EPISTLE XXXIX.--CYPRIAN TO THE PEOPLE, CONCERNING FIVE SCHISMATIC PRESBYTERS
OF THE FACTION OF FELICISSIMUS
EPISTLE XXXIX.(7)
TO THE PEOPLE, CONCERNING FIVE SCHISMATIC PRESBYTERS OF THE FACTION OF
FELICISSIMUS.
ARGUMENT.--IN LIKE MANNER, AS IN THE EPISTLE BUT ONE BEFORE THIS, CYPRIAN TOLD
THE CLERGY, SO NOW HE TELLS THE PEOPLE, THAT FELICISSIMUS IS TO BE AVOIDED,
TOGETHER WITH FIVE PRESBYTERS OF HIS FACTION, WHO NOT ONLY GRANTED PEACE TO THE
LAPSED WITHOUT ANY DISCRIMINATION, BUT STIRRED UP SEDITION AND SCHISM AGAINST
HIMSELF.
1. Cyprian to the whole people, greeting. Although, dearest brethren,
Virtius,(8) a most faithful and upright presbyter, and also Rogatianus and
Numidicus, presbyters, confessors, and illustrious by the glory of the divine
condescension, and also the deacons, good men and devoted to the ecclesiastical
administration in all its duties, with the other ministers, afford you the full
attention of their presence, and do not cease to confirm individuals by their
assiduous exhortations, and, moreover, to govern and reform the minds of the lapsed by
their wholesome counsels, yet, as much as I can, I admonish, and as I can, I
visit you with my letters. By my letters I say, dearest brethren; for the
malignity and treachery of certain of the presbyters has accomplished this, that I
should not be allowed to come to you before Easter-day; since mindful of their
conspiracy, and retaining that ancient venom against my episcopate, that is,
against your suffrage and God's judgment, they renew their old attack upon me, and
once more begin their sacrilegious machinations with their accustomed craft.
And, indeed, of God's providence, neither by our wish nor desire, nay, although we
were forgiving and silent, they have suffered the punishment which they had
deserved; so that, not cast out by us, they of their own accord have cast
themselves out. They themselves, before their own conscience, have passed sentence on
themselves in accordance with your suffrages and the divine. These conspirators
and evil men of their own accord have driven themselves from the Church.
2. Now it has appeared whence came the faction of Felicissimus; on what
root and by what strength it stood. These men supplied in former times
encouragements and exhortations to certain confessors, not to agree with their bishop,
not to maintain the ecclesiastical discipline with faith and quietness according
to the Lord's precepts, not to keep the glory of their confession with an
uncorrupt and unspotted conversation. And lest it should be too little to have
corrupted the minds of certain confessors, and to have wished to arm a portion of
our broken fraternity against God's priesthood, they have now turned their
attention with their envenomed deceitfulness to the ruin of the lapsed, to turn away
from the healing of their wound the sick and the wounded, and those who, by the
misfortune of their fall, are less fit and less sturdy to take stronger
counsel; and invite them, by the falsehood of a fallacious peace, to a fatal
rashness, leaving off prayers and supplications, whereby, with long and continual
satisfaction, the Lord is to be appeased.
3. But I pray you, brethren, watch against the snares of the devil, and,
taking care for your own salvation, be diligently on your guard against this
death-bearing fallacy. This is another persecution and another temptation. Those
five presbyters are none other than the five leaders who were lately associated
with the magistrates in an edict, that they might overthrow our faith, that
they might turn away the feeble hearts of the brethren to their deadly nets by the
prevarication of the truth. Now the same scheme, the same overturning, is
again brought about by the five presbyters, linked with Felicissimus, to the
destruction of salvation, that God should not be besought, and that he who has denied
Christ should not appeal for mercy to the same Christ whom he had denied; that
after the fault of the crime, repentance also should be taken away; and that
the Lord should not be appeased through bishops and priests, but that the Lord's
priests being. forsaken, a new tradition of a sacrilegious appointment should
arise, contrary to the evangelical discipline. And although it was once
arranged as well by us as by the confessors and the city(1) clergy, and moreover by
all the bishops appointed either in our province or beyond the sea,(2) that no
novelty should be introduced in respect of the case of the lapsed unless we all
assembled into one place, and our counsels being compared, should decide upon a
moderate sentence, tempered alike with discipline and with mercy;--against this
our counsel they have rebelled, and all priestly authority and power is
destroyed by factious conspiracies.
4. What sufferings do I now endure, dearest brethren, that I myself am not
able to come to you at the present juncture, that I myself cannot approach you
each one, that I myself cannot exhort you according to the teaching of the
Lord and of His Gospel! An exile of, now, two years(3) was not sufficient, and a
mournful separation from you, from your countenance, and from your
sight,--continual grief and lamentation, which, in my loneliness without you, breaks me to
pieces with my constant mourning, nor my tears flowing day and night, that there
is not even an opportunity for the priest, whom you made with so much love and
eagerness, to greet you, nor to be enfolded in your embraces. This greater
grief is added to my worn spirit, that in the midst of so much solicitude and
necessity I am not able myself to hasten to you, since, by the threats and by the
snares of perfidious men, we are anxious that on our coming a greater tumult may
not arise there; and so, although the bishop ought to be careful for peace and
tranquillity in all things, he himself should seem to have afforded material
for sedition, and to have embittered persecution anew. Hence, however, beloved
brethren, I not only admonish but counsel you, not rashly to trust to
mischievous words, nor to yield an easy consent to deceitful sayings, nor to take
darkness for light, night for day, hunger for food, thirst for drink, poison for
medicine, death for safety. Let not the age nor the authority deceive you of those
who, answering to the ancient wickedness of the two elders;(4) as they attempted
to corrupt and violate the chaste Susannah,(5) are thus also attempting, with
their adulterous doctrines, to corrupt the chastity of the Church and violate
the truth of the Gospel.
5. The Lord cries aloud, saying, "Hearken not unto the words of the false
prophets, for the visions of their own hearts deceive them. They speak, but not
out of the mouth of the Lord. They say to them that despise the word of the
Lord, Ye shall have peace."(1) They are now offering peace who have not peace
themselves. They are promising to bring back and recall the lapsed into the
Church, who themselves have departed from the Church. There is one God, and Christ is
one, and there is one Church, and one chair founded upon the rock by the word
of the Lord.(2) Another altar cannot be constituted nor a new priesthood be
made, except the one altar and the one priesthood. Whosoever gathereth elsewhere,
scattereth. Whatsoever is appointed by human madness, so that the divine
disposition is violated, is adulterous, is impious, is sacrilegious. Depart far from
the contagion of men of this kind. and flee from their words, avoiding them as
a cancer and a plague, as the Lord warns you and says, "They are blind leaders
of the blind. But if the blind lead the blind, they shall both fall into the
ditch."(3) They intercept your prayers, which you pour forth with us to God day
and night, to appease Him with a righteous satisfaction. They intercept your
tears with which you wash away the guilt of the sin you have committed; they
intercept the peace which you truly and faithfully ask from the mercy of the Lord;
and they do not know that it is written, "And that prophet, or that dreamer of
dreams, that hath spoken to turn you away from the Lord your God, shall be put
to death."(4) Let no one, beloved brethren, make you to err from the ways of the
Lord; let no one snatch you, Christians, from the Gospel of Christ; let no one
take sons of the Church away from the Church; let them perish alone for
themselves who have wished to perish; let them remain outside the Church alone who
have departed from the Church; let them anoia be without bishops who have
rebelled against bishops; let them alone undergo the penalties of their conspiracies
who formerly, according to your votes, and now according to God's judgment, have
deserved to undergo the sentence of their own conspiracy and malignity.
6. The Lord warns us in His Gospel, saying, "Ye reject the commandment of
God, that ye may establish your own tradition."(5) Let them who reject the
commandment of God and endeavour to keep their own tradition be bravely and firmly
rejected by you; let one downfall be sufficient for the lapsed; let no one by
his fraud hurl down those who wish to rise; let no one cast down more deeply and
depress those who are down, on whose behalf we pray that they may be raised up
by God's hand and arm; let no one turn away from all hope of safety those who
are half alive and entreating that they may receive their former health; let no
one extinguish every light of the way of salvation to those that are wavering
in the darkness of their lapse. The apostle instructs us, saying, "If any man
teach otherwise, and consent not to the wholesome words of our Lord Jesus Christ
and His doctrine, he is lifted up with foolishness: from such withdraw
thyself."(6) And again he says, "Let no man deceive you with vain words; for because
of these things cometh the wrath of God upon the children of disobedience. Be
not ye therefore partakers with them."(7) There is no reason that you should be
deceived with vain words, and begin to be partakers of their depravity. Depart
from such, I entreat you, and acquiesce in our counsels, who daily pour out for
you continual prayers to the Lord, who desire that you should be recalled to
the Church by the clemency of the Lord, who pray for the fullest peace from God,
first for the mother, and then for her children. Join also your petitions and
prayers with our prayers and petitions; mingle your tears with our wailings.
Avoid the wolves who separate the sheep from the shepherd; avoid the envenomed
tongue of the devil, who from the beginning of the world, always deceitful and
lying, lies that he may deceive, cajoles that he may injure, promises good that he
may give evil, promises life that he may put to death. Now also his words are
evident, and his poisons are plain. He promises peace, in order that peace may
not possibly be attained; he promises salvation, that he who has sinned may not
come to salvation; he promises a Church, when he so contrives that he who
believes him may utterly perish apart from the Church.
7. It is now the occasion, dearly beloved brethren, both for you who stand
fast to persevere bravely, and to maintain your glorious stability, which you
kept in persecution with a continual firmness.; and if any of you by the
circumvention of the adversary have fallen, that in this second temptation you should
faithfully take counsel for your hope and your peace; and in order that the
Lord may pardon you, that you should not depart from the priests of the Lord,
since it is written, "And the man that will do presumptuously, and will not
hearken unto the priest or unto the judge that shall be in those days, even that man
shall die."(1) Of this persecution this is the latest and final temptation,
which itself also, by the Lord's protection, shall quickly pass away; so that I
shall be again presented to you after Easter-day with my colleagues, who, being
present, we shall be able as well to arrange as to complete the matters which
require to be done according to your judgment and to the general advice of all of
us as it has been decided before.(2) But if anybody, refusing to repent and to
make satisfaction to God, shall yield to the party of Felicissimus and his
satellites, and shall join himself to the heretical faction, let him know that he
cannot afterwards return to the Church and communicate with the bishops and the
people of Christ. I bid you, dearest brethren, ever heartily farewell, and
that you plead with me in continual prayer that the mercy of God may be entreated.