Verified Claim · The Sacraments
The Catholic understanding of salvation — that God's grace is necessary and prior, but that human free will genuinely cooperates with grace — was the consensus of the pre-Augustinian Church and was defined at the Council of Orange.
The Catholic Church teaches that God’s grace is the absolutely necessary and prior cause of every movement of the soul toward salvation, and that this grace heals and elevates the human will rather than overriding it. The human will, moved and assisted by grace, acts freely and genuinely. Divine sovereignty and human freedom are not in competition — grace does not replace the will, it restores it.
This teaching was held by the Fathers universally and defined with precision at the Second Council of Orange (529), which drew directly on the writings of Augustine to condemn Pelagianism — the error that the human will can achieve salvation without grace — while affirming that the will, healed by grace, acts genuinely. Augustine’s formula captures the whole of Catholic doctrine: God who made you without you, will not save you without you.
9 dateable primary sources spanning AD 150–529. Tap any dot to expand.
The Evidence Trail of this claim contains direct primary source testimony from Justin Martyr (First Apology 43, c. AD 155), Irenaeus of Lyon (Against Heresies IV.37, c. AD 185), Origen (On First Principles III.1, c. AD 210), Tertullian (Against Marcion II.5, c. AD 200), and John Chrysostom (Homilies on Genesis, c. AD 398) — each affirming human freedom in their own words, with the source cited and dated. This is not an assertion. These are the receipts. Every one of these writers was responding to the determinisms of their day — Gnosticism, Marcionism, Manicheanism — and every one of them defended human freedom as the apostolic teaching. The Catholic doctrine on grace is not a later compromise. It is the teaching of the Church from the beginning, to which Augustine gave the most precise theological expression.
The Second Council of Orange (529) drew directly on Augustine's own writings to define the Catholic doctrine of grace. Its canons cite him explicitly. The Council condemned Pelagianism — the error that the human will can achieve salvation without grace — using Augustine's own arguments against Pelagius. What the Council declined to do was extend beyond what was necessary for that condemnation. This is not a correction of Augustine. Augustine himself never taught double predestination. He never taught that God predestines souls to hell. What he taught — and what Orange confirmed — is that grace is prior, necessary, and efficacious; and that the will, healed and elevated by grace, acts freely and genuinely. These are not two positions in tension. They are one Catholic truth.
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