EPISTLES XXXII, XXXIII & XXXIV.--CYPRIAN TO THE CLERGY AND PEOPLE, ABOUT THE
ORDINATIONS OF AURELIUS, CELERINUS AND NUMIDICUS
EPISTLE XXXII.(11)
TO THE CLERGY AND PEOPLE, ABOUT THE ORDINATION OF AURELIUS AS A READER.
ARGUMENT.--CYPRIAN TELLS THE CLERGY AND PEOPLE THAT AURELIUS THE CONFESSOR HAS
BEEN ORDAINED A READER BY HIM, AND COMMENDS, BY THE WAY, THE CONSTANCY OF HIS
VIRTUE AND HIS MIND, WHEREBY HE WAS EVEN DESERVING OF A HIGHER DEGREE IN THE
CHURCH.
1. Cyprian to the elders and deacons, and to the whole people, greeting.
In ordinations of the clergy, beloved brethren, we usually consult you
beforehand, and weigh the character and deserts of individuals, with the general
advice.(1) But human testimonies must not be waited for when the divine approval
precedes. Aurelius, our brother, an illustrious youth, already approved by the
Lord, and dear to God, in years still very young, but, in the praise of virtue and
of faith, advanced; inferior in the natural abilities of his age, but superior
in the honour he has merited,--has contended here in a double conflict, having
twice confessed and twice been glorious in the victory of his confession, both
when he conquered in the course and was banished, and when at length he fought
in a severer conflict, he was triumphant and victorious in the battle of
suffering. As often as the adversary wished to call forth the servants of God, so
often this prompt and brave soldier both fought and conquered. It had been a
slight matter, previously to have engaged under the eyes of a few when he was
banished; he deserved also in the forum to engage with a more illustrious virtue so
that, after overcoming the magistrates, he might also triumph over the
proconsul, and, after exile, might vanquish tortures also. Nor can I discover what I
ought to speak most of in him,--the glory of his wounds or the modesty of his
character; that he is distinguished by the honour of his virtue, or praiseworthy
for the admirableness of his modesty. He is both so excellent in dignity and so
lowly in humility, that it seems that he is divinely reserved as one who should
be an example to the rest for ecclesiastical discipline, of the way in which
the servants of God should in confession conquer by their courage, and, after
confession, be conspicuous for their character.
2. Such a one, to be estimated not by his years but by his deserts,
merited higher degrees of clerical ordination and larger increase. But, in the
meantime, I judged it well, that he should begin with the office of reading; because
nothing is more suitable for the voice which has confessed the Lord in a
glorious utterance, than to sound Him forth in the solemn repetition of the divine
lessons; than, after the sublime words which spoke out the witness of Christ, to
read the Gospel of Christ whence martyrs are made; to come to the desk after
the scaffold; there to have been conspicuous to the multitude of the Gentiles,
here to be beheld by the brethren; there to have been heard with the wonder of
the surrounding people, here to be heard with the joy of the brotherhood. Know,
then, most beloved brethren, that this man has been ordained by me and by my
colleagues who were then present. I know that you will both gladly welcome these
tidings, and that you desire that as many such as possible may be ordained in
our church. And since joy is always hasty, and gladness can bear no delay, he
reads on the Lord's day, in the meantime, for me; that is, he has made a beginning
of peace, by solemnly entering on his office of a reader.(2) Do you frequently
be urgent in supplications, and assist my prayers by yours, that the Lord's
mercy favouring us may soon restore both the priest(3) safe to his people, and
the martyr for a reader with the priest. I bid you, beloved brethren in God the
Father, and in Jesus Christ, ever heartily farewell.
EPISTLE XXXIII.(4)
TO THE CLERGY AND PEOPLE, ABOUT THE ORDINATION OF CELERINUS AS READER.
ARGUMENT.--THIS LETTER IS ABOUT THE SAME IN PURPORT WITH THE PRECEDING, EXCEPT
THAT HE LARGELY COMMENDS THE CONSTANCY OF CELERINUS IN HIS CONFESSION OF THE
FAITH. MOREOVER, THAT BOTH OF THESE LETTERS WERE WRITTEN DURING HIS RETREAT, IS
SUFFICIENTLY INDICATED BY THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CONTEXT.
1. Cyprian to the presbyters and deacons, and to the whole people, his
brethren in the Lord, greeting. The divine benefits, beloved brethren, should be
acknowledged and embraced, wherewith the Lord has condescended to embellish and
illustrate His Church in our times by granting a respite to His good confessors
and His glorious martyrs, that they who had grandly confessed Christ should
afterwards adorn Christ's clergy in ecclesiastical ministries. Exult, therefore,
and rejoice with me on receiving my letter, wherein I and my colleagues who
were then present mention to you Celerinus, our brother, glorious alike for his
courage and his character, as added to our clergy, not by human recommendation,
but by divine condescension; who, when he hesitated to yield to the Church, was
constrained by her own admonition and exhortation, in a vision by night, not to
refuse our persuasions; and she had more power, and constrained him, because
it was not right, nor was it becoming, that he should be without ecclesiastical
honour, whom the Lord honoured with the dignity of heavenly glory.(5)
2. This man was the first in the struggle of our days; he was the leader
among Christ's soldiers; he, in the midst of the burning beginnings of the
persecution, engaged with the very chief and author of the disturbance, in
conquering with invincible firmness the adversary of his own conflict.(1) He made a way
for others to conquer; a victor with no small amount of wounds, but triumphant
by a miracle, with the long-abiding and permanent penalties of a tedious
conflict. For nineteen days, shut up in the close guard of a dungeon, he was racked
and in irons; but although his body was laid in chains, his spirit remained free
and at liberty. His flesh wasted away by the long endurance of hunger and
thirst; but God fed his soul, that lived in faith and virtue, with spiritual
nourishments. He lay in punishments, the stronger for his punishments; imprisoned,
greater than those that imprisoned him; lying prostrate, but loftier than those
who stood; as bound, and firmer titan the links which bound him; judged, and
more sublime than those who judged him; and although his feet were bound on the
rack, yet the serpent was trodden on and ground down and vanquished. In his
glorious body shine the bright evidences of his wounds; their manifest traces show
forth, and appear on the man's sinews and limbs, worn out with tedious wasting
away.(2) Great things are they--marvelIous things are they--which the
brotherhood may hear of his virtues and of his praises. And should any one appear like
Thomas, who has little faith in what he hears, the faith of the eyes is not
wanting, so that what one hears he may also see. In the servant of God, the glory of
the wounds made the victory; the memory of the scars preserves that glory.
3. Nor is that kind of title to glories in the case of Celerinus, our
beloved, an unfamiliar and novel thing. He is advancing in the footsteps of his
kindred; he rivals his parents and relations in equal honours of divine
condescension. His grandmother, Celerina, was some time since crowned with martyrdom.
Moreover, his paternal and maternal uncles, Laurentius and Egnatius, who
themselves also were once warring in the camps of the world, but were true and spiritual
soldiers of God, casting down the devil by the confession of Christ, merited
palms and crowns from the Lord by their illustrious passion. We always offer
sacrifices for them,(3) as you remember, as often as we celebrate the passions and
days of the martyrs in the annual commemoration. Nor could he, therefore, be
degenerate and inferior whom this family dignity and a generous nobility
provoked, by domestic examples of virtue and faith. But if in a worldly family it is a
matter of heraldry and of praise to be a patrician, of bow much greater
praise and honour is it to become of noble rank in the celestial heraldry! I cannot
tell whom I should call more blessed,--whether those ancestors, for a posterity
so illustrious, or him, for an origin so glorious. So equally between them
does the divine condescension flow, and pass to and fro, that, just as the dignity
of their offspring brightens their crown, so the sublimity of his ancestry
illuminates his glory.
4. When this man, beloved brethren, came to us with such condescension of
the Lord, illustrious by the testimony and wonder of the very man who had
persecuted him, what else behoved to be done except that he should be placed on the
pulpit,(4) that is, on the tribunal of the Church; that, resting on the
loftiness of a higher station, and conspicuous to the whole people for the brightness
of his honour, he should read the precepts and Gospel of the Lord, which he so
bravely and faithfully follows? Let the voice that has confessed the Lord daily
be heard in those things which the Lord spoke. Let it be seen whether there is
any further degree to which he can be advanced in the Church. There is nothing
in which a confessor can do more good to the brethren than that, while the
reading of the Gospel is heard from his lips, every one who hears should imitate
the faith of the reader. He should have been associated with Aurelius in
reading; with whom, moreover, he was associated in the alliance of divine honour;
with whom, in all the insignia of virtue and praise, he had been united. Equal
both, and each like to the other, in proportion as they were sublime in glory, in
that proportion they were humble in modesty. As they were lifted up by divine
condescension, so they were lowly in their own peacefulness and tranquillity,
and equally affording examples to every one of virtues and character, and fitted
both for conflict and for peace; praiseworthy in the former for strength, in
the latter for modesty.
5. In such servants the Lord rejoices; in confessors of this kind He
glories,--whose way and conversation is so advantageous to the announcement of their
glory, that it affords to others a teaching of discipline. For this purpose
Christ has willed them to remain long here in the Church; for this purpose He has
kept them safe, snatched from the midst of death,--a kind of resurrection, so
to speak, being wrought on their behalf; so that, while nothing is seen by the
brethren loftier in honour, nothing more lowly in humility, the way of life of
the brotherhood s may accompany these same persons. Know, then, that these for
the present are appointed readers, because it was fitting that the candle
should be placed in a candlestick, whence it may give light to all, and that their
glorious countenance should be established in a higher place, where, beheld by
all the surrounding brotherhood, they may give an incitement of glory to the
beholders. But know that I have already purposed the honour of the presbytery for
them, that so they may be honoured with the same presents as the presbyters,
and may share the monthly divisions(1) in equalled quantities, to sit with us
hereafter in their advanced and strengthened years; although in nothing can he
seem to be inferior in the qualities of age who has consummated his age by the
dignity of his glory. I bid you, brethren, beloved and earnestly longed-for, ever
heartily farewell.
EPISTLE XXXIV.(2)
TO THE SAME, ABOUT THE ORDINATION OF NUMIDICUS AS PRESBYTER.
ARGUMENT.--CYPRIAN TELLS THE CLERGY AND PEOPLE THAT NUMIDICUS HAS BEEN
ORDAINED BY HIM PRESBYTER; AND BRIEFLY COMMENDS HIS WORTH.
Cyprian to the presbyters and deacons, and to the whole people, his
brethren, very dear and longed-for, greeting. That which belongs, dear-est brethren,
both to the common joy and to the greatest glory of our Church ought to be told
to you; for you must know that I have been admonished and instructed by divine
condescension, that Numidicus the presbyter should be appointed in the number
of Carthaginian presbyters, and should sit with us among the clergy,--a man
illustrious by the brightest light of confession, exalted in the honour both of
virtue and of faith; who by his exhortation sent before himself an abundant
number of martyrs, slain by stones and by the flames, and who beheld with joy his
wife abiding by his side, burned (I should rather say, preserved) together with
the rest. He himself, half consumed, overwhelmed with stones, and left for
dead,--when afterwards his daughter, with the anxious consideration of affection,
sought for the corpse of her father,--was found half dead, was drawn out and
revived, and remained unwillingly(3) from among the companions whom he himself had
sent before. But the reason of his remaining behind, as we see, was this: that
the Lord might add him to our clergy, and might adorn with glorious priests the
number of our presbyters that had been desolated by the lapse of some.(4) And
when God permits, he shall be advanced to a larger office in his region, when,
by the Lord's protection, we have come into your presence once more. In the
meantime, let what is revealed be done, that we receive this gift of God with
thanksgiving, hoping from the Lord's mercy more ornaments of the same kind, that so
the strength of His Church being renewed, He may make men so meek and lowly to
flourish in the honour of our assembly. I bid you, brethren, very dear and
longed-for, ever heartily farewell.