좋은 논문입니다. 동방교회에서 서방교회의 전유물로 여겨지던 '유아 세례'에 대해 신학적으로 또한 목회적으로 이해하고자 접근합니다. 한국교회들은 정교회에 대해 잘 알아야 합니다. 하다 못해, WCC에서도 정교회는 반드시 만납니다.
당연히, 개혁교회는 철저하게 스스로의 전통을 점검하고 공교회 안팎의 여러 논의에 대처하도록 외연을 확장해야 합니다. 개혁교회의 정체성을 끝까지 유지하려면 많은 노력이 필요합니다.
-> 정교회에서도 어린이와 유아에게 신앙을 전수하기 위해 많은 고심을 하는 것 같습니다. 그리고 예전(Liturgy)적 차원에서 어떻게 노력할 것인지 교부들의 전통을 바탕으로 답하려 합니다. 정교회 내에서 '유아세례'를 이해하려는 거의 첫 시도인 것 같습니다.
* The Doctrine of Original Sin and its Infuence on the Theology and Practice of Baptism - Petru-Mihail Pruteanu
The Doctrine of Original Sin and its Infuence on the
Theology and Practice of Baptism
Petru-Mihail Pruteanu*
In the 20th century, both in the East, but mostly in the West, a genuine movement
of patristic and liturgical renewal took shape, aiming to establish as to what degree
the theological discourse and the liturgical life of the Church today corresponds to the
spirit and the practice of the Church of the !rst centuries. In this spirit, the question
was often asked if the generalization of infant baptism in the West (5th century),
but also in the East (6th century), was in"uenced by the theory of “original sin”
and the Augustinian “bogeyman” concerning the inevitable condemnation to hell of
all who die unbaptized. In his book “Of Water and the Spirit”, Father Alexander
Schmemann brie"y touches, but does not fully develop the subject, and fails to reach
any clear conclusions. In the current study we tried, as much as was possible, to
follow the roots and dogmatical consequences of this theory, and also to discern its
ensuing consequences on baptismal rites and texts, as well as other practical and
canonical implications, like the importance of baptismal immersion.
Keywords: Baptism, Immersion, Infants, Liturgy, Original Sin
Introduction
In the writings of the late Father Alexander Schmemann (1921−1983), I
was able to identify three passages addressing “original sin” in the context
of Baptism.1 Each time the matter is discussed brie#y, without ample
dogmatic or historical background, rather a sad account of its implica-
tions on both the theological and the common understanding of Baptism:
For a long time, the theological and spiritual interest in baptism was
virtually disconnected from its cosmic signi$cance, from the totality of
man´s relation to the world. It was explained as “man´s liberation” from
“original sin”. Both original sin and the liberation from it were given an
* Petru-Mihail Pruteanu, docent at the &eology Faculty of the Portuguese Catholic
University, Bishop of the Russian Orthodox Church in Western Europe, Rua Padre
António Farinha Martins 74, Vivenda Santo António 1º andar, Alto dos Gaios, Estoril
2765-078, Portugal, s-mpruteanu@ucp.pt.
1 One of the texts is cited below, and the others are taken from Alexander Schmemann’s
book Of Water and the Spirit. A Liturgical Study of Baptism (New York: St Vladimir’s
Seminary Press, 1974), 54 and 63. &ere are other places where the author uses the
expression “original sin” as a “technical formula” or with an allegoric sense, but these
passages do not serve the current study in any meaningful way.
RES 15 (1/2023), p. 81–104
DOI: 10.2478/ress-2023-0105
Petru-Mihail Pruteanu
extremely narrow and individual meaning. Baptism was understood as
the means to assure the individual salvation of man´s soul. No wonder
that such an understanding of baptism led to a similar narrowing of the
baptismal liturgy.2
Father Alexander never stated that there is no “original sin,” in
its Augustinian understanding, unlike his contemporaries Fr. John
Romanides3 or Fr. John Meyendor'4. Rather he deplored the in#uence of
western baptismal theology focused almost exclusively on the forgiveness
of the “original sin”5 and the “necessity of grace” (which, in western the-
ology, is “gratia creata”6), putting aside biblical meanings such as: the like-
ness and the participation in Christ’s death and Resurrection (Romans
6:3−4, 11), the spiritual grafting (Romans 6:5), the death to sin and the
foretasting of eternal life (Romans 6:6−10), the anointing of the Holy
Spirit (1 John 2:20), the birth from above from water and the Spirit and
being born again (John 3:3−5; 1 Peter 3:20), the birth from God and
the seed of grace (1 John 3:9), the gift of adoption (Galatians 4:5−6) and
the brotherhood with Christ (Hebrews 2:11−12). Out of all these, the
concept of “grafting” (Romans 6:5) most profoundly explains the healing
of human nature7, while all the other gifts of Baptism are regarded as an
“earnest of the eternal blessings.”
2
A. Schmemann, For the Life of the World, 6th edition (New York: St. Vladimir’s
Seminary Press, 1998), 67.
3
Fr. (Ioannis) John Romanides dedicated his doctoral thesis #e Ancestral Sin: A
Comparative Study of the Sin of Our Ancestors Adam and Eve According to the Paradigms
and Doctrines of the First and Second-Century Church and the Augustinian Formulation of
Original Sin ($rst published Athens, 1957) to this subject. in 2001 (New Jersey: Zephyr
Publishing), it was published in English and in 2017 it was translated into Romanian.
4
John Meyendor', Byzantine #eology. Historical Trends and Doctrinal #emes (New
York: Fordham University Press, 1987), 143−46.
5
Understood by Augustine and his followers as a “culpa communis” and as a “massa
perditionis et damnata.” See also: Alessio Peršič, “Da soggetto di colpa a oggetto di
misericordia: uomo e ‘peccato d’origine’ nella comprensione degli aquileiesi Vittorino,
Cromazio e Ru$, Annali di Scienze Religiose 9 (2004) [Milano 2005]: 299−324.
6
As &omasius & Neve observed, the Easterners were not preoccupied very much by
subjects as “original sin” and the relationship between grace and freedom, as was the case
in western theology (Romanides, #e Ancestral Sin, 33).
7
&is is like a wild tree, which brings forth bad fruits (but brings something, neverthe-
less), but, through grafting, becomes a tree that could bring good fruit (see Rom. 11:17,
24). &is contradicts the Augustinian idea of the total perversion of Adam’s nature and
only speaks of an alteration, which is healed through the cooperation with the saving
grace.
82
&e Doctrine of Original Sin and its In#uence
In our observation, western theology, overly preoccupied with the
“validity of the sacrament,” has ignored even the symbolic meaning8 of
the immersion, which is viewed as a mere question of “form,” as opposed
to the “essence” of the sacrament.9
!e !eory of “Original Sin”
According to some researchers on the subject,10 the idea of “original sin”
(not the actual phrase) is rooted in Tertullian’s (150−220) traducianist
theory, addressing the origin of souls.11 Later scholastics attempted to
forcibly include Irineus of Lyon (130−202) and Cyprian of Carthage
(200−258) among the protagonists of this theory, but we should rather in-
clude Ambrose of Milan (340−397), the spiritual mentor of Augustine12.
Like any other doctrinal idea, this theory followed a certain evolu-
tion, but the actual context of its formulation is linked with the dissem-
ination of the heresy of Pelagius (354−420)13, which has received an
8
For Eastern theolog, symbolon is not opposed to reality, but is a visible expression of
an unseen reality. Important are also Fr. A. Schmemann’s observations on this subject
and on the slippages that took place, even in the Orthodox space, due to the incorrect
understanding of the liturgical and theological symbol. (see Alexander Schmemann,
Liturgy and Tradition. #eological Re"ections of Alexander Schmemann, eds. &omas
Fisch, &omas J. Fisch (New York: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1990), 115−28.
9
Schmemann, Of Water and the Spirit, 57−58.
Beatrice Pier Franco, #e Transmission of Sin: Augustine and the Pre-augustinian
10
Sources, trans. Adam Kamesar (Oxford: University Press, 2013).
11
Salvador Vicastillo, “El pecado original en el pensamiento de Tertuliano,” Revista
Agustiniana, no. 140 (Mayo − Agosto 2005).
12
We don’t have comments of Ambrose to Rom. 5:12 (they belong to pseudo-Am-
brose/Ambrosiaster), but the texts from Ps. 50:5 (the words “iniquity” and “sin” in
singular form) were already interpreted by the Milanese bishop in a juridical key, using
expressions such as “guilt” and “o'ense”, but not “original sin.” “Adam ergo in singulis
nobis est. In illo enim conditio humana deliquit quia per unum in omnes pertransit
peccatum” (Apol. Prof. David, II,71). For an Orthodox commentary of this verse from
the psalm see Eftimie Zigaben and Nicodim Aghioritul, Psaltirea în tâlcuirea S!nţilor
Părinţi vol. 1 (Galați: Ed. Egumeniţa, 2019) 601−04. Other interpreters of this verse are
Athanasius the Great, Gregory of Nyssa, Cyril of Alexandria, Maximus the Confessor,
Ephtymius Zygabenus, Melethios Pigas, Nikodemos of Mount Athos and others.
13
John H. Beck, “&e Pelagian Controversy. An Economic Analysis,” American
Journal of Economics and Sociology, no. 66 (April 2007): 681−96; Ali Bonner, #e
Myth of Pelagianism (Oxford: University Press, 2018); &omas P. Scheck, “Pelagius’s
Interpretation of Romans,” in A Companion to St. Paul in the Middle Ages, ed. Steven
Cartwright (Leiden: Brill, 2012), 79−11; Peter Brown, “&e Patrons of Pelagius. &e
Roman Aristocracy Between East and West,” #e Journal of #eological Studies, no. 21
(January 1970): 56−72; G. Maschio, “L’argumentazione patristica di S. Agostino nella
83
Petru-Mihail Pruteanu
excessively juridical and reductionist response. At that time at least, west-
ern theology, with limited access to Greek theology and philosophy, and
without an o,cial translation of the Bible into Latin14, could not other-
wise articulate the “cause and e'ect” link between the mistake and the
death of Adam, on one hand, and the mistake and death of all of us (even
those baptized), on the other. More so, Cappadocian Fathers’ expressions
such as: we are all “inheritors of sin (κληρονόμοι τῆς ἁμαρτίας)”15 trans-
mitted from Adam (τὴν παρέπεμψεν)16, were not understood as involun-
tary consequences inherited through birth, as Maximus the Confessor17
and Photius of Constantinople18 will explain later, but as the personal
guilt of every descendent of Adam, which can be forgiven (justi$ed) only
through baptism, and later paid through death. (Romans 6:23)19.
&e decisive step in the deviation of the Orthodox doctrine regarding
the consequences of the ancestral sin was made by Ambrosiaster, who
erroneously translated and explained the text from Romans 5:1220, by
prima fase della controversia pelagiana,” Augustinianum no. 26 (1986), 459−79 and
412−18; Alfons Fürst, “Zur Vielfalt altkirchlicher Soteriologie Augustins Berufung auf
Hieronymus im pelagianischen Streit,” in Philophronesis für Norbert Brox, ed. J. B. Bauer
(Grazer &eologische Studien 19, Graz: 1995), 119−85.
14
&e full translation of the Bible into Latin was made by Blessed Hieronymus, be-
tween the years 391−406, at the initiative of pope Damasus I. Initially, this translation
was even contested by many Western theologians, and only begun to be used more
frequently during pope Gregory the Great (590−604), becoming normative for the
Western Church in the 8th to the 9th centuries. &e name Vulgata was generalized in
the 13th century.
15
Gregory of Nyssa, In bapt. Christi (PG 46). St. Gregory also says that “all who partic-
ipate in the nature of Adam, also participate in his fall” (Gregory of Nyssa, De oratione
Dominica, 5).
16
Ὡς γὰρ Ἀδὰμ, κακῶς φαγὼν, τὴν ἁμαρτίαν παρέπεμψεν, οὕτως ἐξαλείφομεν ἡμεῖς τὴν
ἐπίβουλον βρῶσιν, ἐὰν χρείαν ἀδελφοῦ καὶ λιμὸν θεραπεύσωμεν (Basílio, De tempore famis
hom. 7: PG 31, 324).
17
Capita de Caritate, IV:90 in PG 90, 1069; Quaestiones ad #alassium, 61, in PG 90,
628−41.
18
Photius, Bibliotheca, cod. 84−185, ed. R. Henry, Photius, Bibliothèque (Paris: Les
Belles Lettres, 1960), vol. II, 177−82.
19
&e teaching about justi$cation is also found in Origen and Gregory of Nazianzus,
but takes juridical expressions in Ambrose of Milan and especially in Augustine, where
the role of human freedom is basically suppressed, favoring rather predestinationist in-
terpretations; Isidoro Lamelas, “A «invenção» do pecado original segundo Agostinho,”
Didaskalia XLII (1/2012), 55−134, here 108.
20
“Διὰ τοῦτο ὥσπερ δι’ ἑνὸς ἀνθρώπου ἡ ἁμαρτία εἰς τὸν κόσμον εἰσῆλθεν καὶ διὰ τῆς
ἁμαρτίας ὁ θάνατος, καὶ οὕτως εἰς πάντας ἀνθρώπους ὁ θάνατος διῆλθεν, ἐφ’ ᾧ πάντες
ἥμαρτον” was translated in Vulgata as such: “propterea sicut per unum hominem in
84
&e Doctrine of Original Sin and its In#uence
understanding the Greek construct ἐφ ὦ, not as a reference to death, as
the Greek Fathers have understood it, but as a reference to Adam “unto
which/ in quo” we all die.21
It is signi$cant to recall that, between 387−397 (1st phase), Augustine
was still reiterating the traditional doctrine regarding the consequences of
ancestral sin, with the legalistic accents speci$c to western theology (see:
De Libero arbitrio voluntatis, III). Already between 390−411 (2nd phase),
the bishop of Hippo begins to distance himself from the formulations
of his predecessors and, after 412 (3rd phase), when he is involved in the
$ght against Pelagius, and, being convinced that his mentor, Ambrose of
Milan (actually Ambrosiaster22) understood the text from Romans 5:12
in the same way, Augustine writes a series of studies in which he intro-
duces both the expression “peccatum originale”, as well as other related
ideas23, which would leave a mark upon all of later western theology, even
though, in time, it would su'er more clari$cations, which will diminish
the Augustinian extremism. 24
Summarizing Augustine’s teaching, aimed at combating Pelagius25
Adam concentrates within himself all of humanity and his mistake is
hunc mundum peccatum intravit et per peccatum mors et ita in omnes homines mors
pertransiit in quo omnes peccaverunt.”
21
Paolo Ciampoli, “Ambosiaster e o «Commentarius in Epistulam ad Romanos»,”
Itinerarium, no. 202 (January 2012), 117−41.
22
Ernesto Buonaiuti, “Agostino e la colpa ereditaria,” Ricerche Religiose vol. 2 (Roma:
1926); Pier Franco Beatrice, Tradux peccati. Alle fonti della dottrina agostiniana del
peccato originale (Milano: Vita e pensiero, 1978); Jesse Couenhoven, “St. Augustine´s
Doctrine of Original Sin,” Augustinian Studies 36 (2/2005), 359−96.
23
Athanase Sage, “Péché originel. Naissance d’un dogme,” RevEtAug 13 (1967); idem,
“Le péché originel dans la pensée de saint Augustin, de 412 à 430,” RevEtAug 15 (1969);
Emmanuele Testa, Il peccato di Adamo nella Patristica (Gen. III) (Gerusalemme: PP.
Francescani, 1970), 183−92; Herbert Haag, Dottrina biblica della creazione e dottrina
ecclesiastica del peccato originale (Brescia: Libreria Città Ideale, 1970).
24
Romanides, #e Ancestral Sin, 25−28. More recently, there is even an attempt to read
Augustine “in an Orthodox key,” seeing in his theories (not just the one about “original
sin”) certain problems of expression and his lack of knowledge in regards to the Greek
language and philosophy, but without seeing any bad intentions and, even less, any sup-
port for heresies that the Church has o,cially condemned and Augustine would have
continued to confess. See George E. Demacopoulos and Aristotle Papanikolaou, eds.,
Orthodox Readings of Augustine (Crestwood, New York: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press,
2008).
25
According to the canons 109 and 111−13 of Carthage (419) Pelagius was seemingly
denying that the death of Adam and all men is a consequence of sin and not a natural
end to life, and that divine grace is absolutely necessary, not just for salvation, but for
the struggle with sin and the accomplishment of good deeds.We $nd more details about
85
Petru-Mihail Pruteanu
the mistake of every man born from Adam. Consequently, man inherits
by birth not only the mortal nature of Adam, but also the guilt for his
mistake. &is Adamic culpability (“original sin”), hereditarily transmitted
because of concupiscence, is washed away only through baptism, and,
those who are not baptized, even if they are babies without personal sin,
are condemned to hell, because they fail to meet the condition of the
“birth from water and the Spirit”, without which no one can enter in
the Kingdom of Heavens (John 3:5)26. Augustine also maintains that the
will of man was not only weakened through sin, but was annihilated,
and human nature was completely corrupted. &erefore, our salvation is
exclusively dependent upon the work of divine grace, which is not only
“free”, but also “irresistible.” Taking further the idea of the imperative of
grace, the North African theologian arrives at the theory of predestina-
tion27, later picked up by certain branches of Protestant theology.
&e Link between “original sin” and baptism is re#ected in the 2nd
and 3rd Canons of the Synod of Carthage of 418. A year later (419), when
“Codex Canonum Ecclesiae Africanae”28 was composed, the texts of the
two canons were united into one, number 110 (CX)29, while in the Greek
the doctrine of Pelagius in Augustine’s work, “De gestis Pelagii”, cap. 11−23, in PL 44,
33−348.
26
De peccatorum meritis et remissione et de baptismo parvulorum ad Marcellinum,
1.16.21, in PL 44, 120-121; Contra Julianum pelagianum 5.11.44, in PL 44, 809−810.
27
Augustinus, De praedestinatione sanctorum ad Prosperum et Hilarium, in PL 44,
960−992; De dono perseverantiae, in PL 45, 993−1036.
28
&e city of Carthage in North Africa was the place for many local synods, but in the
Greek canonical tradition only two collections are recognized: the one from the Synod
in 256 (during Cyprian of Carthage) and that of the Synod in 419 (presided by Bishop
Aurelius of Carthage) who systematized the canons of many Carthaginian synods held
between the years 348 and 418, putting together between 133 and 148 canons, of
which many are confessions of faith, which explains why they are missing from certain
collections. See Philip Scha', #e Canons of the CCXVII blessed Fathers who assembled
at Carthage. Commonly called the Code of Canons of the African Church, Nicene and Post-
Nicene Fathers (collection) seria II, vol. XIV (collection) (Edinburg: T&T Clark, 2009).
29
Hermann &eodor Bruns, ed., Canones apostolorum et conciliorum veterium selecti
(Berlin: Nabu Press, 1939), 155−202. Here is the original text of Canon 110, 188−89):
“Quod parvuli in peccatorum remissionem baptzentur − Item placuit, ut quincunque
parvulos recentes ab uteris matrum baptizandos negat, aut dicit in remissionem quidem
peccatorum eos baptizari, sed nihil ex Adam trahere originalis peccati, quod lavacro
regenerationis expietur, unde sit consequens ut in eis forma baptismatis in remissionem
peccatorum non vera, sed falsa intelligatur, anathema sit. Quoniamn non aliter intelli-
gendum est quod ait Apostulus: «Per unum hominem peccatum intravit in mundum,
et per peccatum mors, et ita in omnes homines pertransiit, in quo omnes peccaverunt.»
(cf. Rom 5:12); nisi quemadmodum Ecclesia catholica ubique di'usa semper intellexit.
86
&e Doctrine of Original Sin and its In#uence
translations of the same collection it appears as number 112, 121 or 124,
according to each edition. Here it what this canon says:
Likewise it seemed good that whosoever denies that infants newly
from their mother’s wombs should be baptized, or says that baptism is
for remission of sins, but that they derive from Adam no original sin
(originalis peccati / προγονικῆς ἁμαρτίας), which needs to be removed
by the laver of regeneration, from whence the conclusion follows, that
in them the form of baptism for the remission of sins, is to be under-
stood as false and not true, let him be anathema. For no otherwise can
be understood what the Apostle says, “By one man sin is come into
the world, and death through sin, and so death passed upon all men in
that all have sinned” (Romans 5:12), than the Catholic Church every-
where di'used has always understood it. For on account of this rule of
faith even infants, who could have committed as yet no sin themselves,
therefore are truly baptized for the remission of sins, in order that what
in them is the result of generation may be cleansed by regeneration.30
As we can see, the biblical and theological source of the canon is the text
from Romans 5:12, in the translation of Ambrosiaster. &e words: “for
no otherwise can be understood what the Apostle says (Rom. 5:12), than
the Catholic Church everywhere di'used has always understood it,” does
not refer only to the universal understanding of the teaching about the
corruptibility of the nature of Adam, but associates with it the idea of
“original sin,” as Augustine and his followers understood it. On the other
hand, the canon does not cast anathema on those who delay baptism for
the sake of a better preparation, but only on those who deny the very idea
that children can be baptized and that the baptism is useful to them.31
&e necessity of baptism was also confessed by St. Cyprian of Carthage
(see Epistle 58/64, V:2)32, but he saw baptism more like a covenant with
God (a “spiritual circumcision” − Colossians 2:11−15) and a communion
Propter hanc enim regulam $dei etiam pravali, qui nihil peccatorum in seipos adhuc
committere potuerunt, ideo in peccatorum remissionem veraciter baptizantur, ut in reis
regeneratione mundetur, quod generatione traxerunt.“
30
Philip Scha', #e Canons of the CCXVII blessed Fathers who assembled at Carthage,
497−98.
31
Waclaw Eborowicz, “La misère des enfants d’après les Confessions de St. Augustin et
ses écrits anti-pélagiens,” Studia Patristica 14 (1976), 410−16.
32
See Epistle (58)64 to Fidus, in Ciprian episcopul Cartaginei, Scrisori (Bucharest: Ed.
Sophia, 2011), 294−98.
87
Petru-Mihail Pruteanu
of grace, which, as a consequence, also yields the remission of sins,33 with-
out actually touching on the necessity of the washing of the sin of Adam,
inherited by every man.
&e popes Zosimas (417−418) and Boniface I (418−422), although
familiar with the heresy of Pelagius and were even condemning it, were
not in a hurry to promote Augustine’s ideas. Only pope Celestine I
(422−432) started to circulate them and even insisted that Pelagianism
be condemned at the 3rd Ecumenical Council of Ephesus (431), however
without implying the acceptance of the theory of the “original sin” by the
Universal Church.
&e Liber Ponti$calis informs us that pope Sixtus III (432−440) had
built an octagonal epistyle in the Lateran Baptistery with verses com-
posed by him or by Leo I, when he was a deacon before he succeeded
Sixtus as bishop of Rome. &e inscription is divided into eight elegiac
couplets distributed on each side of the octagon. Here is the text of the
inscription:
Gens sacranda polis hic semine nascitur almo,/ quam foecundatis spi-
ritus edit aquis;/ Virgineo foetu genitrix Ecclesia natos,/ quos spirante
deo concipit, amne parit./ Caelorum regnum sperate, hoc fonte rena-
ti;/ non recipit felix vita semel genitos./ Fons hic est vitae, qui totum
diluit orbem/ sumens de Christi vulnere principium./ Mergere, pec-
cator sacro purgande #uento:/ quem veterem accipiet, proferet unda
novum./ Insons esse volens isto mundare lavacro,/ seu patrio preme-
ris crimine seu proprio./ Nulla renascentum est distantia, quos facit
unum/ unus fons, unus spiritus, una $des./ Nec numerus quemquam
scelerum nec forma suorum/ terreat: hoc natus #umine sanctus erit.34
33
“If, in the case of the worst sinners and those who formerly sinned much against
God, when afterwards they believe, the remission of their sins is granted and no one
is held back from baptism and grace, how much more, then, should an infant not be
held back, who, having but recently been born, has done no sin, except that, born of
the #esh according to Adam, he has contracted the contagion of that old death from his
$rst being born. For this very reason does he [an infant] approach more easily to receive
the remission of sins: because the sins forgiven him are not his own but those of another”.
St. Cyprian’s usage of the plural “sins” (see note above) refers, most probably, not to
a concrete “original sin,“ but to the sins inherited from the ancestors, because, in the
understanding of the ancients, even the social status (slave/free/noble) was not earned,
but it was inherited, and this determines, from the start, the fate of everyone, even from
a spiritual perspective.
34
Robin Jensen, Living Water. Images, Symbols, and Settings of Early Christian Baptism
(Leiden, Boston: Brill, 2011), 187−88.
88
&e Doctrine of Original Sin and its In#uence
Despite some hastening to see in this 5th century inscription a late adop-
tion of the concept of “original sin,” even by the pope of Rome35, the
expression: “you are burdened by ancestral sin or your own”, as we saw in
the case of the Epistle 58/64 of St. Cyprian of Carthage, the text of Pope
Sixtus’ the 3rd not only fails to use the expression “peccatum originale”,
but rather alludes to the sins inherited from one’s ancestors.36
Eastern Echoes of !e Controversy
Pelagianism became known in the East around the year 412, as Pelagius
himself lived for a while in Palestine. At a local synod of 414, Bishop John
the 2nd of Jerusalem condemned the teachings of Pelagius, but not their
author, which prompted some to a,rm that there was a friendly relation-
ship between John and Pelagius.37 In order to force bishop John towards
a more categorical rejection of Pelagius, blessed Hieronymus, who was
living at the time in Bethlehem and was translating the Bible into Latin,
made known the Augustinian arguments against this heresy, but they
seemed unacceptable to the Easterners.
Soon enough, at an synod in Antioch in 424, bishop &eodot of
Antioch (420−429) condemned both Pelagianism and those who were
a,rming that “man is sinning because of his fallen nature and not by
his own will” (in reference to the theory of “original sin”), and called it
a heresy.38 Even though the synod of Ephesus (431) was called mainly
35
Everett Ferguson, Baptism in the Early Church. History, #eology, and Liturgy in the
First Five Centuries (Cambridge: Eerdmans, 2009), 769.
36
Although, at a $rst read, this concept contradicts the text from Deut. 24:16, it agrees
with the texts from Exod 20:5 or Ezek 18:2 and was widespread in the Middle Ages,
when “patrio crimine” was the simplest solution to explain the cause of illness or death
of a child. &e best-known example is the expression of “Nec quisquam patrio crimine
liber erat” from Carminum libri quattuor (Roma, 1590).
37
Bishop John was a rather prudent theologian and he avoided the condemnation of
persons, which attracted the discontent and even the anger of Epiphanius of Salamis and
Blessed Hieronymus, who wanted to get out of John a formal condemnation of Origen
and those who, in one way or another were sympathetic with Origen. It is precisely
because of these accusations (which did not escape even John Chrysostom) that “&e
Mystagogical Catecheses” of John of Jerusalem were reattributed to Cyril of Jerusalem,
who only wrote the “Catechetical Lectures”, preceded by a “Procatechesis”. For details
on these aspects see Juliette Day, #e Baptismal Liturgy of Jerusalem. Fourth- and Fifth-
Century Evidence from Palestine, Syria and Egypt (Ashgate: Routledge, 2007), 17−21.
38
&e work of &eodot is not preserved, but St. Photius the Great, Patriarch of
Constantinople (9th century), speaks about it in Bibliotheca, cod. 84−185, 177−82.
&e Synod of Antioch of 424 is known through Marius Mercator and the same Photius.
89
Petru-Mihail Pruteanu
to condemn again Pelagianism, theologians like Cyril of Alexandria39,
&eodoret of Cyrrhus, and &eodore of Mopsuestia etc.40 felt it necessary
to also oppose Augustine’s ideas, although not mentioning his name nor
quoting his writings, as those began to be more widely known in the
Greek language only near the end of the 13th century, chie#y through the
contributions of Maximus Planudes.
&e truth is that the Easterners, who had no problem with the un-
derstanding of the text of Romans 5:12 nor with the relationship between
grace, free will and personal asceticism in the work of salvation, have
reacted in a very balanced and neutral way in this dispute. Only after the
Synod of Chalcedon (451), certain monophysite groups, who wished to
maintain links with the West, have assimilated, for the most part, the the-
ory of Augustine41, but the Antiochian groups, the Orthodox as well as
39
“What has Adam’s guilt [πταίσματα] got to do with us? Why are we held responsible
for his sin when we were not even born when he committed it? Did not God say: «&e
parents will not die for the children, nor the children for the parents, but the soul which
has sinned, it shall die» (Deut. 24:16). How then shall we defend this doctrine? &e
soul, I say, which has sinned, it shall die. We have become sinners because of Adam’s
disobedience in the following manner (…). After he fell into sin and surrendered to
corruption, impure lusts [ἡδονή τε καί ἀκαθαρσίας] invaded the nature of his #esh and
at the same time the evil law of our members was born. For our nature contracted the
disease of sin because of the disobedience of one man, that is Adam, and thus many be-
came sinners. &is was not because they sinned along with Adam, because they did not
then exist, but because they had the same nature as Adam, which fell under the law of
sin. &us, just as human nature acquired the weakness of corruption in Adam [ἐν Ἀδὰμ]
because of disobedience, and evil desires invaded it, so the same nature was later set free
by Christ, who was obedient to God the Father and did not commit sin”. (Commentary
to the Epistle to the Romans PG 74, col. 788−89).
40
It is remarkable that the theologians of the Antiochian school, but also Cyril of
Alexandria, who opposed them in many aspects, were not accepting the idea of “origi-
nal sin,” while the monophysites (mostly from the Alexandrian school) did accept it
later on, when the Roman Catholic Church has decreed the dogma of the Immaculate
Conception (the birth of Virgin Mary without “original sin”), this actually meant “a sort
of monophysitism or at least a marian monothelism.” For details see John Meyendor',
“Eph ho chez Cyrille d’Alexandrie et &eodoret,” Studia Patristica 4 (1961), 157−61;
Jerónimo &omaz, Os teólogos ortodoxos e o dogma católica da Imaculada Conceição
(Figueiró dos Vinhos: Lusortodoxia, 2022), 8−10.
41
Julian of Halicarnassus (527), who invented the heresy call “aphtaradocetae,” was the
$rst Eastern theologian to a,rm the radical corruption of human nature as a conse-
quence of Adam’s sin. &is idea, with all its Christological implications, was condemned
not only by Orthodox theologians, but also by moderate monophysites as Severus
(465−538) see: René Draguet, Julien d’Halicarnasse et sa controverse avec Sévère d’An-
tioche sur l’incorruptibilité du Corps du Christ − Étude d’histoire littéraire et doctrinale,
suivie des Fragments dogmatiques de Julien (texte syriaque et traduction grcque) (Universitas
Catholica Lovaniensis, 1924), 42 and 46−51.
90
&e Doctrine of Original Sin and its In#uence
the so-called Nestorian, have followed the line called “semi-Pelagianism”
in the West, which, in truth, was the traditional teaching of the Church
in the East.
It’s true that some “Orthodox Catechisms” of the 17th century have
adopted the Augustinian terminology around “original sin”, in an e'ort
to give it a more Orthodox understanding. &us, Orthodox theologians
would avoid references to Augustine while referencing saints like Irenaeus
of Lyons, Athanasios the Great, Gregory of Nyssa, John of Damascus
etc., although they didn’t use the “original sin” expression per se, but only
spoke about the corruptibility of Adam. In recent decades, more and
more Orthodox theologians have renounced the scholastic terminology,
reverting to the eastern patristic approach of man’s fall and salvation.
In the West as well, more and more theologians have arrived at
conclusions similar to those of the Orthodox Church, a,rming that
Augustine’s teachings are but a personal opinion, which even the likes of
Anselm of Canterbury and &omas Aquino have tried to balance out.42
Of course, the theory of the “original sin” is re#ected not only in the
Catechism of the Roman Catholic Church (§§ 385−421), but also in its
Compendium (§§ 76−77), which clearly states:
Original sin, in which all human beings are born, is the state of depri-
vation of original holiness and justice. It is a sin “contracted” by us not
“committed” by us; it is a state of birth and not a personal act. Because
of the original unity of all human beings, it is transmitted to the de-
scendants of Adam “not by imitation, but by propagation.43
&is transmission remains a mystery which we cannot fully understand.
In consequence of original sin, human nature, without being totally
corrupted, is wounded in its natural powers. It is subject to ignorance, to
su'ering, and to the dominion of death and is inclined toward sin. &is
inclination is called “concupiscence.” However, modern formulations are
more moderate in nature, and they say nothing of the condemnation to
hell of the unbaptized, while the “limbo” theory does not $nd its place
anymore in the current theological discourse.44
42
See the pastoral Constitution „Gaudium et Spes” of the 2nd Vatican Council, prom-
ulgated by Paul the 6th in 1965.
43
content/benedict-xvi/en/speeches/2005/june/documents/hf_ben-xvi_spe_20050628_
compendium.html.
44
“&e Hope of Salvation for Infants who Die Without Being Baptized,” https://
91
Petru-Mihail Pruteanu
For a long time though, the authority of Augustine remained ab-
solute, and any teaching that was not exactly aligned with his juridical
interpretation, would have been suspected of Pelagianism. &is is why,
the 2nd Council of Orange 529 considered the writings of St. Cassian
the Roman, Vincent of Lerin, and especially those of Fauste de Riez, to
be semi-pelagian, while the doctrine of Augustine about “original sin” is
the “catholic faith”.45 In his letter to bishop Césaire de Arles in 521, pope
Boniface the 2nd con$rmed the decisions of the Council of Orange, clos-
ing, for a while, the debates on this subject.
Orthodox Re"ections on Romans 5:12 and a critique of the theory of
“Original Sin”
As we saw in the case of Ambrosiaster and Augustine, Romans 5:12 and
especially the end of this verse − for that all have sinned (KJV) (ἐφ᾿ ᾧ πάντες
ἥμαρτον) − presents serious problems of translation and interpretation.
&e construction ἐφ᾿ ᾧ is a contraction of the preposition ἐπί with the
relative pronoun ᾧ. Translated as “because”, as a causal conjunction, −
which from a grammatical point of view makes the most sense, as it is
also found in other places in the epistles (cf. 2 Cor. 5:4; Phil. 3:12; 4:
10) − makes St. Paul’s expression to be understood as if death, which for
Adam was the “wage of sin” (Rom. 6:23), would also be the wage of all
those who sin like him.46 &e majority of Greek speaking Eastern Fathers
understood it in this way.47 &ey have understood in the Apostle’s text a
doc_20070419_un-baptised-infants_en.html. O,cial document of the International
&eological Commission of Vatican, approved for publication by pope Benedict XVI
on January 19, 2007 and available on the congregation site in several languages. To
facilitate the reading and the identi$cation of each idea, we will mention the paragraph
number (a total of 103§), §§ 90−5.
45
Jaroslav Pelikan, Credo. Historical and #eological Guide to Creeds and Confessions of
Faith in the Christian Tradition (Yale: University Press, 2005), 433.
46
St. Photius the Great: “For this, he says, we also die with Adam (συναποθνήσκομεν
τῷ Ἀδάμ), because (ἐφ’ ᾧ) we also sin; because he has set the beginning, and we, taking
cause from it, did not stop evil, but we cooperated with it and, by receiving it in our-
selves for a long time, we have cultivated it,” in: Fragmenta in Epistolas Sancti Pauli: I. In
Epistolam ad Romanos (Ex Catena Crameriana), in PG 101, 1233−36.
47
Origen (SC 539, 371), Chiril al Alexandriei (PG 74, 784C); &eodoret al Cirului (PG
82, 100B), Fotie al Constantinopolului (PG 101, 553D). For more details see: David
Weaver, “&e Exegesis of Romans 5:12 among the Greek Fathers and its Implication
for the Doctrine of Original Sin. &e 5th−12th Centuries,” St Vladimir’s #eological
Quarterly 29, (2/1985): 133−59 and 231−57.
92
&e Doctrine of Original Sin and its In#uence
moral resemblance between Adam and the other sinners, death being the
natural wage of sin.
Most of Fathers refer to Romans 5:12 as in a strong relationship with
1 Cor. 15:22 (KJV): “For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be
made alive”; meaning that there is a solidarity “in death” between Adam
and his descendants just as there is a solidarity “in life” between Christ
and those baptized.48 &us, the Greek Fathers give a relative value to the
pronoun ᾧ, which refers either to the noun “death” , or to the entire frag-
ment it precedes,49 resulting in the translation “for that all have sinned.”
Another translation variant of Romans 5:12, also based on interpre-
tation of certain Greek language Fathers, was proposed by Father John
Meyendorf, who considers that the verse could also be translated: “As sin
came into the world through one man and death through sin, so death
spread to all men; and because of it (= death), all men have sinned.”50
&eodore of Mopsuestia explains the idea like this: “by becoming mortal,
we acquired greater urge to sin,” while &eodoret of Cyre adds: “Having
become mortal, [Adam and Eve] conceived mortal children, and mortal
beings are necessarily subject to passions and fears, to pleasures and sor-
rows, to anger and hatred.”51
Taking further the analysis of our fragment of Chapter 5 of Romans,
we observe a clear di'erence between the deed of Adam and the sinful
condition inherited by his descendants. St. Paul calls Adams deed trans-
gression, (παραβάσις − 5:14), lapse/slip-up/mistake (παράπτομα − 5:15)
and disobedience (παρακοή − 5:19) − all holding a certain juridical con-
notation, but without implicating the descendants, while the condition
inherited by all humanity is called sin (ἁμαρτία 5:12), which in eastern
thought is understood as disease or helplessness, rather than guilt (culpa),
as perceived in western thought.52 According to St. Cyril of Alexandria,
Adam “got sick with corruption (φθορά)”53, and the devil “has obtained
48
Meyendor', Byzantine #eology, 144.
John Chrysostom (PG 60, 473), John of Damascus (PG 95, 477), Gennadius of
49
Constantinople (PG 85, 1672 BC) etc.
50
Meyendor', Byzantine #eology, 144.
Ibidem.
Justin Popovich, Dogmatika Pravoslavnoy Tserkvi (Moscow: Palomnik, 2006), vol.
51
52
II, §§ 36−41, 227−58; here: 242. So in Orthodox language, peccatum ≠ culpa, but =
corruptibilitas, meaning corruptibility (same origin with the juridical corruption), which
means ontological decadence and depravity.
53
PG 74, 789B.
93
Petru-Mihail Pruteanu
through sin an open avenue to the mind (διάνια) of man.”54 &us, man,
created for eternity and in$nite55, looks to quench his thirst innate to the
biological life of the body.56 However, this is the way of lying, misguid-
ance and idolatry, in other words: “the law of sin and death” (Rom. 8:2),
whose servant and master is Satan.
Consequently, in the view of the Greek Fathers, every man inherits
the nature and the condition of fallen Adam, with all its consequences:
the weakening of will, the distortion of the relationship with God by dis-
obedience, but mainly through the loss of uncreated grace, which leads
to the impossibility of avoiding sin and death.57 &us, “we inherit death
because we are born from mortals,”58 but not because we are carrying the
guilt for the sin of the $rst man, whose descendants we are. &erefore,
death belongs to nature, while sin belongs to each person, particularly.59
&e restoration of this fallen essence/nature is possible through Christ,
Who “became in all just as we are, yet without sin” (Heb. 4:15), assumed
death and overcame it through His Resurrection from the dead, but each
person gets to enjoy this restoration of nature only to the degree that one
becomes a partaker in Christ − the New Adam (Rom. 6:3−5).
According to Father Ioannis Romanides60, the Augustinian theory
hides in itself the accusation that God would be the author of death, and
Satan would be a punitive instrument in the Creator’s hands. Orthodox
&eology however, has always confessed that death is a natural conse-
quence of sin and not a divine punishment for sin. On the contrary, God
54
PG 74, 784B.
55
Even St. Augustine, in his Confessions (Book 1, cap. 1) was saying: “You made us for
Yourself, Oh Lord, and troubled is our soul until we shall rest in You.”
56
As Fr. Dumitru Staniloae explains in Ascetică şi Mistică (Cluj: Casa Cărţii de Ştiinţă,
1993), 67, the passions, as irrational manifestations of the rationally created man, are
the product of a twisted impulse of nature, which, loosing it’s natural and rectilinear
impetus, creates a knot of contradictions, which although it looks for the in$nite, ends
up with nothingness.
57
Chiril al Alexandriei, PG 68, 149A−B.
An idea picked up by Athanasius of Sinai, and developed by Ioannis Karmiris, Σύνοψις
58
της δογματικής διδασκαλίας της Ορθοδόξου Καθολικής Εκκλησίας (Athens: 1957), 38.
59
According to St. Maximus, man’s sin can only be personal, being linked with the
disposition of will [γνώμη] and the free will [προαίρεσις], which are attributes of the
person, not of nature, while nature in itself is not free of guilt, being subjected to the
consequences of sin, but not to sin itself.
60
Romanides, #e Ancestral Sin, 172.
94
&e Doctrine of Original Sin and its In#uence
allowed death out of love for mankind and in order to put an end to sin61,
especially because it encompasses only the visible part of man, without
being able to touch the very image of God in man.62 &is was yet unclear
in the Old Testament, while humankind was waiting for its liberation,
but it became evident through the incarnation and the resurrection of
Christ.
Baptism and !e Forgiveness of Sins
&e 10th article of the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed, (“I confess
one Baptism for the forgiveness of sins/ Ὁμολογῶ ἕν βάπτισμα εἰς ἄφεσιν
ἁμαρτιῶν”) summarizes the purpose of Baptism as to the forgiveness of
sins. &e preposition “for/ εἰς” clearly illustrates why Christians confess
and receive Baptism. Of course, a liturgical and symbolical text (like the
Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed), which had to be studied and under-
stood by each catechumen, could not express the entire wealth of baptis-
mal theology, creating the impression that the “forgiveness of sins” would
be the sole purpose of Baptism. More so, the reductionist understanding
could also favor the initiation and dissemination of Pelagianism, especial-
ly the idea that infants, being sinless, wouldn’t need Baptism either.
First, we have to point out that the expression “for the forgiveness
of sins/ εἰς ἄφεσιν ἁμαρτιῶν,” is taken directly from the Gospel (Matt.
26:28), as the Savior Himself uses it at the Mystical Supper referring to
His sacri$ce, and it doesn’t even remotely render that “forgiveness of sins”
would be the only purpose of the sacri$ce of Christ or of the Eucharist,
since the Savior Himself uncovers many other reasons as to why we need
to commune with His Body and Blood (John 6:35−58).
Second, if we analyze the context in which these words are placed
in the Creed, i.e., articles 9, 10, 11 and 1263, we observe that the con-
fession of Baptism is linked with the faith in the “One, Holy, Catholic
and Apostolic Church” (article 9), but also with the “expectation of the
resurrection of the dead” (article 11) and of the “life of the age to come”
(article 12). &us, if we were to consider the entire biblical teaching about
61
Sf. Maximus the Confessor clearly states: “death came because of sin, but for its de-
struction”; Quaestiones ad #alassium, 58 in PG 90, 596−601.
62
Gregory of Nyssa, #e Great Catechism VI, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (collec-
tion), Series II, vol. 7 (Edinburg: T&T Clark, 2009), 480−81.
63
Even St. Augustine, in his interpretation of the Creed, (De !de et symbolo − PL 40),
analyzes these articles together, as a whole.
95
Petru-Mihail Pruteanu
baptism,64 we would see that articles 11 and 12 of the Creed have to be
considered themselves as an eschatological purpose of baptism, superior
to the immediate one, which is “forgiveness of sins” and doesn’t hold a
value per se.65
&e theoretical and practical interpretation of article 10 of the Creed
did not occur as a problem for the Eastern Fathers, especially in the $rst
four-$ve centuries, as they preferred a more literal interpretation of the
text. As such, the general tendency in the East was to delay baptism as
much as possible, closer to the moment of death, while the Baptism of
infants and children, at least until the 6th century, was practiced very
seldom,66 and then mainly for those severely ill, with a risk of death.67
&ere was also the opinion, chie#y in Syria, that carnal relations between
a husband and a wife would taint Baptism, thus it had to be delayed
until an old age.68 Standing against this notion, many Eastern Fathers,
encouraged not to delay Baptism, which did not automatically mean a
promotion of infant Baptism, since even these Fathers of the Church did
not get baptized before adulthood.69
Other commentaries of church writers, regarding the age for Baptism,
are directed more at unveiling and censuring extremes than making clear
age recommendations. &us, in the East, St. Gregory the &eologian ad-
vises neither the excessive delay of baptism, nor the practice of it before
the age of three.70 In the West as well, Tertullian recommends the delay
64
See the aforementioned biblical typologies in the introduction of this study.
We can also talk about the Eucharist, comparing Matt. 26:28 vs John 6:35−58.
André Benoit, “Le Problème du pédobaptisme,” Revue d’Histoire et de Philosophie re-
65
66
ligieuses, no. 28−29 (2/948): 132−41; Joachim Jeremias, Le baptême des enfants pendant
les quatre premiers siècles (Lyon: Xavier Mappus, 1967); David F. Wright, “At What Ages
Were People Baptized in the Early Centuries?,” Studia Patristica 30 (1997): 389-94.
67
&is is indirectly found in Canon 12 of Neocesarea (315) and 47 of Laodicea (343),
but directly only in the 26th Canon attributed to St. Nicephorus the Confessor (†828).
68
It was a Marcionite in#uence, which imposed celibacy after baptism and in$ltrated
even certain more rigorous circles in eastern Syria; see T.V. Philip, East of the Euphrates:
Early Christianity in Asia (Tiruvalla, India: CSS & ISPCK, 1998), 17−33.
69
Basil the Great and John Chrysostom were baptized at approximately 20 years of age,
and Gregory the &eologian only at 30, although he was a bishop’s son. For the Eastern
Christians, the age of 20 was rather considered an exception, in the sense that it was too
early, as the majority preferred to postpone baptism until after 40 years of age. &ere
was even a desire to imitate emperor Constantine the Great, who, although he professed
himself a Christian, was building churches and even presided over the 1st Ecumenical
Council, and was only baptized on his deathbed.
70
Oratione 40, in PG 36, col. 400.
96
&e Doctrine of Original Sin and its In#uence
of Baptism until reaching, as close as possible, an age of consciousness71,
especially because in North Africa, already in the 3rd century, infant and
child Baptism tended to become a norm even for healthy children −
which, according to the mentality of the epoch, was considered a #agrant
exaggeration.
&e problem of the death of the unbaptized was approached in a
rather optimistic manner, without doom and gloom72, in the East, while
even the Roman Catholic73 theologians were reaching similar conclu-
sions, after having to, more or less delicately, deconstruct the Augustinian
theory of “original sin” and the impossibility of salvation without being
erased through Baptism.74
It is interesting to see the degree to which this Augustinian theory has
penetrated the conscience of Christians and to what measure it has in#u-
enced the generalization of child Baptism, not so much out of the desire
to make them partakers in the saving grace that is imparted through the
Sacraments of the Church, but, chie#y, to guard them from the risk of
eternal condemnation in case they die before baptism.
In addition to these theological re#ections, more or less prevalent in
the Christian conscience, I think we should also consider the anti-pagan
civil legislation, which in the time of Emperor Justinian I (527−565)
reached its peak, with no tolerance for ancient Hellenism or other pagan
religions, and minimal tolerance for Jews.75 &us, according to Justinian’s
Civil Codex, those who refused Orthodox baptism and adherence to the
Catholic Church were stripped of all property (according to Book I, ch.
11.10).76 To prevent such disputes, the citizens of the Empire, including
71
De baptismo, 18.
72
Grigore din Nazianz, Oratio XL − In sanctum baptisma, 23 (PG 36, 389 B−C);
Grigore de Nyssa, De infantibus praemature abreptis libellum (PG 46, 161−92); Anastasie
Sinaitul, Quaestiones et responsiones Bruce W. Frier, ed. and Fred H. Blume, trans., Qn.
81 (PG 89, 709C). See also Panayiotis E. Papageorgiu, “Chrysostom and Augustine on
the Sin of Adam and its Consequences,” St Vladimir’s #eological Quarterly 39 (4/1995),
361−78.
73
“&e Hope of Salvation” (2007), §§ 24, 79, 86.
Ibidem, §§ 26, 32, 37, 83, 88.
Demetrios J. Constantelos, „Paganism and the State in the Age of Justinian,” in #e
74
75
Catholic Historical Review, Vol. 50.3 (Catholic University of America Press: 1964),
372−380.
76
Bruce W. Frier ed. & Fred H. Blume (trans.), #e Codex of Justinian - 3 Volume
Hardback Set: A New Annotated Translation, with Parallel Latin and Greek Text
(Cambridge University Press, 2016), 237−47.
97
Petru-Mihail Pruteanu
the newborn infants, were ordered to be baptized as soon as possible after
birth, without any delay.77 Of course, such legal pressure on citizens was
a much more powerful fear than Augustine’s view that the ones dying un-
baptized were condemned to hell. &erefore, especially in the East, polit-
ical pressure may have been a much more important factor in the spread
of infant baptism than Western theological views which, until the 13th
century, were not even known and did not follow the Eastern Christian
mentality.
!e Presence of “Original Sin” in the Baptismal Rite in !e West
Over time, many Western theologians have tried to demonstrate the pres-
ence of the “original sin “teaching in western baptismal rites” (not just in
the Roman rite)78, and “the most ancient and clear” argument invoked is
the inscription from the Lateran Baptistery of pope Sixtus the 3rd, which
we have already analyzed.
&e most well-known scienti$c work on this subject is the doctorate
thesis of Gerard M. Lukken79, who analyzes not only the western baptis-
mal rites of the 4-5th centuries (the declared focus of his study), but also
the Christmas and Paschal services, as well as the penitence rites, the
consecration of virgins, wedding and even the blessing of fruits. In this
complex approach, which reaches even the late Middle Ages, practical-
ly any liturgical reference to sin, death, demonic possession, de$lement,
corruptibility, (including the expression: “garment of incorruptibility”),
pleasure or concupiscence, but also theological themes like the fall of
Adam and Eve, the expulsion from Paradise, the redemption through
77
Frier and Blume, #e Codex of Justinian, 244−247. Here is a small excerpt from
Justinian’s Novena of 529: „&is too We enact: that their children of tender age shall im-
mediately and without any delay receive saving baptism (ὥστε καὶ τὰ τούτων τέκνα μικρᾶς
ἡλικίας ὄν τα καὶ δίχα τινὸς ἀναβολῆς τυγχάνειν τοῦ σωτηριώδους βαπτίσματος), while
those already past that age must attend the most holy churches according to the divine
canons and be instructed in the divine scriptures…”. &is text was also adopted in the
Basiliacals of Leo VI the Philosopher (§ 20), and Patriarch Photios of Constantinople,
referring to an Epistle of St. Cyril of Alexandria to the Bishops of Libya and Pentapolis,
in the Canonical Syntagma title IV.6, writes something similar: „Θέλει τοὺς Ἕλληνας
βαπτίζεσθαι καὶ τὰ τέκνα αὐτῶν χωρὶς ἀναβολῆς μικρὰ ὄντα, τὰ δὲ τέλεια προδιδάσκεσθαι
κατὰ τοὺς κανόνας καὶ τὰς γραφάς” (cf. PG 104, col. 620).
78
Adrien Nocent, “Christian Initiation in the Roman Church from the Fifth Century
UtilVatican II”, in Handbook for Liturgical Studies, vol. IV − Sacraments and Sacramentals,
ed. Anscar J. Chupungco (Minnesota: A Pueblo Book, 1997), 49−90.
79
Gerard M. Lukken, Original sin in the Roman liturgy. Research into the theology of orig-
inal sin in the Roman sacramentaria and the early baptismal liturgy (Leiden: Brill, 1973).
98
&e Doctrine of Original Sin and its In#uence
Christ etc. − all are interpreted as indirect and abstract references to “orig-
inal sin”, although the expression as such in never encountered in the
Roman order. Other expressions as “felix culpa” and “necessarium pec-
catum” are considered by Lukken as the clearest arguments of the early
re#ection (5th century) of “original sin” in the Roman order, even though
they are found only in the Paschal rite of the light called “Exulter”.80
As for the actual baptismal rites, Lukken considers that the theology of
“original sin” is manifested through allusions (just as indirect and ab-
stract) to the theory of “debitum solvere Deo”, which Anselm was to use
in his theology of atonement.81 In this context, the summary of Roger E.
Reinolds is of note:
On examining the liturgy itself for a doctrine of original sin Lukken
$nds very little evidence outside the baptismal rite. &ere are, to be sure,
a few direct references in the ancient Roman sacramentaries to the fall of
mankind in a collective sense and oblique references to the transmission
of original sin through human generation, but these references do not
give the impression of an explicit consciousness of original sin in the
ancient Roman liturgy. Lukken attempts to explain the paucity of direct
expressions of original sin in the liturgy by pointing to the conservatism
in liturgical formulae and the tendency of the liturgy to use concrete
forms of thought rather than more abstract concepts. One wonders,
however, about these explanations since compilers of liturgical texts were
generally able to innovate even within the conservative limits of liturgical
tradition and could express the most abstract and complex mysteries and
concepts.82
To conclude, we could imagine that the dissertation of Lukken, de-
fended in 1967, but published in 1973, had to justify the appearance of
the expression “original sin” in the new baptismal rite for children, (Ordo
baptismi Parvulorum), developed by the liturgical committee of arch-
bishop Annibale Bugnini, and approved by pope Paul the 6th, in 1969,
80
See also „teodicea felix culpa” of Alvin Platinga, God, Freedom, and Evil (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans,1974) 49.
81
Lukken, Original sin in the Roman liturgy, 223−24.
Roger E. Reynolds, “Reviewed Work: Original Sin in the Roman Liturgy. Research
82
into the &eology of Original Sin in the Roman Sacramentaria and the Early Baptismal
Liturgy, by Gerard M. Lukken,” Speculum 51, (April 1976): 761−63.
99
Petru-Mihail Pruteanu
then again in 1973 with more revisions, mentioned in the introduction
to the 2nd edition83, of which we are interested in two:
(1) n. 5: post verbum «homines», additur: “ab omni culpæ labe,
tum originali tum personali, abluit eosque (...)” (“of every
stain of sin, both original and personal”)
(2) n. 221: loco “a potestate tenebrarum” (“out of the power of
darkness”); dicitur “ab originalis culpæ labe nunc” (“now
from the stain of Original Sin”).84
From this we draw three important conclusions:
a) No direct and clear references to “original sin” are to be
found in the Eastern Baptismal Rites, and neither in the old
western rites nor in the rite approved in 1969 after the 2nd
Vatican Council;
b) &e only two references to “originalis culpae” appear in the
1973 edition: the $rst − in the introductory catechism “Dig-
nity of Baptism”, and the second (of interest to us) − in an
alternate exorcism prayer (Nr. 221), but only in the children
baptismal rite and not in the one for adults.
c) &e Latin expression “originalis culpae” has been translated
in some languages as “original sin”, while in others as: “origi-
nal stain”, although the Latin “culpa” means rather “fault” or
“guilt”.
Practical Consequences of !e !eory Of “Original Sin”
&e teaching on “original sin” has been perceived di'erently in the East
than in the West and this is re#ected even in the form of Baptism. For
example, the Didache (chapter VII) says the following:
83
Prot. N. 516/73: “De editione typica altera,” in #e Roman Ritual. #e Order of
Baptism of Children, ed. United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (Collegeville:
Liturgical Press, 2020).
84
[221: Another Prayer of Exorcism] “Almighty ever-living God, who sent your Son
into the world to drive out from us the power of Satan, the spirit of evil, and bring the
human race, rescued from darkness, into the marvelous Kingdom of your light: we
humbly beseech you to free these children from Original Sin, to make them the temple
of your glory, and to grant that your Holy Spirit may dwell in them. &rough Christ
our Lord.”
100
&e Doctrine of Original Sin and its In#uence
Having $rst said all these things85 baptize into the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit86, in living water. But if you
have not living water, baptize into other water; and if you can not in
cold, in warm. But if you have not either, pour out water thrice upon
the head into the name of Father and Son and Holy Spirit.87 But be-
fore the baptism let the baptizer fast, and the baptized, and whatever
others can; but you shall order the baptized to fast one or two days
before.88
&e 50th Apostolic Canon (4th century) also underlines the importance
of the thrice immersion at baptism, without admitting exceptional sit-
uations where the thrice immersion could be replaced with pouring or
sprinkling. More so, the 7th canon of the 2nd Ecumenical Council (381)
recognizes the heretics’ baptism performed by triple immersion, but
doesn’t recognize the one performed by less radical heretics, but who
practiced one immersion or none.
In the West, however, although the rule of immersion was observed
for a long time, already in the 6th−7th centuries, we see a weakening of this
rule in favor of pouring.89 &e Baptistries built in the West were not very
deep and they did not necessarily suggest a complete immersion, but,
on the other hand, they were built close to live streams90 or employed
certain systems to keep the water moving, emulating a water #ow. For
the Easterners, the full immersion is linked with the baptismal symbol-
ism of the participation into the death, burial and resurrection of the
Lord (Rom. 6:3−11), even if the water in the baptistry was stagnant.
For Westerners, however, the practice of baptism by pouring, ignoring
(not necessarily declaratively, but especially in liturgical practice) the
85
It is a short catechism and a pledge of the candidate to take “the yoke of the Lord”
(cap. VI).
86
Matthew 28:19.
87
Meaning that when there is not enough water or when the candidate cannot be im-
mersed due to health reasons. Clearly, these are extraordinary situations, which cannot
be perceived as ordinary.
88
#e Didache: #e Lord’s Teaching #rough the Twelve Apostles to the Nations, https://
89
Wolfred Nelson Cote, #e Archeology of Baptism (London: Yates and Alexander,1896);
Iorio Ruggero, Battesimo e battisteri (Firenze: Nardini,1993).
90
&e famous Lateran Baptistery (from the old cathedral in Rome) was built during
emperor Constantine the Great on a live water spring. In most cases, it was sought that
the water spring be as close as possible to the baptistry in order to provide enough #ow-
ing water. Other times, certain miraculous wells were transformed into baptistries, as is
the case of the baptistries of Tourin (5th century) and Tours (6th century).
101
Petru-Mihail Pruteanu
symbolism of death and resurrection, rather underlines the cleaning as-
pect of the Sacrament91, relating to the new theory about “original sin.”
&erefore, the abandonment of baptismal immersion in the West could
be a direct consequence of the exaggeration of the cleansing function of
baptism, at the expense of the other aspects of the mystery, even if they
continued to be mentioned both in dogmatic treatises and in liturgical
texts.
&e Christian East, without neglecting the importance of the for-
giveness of sins through baptism − confessed even in the Symbol of Faith
(article 10) − sees it not as a purpose in itself, but as a natural conse-
quence of the blessing of the water of baptism. &erefore, “the forgiveness
of sins” (plural), mentioned in the 10th article of the Symbol of faith, does
not refer to “original sin” (singular), but to the personal sins committed
by men before baptism, especially because the majority of people in those
times were baptized as adults, and their baptism was preceded by repent-
ance (Acts 2:38) and meant a radical change of life. On the other hand,
as the 111th canon92 of “Codex Canonum Ecclesiae Africanae” states, the
forgiveness of sins at baptism should not be understood only as an erasing
of the past, but also as a spiritual power to $ght sin over the course of
one’s life, to the extent of one’s cooperation with divine grace. &us, even
if we detach from the theory of “original sin,” the Creed article is perfect-
ly valid even in the case of child baptism, because the Creed doesn’t refer
to “original sin,” but to personal sins (from the past and even from the
future).
Conclusion
1. &e &eory of “original sin,” appearing in the West at the beginning
of the 5th century, has come, unfortunately, to be considered “Orthodox”
in some Eastern Catechisms of the 17th century, remaining until today in
some Orthodox manuals. However, the “neopatristic movement” of the
20th century, which included also the liturgist Alexander Schmemann,
has pointed out the inconsistency of this teaching. Beginning in the 60s
until the 1980s of the 20th century, even Roman Catholic dogmatists
91
Cyril of Jerusalem, On the Mysteries II (20), Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (collec-
tion), Series II, Volume 7, (Edinburg: T&T Clark, 2009) 148−49.
92
“It has been decided also, that anyone who says that the grace of God, by means of
which one moves towards Jesus Christ, has power only for the forgiveness of sins already
committed, but does not give assistance as not to commit others, let there be anathema!”
102
&e Doctrine of Original Sin and its In#uence
have begun to reformulate and to bring Augustinian theory within the
limits of Orthodoxy. Yet, on the other hand, in 1973, for the $rst time,
the Vatican included liturgical references to “original sin” in the western
baptismal rite, nonexistent until that time.
2. We don’t know what “original sin” is and how it is forgiven at
baptism, especially since Orthodox theology understands sin as a disease,
cured through pre- and post baptism repentance (μετάνοια), and not as a
guilt (culpa) of which you are absolved in a juridical sense once and for
all. If men would inherit the “original sin” and this would be forgiven
through baptism, it would mean that the consequences of baptism should
disappear along with it, meaning the proclivity towards sin, disease and
death, but they do not disappear and we don’t even know to what extent
they are weakened, continuing to work in us (Rom. 7:14-25). &erefore,
in order to break the vicious cycle of western theological polemics, I be-
lieve it is better to return to the eastern patristic theology, which, without
giving scholastic answers regarding the nature and the consequences of
the ancestral sin, concentrates on the healing of human nature “in Christ
and the Church” (Eph. 5:32).
3. Without a doubt, in the Christian West, the theory of “original
sin” hastened the practice of child baptism, and the bogeymen of the
condemnation to hell of those who died unbaptized functioned very ef-
fectively for the baptism of the masses. In the East however, contrary to
all neo-protestant accusations, this process happened a little later, with no
link to the theory of “original sin” but as virtue of the fact that around the
6th century the majority of Christians belonged at least to the 3rd genera-
tion, while the discipline of the catechumenate has already disappeared.
Hence, the reason why many were hastening baptism was based on su-
perstitions and fears related to earthly life, but also on the fear of expro-
priation of personal property (according to Justinian’s Law of 529). &e
hierarchy of the Eastern Church, instead of respecting the freedom and
conscience of each individual, when it realized that legal pressures had
ceased to work, resorted to introducing the Western theory of original sin
with all its fear mongering, without promoting a positive baptismal the-
ology, which does not scare people with hell, but aims to make them sons
and daughters of the Kingdom of God.
4. An Orthodox anthropology and soteriology that goes beyond the
scholastic ideas on “original sin” should in no way lead to a revision of the
practice of infant baptism (this is not the purpose of the research in this
103
Petru-Mihail Pruteanu
area), but are meant to help us properly understand the purpose and the
e'ects of baptism, as well as to create new bridges of theological dialogue
between East and West.
104
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