How Guilt Swallowed Death
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Episode 18 —
The Pelagian controversy is usually framed as a debate about grace and free will. But beneath the surface was a deeper question:
What is the foundational problem of humanity?
In this episode, we explore how earlier Greek Fathers like Athanasius of Alexandria and John Chrysostom often described humanity’s condition primarily through the lenses of death, corruption, bondage, and satanic tyranny — while the Augustinian anti-Pelagian framework increasingly centered inherited guilt and condemnation.
Topics include:
- infant baptism in East and West
- death as bondage in Hebrews 2
- Augustine vs. Pelagius
- Chrysostom’s Paschal Homily
- ancestral sin vs. original guilt
- why Reformers accused Anabaptists of Pelagian tendencies
- moralism vs. conversionism in Western Christianity
- participatory salvation and union with Christ in Orthodoxy
- Augustine’s response to accusations of lingering Manichean influence
We also examine how the Pelagian controversy may have narrowed the theological center of gravity from cosmic victory over death toward juridical categories of culpability and condemnation — and how that shift still shapes Christian experience today.