THE EPISTLES OF CYPRIAN: EPISTLES LXIX TO LXXIV.--CONCERNING THE BAPTISM OF
HERETICS
EPISTLE LXIX.(3)
TO JANUARIUS AND OTHER NUMIDIAN BISHOPS, ON BAPTIZING HERETICS.
ARGUMENT.--THE ARGUMENT OF THIS LETTER AND THE NEXT IS FOUND IN A SUBSEQUENT
EPISTLE TO STEPHEN;(4) "THAT WHAT HERETICS USE IS NOT BAPTISM; AND THAT NONE
AMONG THEM CAN RECEIVE BENEFiT BY THE GRACE OF CHRIST, WHO OPPOSE CHRIST; HAS BEEN
LATELY CAREFULLY EXPRESSED IN A LETTER WHICH WAS WRITTEN ON THAT SUBJECT TO
QUINTUS, OUR COLLEAGUE, ESTABLISHED IN MAURITANIA; AS ALSO IN A LETTER WHICH OUR
COLLEAGUES PREVIOUSLY WROTE TO THE BISHOPS PRESIDING IN NUMIDIA; OF BOTH OF
WHICH LETTERS I HAVE SUBJOINED COPIES."(5)
1. Cyprian, Liberalis, Caldonius, Junius, Primus, Caecilius, Potycarp,
Nicomedes, Felix, Marrutius, Successus, Lucianus, Honoratus, Fortu-natus, Victor,
Donatus, Lucius, Herculanus, Pomponius, Demetrius, Quintus, Saturninus
Januarius, Marcus, another Saturninus, another Donatus, Rogatianus, Sedatus, Tertullus,
Hortensianus, still another Saturninus, Sattius, to their brethren Januarius,
Saturninus, Maximus, Victor, another Victor, Cassius, Proculus, Modianus,
Cittinus, Gargilius, Eutycianus, another Gargilius, another Saturninus, Nemesianus,
Nampulus, Antonianus, Rogatianus, Honoratus, greeting. When we were together in
council, dearest brethren, we read your letter which you wrote to us
concerning those who seem to be baptized by heretics and schismatics, (asking) whether,
when the), come to the Catholic Church, which is one,(6) they ought to be
baptized. On which matter, although you yourselves hold thereupon the truth and
certainty of the Catholic rule, yet since you have thought that of our mutual love
we ought to be consulted, we put forward our opinion, not as a new one,(7) but
we join with you in equal agreement, in an opinion long since decreed by our
predecessors, and observed by us,--judging, namely, and holding it for certain
that no one can be baptized abroad outside the Church, since there is one baptism
appointed in the holy Church. And it is written in the words of the Lord,
"They have forsaken me, the fountain of living waters, and hewed them out broken
cisterns, which can hold no water."(1) And again, sacred Scripture warns, and
says, "Keep thee from the strange water, and drink not from a fountain of strange
water."(2) It is required, then, that the water should first be cleansed and
sanctified by the priest,(3) that it may wash away by its baptism the sins of the
man who is baptized; because the Lord says by Ezekiel the prophet: "Then will
I sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be cleansed from all your
filthiness; and from all your idols will I cleanse you: a new heart also will I give
you, and a new spirit will I put within you."(4) But how can he cleanse and
sanctify the water who is himself unclean, and in whom the Holy Spirit is not?
since the Lord says in the book of Numbers, "And whatsoever the unclean person
toucheth shall be unclean."(5) Or how can he who baptizes give to another remission
of sins who himself, being outside the Church, cannot put away his own sins?
2. But, moreover, the very interrogation which is put in baptism is a
witness of the truth. For when we say, "Dost thou believe in eternal life and
remission of sins through the holy Church?" we mean that remission of sins is not
granted except in the Church, and that among heretics, where there is no Church,
sins cannot be put away. Therefore they who assert that heretics can baptize,
must either change the interrogation or maintain the truth; unless indeed they
attribute a church also to those who, they contend, have baptism. It is also
necessary that he should be anointed who is baptized; so that, having received the
chrism,(6) that is, the anointing, he may be anointed of God, and have in him
the grace of Christ. Further, it is the Eucharist whence the baptized are
anointed with the oil sanctified on the altar.(7) But he cannot sanctify the
creature of oil,(8) who has neither an altar nor a church; whence also there can be no
spiritual anointing among heretics, since it is manifest that the oil cannot
be sanctified nor the Eucharist celebrated at all among them. But we ought to
know and remember that it is written, "Let not the oil of a sinner anoint my
head,"(9) which the Holy Spirit before forewarned in the Psalms, lest any one going
out of the way and wandering from the path of truth should be anointed by
heretics and adversaries of Christ. Besides, what prayer can a priest who is
impious and a sinner offer for a baptized person? since it is written, "God heareth
not a sinner; but if any man be a worshipper of God, and doeth His will, him He
heareth."(10) Who, moreover, can give what he himself has not? or how can he
discharge spiritual functions who himself has lost the Holy Spirit? And therefore
he must be baptized and renewed who comes untrained to the Church, that he may
be sanctified within by those who are holy, since it is written, "Be ye holy,
for I am holy, saith the Lord."(11) So that he who has been seduced into error,
and baptized(12) outside of the Church, should lay aside even this very thing
in the true and ecclesiastical baptism, viz., that he a man coming to God,
while he seeks for a priest, fell by the deceit of error upon a profane one.
3. But it is to approve the baptism of heretics and schismatics, to admit
that they have truly baptized. For therein a part cannot be void, and part be
valid. If one could baptize, he could also give the Holy Spirit. But if he
cannot give the Holy Spirit, because he that is appointed without is not endowed
with the Holy Spirit, he cannot baptize those who come; since both baptism is one
and the Holy Spirit is one, and the Church founded by Christ the Lord upon
Peter, by a source and principle of unity,(13) is one also. Hence it results, that
since with them all things are futile and false, nothing of that which they
have done ought to be approved by us. For what can be ratified and established by
God which is done by them whom the Lord calls His enemies and adversaries?
setting forth in His Gospel, "He that is not with me is against me; and he that
gathereth not with me, scattereth."(14) And the blessed Apostle John also, keeping
the commandments and precepts of the Lord, has laid it down in his epistle,
and said, "Ye have heard that antichrist shall come: even now there are many
Antichrists; whereby we know that it is the last time. They went out from us, but
they were not of us; for if they had been of us, no doubt they would have
continued with us."(15) Whence we also ought to gather and consider whether they who
are the Lord's adversaries, and are called antichrists, can give the grace of
Christ. Wherefore we who are with the Lord, and maintain the unity of the Lord,
and according to His condescension administer His priesthood in the Church,
ought to repudiate and reject and regard as profane whatever His adversaries and
the antichrists do; and to those who, coming out of error and wickedness,
acknowledge the true faith of the one Church, we should give the truth both of unity
and faith, by means of all the sacraments of divine grace.(1) We bid you,
dearest brethren, ever heartily farewell.
EPISTLE LXX.(2)
TO QUINTUS, CONCERNING THE BAPTISM OF HERETICS.
ARGUMENT.--AN ANSWER IS GIVEN TO QUINTUS A BISHOP IN MAURITANIA, WHO HAS ASKED
ADVICE CONCERNING THE BAPTISM OF HERETICS.
1. Cyprian to Quintus his brother, greeting. Lucian, our co-presbyter, has
reported to me, dearest brother, that you have wished me to declare to you
what I think concerning those who seem to have been baptized by heretics and
schismatics; of which matter, that you may know what several of us fellow-bishops,
with the brother presbyters who were present, lately determined in council, I
have sent you a copy of the same epistle. For I know not by what presumption some
of our colleagues(3) are led to think that they who have been dipped by
heretics ought not to be baptized when they come to us, for the reason that they say
that there is one baptism which indeed is therefore one, because the Church is
one, and there cannot be any baptism out of the Church.(4) For since there
cannot be two baptisms, if heretics truly baptize, they themselves have this
baptism. And he who of his own authority grants this advantage to them yields and
consents to them, that the enemy and adversary of Christ should seem to have the
power of washing, and purifying, and sanctifying a man. But we say that those
who come thence are not re-baptized among us, but are baptized. For indeed they
do not receive anything there, where there is nothing; but they come to us, that
here they may receive where there is both grace and all truth, because both
grace and truth are one. But again some of our colleagues(3) would rather give
honour to heretics than agree with us; and while by the assertion of one baptism
they are unwilling to baptize those that come, they thus either themselves make
two baptisms in saying that there is a baptism among heretics; or certainly,
which is a matter of more importance, they strive to set before and prefer the
sordid and profane washing of heretics to the true and only and legitimate
baptism of the Catholic Church, not considering that it is written, "He who is
baptized by one dead, what availeth his washing?"(5) Now it is manifest that they
who are not in the Church of Christ are reckoned among the dead; and another
cannot be made alive by him who himself is not alive, since there is one Church
which, having attained the grace of eternal life, both lives for ever and quickens
the people of God.
2. And they say that in this matter they follow ancient custom;(6)
although among the ancients these were as yet the first beginnings of heresy and
schisms, so that those were involved in them who departed from the Church, having
first been baptized therein; and these, therefore, when they returned to the
Church and repented, it was not necessary to baptize. Which also we observe in the
present day, that it is sufficient to lay hands for repentance upon those who
are known to have been baptized in the Church, and have gone over from us to the
heretics, if, subsequently acknowledging their sin and putting away their
error, they return to the truth and to their parent; so that, because it had been
a sheep, the Shepherd may receive into His fold the estranged and vagrant
sheep. But if he who comes from the heretics has not previously been baptized in the
Church, but comes as a stranger and entirely profane, he must be baptized,
that he may become a sheep, because in the holy Church is the one water which
makes sheep. And therefore, because there can be nothing common to falsehood and
truth, to darkness and light, to death and immortality, to Antichrist and Christ,
we ought by all means to maintain the unity of the Catholic Church, and not to
give way to the enemies of faith and truth in any respect.
3. Neither must we prescribe this from custom, but overcome opposite
custom by reason. For neither did Peter, whom first the Lord chose, and upon whom
He built His Church, when Paul disputed with him afterwards about circumcision,
claim anything to himself insolently, nor arrogantly assume anything; so as to
say that he held the primacy,(7) and that he ought rather to be obeyed by
novices and those lately come.(8) Nor did he despise Paul because he had previously
been a persecutor of the Church, but admitted the counsel of truth, and easily
yielded to the lawful reason which Paul asserted, furnishing thus an
illustration to us both of concord and of patience, that we should not obstinately love
our own opinions, but should rather adopt as our own those which at any time are
usefully and wholesomely suggested by our brethren and colleagues, if they be
true and lawful. Paul, moreover, looking forward to this, and consulting
faithfully for concord and peace, has laid down in his epistle this rule: "Moreover,
let the prophets speak two or three, and let the rest judge. But if anything be
revealed to another that sitteth by, let the first hold his peace."(1) In
which place he has taught and shown that many things are revealed to individuals
for the better, and that each one ought not obstinately to contend for that which
he had once imbibed and held; but if anything has appeared better and more
useful, he should gladly embrace it. For we are not overcome when better things
are presented to us, but we are instructed, especially in those matters which
pertain to the unity of the Church and the truth of our hope and faith; so that
we, priests of God and prelates of His Church, by His condescension, should know
that remission of sins cannot be given save in the Church, nor can the
adversaries of Christ claim to themselves anything belonging to His grace.
4. Which thing, indeed, Agrippinus also, a man of worthy memory, with his
other fellow-bishops, who at that time governed the Lord's Church in the
province of Africa and Numidia, decreed, and by the well-weighed examination of the
common council established: whose opinion, as being both religious and lawful
and salutary, and in harmony with the Catholic faith and Church, we also have
followed.(2) And that you may know what kind of letters we have written on this
subject, I have transmitted for our mutual love a copy of them, as well for your
own information as for that of our fellow-bishops who are in those parts. I bid
you, dearest brother, ever heartily farewell.
EPISTLE LXXI.(3)
TO STEPHEN, CONCERNING A COUNCIL.
ARGUMENT.--CYPRIAN WITH HIS COLLEAGUES IN A CERTAIN COUNCIL TELLS STEPHEN, THE
ROMAN BISHOP, THAT IT HAD BEEN DECREED BY THEM, BOTH THAT THOSE WHO RETURNED
FROM HERESY INTO THE CHURCH SHOULD BE BAPTIZED, AND THAT BISHOPS OR PRIESTS
COMING FROM THE HERETICS SHOULD BE RECEIVED ON NO OTHER CONDITION, THAN THAT THEY
SHOULD COMMUNICATE AS LAY PEOPLE. A.D. 255.
1. Cyprian and others, to Stephen their brother, greeting. We have thought
it necessary for the arranging of certain matters, dearest brother, and for
their investigation by the examination of a common council, to gather together
and to hold a council, at which many priests were assembled at once; at which,
moreover, many things were brought forward and transacted. But the subject in
regard to which we had chiefly to write to you, and to confer with your gravity
and wisdom, is one that more especially pertains both to the priestly authority
and to the unity, as well as the dignity, of the Catholic Church, arising as
these do from the ordination of the divine appointment; to wit, that those who
have been dipped abroad outside the Church, and have been stained among heretics
and schismatics with the taint of profane water, when they come to us and to the
Church which is one, ought to be baptized, for the reason that it is a small
matter(4) to "lay hands on them that they may receive the Holy Ghost," unless
they receive also the baptism of the Church. For then finally can they be fully
sanctified, and be the sons of God, if they be born of each sacrament;(5) since
it is written, "Except a man be born again of water, and of the Spirit, he
cannot enter into the kingdom of God."(6) For we find also, in the Acts of the
Apostles, that this is maintained by the apostles, and kept in the truth of the
saving faith, so that when, in the house of Cornelius the centurion, the Holy
Ghost had descended upon the Gentiles who were there, fervent in the warmth of
their faith, and believing in the Lord with their whole heart; and when, filled
with the Spirit, they blessed God in divers tongues, still none the less the
blessed Apostle Peter, mindful of the divine precept and the Gospel, commanded that
those same men should be baptized who had already been filled with the Holy
Spirit, that nothing might seem to be neglected to the observance by the apostolic
instruction in all things of the law of the divine precept and Gospel.(7) But
that that is not baptism which the heretics use; and that none of those who
oppose Christ can profit by the grace of Christ; has lately been set forth with
care in the letter which was written on that subject to Quintus, our colleague,
established in Mauritania; as also in a letter which our colleagues previously
wrote to our fellow-bishops presiding in Numidia, of both which letters I have
subjoined copies.
2. We add, however, and connect with what we have said, dearest brother,
with common consent and authority, that if, again, any presbyters or deacons,
who either have been before ordained in the Catholic Church, and have
subsequently stood forth as traitors and rebels against the Church, or who have been
promoted among the heretics by a profane ordination by the hands of false bishops
and antichrists contrary to the appointment of Christ, and have attempted to
offer; in opposition to the one and divine altar, false and sacrilegious sacrifices
without, that these also be received when they return, on this condition, that
they communicate as laymen, and hold it to be enough that they should be
received to peace, after having stood forth as enemies of peace; and that they ought
not, on returning, to retain those arms of ordination and honour with which
they rebelled against us. For it behoves priests and ministers, who wait upon the
altar and sacrifices, to be sound and stainless; since the Lord God speaks in
Leviticus, and says, "No man that hath a stain or a blemish shall come nigh to
offer gifts to the Lord."(1) Moreover, in Exodus, He prescribes this same
thing, and says, "And let the priests which come near to the Lord God sanctify
themselves, lest the Lord forsake them."(2) And again: "And when they come near to
minister at the altar of the holy place, they shall not bear iniquity upon them,
lest they die."(3) But what can be greater iniquity, or what stain can be more
odious, than to have stood in opposition to Christ; than to have scattered His
Church, which He purchased and founded with His blood; than, unmindful of
evangelical peace and love, to have fought with the madness of hostile discord
against the unanimous and accordant people of God? Such as these, although they
themselves return to the Church, still cannot restore and recall with them those
who, seduced by them, and forestalled by death without, have perished outside
the Church without communion and peace; whose souls in the day of judgment shall
be required at the hands of those who have stood forth as the authors and
leaders of their ruin. And therefore to such, when they return, it is sufficient
that pardon should be granted; since perfidy ought certainly not to receive
promotion in the household of faith. For what do we reserve for the good and
innocent, and those who do not depart from the Church, if we honour those who have
departed from us, and stood in opposition to the Church?
3. We have brought these things, dearest brother, to your knowledge, for
the sake of our mutual honour and sincere affection; believing that, according
to the truth of your religion and faith, those things which are no less
religious than true will be approved by you. But we know that some will not lay aside
what they have once imbibed, and do not easily change their purpose; but,
keeping fast the bond of peace and concord among their colleagues, retain certain
things peculiar to themselves, which have once been adopted among them. In which
behalf we neither do violence to, nor impose a law upon, any one, since each
prelate has in the administration of the Church the exercise of his will free, as
he shall give an account of his conduct to the Lord.(4) We bid you, dearest
brother, ever heartily farewell.
EPISTLE LXXII.(5)
TO JUBAIANUS, CONCERNING THE BAPTISM OF HERETICS.
ARGUMENT.--CYPRIAN REFUTES A LETTER ENCLOSED TO HIM BY JUBAIANUS, AND WITH THE
GREATEST CARE COLLECTS WHATEVER HE THINKS WILL AVAIL FOR THE DEFENCE OF HIS
CAUSE. MOREOVER, HE SENDS JUBAIANUS A COPY OF THE LETTER TO THE NUMIDIANS AND TO
QUINTUS, AND PROBABLY THE DECREES OF THE LAST SYNOD.(6)
1. Cyprian to Jubaianus his brother, greeting. You have written to me,
dearest brother, wishing that the impression of my mind should be signified to
you, as to what I think concerning the baptism of heretics; who, placed without,
and established outside the Church, arrogate to themselves a matter neither
within their right nor their power. This baptism we cannot consider as valid or
legitimate, since it is manifestly unlawful among them; and since we have already
expressed in our letters what we thought on this matter, I have, as a
compendious method, sent you a copy of the same letters, what we decided in council when
very many of us were present, and what, moreover, I subsequently wrote back to
Quintus, our colleague, when he asked about the same thing. And now also, when
we had met together, bishops as well of the province of Africa as of Numidia,
to the number of seventy-one, we established this same matter once more(7) by
our judgment, deciding that there is one baptism which is appointed in the
Catholic Church; and that by this those are not re-baptized, but baptized by us, who
at any time come from the adulterous and unhallowed water to be washed and
sanctified by the truth of the saving water.
2. Nor does what you have described in your letters disturb us, dearest
brother, that the Novarians re-baptize those whom they entice from us, since it
does not in any wise matter to us what the enemies of the Church do, so long as
we ourselves hold a regard for our power, and the stedfastness of reason and
truth. For Novatian, after the manner of apes--which, although they are not men,
yet imitate human doings--wishes to claim to himself the authority and truth of
the Catholic Church, while he himself is not in the Church; nay, moreover, has
stood forth hitherto as a rebel and enemy against the Church. For, knowing
that there is one baptism, he arrogates to himself this one, so that he may say
that the Church is with him, and make us heretics. But we who hold the head and
root(1) of the one Church know, and trust for certain, that nothing is lawful
there outside the Church, and that the baptism which is one(2) is among us, where
he himself also was formerly baptized, when he maintained both the wisdom and
truth of the divine unity. But if Novatian thinks that those who have been
baptized in the Church are to be re-baptized outside--without the Church--he ought
to begin by himself, that he might first be re-baptized with an extraneous and
heretical baptism, since he thinks that after the Church, yea, and contrary to
the Church, people are to be baptized without. But what sort of a thing is
this, that, because Novatian dares to do this thing, we are to think that we must
not do it! What then? Because Novatian also usurps the honour of the priestly
throne, ought we therefore to renounce our throne? Or because Novatian endeavours
wrongfully to set up an altar and to offer sacrifices, does it behove us to
cease from our altar and sacrifices, lest we should appear to be celebrating the
same or like things with him? Utterly vain and foolish is it, that because
Novatian arrogates to himself outside the Church the image of the truth, we should
forsake the truth of the Church.
3. But among us it is no new or sudden thing for us to judge that those
are to be baptized who come to the Church from among the heretics, since it is
now many years and a long time ago, that, under Agrippinus--a man of worthy
memory--very many bishops assembling together have decided this;(3) and
thenceforward until the present day, so many thousands of heretics in our provinces have
been converted to the Church, and have neither despised nor delayed, nay, they
have both reasonably and gladly embraced, the opportunity to attain the grace of
the life-giving layer and of saving baptism. For it is not difficult for a
teacher to insinuate true and lawful things into his mind, who, having condemned
heretical pravity, and discovered the truth of the Church, comes for this
purpose, that he may learn, and learns for the purpose that he may live. We ought
not to increase the stolidity of heretics by the patronage of our consent, when
they gladly and readily obey the truth.
4. Certainly, since I found in the letter the copy of which you
transmitted to me, that it was written, "That it should not be asked who baptized, since
he who is baptized might receive remission of sins according to what he
believed," I thought that this topic was not to be passed by, especially since I
observed in the same epistle that mention was also made of Marcion, saying that
"even those that came from him did not need to be baptized, because they seemed to
have been already baptized in the name of Jesus Christ." Therefore we ought to
consider their faith who believe without, whether in respect of the same faith
they can obtain any grace. For if we and heretics have one faith, we may also
have one grace. If the Patripassians, Anthropians, Valentinians, Apelletians,
Ophites, Marcionites, and other pests, and swords, and poisons of heretics for
subverting the truth,(4) confess the same Father, the same Son, the same Holy
Ghost, the same Church with us, they may also have one baptism if they have also
one faith.
5. And lest it should be wearisome to go through all the heresies, and to
enumerate either the follies or the madness of each of them, because it is no
pleasure to speak of that which one either dreads or is ashamed to know, let us
examine in the meantime about Marcion alone, the mention of whom has been made
in the letter transmitted by you to us, whether the ground of his baptism can
be made good. For the Lord after His resurrection, sending His disciples,
instructed and taught them in what manner they ought to baptize, saying, "All power
is given unto me in heaven and in earth. Go ye, therefore, and teach all
nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Ghost."(5) He suggests the Trinity, in whose sacrament the nations were to be
baptized. Does Marcion then maintain the Trinity? Does he then assert the same
Father, the Creator, as we do? Does he know the same Son, Christ born of the Virgin
Mary, who as the Word was made flesh, who bare our sins, who conquered death
by dying, who by Himself first of all originated the resurrection of the flesh,
and showed to His disciples that He had risen in the same flesh? Widely
different is the faith with Marcion, and, moreover, with the other heretics nay, with
them there is nothing but perfidy, and blasphemy, and contention, which is
hostile to holiness and truth. How then can one who is baptized among them seem to
have obtained
mission of sins, and the grace of the divine mercy, by his faith, when he has
not the truth of the faith itself? For if, as some suppose, one could receive
anything abroad out of the Church according to his faith, certainly he has
received what he believed; but if he believes what is false, he could not receive
what is true; but rather he has received things adulterous and profane, according
to what he believed.
6. This matter of profane and adulterous baptism Jeremiah the prophet
plainly rebukes, saying, "Why do they who afflict me prevail? My wound is hard;
whence shall I be healed? while it has indeed become unto me as deceitful water
which has no faithfulness."(1) The Holy Spirit makes mention by the prophet of
deceitful water which has no faithfulness. What is this deceitful and faithless
water? Certainly that which falsely assumes the resemblance of baptism, and
frustrates the grace of faith by a shadowy pretence. But if, according to a
perverted faith, one could be baptized without, and obtain remission of sins,
according to the same faith he could also attain the Holy Spirit; and there is no need
that hands should be laid on him when he comes, that he might obtain the Holy
Ghost, and be sealed. Either he could obtain both privileges without by his
faith, or he who has been without has received neither.
7. But it is manifest where and by whom remission of sins can be given; to
wit, that which is given in baptism. For first of all the Lord gave that power
to Peter, upon whom He built the Church, and whence He appointed and showed
the source of unity--the power, namely, that whatsoever he loosed on earth should
be loosed in heaven. And after the resurrection, also, He speaks to the
apostles, saying, "As the Father hath sent me, even so I send you. And when He had
said this, He breathed on them, and saith, unto them, Receive ye the Holy Ghost:
whosesoever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them; and whosesoever sins ye
retain, they are retained."(2) Whence we perceive that only they who are set
over the Church and established in the Gospel law, and in the ordinance of the
Lord, are allowed to baptize and to give remission of sins; but that without,
nothing can either be bound or loosed, where there is none who can either bind or
loose anything.
8. Nor do we propose this, dearest brother, without the authority of
divine Scripture, when we say that all things are arranged by divine direction by a
certain law and by special ordinance, and that none can usurp to himself, in
opposition to the bishops and priests, anything which is not of his own right and
power. For Korah, Dathan, and Abiram endeavoured to usurp, in opposition to
Moses and Aaron the priest, the power of sacrificing; and they did not do without
punishment what they unlawfully dared. The sons of Aaron also, who placed
strange fire upon the altar, were at once consumed in the sight of an angry Lord;
which punishment remains to those who introduce strange water by a false
baptism, that the divine vengeance may avenge and chastise when heretics do that in
opposition to the Church, which the Church alone is allowed to do.
9. But in respect of the assertion of some concerning those who had been
baptized in Samaria, that when the Apostles Peter and John came, only hands were
imposed on them, that they might receive the Holy Ghost, yet that they were
not re-baptized; we see that that place does not, dearest brother, touch the
present case. For they who had believed in Samaria had believed with a true faith;
and within, in the Church which is one, and to which alone it is granted to
bestow the grace of baptism and to remit sins, had been baptized by Philip the
deacon, whom the same apostles had sent. And therefore, because they had obtained
a legitimate and ecclesiastical baptism, there was no need that they should be
baptized any more, but only that which was needed was performed by Peter and
John; viz., that prayer being made for them, and hands being imposed, the Holy
Spirit should be invoked and poured out upon them, which now too is done among
us, so that they who are baptized in the Church are brought to the prelates of
the Church, and by our prayers and by the imposition of hands obtain the Holy
Spirit, and are perfected with the Lord's seal.
10. There is no ground, therefore, dearest brother, for thinking that we
should give way to heretics so far as to contemplate the betrayal to them of
that baptism, which is only granted to the one and only Church. It is a good
soldier's duty to defend the camp of his general against rebels and enemies. It is
the duty of an illustrious leader to keep the standards entrusted to him.(3) It
is written, "The Lord thy God is a jealous God."(4) We who have received the
Spirit of God ought to have a jealousy for the divine faith; with such a jealousy
as that wherewith Phineas both pleased God and justly allayed His wrath when
He was angry, and the people were perishing. Why do we receive as allowed an
adulterous and alien church, a foe to the divine unity, when we know only one
Christ and His one Church? The Church, setting forth the likeness of paradise,
includes within her walls fruit-bearing trees, whereof that which does not bring
forth good fruit is cut off and is cast into the fire. These trees she waters
with four rivers, that is, with the four Gospels, wherewith, by a celestial
inundation, she bestows the grace of saving baptism. Can any one water from the
Church's fountains who is not within the Church? Can one impart those wholesome and
saving draughts of paradise to any one if he is perverted, and of himself
condemned, and banished outside the fountains of paradise, and has dried up and
failed with the dryness of an eternal thirst?
11. The Lord cries aloud, that "whosoever thirsts should come and drink of
the rivers of i living water that flowed out of His bosom."(1) Whither is he
to come who thirsts? Shall he come to the heretics, where there is no fountain
and river of living water at all; or to the Church which is one, and is founded
upon one who has received the keys of it by the Lord's voice? It is she who
holds and possesses alone all the power of her spouse and Lord. In her we preside;
for her honour and unity we fight; her grace, as well as her glory, we defend
with faithful devotedness.(2) We by the divine permission water the thirsting
people of God; we guard the boundaries of the living fountains. If, therefore,
we hold the right of our possession, if we acknowledge the sacrament of unity,
wherefore are we esteemed prevaricators against truth? Wherefore are we judged
betrayers of unity? The faithful, and saving, and holy water of the Church
cannot be corrupted and adulterated, as the Church herself also is uncorrupted, and
chaste, and modest. If heretics are devoted to the Church and established in
the Church, they may use both her baptism and her other saving benefits. But if
they are not in the Church, nay more, if they act against the Church, how can
they baptize with the Church's baptism?
12. For it is no small and insignificant matter, which is conceded to
heretics, when their baptism is recognised by us; since thence springs the whole
origin of faith and the saving access to the hope of life eternal, and the divine
condescension for purifying and quickening the servants of God. For if any one
could be baptized among heretics, certainly he could also obtain remission of
sins. If he attained remission of sins, he was also sanctified. If he was
sanctified, he also was made the temple of God. I ask, of what God? If of the
Creator; he could not be, because he has not believed in Him. If of Christ; he could
not become His temple, since he denies that Christ is God. If of the Holy
Spirit; since the three are one, how can the Holy Spirit be at peace with him who is
the enemy either of the Son or of the Father?
13. Hence it is in vain that some who are overcome by reason oppose to us
custom, as if custom were greater than truth;(3) or as if that were not to be
sought after in spiritual matters which has been revealed as the better by the
Holy Spirit. For one who errs by simplicity may be pardoned, as the blessed
Apostle Paul says of himself, "I who at first was a blasphemer, and a persecutor,
and injurious; yet obtained mercy, because I did it ignorantly."(4) But after
inspiration and revelation made to him, he who intelligently and knowingly
perseveres in that course in which he had erred, sins without pardon for his
ignorance. For he resists with a certain presumption and obstinacy, when he is overcome
by reason. Nor let any one say, "We follow that which we have received from
the apostles," when the apostles only delivered one Church, and one baptism,
which is not ordained except in the same Church. And we cannot find that any one,
when he had been baptized by heretics, was received by the apostles in the same
baptism, and communicated in such a way as that the apostles should appear to
have approved the baptism of heretics.
14. For as to what some say, as if it tended to favour heretics, that the
Apostle Paul declared, "Only every way, whether in pretence or in truth, let
Christ be preached,"(5) we find that this also can avail nothing to their
benefit who support and applaud heretics. For Paul, in his epistle, was not speaking
of heretics, nor of their baptism, so that anything can be shown to have been
alleged which pertained to this matter. He was speaking of brethren, whether as
walking disorderly anti against the discipline of the Church, or as keeping the
truth of the Gospel with the fear of God. And he said that certain of them
spoke the word of God with constancy and courage, but some acted in envy and
dissension; that some maintained towards him a benevolent love, but that some
indulged a malevolent spirit of dissension; but yet that he bore all patiently, so
long only as, whether in truth or in pretence, the name of Christ which Paul
preached might come to the knowledge of many; and the sowing of the word, which as
yet had been new and irregular, might increase through the preaching of the
speakers. Besides, it is one thing for those who are within the Church to speak
concerning the name of Christ; it is another for those who are without, and act
in opposition to the Church, to baptize in the name of Christ. Wherefore, let
not those who favour heretics put forward what Paul spoke concerning brethren,
but let them show if he thought anything was to be conceded to the heretic, or if
he approved of their faith or baptism, or if he appointed that perfidious and
blasphemous men could receive remission of their sins outside the Church.
15. But if we consider what the apostles thought about heretics, we shall
find that they, in all their epistles, execrated and detested the sacrilegious
wickedness of heretics. For when they say that "their word creeps as a
canker,"(1) how is such a word as that able to give remission of sins, which creeps
like a canker to the ears of the hearers? And when they say that there can be no
fellowship between righteousness and un-righteousness, no communion between
light and darkness,(2) how can either darkness illuminate, or unrighteousness
justify? And when they say that "they are not of God, but are of the spirit of
Antichrist,"(3) how can they transact spiritual and divine matters, who are the
enemies of God, and whose hearts the spirit of Antichrist has possessed? Wherefore,
if, laying aside the errors of human dispute, we return with a sincere and
religious faith to the evangelical authority and to the apostolical tradition, we
shall perceive that they may do nothing towards conferring the ecclesiastical
and saving grace, who, scattering and attacking the Church of Christ, are called
adversaries by Christ Himself, but by His apostles, Antichrists.
16. Again, there is no ground for any one, for the circumvention of
Christian truth, opposing to us the name of Christ, and saying, "All who are baptized
everywhere, and in any manner, in the name of Jesus Christ, have obtained the
grace of baptism,"--when Christ Himself speaks, and says, "Not every one that
saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven."(4), And
again, He forewarns and instructs, that no one should be easily deceived by false
prophets and false Christs in His name. "Many," He says, "shall come in my name,
saying, I am Christ, and shall deceive many." And afterwards He added: "But
take ye heed; behold, I have foretold you all things."(5) Whence it appears that
all things are not at once to be received and assumed which are boasted of in
the name of Christ, but only those things which are done in the truth of Christ.
17. For whereas in the Gospels, and in the epistles of the apostles, the
name of Christ is alleged for the remission of sins; it is not in such a way as
that the Son alone, without the Father, or against the Father, can be of
advantage to anybody; but that it might be shown to the Jews, who boasted as to their
having the Father, that the Father would profit them nothing, unless they
believed on the Son whom He had sent. For they who know God the Father the Creator,
ought also to know Christ the Son, lest they should flatter and applaud
themselves about the Father alone, without the acknowledgment of His Son, who also
said, "No man cometh to the Father but by me."(6) But He, the same, sets forth,
that it is the knowledge of the two which saves, when He says, "And this is life
eternal, that they might know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom
thou hast sent."(7) Since, therefore, from the preaching and testimony of
Christ Himself, the Father who sent must be first known, then afterwards Christ, who
was sent, and there cannot be a hope of salvation except by knowing the two
together; how, when God the Father is not known, nay, is even blasphemed, can
they who among the heretics are said to be baptized in the name of Christ, be
judged to have obtained the remission of sins? For the case of the Jews under the
apostles was one, but the condition of the Gentiles is another. The former,
because they had already gained the most ancient baptism of the law and Moses, were
to be baptized also in the name of Jesus Christ, in conformity with what Peter
tells them in the Acts of the Apostles, saying, "Repent, and be baptized every
one of you in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins,
and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. For this promise is unto you,
and to your children, and to all that are afar off, even as many as the Lord our
God shall call."(8) Peter makes mention of Jesus Christ, not as though the
Father should be omitted, but that the Son also might be joined to the Father.
18. Finally, when, after the resurrection, the apostles are sent by the
Lord to the heathens, they are bidden to baptize the Gentiles "in the name of the
Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." How, then, do some say, that a
Gentile baptized without, outside the Church, yea, and in opposition to the
Church, so that it be only in the name of Jesus Christ, everywhere, and in
whatever manner, can obtain remission of sin, when Christ Himself commands the
heathen to be baptized in the full and united Trinity? Unless while one who denies
Christ is denied by Christ, he who denies His Father whom Christ Himself
confessed is not denied; and he who blasphemes against Him whom Christ called His Lord
and His God, is rewarded by Christ, and obtains remission of sins, and the
sanctification of baptism! But by what power can he who denies God the Creator, the
Father of Christ, obtain, in baptism, the remission of sins, since Christ
received that very power by which we are baptized and sanctified, from the same
Father, whom He called "greater" than Himself, by whom He desired to be glorified,
whose will He fulfilled even unto the obedience of drinking the cup, and of
undergoing death? What else is it then, than to become a partaker with
blaspheming heretics, to wish to maintain and assert, that one who blasphemes and gravely
sins against the Father and the Lord and God of Christ, can receive remission
of sins in the name of Christ? What, moreover, is that, and of what kind is it,
that he who denies the Son of God has not the Father, and he who denies the
Father should be thought to have the Son, although the Son Himself testifies, and
says, "No man can come unto me except it were given unto him of my Father?"(1)
So that it is evident, that no remission of sins can be received in baptism
from the Son, which it is not plain that the Father has granted. Especially,
since He further repeats, and says, "Every plant which my heavenly Father hath not
planted shall be rooted up."(2)
19. But if Christ's disciples are unwilling to learn from Christ what
veneration and honour is due to the name of the Father, still let them learn from
earthly and secular examples, and know that Christ has declared, not without the
strongest rebuke, "The children of this world are wiser in their generation
than the children of light."(3) In this world of ours, if any one have offered an
insult to the father of any; if in injury and frowardness he have wounded his
reputation and his honour by a malevolent tongue, the son is indignant, and
wrathful, and with what means he can, strives to avenge his injured father's
wrong. Think you that Christ grants impunity to the impious and profane, and the
blasphemers of His Father, and that He puts away their sins in baptism, who it is
evident, when baptized, still heap up evil words on the person of the Father,
and sin with the unceasing wickedness of a blaspheming tongue? Can a Christian,
can a servant of God, either conceive this in his mind, or believe it in faith,
or put it forward in discourse? And what will become of the precepts of the
divine law, which say, "Honour thy father and thy mother?"(4) If the name of
father, which in man is commanded to be honoured, is violated with impunity in God,
what will become of what Christ Himself lays down in the Gospel, and says, "He
that curseth father or mother, let him die the death;"(5) if He who bids that
those who curse their parents after the flesh should be punished and slain,
Himself quickens those who revile their heavenly and spiritual Father, and are
hostile to the Church, their Mother? An execrable and detestable thing is actually
asserted by some, that He who threatens the man who blasphemes against the
Holy Spirit, that he shall be guilty of eternal sin, Himself condescends to
sanctify those who blaspheme against God the Father with saving baptism. And now,
those who think that they must communicate with such as come to the Church without
baptism, do not consider that they are becoming partakers with other men's,
yea, with eternal sins, when they admit without baptism those who cannot, except
in baptism, put off the sins of their blasphemies.
20. Besides, how vain and perverse a thing it is, that when the heretics
themselves, having repudiated and forsaken either the error or the wickedness in
which they had previously been, acknowledge the truth of the Church, we should
mutilate the rights and sacrament of that same truth, and say to those who
come to us and repent, that they had obtained remission of sins when they confess
that they have sinned, and are for that reason come to seek the pardon of the
Church! Wherefore, dearest brother, we ought both firmly to maintain the faith
and truth of the Catholic Church, and to teach, and by all the evangelical and
apostolical precepts to set forth, the plan of the divine dispensation and unity.
21. Can the power of baptism be greater or of more avail than confession,
than suffering, when one confesses Christ before men and is baptized in his own
blood? And yet even this baptism does not benefit a heretic, although he has
confessed Christ, and been put to death outside the Church, unless the patrons
and advocates of heretics declare that the heretics who are slain in a false
confession of Christ are martyrs, and assign to them the glory and the crown of
martyrdom contrary to the testimony of the apostle, who says that it will profit
them nothing although they were burnt and slain.(6) But if not even the baptism
of a public confession and blood can profit a heretic to salvation, because
there is no salvation out of the Church,(7) how much less shall it be of
advantage to him, if in a hiding-place and a cave of robbers, stained with the
contagion of adulterous water, he has not only not put off his old sins, but rather
heaped up still newer and greater ones! Wherefore baptism cannot be common to us
and to heretics, to whom neither God the Father, nor Christ the Son, nor the
Holy Ghost, nor the faith, nor the Church itself, is common. And therefore it
behoves those to be baptized who come from heresy to the Church, that so they who
are prepared, in the lawful, and true, and only baptism of the holy Church, by
divine regeneration, for the kingdom of God, may be born of both sacraments,
because it is written, "Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot
enter into the kingdom of God."(1)
22. On which place some, as if by human reasoning they were able to make
void the truth of the Gospel declaration, object to us the case of catechumens;
asking if any one of these, before he is baptized in the Church, should be
apprehended and slain on confession of the name, whether he would lose the hope of
salvation and the reward of confession, because he had not previously been born
again of water? Let men of this kind, who are aiders and favourers of
heretics, know therefore, first, that those catechumens hold the sound faith and truth
of the Church, and advance from the divine camp to do battle with the devil,
with a full and sincere acknowledgment of God the Father, and of Christ, and of
the Holy Ghost; then, that they certainly are not deprived of the sacrament of
baptism who are baptized with the most glorious and greatest baptism of blood,
concerning which the Lord also said, that He had "another baptism to be baptized
with."(2) But the same Lord declares in the Gospel, that those who are
baptized in their own blood, and sanctified by suffering, are perfected, and obtain
the grace of the divine promise, when He speaks to the thief believing and
confessing in His very passion, and promises that he should be with Himself in
paradise. Wherefore we who are set over the faith and truth ought not to deceive and
mislead those who come to the faith and truth, and repent, and beg that their
sins should be remitted to them; but to instruct them when corrected by us, and
reformed for the kingdom of heaven by celestial discipline.
23. But some one says, "What, then, shall become of those who in past
times, coming from heresy to the Church, were received without baptism?" The Lord
is able by His mercy to give indulgence,(3) and not to separate from the gifts
of His Church those who by simplicity were admitted into the Church, and in the
Church have fallen asleep. Nevertheless it does not follow that, because there
was error at one time, there must always be error; since it is more fitting for
wise and God-fearing men, gladly and without delay to obey the truth when laid
open and perceived, than pertinaciously and obstinately to struggle against
brethren and fellow-priests on behalf of heretics.
24. Nor let any one think that, because baptism is proposed to them,
heretics will be kept back from coming to the Church, as if offended at the name of
a second baptism; nay, but on this very account they are rather driven to the
necessity of coming by the testimony of truth shown and proved to them. For if
they shall see that it is determined and decreed by our judgment and sentence,
that the baptism wherewith they are there baptized is considered just and
legitimate, they will think that they are justly and legitimately in possession of
the Church also, and the other gifts of the Church; nor will there be any reason
for their coming to us, when, as they have baptism, they seem also to have the
rest. But further, when they know that there is no baptism without, and that no
remission of sins can be given outside the Church, they more eagerly and
readily hasten to us, and implore the gifts and benefits of the Church our Mother,
assured that they can in no wise attain to the true promise of divine grace
unless they first come to the truth of the Church. Nor will heretics refuse to be
baptized among us with the lawful and true baptism of the Church, when they
shall have learnt from us that they also were baptized by Paul, who already had
been baptized with the baptism of John,(4) as we read in the Acts of the Apostles.
25. And now by certain of us the baptism of heretics is asserted to occupy
the (like) ground, and, as if by a certain dislike of re-baptizing, it is
counted unlawful to baptize after God's enemies. And this, although we find that
they were baptized whom John had baptized: John, esteemed the greatest among the
prophets; John, filled with divine grace even in his mother's womb; who was
sustained with the spirit and power of Elias; who was not an adversary of the
Lord, but His precursor and announcer; who not only foretold our Lord in words, but
even showed Him to the eyes; who baptized Christ Himself by whom others are
baptized. But if on that account a heretic could obtain the right of baptism,
because he first baptized, then baptism will not belong to the person that has it,
but to the person that seizes it. And since baptism and the Church can by no
means be separated from one another, and divided, he who has first been able to
lay hold on baptism has equally also laid hold on the Church; and you begin to
appear to him as a heretic, when you being anticipated, have begun to be last,
and by yielding and giving way have relinquished the right which you had
received. But how dangerous it is in divine matters, that any one should depart from
his right and power, Holy Scripture declares when, in Genesis, Esau thence lost
his birthright, nor was able afterwards to regain that which he had once given
up.
26. These things, dearest brother, I have briefly written to you,
according to my abilities, prescribing to none, and prejudging none, so as to prevent
any one of the bishops doing what he thinks well, and having the free exercise
of his judgment.(1) We, as far as in us lies, do not contend on behalf of
heretics with our colleagues and fellow-bishops, with whom we maintain a divine
concord and the peace of the Lord;(1) especially since the apostle says, "If any
man, however, is thought to be contentious, we have no such custom, neither the
Church of God."(2) Charity of spirit, the honour of our college, the bond of
faith, and priestly concord, are maintained by us with patience and gentleness. For
this reason, moreover, we have with the best of our poor abilities, with the
permission and inspiration of the Lord, written a treatise(3) on the "Benefit of
Patience," which for the sake of our mutual love we have transmitted to you. I
bid you, dearest brother, ever heartily farewell.
EPISTLE LXXIII.(4)
TO POMPEY, AGAINST THE EPISTLE OF STEPHEN ABOUT THE BAPTISM OF HERETICS.
ARGUMENT.--THE PURPORT OF THIS EPISTLE IS GIVEN IN ST. AUGUSTINE'S "CONTRA
DONATISTAS," LIB. V. CAP. 23. HE SAYS THERE: "CYPRIAN,MOREOVER, WRITES TO POMPEY
ON THE SAME SUBJECT, WHEN HE PLAINLY SIGNIFIES THAT STEPHEN, WHO, AS WE LEARN,
WAS THEN A BISHOP OF THE ROMAN CHURCH, NOT ONLY DID NOT AGREE WITH HIM ON
THOSE POINTS, BUT EVEN HAD WRITTEN AND CHARGED IN OPPOSITION TO HIM."(5)
1. Cyprian to his brother Pompeius, greeting. Although I have fully
comprised what is to be said concerning the baptism of heretics in the letters of
which I sent you copies, dearest brother, yet, since you have desired that what
Stephen our brother replied to my letters should be brought to your knowledge, I
have sent you a copy of his reply; on the reading of which, you will more and
more observe his error in endeavouring to maintain the cause of heretics against
Christians, and against the Church of God.(6) For among other matters, which
were either haughtily assumed, or were not pertaining to the matter, or
contradictory to his own view, which he unskilfully and without foresight wrote, he
moreover added this saying: "If any one, therefore, come to you from any heresy
whatever, let nothing be innovated (or done) which has not been handed down, to
wit, that hands be imposed on him for repentance;(7) since the heretics
themselves, in their own proper character, do not baptize such as come to them from one
another, but only admit them to communion."
2. He forbade one coming from any heresy to be baptized in the Church;
that is, he judged the baptism of all heretics to be just and lawful. And although
special heresies have special baptisms and different sins, he, holding
communion with the baptism of all, gathered up the sins of all, heaped together into
his own bosom. And he charged that nothing should be innovated except what had
been handed down; as if he were an innovator, who, holding the unity, claims for
the one Church one baptism; and not manifestly he who, forgetful of unity,
adopts the lies and the contagions of a profane washing. Let nothing be innovated,
says he, nothing maintained, except what has been handed down. Whence is that
tradition? Whether does it descend from the authority of the Lord and of the
Gospel, or does it come from the commands and the epistles of the apostles? For
that those things which are written must be done, God witnesses and admonishes,
saying to Joshua the son of Nun: "The book of this law shall not depart out of
thy mouth; but thou shalt meditate in it day and night, that thou mayest
observe to do according to all that is written therein."(8) Also the Lord, sending
His apostles, commands that the nations should be baptized, and taught to observe
all things which He commanded. If, therefore, it is either prescribed in the
Gospel, or contained in the epistles or Acts of the Apostles, that those who
come from any heresy should not be baptized, but only hands laid upon them to
repentance, let this divine and holy tradition be observed. But if everywhere
heretics are called nothing else than adversaries and antichrists, if they are
pronounced to be people to be avoided, and to be perverted and condemned of their
own selves, wherefore is it that they should not be thought worthy of being
condemned by us, since it is evident from the apostolic testimony(1) that they are
of their own selves condemned? So that no one ought to defame the apostles as if
they had approved of the baptisms of heretics, or had communicated with them
without the Church's baptism, when they, the apostles, wrote such things of the
heretics. And this, too, while as yet the more terrible plagues of heresy had
not broken forth; while Marcion of Pontus had not yet emerged from Pontus, whose
master Cerdon came to Rome,--while Hyginus was still bishop, who was the ninth
bishop in that city,--whom Marcion followed, and with greater impudence adding
other enhancements to his crime, and more daringly set himself to blaspheme
against God the Father, the Creator, and armed with sacrilegious arms the
heretical madness that rebelled against the Church with greater wickedness and
determination.
3. But if it is evident that subsequently heresies became more numerous
and worse; and if, in time past, it was never at all prescribed nor written that
only hands should be laid upon a heretic for repentance, and that so he might
be communicated with; and if there is only one baptism, which is with us, and is
within, and is granted of the divine condescension to the Church alone, what
obstinacy is that, or what presumption, to prefer human tradition to divine
ordinance, and not to observe that God is indignant and angry as often as human
tradition relaxes and passes by the divine precepts, as He cries out, and says by
Isaiah the prophet, "This people honoureth me with their lips, but their heart
is far from me. But in vain do they worship me, teaching the doctrines and
commandments of men."(2) Also the Lord in the Gospel, similarly rebuking and
reproving, utters and says, "Ye reject the commandment of God, that ye may keep your
own tradition."(3) Mindful of which precept, the blessed Apostle Paul himself
also warns and instructs, saying, "If any man teach otherwise, and consent not
to the wholesome words of our Lord Jesus Christ, and to His doctrine, he is
proud, knowing nothing: from such withdraw thyself."(4)
4. Certainly an excellent and lawful tradition is set before us by the
teaching of our brother Stephen, which may afford us a suitable authority! For in
the same place of his epistle he has added and continued: "Since those who are
specially heretics do not baptize those who come to them from one another, but
only receive them to communion." To this point of evil has the Church of God
and spouse of Christ been developed, that she follows the examples of heretics;
that for the purpose of celebrating the celestial sacraments, light should
borrow her discipline from darkness, and Christians should do that which antichrists
do. But what is that blindness of soul, what is that degradation of faith, to
refuse to recognise the unity(5) which comes from God the Father, and from the
tradition of Jesus Christ the Lord and our God! For if the Church is not with
heretics, therefore, because it is one, and cannot be divided; and if thus the
Holy Spirit is not there, because He is one, and cannot be among profane
persons, and those who are without; certainly also baptism, which consists in the same
unity, cannot be among heretics, because it can neither be separated from the
Church nor from the Holy Spirit.
5. Or if they attribute the effect of baptism to the majesty of the name,
so that they who are baptized anywhere and anyhow, in the name of Jesus Christ,
are judged to be renewed and sanctified; wherefore, in the name of the same
Christ, are not hands laid upon the baptized persons among them, for the
reception of the Holy Spirit? Why does not the same majesty of the same name avail in
the imposition of hands, which, they contend, availed in the sanctification of
baptism? For if any one born out of the Church can become God's temple, why
cannot the Holy Spirit also be poured out upon the temple? For he who has been
sanctified, his sins being put away in baptism, and has been spiritually reformed
into a new man, has become fitted for receiving the Holy Spirit; since the
apostle says, "As many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on
Christ."(6) He who, having been baptized among the heretics, is able to put on Christ,
may much more receive the Holy Spirit whom Christ sent. Otherwise He who is
sent will be greater than Him who sends; so that one baptized without may begin
indeed to put on Christ, but not to be able to receive the Holy Spirit, as if
Christ could either be put on without the Spirit, or the Spirit be separated from
Christ. Moreover, it is silly to say, that although the second birth is
spiritual, by which we are born in Christ through the layer of regeneration, one may
be born spiritually among the heretics, where they say that the Spirit is not.
For water alone is not able to cleanse away sins, and to sanctify a man, unless
he have also the Holy Spirit.(1) Wherefore it is necessary that they should
grant the Holy Spirit to be there, where they say that baptism is; or else there
is no baptism where the Holy Spirit is not, because there cannot be baptism
without the Spirit.
6. But what a thing it is, to assert and contend that they who are not
born in the Church can be the sons of God! For the blessed apostle sets forth and
proves that baptism is that wherein the old man dies and the new man is born,
saying, "He saved us by the washing of regeneration."(2) But if regeneration is
in the washing, that is, in baptism, how can heresy, which is not the spouse of
Christ, generate sons to God by Christ? For it is the Church alone which,
conjoined and united with Christ, spiritually bears sons; as the same apostle again
says, "Christ loved the Church, and gave Himself for it, that He might
sanctify it, cleansing it with the washing of water."(3) If, then, she is the beloved
and spouse who alone is sanctified by Christ, and alone is cleansed by His
washing, it is manifest that heresy, which is not the spouse of Christ, nor can be
cleansed nor sanctified by His washing, cannot bear sons to God.(4)
7. But further, one is not born by the imposition of hands when he
receives the Holy Ghost, but in baptism, that so, being already born, he may receive
the Holy Spirit, even as it happened in the first man Adam. For first God formed
him, and then breathed into his nostrils the breath of life. For the Spirit
cannot be received, unless he who receives first have an existence. But as the
birth of Christians is in baptism, while the generation and sanctification of
baptism are with the spouse of Christ alone, who is able spiritually to conceive
and to bear sons to God, where and of whom and to whom is he born, who is not a
son of the Church, so as that he should have God as his Father, before he has
had the Church for his Mother? But as no heresy at all, and equally no schism,
being without, can have the sanctification of saving baptism, why has the bitter
obstinacy of our brother Stephen broken forth to such an extent, as to contend
that sons are born to God from the baptism of Marcion; moreover, of Valentinus
and Apelles, and of others who blaspheme against God the Father; and to say
that remission of sins is granted in the name of Jesus Christ where blasphemy is
uttered against the Father and against Christ the Lord God?
8. In which place, dearest brother, we must consider, for the sake of the
faith and the religion of the sacerdotal office which we discharge, whether the
account can be satisfactory in the day of judgment for a priest of God, who
maintains, and approves, and acquiesces in the baptism of blasphemers, when the
Lord threatens, and says, "And now, O ye priests, this commandment is for you:
if ye will not hear, and if ye will not lay it to heart to give glory unto my
name, saith the Lord Almighty, I will even send a curse upon you, and I will
curse your blessings."(5) Does he give glory to God, who communicates with the
baptism of Marcion? Does he give glory to God, who judges that remission of sins is
granted among those who blaspheme against God? Does he give glory to God, who
affirms that sons are born to God without, of an adulterer and a harlot? Does
he give glory to God, who does not hold the unity and truth that arise from the
divine law, but maintains heresies against the Church? Does he give glory to
God, who, a friend of heretics and an enemy to Christians, thinks that the
priests of God, who support the truth of Christ and the unity of the Church, are to
be excommunicated?(6) If glory is thus given to God, if the fear and the
discipline of God is thus preserved by His worshippers and His priests, let us cast
away our arms; let us give ourselves up to captivity; let us deliver to the devil
the ordination of the Gospel, the appointment of Christ, the majesty of God;
let the sacraments of the divine warfare be loosed; let the standards of the
heavenly camp be betrayed; and let the Church succumb and yield to heretics, light
to darkness, faith to perfidy, hope to despair, reason to error, immortality
to death, love to hatred, truth to falsehood, Christ to Antichrist! Deservedly
thus do heresies and schisms arise day by day, more frequently and more
fruitfully grow up, and with serpents' locks shoot forth and cast out against the
Church of God with greater force the poison of their venom; whilst, by the advocacy
of some, both authority and support are afforded them; whilst their baptism is
defended, whilst faith, whilst truth, is betrayed;(7) whilst that which is done
without against the Church is defended within in the very Church itself.
9. But if there be among us, most beloved brother, the fear of God, if the
maintenance of the faith prevail, if we keep the precepts of Christ, if we
guard the incorrupt and inviolate sanctity of His spouse, if the words of the Lord
abide in our thoughts and hearts, when he says, "Thinkest thou, when the Son
of man cometh, shall He find faith on the earth"(1) then, because we are God's
faithful soldiers, who war for the faith and sincere religion of God, let us
keep the camp entrusted to us by God with faithful valour. Nor ought custom, which
had crept in among some, to prevent the truth from prevailing and conquering;
for custom without truth is the antiquity of error.(2) On which account, let us
forsake the error and follow the truth, knowing that in Esdras also the truth
conquers, as it is written: "Truth endureth and grows strong to eternity, and
lives and prevails for ever and ever. With her there is no accepting of persons
or distinctions; but what is just she does: nor in her judgments is there
unrighteousness, but the strength, and the kingdom, and the majesty, and the power
of all ages. Blessed be the Lord God of truth!"(3) This truth Christ showed to
us in His Gospel, and said, "I am the truth."(4) Wherefore, if we are in Christ,
and have Christ in us, if we abide in the truth, and the truth abides in us,
let us keep fast those things which are true.
10. But it happens, by a love of presumption and of obstinacy, that one
would rather maintain his own evil and false position, than agree in the right
and true which belongs to another. Looking forward to which, the blessed Apostle
Paul writes to Timothy, and warns him that a bishop must not be "litigious, nor
contentious, but gentle and teachable."(5) Now he is teachable who is meek and
gentle to the patience of learning. For it behoves a bishop not only to teach,
but also to learn; because he also teaches better who daily increases and
advances by learning better; which very thing, moreover, the same Apostle Paul
teaches, when he admonishes, "that if anything better be revealed to one sitting
by, the first should hold his peace."(6) But there is a brief way for religious
and simple minds, both to put away error, and to find and to elicit truth. For
if we return to the head and source of divine tradition, human error ceases; and
having seen the reason of the heavenly sacraments, whatever lay hid in
obscurity under the gloom and cloud of darkness, is opened into the light of the
truth. If a channel supplying water, which formerly flowed plentifully and freely,
suddenly fail, do we not go to the fountain, that there the reason of the
failure may be ascertained, whether from the drying up of the springs the water has
failed at the fountainhead, or whether, flowing thence free and full, it has
failed in the midst of its course; that so, if it has been caused by the fault of
an interrupted or leaky channel, that the constant stream does not flow
uninterruptedly and continuously, then the channel being repaired and strengthened,
the water collected may be supplied for the use and drink of the city, with the
same fertility and plenty with which it issues from the spring? And this it
behoves the priests of God to do now, if they would keep the divine precepts, that
if in any respect the truth have wavered and vacillated, we should return to
our original and Lord, and to the evangelical and apostolical tradition; and
thence may arise the ground of our action, whence has taken rise both our order and
our origin.(7)
11. For it has been delivered to us, that there is one God, and one
Christ, and one hope, and one faith, and one Church, and one baptism ordained only in
the one Church, from which unity whosoever will depart must needs be found
with heretics; and while he upholds them against the Church, he impugns the
sacrament of the divine tradition. The sacrament of which unity we see expressed also
in the Canticles, in the person of Christ, who says, "A garden enclosed is my
sister, my spouse, a fountain sealed, a well of living water, a garden with the
fruit of apples."(8) But if His Church is a garden enclosed, and a fountain
sealed, how can he who is not in the Church enter into the same garden, or drink
from its fountain? Moreover, Peter himself, showing and vindicating the unity,
has commanded and warned us that we cannot be saved, except by the one only
baptism of one Church. "In the ark," says he, "of Noah, few, that is, eight souls,
were saved by water, as also baptism shall in like manner save you."(9) In how
short and spiritual a summary has he set forth the sacrament of unity! For as,
in that baptism of the world in which its ancient iniquity was purged away, he
who was not in the ark of Noah could not be saved by water, so neither can he
appear to be saved by baptism who has not been baptized in the Church which is
established in the unity(10) of the Lord according to the sacrament of the one
ark.
12. Therefore, dearest brother, having explored and seen the truth; it is
observed and held by us, that all who are converted from any heresy whatever to
the Church must be baptized by the only and lawful baptism of the Church, with
the exception of those who had previously been baptized in the Church, and so
had passed over to the heretics.(1) For it behoves these, when they return,
having repented, to be received by the imposition of hands only, and to be
restored by the shepherd to the sheep-fold whence they had strayed. I bid you, dearest
brother, ever heartily farewell.
EPISTLE LXXIV.(2)
FIRMILIAN, BISHOP OF CAESAREA IN CAPPADOCIA, TO CYPRIAN, AGAINST THE LETTER OF
STEPHEN. A.D. 256.
ARGUMENT.--THE ARGUMENT OF THIS LETTER IS EXACTLY THE SAME AS THAT OF THE
PREVIOUS ONE, BUT WRITTEN WITH A LITTLE MORE VEHEMENCE AND ACERBITY THAN BECOMES A
BISHOP,(3) CHIEFLY FOR THE REASON, AS MAY BE SUSPECTED, THAT STEPHEN HAD ALSO
WRITTEN ANOTHER LETTER TO FIRMILIANUS, HELENUS, AND OTHER BISHOPS OF THOSE
PARTS.(4)
1. Firmilianus to Cyprian, his brother in the Lord, greeting. We have
received by Rogatian, our beloved deacon, the letter sent by you which you wrote to
us, well-beloved brother; and we gave the greatest thanks to the Lord, because
it has happened that we who are separated from one another in body are thus
united in spirit, as if we were not only occupying one country, but inhabiting
together one and the self-same house. Which also it is becoming for us to say,
because, indeed, the spiritual house of God is one. "For it shall come to pass in
the last days," saith the prophet, "that the mountain of the Lord shall be
manifest, and the house of God above the tops of the mountains."(5) Those that
come together into this house are united with gladness, according to what is asked
from the Lord in the psalm, to dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of
one's life. Whence in another place also it is made manifest, that among the
saints there is great and desirous love for assembling together. "Behold," he
says, "how good and how pleasant a thing it is for brethren to dwell together in
unity! "(6)
2. For unity and peace and concord afford the greatest pleasure not only
to men who believe and know the truth, but also to heavenly angels themselves,
to whom the divine word says it is a joy when one sinner repents and returns to
the bond of unity. But assuredly this would not be said of the angels, who have
their conversation in heaven, unless they themselves also were united to us,
who rejoice at our unity; even as, on the other hand, they are assuredly
saddened when they see the diverse minds and the divided wills of some, as if not only
they do not together invoke one and the same God, but as if, separated and
divided from one another, they can neither have a common conversation nor
discourse.(7) Except that we may in this matter give thanks to Stephen, that it has now
happened through his unkindness that we receive the proof of your faith and
wisdom. But although we have received the favour of this benefit on account of
Stephen, certainly Stephen has not done anything deserving of kindness and
thanks. For neither can Judas be thought worthy by his perfidy and treachery
wherewith he wickedly dealt concerning the Saviour, as though he had been the cause of
such great advantages, that through him the world and the people of the
Gentiles were delivered by the Lord's passion.
3. But let these things which were done by Stephen be passed by for the
present, lest, while we remember his audacity and pride, we bring a more lasting
sadness on ourselves from the things that he has wickedly done.(8) And knowing,
concerning you, that you have settled this matter, concerning which there is
now a question, according to the rule of truth and the wisdom of Christ; we have
exulted with great joy, and have given God thanks that we have found in
brethren placed at such a distance such a unanimity of faith and truth with us. For
the grace of God is mighty to associate and join together in the bond of charity
and unity even those things which seem to be divided by a considerable space
of earth, according to the way in which of old also the divine power associated
in the bond of unanimity Ezekiel and Daniel, though later in their age, and
separated from them by a long space of time, to Job and Noah, who were among the
first; so that although they were separated by long periods, yet by divine
inspiration they felt the same truths. And this also we now observe in you, that you
who are separated from us by the most extensive regions, approve yourselves to
be, nevertheless, joined with us in mind and spirit. All which arises from the
divine unity. For even as the Lord who dwells in us is one and the same, He
everywhere joins and couples His own people in the bond of unity, whence their
sound has gone out into the whole earth, who are sent by the Lord swiftly running
in the spirit of unity; as, on the other hand, it is of no advantage that some
are very near and joined together bodily, if in spirit and mind they differ,
since souls cannot at all be united which divide themselves from God's unity.
"For, lo," it says, "they that are far from Thee shall perish."(1) But such shall
undergo the judgment of God according to their desert, as depart from His
words who prays to the Father for unity, and says, "Father, grant that, as Thou and
I are one, so they also may be one in us."(2)
4. But we receive those things which you have written as if they were our
own; nor do we read them cursorily, but by frequent repetition have committed
them to memory. Nor does it hinder saving usefulness, either to repeat the same
things for the confirmation of the truth, or, moreover, to add some things for
the sake of accumulating proof. But if anything has been added by us, it is
not added as if there had been too little said by you; but since the divine
discourse surpasses human nature, and the soul cannot conceive or grasp the whole
and perfect word, therefore also the number of prophets is so great, that the
divine wisdom in its multiplicity may be distributed through many. Whence also he
who first speaks in prophecy is bidden to be silent if a revelation be made to
a second. For which reason it happens of necessity among us, that year by year
we, the elders and prelates, assemble together to arrange those matters which
are committed to our care, so that if any things are more serious they may be
directed by the common counsel. Moreover, we do this that some remedy may be
sought for by repentance for lapsed brethren, and for those wounded by the devil
after the saving layer, not as though they obtained remission of sins from us,
but that by our means they may be converted to the understanding of their sins,
and may be compelled to give fuller satisfaction to the Lord.
5. But since that messenger sent by you was in haste to return to you, and
the winter season was pressing, we replied what we could to your letter. And
indeed, as respects what Stephen has said, as though the apostles forbade those
who come from heresy to be baptized, and delivered this also to be observed by
their successors, you have replied most abundantly, that no one is so foolish
as to believe that the apostles delivered this, when it is even well known that
these heresies themselves, execrable and detestable as they are, arose
subsequently; when even Marcion the disciple of Cerdo is found to have introduced his
sacrilegious tradition against God long after the apostles, and after long lapse
of time from them. Apelles, also consenting to his blasphemy, added many other
new and more important matters hostile to faith and truth. But also the time
of Valentinus and Basilides is manifest, that they too, after the apostles, and
after a long period, rebelled against the Church of God with their wicked lies.
It is plain that the other heretics, also, afterwards introduced their evil
sects and perverse inventions, even as every one was led by error; all of whom,
it is evident, were self-condemned, and have declared against themselves an
inevitable sentence before the day of judgment; and he who confirms the baptism of
these, what else does he do but adjudge himself with them, and condemn himself,
making himself a partaker with such?
6. But that they who are at Rome do not observe those things in all cases
which are handed down from the beginning, and vainly pretend the authority of
the apostles;(3) any one may know also from the fact, that concerning the
celebration of Easter, and concerning many other sacraments of divine matters, he may
see that there are some diversities among them, and that all things are not
observed among them alike, which are observed at Jerusalem, just as in very many
other provinces also many things are varied because of the difference of the
places and names.(4) And yet on this account there is no departure at all from
the peace and unity of the Catholic Church, such as Stephen has now dared to
make;(5) breaking the peace against you, which his predecessors have always kept
with you in mutual love and honour, even herein defaming Peter and Paul the
blessed apostles,(5) as if the very men delivered this who in their epistles
execrated heretics, and warned us to avoid them. Whence it appears that this tradition
is of men which maintains heretics, and asserts that they have baptism, which
belongs to the Church alone.
7. But, moreover, you have well answered that part where Stephen said in
his letter that heretics themselves also are of one mind in respect of baptism;
and that they do not baptize such as come to them from one another, but only
communicate with them; as if we also ought to do this. In which place, although
you have already proved that it is sufficiently ridiculous for any one to follow
those that are in error, yet we add this moreover, over and above, that it is
not wonderful for heretics to act thus, who, although in some lesser matters
they differ, yet in that which is greatest they hold one and the same agreement
to blaspheme the Creator, figuring for themselves certain dreams and phantasms
of an unknown God. Assuredly it is but natural that these should agree in having
a baptism which is unreal,(1) in the same way as they agree in repudiating the
truth of the divinity. Of whom, since it is tedious to reply to their several
statements, either wicked or foolish, it is sufficient shortly to say in sum,
that they who do not hold the true Lord the Father cannot hold the truth either
of the Son or of the Holy Spirit; according to which also they who are called
Cataphrygians, and endeavour to claim to themselves new prophecies, can have
neither the Father, nor the Son, nor the Holy Spirit,(2) of whom, if we ask what
Christ they announce, they will reply that they preach Him who sent the Spirit
that speaks by Montanus and Prisca. And in these, when we observe that there has
been not the spirit of truth, but of error, we know that they who maintain
their false prophesying against the faith of Christ cannot have Christ. Moreover,
all other heretics, if they have separated themselves from the Church of God,
can have nothing of power or of grace, since all power and grace are established
in the Church where the elders(3) preside, who possess the power both of
baptizing, and of imposition of hands, and of ordaining. For as a heretic may not
lawfully ordain nor lay on hands, so neither may he baptize, nor do any thing
holily or spiritually, since he is an alien from spiritual and deifying sanctity.
All which we some time back confirmed in Iconium, which is a place in Phrygia,
when we were assembled together with those who had gathered from Galatia and
Cilicia, and other neighbouring countries, as to be held and firmly vindicated
against heretics, when there was some doubt in certain minds concerning that
matter.(4)
8. And as Stephen and those who agree with him contend that putting away
of sins and second birth may result from the baptism of heretics, among whom
they themselves confess that the Holy Spirit is not; let them consider and
understand that spiritual birth cannot be without the Spirit; in conformity with which
also the blessed Apostle Paul baptized anew with a spiritual baptism those who
had already been baptized by John before the Holy Spirit had been sent by the
Lord, and so laid hands on them that they might receive the Holy Ghost. But
what kind of a thing is it, that when we see that Paul, after John's baptism,
baptized his disciples again, we are hesitating to baptize those who come to the
Church from heresy after their unhallowed and profane dipping. Unless, perchance,
Paul was inferior to the bishops of these times, so that these indeed can by
imposition of hands alone give the Holy Spirit to those heretics who come (to
the Church), while Paul was not fitted to give the Holy Spirit by imposition of
hands to those who had been baptized by John, unless he had first baptized them
also with the baptism of the Church.
9. That, moreover, is absurd, that they do not think it is to be inquired
who was the person that baptized, for the reason that he who has been baptized
may have obtained grace by the invocation of the Trinity, of the names of the
Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Then this will be the wisdom
which Paul writes is in those who are perfected. But who in the Church is perfect
and wise who can either defend or believe this, that this bare invocation of
names is sufficient to the remission of sins and the sanctification of baptism;
since these things are only then of advantage, when both he who baptizes has the
Holy Spirit, and the baptism itself also is not ordained without the Spirit?
But, say they, he who in any manner whatever is baptized without, may obtain the
grace of baptism by his disposition and faith, which doubtless is ridiculous in
itself, as if either a wicked disposition could attract to itself from heaven
the sanctification of the righteous, or a false faith the truth of believers.
But that not all who call on the name of Christ are heard, and that their
invocation cannot obtain any grace, the Lord Himself manifests, saying, "Many shall
come in my name, saying, I am Christ, and shall deceive many."(5) Because there
is no difference between a false prophet and a heretic. For as the former
deceives in the name of God or Christ, so the latter deceives in the sacrament of
baptism. Both strive by falsehood to deceive men's wills.
10. But I wish to relate to you some facts concerning a circumstance which
occurred among us, pertaining to this very matter. About two-and-twenty years
ago, in the tithes after the Emperor Alexander, there happened in these parts
many struggles and difficulties, either in general to all men, or privately to
Christians. Moreover, there were many and frequent earthquakes, so that many
places were overthrown throughout Cappadocia and Pontus; even certain cities,
dragged into the abyss, were swallowed up by the opening of the gaping earth. So
that from this also a severe persecution arose against us of the Christian name;
and this after the long peace of the previous age arose suddenly, and with its
unusual evils was made more terrible for the disturbance of our people.
Se-renianus was then governor in our province, a bitter and terrible persecutor. But
the faithful being set in this state of disturbance, and fleeing hither and
thither for fear of the persecution, and leaving their country and passing over
into other regions--for there was an opportunity of passing over, for the reason
that that persecution was not over the whole world, but was local--there arose
among us on a sudden a certain woman, who in a state of ecstasy announced
herself as a prophetess, and acted as if filled with the Holy Ghost. And she was so
moved by the impetus of the principal demons, that for a long time she made
anxious and deceived the brotherhood, accomplishing certain wonderful and
portentous things, and promised that she would cause the earth to be shaken. Not that
the power of the demon was so great that he could prevail to shake the earth, or
to disturb the elements; but that sometimes a wicked spirit, prescient, and
perceiving that there will be an earthquake, pretends that he will do what he sees
will happen. By these lies and boastings he had so subdued the minds of
individuals, that they obeyed him and followed whithersoever he commanded and led. He
would also make that woman walk in the keen winter with bare feet over frozen
snow, and not to be troubled or hurt in any degree by that walking. Moreover,
she would say that she was hurrying to Judea and to Jerusalem, feigning as if
she had come thence. Here also she deceived one of the presbyters, a countryman,
and another, a deacon, so that they had intercourse with that same woman, which
was shortly afterwards detected. For on a sudden there appeared unto her one
of the exorcists, a man approved and always of good conversation in respect of
religious discipline; who, stimulated by the exhortation also of very many
brethren who were themselves strong and praiseworthy in the faith, raised himself up
against that wicked spirit to overcome it; which moreover, by its subtile
fallacy, had predicted this a little while before, that a certain adverse and
unbelieving tempter would come. Yet that exorcist, inspired by God's grace, bravely
resisted, and showed that that which was before thought holy, was indeed a most
wicked spirit. But that woman, who previously by wiles and deceitfulness of
the demon was attempting many things for the deceiving of the faithful, among
other things by which she had deceived many, also had frequently dared this; to
pretend that with an invocation not to be contemned she sanctified bread and
celebrated, the Eucharist, and to offer sacrifice to the Lord, not without the
sacrament of the accustomed utterance; and also to baptize many, making use of the
usual and lawful words of interrogation, that nothing might seem to be
different from the ecclesiastical rule.
11. What, then, shall we say about the baptism of this woman, by which a
most wicked demon baptized through means of a woman? Do Stephen and they who
agree with him approve of this also especially when neither the symbol of the
Trinity nor the legitimate and ecclesiastical interrogatory were wanting to her?
Can it be believed that either remission of sins was given, or the regeneration
of the saving layer duly completed, when all things, although after the image of
truth, yet were done by a demon? Unless, perchance, they who defend the
baptism of heretics contend that the demon also conferred the grace of baptism in the
name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Among them, no
doubt, there is the same error--it is the very deceitfulness of devils, since
among them the Holy Spirit is not at all.
12. Moreover, what is the meaning of that which Stephen would assert, that
the presence and holiness of Christ is with those who are baptized among
heretics? For if the apostle does not speak falsely when he says, "As many of you as
are baptized into Christ, have put on Christ,"(2) certainly he who has been
baptized among them into Christ, has put on Christ. But if he has put on Christ,
he might also receive the Holy Ghost, who was sent by Christ, and hands are
vainly laid upon him who comes to us for the reception of the Spirit; unless,
perhaps, he has not put on the Spirit from Christ, so that Christ indeed may be
with heretics, but the Holy Spirit not be with them.
13. But let us briefly run through the other matters also, which were
spoken of by you abundantly and most fully, especially as Rogatianus, our
well-beloved deacon, is hurrying to you. For it follows that they must be asked by us,
when they defend heretics, whether their baptism is carnal or spiritual. For if
it is carnal, they differ in no respect from the baptism of the Jews, which
they use in such a manner that in it, as if in a common and vulgar laver, only
external filth is washed away. But if it is spiritual, how can baptism be
spiritual among those among whom there is no Holy Spirit? And thus the water wherewith
they are washed is to them only a carnal washing, not a sacrament of baptism.
14. But if the baptism of heretics can have the regeneration of the second
birth, those who are baptized among them must be counted not heretics, but
children of God. For the second birth, which occurs in baptism, begets sons of
God. But if the spouse of Christ is one, which is the Catholic Church, it is she
herself who alone bears sons of God. For there are not many spouses of Christ,
since the apostle says, "I have espoused you, that I may present you as a chaste
virgin to Christ;"(1) and, "Hearken, O daughter, and consider, and incline
thine ear; forget also thine own people, for the King hath greatly desired thy
beauty;"(2) and, "Come with me, my spouse, from Lebanon; thou shalt come, and
shalt pass over from the source of thy faith; "(3) and, "I am come into my garden,
my sister, my spouse."(4) We see that one person is everywhere set forward,
because also the spouse is one. But the synagogue of heretics is not one with us,
because the spouse is not an adulteress and a harlot. Whence also she cannot
bear children of God; unless, as appears to Stephen, heresy indeed brings them
forth and exposes them, while the Church takes them up when exposed, and
nourishes those for her own whom she has not born, although she cannot be the mother
of strange children. And therefore Christ our Lord, setting forth that His
spouse is one, and declaring the sacrament of His unity, says, "He that is not with
me is against me, and he that gathereth not with me scattereth."(5) For if
Christ is with us, but the heretics are not with us, certainly the heretics are in
opposition to Christ; and if we gather with Christ, but the heretics do not
gather with us, doubtless they scatter.
15. But neither must we pass over what has been necessarily remarked by
you, that the Church, according to the Song of Songs, is a garden enclosed, and a
fountain sealed, a paradise with the fruit of apples.(6) They who have never
entered into this garden, and have not seen the paradise planted by God the
Creator, how shall they be able to afford to another the bring water of the saving
lava from the fountain which is enclosed within, and sealed with a divine seal?
And as the ark of Noah was nothing else than the sacrament of the Church of
Christ, which then, when all without were perishing, kept those only safe who
were within the ark, we are manifestly instructed to look to the unity of the
Church. Even as also the Apostle Peter laid down, saying, "Thus also shall
baptism in like manner make you safe;"(7) showing that as they who were not in the
ark with Noah not only were not purged and saved by water, but at once perished
in that deluge; so now also, whoever are not in the Church with Christ will
perish outside, unless they are converted by penitence to the only and saving
lava of the Church.
16. But what is the greatness of his error, and what the depth of his
blindness, who says that remission of sins can be granted in the synagogues of
heretics, and does not abide on the foundation of the one Church which was once
based by Christ upon the rock, may be perceived from this, that Christ said to
Peter alone, "Whatsoever thou shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and
whatsoever thou shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven."(8) And again, in
the Gospel, when Christ breathed on the apostles alone, saying, "Receive ye
the Holy Ghost: whose soever sins ye remit they are remitted unto them, and whose
soever sins ye retain they are retained."(9) Therefore the power of remitting
sins was given to the apostles, and to the churches which they, sent by Christ,
established, and to the bishops who succeeded to them by vicarious
ordination.(10) But the enemies of the one Catholic Church in which we are, and the
adversaries of us who have succeeded the apostles, asserting for themselves, in
opposition to us, unlawful priesthoods, and setting up profane altars, what else are
they than Korah, Dathan, and Abiram, profane with a like wickedness, and about
to suffer the same punishments which they did, as well as those who agree with
them, just as their partners and abettors perished with a like death to theirs?
17. And in this respect I am justly indignant at this so open and manifest
folly of Stephen, that he who so boasts of the place of his episcopate, and
contends that he holds the succession from Peter," on whom the foundations of the
Church were laid, should introduce many other rocks and establish new
buildings of many churches; maintaining that there is baptism in them by his authority.
For they who are baptized, doubtless, fill up the number of the Church. But he
who approves their baptism maintains, of those baptized, that the Church is
also with them. Nor does he understand that the truth of the Christian Rock is
overshadowed, and in some measure abolished, by him when he thus betrays and
deserts unity.(12) The apostle acknowledges that the Jews, although blinded by
ignorance, and bound by the grossest wickedness, have yet a zeal for God. Stephen,
who announces that he holds by succession the throne of Peter, is stirred with
no zeal against heretics, when he concedes to them, not a moderate, but the
very greatest power of grace: so far as to say and assert that, by the sacrament
of baptism, the filth of the old man is washed away by them, that they pardon
the former mortal sins, that they make sons of God by heavenly regeneration, and
renew to eternal life by the sanctification of the divine layer. He who
concedes and gives up to heretics in this way the great and heavenly gifts of the
Church, what else does he do but communicate with them for whom he maintains and
claims so much grace? And now he hesitates in vain to consent to them, and to be
a partaker with them in other matters also, to meet together with them, and
equally with them to mingle their prayers, and appoint a common altar and
sacrifice.
18. But, says he, "the name of Christ is of great advantage to faith and
the sanctification of baptism; so that whosoever is anywhere so-ever baptized in
the name of Christ, immediately obtains the grace of Christ: "although this
position may be briefly met and answered, that if baptism without in the name of
Christ availed for the cleansing of man; in the name of the same Christ, the
imposition of hands might avail also for the reception of the Holy Spirit; and
the other things also which are done among heretics will begin to seem just and
lawful when they are done in the name of Christ; as you have maintained in your
letter that the name of Christ could be of no avail except in the Church alone,
to which alone Christ has conceded the power of heavenly grace.
19. But with respect to the refutation of custom which they seem to oppose
to the truth, who is so foolish as to prefer custom to truth, or when he sees
the light, not to forsake the darkness?--unless most ancient custom in any
respect avail the Jews, upon the advent of Christ, that is, the Truth, in remaining
in their old usage, and forsaking the new way of truth. And this indeed you
Africans are able to say against Stephen, that when you knew the truth you
forsook the error of custom. But we join custom to truth, and to the Romans' custom
we oppose custom, but the custom of truth; holding from the beginning that which
was delivered by Christ and the apostles.(1) Nor do we remember that this at
any time began among us, since it has always been observed here, that we knew
none but one Church of God, and accounted no baptism holy except that of the holy
Church. Certainly, since some doubted about the baptism of those who, although
they receive the new prophets,(2) yet appear to recognise the same Father and
Son with us; very many of us meeting together in Iconium very carefully
examined the matter, and we decided that every baptism was altogether to be rejected
which is arranged for without the Church.(3)
20. But to what they allege and say on behalf of the heretics, that the
apostle said, "Whether in pretence or in truth, Christ is preached,"(4) it is
idle for us to reply; when it is manifest that the apostle, in his epistle wherein
he said this, made mention neither of heretics nor of baptism of heretics, but
spoke of brethren only, whether as perfidiously speaking in agreement with
himself, or as persevering in sincere faith; nor is it needful to discuss this in
a long argument, but it is sufficient to read the epistle itself, and to gather
from the apostle himself what the apostle said.
21. What then, say they, will become of those who, coming from the
heretics, have been received without the baptism of the Church? If they have departed
this life, they are reckoned in the number of those who have been catechumens
indeed among us, but have died before they were baptized,--no trifling(5)
advantage of truth and faith, to which they had attained by forsaking error,
although, being prevented by death, they had not gained the consummation of grace.(6)
But they who still abide in life should be baptized with the baptism of the
Church, that they may obtain remission of sins, lest by the presumption of others
they remain in their old error, and die without the completion of grace. But
what a crime is theirs on the one hand who receive, or on the other, theirs who
are received, that their foulness not being washed away by the layer of the
Church, nor their sins put away, communion being rashly seized, they touch the body
and blood of the Lord, although it is written, "Whosoever shall eat the bread
or drink the cup of the Lord unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood
of the Lord!"(7)
22. We have judged, that those also whom they, who had formerly been
bishops in the Catholic Church, and afterwards had assumed to themselves the power
of clerical ordination, had baptized, are to be regarded as not baptized. And
this is observed among us, that whosoever dipped by them come to us are baptized
among us as strangers and having obtained nothing, with the only and true
baptism of the Catholic Church, and obtain the regeneration of the layer of life.
And yet there is a great difference between him who unwillingly and constrained
by the necessity of persecution has given way, and him who with a profane will
boldly rebels against the Church, or with impious voice blasphemes against the
Father and God of Christ and the Creator of the whole world. And Stephen is not
ashamed to assert and to say that remission of sins can be granted by those who
are themselves set fast in all kinds of sins, as if in the house of death
there could be the layer of salvation.
23. What, then, is to be made of what is written, "Abstain from strange
water, and drink not from a strange fountain,"(1) if, leaving the sealed fountain
of the Church, you take up strange water for your own, and pollute the Church
with unhallowed fountains? For when you communicate with the baptism of
heretics, what else do you do than drink from their slough and mud; and while you
yourself are purged with the Church's sanctification, you become befouled with the
contact of the filth of others? And do you not fear the judgment of God when
you are giving testimony to heretics in opposition to the Church, although it is
written, "A false witness shall not be unpunished?"(2) But indeed you are
worse than all heretics. For when many, as soon as their error is known, come over
to you from them that they may receive the true light of the Church, you assist
the errors of those who come, and, obscuring the light of ecclesiastical
truth, you heap up the darkness of the heretical night; and although they confess
that they are in sins, and have no grace, and therefore come to the Church, you
take away from them remission of sins, which is given in baptism, by saying that
they are already baptized and have obtained the grace of the Church outside
the Church, and you do not perceive that their souls will be required at your
hands when the day of judgment shall come, for having denied to the thirsting the
drink of the Church, and having been the occasion of death to those that were
desirious of living. And, after all this, you are indignant!
24. Consider with what want of judgment you dare to blame those who strive
for the truth against falsehood. For who ought more justly to be indignant
against the other?--whether he who supports God's enemies, or he who, in
opposition to him who supports God's enemies, unites with us on behalf of the truth of
the Church?--except that it is plain that the ignorant are also excited and
angry, because by the want of counsel and discourse they are easily turned to
wrath; so that of none more than of you does divine Scripture say, "A wrathful man
stirreth up strifes, and a furious man heapeth up sins."(3) For what strifes and
dissensions have you stirred up throughout the churches of the whole world!
Moreover, how great sin have you heaped up for yourself, when you cut yourself
off from so many flocks! For it is yourself that you have cut off. Do not deceive
yourself, since he is really the schismatic who has made himself an apostate
from the communion of ecclesiastical unity.(4) For while you think that all may
be excommunicated by you, you have excommunicated yourself alone from all; and
not even the precepts of an apostle have been able to mould you to the rule of
truth and peace, although he warned, and said, "I therefore, the prisoner of
the Lord, beseech you that ye walk worthy of the vocation wherewith ye are
called, with all lowliness and meekness, with long-suffering, forbearing one another
in love; endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.
There is one body and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your
calling; one Lord, one faith, one baptism; one God and Father of all, who is above
all, and through all, and in us all."(5)
25. How carefully has Stephen fulfilled these salutary commands and
warnings of the apostle, keeping in the first place lowliness of mind and meekness!
For what is more lowly or meek than to have disagreed with so many bishops
throughout the whole world, breaking peace with each one of them in various kinds of
discord:(6) at one time with the eastern churches, as we are sure you know; at
another time with yon who are in the south, from whom he received bishops as
messengers sufficiently patiently and meekly not to receive them even to the
speech of an ordinary conference; and even more, so mindful of love and charity as
to command the entire fraternity, that no one should receive them into his
house, so that not only peace and communion, but also a shelter and entertainment,
were denied to them when they came! This is to have kept the unity of the
Spirit in the bond of peace, to cut himself off from the unity of love,(7) and to
make himself a stranger in all respects from his brethren, and to rebel against
the sacrament and the faith with the madness of contumacious discord! With such
a man can there be one Spirit and one body, in whom perchance there is not
even one mind, so slippery, and shifting, and uncertain is it?
26. But as far as he is concerned, let us leave him;(7) let us rather deal
with that concerning which there is the greatest question. They who contend
that persons baptized among the heretics ought to be received as if they had
obtained the grace of lawful baptism, say that baptism is one and the same to them
and to us, and differs in no respect. But what says the Apostle Paul? "One
Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God."(8) If the baptism of heretics be one and
the same with ours, without doubt their faith also is one; but if our faith is
one, assuredly also we have one Lord: if there is one Lord, it follows that we
say that He is one.(1) But if this unity which cannot be separated and divided at
all, is itself also among heretics, why do we contend any more? Why do we call
them heretics and not Christians? Moreover, since we and heretics have not one
God, nor one Lord, nor one Church, nor one faith, nor even one Spirit, nor one
body, it is manifest that neither can baptism be common to us with heretics,
since between us there is nothing at all in common. And yet Stephen is not
ashamed to afford patronage to such in opposition to the Church, and for the sake of
maintaining heretics to divide the brotherhood and in addition, to call
Cyprian "a false Christ and a false apostle, and a deceitful worker."(2) And he,
conscious that all these characters are in himself, has been in advance of you, by
falsely objecting to another those things which he himself ought deservedly to
hear. We all bid you, for all our sakes, with all the bishops who are in
Africa, and all the clergy, and all the brotherhood, farewell; that, constantly of
one mind, and thinking the same thing, we may find you united with us even though
afar off.(3)