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(Created page with "San Agustín, de Simone Martini (1320-1325)") |
(Created page with "En su mayor parte, apenas hay rastro del concepto de pecado original entre los primeros padres apostólicos, quienes creían que ningún pecado podía impedir que el hombre el...") |
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[[File:Simone Martini 003.jpg|thumb|upright|San Agustín, de Simone Martini (1320-1325)]] | [[File:Simone Martini 003.jpg|thumb|upright|San Agustín, de Simone Martini (1320-1325)]] | ||
En su mayor parte, apenas hay rastro del concepto de pecado original entre los primeros padres apostólicos, quienes creían que ningún pecado podía impedir que el hombre eligiera el bien sobre el mal por su propia voluntad. | |||
Early theologians had toyed with the idea that man’s wretched state of affairs is somehow related to the Fall of [[Adam and Eve]] in the [[Garden of Eden|Garden]]. But it was Saint Augustine (<small>A</small>.<small>D</small>. 354–430) who fashioned it into what remains a cornerstone of Christian theology—original sin. | Early theologians had toyed with the idea that man’s wretched state of affairs is somehow related to the Fall of [[Adam and Eve]] in the [[Garden of Eden|Garden]]. But it was Saint Augustine (<small>A</small>.<small>D</small>. 354–430) who fashioned it into what remains a cornerstone of Christian theology—original sin. | ||