Honestly, in making such a statement do you even understand what Augustine is saying?
Bishop Minatios - for He foreknows that the person will be good and of an obedient will.
LOL. I've been reading up on Augustine. He was quite a wild young man. His conversion gives hope to the mother's heart of every rowdy son. 8~)
"Too late, have I loved Thee, O Beauty so ancient and so new, too late have I loved Thee! Thou wast with me, and I was not with Thee; I was abroad, running after those beauties which Thou hast made; those things which could have no being but in Thee kept me away from Thee. Thou hast called, Thou hast cried out, and hast pierced my deafness. Thou hast enlightened, Thou hast shone forth, and my blindness is dispelled. I have tasted Thee, and am hungry of Thee. Thou hast touched me, and I am afire with the desire of thy embraces." -- Augustine
Minatios says, "good and of obedient will". That means, God chooses those who would, per Augustine, "believe on Him".
You are misreading the good Bishop. Either point of view is acceptable to Catholicism. The Bishop doesn't say (in your quote) that a person received grace because God foreknew that man would react positively (which, by the way, is NOT Pelagianism. You sure throw that word around a lot. It is the idea that man can come to God, even before initial justifying grace, by natural means.)
Regards