He wrote six pamphlets, all on the text "If you would be perfect, go, sell what you possess and give to the poor" (Matthew 19:21). In his best known work, De Divitiis ("On Riches") (c. 410),[4] he blamed the existence of poverty on the existence of wealth. He divided people into three categories: the rich, the poor, and those who have enough, and advocated redistributing the excess wealth of the rich so that everyone has enough. This was summarised in the slogan: tolle divitem et pauperem non invenies ("abolish the rich and you will find no more poor"). His views can be considered an early form of socialism.
He was associated with his fellow Briton Pelagius, although Pelagius distanced himself from the Sicilian Briton's more radical doctrines.
^Brinley Roderick Rees, Pelagius: Life and Letters, Boydell & Brewer Ltd, 1998, p. 18.ISBN9780851157146 "Evans goes on to suggest that the 'Sicilian Briton' met and conversed with Pelagius - 'they were both, after all, Britons residing for the present in Sicily' (!)"