Michael Baius had been educated at the…
1581 CE
Michael Baius had been educated at the University of Louvain, where he studied philosophy and theology and held various university appointments.
With fellow theologian Jan Hessels, he had in about 1550 begun to advance revolutionary doctrines of grace and justification based on a new, rigid, and pessimistic interpretation of the writings of St. Augustine.
Baius' numerous short treatises on theological subjects have incurred censures by ecclesiastical authorities; in 1567, Pope Pius V had condemned 79 statements from his works in the bull Ex Omnibus Afflictionibus.
Baius submitted, but indiscreet utterances by him and his supporters led to a new condemnation in 1580 by Pope Gregory XIII.
Baius, however, has kept his professorship and become chancellor of Louvain in 1575.
The most distinctive features of Baius' system, which are found also in some Protestant writers, concern the Fall of man.
Baius holds that the innocence of Adam and Eve was part of their nature, so that the first sin destroyed intrinsic principles of human nature.