TO SCAPULA
V. TO SCAPULA.(1)
[TRANSLATED BY THE REV. S. THELWALL.]
CHAP. I.
WE are not in any great perturbation or alarm about the persecutions we
suffer from the ignorance of men; for we have attached ourselves to this sect,
fully accepting the terms of its covenant, so that, as men whose very lives are
not their own, we engage in these conflicts, our desire being to obtain God's
promised rewards, and our dread lest the woes with which He threatens an
unchristian life should overtake us. Hence we shrink not from the grapple with your
utmost rage, coming even forth of our own accord to the contest; and condemnation
gives us more pleas-are than acquittal. We have sent, therefore, this tract to
you in no alarm about ourselves, but in much concern for you and for all our
enemies, to say nothing of our friends. For our religion commands us to love even
our enemies, and to pray for those who persecute us, aiming at a perfection
all its own, and seeking in its disciples something of a higher type than the
commonplace goodness of the world. For all love those who love them; it is
peculiar to Christians alone to love those that hate them. Therefore mourning over
your ignorance, and compassionating human error, and looking on to that future of
which every day shows threatening signs, necessity is laid on us to come forth
in this way also, that we may set before you the truths you will not listen to
openly.
CHAP. II.
We are worshippers of one God, of whose existence and character Nature
teaches all men; at whose lightnings and thunders you tremble, whose benefits
minister to your happiness. You think that others, too, are gods, whom we know to
be devils. However, it is a fundamental human right, a privilege of nature, that
every man should worship according to his own convictions: one man's religion
neither harms nor helps another man. It is assuredly no part of religion to
compel religion--to which free-will and not force should lead us--the sacrificial
victims even being required of a willing mind. You will render no real service
to your gods by compelling us to sacrifice. For they can have no desire of
offerings from the unwilling, unless they are animated by a spirit of contention,
which is a thing altogether undivine. Accordingly the true God bestows His
blessings alike on wicked men and on His own elect; upon which account He has
appointed an eternal judgment, when both thankful and unthankful will have to stand
before His bar. Yet you have never detected us--sacrilegious wretches though you
reckon us to be--in any theft, far less in any sacrilege. But the robbers of
your temples, all of them swear by your gods, and worship them; they are not
Christians, and yet it is they who are found guilty of sacrilegious deeds. We have
not time to unfold in how many other ways your gods are mocked and despised by
their own votaries. So, too, treason is falsely laid to our charge, though no
one has ever been able to find followers of Albinus, or Niger, or Cassius,
among Christians; while the very men who had sworn by the genii of the emperors,
who had offered and vowed sacrifices for their safety, who had often pronounced
condemnation on Christ's disciples, are till this day found traitors to the
imperial throne. A Christian is enemy to none, least of all to the Emperor of Rome,
whom he knows to be appointed by his God, and so cannot but love and honour;
and whose well-being moreover, he must needs desire, with that of the empire
over which he reigns so long as the world shall stand--for so long as that shall
Rome continue.(2) To the emperor, therefore, we render such reverential homage
as is lawful for us and good for him; regarding him as the human being next to
God who from God has received all his power, and is less than God alone. And
this will be according to his own desires. For thus--as less only than the true
God--he is greater than all besides. Thus he is greater than the very gods
themselves, even they, too, being subject to him. We therefore sacrifice for the
emperor's safety, but to our God and his, and after the manner God has enjoined, in
simple prayer. For God, Creator of the universe, has no need of odours or of
blood. These things are the food of devils.(1) But we not only reject those
wicked spirits: we overcome them; we daily hold them up to contempt; we exorcise
them from their victims, as multitudes can testify. So all the more we pray for
the imperial well-being, as those who seek it at the hands of Him who is able to
bestow it. And one would think it must be abundantly clear to you that the
religious system under whose rules we act is one inculcating a divine patience;
since, though our numbers are so great--constituting all but the majority in
every city--we conduct ourselves so quietly and modestly; I might perhaps say,
known rather as individuals than as organized communities, and remarkable only for
the reformation of our former vices. For far be it from us to take it ill that
we have laid on us the very things we wish, or in any way plot the vengeance at
our own hands, which we expect to come from God.
CHAP. III.
However, as we have already remarked, it cannot but distress us that no
state shall bear unpunished the guilt of shedding Christian blood; as you see,
indeed, in what took place during the presidency of Hilarian, for when there had
been some agitation about places of sepulture for our dead, and the cry arose,
"No areoe--no burial-grounds for the Christians," it came that their own
areoe,(2) their threshing-floors, were awanting, for they gathered in no harvests. As
to the rains of the bygone year, it is abundantly plain of what they were
intended to remind men--of the deluge, no doubt, which in ancient times overtook
human unbelief and wickedness; and as to the fires which lately hung all night
over the walls of Carthage, they who saw them know what they threatened; and what
the preceding thunders pealed, they who were hardened by them can tell. All
these things are signs of God's impending wrath, which we must needs publish and
proclaim in every possible way; and in the meanwhile we must pray it may be
only local. Sure are they to experience it one day in its universal and final
form, who interpret otherwise these samples of it. That sun, too, in the metropolis
of Utica,(3) with light all but extinguished, was a portent which could not
have occurred from an ordinary eclipse, situated as the lord of day was in his
height and house. You have the astrologers, consult them about it. We can point
you also to the deaths of some provincial rulers, who in their last hours had
painful memories of their sin in persecuting the followers of Christ.(4)
Vigellius Saturninus, who first here used the sword against us, lost his eyesight.
Claudius Lucius Herminianus in Cappadocia, enraged that his wife had become a
Christian, had treated the Christians with great cruelty: well, left alone in his
palace, suffering under a contagious malady, he boiled out in living worms, and
was heard exclaiming, "Let nobody know of it, lest the Christians rejoice, and
Christian wives take encouragement." Afterwards he came to see his error in
having tempted so many from their stedfastness by the tortures he inflicted, and
died almost a Christian himself. In that doom which overtook Byzantium,(3)
Caecilius Capella could not help crying out, "Christians, rejoice!" Yes, and the
persecutors who seem to themselves to have acted with impunity shall not escape the
day of judgment. For you we sincerely wish it may prove to have been a warning
only, that, immediately after you had condemned Mavilus of Adrumetum to the
wild beasts, you were overtaken by those troubles, and that even now for the same
reason you are called to a blood-reckoning. But do not forget the future.
CHAP. IV.
We who are without fear ourselves are not seeking to frighten you, but we
would save all men if possible by warning them not to fight with God.(5) You
may perform the duties of your charge, and yet remember the claims of humanity;
if on no other ground than that you are liable to punishment yourself, (you
ought to do so). For is not your commission simply to condemn those who confess
their guilt, and to give over to the torture those who deny? You see, then, how
you trespass yourselves against your instructions to wring from the confessing a
denial. It is, in fact, an acknowledgment of our innocence that you refuse to
condemn us at once when we confess. In doing your utmost to extirpate us, if
that is your object, it is innocence you assail. But how many rulers, men more
resolute and more cruel than you are, have contrived to get quit of such causes
altogether,--as Cincius Severus, who himself suggested the remedy at Thysdris,
pointing out how the Christians should answer that they might secure an
acquittal; as Vespronius Candidus, who dismissed from his bar a Christian, on the ground
that to satisfy his fellow-citizens would break the peace of the community; as
Asper, who, in the case of a man who gave up his faith under slight infliction
of the torture, did not compel the offering of sacrifice, having owned before,
among the advocates and assessors of court, that he was annoyed at having had
to meddle with such a case. Pudens, too, at once dismissed a Christian who was
brought before him, perceiving from the indictment that it was a case of
vexatious accusation; tearing the document in pieces, he refused so much as to hear
him without the presence of his accuser, as not being consistent with the
imperial commands. All this might be officially brought Under your notice, and by the
very advocates, who are themselves also under obligations to us, although in
court they give their voice as it suits them. The clerk of one of them who was
liable to be thrown upon the ground by an evil spirit, was set free from his
affliction; as was also the relative of another, and the little boy of a third.
How many men of rank (to say nothing of common people) have been delivered from
devils, and healed of diseases! Even Severus himself, the father of Antonine,
was graciously mindful of the Christians; for he sought out the Christian
Proculus, surnamed Torpacion, the steward of Euhodias, and in gratitude for his having
once cured him by anointing, he kept him in his palace till the day of his
death.(1) Antonine, too, brought up as he was on Christian milk, was intimately
acquainted with this man. Both women and men of highest rank, whom Severus knew
well to be Christians, were not merely permitted by him to remain uninjured; but
he even bore distinguished testimony in their favour, and gave them publicly
back to us from the hands of a raging populace. Marcus Aurelius also, in his
expedition to Germany, by the prayers his Christian soldiers offered to God, got
rain in that well-known thirst.(2) When, indeed, have not droughts been put away
by our kneelings and our fastings? At times like these, moreover, the people
crying to "the God of gods, the alone Omnipotent," under the name of Jupiter,
have borne witness to our God. Then we never deny the deposit placed in our
hands; we never pollute the marriage bed; we deal faithfully with our wards; we give
aid to the needy; we render to none evil for evil. As for those who falsely
pretend to belong to us, and whom we, too, repudiate, let them answer for
themselves. In a word, who has complaint to make against us on other grounds? To what
else does the Christian devote himself, save the affairs of his own community,
which during all the long period of its existence no one has ever proved guilty
of the incest or the cruelty charged against it? It is for freedom from crime
so singular, for a probity so great, for righteousness, for purity, for
faithfulness, for truth, for the living God, that we are consigned to the flames; for
this is a punishment you are not wont to inflict either on the sacrilegious, or
on undoubted public enemies, or on the treason-tainted, of whom you have so
many. Nay, even now our people are enduring persecution from the governors of
Legio and Mauritania; but it is only with the sword, as from the first it was
ordained that we should suffer. But the greater our conflicts, the greater our
rewards.
CHAP. V.
Your cruelty is our glory. Only see you to it, that in having such things
as these to endure, we do not feel ourselves constrained to rush forth to the
combat, if only to prove that we have no dread of them, but on the contrary,
even invite their infliction. When Arrius Antoninus was driving things hard in
Asia, the whole Christians of the province, in one united band, presented
themselves before his judgment-seat; on which, ordering a few to be led forth to
execution, he said to the rest, "O miserable men, if you wish to die, you have
precipices or halters." If we should take it into our heads to do the same thing
here, what will you make of so many thousands, of such a multitude of men and
women, persons of every sex and every age and every rank, when they present
themselves before you? How many fires, how many swords will be required? What will be
the anguish of Carthage itself, which you will have to decimate,(3) as each one
recognises there his relatives and companions, as he sees there it may be men
of your own order, and noble ladies, and all the leading persons of the city,
and either kinsmen or friends of those of your own circle? Spare thyself, if not
us poor Christians! Spare Carthage, if not thyself! Spare the province, which
the indication of your purpose has subjected to the threats and extortions at
once of the soldiers and of private enemies.
We have no master but God. He is before you, and cannot be hidden from
you, but to Him you can do no injury. But those whom you regard as masters are
only men, and one day they themselves must die. Yet still this community will be
undying, for be assured that just in the time of its seeming overthrow it is
built up into greater power. For all who witness the noble patience of its
martyrs, as struck with misgivings, are inflamed with desire to examine into the
matter in question;(1) and as soon as they come to know the truth, they straightway
enrol themselves its disciples.
ELUCIDATIONS.
I. (Scapula, cap. i., p. 105.)
SCAPULA was Proconsul of Carthage, and though its date is conjectural
(A.D. 217), this work gives valuable indices of its time and circumstances. It was
composed after the death of Severus, to whom there is an allusion in chapter
iv., after the destruction of Byzantium (A.D. 196), to which there is a reference
in chapter iii.; and Dr. Allix suggests, after the dark day of Utica (A.D.
210) which he supposes to be referred to in the same chapter. Cincius Severus, who
is mentioned in chapter iv., was put to death by Severus, A.D. 198.
II. (Caractacus, cap. ii., note 2, p. 105.)
Mr. Lewin (St. Paul, ii. 397), building on the fascinating theory of
Archdeacon Williams, thinks St. Paul's Claudia (Qu. Gladys?) may very well have been
the daughter of Caradoc, with whose noble character we are made acquainted by
Tacitus. (Annals xii. 36.) And Archdeacon Williams gives us very strong reason
to believe he was a Christian. He may very well have lived to behold the
Coliseum completed. What more natural then, in view of the cruelty against Christians
there exercised, for the expressions with which he is credited? In this case
his words contain an eloquent ambiguity, which Christians would appreciate, and
which may have been in our author's mind when he says--"quousque saeculum
stabit." To those who looked for the Second Advent, daily, this did not mean what
the heathen might suppose.
Bede's version of the speech (See Du Cange, II., 407.,) is this: "Quandiu
stabit Colyseus--stabit et Roma: Quando cadet Colysevs--cadet et Roma: Quando
cadet Roma--cadet et mundus."