THE EPISTLES OF CYPRIAN: EPISTLE XV.--TO MOYSES AND MAXIMUS, AND THE REST OF
THE CONFESSORS
EPISTLE XV.(2)
TO MOYSES AND MAXIMUS, AND THE REST OF THE CONFESSORS.
ARGUMENT.--THE BURDEN OF THIS LETTER IS GIVEN IN EPISTLE XXXI. BELOW, WHERE
THE ROMAN CLERGY SAY: "ON WHICH SUBJECT WE OWE YOU, AND GIVE YOU OUR DEEPEST AND
ABUNDANT THANKS, THAT YOU THREW LIGHT INTO THE GLOOM OF THEIR PRISON BY YOUR
LETTERS."(3)
1. Cyprian to Moyses and Maximus, the presbyters and the other confessors,
his brethren, greeting. Celerinus, a companion both of your faith and virtue,
and God's soldier in glorious engagements, has come to me, beloved brethren,
and represented all of you, as well as each individual, forcibly to my affection.
I beheld in him, when he came, the whole of you; and when he spoke sweetly and
often of your love to me, in his words I heard you. I rejoice very greatly
when such things are brought to me from you by such men as he. In a certain manner
I am also there with you in prison. I think that I who am thus bound to your
hearts, enjoy with you the delights of the divine approval. Your individual love
associates me with your honour; the Spirit does not allow our love to be
separated. Confession(4) shuts you up in prison; affection shuts me up there. And I
indeed, remembering you day and night, both when in the sacrifices I offer
prayer with many, and when in retirement I pray with private petition, beseech of
the Lord a full acknowledgment to your crowns and your praises. But my poor
ability is too weak to recompense you; you give more when you remember me in
prayer, since, already breathing only celestial things, and meditating only divine
things, you ascend to loftier heights, even by the delay of your suffering; and
by the long lapse of time, are not wasting, but increasing your glory. A first
and single confession makes blessed; you confess as often as, when asked to
retire from prison, you prefer the prison with faith and virtue; your praises are
as numerous as the days; as the months roll onward, ever your merits increase.
He conquers once who suffers at once; but he who continues always battling with
punishments, and is not overcome with suffering, is daily crowned.
2. Now, therefore, let magistrates and consuls or proconsuls go by; let
them glory in the ensigns of their yearly dignity, and in their twelve fusees.
Behold, the heavenly dignity in you is sealed by the brightness of a year's
honour, and already, in the continuance of its victorious glory, has passed over the
rolling circle of the returning year. The rising sun and the waning moon
enlightened the world; but to you, He who made the sun and moon was a greater light
in your dungeon, and the brightness of Christ glowing in your hearts and minds,
irradiated with that eternal and brilliant light the gloom of the place of
punishment, which to others was so horrible and deadly. The winter has passed
through the vicissitudes of the months; but you, shut up in prison, were
undergoing, instead of the inclemencies of winter, the winter of persecution. To the
winter succeeded the mildness of spring, rejoicing with roses and crowned with
flowers; but to you were present roses and flowers from the delights of paradise,
and celestial garlands wreathed your brows. Behold, the summer is fruitful with
the fertility of the harvest, and the threshing-floor is filled with grain; but
you who have sown glory, reap the fruit of glory, and, placed in the Lord's
threshing-floor, behold the chaff burnt up with unquenchable fire; yon yourselves
as grains of wheat, winnowed and precious corn, now purged and garnered,
regard the dwelling-place of a prison as your granary. Nor is there wanting to the
autumn spiritual grace for discharging the duties of the season. The vintage is
pressed out of doors, and the grape which shall hereafter flow into the cups is
trodden in the presses. You, rich bunches out of the Lord's vineyard, and
branches with fruit already ripe, trodden by the tribulation of worldly pressure,
fill your wine-press in the torturing prison, and shed your blood instead of
wine; brave to bear suffering, you willingly drink the cup of martyrdom. Thus
the year rolls on with the Lord's servants,--thus is celebrated the vicissitude
of the seasons with spiritual deserts, and with celestial rewards.
3. Abundantly blessed are they who, from your number, passing through
these footprints of glory, have already departed from the world; and, having
finished their journey of virtue and faith, have attained to the embrace and the kiss
of the Lord, to the joy of the Lord Himself. But yet your glory is not less,
who are still engaged in contest, and, about to follow the glories of your
comrades, are long waging the battle, and with an unmoved and unshaken faith
standing fast, are daily exhibiting in your virtues a spectacle in the sight of God.
The longer is your strife, the loftier will be your crown. The struggle is one,
but it is crowded with a manifold multitude of contests; you conquer hunger,
and despise thirst, and tread under foot the squalor of the dungeon, and the
horror of the very abode of punishment, by the vigour of your courage. Punishment
is there subdued; torture is worn out; death is not feared but desired, being
overcome by the reward of immortality, so that he who has conquered is crowned
with eternity of life. What now must be the mind in you, how elevated, how large
the heart, when such and so great things are resolved, when nothing but the
precepts of God and the rewards of Christ are considered! The will is then only
God's will; and although you are still placed in the flesh, it is the life not of
the present world, but of the future, that you now live.
4. It now remains, beloved brethren, that you should be mindful of me;
that, among your great and divine considerations, you should also think of me in
your mind and spirit; and that I should be in your prayers and supplications,
when that voice, which is illustrious by the purification of confession, and
praiseworthy for the continual tenor of its honour, penetrates to God's ears, and
heaven being open to it, passes from these regions of the world subdued, to the
realms above, and obtains from the Lord's goodness even what it asks. For what
do you ask from the Lord's mercy which you do not deserve to obtain?--you who
have thus observed the Lord's commands, who have maintained the Gospel
discipline with the simple vigour of your faith, who, with the glory of your virtue
uncorrupted, have stood bravely by the Lord's commands, and by His apostles, and
have confirmed the wavering faith of many by the truth of your martyrdom? Truly,
Gospel witnesses, and truly, Christ's martyrs, resting upon His roots, founded
with strong foundation upon the Rock, you have joined discipline with virtue,
you have brought others to the fear of God, you have made your martyrdoms,
examples. I bid you, brethren, very brave and beloved, ever heartily farewell; and
remember me.