AN ANONYMOUS TREATISE AGAINST THE HERETIC NOVATIAN
INTRODUCTORY NOTICE[1]
TO AN ANONYMOUS TREATISE AGAINST THE HERETIC NOVATIAN.
THE writer of the following treatise was undoubtedly a contemporary of
Cyprian, and wrote in the early part of the reign of Valerian (254-256), during an
interval of peace to the Church. This much may be collected from the fact that
he names one, and only one, persecution after that of Decius--namely, that of
Gallus and Volusianus--and speaks of those who had lapsed under the former, as
having been stedfast and victorious in the latter.[2] He is generally believed
to have been an Africa, and Tillemont is only withheld from attributing the
work to Cyprian himself by what he judges to be a difference of style. But
although from the exordium it may be concluded that the writer was a bishop, yet, from
his manifest uncertainty as to the fitting way to treat those who had lapsed,
it is evident that Cyprian cannot have been the author; for that prelate, when
the persecution of Gallus and Volusianus was just threatening, had already
decided upon receiving to communion the penitents who had yielded to temptation
under Decius.[3]
Ceillier[4] says that this treatise was written about the year 255, while
Novatian was still alive,[5] and when the schism of Felicissimus was all but
extinct.
Erasmus first published it among the known works of Cyprian in the year
1520.
NOTE.
THE American editor subjoins as follows: Cyprian, and Cornelius afterward,
had decided, with their councils, that the lapsed should be classed, and dealt
with accordingly, as (1) Libellatici, those who had compounded with the
heathen, and bought off from offering sacrifice; and (2) Sacrificati, those who had
actually offered sacrifice to idols. Different degrees of discipline were
awarded, but all were admitted to pardon finally.
A TREATISE AGAINST THE HERETIC NOVATIAN
BY AN ANONYMOUS BISHOP.
THAT THE HOPE OF PARDON SHOULD NOT BE DENIED TO THE LAPSED.
1. WHILE I was meditating and impatiently tossing in my mind what I ought
to do concerning those pitiable brethren who, wounded, not of their own will,
but by the onset of a raging devil, have lived until now, that is, through a
long course of time, in the endurance of their punishment; lo, there appeared
opposed to me another enemy, and the adversary of his own paternal affection--the
heretic Novatian--who not only, as it is signified in the Gospel, passed by the
prostrate wounded man, as did the priest or the Levite, but by an ingenious and
novel cruelty rather would slay the wounded man, by taking away the hope of
salvation, by denying the mercy of his Father, by rejecting the repentance of his
brother. Marvellous, how bitter, how harsh how perverse are many things ! But
one more easily perceives the straw in another's eye than the beam in one's
own. Let not the abrupt madness of that perfidious heretic move or disturb us
however, beloved brethren, who, although he is placed in such great guilt of
dissension and schism, and is separated from the Church, with sacrilegious temerity
does not shrink from hurling back his charges upon us: for although he is now by
himself made unclean, defiled with the filth of sacrilege, he contends that we
are so. And although it is written that the dogs should remain without, and
the apostle has taught that these same dogs must be shunned, as we read, for he
says, "Beware of dogs, beware of evil workers,"[1] he does not cease stirring
up his frenzy with barkings, after the manner of wolves seeking the gloomy
darkness, where with his brutal cruelty he may easily rend in his dark caves the
sheep snatched away from the Shepherd. Certainly he declares that he and his
friends whom he collects are gold. Nor do we doubt but that deserters of the
Church who have become apostates could now easily be converted into gold, but it
must be that gold in which the first sins of the people of Israel were
designated. But the gold and silver vessels which were wrested from the Egyptians
continue in the Lord's power, that is, in Christ's Church; in which house if thou
hadst continued, Novatian, thou hadst perchance been also a precious vessel; but
now thou neither perceivest nor complainest that thou art changed into chaff
and straw.
2. Why, therefore, shouldst thou be lifted up with vain things? Thou wilt
gain loss rather than profit. Why, from the very fact that thou art become
poorer, believest thou thyself rich? Hear in the Apocalypse the Lord's voice
rebuking thee with righteous reproaches: "Thou sayest," says He, "I am rich, and
increased with goods, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art
wretched, and miserable, and blind, and poor, and naked."[2] Let him think for
certain that he possesses these riches of poverty, whoever he may be, that,
forsaking the Church of Christ, with his darkened reason does not shrink from being
turned to those rash leaders of schisms and authors of dissension, whom John calls
antichrists, whom the Evangelist likens to chaff, whom the Lord Christ
characterizes as thieves and robbers, as He Himself declares in the Gospel, saying
that "he who entereth not by the door into the sheep-fold, but goeth down by some
other way, the same is a thief and a robber."[3] Moreover, in the same He also
says, "All who have come are thieves and robbers."[4] Who are such but the
deserters of the faith, and the transgressors of God's Church, who strive against
God's ordinance;whom the Holy Spirit rightly rebukes by the prophet, saying, "Ye
have taken counsel, but not by me; and have made a confederacy, but not by my
Spirit, to add sin to sin."[5] What now can those most perverse friends of
Novatian, even now the most unhappy[6] few, reply to these things, who have broken
forth to such a folly of madness as to have no reverence either for God or man?
Among them, shamelessly, and without any law of ordination, the episcopate is
sought after; but among us in its own Sees, and in those of the throne
delivered to it by God, it is renounced.[1] There the Truth says, "They reject me, that
they may sacrifice to me; nor do they offer the holy oblations of the children
of Israel, nor do they approach to offer the holy of holies, but they shall
receive their ignominy in the error wherein they have erred."[2] Let it be enough
in a few words to have proved what they are. Hear, therefore, O Novatians,
among whom the heavenly Scriptures are read rather than understood; well, if they
are not interpolated.[3] For your ears are closed, and your hearts darkened,
seeing that ye admit no light from spiritual and saving warnings; as Isaiah gays,
"The servants of God are blinded."[4] And deservedly blinded, because the
desire of schismatics is not in the law; which law points out to us the one and
only Church in that ark to wit, which was fashioned, by the providence of God,
under Noah before the deluge, in which--to answer you quickly, O Novatian--we find
that there were shut up not only clean animals, but also unclean; which ark
was saved alone, with those who were in it, whereas the other things which were
not found therein perished in the deluge. From that ark there were loosed two
birds, a raven and a dove; and this raven truly bore the figure or type of impure
men, and men who would be in perpetual darkness through the world's broad
road, and of apostates who should arise, feeding on unclean things, and not turning
themselves eventually to the Church; and as we read, we find that it was sent
forth, and returned no more. Whoever should be found to resemble this bird,
then, that is, the impure spirit, will no more be able to return to the Church,
seeing that the Lord will forbid them, even if they should wish it, as He
commanded Moses, saying, "Everything leprous[5] and impure, cast abroad outside the
camp."[6] But the dove sent forth that returned, is signified by the man who does
not delay, because be would have no rest for his feet. And Noah received it
into the ark; and when it was sent forth again on the seventh day, received it,
bearing in its mouth an olive leaf.
3. And I, beloved brethren,--as I not heedlessly meditate these things,
and not in harmony with human wisdom, but as it is permitted to our minds by the
condescension of the heavenly Lord, needfully and pertinently to conceive,--say
that that dove signifies to us of itself a double type. Formerly, that is,
from the beginning of the divine administration, it suggests its own figure, the
first indeed and chief--that is, the figure of the Spirit. And by its mouth the
sacrament of baptism which is provided for the salvation of the human race, and
that by the heavenly plan it is celebrated in the Church only.[7] Moreover,
three times sent forth from the ark, flying about through the air over the water,
it already signified the sacraments of our Church. Whence also the Lord Christ
charges upon Peter, and moreover also upon the rest of His disciples, "Go ye
and preach the Gospel to the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost."[8] That is, that that same Trinity
which operated figuratively in Noah's days through the dove, now operates in the
Church spiritually through the disciples.
4. Let us now take the second character also of the dove sent forth from
the ark, that is to say, in the time of the deluge, when all the abysses broke
forth; when the cataracts of heaven were opened upon the earth, on account of
the wickedness of men which they daily practised before the Lord; as said Moses,
"And the Lord God saw that the wickednesses of men were overflowing upon the
earth, and that all of them were remembering for evil from the beginning of their
days; and He said, I will destroy man whom I have made from off the face of
the earth, from man even unto cattle, and from the creeping thing even unto the
fowls of the air."[9] Therefore in the time of the flood the dove is sent forth
from the ark, when the waters were violently rushing with all their force upon
the earth.
5. That ark bore the figure of the Church, as we have said above, which
was stricken hither and thither to such a degree by the tumultuous waters.
Therefore that deluge which happened under Noah showed forth the figure of the
persecution which now lately was poured forth over the whole world. Moreover, by the
waters, the cataracts broken forth meeting together on all sides, and growing,
were signified the peoples which grew up for the desolation of the Church; as
the Apocalypse teaches, saying, "The waters which thou sawest are peoples, and
nations, and kingdoms."[10] Moreover, the dove which could not find rest for its
feet, bore the likeness of the lapsed, who fell forgetful of the divine
announcements, either ignorant in simplicity, or feigning in audacity. Of whom the
Lord had intimated the future destruction in the Gospel in these words, saying,
"He who heareth my words and doeth them not, I will liken him to a foolish man,
who built his house upon the sand: the tempests came and beat upon that house,
and it fell; and great was its destruction."[1] And lest we should seem to have
made the comparison inconsiderately of that dove bearing the image of the
lapsed, the prophet rebukes the city as a dove, that is, the character of the
lapsed, saying, "The dove hearkens not to the voice; that is, the illustrious and
redeemed city receives not teaching, and trusted not in the Lord."[2]
6. Moreover, that that dove could not find rest for her feet, as we have
said above, this signified the footsteps of those who deny; that is, those,
wounded by the poison of the shining serpent, who sacrifice, turned towards their
fall; which could not any further step upon the asp and the basilisk, and tread
upon the dragon and the lion. For this power the Lord gave to His disciples, as
He says in the Gospel:" Lo, I give unto you power to tread on all the power of
the enemy, and upon serpents and scorpions; and they shall not harm you."[3]
When, therefore, these so many and such malignant spirits are attacking and
bestirring themselves for the destruction of the lapsed, a way of salvation is
provided for the wounded, that with whatever strength they have they may drag
themselves with their whole body, and betake themselves to their camp, wherein being
received, they may heal their wounds with spiritual medicaments. Thus the dove
received, after the intervention of a few days, is again sent forth from the
ark; and returning, not only shows its firm footsteps, but moreover the signs of
its peace and victory, in those olive leaves which it bore in its mouth.
Therefore that twofold sending forth shows to us a twofold trial of persecution: the
first, in which they who have lapsed have fallen conquered; the second, in
which they who have fallen have come out conquerors. For to none of us is it
doubtful or uncertain, beloved brethren, that they who in the first struggle--that
is, in the Decian persecution--were wounded; afterwards, that is in the second
encounter, persevered so bravely, that, despising the edicts of the princes of
the world,[4] they maintained that unconquered; in that they did not fear, after
the example of the good Shepherd, to give up their life, and to shed their
blood, and not to shrink from any barbarity of the raging tyrant.
7. Behold how glorious, how dear to the Lord, are the people whom these
schismatics do not shrink from calling "wood, hay, stubble;"[5] the equals of
whom, that is, those who are even still placed in the same guilt of their lapse,
they presume must not be admitted to repentance. This they judge from that
utterance of the Lord, where He says, "Whosoever shall deny me before men, him will
I deny before my Father which is in heaven."[6] Oh grief! why do they strive
against the Lord's precepts, that this offspring of Novatian, following the
example of his father the devil, should now endeavour to put in force those things
which Christ will do in the time of His judgment? that is, when Scripture says,
"Vengeance is mine; and I will repay, saith the Lord."[7]
8. We will answer them as to that utterance of the Lord, which they ill
understand, and ill explain to themselves. For that He says, "Whosoever shall
deny me before men, him will I also deny before my Father which is in heaven," its
meaning is assuredly with respect to future time--to the time at which the
Lord shall begin to judge the secrets of men--to the time at which we must all
stand before the judgment-seat of Christ--to the time at which many shall begin to
say, "Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Thy name, and in Thy name cast out
devils, and in Thy name done many wonderful works?"[8] And yet they shall hear
the voice of the Lord saying, "Depart from me, all ye that have worked
iniquity: I know you not." [8] Then shall it be fulfilled that He says, "I also will
deny them." But whom will the Lord Christ chiefly deny, if not all of you
heretics, and schismatics, and strangers to His name? For ye who were some time
Christians, but now are Novatians, no longer Christians, have changed your first
faith by a subsequent perfidy in the calling of your name. I should wish you to
reply to your own proposition. Read and teach: whom of those who had failed or
denied Him, while He was still with them, did our Lord deny? Yet also to the
others of the disciples who had remained with Him He saith, "Will ye also go away?
"[9] Even Peter, whom He had previously foretold as about to deny Him, when he
had denied Him, He did not deny, but sustained; and He Himself soothed him when
subsequently bitterly bewailing his denial.
9. What sort of folly is thine, Novatian, only to read what tends to the
destruction of salvation, and to pass by what tends to mercy, when Scripture
cries, and says, "Repent, ye who err: be converted in heart;"[10] and when the
same prophet also exhorts, and says, "Be converted unto me with all your heart, in
fasting, and weeping, and mourning; and rend your hearts, and not your
garments; be ye converted to the Lord your God: for He is merciful, and one who pities
with great compassion? "[1]
10. Thus we have heard that the Lord is of great compassion. Let us hear
what the Holy Spirit testifies by David: "If his children forsake my law, and
walk not in my commandments; if they should profane my righteousness, and should
not keep my precepts; I will visit their crimes with a rod, and their sins with
stripes. But my mercy will I not utterly disperse from them."[2] Words like to
these we read that the Lord said also by Ezekiel: "Son of man, the house of
Israel has dwelt on its own land, and they have defiled it by their crimes: their
uncleanness has become like that of a menstruous woman before my face. I have
poured out my anger upon them, and I have scattered them among the nations; and
I have judged them according to their sins, because they have defiled my holy
name; and because it was said of them, This is the people of the Lord, I have
spared them, because of my holy name, which the house of Israel despised among
the nations."[3] And in conjunction with this he says, "Therefore say to the
people of Israel, Thus saith the Lord, I spare you not, O house of Israel; but I
will spare you on account of m holy name, which ye have defiled among they
nations: and ye shall know that I am the Lord, when I shall be sanctified in you."
Also the Lord to the same: "Son of man, say unto the people of Israel, Wherefore
have ye spoken, saying, We are pining away in our sins, and how shall we be
able to be saved? Say unto them, I live, saith the Lord: for I do not desire the
death of the sinner; but I desire that the sinner should turn from his evil
way, and live: therefore return ye from your evil way: why do ye give yourselves
over to death, O house of Israel?"[4] So, too, by Isaiah the prophet: "I will
not be angry with you for ever, nor will I abstain from defending you always."[5]
And because Jeremiah the prophet, in the person of the sinful people, prays to
the Lord, saying, "Amend us, O Lord, but in judgment, and not in anger, lest
Thou make us few;"[6] Isaiah also added, and said, "For his sin I have slightly
afflicted him; and I have stricken him, and have turned away my face from
him: and he was afflicted, and went away sadly in his ways."[7] And because he
labours, he added and said, "I have seen his ways, and I have healed him; and I
have given him a true exhortation, peace upon peace;"[8] that to those who
repent, and pray, and labour, restoration is possible, because they would
miserably perish, and because they would decline from Christ.
11. Moreover, this is proved in the Gospel, where is described that woman
who was a sinner, who came to the house of a certain Pharisee whither the Lord
had been bidden with His disciples, and she brought a vessel of ointment, and
stood at the Lord's feet, and washed His feet with her tears, and wiped them
with her hair, and pressed kisses upon them; so that that Pharisee was provoked,
and said, "If this man were a prophet, he would know who and what sort of a
woman this is who touches him; for she is a sinner."[9] Whence immediately the
Lord, the remitter of sins and the receiver of the penitent, says, "Simon, I have
somewhat to say unto thee. And he answered, saying, Master, say on. And the
Lord, There was a certain creditor which had two debtors; one who had[10] five
hundred pence, and the other fifty. When they had nothing to pay, he forgave both.
And He asked, Which of these loved most? And Simon answered, Assuredly he to
whom he forgave most. And He added, saying, Seest thou that woman? I entered
into thy house, thou gavest me no kiss; but she hath not ceased to kiss my feet;
thou washedst not my feet, but she has washed them with her tears, and wiped
them with her hair; thou didst not anoint my feet with oil, but she hath anointed
them. Wherefore I say unto thee, Simon, that her sins are forgiven her."
Behold, the Lord grants the debt with His liberal kindness to both debtors; behold
Him who pardons sins; behold the woman who was a sinner, penitent, weeping,
praying, and receiving remission of her sins !
12. And now blush if thou canst, Novatian; cease to deceive the unwary
with thy impious arguments; cease to frighten them with the subtlety of one
particular. We read, and adore, and do not pass over the heavenly judgment of the
Lord, where he says that He will deny him who denies Him. But does this mean the
penitent? And why should I be taking pains so long to prove individual cases of
mercies? since the mercy of God is not indeed denied to the Ninevites, although
strangers, and placed apart from the law of the Lord, when they beseech it on
account of the overthrow announced to their city. Nor to Pharaoh himself,
resisting with sacrilegious boldness, when formerly he was stricken with plagues
from heaven, and, turning to Moses and to his brother, said, "Pray to the Lord for
me, for I have sinned."[11] At once the anger of God was suspended from him.
And yet thou, O Novatian, judgest and declarest that the lapsed have no hope of
peace and mercy, nor inclinest thine ear to the rebuke of the apostle, when he
says," Who art thou, who judgest another man's servant? To his own master he
standeth or falleth. Yea, he shall stand. God is mighty to establish him."(1)
Whence pertinently and needfully the Holy Spirit, in the person of those same
lapsed people, rebukes you when He says, "Rejoice not over me, O mine enemy:
because if I have fallen, I shall also rise again; and if I shall walk in darkness,
the Lord is my light. I will bear the indignation of the Lord, because I have
sinned against Him, until He justify my cause, and execute judgment and justice,
and bring me forth to the light. I shall behold His righteousness; and she that
is mine enemy shall see me, and shall cover herself with confusion."(2)
13. I beseech thee, hast thou not read, "Boast not, and speak not loftily,
and let not arrogancy proceed out of your mouth: for the Lord lifteth the poor
from the earth; He raiseth up the beggar from the dunghill, and maketh him to
sit with the mighty ones of the people?"(3) Hast thou not read, that "the Lord
resisteth the proud, and giveth grace to the humble?"(4) Hast thou not read,
"Whoso exalteth himself shall be humbled?"(5) Hast thou not read, that "God
destroys the remembrance of the proud, and does not forsake the memory of the
lowly?" Hast thou not read, that "with what judgment a man shall judge he must be
judged?"(6) Hast thou not read, that "he who hateth his brother is in darkness,
and walketh in darkness, and knoweth not whither he goeth, because the darkness
hath blinded his eyes?"(7) Whence, then, this Novatian has become both so
wicked and so lost, so mad with rage of discord, I cannot discover, since he always
in one household--that is, the Church of Christ --would have bewailed the sins
of his neighbours as his own;(8) would have borne the burthens of his brethren,
as the apostle exhorts would have strengthened the faltering in the faith with
heavenly counsel. But now, from the time when he began to practise that heresy
of Cain which only delights in slaying, he does not even of late spare
himself. But if he had read that "the righteousness of the righteous shall not deliver
him in the day on which he shall have erred, and the wickedness of the wicked
shall not harm him from the dayin which he shall have been converted,"(9) he
would long ago have repented in ashes, who is always opposed to penitents; who
labours more readily in the destruction of those things which are built and
standing, than in the building up of those which are prostrate; who has once more
made heathens of many most wretched brethren of ours, terrified by his false
oppositions, by saying that the repentance of the lapsed is vain, and cannot avail
them for salvation, although the Scripture cries aloud and says, "Remember
whence thou hast fallen, and repent, or else I will come to thee except thou
repent."(10) And indeed, writing to the seven churches, rebuking each one of them
with its own crimes and sins, it said, Repent. To whom but to them, doubtless,
whom He had redeemed at the great price of His blood?
14. O impious and wicked as thou art, thou heretic Novatian! who after so
many and great crimes which in past times thou hadst known to be voluntarily
committed in the Church, and before thou thyself wast an apostate in the family
of God, hadst certainly taught that these might be abolished from memory if
well-doing followed; according to the faith of the Scripture which says, "But if
the wicked will turn from all his sins which he hath committed, and will do
righteousness, he shall live in eternal life, and shall not die in his
wickedness."(11) For the sins which he has committed shall be abolished from memory by the
good deeds which succeed. Thou reconsiderest now, whether the wounds of the
lapsed who have fallen, stripped bare by the devil, ought to be cured; dashed down,
as they are, by the "violence of the flood which the serpent sent forth from
his mouth after the woman."(12) But "What shall I say?" says the apostle. "Do I
praise you? In this I praise you not; that ye come together not for the better,
but for the worse."(13) For where there are "rivalries and dissensions among
you, are ye not carnal, and walk according to man?"(14) Nor indeed ought we to
wonder why this Novatian should dare now to practise such wicked, such severe
things against the person of the lapsed, since we have previous examples of
this kind of prevarication. Saul, that once good(15) man, besides other things, is
subsequently overthrown by envy, and strives to do everything that is harsh
and hostile against David. That Judas, who was chosen among the apostles, who was
always of one mind and faithful in the house of God, himself subsequently
betrayed God.(167)
And indeed the Lord had foretold that many should come as ravening wolves
in the skins of sheep. Who are those ravening wolves but such as conspire with
treacherous intent to waste the flock of Christ? As we read it written in
Zechariah: "Lo, I raise up a shepherd in the land, who shall not visit that which is
turned away, and will eat the flesh of the chosen, and tear their claws in
pieces."(1) Similarly also in Ezekiel he rebukes shepherds of this kind, to wit,
robbers and butchers (I will speak as he had thought(2)), saying, "O shepherds,
wherefore do ye drink the milk, and eat up the curdled milk, and have brought
that which is strong to nothing, and have not visited the weak, have not healed
the halting, and have not recalled the wandering, and have permitted my people
to wander among thorns and briers? For these things, says the Lord, lo, I will
come against the shepherds, and I will require my sheep of their hands; and I
will drive them away, that they may not feed my sheep; and my sheep shall no
more be for them to devour, and I will seek them out as a shepherd his flock in
the day in which there shall be darkness and cloud. Thus I will seek out my
sheep, and I will seek them out in every place wherever they are scattered; and I
will seek out what had perished, and I will recall what had wandered, and what
had halted I will heal, and what is weak I will watch over; and I will feed my
sheep with judgment."(3)
15. Who is it that says these things? Certainly He who, having left the
ninety and nine sheep, went to seek that one which had wandered from His flock;
as David says, "I have gone astray like a sheep which was lost,"(4) which being
found Christ brings back, bearing on His shoulder the tender sinful one; and
He, rejoicing and exulting, having called His friends and domestics, says,
"Rejoice with me; for my sheep which was lost is found. I say," says He, "unto you,
that there will be such joy m heaven over one sinner that repenteth."(5) And m
continuation, He says: "Or what woman, having ten denarii, if she should lose
one of the denarii, does not light a lamp, and all the day long clean out her
house, seeking till she finds it? And when she has found it, she calls together
her friends and neighbours, saying, Rejoice with me; for I have found the
denarius that I had lost. I say unto you, that such joy shall be in the sight of the
angels of God over one sinner that repenteth."(5) But, on the other hand, they
who do not repent of their wickedness, let them know from the answer of the Lord
Himself what remaineth for them; for we read in the Gospel, that "certain men
came from the Galileans to the Lord, telling Him of those whose blood Pilate
mingled with their sacrifices; to whom the Lord answered, saying, Think ye that
those Galileans had been sinners above other Galileans, because they suffered
such things? No; for I say unto you, unless ye repent, ye shall all likewise
perish. Or those eighteen upon whom the tower in Siloam fell, think ye that they
were debtors to death above all men who dwell in Jerusalem? No; I say unto you,"
said He, "that unless ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish."(6)
16. Let us then arouse ourselves as much as we can, beloved brethren; and
breaking away from the slumber of indolence and security, let us be watchful
for the observance of the Lord's precepts. Let us with all our hearts seek for
what we have lost, that we may be able to find; because "to him that seeketh,"
says the Scripture, "it shall be given, and to him that knocketh it shall be
opened."(7) Let us cleanse our house with spiritual cleanliness, that every secret
and hidden place of our breast, truly enlightened by the light of the Gospel,
may say, "Against Thee only have I sinned, and done this great evil in Thy
sight."(8) Because the death of sinners is evil, and in hell there is no repentance.
Let us have in contemplation especially the day of judgment and retribution,
and what must be believed by all of us, and firmly maintained, that "there is no
acceptance of persons with God;"(9) since He commanded in Deuteronomy, that
the person must not be accepted in judgment: "Thou shalt not accept," says He,
"the person, neither shalt thou judge according to the least nor according to the
greatest."(10) Like words to these He also said by Ezekiel: "All souls," said
He, "are mine; as the soul of the father, so is the soul of the son: the soul
that hath sinned, it shall die."(11) It is then He who must be revered by us; He
must be held fast; He must be propitiated by our full and worthy confession,
"who has the power of sending soul and body to the Gehenna of fire,"(12)--as it
is written, "Behold, He cometh with many thousands of His messengers, to
execute judgment upon all, and to destroy all the wicked, and to condemn all flesh,
for all the deeds of the wicked which they have wickedly done. and for all the
impious words which sinners have spoken about God."(13)
17. Like things to these also says Daniel: "I beheld a throne placed, and
the Ancient of days sat upon it, and His clothing was as it were snow, and the
hairs of His head as it were white wool: His throne was a flame of fire, its
wheels were burning fire. A river of fire came forth before Him: thousand
thousands ministered to Him, and thousand thousands stood before Him: He sat to
judgment, and the books were opened."(1) And John still more plainly declares, both
about the day of judgment and the consummation of the world, saying, "And when,"
said he, "He had opened the sixth seal, lo, there was a great earthquake; and
the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the whole moon became as of
blood; and the stars fell to the earth, even as a fig-tree, shaken by a mighty
wind, casteth her unripe figs. And the heaven departed as a book when it is rolled
up, and every mountain and island were moved from their places. And the kings
of the earth, and all the great men, and the tribunes, and the rich men, and the
strong men, and every slave, and every free man, hid themselves in the caves
and in the caverns of the mountains; saying to the mountains and to the rocks,
Fall upon us, and hide us from the sight of the Father that sitteth upon the
throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb: because the day of destruction cometh; and
who shall be able to stand?"(2) Also in the same Apocalypse John says that
this too was revealed to him. "I saw," says he, "a great throne, and one in white
who sat upon it, from whose face the heaven and the earth fled away; and their
place was not found. And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the
sight of the Lord's throne: and the books were opened; and another book was
opened, which is (the book) of life: and every one was judged according to those
things that were written in the book, according to their own works."(3) Moreover,
too, the apostle, giving good advice, thus exhorts us, saying, "Let no one
deceive you with vain words: for because of these things the wrath of God cometh
upon the children of disobedience. Be not partakers with them."(4)
18. Let us, then, with the whole strength of our faith, give praise to
God; let us give our full confession, since the powers of heaven rejoice over our
repentance, all the angels rejoice, and Christ also rejoices, who once again
with full and merciful moderation exhorts us, laden with sins, overwhelmed with
crimes, to cease from wickedness, saying, "Turn ye, and return from your
impieties, and your iniquities shall not be to you for a punishment. Cast away from
you all your impieties which ye have committed against me; and make to yourselves
a new heart and a new spirit. And why do ye deliver yourselves over to death,
O house of Israel? For I do not desire the death of the sinner." (5) "I am He,
I am He who blot out thy crimes, and I will not remember them. But do thou have
in mind, and let us judge; tell thou thy wickednesses first, that thou mayest
be justified."(6) While the way of mercy, brethren, is open,(7) let us entreat
God with full atonements; let us humble ourselves, that we may be exalted; let
us acquiesce in the divine exhortation, whereby we may escape the day of the
Lord and His anger. For thus He says: "Look, my son, upon the nations of men, and
know who hath hoped in the Lord, and has been confounded; or has remained in
His commandments, and has been forsaken; or has called upon Him, and He has
despised him. For the Lord is loving and merciful, and forgiving in time of
tribulation their sins to all those that seek after Him in truth."(8) Therefore He
says, "First tell thou thy sins, that thou mayest be justified." Let there be
first in your hand that prayer full of confession.(9)