THE EPISTLES OF CYPRIAN: EPISTLE I.--TO DONATUS
THE EPISTLES OF CYPRIAN
EPISTLE I.(1)
TO DONATUS.
ARGUMENT.--CYPRIAN HAD PROMISED DONATUS THAT HE WOULD HAVE A DISCOURSE WITH
HIM CONCERNING THINGS DIVINE, AND NOW BEING REMINDED OF HIS PROMISE, HE FULFILS
IT. COMMENDING AT LENGTH THE GRACE OF GOD CONFERRED IN BAPTISM, HE DECLARES HOW
HE HAD BEEN CHANGED THEREBY; AND, FINALLY, POINTING OUT THE ERRORS OF THE
WORLD, HE EXHORTS TO CONTEMPT OF IT AND TO READING AND PRAYER.
1. CAECILIUS CYPRIAN to Donatus sends, greeting. You rightly remind me,
dearest Donatus for I not only remember my promise, but I confess that this is
the appropriate time for its fulfilment, when the vintage festival invites the
mind to unbend in repose, and to enjoy the annual and appointed respite of the
declining year.(2) Moreover, the place is in accord with the season, and the
pleasant aspect of the gardens harmonizes with the gentle breezes of a mild autumn
in soothing and cheering the senses. In such a place as this it is delightful
to pass the day in discourse, and, by the (study of the sacred) parables,(3) to
train the conscience of the breast to the apprehension of the divine precepts.
And that no profane intruder may interrupt our converse, nor any unrestrained
clatter of a noisy household disturb it, let us seek this bower.(4) The
neighbouring thickets ensure us solitude, and the vagrant trailings of the vine
branches creeping in pendent mazes among the reeds that support them have made for us
a porch vines and a leafy shelter. Pleasantly here we clothe our thoughts in
words; and while we gratify our eyes with the agreeable outlook upon trees and
vines, the mind is at once instructed by what we hear, and nourished by what we
see, although at the present time your only pleasure and your only interest is
in our discourse. Despising the pleasures of sight, your eye is now fixed on
me. With your mind as well as your ears you are altogether a listener; and a
listener, too, with an eagerness proportioned to your affection.
2. And yet, of what kind or of what amount is anything that my mind is
likely to communicate to yours? The poor mediocrity of my shallow understanding
produces a very limited harvest, and enriches the soil with no fruitful
deposits. Nevertheless, with such powers as I have, I will set about the matter; for
the subject itself on which I am about to speak will assist me. In courts of
justice, in the public assembly, in political debate, a copious eloquence may be
the glory of a voluble ambition; but in speaking of the Lord God, a chaste
simplicity of expression strives for the conviction of faith rather with the
substance, than with the powers, of eloquence. Therefore accept from me things, not
clever but weighty, words, not decked up to charm a popular audience with
cultivated rhetoric, but simple and fitted by their unvarnished truthfulness for the
proclamation of the divine mercy. Accept what is felt before it is spoken, what
has not been accumulated with tardy painstaking during the lapse of years, but
has been inhaled in one breath of ripening grace.
3. While I was still lying in darkness and gloomy night, wavering hither
and thither, tossed about on the foam of this boastful age, and uncertain of my
wandering steps, knowing nothing of my real life, and remote from truth and
light, I used to regard it as a difficult matter, and especially as difficult in
respect of my character at that time, that a man should be capable of being born
again(5)--a truth which the divine mercy had announced for my salvation,--and
that a man quickened to a new life in the layer of saving water should be able
to put off what he had previously been; and, although retaining all his bodily
structure, should be himself changed in heart and soul. "How," said I, "is such
a conversion possible, that there should be a sudden and rapid divestment of
all which, either innate in us has hardened in the corruption of our material
nature, or acquired by us has become inveterate by long accustomed use? These
things have become deeply and radically engrained within us. When does he learn
thrift who has been used to liberal banquets and sumptuous feasts? And he who has
been glittering in gold and purple, and has been celebrated for his costly
attire, when does he reduce himself to ordinary and simple clothing? One who has
felt the charm of the fasces and of civic honours shrinks from becoming a mere
private and inglorious citizen. The man who is attended by crowds of clients,
and dignified by the numerous association of an officious train, regards it as a
punishment when he is alone. It is inevitable, as it ever has been, that the
love of wine should entice, pride inflate, anger inflame, covetousness disquiet,
cruelty stimulate, ambition delight, lust hasten to ruin, with allurements
that will not let go their hold."
4. These were my frequent thoughts. For as I myself was held in bonds by
the innumerable errors of my previous life, from which I did not believe that I
could by possibility be delivered, so I was disposed to acquiesce in my
clinging vices; and because I despaired of better things, I used to indulge my sins as
if they were actually parts of me, and indigenous to me. But after that, by
the help of the water of new birth, the stain of former years had been washed
away, and a light from above, serene and pure, had been infused into my reconciled
heart,--after that, by the agency of the Spirit breathed from heaven, a second
birth had restored me to a new man;--then, in a wondrous manner, doubtful
things at once began to assure themselves to me, hidden things to be revealed, dark
things to be enlightened, what before had seemed difficult began to suggest a
means of accomplishment, what had been thought impossible, to be capable of
being achieved; so that I was enabled to acknowledge that what previously, being
born of the flesh, had been living in the practice of sins, was of the earth
earthly, but had now begun to be of God, and was animated by the Spirit of
holiness. You yourself assuredly know and recollect as well as I do what was taken
away from us, and what was given to us by that death of evil, and that life of
virtue. You yourself know this without my information. Anything like boasting in
one's own praise is hateful, although we cannot in reality boast but only be
grateful for whatever we do not ascribe to man's virtue but declare to be the
gift of God; so that now we sin not is the beginning of the work of faith,
whereas that we sinned before was the result of human error. All our power is of
God; I say, of God. From Him we have life, from Him we have strength, by power
derived and conceived from Him we do, while yet in this world, foreknow the
indications of things to come. Only let fear be the keeper of innocence, that the
Lord, who of His mercy has flowed(1) into our hearts in the access of celestial
grace, may be kept by righteous submissiveness in the hostelry of a grateful
mind, that the assurance we have gained may not beget carelessness, and so the old
enemy creep upon us again.
5. But if you keep the way of innocence, the way of righteousness, if you
walk with a firm and steady step, if, depending on God with your whole strength
and with your whole heart, you only be what you have begun to be, liberty and
power to do is given you in proportion to the increase of your spiritual grace.
For there is not, as is the case with earthly benefits, any measure or stint
in the dispensing of the heavenly gift. The Spirit freely flowing forth is
restrained by no limits, is checked by no closed barriers within certain bounded
spaces; it flows perpetually, it is exuberant in its affluence. Let our heart only
be athirst, and be ready to receive: in the degree in which we bring to it a
capacious faith, in that measure we draw from it an overflowing grace. Thence
is given power, with modest chastity, with a sound mind, with a simple voice,
with unblemished virtue, that is able to quench the virus of poisons for the
healing of the sick, to purge out the stains of foolish souls by restored health,
to bid peace to those hat are at enmity, repose to the violent, gentleness to
the unruly,--by startling threats to force to avow themselves the impure and
vagrant spirits that have betaken themselves into the bodies of men whom they
purpose to destroy, to drive them with heavy blows to come out of them, to stretch
them out struggling, howling, groaning with increase of constantly renewing
pain, to beat them with scourges, to roast them with fire: the matter is carded on
there, but is not seen; the strokes inflicted are hidden, but the penalty is
manifest. Thus, in respect of what we have already begun to be, the Spirit that
we have received possesses its own liberty of action; while in that we have not
yet changed our body and members, the carnal view is still darkened by the
clouds of this world. How great is this empire of the mind, and what a power it
has, not alone that itself is withdrawn from the mischievous associations of the
world, as one who is purged and pure can suffer no stain of a hostile irruption,
but that it becomes still greater and stronger in its might, so that it can
rule over all the imperious host of the attacking adversary with its sway!
6. But in order that the characteristics of the divine may shine more
brightly by the development of the truth, I will give you light to apprehend it,
the obscurity caused by sin being wiped away. I will draw away the veil from the
darkness of this hidden world. For a brief space conceive yourself to be
transported to one of the loftiest peaks of some inaccessible mountain, thence gaze
on the appearances of things lying below you, and with eyes turned in various
directions look upon the eddies of the billowy world, while you yourself are
removed from earthly contacts,--you will at once begin to feel compassion for the
world, and with self-recollection and increasing gratitude to God, you will
rejoice with all the greater joy that you have escaped it. Consider the roads
blocked up by robbers, the seas beset with pirates, wars scattered all over the
earth with the bloody horror of camps. The whole world is wet with mutual blood;
and murder, which in the case of an individual is admitted to be a crime, is
called a virtue when it is committed wholesale. Impunity is claimed for the wicked
deeds, not on the plea that they are guiltless, but because the cruelty is
perpetrated on a grand scale.
7. And now, if you turn your eyes and your regards to the cities
themselves, you will behold a concourse more fraught with sadness than any solitude. The
gladiatorial games are prepared, that blood may gladden the lust of cruel
eyes. The body is fed up with stronger food, and the vigorous mass of limbs is
enriched with brawn and muscle, that the wretch fattened for punishment may die a
harder death. Man is slaughtered that man may be gratified, and the skill that
is best able to kill is an exercise and an art. Crime is not only committed, but
it is taught. What can be said more inhuman,--what more repulsive? Training is
undergone to acquire the power to murder, and the achievement of murder is its
glory. What state of things, I pray you, can that be, and what can it be like,
in which men, whom none have condemned, offer themselves to the wild
beasts--men of ripe age, of sufficiently beautiful person, clad in costly garments?
Living men, they are adorned for a voluntary death; wretched men, they boast of
their own miseries. They fight with beasts, not for their crime, but for their
madness. Fathers look on their own sons; a brother is in the arena, and his sister
is hard by; and although a grander display of pomp increases the price of the
exhibition, yet, oh shame! even the mother will pay the increase in order that
she may be present at her own miseries. And in looking upon scenes so frightful
and so impious and so deadly, they do not seem to be aware that they are
parricides with their eyes.
8. Hence turn your looks to the abominations, not less to be deplored, of
another kind of spectacle.(1) In the theatres also you will behold what may
well cause you grief and shame. It is the tragic buskin which relates in verse the
crimes of ancient days. The old horrors(2) of parricide and incest are
unfolded in action calculated to express the image of the truth, so that, as the ages
pass by, any crime that was formerly committed may not be forgotten. Each
generation is reminded by what it hears, that whatever has once been done may be
done again. Crimes never die out by the lapse of ages; wickedness is never
abolished by process of time; impiety is never buried in oblivion. Things which have
now ceased to be actual deeds of vice become examples. In the mimes, moreover,
by the teaching of infamies, the spectator is attracted either to reconsider
what he may have done in secret, or to hear what he may do. Adultery is learnt
while it is seen; and while the mischief having public authority panders to vices,
the matron, who perchance had gone to the spectacle a modest woman, returns
from it immodest. Still further, what a degradation of morals it is, what a
stimulus to abominable deeds, what food for vice, to be polluted by histrionic
gestures, against the covenant and law of one's birth, to gaze in detail upon the
endurance of incestuous abominations! Men are emasculated, and all the pride and
vigour of their sex is effeminated in the disgrace of their enervated body; and
he is most pleasing there who has most completely broken down the man into the
woman. He grows into praise by virtue of his crime; and the more he is
degraded, the more skilful he is considered to be. Such a one is looked upon--oh
shame! and looked upon with pleasure. And what cannot such a creature suggest? He
inflames the senses, he flatters the affections, he drives out the more vigorous
conscience of a virtuous breast; nor is there wanting authority for the
enticing abomination, that the mischief may creep upon people with a less perceptible
approach. They picture Venus immodest, Mars adulterous; and that Jupiter of
theirs not more supreme in dominion than in vice, inflamed with earthly love in
the midst of his own thunders, now growing white in the feathers of a swan, now
pouring down in a golden shower, now breaking forth by the help of birds to
violate the purity of boys. And now put the question, Can he who looks upon such
things be healthyminded or modest? Men imitate the gods whom they adore, and to
such miserable beings their crimes become their religion.(3)
9. Oh, if placed on that lofty watch-tower you could gaze into the secret
places--if you could open the closed doors of sleeping chambers, and recall
their dark recesses to the perception of sight,--you would behold things done by
immodest persons which no chaste eye could look upon; you would see what even to
see is a crime; you would see what people embruted with the madness of vice
deny that they have done, and yet hasten to do,--men with frenzied lusts rushing
upon men, doing things which afford no gratification even to those who do them.
I am deceived if the man who is guilty of such things as these does not accuse
others of them. The depraved maligns the depraved, and thinks that he himself,
though conscious of the guilt, has escaped, as if consciousness were not a
sufficient condemnation. The same people who are accusers in public are criminals
in private, condemning themselves at the same time as they condemn the
culprits; they denounce abroad what they commit at home, willingly doing what, when
they have done, they accuse,--a daring which assuredly is fitly mated with vice,
and an impudence quite in accordance with shameless people. And I beg you not to
wonder at the things that persons of this kind speak: the offence of their
mouths in words is the least of which they are guilty.(1)
10. But after considering the public roads full of pitfalls, after battles
of many kinds scattered abroad over the whole world, after exhibitions either
bloody or infamous, after the abominations of lust, whether exposed for sale in
brothels or hidden within the domestic walls --abominations, the audacity of
which is greater in proportion to the secrecy of the crime,--possibly you may
think that the Forum at least is free from such things, that it is neither
exposed to exasperating wrongs, nor polluted by the association of criminals. Then
turn your gaze in that direction: there you will discover things more odious than
ever, so that thence you will be more desirous of turning away your eyes,
although the laws are carved on twelve tables, and the statutes are publicly
prescribed on brazen tablets. Yet wrong is done in the midst of the laws themselves;
wickedness is committed in the very face of the statutes; innocence is not
preserved even in the place where it is defended. By turns the rancour of
disputants rages; and when peace is broken among the togas,(2) the Forum echoes with the
madness of strife. There close at hand is the spear and the sword, and the
executioner also; there is the claw that tears, the rack that stretches, the fire
that burns up,--more tortures for one poor human body than it has limbs. And in
such cases who is there to help? One's patron? He makes a feint, and deceives.
The judge? But he sells his sentence. He who sits to avenge crimes commits
them, and the judge becomes the culprit, in order that the accused may perish
innocently. Crimes are everywhere common; and everywhere in the multiform character
of sin, the pernicious poison acts by means of degraded minds. One man forges
a will, another by a capital fraud makes a false deposition; on the one hand,
children are cheated of their inheritances, on the other, strangers are endowed
with their estates. The opponent makes his charge, the false accuser attacks,
the witness defames, on all sides the venal impudence of hired voices sets about
the falsification of charges, while in the meantime the guilty do not even
perish with the innocent. There is no fear about the laws; no concern for either
inquisitor or judge; when the sentence can be bought off for money, it is not
cared for. It is a crime now among the guilty to be innocent; whoever does not
imitate the wicked is an offence to them. The laws have come to terms with
crimes, and whatever is public has begun to be allowed. What can be the modesty, what
can be the integrity, that prevails there, when there are none to condemn the
wicked, and one only meets with those who ought themselves to be condemned?
11. But that we may not perchance appear as if we were picking out extreme
cases, and with the view of disparagement were seeking to attract your
attention to those things whereof the sad and revolting view may offend the gaze of a
better conscience, I will now direct you to such things as the world in its
ignorance accounts good. Among these also you will behold things that will shock
you. In respect of what you regard as honours, of what you consider the fasces,
what you count affluence in riches, what you think power in the camp, the glory
of the purple in the magisterial office, the power of licence in the chief
command,--there is hidden the virus of ensnaring mischief, and an appearance of
smiling wickedness, joyous indeed, but the treacherous deception of hidden
calamity. Just as some poison, in which the flavour having been medicated with
sweetness, craftily mingled in its deadly juices, seems, when taken, to be an
ordinary draught, but when it is drunk up, the destruction that you have swallowed
assails you. You see, forsooth, that man distinguished by his brilliant dress,
glittering, as he thinks, in his purple. Yet with what baseness has he purchased
this glitter! What contempts of the proud has he had first to submit to! what
haughty thresholds has he, as an early courtier, besieged! How many scornful
footsteps of arrogant great men has he had to precede, thronged in the crowd of
clients, that by and by a similar procession might attend and precede him with
salutations,--a train waiting not upon his person, but upon his power! for he has
no claim to be regarded for his character, but for his fasces. Of these,
finally, you may see the degrading end, when the time-serving sycophant has departed,
and the hanger-on, deserting them, has defiled the exposed side of the man who
has retired into a private condition.(1) It is then that the mischiefs done to
the squandered family-estate smite upon the conscience, then the losses that
have exhausted the fortune are known,--expenses by which the favour of the
populace was bought, and the people's breath asked for with fickle and empty
entreaties. Assuredly, it was a vain and foolish boastfulness to have desired to set
forth in the gratification of a disappointing spectacle, what the people would
not receive, and what would ruin the magistrates.
12. But those, moreover, whom you consider rich, who add forests to
forests, and who, excluding the poor from their neighbourhood, stretch out their
fields far and wide into space without any limits, who possess immense heaps of
silver and gold and mighty sums of money, either in built-up heaps or in buried
stores,--even in the midst of their riches those are torn to pieces by the
anxiety of vague thought, lest the robber should spoil, lest the murderer should
attack, test the envy of some wealthier neighbour should become hostile, and harass
them with malicious lawsuits. Such a one enjoys no security either in his food
or in his sleep. In the midst of the banquet he sighs, although he drinks from
a jewelled goblet; and when his luxurious bed has enfolded his body, languid
with feasting, in its yielding bosom, he lies wakeful in the midst of the down;
nor does he perceive, poor wretch, that these things are merely gilded
torments, that he is held in bondage by his gold, and that he is the slave of his
luxury and wealth rather than their master. And oh, the odious blindness of
perception, and the deep darkness of senseless greed! although he might disburden
himself and get rid of the load, he rather continues to brood over his vexing
wealth,--he goes on obstinately clinging to his tormenting hoards. From him there is
no liberality to dependents, no communication to the poor. And yet such people
call that their own money, which they guard with jealous labour, shut up at
home as if it were another's, and from which they derive no benefit either for
their friends, for their children, or, in fine, for themselves. Their possession
amounts to this only, that they can keep others from possessing it; and oh,
what a marvellous perversion of names! they call those things goods, which they
absolutely put to none but bad uses.
13. Or think you that even those are secure,--that those at least are safe
with some stable permanence among the chaplets of honour and vast wealth,
whom, in the glitter of royal palaces, the safeguard of watchful arms surrounds?
They have greater fear than others. A man is constrained to dread no less than he
is dreaded. Exaltation exacts its penalties equally from the more powerful,
although he may be hedged in with bands of satellites, and may guard his person
with the enclosure and protection of a numerous retinue. Even as he does not
allow his inferiors to feel security, it is inevitable that he himself should want
the sense of security. The power of those whom power makes terrible to others,
is, first of all, terrible to themselves. It smiles to rage, it cajoles to
deceive, it entices to slay, it lifts up to cast down. With a certain usury of
mischief, the greater the height of dignity and honours attained, the greater is
the interest of penalty required.
14. Hence, then, the one peaceful and trustworthy tranquillity, the one
solid and firm and constant security, is this, for a man to withdraw from these
eddies of a distracting world, and, anchored on the ground of the harbour of
salvation, to lift his eyes from earth to heaven; and having been admitted to the
gift of God, and being already very near to his God in mind, he may boast, that
whatever in human affairs others esteem lofty and grand, lies altogether
beneath his consciousness. He who is actually greater than the world can crave
nothing, can desire nothing, from the world. How stable, how free from all shocks is
that safeguard; how heavenly the protection in its perennial blessings,--to be
loosed from the snares of this entangling world, and to be purged from earthly
dregs, and fitted for the light of eternal immortality! He will see what
crafty mischief of the foe that previously attacked us has been in progress against
us. We are constrained to have more love for what we shall be, by being allowed
to know and to condemn what we were. Neither for this purpose is it necessary
to pay a price either in the way of bribery or of labour; so that man's
elevation or dignity or power should be begotten in him with elaborate effort; but it
is a gratuitous gift from God, and it is accessible to all. As the sun shines
spontaneously, as the day gives light, as the fountain flows, as the shower
yields moisture, so does the heavenly Spirit infuse itself into us. When the soul,
in its gaze into heaven, has recognised its Author, it rises higher than the
sun, and far transcends all this earthly power, and begins to be that which it
believes itself to be.(2)
15. Do you, however, whom the celestial warfare has enlisted in the
spiritual camp, only observe a discipline uncorrupted and chastened in the virtues of
religion. Be constant as well in prayer as in reading; now speak with God, now
let God speak with you, let Him instruct you in His precepts, let Him direct
you. Whom He has made rich, none shall make poor; for, in fact, there can be no
poverty to him whose breast has once been supplied with heavenly food. Ceilings
enriched with gold, and houses adorned with mosaics of costly marble, will
seem mean to you, now when you know that it is you yourself who are rather to be
perfected, you who are rather to be adorned, and that that dwelling in which God
has dwelt as in a temple, in which the Holy Spirit has begun to make His
abode, is of more importance than all others. Let us embellish this house with the
colours of innocence, let us enlighten it with the light of justice: this will
never fall into decay with the wear of age, nor shall it be defiled by the
tarnishing of the colours of its walls, nor of its gold. Whatever is artificially
beautified is perishing; and such things as contain not the reality of possession
afford no abiding assurance to their possessors. But this remains in a beauty
perpetually vivid, in perfect honour, in permanent splendour. It can neither
decay nor be destroyed; it can only be fashioned into greater perfection when the
body returns to it.
16. These things, dearest Donatus, briefly for the present. For although
what you profitably hear delights your patience, indulgent in its goodness, your
well-balanced mind, and your assured faith--and nothing is so pleasant to your
ears as what is pleasant to you in God,--yet, as we are associated as
neighbours, and are likely to talk together frequently, we ought to have some
moderation in our conversation; and since this is a holiday rest, and a time of
leisure, whatever remains of the day, now that the sun is sloping towards the
evening,(1) let us spend it in gladness, nor let even the hour of repast be without
heavenly grace. Let the temperate meal resound with psalms;(2) and as your
memory is tenacious and your voice musical, undertake this office, as is your
wont. You will provide a better entertainment for your dearest friends, if,
while we have something spiritual to listen to, the sweetness of religious music
charm our ears.