THE EPISTLES OF CYPRIAN: EPISTLES XXXV & XXXVI.--TO THE CLERGY
EPISTLE XXXV.(5)
TO THE CLERGY, CONCERNING THE CARE OF THE POOR AND STRANGERS.
ARGUMENT.--HE CAUTIONS THEM AGAINST NEGLECTING THE WIDOWS, THE SICK, OR THE
POOR, OR STRANGERS.
Cyprian to the presbyters and deacons, his beloved brethren, greeting. In
safety, by God's grace, I greet you, beloved brethren, desiring soon to come to
you, and to satisfy the wish as well of myself and you, as of all the
brethren. It behoves me also, however, to have regard to the common peace, and, in the
meantime, although with weariness of spirit, to be absent from you, lest my
presence should provoke the jealousy and violence of the heathens, and I should be
the cause of breaking the peace, who ought rather to be careful for the quiet
of all. When, therefore, you write that matters are arranged, and that I ought
to come, or if the Lord should condescend to intimate it to me before, then I
will come to you. For where could I be better or more joyful than there where
the Lord willed me both to believe and to grow up? I request that you will
diligently take care of the widows, and of the sick, and of all the poor. Moreover,
you may supply the expenses for strangers, if any should be indigent, from my
own portion, which I have left with Rogatianus, our fellow-presbyter;(6) which
portion, lest it should be all appropriated, I have supplemented by sending to
the same by Naricus the acolyte another share, so that the sufferers may be more
largely and promptly dealt with. I bid you, beloved brethren, ever heartily
farewell; and have me in remembrance. Greet your brotherhood in my name, and tell
them to be mindful of me.
EPISTLE XXXVI.(7)
TO THE CLERGY, BIDDING THEM SHOW EVERY KINDNESS TO THE CONFESSORS IN PRISON.
ARGUMENT.--HE EXHORTS HIS CLERGY THAT EVERY KINDNESS AND CARE SHOULD BE
EXERCISED TOWARDS THE CONFESSORS, AS WELL TOWARDS THOSE WHO WERE ALIVE, AS THOSE WHO
DIED, IN PRISON; THAT THE DAYS OF THEIR DEATH SHOULD BE CAREFULLY NOTED, FOR
THE PURPOSE OF CELEBRATING THEIR MEMORY ANNUALLY; AND, FINALLY, THAT THEY
SHOULD NOT FORGET THE POOR ALSO.
1. Cyprian to the presbyters and deacons, his brethren, greeting. Although
I know, dearest brethren, that you have frequently been admonished in my
letters to manifest all care for those who with a glorious voice have confessed the
Lord, and are confined in prison; yet, again and again, I urge it upon you,
that no consideration be wanting to them to whose glory there is nothing wanting.
And I wish that the circumstances of the place and of my station would permit
me to present myself at this time with them; promptly and gladly would I fulfil
all the duties of love towards our most courageous brethren in my appointed
ministry. But I beseech you, let your diligence be the representative of my duty,
and do all those things which behove to be done in respect of those whom the
divine condescension has rendered illustrious in such merits of their faith and
virtue. Let there be also a more zealous watchfulness and care bestowed upon the
bodies of all those who, although they were not tortured in prison, yet depart
thence by the glorious exit of death. For neither is their virtue nor their
honour too little for them also to be allied with the blessed martyrs. As far as
they could, they bore whatever they were prepared and equipped to bear. He who
under the eyes of God has offered himself to tortures and to death, has
suffered whatever he was willing to suffer; for it was not he that was wanting to
the tortures, but the tortures that were wanting to him. "Whosoever shall confess
me before men, him will I also confess before my Father which is in
heaven,"(1) saith the Lord. They have confessed Him "He that endureth to the end, the
same shall be saved,"(2) saith the Lord. They have endured and have carried the
uncorrupted and unstained merits of their virtues through, even unto the
end. And, again, it is written, "Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee
a crown of life."(3) They have persevered in their faithfulness, and
stedfastness, and invincibleness, even unto death. When to the willingness and the
confession of the name in prison and in chains is added also the conclusion of
dying, the glory of the martyr is consummated.
2. Finally, also, take note of their days on which they depart, that we
may celebrate their commemoration among the memorials of the martyrs,(4) although
Tertullus, our most faithful and devoted brother, who, in addition to the
other solicitude and care which he shows to the brethren in all service of labour,
is not wanting besides in that respect in any care of their bodies, has
written, and does write and intimate to me the days, in which our blessed brethren in
prison pass by the gate of a glorious death to their immortality; and there are
celebrated here by us oblations and sacrifices for their commemorations, which
things, with the Lord's protection, we shall soon celebrate with you. Let your
care also (as I have already often written) and your diligence not be wanting
to the poor,--to such, I mean, as stand fast in the faith and bravely fight
with us, and have not left the camp of Christ; to whom, indeed, we should now show
a greater love and care, in that they are neither constrained by poverty nor
prostrated by the tempest of persecution, but faithfully serve with the Lord,
and have given an example of faith to the other poor. I bid you, brethren
beloved, and greatly longed-for, ever heartily farewell; and remember me. Greet the
brotherhood in my name. Fare ye well.