LETTERS OF ST. AUGUSTIN: LETTERS LXXXVII TO XCII
LETTER LXXXVII. (A.D. 405.)
TO HIS BROTHER EMERITUS, BELOVED AND LONGED FOR, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING.
1. I know that it is not on the possession of good talents and a liberal
education that the salvation of the soul depends; but when I hear of any one who
is thus endowed holding a different view from that which truth imperatively
insists upon on a point which admits of very easy examination, the more I wonder
at such a man, the more I burn with desire to make his acquaintance, and to
converse with him; or if that be impossible, I long to bring his mind and mine
into contact by exchanging letters, which wing their flight even between places
far apart. As I have heard that you are such a man as I have spoken of, I grieve
that you should be severed and shut out from the Catholic Church, which is
spread abroad throughout the whole world, as was foretold by the Holy Spirit. What
your reason for this separation is I do not know. For it is not disputed that
the party of Donatus is wholly unknown to a great part of the Roman world, not
to speak of the barbarian nations (to whom also the apostle said that he was a
debtor2) whose communion in the Christian faith is joined with ours, and that in
fact they do not even know at all when or upon what account the dissension
began. Now, unless you admit these Christians to be innocent of those crimes with
which you charge the Christians of Africa, you must confess that all of you are
defiled by participation in the wicked actions of all worthless characters, so
long as they succeed (to put the matter mildly) in escaping detection among
you. For you do occasionally expel a member from your communion, in which case
his expulsion takes place only after he has committed the crime for which he
merited expulsion. Is there not some intervening time during which he escapes
detection before he is discovered, convicted, and condemned by you ? I ask,
therefore, whether he involved you in his defilement so long as he was not discovered
by you? You answer, "By no means." If, then, he were not to be discovered at
all, he would in that case never involve you in his defilement; 'for it sometimes
happens that the crimes committed by men come to light only after their :death,
yet this does not bring guilt upon those Christians who communicated with them
while they were alive. Why, then, have you severed , yourselves by so rash and
profane schism from the communion of innumerable Eastern Churches, in which
all that you truly or falsely affirm to have been done in Africa has been and
still is utterly unknown?
2. For it is quite another question whether or not there be truth in the
assertions made by you. These assertions we disprove by documents much more
worthy of credit than those which you bring forward, and we further find in your
own documents more abundant proof of those positions which you assail. But this
is, as I have said, another question altogether, to be taken up and discussed
when necessary. Meanwhile, let your mind give special attention to this: that no
one can be involved in the guilt of unknown crimes committed by persons unknown
to him. Whence it is manifest that you have been guilty of impious schism in
separating yourselves from the communion of the whole world, to which the things
charged, whether truly or falsely, by you against some men in Africa, have
been and still are wholly unknown; although this also should not be forgotten,
that even when known and discovered, bad men do not harm the good who are in a
Church, if either the power of restraining them from communion be wanting, or the
interests of the Church's peace forbid this to be done. For who were those who,
according to the prophet Ezekiel, obtained the reward of being marked before
the destruction of the wicked, and of escaping unhurt when they were destroyed,
but those who sighed and cried for the sins and iniquities of the people of God
which were done in the midst of them? Now who sighs and cries for that which
is unknown to him? On the same principle, the Apostle Paul bears with false
brethren. For it is not of persons unknown to him that he says, "All seek their
own, not the things which are Jesus Christ's;" yet these persons he shows plainly
to have been beside him. And to what class do the men belong who have chosen
rather to burn incense to idols or surrender the divine books than to suffer
death, if not to those who "seek their own, not the things of Jesus Christ "?
3. I omit many proofs which I might give from Scripture, that I may not
make this letter longer than is needful; and I leave many more things to be
considered by yourself in the light of your own learning. But I beseech you mark
this, which is quite enough to decide the whole question: If so many transgressors
in the one nation, which was then the Church of God, did not make those who
were associated with them to be guilty like themselves; if that multitude of
false brethren did not make the Apostle Paul, who was a member of the same Church
with them, a seeker not of the things of Jesus Christ, but of his own,- it is
manifest that a man is not made wicked by the wickedness of any one with whom he
goes to the altar of Christ, even though he be not unknown to him, provided
only that he do not encourage him in his wickedness, but by a good conscience
disallowing his conduct keep himself apart from him. It is therefore obvious that,
to be art and part with a thief, one must either help him in the theft, or
receive with approbation what he has stolen. This I say in order to remove out of
the way endless and unnecessary questions concerning the conduct of men, which
are wholly irrelevant when advanced against our position.
4. If, however, you do not agree with what I have said, you involve the
whole of your party in the reproach of being such men as Optatus was, while,
notwithstanding your knowledge of his crimes, he was tolerated in communion with
you; and far be it from me to say this of such a man as Emeritus, and of others
of like integrity among you, who are, I am sure, wholly averse to such deeds as
disgraced him. For we do not lay any charge against you but the one of schism,
which by your obstinate persistence in it you have now made heresy. How great
this crime is in the judgment of God Himself, you may see by reading what
without doubt you have read ere now. You will find that Dathan and Abiram were
swallowed up by an opening of the earth beneath them,' and that all the others who
had conspired with them were devoured by fire breaking forth in the midst of
them. As a warning to men to shun this crime, the Lord God signalized its
commission with this immediate punishment, that He might show what He reserves for the
final recompense of persons guilty of a similar transgression, whom His great
forbearance spares for a time. We do not, indeed, find fault with the reasons by
which you excuse your tolerating Optatus among you. We do not blame you,
because at the time when he was denounced for his furious conduct in the mad abuse of
power, when he was impeached by the groans of all Africa, B groans in which
you also. shared, if you are what good report declares you to be, -- a report
which, God knows, I most willingly believe, -- you forbore from excommunicating
him, lest he should under such sentence draw away many with him, and rend your
communion asunder with the frenzy of i schism. But this is the thing which is
itself i an indictment against you at the bar of God, O brother Emeritus, that
although you saw that the division of the party of Donators was so great an evil,
that it was thought better that Optatus should be tolerated in your communion
than that division should be introduced among you, you nevertheless perpetuate
the evil which was wrought in the division of the Church of Christ by your
forefathers.
5. Here perhaps you will be disposed, under the exigencies of debate, to
attempt to defend Optatus. Do not so, I beseech you; do not so, my brother: it
would not become you; and if it would perchance be seemly for any one to do it
(though, in fact, nothing is seemly which is wrong), it assuredly would be
unseemly for Emeritus to defend Optatus. Perhaps you reply that it would as little
become you to accuse him. Granted, by all means. Take, then, the course which
lies between defending and accusing him. Say, "Every man shall bear his own
burden;"1 "Who art thou that judgest another man s servant?"2 If, then,
notwithstanding the testimony of all Africa, --nay more, of all regions to which the name
of Gildo was carried, for Optatus was not less notorious than he,- you have not
dared. to pronounce judgment concerning Optatus, lest you should rashly decide
in regard to one unknown to you, is it, I ask, either possible or right for us,
proceeding solely on your testimony, to pronounce sentence rashly upon persons
whom we do not know? Is it not enough that you should charge them with things
of which you have no certain knowledge, without our pronouncing them guilty of
things of which we know as little as yourselves? For even though Optatus were
in peril through the falsehood of detractors, you defend not him, but yourself,
when you say, "I do not know what his character was." How much more obvious,
then, is it that the Eastern world knows nothing of the character of those
Africans with whom, though much less known to you than Optatus, you find fault! Yet
you are disjoined by scandalous schism from Churches in the East, the names of
which you have and you read in the sacred books. If your most famous and most
scandalously notorious Bishop of Thamugada3 was at that very time not known to
his colleague, I shall not say in Caesarea, but in Sitifa, so close at hand, how
was it possible for the Churches of Corinth, Ephesus, Colosse, Philippi,
Thessalonica, Antioch, Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, and others which were founded in
Christ by the apostles, to know the case of these African traditors, whoever
they were; or how was it consistent with justice that they should be condemned by
you for not knowing it? Yet with these Churches you hold no communion. You say
they are not Christian, and you labour to rebaptize their members. What need I
say? What complaint, what protest is necessary here? If I am addressing a
right-hearted man, I know that with you I share the keenness of the indignation
which I feel. For you doubtless see at once what I might say if I would.
6. Perhaps, however, your forefathers formed of themselves a council, and
placed the whole Christian world except themselves under sentence of
excommunication. Have you come so to judge of things, as to affirm that the council of
the followers of Maximianus who were cut off from you, as you were cut off from
the Church, was of no authority against you, because their number was small
compared with yours; and yet claim for your council an authority against the
nations, which are the inheritance of Christ, and the ends of the earth, which are
His possession?4 I wonder if the man who does not blush at such pretensions has
any blood in his body. Write me, I beseech you, in reply i to this letter; for I
have heard from some, on i whom I could not but rely, that you would write me
an answer if I were to address a letter ' to you. Some time ago, moreover, I
sent you a letter; but I do not know whether you received it or answered it, and
perhaps your reply did not reach me. Now, however, I beg you not to re,fuse to
answer this letter, and state what you think. But do not occupy yourself with
other questions than the one which I have stated, for this is the leading point
of a well-ordered discussion of the origin of the schism.
7. The civil powers defend their conduct in persecuting schismatics by the
rule which the apostle laid down: "Whoso resisteth the power, resisteth the
ordinance of God; and they that resist shall receive to themselves judgment. For
rulers are not a terror to good works, but to the evil. Wilt thou then not be
afraid of the power ? Do that which is good, and thou shalt have praise of the
same: for he is the minister of God to thee for good. But if thou do that which
is evil, be afraid; for he beareth not the sword in vain: for he is the
minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil." s The whole
question therefore is, whether schism be not an evil work, or whether you have
not caused schism, so that your resistance of the powers that be is in a good
cause and not in an evil work, whereby you would bring judgment on yourselves.
Wherefore with infinite wisdom the i Lord not merely said, "Blessed are they who
are persecuted," but added, "for righteousness' i sake." 6 I desire therefore to
know from you, l in the light of what I have said above, whether it be a work
of righteousness to originate and perpetuate your state of separation from the
Church. I desire also to know whether it be not rather a work of
unrighteousness to condemn unheard the whole Christian world, either because it has not heard
what you have heard, or because no proof has been furnished to it of charges
which Were rashly believed, or without sufficient evidence advanced by you, and
to propose on this ground to baptize a second time: the members of so many
churches rounded by the preaching and labours either of the Lord Himself while He
was on earth, or of His apostles; and all this on the assumption that it is
excusable for you either not to know the wickedness of your African colleagues who
are living beside you, and are using the same sacraments with you, or even to
tolerate their misdeeds when known, lest the party of Donatus should be divided,
but that it is inexcusable for them, though they reside in most remote
regions, to be ignorant of what you either know, or believe, or have heard, or
imagine, concerning men in Africa. How great is the perversity of those who cling to
their own unrighteousness, and yet find fault with the severity of the civil
powers!
8. You answer, perhaps, that Christians ought not to persecute even the
wicked. Be it so; let us admit that they ought not: but is it lawful to lay this
objection in the way of the powers which are ordained for this very purpose?
Shall we erase the apostle's words ? Or do your Mss. not contain the words which
I mentioned a little while ago ? But you will say that we ought not to
communicate with such persons. What then ? Did you withdraw, some time ago, from
communion with the deputy Flavianus, on the ground of his putting to death, in his
administration of the laws, those whom he found guilty ? Again, you will say that
the Roman emperors are incited against you by us. Nay, rather blame yourselves
for this, seeing that, as was long ago foretold in the promise concerning
Christ, "Yea, all kings shall fall down before him,"' they are now members of the
Church; and you have dared to wound the Church by schism, and still presume to
insist upon rebaptizing her members. Our brethren indeed demand help from the
powers which are ordained, not to persecute you, but to protect themselves
against the lawless acts of violence perpetrated by individuals of your party, which
you yourselves, who refrain from such things, bewail and deplore; just as,
before the Roman Empire became Christian, the Apostle Paul took measures to secure
that the protection !: of armed Roman soldiers should be granted him i against
the Jews who bad conspired to kill him. ! But these emperors, whatever the
occasion of their becoming acquainted with the crime of your schism might be, frame
against you such decrees as their zeal and their office demand. For they bear
not the sword in vain; they are the ministers of God to execute wrath upon
those that do evil. Finally, if some of our party transgress the bounds of
Christian moderation in this matter, it displeases us; nevertheless, we do not on their
account forsake the Catholic Church because we are unable to separate the
wheat from the chaff before the final winnowing, especially since you yourselves
have not forsaken the Donatist party on account of Optatus, when you had not
courage to excommunicate him for his crimes.
9. You say, however, "Why seek to have us joined to you, if we be thus
stained with guilt?" I reply: Because you still live, and may, if you are willing,
be restored. For when you join yourselves to us, i.e. to the Church of God,
the heritage of Christ, who has the ends of the earth as his possession, you are
restored so that you live in vital union with the Root. For the apostle says of
the branches which were broken off: "God is able to graft them in again." We
exhort you to change, in so far as concerns your dissent from the Church;
although, as to the sacraments which you had, we admit that they are holy, since they
are the same in all. Wherefore we desire to see you changed from your
obstinacy, that is, in order that you who have been cut off may be vitally united to
the Root again. FOr the sacraments which you have not changed are approved by us
as you have them; else, in our attempting to correct your sin, we should do
impious wrong to those mysteries of Christ which have not been deprived of their
worth by your unworthiness. For even Saul did not, with all his sins, destroy
the efficacy of the anointing which he received; to which anointing David, that
pious servant of God, showed so great respect. We therefore do not insist upon
rebaptizing you, because we only wish to restore to you connection with the
Root: the form of the branch which has been cut off we accept with approval, if it
has not been changed; but the branch, however perfect in its form, cannot bear
fruit, except it be united to the root. As to the persecution, so gentle and
tempered with clemency, which you say you suffer at the hands of our party, while
unquestionably your own party inflict greater harm in a lawless and irregular
way upon us,- this is one question: the question concerning baptism is wholly
distinct from it; in regard to it, we inquire not where it is, but where it
profits. For wherever it is, it is the same; but it cannot be said of him who
receives it, that wherever he is, he is the same. We therefore detest the impiety of
which men as individuals are guilty in a state of schism; but we venerate
everywhere the baptism of Christ. If deserters carry with them the imperial
standards, these standards are welcomed back again as they were, if they have remained
unharmed, when the deserters are either punished with a severe sentence, or,
in the exercise of clemency, restored. If, in regard to this, any more
particular inquiry is to be made, that is, as I have said another question; for in these
things, the practice of the Church of God is the rule of our practice.
10. The question between us, however, is, whether your Church or ours is
the Church of God. To resolve this, we must begin with the original inquiry, why
you became schismatics. If you do not write me an answer, I believe that
before the bar of God I shall be easily vindicated as having done my duty in this
matter; because I have sent a letter in the interests of peace to a man of whom I
have heard that, excepting only his adherence to schismatics, he is a good
and' well-educated man. Be it yours to consider how you shall answer Him whose
forbearance now demands your praise, and His judgment shall in the end demand your
fears. If, however, you write a reply to me with as much care as you see me to
have bestowed upon this, I believe that, by the mercy of God, the error which
now keeps us apart shall perish before the love of peace and the logic of
truth. Observe that I have said nothing about the followers of Rogatus,1 who call
you Firmiani, as you call us Macariani. Nor have I spoken of your bishop of
Rucata (or Rusicada), who is said to have made an agreement with Firmus, promising,
on condition of the safety of all his adherents, that the gates should be
opened to him, and the Catholics given up to slaughter and pillage. Many other such
things I pass unnoticed. Do you therefore in like manner desist from the
commonplaces of rhetorical exaggeration concerning actions of men which you have
either heard of or known; for you see how I am silent concerning deeds of your
party, in order to confine the debate to the question upon which the whole matter
hinges, namely, the origin of the schism.
My brother, beloved and longed for, may the Lord our God breathe into you
thoughts tending towards reconciliation.
LETTER LXXXVIII. (A.D. 406.)
TO JANUARIUS,2 THE CATHOLIC CLERGY OF THE DISTRICT OF HIPPO 3 SEND THE
FOLLOWING.
1. Your clergy and your Circumcelliones are venting against us their rage
in a persecution of a new kind, and of unparalleled atrocity. Were we to render
evil for evil, we should be transgressing the law of Christ. But now, when all
that has been done, both on your side and on ours, is impartially considered,
it is found that we are suffering what is written, "They rewarded me evil for
good;" 4 and (in another Psalm), "My soul hath long dwelt with him that hateth
peace. I am for peace: but when I speak, they are for war." s For, seeing that
you have arrived at so great age, we suppose you to know perfectly well that the
party of Donatus, which at first was called at Carthage the party of
Majorinus, did of their own accord accuse Caecilianus, then bishop of Carthage, before
the famous Emperor Constantine. Lest, however, you should have forgotten this,
venerable sir, or should pretend not to know, or perhaps (which we scarcely
think possible) may never have known it, we insert here a copy of the narrative of
Anulinus, then proconsul, to whom the party of Majorinus appealed, requesting
that by him as proconsul a statement of the charges which they brought against
Caecilianus should be sent to the Emperor aforesaid: --
2. To Canstantine Augustus, from Anulinus, a man of consular rank,
proconsul of Africa, these:6
The welcome and adored celestial writing sent by your Majesty to
Caecilianus, and those over whom he presides, who are called clergy, have been, by the
care of your Majesty's most humble servant, engrossed in his Records; and he has
exhorted these parties that, heartily agreeing among themselves, since they
are seen to be exempted from all other burdens by your Majesty's clemency, they
should, preserving Catholic unity, devote themselves to their duties with the
reverence due to the sanctity of law and to divine things. After a few days,
however, there arose some persons to whom a crowd of people joined themselves, who
thought that proceedings should. be taken against Caecilianus, and presented to
me 7 a sealed packet wrapped in leather, and a small document without seal,
and earnestly besought me to transmit them to your Majesty's sacred and venerable
court, which your Majesty's most humble servant s has taken care to do,
Caecilianus continuing meanwhile as he was. The Acts pertaining to the case are
subjoined, in order that your Majesty may be able to arrive at a decision concerning
the whole matter. The documents sent are two: the one in a leathern envelope,
with this title, "A document of the Catholic Church containing charges against
Caecilianus, and furnished by the party of Majorinus;" the other attached
without a seal to the same leathern envelope.
Given on the 17th day before the Calends of May,'in the third consulship
of our lord Constantine Augustus [i.e. April 15, A.D. 313].
3. After this report had been sent to him, the Emperor summoned the
parties before a tribunal of bishops to be constituted at Rome. The ecclesiastical
records show how the case was there argued and decided, and Caecilianus
pronounced innocent. Surely now, after the l peacemaking decision of the tribunal of
bishops, all the pertinacity of strife and bitterness should have given way. Your
forefathers, however, appealed again to the Emperor, and complained that the
decision was not just, and that their case had not been fully heard. Accordingly,
he appointed a second tribunal of bishops to meet in Aries, a town of Gaul,
where, after sentence had been pronounced against your worthless and diabolical
schism, many of your party returned to a good understanding with Caecilianus;
some, however, who were most obstinate and contentious, appealed to the Emperor
again. Afterwards, when, yielding to their importunity, he personally interposed
in this dispute, which belonged properly to the bishops to decide, having
heard the case, he gave sentence against your party, and was the first to pass a
law that the properties of your congregations should be confiscated; of all which
things we could insert the documentary evidence here, if it were not for
making the letter too long. We must, however, by no means omit the investigation and
decision in open court of the case of Felix of Aptunga, whom, in the Council
of Carthage, under Secundus of Tigisis, primate, your fathers affirmed to be the
original cause of all these evils. For the Emperor aforesaid, in a letter of
which we annex a copy, bears witness that in this trial your party were before
him as accusers and most strenuous prosecutors. m
4. The Emperors Flavius Constantinus, Maximus Caesar, and Valerius
Licinius Caesar, to Probianus, proconsul of Africa:
Your predecessor AElianus, who acted as substitute for Verus, the
superintendent of the prefects, when that most excellent magistrate was by severe
illness laid aside in that part of Africa which is under our sway, considered it,
and most justly, to be his duty, amongst other things, to bring again under his
investigation and decision the matter of Caecilianus, or rather the odium which
seems to have been stirred up against that bishop of the Catholic Church.
Wherefore, having ordered the compearance of Superius, centurion, Caecilianus,
magistrate of Aptunga, and Saturninus, the ex-president of police, and his successor
in the office, Calibius the younger, and Solon, an official belonging to
Aptunga, he heard the testimony of these witnesses i' the result of which was, that
whereas objection had been taken to Caecilianus on the ground of his ordination
to the office of bishop by Felix, against whom it seemed that the charge of
surrendering and burning the sacred books had been made, the innocence of Felix
in this matter was clearly established. Moreover, when Maximus affirmed that
Ingentius, a decurion of the town of Ziqua, had forged a letter of the
ex-magistrate Caecilianus, we found, on examining the Acts which were before us, that
this. same Ingentius had been put on the rack for that offence, and that the
infliction of torture on him was not, as alleged, on the ground of his affirming that
he was a decurion of Ziqua. Wherefore we desire you to send under a suitable
guard to the court of Augustus Constantine the said Ingentius, that in the
presence and hearing of those who are now pleading in this case, and who day after
day persist in their complaints, it may be made manifest and fully known that
they labour in vain to excite odium against the bishop Caecilianus, and to
clamour violently against him. This, we hope, will bring the people to desist, as
they should do, from such contentions, and to devote themselves with becoming
reverence to their religious duties, undistracted by dissension among themselves.
5. Since you see, therefore, that these things are so, why do you provoke
odium against us on the ground of the imperial decrees which are in force
against you, when you have yourselves done all this before we followed your example?
If emperors ought not to use their authority in such cases, if care of these
matters lies beyond the province.of Christian emperors, who urged your
forefathers to remit the case of Caecilianus, By the proconsul, to the Emperor, and a
second time to bring before the Emperor accusations against a bishop whom you had
somehow condemned in absence, and on his acquittal to invent and bring before
the same Emperor other calumnies against Felix, by whom the bishop aforesaid
had been ordained? And now, what other law is in force against your party than
that decision of the elder Constantine, to which your forefathers of their own
choice appealed, which they extorted from him by their importunate complaints,
and which they preferred to the decision of an episcopal tribunal? If you are
dissatisfied with the decrees of emperors, who were the first to compel the
emperors to set these in array against you? For you have no more reason for crying
out against the Catholic Church because of the decrees of emperors against yon,
than those men would have had for crying out against Daniel, who, after his
deliverance, were thrown in to be devoured by the same lions by which they first
sought to have him destroyed; as it is written: "The king's wrath is as the
roaring of a lion."' These slanderous enemies insisted that Daniel should be thrown
into the den of lions: his innocence prevailed over their malice; he was taken
from the den unharmed and they, being cast into it, perished. In like manner,
your forefathers cast Caecilianus and his companions to be destroyed by the
king's wrath; and when, by their innocence, they were delivered from this, you
yourselves now suffer from these kings what your party wished them to suffer; as it
is written: "Whoso diggeth a pit for his neighbour, shall himself fall
therein."2
6. You have therefore no ground for complaint against us: nay more, the
clemency of the Catholic Church would have led us to desist from even enforcing
these decrees of the emperors, had not your clergy and Circumcelliones, i
disturbing our peace, and destroying us by their most monstrous crimes and furious
deeds of violence, compelled us to have these decrees revived and put in force
again. For before these more recent edicts of which you complain had come into
Africa, these desperadoes laid ambush for our bishops on their journeys, abused
our clergy with savage blows, and assaulted our laity in the same most cruel
manner, and set fire to their habitations. A certain presbyter who had of his own
free choice preferred the unity of our Church, was for so doing dragged out of
his own house, cruelly beaten without form of law, rolled over and over in a
miry pond, covered with a matting of rushes, and exhibited as an object of pity
to some and of ridicule to others, while his persecutors gloried in their crime;
after which they carried him away where they pleased, and: reluctantly set him
at liberty after twelve days., When Proculeianus3 was challenged by our bishop
concerning this outrage, at a meeting of the municipal courts, be at first
endeavoured to evade inquiry into the matter by pretending that he knew nothing of
it; and when the demand was immediately repeated, he publicly declared that he
would say nothing more on the subject. And the perpetrators of that outrage
are at this day among your presbyters, continuing moreover to keep us in terror,
and to persecute us to the utmost of their power.
7. Our bishop, however, did not complain to the emperors of the wrongs and
persecution which the Catholic Church in our district suffered in those days.
But when a Council had been convened? it was agreed that you should be invited
to meet our party peaceably, in order that, if it were possible, you [i.e. the
bishops on both sides, for the letter is written by the clergy of Hippo] might
have a conference, and the error being taken out of the way, brotherly love
might rejoice in the bond of peace between us. You may learn from your own records
the answer which Proculeianus made at first on that occasion, that you would
call a Council together, and would there see what you ought to answer; and how
afterwards, when he was again publicly reminded of his promise, he stated, as
the Acts bear witness, that he refused to have any conference with a view to
peace. After this, when the notorious atrocities of your clergy and Circumcelliones
continued, a case was brought to trial;5 and Crispinus being condemned as a
heretic, although he was through the forbearance of the Catholics exempted from
the fine which the imperial edict imposed on heretics of ten pounds of gold,
nevertheless' thought himself warranted in appealing to the emperors. As to the
answer which was.made to that appeal, was it not extorted by the preceding
wickedness of your party and by his own appeal? And yet, even after that answer was
given, he was permitted to escape the infliction of that fine, through the
intercession of our bishops with the Emperor on his behalf. From that Council,
however, our bishops sent deputies to the court, who obtained a decree that not all
your bishops and clergy should be held liable to this fine of ten pounds of
gold, which the decree had imposed on all heretics, but only those in whose
districts the Catholic Church suffered violence at the hands of your party. But by
the time that the deputation came to Rome, the wounds of the Catholic bishop of
Bugle, who had just then been dreadfully injured, had moved the Emperor to send
such edicts as were actually sent. When these edicts came to Africa, seeing
especially that strong pressure had begun to be brought upon you, not to any evil
thing, but for your good, what should you have done but invited our bishops to
meet you, as they had invited yours to meet them, that by a conference the
truth might be brought to light?
8. Not only, however, have you failed to do this. but your party go on
inflicting yet greater injuries upon us. Not contented with beating us with
bludgeons and killing some with the sword, they even, with incredible ingenuity in
crime, throw lime mixed with acid [? vitriol] into our people's eyes to blind
them. For pillaging our houses, moreover, they have fashioned huge and formidable
implements, armed with which they wander here and there, breathing out threats
of slaughter, rapine, burning of houses and blinding of our eyes; by which
things we have been constrained in the first instance to complain to you, venerable
sir, begging you to consider how, under these so-called terrible laws of
Catholic emperors, many, nay all of you, who say that you are the victims of
persecution, are settled in peace in the possessions which were your own, or which you
have taken from others, while we suffer such unheard-of wrongs at the hands of
your party. You say that you are. persecuted, while we are killed with clubs
and! swords by your armed men. You say that you ] are persecuted, while our
houses are pillaged by your armed robbers. You say that you are persecuted, while
many of us have our eyesight destroyed by the lime and acid with which your men
are armed for the purpose. Moreover, if their course of crime brings some of
them to death, they make out that these deaths are justly the occasion of odium
against us, and of glory to them. They take no blame to themselves for the harm
which they do to us, and they lay upon us the blame of the harm which they
bring upon themselves. They live as robbers, they die as Circumcelliones, they are
honoured as martyrs ! Nay, I do injustice to robbers in this comparison; for we
have never heard of robbers destroying the eyesight of those whom they have
plundered: they indeed take away those whom they kill from the light, but they do
not take away the light from those whom they leave in life.
9. On the other hand, if at any time we get men of your party into our
power, we keep them unharmed, showing great love towards them; and we tell them
everything by which the error which has severed brother from brother is refuted.
We do as the Lord Himself commanded us, in the words of the prophet Isaiah:
"Hear l the word of the Lord, ye that tremble at His word; say, Ye are our
brethren, to those who hate you, and who cast you out, that the name of the Lord may
be glorified, and that He may appear to them with joy; but let them be put to
shame."' And thus some of them we persuade, through their considering the
evidences l of the truth and the beauty of peace, not to be baptized anew for this
sign of allegiance to our king they have already received (though they were as
deserters), but to accept that faith, and love of the Holy Spirit, and union to
the body of Christ, which formerly they had not. For it is written, "Purifying
their hearts by faith;"2 and again, "Charity covereth a multitude of sins."3 If,
however, either through too great obduracy, or through shame making them unable
to bear the taunts of those with whom they were accustomed to join so
frequently in falsely reproaching us and contriving evil against us, or perhaps more
through fear lest they should come to share along with us such injuries as they
were formerly wont to inflict on us,- if, I say, from any of these causes, they
refuse to be reconciled to the unity of Christ, they are allowed to depart, as
they were detained, without suffering any harm. We also exhort our laity as far
as we can to detain them without doing them any harm, and bring them to us for
admonition and instruction. Some of them obey us and do this, if it is in
their power: others deal with them as they would with robbers, because they
actually suffer from them such things as robbers are wont to do. Some of them strike
their assailants in protecting their own bodies from their blows: while others
apprehend them and bring them to the magistrates; and though we intercede on
their behalf, they do not let them off, because they are very much afraid of their
savage outrages. Yet all the while, these men, though persisting in the
practices of robbers, claim to be honoured as martyrs when they receive the due
reward of their deeds!
10. Accordingly our desire, which we lay before you, venerable sir, by
this letter and by the brethren whom we have sent, is as follows. In the first
place, if it be possible, let a peaceable conference be held with our bishops, so
that an end may be put to the error itself, not to the men who embrace it, and
men corrected rather than punished; and as you formerly despised their
proposals for agreement, let them now proceed from your side. How much better for you
to have such a conference between your bishops and ours, the proceedings of
which may be written down and sent with signature of the parties to.the Emperor,
than to confer with the civil magistrates, who cannot do otherwise than
administer the laws which have been passed against you! For your colleagues who sailed
from this country said that they had come to have their case heard by the
prefects. They also named our holy father the Catholic bishop Valentinus, who was
then at court, saying that they wished to be heard along with him. This the judge
could not concede, as he was guided in his judicial functions by the laws which
were passed against you: the bishop, moreover, had not come on this footing,
or with any such instructions from his colleagues. How much better qualified
therefore will the Emperor himself be to decide regarding your case, when the
report of that conference has been read before him, seeing that he is not bound by
these laws, and has power to enact other laws instead of them; although it may
be said to be a case upon which final decision was pronounced long ago ! Yet,
in wishing this conference with you, we seek not to have a second final
decision, but to have it made known as already settled to those who meanwhile are not
aware that it is so. If your bishops be willing to do this, what do you thereby
lose? Do you not rather gain, inasmuch as your willingness for such conference
will become known, and the reproach, hitherto deserved, that you distrust your
own cause will be taken away? Do you, perchance, suppose that such conference
would be unlawful? Surely you are aware that Christ our Lord spoke even to the
devil concerning the law,' and that by the Apostle Paul debates were held not
only with Jews, but even with heathen philosophers of the sect of the Stoics and
of the Epicurean,.2 Is it, perchance, that the laws of the Emperor do not
permit you to meet our bishops? If so, assemble together in the meantime your
bishops in the region of Hippo, in which we are suffering such wrongs from men of
your party. For how much more legitimate and open is the way of access to us for
the writings which you might send to us, than for the arms with which they
assail us!
11. Finally, we beg you to send back such writings by our brethren whom we
have sent to you. If, however, you will not do this, at least hear us as well
as those of your own party, at whose hands we suffer such wrongs Show us the
truth for which you allege that you suffer persecution, at the time when we are
suffering so great cruelties from your side. For if you convict us of being in
error, perhaps you will concede to us an exemption from being rebaptized by you,
because we were baptized by persons whom you have not condemned; and you
granted this exemption to those whom Felicianus of Musti, and Praetextatus of
Assuri, had baptized during the long period in which you! were attempting to east
them out of their l churches by legal interdicts, because they were i in communion
with Maximianus, along with whom they were condemned explicitly and by name in
the Council of Bagae. All which things we can prove by the judicial and
municipal transactions, in which you brought forward the decisions of this same
Council of yours, when you wished to show the judges that the persons! whom you were
expelling from your ecclesiastical buildings were persons by schism separated
from you. Nevertheless, you who have by schism severed yourselves from the seed
of Abraham, in whom all the nations of the earth are blessed,3 refuse to be
expelled from our ecclesiastical buildings, when the decree to this effect
proceeds not from judges such as you employed in dealing with schismatics from your
sect, but from the kings of the earth themselves, who worship Christ as the
prophecy had foretold, and from whose bar you retired vanquished when you brought
accusation against Caecilianus.
12. If, however, you will neither instruct us nor listen to us, come
yourselves, or send into the district of Hippo some of your party, with some of us
as their guides, that they may see your army equipped with their weapons; nay,
more fully equipped than ever army was before, for no soldier when fighting
against barbarians was ever known to add to his other weapons t lime and acid to
destroy the eyes of his enemies. [If you refuse this also, we beg you at least to
write to them to desist now from these things, and refrain from murdering,
plundering, and blinding our people. We will not say, condemn them; for it is for
yourselves to see how no contamination is brought to you by the toleration
within your communion of those whom we prove to be robbers, while contamination is
brought to us by our having members against whom you have never been able to
prove that they were traditors. If, however, you treat all our remonstrances with
contempt, we shall never regret that we desired to act in a peaceful and
orderly way. The Lord will so plead for His Church, that you, on the other hand,
shall regret that you despised our humble attempt at conciliation.
LETTER LXXXIX. (A.D. 406.)
TO FESTUS, MY LORD WELL BELOVED, MY SON HONOURABLE AND WORTHY OF ESTEEM,
AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. If, on behalf of error and inexcusable dissension, and falsehoods which
have been in every way possible disproved, men are so presumptuous as to
persevere in boldly assailing and threatening the Catholic Church, which seeks their
salvation, how much more is it reasonable and right for those who maintain the
truth of Christian peace and unity,- truth which commends itself even to those
who profess to deny it or attempt to resist it, -- to labour constantly and
with energy, not only in the defence of those who are already Catholics, but also
for the correction of those who are not yet within the Church! For if
obstinacy aims at the possession and exercise of indomitable strength, how great should
be the strength of constancy which devotes persevering and unwearied labours
to a cause which it knows to be both pleasing to God, and beyond all question
necessarily approved by the judgment of wise men!
2. Could there, moreover, be anything more lamentable as an instance of
perversity, than for men not only to refuse to be humbled by the correction of
their wickedness, but even to claim commendation for their conduct, as is done by
the Donatists, when they boast that they are the victims of persecution;
either through incredible blindness not knowing, or through inexcusable passion
pretending not to know, that men are made martyrs not by the amount of their
suffering, but by the cause in which they suffer? This I would say even were I
opposing men who were only involved in the darkness of error, and suffering penalties
on that account most truly merited, and who had not dared to assault any one
with insane violence. But what shall I say against those whose fatal obstinacy
is such that it is checked only by fear of losses, and is taught only by exile
how universal (as had been foretold) is the diffusion of the Church, which they
prefer to attack rather then to acknowledge? And if the things which they
suffer under this most gentle discipline be compared] with those things which they
in reckless fury perpetrate, who does not see to which party the name of
persecutors more truly belongs? Nay, even though wicked sons abstain from violence,
they do, by their abandoned way of life, inflict upon their affectionate parents
a much more serious wrong than their father and mother inflict upon them, when,
with a sternness proportioned to the strength of their love, they endeavour
without dissimulation to compel them to live uprightly.
3. There exist the strongest evidences in' public documents, which you can
read if you please, or rather, which I beseech and exhort you to read, by
which it is proved that their predecessors, who originally separated themselves
from the peace of the Church, did of their 'own accord dare to bring accusation
against Caecilianus before the Emperor by means of Anulinus, who was proconsul at
that time. Had they gained the day in that trial, what else would Caecilianus
have suffered at the hands of the Emperor than that which, when they were
defeated, he awarded to them? But truly, if they having accused him had prevailed,
and Caecilianus and his colleagues had been expelled from their sees, or,
through persisting in their conspiracy, had exposed themselves to severer punishments
(for the imperial censure could not pass unpunished the resistance of persons
who had been defeated in the civil courts), they would then have published as
worthy of all praise the Emperor's wise measures and anxious care for the good
of the Church. But now, because they have themselves lost their case, being
wholly unable to prove the charges which they advanced, if they suffer anything for
their iniquity, they call it persecution; and not only set no bounds to their
wicked violence, but also claim to be honoured as martyrs: as if the Catholic
Christian emperors were following in their measures against their most obstinate
wickedness any other precedent than the decision of Constantine, to whom they
of their own accord appealed as the accusers of Caecilianus, and whose
authority they so esteemed above that of all the bishops beyond the sea, that to him
rather than to them they referred this ecclesiastical dispute. To him, again,
they protested against the first judgment given against them by the bishops whom
he had appointed to examine the case in Rome, and to him also they appealed
against the second judgment given by the bishops at Arles: yet when at last they
were defeated by his own decision, the), remained unchanged in their perversity.
I think that even the devil himself would not have had the assurance to persist
in such a cause, if he had been so often overthrown by the authority of the
judge to whom he had of his own will chosen to appeal.
4. It may be said, however, that these are human tribunals, and that they
might have been cajoled, misguided, or bribed. Why, then, is the Christian
world libelled and branded with the crime laid to the charge of some who are said
to have surrendered to persecutors the sacred books? For surely it was neither
possible for the Christian world, nor incumbent upon it, to do otherwise than
believe the judges whom the plaintiffs had chosen, rather than the plaintiffs
against whom these judges pronounced judgments. These judges are responsible to
God for their opinion, whether just or unjust; but what has the Church, diffused
throughout the world, done that it should be deemed necessary for her to be
rebaptized by the Donatists upon no other ground than because, in a case in which
she was not able to decide as to the truth, she has thought herself called upon
to believe those who were in a position to judge it rightly, rather than those
who, though defeated in the civil courts, refused to yield? O weighty
indictment against all the nations to which God promised that they should be blessed in
the seed of Abraham, and has now made His promise good ! When they with one
voice demand, Why do you wish to rebaptize us? the answer given is, Because you
do not know what men in Africa were guilty of surrendering the sacred books; and
being thus ignorant, accepted the testimony of the judges who decided the case
as more worthy of credit than that of those by whom the accusation was
brought. No man deserves to be blamed for the crime of another; what, then, has the
whole world to do with the sin which some one in Africa may have committed? No
man deserves to be blamed for a crime about which he knows nothing; and how could
the whole world possibly know the crime in this case, whether the judges or
the party condemned were guilty? Ye who have understanding, judge what I say.
Here is the justice of heretics: the party of Donatus condemns the whole world
unheard, because the whole world does not condemn a crime unknown. But for the
world, truly, it suffices to have the promises of God, and to see fulfilled in
itself what prophets predicted so long ago, and to recognise the Church by means
of the same Scriptures by which Christ her King is recognised. For as in them
are foretold concerning Christ the things which we read in gospel history to have
been fulfilled in Him, so also in them have been foretold concerning the
Church the things which we now behold fulfilled in the world.
5. Possibly some thinking people might be disturbed by what they are
accustomed to say regarding baptism, viz. that it is the true baptism of Christ only
when it is administered by a righteous man, were it not that on this subject
the Christian world holds what is most manifestly ! evangelical truth as taught
in the words of John: "He that sent me to baptize with water, the same said
unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending, and remaining on him, the
same is he which baptizeth with the Holy! Ghost." L Wherefore the Church
calmly declines to place her hope in man, lest she fall under the curse pronounced
in Scripture, "Cursed be the man that trusteth in man,"2 but places her hope in
Christ, who so took upon Him the form of a servant as not to lose the form of
God, of whom it is said, "The same is He which baptizeth."' Therefore, whoever
the man be, and whatever office he bear who administers the ordinance, it is not
he who baptizes, w that is the work of Him upon whom the dove descended. So
great is the absurdity in which the Donatists are involved in consequence of
these foolish opinions, that they can find no escape from it. For when they admit
the validity and reality of baptism when one of their sect baptizes who is a
guilty man, but whose guilt is concealed, we ask them, Who baptizes in this case?
and they can only answer, God; for they cannot affirm that a man guilty of sin
(say of adultery) can sanctify any one. If, then, when baptism is administered
by a man known to be righteous, he sanctifies the person baptized; but when it
is administered by [a wicked man, whose wickedness is hidden, it is ;not he,
but God, who sanctifies. Those who are baptized ought to wish to be baptized
rather by men who are secretly bad than by men manifestly good, for God sanctifies
much more effectually than any righteous man can do. If it be palpably absurd
that one about to be baptized ought to wish to be baptized by a hypocritical
adulterer rather than by a man of known chastity, it follows plainly, that whoever
be the minister that dispenses the rite, the baptism is valid, because He
Himself baptizes upon whom the dove descended.
6. Notwithstanding the impression which truth so obvious should produce on
the ears and hearts of men, such is the whirlpool of evil custom by which some
have been engulfed, that rather than yield, they will resist both authority
and argument of every kind. Their resistance is of two kinds- either with active
rage or with passive immobility. What remedies, then, must the Church apply
when seeking with a mother's anxiety the salvation of them all, and distracted by
the frenzy of some and the lethargy of others? Is it right, is it possible, for
her to despise or give up any means which may promote their recovery? She must
necessarily be esteemed burdensome by both, just because she is the enemy of
neither. For men in frenzy do not like to be bound, and men in lethargy do not
like to be stirred up; nevertheless the diligence of charity perseveres in
restraining the one and stimulating the other, out of love to both. Both are
provoked, but both are loved; both, while they continue under their infirmity, resent
the treatment as vexatious; both express their thankfulness for it when they
are cured.
7. Moreover, whereas they think and boast that we receive them into the
Church just as they were, it is not so. We receive them completely changed,
because they do not begin to be Catholics until they have ceased to be heretics. For
their sacraments, which we have in common with them, are not the objects of
dislike to us, because they are not human, but Divine. That which must be taken
from them is the error, which is their own, and which they have wickedly
imbibed; not the sacraments, which they have received like ourselves, and which they
bear and have, -- to their own condemnation, indeed, because they use them so
unworthily; nevertheless, they truly have them. Wherefore, when their error is
forsaken, and the perversity of schism corrected in them, they pass over from
heresy into the peace of the Church, which they formerly did not possess, and
without which all that they did possess was only doing them harm. If, however, in
thus passing over they are not sincere, this is a matter not for us, but for
God, to judge. And yet, some who were suspected of insincerity because they had
passed over to us through fear, have been found in some subsequent temptations so
faithful as to surpass others who had been originally Catholics. Therefore let
it not be said that nothing is accomplished when strong measures are employed.
For when the entrenchments of stubborn custom are stormed by fear of human
authority, this is not all that is done, because at the same time faith is
strengthened, and the understanding convinced, by authority and arguments which are
Divine.
8. These things being so, be it known to your Grace that your men in the
region of Hippo are still Donatists, and that your letter has had no influence
upon them. The reason why it failed to move them I need not write; but send some
one, either a servant or a friend of your own, whose fidelity you can entrust
with the commission, and let him come not to them in the first place, but to us
without their knowledge; and when he has carefully consulted with us as to
what is best to be done, let him do it with the Lord's help. For in these measures
we are acting not only for their welfare, but also on behalf of our own men
who have become Catholics, to whom the vicinity of these Donatists is so
dangerous, that it cannot be looked upon by us as a small matter.
I could have written much more briefly; but I wished you to have a letter
from me, by which you might not only be yourself informed of the reason of my
solicitude, but also be provided with an answer to any one who might dissuade
you from earnestly devoting your energies to the correction of the people who
belong to you, and might speak against us for wishing you to do this. If in this I
have done what was unnecessary, because you had yourself either learned or
thought out these principles, or if I have been burdensome to you by inflicting so
long a letter upon one so engrossed with public affairs, I beg you to forgive
me. I only entreat you not to despise what I have brought before you and
requested at your hands. May the mercy of God be your safeguard!
LETTER XC. (A.D. 408.)
TO MY NOBLE LORD AND BROTHER, WORTHY OF ALL ESTEEM, BISHOP AUGUSTIN, NECTARIUS
SENDS GREETING.
I do not dwell upon the strength of the love men bear to their native
land, for you know it. It is the only emotion which has a stronger claim than love
of kindred. If there were any limit or time beyond which it would be lawful for
right-hearted men to withdraw themselves from its control, I have by this time
well earned exemption from the burdens which it imposes. But since love and
gratitude towards our country gain strength every day, and the nearer one [comes
to the end of life, the more ardent is his desire to leave his country in a
safe and prosperous condition, I rejoice, in beginning this letter, that I am
addressing myself to a man who is versed in all kinds of learning, and therefore
able to enter into my feelings.
There are many things in the colony of Calama which justly bind my love to
it. I was born here, and I have (in the opinion of others) rendered great
services to this community. Now, my lord most excellent and worthy of all esteem,
this town has fallen disastrously by a grievous misdemeanour on the part of her
citizens,' which must be punished with very great severity, if we are dealt
with according to the rigour of the civil law. But a bishop is guided by another
law. His duty is to promote the welfare of men, to interest himself in any case
only with a view to the benefit of the parties, and to obtain for other men the
pardon of their sins at the hand of the Almighty God. Wherefore I beseech you
with all possible urgency to secure that, if the matter is to be made the
subject of a prosecution, the guiltless be protected, and a distinction drawn
between the innocent and those who did the wrong. This, which, as you see, is a
demand in accordance with your own natural sentiments, I pray you to grant. An
assessment to compensate for the losses caused by the tumult can be easily levied.
We only deprecate the severity of revenge. May you live in the more full
enjoyment of the Divine favour, my noble lord, and brother worthy of all esteem.
LETTER XCI. (A.D. 408.)
TO MY NOBLE LORD AND JUSTLY HONOURED BROTHER NECTARIUS, AUGUSTIN SENDS
GREETING.
1. I do not wonder that, though your limbs are chilled by age, your heart
still glows with patriotic fire. I admire this, and, instead of grieving, I
rejoice to learn that you not only remember, but by your life and practice
illustrate, the maxim that there is no limit either in measure or in time to the
claims which their country has upon the care and service of right-hearted men.
Wherefore we long to have you enrolled in the service of a higher and nobler
country, through holy love, to which (up to the measure of our capacity) we are
sustained amid the perils and toils which we meet with among those whose welfare we
seek in urging them to make that country their own. Oh that we had you such a
citizen of that country, that you would think that there ought to be no limit
either in measure or in time to your efforts for the good of that small portion of
her citizens who are on this earth pilgrims! This would be a better loyalty,
because you would be responding to the claims of a better country; and if you
resolved that in your time on earth your labours for her welfare should have no
end, you would in her eternal peace be recompensed with joy that shall have no
end.
2. But till this be done,--and it is not beyond hope that you should be
able to gain, or should even now be most wisely considering that you. ought to
gain, that country to which your father has gone before you,--till this be done,
I say, you: must excuse us if, for the sake of that country which we desire
never to leave, we cause some distress to that country which you desire to leave
in the full bloom of honour and prosperity. As to the flowers which thus bloom
in your country, if we were discussing this subject with one of )'our wisdom, we
have no doubt that you would be easily convinced, or rather, would yourself
readily perceive, in what way a commonwealth should flourish. The foremost of
your poets has sung of certain flowers of Italy; but in your own country we have
been taught by experience, not how it has blossomed with heroes, so much as how
it has gleamed with weapons of war: nay, I ought to write how it has burned
rather than how it has gleamed; and instead of the weapons of war, I should write
the fires of incendiaries. If so great a crime were to remain unpunished, I
without any rebuke such as the miscreants have deserved, do you think that you
would leave your country in the full bloom of honour and prosperity? O blooming
flowers, yielding not fruit, but thorns ! Consider now whether you would prefer
to see your country flourish by the piety of its inhabitants, or by their
escaping the punishment of their crimes; by the correction of their manners, or by
outrages to which impunity emboldens them. Compare these things, I say, and judge
whether or not you love your country more than we do; whether its prosperity
and honour are more truly and earnestly sought by you or by us.
3. Consider for a little those books, De Republica, from which you imbibed
that sentiment of a most loyal citizen, that there is no limit either in
measure or in time to the claims which their country has upon the care and service
of right-hearted men. Consider them, I beseech you, and observe how great are
the praises there bestowed upon frugality, self-control, conjugal fidelity, and
those chaste, honourable, and upright manners, the prevalence of which in any
city entitles it to be spoken of as flourishing. Now the Churches which are
multiplying throughout the world are, as it were, sacred seminaries of public
instruction, in which this sound morality is inculcated and learned, and in which,
above all, men are taught the worship due to the true and faithful God, who not
only commands men to attempt, but also gives grace to perform, all those things
by which the soul of man is furnished and fitted for fellowship with God, and
for dwelling in the eternal heavenly kingdom. For this reason He hath both
foretold and commanded the casting down of the images of the many false gods which
are in the world. For nothing so effectually renders men depraved in practice,
and unfit to be good members of society, as the imitation of such deities as are
described and extolled in pagan writings.
4. In fact, those most learned men (whose beau ideal of a republic or
commonwealth in this world was, by the way, rather investigated or described by
them in private discussions, than established and realized by them in public
measures) were accustomed to set forth as models for the education of youth the
examples of men whom they esteemed eminent and praiseworthy, rather than the
example given by their gods. And there is no question that the young man in Terence,1
who, beholding a picture upon the wall in which was portrayed the licentious
conduct of the king of the gods, fanned the flame of the passion which mastered
him, by the encouragement which such 'high authority gave to wickedness, would
not have fallen into the desire, nor have plunged into the commission, of such
a shameful deed if he had chosen to imitate Cato instead of Jupiter; but how
could he make such a choice, when he was compelled in the temples to worship
Jupiter rather than Cato? Perhaps it may be said that we should not bring forward
from a comedy arguments to put to shame the wantonness and the impious
superstition of profane men. But read or recall to mind how wisely it is argued in the
books above referred to, that the style and the plots of comedies would never be
approved by the public voice if they did not harmonize with the manners of
those who approved them; wherefore, by the authority of men most illustrious and
eminent in the commonwealth to which they belonged, and engaged in debating as
to the conditions of a perfect commonwealth, our position is established, that
the most degraded of men may be made yet worse if they imitate their gods,-
gods, of course, which are not true, but false and invented.
5. You will perhaps reply, that all those things which were written long
ago concerning the life and manners of the gods are to be far otherwise than
literally understood and interpreted by the wise. Nay, we have heard within the
last few days that such wholesome interpretations are now read to the people when
assembled in the temples. Tell me, is the human race so blind to truth as not
to perceive things so plain and palpable as these? When, by the art of
painters, founders, hammermen, sculptors, authors, players, singers, and dancers,
Jupiter is in so many places exhibited in flagrant acts of lewdness, how important
it was that in his own Capitol at least his worshippers might have read a decree
from himself prohibiting such crimes! If, through the absence of such
prohibition, these monsters, in which shame and profanity culminate, are regarded with
enthusiasm by the people, worshipped in their temples, and laughed at in their
theatres; if, in order to provide sacrifices for them, even the poor must be
despoiled of their flocks; if, in order to provide actors who shall by gesture
and dance represent their infamous achievements, the rich squander their estates,
can it be said of the communities in which these things are done, that they
flourish? The flowers with which they bloom owe their birth not to a fertile
soil, nor to a wealthy and bounteous virtue; for them a worthy parent is found in
that goddess Flora,' whose dramatic games are celebrated with a profligacy so
utterly dissolute and shameless, that any one may infer from them what kind of
demon that must be which cannot be appeased unless -- not birds, nor quadrupeds,
nor even human life -- but (oh, greater villany!) human modesty and virtue,
perish as sacrifices on her altars.
6. These things I have said, because of your having written that the
nearer you come to the end of life, the greater is your desire to leave your country
in a safe and flourishing condition. Away with all these vanities and follies,
and let men be converted to the true worship of God, and to chaste and pious
manners: then will you see your country flourishing, not in the vain opinion of
fools, but in the sound judgment of the wise; when your fatherland here on
earth shall have become a portion of that Fatherland into which we are born not by
the flesh, but by faith, and in which all the holy and faithful servants of God
shall bloom in the eternal summer, when their labours in the winter of time
are done. We are therefore resolved, neither on the one hand to lay aside
Christian gentleness, nor on the other to leave in your city that which would l be a
most pernicious example for all others to follow. For success in this dealing we
trust to' the help of God, if His indignation against the! evil-doers be not
so great as to make Him withhold His blessing. For certainly both the gentleness
which we desire to maintain, and the discipline which we shall endeavour
without passion to administer, may be hindered, if God in His hidden counsels order
it otherwise, and either appoint that this so great wickedness be punished with
a more severe chastisement, or in yet greater displeasure leave the sin
without punishment in this world, its guilty authors being neither reproved nor
reformed.
7. You have, in the exercise of your judgment, laid down the principles by
which a bishop should be influenced; and after saying that your town has
fallen disastrously by a grievous misdemeanour on the part of your citizens, which
must be punished with great severity if they are dealt with according to the
rigour of the civil law, you add: "But a bishop is guided by another law; his duty
is to promote the welfare of men, to interest himself in any case only with a
view to the benefit of the parties, and to obtain for other men the pardon of
their sins at the hand of the Almighty God."' This we by all means labour to
secure, that no one be visited with undue severity of punishment, either by us or
by any other who is influenced by our interposition; and we seek to promote the
true welfare of men, which consists in the blessedness of well-doing, not in
the assurance of impunity in evil-doing. We do also seek earnestly, not for
ourselves alone, but on behalf of others, the pardon of sin: but this we cannot
obtain, except for those who have been turned by correction from the practice of
sin. You add, moreover: "I beseech you with all possible urgency to secure that
if the matter is to be made the subject of a prosecution, the guiltless be
protected, and a distinction drawn between the innocent and those who did the
wrong."
8. Listen to a brief account of what was done, and let the distinction
between innocent and guilty be drawn by yourself. In defiance of the most recent
laws,3 certain impious rites were celebrated on the Pagan feast-day, the calends
of June, no one interfering to forbid them, and with such unbounded effrontery
that a most insolent multitude passed along the street in which the church is
situated, and went on dancing in front of the building, -- an outrage which was
never committed even in the time of Julian. When the clergy endeavoured to
stop this most illegal and insulting procedure, the church was assailed with
stones. About eight days after that, when the bishop had called the attention of the
authorities to the well-known laws on the subject, and they were preparing to
carry out that which the law prescribed, the church was a second time assailed
with stones. When, on the following day, our people wished to make such
complaint as they deemed necessary in open court, in order to make these villains
afraid, their rights as citizens were denied them. On the same day there was a
storm of hailstones, that they might be made afraid, if not by men, at least by the
divine power, thus requiting them for their showers of stones against the
church; but as soon as this was over they renewed the attack for the third time
with stones, and at last endeavoured to destroy both the buildings and the-men in
them by fire: one servant of God who lost his way and met them they killed on
the spot, all the rest escaping or concealing themselves as they best could;
while the bishop hid himself in some crevice into which he forced himself with
difficulty, and in which he lay folded double while he heard the voices of the
ruffians seeking him to kill him, and expressing their mortification that through
his escaping them their principal design in this grievous outrage had been
frustrated. These things went on from about the tenth hour until the night was far
advanced. No attempt at resistance or rescue was made by those whose authority
might have had influence on the mob. The only one who interfered was a
stranger, through whose exertions a number of the servants of God were delivered from
the hands of those who were trying to kill them, and a great deal of property
was recovered from the plunderers by force: whereby it. was shown how easily
these riotous proceedings might have been either prevented wholly or arrested, if
the citizens, and especially the leading men, had forbidden them, either from
the first or after they had begun.
9. Accordingly you cannot in that community draw a distinction between
innocent and guilty persons, for all are guilty; but perhaps you may distinguish
degrees of guilt. Those are in a comparatively small fault, who, being kept back
by fear, especially by fear of offending those whom they knew to have leading
influence in the community and to be hostile to the Church, did not dare to
render assistance to the Christians; but all are guilty who consented to these
outrages, though they neither perpetrated them nor instigated others to the crime:
more guilty are those who perpetrated the wrong, and most guilty are those who
instigated them to it. Let us, however, suppose that the instigation of others
to these crimes is a matter of suspicion rather than of certain knowledge, and
let us not investigate those things which can be found out in no other way
than by subjecting witnesses to torture. Let us also forgive those who through
fear thought it better for them to plead secretly with God for the bishop and His
other servants, than openly to displease the powerful enemies of the Church.
What reason can you give for holding that those who remain should be subjected to
no correction and restraint? Do you really think that a case of such cruel
rage should be held up to the world as passing unpunished ? We do not desire to
gratify our anger by vindictive retribution for the past, but we are concerned to
make provision in a truly merciful spirit for the future. Now, wicked men have
something in respect to which they may be punished, and that by Christians, in
a merciful way, and so as to promote their own profit and well-being. For they
have these three things: the life and health of the body, the means of
supporting that life, and the means and opportunities of living a wicked life. Let the
two former remain untouched in the possession of those who repent of their
crime: this we desire, and this we spare no pains to secure. But as to the third,
upon it God will, if it please Him, inflict punishment in His great compassion,
dealing with it as a decaying or diseased part, which must be removed with the
pruning-knife. If, however, He be pleased either to go beyond this, or not to
permit the punishment to go so far, the reason for this higher and doubtless
more righteous counsel remains with Him: our duty is to devote pains and use our
influence according to the light which is granted to us, beseeching His
approval of our endeavours to do that which shall be most for the good of all, and
praying Him not to permit us to do anything which He who knoweth all things much
better than we do sees to be inexpedient both for ourselves and for His Church.
10. When I went recently to Calama, that under so grievous sorrow I might
either comfort the downcast or soothe the indignant among our people, I used
all my influence with the Christians to persuade them to do what I judged to be
their duty at that time. I then at their own request admitted to an audience the
Pagans also, the source and cause of all this mischief, in order that I might
admonish them what they should do if they were wise, not only for the removal
of present anxiety, but also for the obtaining of everlasting salvation. They
listened to many things which I said, and they preferred many requests to me; but
far be it from me to be such a servant as to find pleasure in being petitioned
by those who do not humble themselves before my Lord to ask from Him. With
your quick intelligence, you will readily perceive that our aim must be, while
preserving Christian gentleness and moderation, to act so that we may either make
others afraid of imitating their perversity, or have cause to desire others to
imitate their profiling by correction. As for the loss sustained, this is
either borne by the Christians or remedied by the help of their brethren. What
concerns us is the gaining of souls, which even at the risk of life we are impatient
to secure; and our desire is, that in your district we may have larger
success, and that in other districts we may not be hindered by the influence of your
example. May God in His mercy grant to us to rejoice in your salvation!
LETTER XCII. (A.D: 408.)
TO THE NOBLE AND JUSTLY DISTINGUISHED LADY ITALICA, A DAUGHTER WORTHY OF
HONOUR IN THE LOVE OF CHRIST, BISHOP AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETING IN THE LORD.
1. I have learned, not only by your letter, but also by the statements of
the person who brought it to me, that you earnestly solicit a letter from me,
believing that you may derive from it very great consolation. What you may gain
from my letter it is for yourself to judge; I at least felt that I should
neither refuse nor delay compliance with your request. May your own faith and hope
comfort you, and that love which is shed abroad in the hearts of the pious by
the Holy Ghost,' whereof we have now a portion as an earnest of the whole, in
order that we may learn to desire its consummate fulness. For you ought not to
consider yourself desolate while you have Christ dwelling in your heart by faith;
nor ought you to sorrow as those heathens who have no hope, seeing that in
regard to those friends, who are not lost, but only called earlier than ourselves
to the country whither we shall follow them, we have hope, resting on a most
sure promise, that from this life we shall pass into that other life, in which
they shall be to us more beloved as they shall be better known, and in which our
pleasure in loving them shall not be alloyed by any fear of separation.
2. Your late husband, by whose decease you are now a widow, was truly well
known to you, but better known to himself than to you. And how could this be,
when you saw his face, which he himself did not see, if it were not that the
inner knowledge which we have of ourselves is more certain, since no man "knoweth
the things ! of a man, save the spirit of man which is in! man "? 2 but when
the Lord cometh, "who both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness and
will make manifest the counsels of the hearts," 3 then shall nothing in any
one be concealed from his neighbour; nor shall there be anything which any one
might reveal to his friends, but keep hidden from strangers, for no stranger
shall be there. What tongue can describe the nature and the greatness of that light
by which all those things which are now in the hearts of men concealed shall
be made manifest ? who can with our weak faculties even approach it ? Truly that
Light is God Himself, for "God is Light, and in Him is no darkness at all;" 4
but He is the Light of purified minds, not of these bodily eyes. And the mind
shall then be, what meanwhile it is not, able to see that light.
3. But this the bodily eye neither now is, nor shall then be, able to see.
For everything which can be seen by the bodily eye must be in some place, nor
can be everywhere in its totality, but with a smaller part of itself occupies a
smaller space, and with a larger part a larger space. It is not so with God,
who is invisible and incorruptible, "who only hath immortality, dwelling in the
light which no man can approach unto; whom no man hath seen nor can see." s For
He cannot be seen by men through the bodily organ by which men see corporeal
things. For if He were inaccessible to the minds also of the saints, it would
not be said, "They looked unto Him, and were lightened" translated by Aug., "Draw
near unto Him, and be enlightened "3 ;6 and if He was invisible to the minds
of the saints, it would not be said, "We shall see Him as He is:" for consider
the whole context there in that Epistle of John: "Beloved," he says, "now are we
the sons of God; and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know
that, when He shall appear, we shall be like Him; for we shall see Him as He is." 7
We shall therefore see Him according to the measure in which we shall be like
Him; because now the measure in which we do not see Him is according to the
measure of our unlikeness to Him. We shall therefore see Him by means of that in
which we shall be like Him. But who would be so infatuated as to assert that we
either are or shall be in our bodies like unto God? The likeness spoken of is
therefore in the inner man, "which is renewed in knowledge after the image of
Him that created him." s And we shall become the more like unto Him, the more we
advance in knowledge of Him and in love; because "though our outward man
perish, our inward man is renewed day by day," 9 yet so as that, however far one may
have become advanced in this life, he is far short of that perfection of
likeness which is fitted for seeing God, as the apostle says, "face to face." '° If
by these words we were to understand the bodily face, it would follow that God
has a face such as ours, and that between our face and His there must be a space
intervening when we shall see Him face to face. And if a space intervene, this
presupposes a limitation and a definite conformation of members and other
things, absurd to utter, and impious even to think of, by which most empty
delusions the natural man, which "receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God,"' is
deceived.
4. For some of those who talk thus foolishly affirm, as I am informed,
that we see God now by our minds, but shall then see Him by our bodies; yea, they
even say that the wicked shall in the same manner see Him. Observe how far they
have gone from bad to worse, when, unpunished for their foolish speaking, they
talk at random, unrestrained by either fear or shame. They used to say at
first, that Christ endowed only His own flesh with this faculty of seeing God with
the bodily eye; then they added to this, that all the saints shall see God in
the same way then they have received their bodies again in the resurrection; and
now they have granted that the same thing is possible to the wicked also.
Well, let them grant what gifts they please, and to whom they please: for who may
say anything against men giving away that which is their own ? for he that
speaketh a lie, speaketh of his own.2 Be it yours, however, in common with all who
hold sound doctrine, not to presume to take in this way from your own any of
these errors; but when you read, "Blessed are the' pure in heart, for they shall
see God," 3 learn! from it that the impious shall not see Him: for! the impious
are neither blessed nor pure in heart. i Moreover, when you read, "Now we see
through j a glass darkly? but then face to face," s learn] from this that we
shall then see Him face to face by the same means by which we now see] Him through
a glass darkly. In both cases alike, the vision of God belongs to the inner
man, whether when we walk in this pilgrimage still by faith, in which it uses the
glass and the <greek>aingma</greek>, or when, in the country which is our
home, we shall perceive by sight, which vision the words "face to face" denote.
5. Let the flesh raving with carnal imaginations hear these words: "God is
a Spirit, and they that worship Him must worship Him in spirit and in truth."
6 If this be the manner of/ worshipping Him, how much more of seeing Him! For
who durst affirm that the Divine essence is seen in a corporal manner, when He
has not permitted it to be worshipped in a corporal manner ? They think,
however, that they are very acute in saying and in pressing as a , question for us to
answer: Was Christ able to endow His flesh so as that He could with His eyes t]
see the Father, or was He not? If we reply that He was not, they publish
abroad that we have : denied the omnipotence of God; if, on the other hand, we grant
that He was able, they affirm that their argument is established by our reply.
How much more excusable is the folly of those who maintain that the flesh
shall be changed into the Divine substance, and shall be what God Himself is, in
order that thus they may endow with fitness for seeing God that which is
meanwhile removed by so great diversity of nature from likeness to Him! Yet I believe
they reject from their creed, perhaps also refuse to hear, this error.
Nevertheless, if they were in like manner pressed with the question above quoted, as to
whether God can or cannot do this [viz. change our flesh into the Divine
substance], which alternative will they choose ? Will they limit His power by
answering that He cannot; or if they concede that He can, will they by this concession
grant that it shall be done ? Let them get out of the dilemma which they have
proposed to others as above, in the same way by which they get out of this
dilemma proposed to others by them. Moreover, why do they contend that this gift is
to be attributed only to the eyes, and not to all the other senses of Christ?
Shall God then be a sound, that He may be perceived by the ear? and an
exhalation, that He may be discerned by the sense of smell ? and a liquid of some kind,
that He may be also imbibed ? and a solid body, that He may be also touched?
No, they say. What then? we reply; can God be this, or can He not ? If they say
He cannot, why do they derogate from the omnipotence of God ? If they say He
can, but is not willing, why do they show favour to the eyes alone, and grudge
the same honour to the other senses of Christ? Do they carry their folly just as
far as they please ? How much better is our course, who do not prescribe limits
to their folly, but would fain prevent them from entering into it at all!
6. Many things may be brought forward for the confutation of that madness.
Meanwhile, however, if at any time they assail your ears, read this letter to
the supporters of such error, and do not count it too great a labour to write
back to me as well as you can what they say in reply. Let me add that our hearts
are purified by faith, because the vision of God is promised to us as the
reward of faith. Now, if this vision of God were to be through the bodily eyes, in
vain are the souls of saints exercised for receiving it; nay, rather, a soul
which cherishes such sentiments is not exercised in itself, but is wholly in the
flesh. For where will it dwell more resolutely and fixedly than in that by
means of which it expects that it shall see God ? How great an evil this would be I
rather leave to your own intelligence to observe, than labour to prove by a
long argument.
May your heart dwell always under the Lord's keeping, noble and justly
distinguished lady, and daughter worthy of honour in the love of Christ: Salute
from me, with the respect due to your worth, your sons, who are along with
yourself honourable, and to me dearly beloved in the Lord.