus.
I have received your letter, I have heard the judgment of the council, and I have prayed. After genuine reflection, I believe that the positions I have been defending are in error, and I recant them.
I was wrong to say that the human will has no genuine role in salvation. I was wrong to say that Christ died only for the elect and not for all humanity. I was wrong to say that God predestines some to damnation. These claims, taken together, do make God the author of evil, and I understand now why the tradition has rejected them.
What I was trying to say — and what I still believe, properly stated — is that human salvation depends entirely on God's grace and not on any merit of our own. Grace is prior; human response is response, not initiative. But this does not mean the response is unreal. It means that even the response is itself enabled by grace.
I am grateful for your correction. It is a painful thing to be publicly wrong about something one has argued for publicly. But it is better to be corrected now than to continue in error.
I ask your prayers and your continued patience with me.
Your servant,
Lucidus
AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.
Latin / Greek Original
Original text not yet available in this corpus.
This letter still needs a Latin or Greek source-text backfill. The source link, when available, is preserved so the text can be checked and added later.
View sourceRevision history
- 2026-05-27v2.2.34-import
Initial corpus import from Unspecified import source.
Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.mlat.uzh.ch/MLS/xanfang.php?tabelle=Faustus_Regiensis_cps2
Related Letters
Faustus, from Ennodius.
Your Eminence's conscience is well aware of what we owe to the distinguished Faustinus — both on account of his...
Faustus, from Ennodius.
For a long time I was in suspense about the arrival of Your Greatness, uncertain whether the delay meant a change of...
Faustus, from Ennodius.