CONSTITUTIONS OF THE HOLY APOSTLES. REST OF BOOK II
SEC. V.--ON ACCUSATIONS, AND THE TREATMENT OF ACCUSERS.
CONCERNING ACCUSERS AND FALSE ACCUSERS, AND HOW A JUDGE IS NOT RASHLY EITHER
TO BELIEVE THEM OR DISBELIEVE THEM, BUT AFTER AN ACCURATE EXAMINATION.
XXXVII. But it is the duty of the bishop to judge rightly, as it is
written, "Judge righteous judgment;"(12) and elsewhere, "Why do ye not even of
yourselves judge what is right?"(13) Be ye therefore as skilful dealers in money: for
as these reject bad money, but take to themselves what is current, in the same
manner it is the bishops's duty to retain the unblameable, but either to heal,
or, if they be past cure, to cast off those that are blameworthy, so as not to
be hasty in cutting off, nor to believe alI accusations; for it sometimes
happens that some, either through passion or envy, do insist on a false accusation
against a brother, as did the two elders in the case of Susanna in Babylon,(1)
and the Egyptian woman in the case of Joseph.(2) Do thou therefore, as a man of
God, not rashly receive such accusations, lest thou take away the innocent and
slay the righteous; for he that will receive such accusations is the author of
anger rather than of peace. But where there is anger, there the Lord is not;
for that anger, which is the friend of Satan--I mean that which is excited
unjustly by the means of false brethren--never suffers unanimity to be in the
Church. Wherefore, when you know such persons to be foolish, quarrelsome, passionate,
and such as delight in mischief, do not give credit to them; but observe such
as they are, when you hear anything from them against their brother: for murder
is nothing in their eyes, and they cast a man down in such a way as one would
not suspect. Do thou therefore consider diligently the accuser,(3) wisely
observing his mode of life, what, and of what sort it is; and in case thou findest
him a man of veracity, do according to the doctrine of our Lord,(4) and taking
him who is accused, rebuke him, that he may repent, when nobody is by. But if he
be not pervaded, take with thee out or two more, and so show him his fault,
and admonish him with mildness and instruction; for "wisdom will rest upon an
heart that is good, but is not understood in the heart of the foolish."(5)
THAT SINNERS ARE PRIVATELY TO BE REPROVED, AND THE PENITENT TO BE RECEIVED,
ACCORDING TO THE CONSTITUTION OF OUR LORD.
XXXVIII. If, therefore, he be persuaded by the mouth of you three, it is
well. But if any one hardens himself, "tell it to the Church: but if he neglects
to hear the Church, let him be to thee as an heathen man and a publican;"(6)
and receive him no longer into the Church as a Christian, but reject him as an
heathen. But if he be willing to repent, receive him. For the Church does not
receive an heathen or a publican to communion, before they every one repent of
their former impieties; for our Lord Jesus, the Christ of God, has appointed
place for the acceptance of men upon their repentance.
EXAMPLES OF REPENTANCE.
XXXIX. For I Matthew, one of those twelve which speak to you in this
doctrine, am an apostle, having myself been formerly a publican, but now have
obtained mercy through believing, and have repented of my former practices, and have
been vouchsafed the honour to be an apostle and preacher of the word. And
Zacchaeus, whom the Lord received upon his repentance and prayers to Him, was also
himself in the same manner a publican at first. And, besides, even the soldiers
and multitude of publicans, who came to hear the word of the Lord about
repentance, heard this from the prophet John, after he had baptized them: "Do nothing
more than that which is appointed you."(7) In like manner, life is not refused
to the heathen, if they repent and cast away their unbelief. Esteem,
therefore, every one that is convicted of any wicked action, and has not repented, as a
publican or an heathen. But if he afterward repents, and turns from his error,
then, as we receive the heathen, when they wish to repent, into the Church
indeed to hear the word, but do not receive them to communion until they have
received the seal of baptism, and are made complete Christians; so do we also permit
such as these to enter only to hear, until they show the fruit of repentance,
that by hearing the word they may not utterly and irrecoverably perish. But let
them not be admitted to communion in prayer; and let them depart after the
reading of the law, and the prophets, and the Gospel, that by such departure they
may be made better in their course of life, by endeavouring to meet every day
about the public assemblies, and to be frequent in prayer, that they also may be
at length admitted, and that those who behold them may be affected, and be
more secured by fearing to fall into the same condition.
THAT WE ARE NOT TO BE IMPLACABLE TO HIM WHO HAS ONCE OR TWICE OFFENDED.
XL. But yet do not thou, O bishop, presently abhor any person who has
fallen into one or two offences, nor shalt thou exclude him from the word of the
Lord, nor reject him from common intercourse, since neither did the Lord refuse
to eat with publicans and sinners; and when He was accused by the Pharisees on
this account, He said: "They that are well have no need of the physician, but
they that are sick."(8) Do you, therefore, live and dwell with those who are
separated from you for their sins; and take care of them, comforting them, and
confirming them, and saying to them: "Be strengthened, ye weak hands and feeble
knees."(9) For we ought to comfort those that mourn, and afford encouragement to
the fainthearted, lest by immoderate sorrow they degenerate into distraction,
since "he that is fainthearted is exceedingly distracted."(10)
AFTER WHAT MANNER WE OUGHT TO RECEIVE A PENITENT; HOW WE OUGHT TO DEAL WITH
OFFENDERS, AND WHEN THEY ARE TO BE CUT OFF FROM THE CHURCH.
XLI. But if any one returns, and shows forth the fruit of repentance, then
do ye receive him to prayer, as the lost son, the prodigal, who had consumed
his father's substance with harlots, who fed swine, and desired to be fed with
husks, and could not obtain it. This son, when he repented, and returned to his
father, and said, "I have sinned against Heaven, and before thee, and am no
more worthy to be called thy son;"(1) the father, full of affection to his child,
received him with music, and restored him his old robe, and ring, and shoes,
and slew the fatted calf, and made merry with his friends. Do thou therefore, O
bishop, act in the same manner. And as thou receivest an heathen after thou hast
instructed and baptized him, so do thou let all join in prayers for this man,
and restore him by imposition of hands to his ancient place among the flock, as
one purified by repentance; and that imposition of hands shall be to him
instead of baptism: for by the laying on of our hands the Holy Ghost was given to
believers. And in case some one of those brethren who had stood immoveable accuse
thee, because thou art reconciled to him, say to him: "Thou art always with
me, and all that I have is thine. It was meet to make merry and be glad: for this
thy brother was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found." For that
God does not only receive the penitent, but restores them to their former
dignity, holy David is a sufficient witness, who, after his sin in the matter of
Uriah, prayed to God, and said: "Restore unto me the joy of Thy salvation, and
uphold me with Thy free Spirit."(2) And again: "Turn Thy face from my sins, and
blot out all mine offences. Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right
spirit in my inward parts. Cast me not away from Thy presence, and take not
Thy Holy Spirit from me." Do thou therefore, as a compassionate physician, heal
all that have sinned, making use of saving methods of cure; not only cutting and
searing, or using corrosives, but binding up, and putting in tents, and using
gentle healing medicines, and sprinkling comfortable words. If it be an hollow
wound, or great gash, nourish it with a suitable plaister, that it may be
filled up, and become even with the rest of the whole flesh. If it be foul, cleanse
it with corrosive powder, that is, with the words of reproof. If it have proud
flesh, eat it down with a sharp plaister--the threats of judgment. If it
spreads further, sear it, and cut off the putrid flesh, mortifying him with fastings.
But if, after all that thou hast done, thou perceivest that from the feet to
the head there is no room for a fomentation, or oil, or bandage, but that the
malady spreads and prevents all cure, as a gangrene which corrupts the entire
member; then, with a great deal of consideration, and the advice of other skilful
physicians, cut off the putrefied member, that the whole body of the Church be
not corrupted. Be not therefore ready and hasty to cut off, nor do thou easily
have recourse to the saw, with its many teeth; but first use a lancet to lay
open the wound, that the inward cause whence the pain is derived being drawn out,
may keep the body free from pain. But if thou seest any one past repentance,
and he is become insensible, then cut off the incurable from the Church with
sorrow and lamentation. For: "Take out from among yourselves that wicked
person."(3) And: "Ye shall make the children of Israel to fear."(4) And again: "'Thou
shalt not accept the persons of the rich in judgment."(5) And: "Thou shalt not
pity a poor man in his cause: for the judgment is the Lord's."(6)
THAT A JUDGE MUST NOT BE A RESPECTER OF PERSONS.
XLII. But if the slanderous accusation be false, and youthat are the
pastors, with the deacons, admit of that falsehood for truth, either by acceptance
of persons or receiving of bribes, as willing to do that which will he pleasing
to the devil, and so you thrust out from the Church him that is accused, but
is clear of the crime, you shall give an account in the day of the Lord. For it
is written: "The innocent and the righteous thou shalt not slay."(7) "Thou
shalt not take girls to smite the soul: for gifts blind the eyes of the wise, and
destroy the words of the righteous."(8) And again: "They that justify the wicked
for gifts, and take away the righteousness of the righteous from him."(9) Be
careful, therefore, not to condemn any persons unjustly, and so to assist the
wicked. For "woe to him that calls evil good, and good evil; bitter sweet, and
sweet bitter; that puts light for darkness, and darkness for light."(10) Take
care, therefore, lest by any means ye become acceptors of persons, and thereby
fall under this voice of the Lord.(11) For if you condemn others unjustly, you
pass sentence against yourselves. For the Lord says: "With what judgment ye
judge, ye shall be judged; and as you condemn, you shall be condemned."(1) If,
therefore, ye judge without respect of persons, ye will discover that accuser who
bears false witness against his neighbour, and will prove him to be a sycophant,
a spiteful person, and a murderer, causing perplexity by accusing the man as
if he were wicked, inconstant in his words, contradicting himself in what he
affirms, and entangled with the words of his own mouth; for his own lips are a
dangerous, snare to him: whom, when thou hast convicted him of speaking falsely,
thou shalt judge severely, and shalt deliver him to the fiery sword, and thou
shalt do to him as he wickedly proposed to do to his brother; for as much as in
him lay he slew his brother, by forestalling the ears of the judge.(2) Now it
is written, that "he that sheddeth man's blood, for that his own blood shall
be shed."(3) And: "Thou shalt take away that innocent blood, which was shed
without cause, from thee."(4)
AFTER WHAT MANNER FALSE ACCUSERS ARE TO BE PUNISHED.
XLIII. Thou shalt therefore cast him out of the congregation as a murderer
of his brother. Some time afterwards, if he says that he repents, mortify
him with fastings, and afterwards ye shall lay your hands upon him and receive
him, but still securing him, that he does not disturb anybody a second time. But
if, when he is admitted again, he be alike troublesome, and will not cease to
disturb and to quarrel with his brother, spying faults out of a contentious
spirit, cast him out as a pernicious person, that he may not lay waste the Church
of God. For such a one is the raiser of disturbances in cities; for he, though
he be within, does not become the Church, but is a superfluous and vain member,
casting a blot, as far as in him lies, on the body of Christ. For if such men
as are born with superfluous members of their body, which hang to them as
fingers, or excrescences of flesh, cut them away from themselves on account of their
indecency, whereby the unseemliness vanishes, and the man recovers his natural
good shape by the means of the surgeon; how much more ought you, the pastors of
the Church (for the Church is a perfect body, and sound members; of such as
believe in God, in the fear of the Lord, and in love), to do the like when there
is found in it a superfluous member with wicked designs, and rendering the rest
of the body unseemly, and disturbing it with sedition, and war, and
evil-speaking; causing fears, disturbances, blots, evil-speaking, accusations, disorders,
and doing the like works of the devil, as if he were ordained by the devil to
cast a reproach on the Church by calumnies, and mighty disorders, and strife,
and division! Such a one, therefore, when he is a second time cast out of the
Church, is justly cut off entirely from the congregation of the Lord. And now the
Church of the Lord will be more beautiful than it was before, when it had a
superfluous, and to itself a disagreeable member. Wherefore henceforward it will
be free from blame and reproach, and become clear of such wicked, deceitful,
abusive, unmerciful, traitorous persons; of such as are "haters of those that are
good, lovers of pleasure,"(5) affecters of vainglory, deceivers, and
pretenders to wisdom; of such as make it their business to scatter, or rather utterly to
disperse, the lambs of the Lord.
SEC. VI.--THE DISPUTES OF THE FAITHFUL TO BE SETTLED BY THE DECISIONS OF THE
BISHOP, AND THE FAITHFUL TO BE RECONCILED.
Do thou therefore, O bishop, together with thy subordinate clergy,
endeavour rightly to divide the word of truth. For the Lord says: "If you walk
cross-grained to me, I will walk cross-grained to you."(6) And elsewhere: "With the
holy Thou wilt be holy, and with the perfect man Thou wilt be perfect, and with
the froward Thou wilt be froward."(7) Walk therefore holily, that you may
rather appear worthy of praise from the Lord than of complaint from the adversary.
THAT THE DEACON IS TO EASE THE BURTHEN OF THE BISHOPS, AND TO ORDER THE
SMALLER MATTERS HIMSELF.
XLIV. Be ye of one mind, O ye bishops, one with another, and be at peace
with one another; sympathize with one another, love the brethren, and feed the
people with care; with one consent teach those that are under you to be of the
same sentiments and to be of the same opinions about the same matters, "that
there may be no schisms among you; that ye may be one body and one spirit,
perfectly joined together in the same mind and in the same judgment,"(8) according to
the appointment of the Lord. And let the deacon refer all things to the bishop,
as Christ does to His Farther. But let him order such things as he is able by
himself, receiving power from the bishop, as the Lord did from His Father the
power of creation and of providence. But the weighty matters let the bishop
judge; but let the deacon be the bishop's ear, and eye, and mouth, and heart, and
soul, that the bishop may not be distracted with many cares, but with such only
as are more considerable, as Jethro did appoint for Moses, and his counsel was
received.(9)
THAT CONTENTIONS AND QUARRELS ARE UNBECOMING CHRISTIANS.
XLV. It is therefore a noble encomium for a Christian to have no contest
with any one;(1) but if by any management or temptation a contest arises with
any one, let him endeavour that it may be composed, though thereby he be obliged
to lose somewhat; and let it not come before an heathen tribunal. Nay, indeed,
you are not to permit that the rulers of this world should pass sentence
against your people; for by them the devil contrives mischief to the servants of God,
and occasions a reproach to be cast upon us, as though we had not "one wise
man that is able to judge between his brethren," or to decide their controversies.
THAT BELIEVERS OUGHT NOT TO GO TO LAW BEFORE UNBELIEVERS; NOR OUGHT ANY
UNBELIEVER TO BE CALLED FOR A WITNESS AGAINST BELIEVERS.
XLVI. Let not the heathen therefore know of your differences among One
another, nor do you receive unbelievers as witnesses against yourselves, nor be
judged by them, nor owe them anything on account of tribute or fear; but "render
to Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and unto God the things that are
God's,"(2) as tribute, taxes, or poll-money, as our Lord by giving a piece of money
was freed from disturbance.(3) Choose therefore rather to suffer harm, and to
endeavour after those things that make for peace, not only among the brethren,
but also among the unbelievers. For by suffering loss in the affairs of this
life, thou wilt be sure not to suffer in the concerns of piety, and wilt live
religiously, and according to the command of Christ.(4) But if brethren have
lawsuits one with another, which God forbid, you who are the rulers ought thence to
learn that such as these do not do the work of brethren in the Lord, but rather
of public enemies; and one of the parties will be found to be mild, gentle, and
the child of light; but the other unmerciful, insolent, and covetous. Let him,
therefore, who is condemned be rebuked, let him be separated, let him undergo
the punishment of his hatred to his brother. Afterwards, when he repents, let
him be received; and so, when they have learned prudence, they will ease your
judicatures. It is also a duty to forgive each other's trespasses--not the duty
of those that judge, but of those that have quarrels; as the Lord determined
when I Peter asked Him, "How oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive
him? Till seven times?" He replied, "I say not unto thee, Until seven times, but
until seventy times seven."(5) For so would our Lord have us to be truly His
disciples, and never to have anything against anybody; as, for instance, anger
without measure, passion without mercy, covetousness without justice, hatred
without reconciliation. Draw by your instruction those who are angry to friendship,
and those who are at variance to agreement. For the Lord says: "Blessed are
the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God."(6)
THAT THE JUDICATURES OF CHRISTIANS OUGHT TO BE HELD ON THE SECOND DAY OF THE
WEEK.
XLVII. Let your judicatures be held on the second day of the week, that
if any controversy arise about your sentence, having an interval till the
Sabbath,(7) you may be able to set the controversy right, and to reduce those to
peace who have the contests one with another against the Lord's day. Let also the
deacons and presbyters be present at your judicatures, to judge without
acceptance of persons, as men of God, with righteousness. When, therefore, both the
parties are come, according as the law says,(8) those that have the controversy
shall stand severally in the middle of the court; and when you have heard them,
give your votes holily, endeavouring to make them both friends before the
sentence of the bishop, that judgment against the offender may not go abroad into the
world; knowing that he has in the court the Christ of God as conscious of and
confirming his judgment. But if any persons are accused by any one, and their
fame suffers as if they did not walk uprightly in the Lord. in like manner you
shall hear both parties--the accuser and accused; but not with prejudice, nor
with hearkening to one part only, but with righteousness, as passing a sentence
concerning eternal life or death. For says God: "He shall prosecute that which
is right justly."(9) For he that is justly punished and separated by you is
rejected from eternal life and glory; he becomes dishonourable among holy men, and
one condemned of God.
THAT THE SAME PUNISHMENT IS NOT TO BE INFLICTED FOR EVERY OFFENCE, BUT
DIFFERENT PUNISHMENTS FOR DIFFERENT OFFENDERS.
XLVIII. Do not pass the same sentence for every sin, but one suitable to
each crime, distinguishing all the several sorts of offences with much prudence,
the great from the little. Treat a wicked action after one manner, and a
wicked word after another; a bare intention still otherwise. So also in the case of
a contumely or suspicion. And some thou shalt curb by threatenings alone; some
thou shalt punish with fines to the poor; some thou shalt mortify with
fastings; and others thou shalt separate according to the greatness of their several
crimes. For the law did not allot the same punishment to every offence, but had a
different regard to a sin against God, against the priest, against the temple,
or against the sacrifice; from a sin against the king, or ruler, or a soldier,
or a fellow-subject; and so were the offences different which were against a
servant, a possession, or a brute creature. And again, sins were differently
rated according as they were against parents and kinsmen, and those differently
which were done on purpose from those that happened involuntarily. Accordingly
the punishments were different: as death either by crucifixion or by stoning,
fines, scourgings, or the suffering the same mischiefs they had done to others.
Wherefore do you also allot different penalties to different offences, lest any
injustice should happen, and provoke God to indignation. For of what unjust
judgment soever you are the instruments, of the same you shall receive the reward
from God. "For with what judgment ye judge ye shall be judged."(1)
WHAT ARE TO BE THE CHARACTERS OF ACCUSERS AND WITNESSES.
XLIX. When, therefore, you are set down at your tribunal, and the parties
are both of them present (for we will not call them brethren until they receive
each other in peace), examine diligently concerning those who appear before
you; and first concerning the accuser, whether this be the first person he has
accused, or whether he has advanced accusations against some others before, and
whether this contest and accusation of theirs does not arise from some quarrel,
and what sort of life the accuser leads. Yet, though he be of a good
conscience, do not give credit to him alone, for that is contrary to the law; but let him
have others to join in his testimony, and those of the same course of life. As
the law says: "At the mouth of two or three witnesses everything shall be
established."(2) But why did we say that the character of the witnesses was to be
inquired after, of what sort it is? Because it frequently happens that two and
more testify for mischief, and with joint consent prefer a lie; as did the two
elders against Susanna in Babylon,(3) and the sons of transgressors against
Naborb in Samaria,(4) and the multitude of the Jews against our Lord at
Jerusalem,(5) and against Stephen His first martyr.(6) Let the witnesses therefore be
meek, free from anger, full of equity, kind, prudent, continent, free from
wickedness, faithful, religious; for the testimony of such persons is firm on account
of their character, and true on account of their mode of life. But as to those
of a different character, do not ye receive their testimony, although they seem
to agree together in their evidence against the accused; for it is ordained in
the law: "Thou shalt not be with a multitude for wickedness; thou shalt not
receive a vain report; thou shalt not consent with a multitude to pervert
judgment."(7) You ought also particularly to know him that is accused; what he is in
his course and mode of life; whether he have a good report as to his life;
whether he has been unblameable; whether he has been zealous in holiness; whether he
be a lover of the widows, a lover of the strangers, a lover of the poor, and a
lover of the brethren; whether he be not given to filthy lucre; whether he be
not an extravagant person, or a spendthrift; whether he be sober, and free from
luxury, or a drunkard, or a glutton; whether he be compassionate and
charitable.
THAT FORMER OFFENCES DO SOMETIMES RENDER AFTER ACCUSATIONS CREDIBLE.
L. For if he has been before addicted to wicked works, the accusations
which are now brought against him will thence in some measure appear to be true,
unless justice do plainly plead for hint. For it may be, that though he had
formerly been an offender, yet that he may not be guilty of this crime of which he
is accused. Wherefore be exactly cautious about such circumstances, and so
render your sentences, when pronounced against the offender convicted, safe and
firm. And if, after his separation, he begs pardon, and falls down before the
bishop, and acknowledges his fault, receive him. But neither do you suffer a false
accuser to go unpunished, that he may not calumniate another who lives well,
or encourage some other person to do like him. Nor, to be sure, do ye suffer a
person convicted to go off clear, lest another be ensnared in the same crimes.
For neither shall a witness of mischiefs be unpunished, nor shall he that
offends be without censure.
AGAINST JUDGING WITHOUT HEARING BOTH SIDES.
LI. We said before that judgment ought not to be given upon hearing only
one of the parties; for if you hear one of them when the other is not there,
and so cannot make his defence to the accusation brought against him, and rashly
give your votes for condemnation, you will be found guilty of that man's
destruction, and partaker with the false accuser before God, the just Judge. For "as
he that holdeth the tail of a dog, so is he that presides at unjust judgment."
But if ye become imitators of the elders in Babylon, who, when they had borne
witness against Susanna, unjustly condemned her to death, you will become
obnoxious to their judgment and condemnation. For the Lord by Daniel delivered
Susanna from the hand of the ungodly, but condemned to the fire those elders who were
guilty of her blood, and reproaches you by him, saying: "Are ye so foolish, ye
children of Israel? Without examination, and without knowing the truth, have
ye condemned a daughter of Israel? Return again to the place of judgment, for
these men have borne false witness against her."(2)
THE CAUTION OBSERVED AT HEATHEN TRIBUNALS BEFORE THE CONDEMNATION OF CRIMINALS
AFFORDS CHRISTIANS A GOOD EXAMPLE.
LII. Consider even the judicatures of this world, by whose power we see
murderers, adulterers, wizards, robbers of sepulchres, and thieves brought to
trial; and those that preside, when they have received their accusations from
those that brought them, ask the malefactor whether those things be so. And though
he does not deny the crimes, they do not presently send him out to punishment;
but for several days they make inquiry about him with a full council, and with
the veil interposed. And he that is to pass the final decree and suffrage of
death against him, lifts up his hands to the sun, and solemnly affirms that he is
innocent of the blood of the man. Though they be heathens, and know not the
Deity, nor the vengeance which will fall upon men from God on account of those
that are justly condemned, they avoid such unjust judgments.
THAT CHRISTIANS OUGHT NOT TO BE CONTENTIOUS ONE WITH ANOTHER.
LIII. But you who know who our God is, and what are His judgments, how can
you bear to pass an unjust judgment, since your sentence will be immediately
known to God? And if you have judged righteously, you will be deemed worthy of
the recompenses of righteousness, both now and hereafter; but if unrighteously,
you will partake of the like. We therefore advise you, brethren, rather to
deserve commendation from God than rebukes; for the commendation of God is eternal
life to men, as is His rebuke everlasting death. Be ye therefore righteous
judges, peacemakers, and without anger. For "he that is angry with his brother
without a cause is obnoxious to the judgment."(3) But if it happens that by any
one's contrivance you are angry at anybody, "let not the sun go down upon your
wrath;"(4) for says David, "Be angry and sin not;"(5) that is, be soon reconciled,
lest your wrath continue so long that it turn to a settled hatred, and work
sin. "For the souls of those that bear a settled hatred are to death,"(6) says
Solomon. But our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ says in the Gospels: "If thou
bring thy gift to the altar, and there rememberest that thy brother hath ought
against thee, leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be
reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift to God."(7) Now the gift
to God is every one's prayer and thanksgiving. If, therefore, thou hast
anything against thy brother, or he has anything against thee, neither will thy
prayers be heard, nor will thy thanksgivings be accepted, by reason of that hidden
anger. But it is your duty, brethren, to pray continually. Yet, because God
hears not those which are at enmity with their brethren by unjust quarrels, even
though they should pray three times an hour, it is our duty to compose all our
enmity and littleness of soul, that we may be able to pray with a pure and
unpolluted heart. For the Lord commanded us to love even our enemies, and by no means
to hate our friends. And the lawgiver says: "Thou shalt not hate any man; thou
shalt not hate thy brother in thy mind. Thou shalt certainly reprove thy
brother, and not incur sin on his account."(8) "Thou shalt not hate an Egyptian, for
thou wast a sojourner with him. Thou shalt not hate an Idumaean, for he is thy
brother."(9) And David says: "If I have repaid those that requited me
evil."(10) Wherefore, if thou wilt be a Christian, follow the law of the Lord: "Loose
every band of wickedness; for the Lord has given thee authority to remit those
sins to thy brother which he has committed against thee as far as "seventy times
seven,"(12) that is, four hundred and ninety times. How oft, therefore, hast
thou remitted to thy brother, that thou art unwilling to do it now, when thou
also hast heard Jeremiah saying, "Do not any of you impute the wickedness of his
neighbour in your hearts?"(13) But thou rememberest in juries, and keepest
enmity, and comest into judgment, and art suspicious of His anger and thy prayer is
hindered. Nay, if thou hast remitted to thy brother four hundred and ninety
times, do thou still multiply thy acts of gentleness more, to do good for thy own
sake. Although he does not do so, yet, however, do thou endeavour to forgive
thy brother for God's sake, "that thou mayest be the son of thy Father which is
in heaven,"(1) and when thou prayest, mayest be heard as a friend of God.
THAT THE BISHOPS MUST BY THEIR DEACON PUT THE PEOPLE IN MIND OF THE OBLIGATION
THEY ARE UNDER TO LIVE PEACEABLY TOGETHER.
LIV. Wherefore, O bishop, when you are to go to prayer after the lessons,
and the psalmody, and the instruction out of the Scriptures, let the deacon
stand nigh you, and with a loud voice say: Let none have any quarrel with another;
let none come in hypocrisy; that if there be any controversy found among any
of you, they may be affected in conscience, and may pray to God, and be
reconciled to their brethren. For if, upon coming into any one's house, we are to say,
"Peace be to this house,"(2) like sons of peace bestowing peace on those who
are worthy, as it is written, "He came and preached peace to you that are nigh,
and them that are far off, whom the Lord knows to be His,"(3) much more is it
incumbent on those that enter into the Church of God before all things to pray
for the peace of God. But if he prays for it upon others, much more let himself
be within the same, as a child of light; for he that has it not within himself
is not fit to bestow it upon others. Wherefore, before all things, it is our
duty to be at peace in our own minds; for he that does not find any disorder in
himself will not quarrel with another, but will be peaceable, friendly, gathering
the Lord's people, and a fellow-worker with him, in order to the increasing
the number of those that shall be saved in unanimity. For those who contrive
enmities, and strifes, and contests, and lawsuits, are wicked, and aliens from God.
AN ENUMERATION OF THE SEVERAL INSTANCES OF DIVINE PROVIDENCE, AND HOW IN EVERY
AGE FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE WORLD GOD HAS INVITED ALL MEN TO REPENTANCE.
LV. For God, being a God of mercy from the beginning, called every
generation to repentance by righteous men and prophets. He instructed those before the
flood by Abel and Sem, and Seth, also by Enos, and by Enoch that was
translated; those at the flood by Noah; the inhabitants of Sodom by hospitable Lot;
those after the flood by Melchizedek, and the patriarchs, and Job the beloved of
God; the Egyptians by Moses; the Israelites by him, and Joshua, and Caleb, and
Phineas, and the rest; those after the law by angels and prophets, and the same
by His own incarnation(4) of the Virgin; those a little before His bodily
appear- ance by John His forerunner, and the same by the same person after Christ's
birth, saying, "Repent ye, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand;"(5) those
after His passion by us, the twelve apostles, and Paul the chosen vessel. We
therefore, who have been vouchsafed the favour of being the witnesses of His
appearance, together with James the brother of our Lord, and the other seventy-two
disciples, and his seven deacons, have heard from the mouth of our Lord Jesus
Christ, and by exact knowledge declare "what is the will of God, that good, and
acceptable, and perfect will"(6) which is made known to us by Jesus; that none
should perish, but that all men with one accord should believe in Him, and send
unanimously praise to Him, and thereby live for ever.
THAT IT IS THE WILL OF GOD THAT MEN SHOULD BE OF ONE MIND IN MATTERS OF
RELIGION, IN ACCORD WITH THE HEAVENLY POWERS.
LVI. For this is that which our Lord taught us when we pray to say to His
Father, "Thy will be done, as in heaven, so upon earth;"(7) that as the
heavenly natures of the incorporeal powers do all glorify God with one consent, so
also upon earth all men with one mouth and one purpose may glorify the only, the
one, and the true God, by Christ His only-begotten. It is therefore His will
that men should praise Him with unanimity, and adore Him with one consent.(8) For
this is His will in Christ, that those who are saved by Him may be many; but
that you do not occasion any loss or diminution to Him, nor to the Church, or
lessen the number by one soul of man, as destroyed by you, which might have been
saved by repentance; and which therefore perishes not only by its own sin, but
also by your treachery besides, whereby you fulfil that which is written, "He
that gathereth not with me, scattereth."(9) Such a one is a disperser of the
sheep, an adversary, an enemy of God, a destroyer of those lambs whose Shepherd was
the Lord, and we were the collectors out of various nations and tongues, by
much pains and danger, and perpetual labour, by watchings, by fastings, by lyings
on the ground, by persecutions, by stripes, by imprisonments, that we might do
the will of God, and fill the feast-chamber with guests to sit down at His
table, that is, the holy and Catholic Church, with joyful and chosen people,
singing hymns and praises to God that has called them by us to life. And you, as
much as in you lies, have dispersed them. Do you also of the laity be at peace
with one another, endeavouring like wise men to increase the Church, and to turn
back, and tame, and restore those which seem wild. For this is the greatest
reward by His promise from God, "If thou fetch out the worthy and precious from the
unworthy, thou shalt be as my mouth."(1)
SEC. VII.--ON ASSEMBLING IN THE CHURCH.
AN EXACT DESCRIPTION OF A CHURCH AND THE CLERGY, AND WHAT THINGS IN PARTICULAR
EVERY ONE IS TO DO IN THE SOLEMN ASSEMBLIES OF THE CLERGY AND LAITY FOR,
RELIGIOUS WORSHIP.
LVII. But be thou, O bishop, holy, unblameable, no striker, not soon
angry, not cruel; but a builder up, a converter, apt to teach, forbear-ing of evil,
of a gentle mind, meek, long-suffering, ready to exhort, ready to comfort, as
a man of God. When thou callest an assembly of the Church as one that is the
commander of a great ship, appoint the assemblies to be made with all possible
skill, charging the deacons as mariners to prepare places for the brethren as
for passengers, with all due care and decency. And first, let the building be
long, with its head to the east, with its vestries on both sides at the east end,
and so it will be like a ship. In the middle let the bishop's throne be
placed, and on each side of him let the presbytery sit down; and let the deacons
stand near at hand, in close and small girt garments, for they are like the
mariners and managers of the ship: with regard to these, let the laity sit on the
other side, with all quietness and good order. And let the women sit by
themselves, they also keeping silence. In the middle, let the reader stand upon some
high place: let him read the books of Moses, of Joshua the son of Nun, of the
Judges, and of the Kings and of the Chronicles, and those written after the
return from the captivity; and besides these, the books of Job and of Solomon, and
of the sixteen prophets. But when there have been two lessons severally read,
let some other person sing the hymns of David, and let the people join at the
conclusions of the verses. Afterwards let our Acts be read, and the Epistles of
Paul our fellow-worker, which he sent to the churches under the conduct of the
Holy Spirit; and afterwards let a deacon or a presbyter read the Gospels, both
those which I Matthew and John have delivered to you, and those which the
fellow-workers of Paul received and left to you, Luke and Mark. And while the Gospel
is read, let all the presbyters and deacons, and all the people, stand up in
great silence; for it is written: "Be silent, and hear, O lsrael."(2) And again:
"But do thou stand there, and hear."(3) In the next place, let the presbyters
one by one, not all together, exhort the people, and the bishop in the last
place, as being the commander. Let the porters stand at the entries of the men,
and observe them. Let the deaconesses also stand at those of the women, like
shipmen. For the same description and pattern was both in the tabernacle of the
testimony and in the temple of God.(4) But if any one be found sitting out of his
place, let him be rebuked by the deacon, as a manager of the foreship, and be
removed into the place proper for him; for the Church is not only like a ship,
but also like a sheepfold. For as the shepherds place all the brute creatures
distinctly, I mean goats and sheep, according to their kind and age, and still
every one runs together, like to his like; so is it to be in the Church. Let the
young persons sit by themselves, if there be a place for them; if not, let them
stand upright. But let those that are already stricken in years sit in order.
For the children which stand, let their fathers and mothers take them to them.
Let the younger women also sit by themselves, if there be a place for them; but
if there be not, let them stand behind the women. Let those women which are
married, and have children, be placed by themselves; but let the virgins, and the
widows, and the elder women, stand or sit before all the rest; and let the
deacon be the disposer of the places, that every one of those that comes in may go
to his proper place, and may not sit at the entrance. In like manner, let the
deacon oversee the people, that nobody may whisper, nor slumber, nor laugh, nor
nod; for all ought in the church to stand wisely, and soberly, and
attentively, having their attention fixed upon the word of the Lord. After this, let all
rise up with one consent, and looking towards the east, after the catechumens
and penitents are gone out, pray to God eastward, who ascended up to the heaven
of heavens to the east; remembering also the ancient situation of paradise in
the east, from whence the first man, when he had yielded to the persuasion of the
serpent, and disobeyed the command of God, was expelled. As to the deacons,
after the prayer is over, let some of them attend upon the oblation of the
Eucharist, ministering to the Lord's body with fear. Let others of them watch the
multitude, and keep them silent. But let that deacon who is at the high priest's
hand say to the people, Let no one have any quarrel against another; let no one
come in hypocrisy. Then let the men give the men, and the women give the women,
the Lord's kiss. But let no one do it with deceit, as Judas betrayed the Lord
with a kiss. After this let the deacon pray for the whole Church, for the whole
world, and the several parts of it, and the fruits of it; for the priests and
the rulers, for the high priest and the king, and the peace of the universe.
After this let the high priest pray for peace upon the people, and bless them, as
Moses commanded the priests to bless the people, in these words: "The Lord
bless thee, and keep thee: the Lord make His face to shine upon thee,(1) and give
thee peace."(2) Let the bishop pray for the people, and say: "Save Thy people,
O Lord, and bless Thine inheritance, which Thou hast obtained with the precious
blood of Thy Christ, and hast called a royal priesthood, and an holy
nation."(3) After this let the sacrifice follow, the people standing, and praying
silently; and when the oblation has been made, let every rank by itself partake of
the Lord's body and precious blood in order, and approach with reverence and holy
fear, as to the body of their king. Let the women approach with their heads
covered, as is becoming the order of women; but let the door be watched, lest any
unbeliever, or one not yet initiated, come in.(4)
OF COMMENDATORY LETTERS IN FAVOUR OF STRANGERS, LAY PERSONS, CLERGYMEN, AND
BISHOPS; AND THAT THOSE WHO COME INTO THE CHURCH ASSEMBLIES ARE TO BE RECEIVED
WITHOUT REGARD TO THEIR QUALITY.
LVIII. If any brother, man or woman, come in from another parish, bringing
recommendatory letters, let the deacon be the judge of that affair, inquiring
whether they be of the faithful, and of the Church? whether they be not defiled
by heresy? and besides, whether the party be a married woman or a widow? And
when he is satisfied in these questions, that they are really of the faithful,
and of the same sentiments in the things of the Lord, let him conduct every one
to the place proper for him. And if a presbyter comes from another parish, let
him be received to communion by the presbyters; if a deacon, by the deacons; if
a bishop, let him sit with the bishop, and be allowed the same honour with
himself; and thou, O bishop, shalt desire him to speak to the people words of
instruction: for the exhortation and admonition of strangers is very acceptable,
and exceeding profitable. For, as the Scripture says, "no prophet is accepted in
his own country."(5) Thou shalt also permit him to offer the Eucharist; but if,
out of reverence to thee, and as a wise man, to preserve the honour belonging
to thee, he will not offer, at least thou shalt compel him to give the blessing
to the people. But if, after the congregation is sat down, any other person
comes upon you of good fashion and character in the world, whether he be a
stranger, or one of your own country, neither do thou, O bishop, if thou art speaking
the word of God, or hearing him that sings or reads, accept persons so far as
to leave the ministry of the word, that thou mayest appoint an upper place for
him; but continue quiet, not interrupting thy discourse, nor thy attention. But
let the brethren receive him by the deacons; and if there be not a place, let
the deacon by speaking, but not in anger, raise the junior, and place the
stranger there. And it is but reasonable that one that loves the brethren should do
so of his own accord; but if he refuse, let him raise him up by force, and set
him behind all, that the rest may be taught to give place to those that are
more honourable. Nay, if a poor man, or one of a mean family, or a stranger, comes
upon you, whether he be old or young, and there be no place, the deacon shall
find a place for even these, and that with all his heart; that, instead of
accepting persons before men, his ministration towards God may be well-pleasing.
The very same thing let the deaconess do to those women, whether poor or rich,
that come unto them.
THAT EVERY CHRISTIAN OUGHT TO FREQUENT THE CHURCH DILIGENTLY BOTH MORNING AND
EVENING.
LIX. When thou instructest the people, O bishop, command and exhort them
to come constantly to church morning and evening every day, and by no means to
forsake it on any account, but to assemble together continually; neither to
diminish the Church by withdrawing themselves, and causing the body of Christ to be
without its member. For it is not only spoken concerning the priests, but let
every one of the laity hearken to it as concerning himself, considering that it
is said by the Lord: "He that is not with me is against me, and he that
gathereth not with me scattereth abroad."(6) Do not you therefore scatter yourselves
abroad, who are the members of Christ, by not assembling together, since you
have Christ your head, according to His promise, present, and communicating to
you.(7) Be not careless of yourselves, neither deprive your Saviour of His own
members, neither divide His body nor disperse His members, neither prefer the
occasions of this life to the word of God; but assemble yourselves together every
day, morning and evening, singing psalms and praying in the Lord's house: in
the morning saying the sixty-second Psalm, and in the evening the hundred and
fortieth, but principally on the Sabbath-day. And on the day of our Lord's
resurrection, which is the Lord's day, meet more diligently, sending praise to God
that made the universe by Jesus, and sent Him to us, and condescended to let Him
suffer, and raised Him from the dead. Otherwise what apology will he make to God
who does not assemble on that day to hear the saving word concerning the
resurrection, on which we pray thrice standing in memory of Him who arose in three
days, in which is performed the reading of the prophets, the preaching of the
Gospel, the oblation of the sacrifice, the gift of the holy food?
THE VAIN ZEAL WHICH THE HEATHENS AND JEWS SHOW IN FREQUENTING THEIR TEMPLES
AND SYNAGOGUES IS A PROPER EXAMPLE AND MOTIVE TO EXCITE CHRISTIANS TO FREQUENT
THE CHURCH.
LX. And how can he be other than an adversary to God, who takes pains
about temporary things night and day, but takes no care of things eternal? who
takes care of washings and temporary food every day, but does not take care of
those that endure for ever? How can such a one even now avoid hearing that word of
the Lord, "The Gentiles are justified more than you?"(1) as He says, by way of
reproach, to Jerusalem, "Sodom is justified rather than thou." For if the
Gentiles every day, when they arise from sleep, run to their idols to worship them,
and before all their work and all their labours do first of all pray to them,
and in their feasts and in their solemnities do not keep away, but attend upon
them; and not only those upon the place, but those living far distant do the
same; and in their public shows all come together, as into a synagogue: in the
same manner those which are vainly called Jews, when they have worked six days.
on the seventh day rest, and come together into their synagogue, never leaving
nor neglecting either rest from labour or assembling together, while yet they
are deprived of the efficacy of the word in their unbelief, nay, and of the
force of that name Judah, by which they call themselves,--for Judah is interpreted
Confession,--but these do not confess to God (having unjustly occasioned the
suffering on the cross), so as to be saved on their repentance;--if, therefore,
those who are not saved frequently assemble together for such purposes as do not
profit them, what apology wilt thou make to the Lord God who forsakest His
Church, not imitating so much as the heathen, but by such thy absence growest
slothful, or turnest apostate, or actest wickedness? To whom the Lord says by
Jeremiah: "Ye have not kept my ordinances; nay, ye have not walked according to the
ordinances of the heathen, and you have in a manner exceeded them."(2) And
again: "lsrael has justified his soul more than treacherous Judah."(3) And
afterwards: "Will the Gentiles change their gods which are not gods?(4) Wherefore pass
over to the isles of Chittim, and behold, and send to Kedar, and observe
diligently whether such things have been done. For those nations have not changed
their ordinances; but," says He, "my people has changed its glory for that which
will not profit."(5) How, therefore, will any one make his apology who has
despised or absented himself from the church of God?
THAT WE MUST NOT PREFER THE AFFAIRS OF THIS LIFE TO THOSE WHICH CONCERN THE
WORSHIP OF GOD.
LXI. But if any one allege the pretence of his own work, and so is a
despiser, "offering pretences for his sins," let such a one know that the trades of
the faithful are works by the by, but the worship of God is their great work.
Follow therefore your trades as by the by, for your maintenance, but make the
worship of God your main business; as also our Lord said: "Labour not for the
meat which perishes, but for that which endureth unto everlasting life."(6) And
again: "This is the work of God, that ye believe on Him whom He hath sent."(7)
Endeavour therefore never to leave the Church of God; but if any one overlooks
it, and goes either into a polluted temple of the heathens, or into a synagogue
of the Jews or heretics, what apology will such a one make to God in the day of
judgment, who has forsaken the oracles of the living God, and the living and
quickening oracles, such as are able to deliver from eternal punishment, and has
gone into an house of demons, or into a synagogue of the murderers of Christ,
or the congregation of the wicked?--not hearkening unto him that says: "I have
hated the congregation of the wicked, and I will not enter with the ungodly. I
have not sat with the assembly of vanity, neither will I sit with the
ungodly."(8) And again: "Blessed is the man that hath not walked in the counsel of the
ungodly, nor stood in the way of sinners, and hath not sat in the seat of the
scornful; but his delight is in the law of the Lord, and in His law will he
meditate day and night."(1) But thou, forsaking the gathering together of the
faithful, the Church of God, and His laws, hast respect to those "dens of thieves,"
calling those things holy which He has called profane, and making such things
unclean which He has sanctified. And not only so, but thou already runnest after
the pomps of the Gentiles, and hastenest to their theatres, being desirous to be
reckoned one of those that enter into them, and to partake of unseemly, not to
say abominable words; not hearkening to Jeremiah, who says, "O Lord, I have
not sat in their assemblies, for they are scorners; but I was afraid because of
Thy hand;"(2) nor to Job, who speaks in like manner, "If I have gone at any time
with the scornful; for I shall be weighed in a just balance."(3) But why wilt
thou be a partaker of the heathen oracles, which are nothing but dead men
declaring by the inspiration of the devil deadly things, and such as tend to subvert
the faith, and to draw those that attend to them to polytheism? Do you
therefore, who attend to the laws. of God, esteem those laws more honourable than the
necessities of this life, and pay a greater respect to them, and run together
to the Church of the Lord, "which He has purchased with the blood of Christ, the
beloved, the first-born of every creature."(4) For this Church is the daughter
of the Highest, which has been in travail of you by the word of grace, and has
"formed Christ in you," of whom you are made partakers, and thereby become His
holy and chosen members, "not having spot or wrinkle, or any such thing; but
as being holy and unspotted in the faith, ye are complete in Him, after the
image of God that created you."(5)
THAT CHRISTIANS MUST ABSTAIN FROM ALL THE IMPIOUS PRACTICES OF THE HEATHENS.
LXII. Take heed, therefore, not to join yourselves in your worship with
those that perish, which is the assembly of the Gentiles, to your deceit and
destruction. For there is no fellowship between God and the devil; for he that
assembles himself with those that favour the things of the devil, will be esteemed
one of them, and will inherit a woe. Avoid also indecent spectacles: I mean the
theatres and the pomps of the heathens; their enchantments, observations of
omens, soothsayings, purgations, divinations, observations of birds; their
necromancies and invocations. For it is written: "There is no divination in Jacob,
nor soothsaying in Israel."(6) And again: "Divination is iniquity."(7) And
elsewhere: "Ye shall not be soothsayers, and follow observers of omens, nor diviners,
nor dealers with familiar spirits. Ye shall not preserve alive wizards."(8)
Wherefore Jeremiah exhorts, saying: "Walk ye not according to the ways of the
heathen, and be not afraid of the signs of heaven."(9) So that it is the duty of a
believer to avoid the assemblies of the ungodly, of the heathen, and of the
Jews, and of the rest of the heretics, lest by uniting ourselves to them we bring
snares upon our own souls; that we may not by joining in their feasts, which
are celebrated in honour of demons, be partakers with them in their impiety. You
are also to avoid their public meetings, and those sports which are celebrated
in them. For a believer ought not to go to any of those public meetings,
unless to purchase a slave, and save a soul? and at the same time to buy such other
things as suit their necessities. Abstain, therefore, from all idolatrous pomp
and state, all their public meetings, banquets, duels, and all shows belonging
to demons.
SEC. VIII.--ON THE DUTY OF WORKING FOR A LIVELIHOOD.
THAT A CHRISTIAN WHO WILL NOT WORK MUST NOT EAT, AS PETER AND THE REST OF THE
APOSTLES WERE FISHERMEN, BUT PAUL AND AQUILA TENTMAKERS, JUDE THE SON OF JAMES
AN HUSBANDMAN.
LXIII. Let the young persons of the Church endeavour to minister
diligently in all necessaries: mind your business with all becoming seriousness, that so
you may always have sufficient to support yourselves and those that are needy,
and not burden the Church of God. For we ourselves, besides our attention to
the word of the Gospel, do not neglect our inferior employments. For some of us
are fishermen, some tentmakers, some husbandmen, that so we may never be idle.
So says Solomon somewhere: "Go to the ant, thou sluggard; consider her ways
diligently, and become wiser than she. For she, having neither field, overseer,
nor ruler, prepareth her food in the summer, and layeth up a great store in the
harvest. Or else go to the bee, and learn how laborious she is, and her work how
valuable it is, whose labours both kings and mean men make use of for their
health. She is desirable and glorious, though she be weak in strength, yet by
honouring wisdom she is improved, etc. How long wilt thou lie on thy bed, O
sluggard? When wilt thou awake out of thy sleep? Thou sleepest awhile thou liest down
awhile, thou slumberest awhile, thou foldest thy hands on thy breast to sleep
awhile. Then poverty comes on thee like an evil traveller, and want as a swift
racer. But if thou beest diligent, thy harvest shall come as a fountain, and
want shall fly from thee as an evil runagate."(1) And again: "He that manageth
his own land shall be filled with bread."(2) And elsewhere he says: "The
slothful has folded his own hands together, and has eaten his own flesh."(3) And
afterwards: "The sluggard hides his hand; he will not be able to bring it to his
mouth."(4) And again: "By slothfulness of the hands a floor will be brought
low."(5) Labour therefore continually; for the blot of the slothful is not to be
healed. But "if any one does not work, let not such a one eat"(6) among you. For
the Lord our God hates the slothful. For no one of those who are dedicated to God
ought to be idle.
ELUCIDATION
(To purchase a slave, and save a soul, p. 424.)
THE calm and patient course of the Church in gradually obliterating
slavery has been well defended by the pious Spanish Ultramontane writer Jacques
Balmas.(1) Of course, he imagines that "the Catholic Church," which wrought the
change, was his own Tridentine Communion,(2) Lecky's remarks on the gladiators and
slavery as the product of famines and distress are worthy of note, and even he
is forced to recognise the ameliorating influences of Christianity from the
beginning.(3) He says:--
"Christianity for the first time made charity a rudimentary virtue, giving
it a foremost place in the moral type and in the exhortations of its teachers.
Besides its general influence in stimulating the affections, it effected a
complete revolution in this sphere, by representing the poor as the special
representatives of the Christian founder, and thus making the love of Christ rather
than the love of man the principle of charity. Even in the days of persecution,
collections for the relief of the poor were made at the Sunday meetings. The
agapoe, or feasts of love, were intended mainly for the poor; and food that was
saved by the fasts was devoted to their benefit. A vast organization of charity,
presided over by the bishops, and actively directed by the deacons, soon
ramified over Christendom, till the bond of charity became the bond of unity, and
the most distant sections of the Christian Church corresponded by the interchange
of mercy.(4) Long before the era of Constantine it was observed that the
charities of the Christians were so extensive--it may perhaps be said so
excessive--that they drew very many impostors to the Church; and, when the victory of
Christianity was achieved, the enthusiasm for charity displayed itself in the
erection of numerous institutions that were altogether unknown to the pagan world."