THE SEVEN BOOKS OF AUGUSTIN, BISHOP OF HIPPO, ON BAPTISM, AGAINST THE
DONATISTS (BOOKS III & IV)
BOOK III.
AUGUSTIN UNDERTAKES THE REFUTATION OF THE ARGUMENTS WHICH MIGHT BE DERIVED
FROM THE EPISTLE OF CYPRIAN TO JUBAIANUS, TO GIVE COLOR TO THE VIEW THAT THE
BAPTISM OF CHRIST COULD NOT BE CONFERRED BY HERETICS.
CHAP. 1.--1. I think that it may now be considered clear to every one, that the
authority of the blessed Cyprian for the maintenance of the bond of peace, and the
avoiding of any violation of that most wholesome charity which preserves unity in
the Church, may be urged on our side rather than on the side of the Donatists.
For if they have chosen to act upon his example in rebaptizing Catholics,
because he thought that heretics ought to be baptized on joining the Catholic
Church, shall not we rather follow his example, whereby he laid down a manifest rule
that one ought in no wise, by the establishment of a separate communion, to
secede from the Catholic communion, that is, from the body of Christians
dispersed throughout the world, even on the admission of evil and sacrilegious men,
since he was unwilling even to remove from the right of communion those whom he
considered to have received sacrilegious men without baptism into the Catholic
communion, saying, "Judging no one, nor depriving any of the right of communion
if he differ from us?"
CHAP. 2.--2. Nevertheless, I see what may still be required of me, viz., that I should
answer those plausible arguments, by which, in even earlier times, Agrippinus,
or Cyprian himself, or those in Africa who agreed with them, or any others in
far distant lands beyond the sea, were moved, not indeed by the authority of
any plenary or even regionary Council, but by a mere epistolary correspondence,
to think that they ought to adopt a custom which had no sanction from the
ancient custom of the Church, and which was expressly forbidden by the most unanimous
resolution of the Catholic world in order that an error which had begun to
creep into the minds of some men, through discussions of this kind, might be cured
by the more powerful truth and universal healing power of unity coming on the
side of safety. And so they may see with what security I approach this
discourse. If I am unable to gain my point, and show how those arguments may be refuted
which they bring forward from the Council and the epistles of Cyprian, to the
effect that Christs's baptism may not be given by the hands of heretics, I
shall still remain safely in the Church, in whose communion Cyprian himself
remained with those who differed from him.
3. But if they say that the Catholic Church existed then, because there
were a few, or, if they prefer it, even a considerable number, who denied the
validity of any baptism conferred in an heretical body, and baptized all who came
from thence, what then? Did the Church not exist at all before Agrippinus, with
whom that new kind of system began, at variance with all previous custom? Or
how, again after the time of Agrippinus, when, unless there had been a return to
the primitive custom, there would have been no need for Cyprian to set on foot
another Council? Was there no Church then, because such a custom as this
prevailed everywhere, that the baptism of Christ should be considered nothing but
the baptism of Christ, even though it were proved to have been conferred in a
body of heretics or schismatics? But if the Church existed even then, and had not
perished through a breach of its continuity, but was, on the contrary, holding
its ground, and receiving increase in every nation, surely it is the safest
plan to abide by this same custom, which then embraced good and bad alike in
unity. But if there was then no Church in existence, because sacrilegious heretics
were received without baptism, and this prevailed by universal custom, whence
has Donatus made his appearance? From what land did he spring? or from what sea
did he emerge? or from what sky did he fall? And so we, as I had begun to say,
are safe in the communion of that Church, throughout the whole extent of which
the custom now prevails, which prevailed in like manner through its whole extent
before the time of Agrippinus, and in the interval between Agrippinus and
Cyprian, and whose unity neither Agrippinus nor Cyprian ever deserted, nor those
who agreed with them, although they entertained different views from the rest of
their brethren--all of them remaining in the same communion of unity with the
very men from whom they differed in opinion. But let the Donatists themselves
consider what their true position is, if they neither can say whence they derived
their origin, if the Church had already been destroyed by the plague-spot of
communion with heretics and schismatics received into her bosom without baptism;
nor again agree with Cyprian himself, for he declared that he remained in
communion with those who received heretics and schismatics, and so also with those
who were received as well: while they have separated themselves from the
communion of the whole world, on account of the charge of having delivered up the
sacred books, which they brought against the men whom they maligned in Africa, but
failed to convict when brought to trial beyond the sea; although, even had the
crimes which they alleged been true, they were much less heinous than the sins
of heresy and schism; and yet these could not defile Cyprian in the persons of
those who came from them without baptism, as he conceived, and were admitted
without baptism into the Catholic communion. Nor, in the very point in which
they say that they imitate Cyprian, can they find any answer to make about
acknowledging the baptism of the followers of Maximianus, together with those whom,
though they belonged to the party that they had first condemned in their own
plenary Council, and then gone on to prosecute even at the tribunal of the secular
power, they yet received back into their communion, in the episcopate of the
very same bishop under whom they had been condemned. Wherefore, if the communion
of wicked men destroyed the Church in the time of Cyprian, they have no source
from which they can derive their own communion; and if the Church was not
destroyed, they have no excuse for their separation from it. Moreover, they are
neither following the example of Cyprian, since they have burst the bond of unity,
nor abiding by their own Council, since they have recognized the baptism of the
followers of Maximianus.
CHAP. 3.--4. Let us therefore, seeing that we adhere to the example of Cyprian, go on
now to consider Cyprian's Council. What says Cyprian? "Ye have heard," he says,
"most beloved colleagues, what Jubaianus our fellow-bishop has written to me,
consulting my moderate ability concerning the unlawful and profane baptism of
heretics, and what answer I gave him,--giving a judgment which we have once and
again and often given, that heretics coming to the Church ought to be baptized
and sanctified with the baptism of the Church. Another letter of Jubaianus has
likewise been read to you, in which, agreeably to his sincere and religious
devotion, in answer to our epistle, he not only expressed his assent, but returned
thanks also, acknowledging that he had received instruction."(1) In these
words of the blessed Cyprian, we find that he had been consulted by Jubaianus, and
what answer he had given to his questions, and how Jubaianus acknowledged with
gratitude that he had received instruction. Ought we then to be thought
unreasonably persistent if we desire to consider this same epistle by which Jubaianus
was convinced? For till such time as we are also convinced (if there are any
arguments of truth whereby this can be done), Cyprian himself has established our
security by the right of Catholic communion.
5. For he goes on to say: "It remains that we severally declare our
opinion on this same subject, judging no one, nor depriving any one of the right of
communion if he differ from us."(2) He allows me, therefore, without losing the
right of communion, not only to continue inquiring into the truth, but even to
hold opinions differing from his own. "For no one of us," he says, "setteth
himself up as a bishop of bishops, or by tyrannical terror forces his colleagues
to a necessity of obeying." What could be more kind? what more humble? Surely
there is here no authority restraining us from inquiry into what is truth.
"Inasmuch as every bishop," he says, "in the free use of his liberty and power, has
the right of forming his own judgment, and can no more be judged by another than
he can himself judge another,"--that is, I suppose, in those questions which
have not yet been brought to perfect clearness of solution; for he knew what a
deep question about the sacrament was then occupying the whole Church with every
kind of disputation, and gave free liberty of inquiry to every man, that the
truth might be made known by investigation. For he was surely not uttering what
was false, and trying to catch his simpler colleagues in their speech, so that,
when they should have betrayed that they held opinions at variance with his,
he might then propose, in violation of his promise, that they should be
excommunicated. Far be it from a soul so holy to entertain such accursed treachery;
indeed, they who hold such a view about such a man, thinking that it conduces to
his praise, do but show that it would be in accordance with their own nature. I
for my part will in no wise believe that Cyprian, a Catholic bishop, a Catholic
martyr, whose greatness only made him proportionately humble in all things, so
as to find favor before the Lord,(1) should ever, especially in the sacred
Council of his colleagues, have uttered with his mouth what was not echoed in his
heart, especially as he further adds, "But we must all await the judgment of
our Lord Jesus Christ, who alone has the power both of setting us in the
government of His Church, and of judging of our acts therein."(2) When, then, he called
to their remembrance so solemn a judgment, hoping to hear the truth from his
colleagues, would he first set them the example of lying? May God avert such
madness from every Christian man, and how much more from Cyprian! We have
therefore the free liberty of inquiry granted to us by the most moderate and most
truthful speech of Cyprian.
CHAP. 4.--6. Next his colleagues proceed to deliver their several opinions. But first
they listened to the letter written to Jubaianus; for it was read, as was
mentioned in the preamble. Let it therefore be read among ourselves also, that we
too, with the help of God, may discover from it What we ought to think. "What!" I
think I hear some one saying, "do you proceed to tell us what Cyprian wrote to
Jubaianus?" I have read the letter, I confess, and should certainly have been
a convert to his views, had I not been induced to consider the matter more
carefully by the vast weight of authority, originating in those whom the Church,
distributed throughout the world amid so many nations, of Latins, Greeks,
barbarians, not to mention the Jewish race itself, has been able to produce,--that
same Church which gave birth to Cyprian himself,--men whom I could in no wise
bring myself to think had been unwilling without reason to hold this view,--not
because it was impossible that in so difficult a question the opinion of one or of
a few might not have been more near the truth than that of more, but because
one must not lightly, without full consideration and investigation of the matter
to the best of his abilities, decide in favor of a single individual, or even
of a few, against the decision of so very many men of the same religion and
communion, all endowed with great talent and abundant learning. And so how much
was suggested to me on more diligent inquiry, even by the letter of Cyprian
himself, in favor of the view which is now held by the Catholic Church, that the
baptism of Christ is to be recognized and approved, not by the standard of their
merits by whom it is administered, but by His alone of whom it is said, "The
same is He which baptizeth,"(3) will be shown naturally in the course of our
argument. Let us therefore suppose that the letter which was written by Cyprian to
Jubaianus has been read among us, as it was read in the Council.(4) And I would
have every one read it who means to read what I am going to say, lest he might
possibly think that I have suppressed some things of consequence. For it would
take too much time, and be irrelevant to the elucidation of the matter in hand,
were we at this moment to quote all the words of this epistle.
CHAP. 5.--7. But if any one should ask what I hold in the meantime, while discussing
this question, I answer that, in the first place, the letter of Cyprian
suggested to me what I should hold till I should see clearly the nature of the question
which next begins to be discussed. For Cyprian himself says: "But some will
say, 'What then will become of those who in times past, coming to the Church from
heresy, were admitted without baptism?'"(5) Whether they were really without
baptism, or whether they were admitted because those who admitted them conceived
that they had partaken of baptism, is a matter for our future consideration.
At any rate, Cyprian himself shows plainly enough what was the ordinary custom
of the Church, when he says that in past time those who came to the Church from
heresy were admitted without baptism.
8. For in the Council itself Castus of Sicca says: "He who, despising
truth, presumes to follow custom, is either envious or evil-disposed towards the
brethren to whom the truth is revealed, or is ungrateful towards God, by whose
inspiration His Church is instructed."(6) Whether the truth had been revealed, we
shall investigate hereafter; at any rate, he acknowledges that the custom of
the Church was different.
CHAP. 6.--9. Libosus also of Vaga says: "The Lord says in the gospel, 'I am the
Truth.'(1) He does not say, 'I am custom.' Therefore, when the truth is made
manifest, custom must give way to truth."(2) Clearly, no one could doubt that custom
must give way to truth where it is made manifest. But we shall see presently
about the manifestation of the truth. Meanwhile he also makes it clear that custom
was on the other side.
CHAP. 7.--10. Zosimus also of Tharassa said: "When a revelation of the truth has been
made, error must give way to truth; for even Peter, who at the first
circumcised, afterwards gave way to Paul when he declared the truth."(3) He indeed chose
to say error, not custom; but in saying "for even Peter, who at the first
circumcised, afterwards gave way to Paul when he declared the truth," he shows
plainly enough that there was a custom also on the subject of baptism at variance
with his views. At the same time, also, he warns us that it was not impossible
that Cyprian might have held an opinion about baptism at variance with that
required by the truth, as held by the Church both before and after him, if even
Peter could hold a view at variance with the truth as taught us by the Apostle
Paul.(4)
CHAP. 8.--11. Likewise Felix of Buslacene said: "In admitting heretics without the
baptism of the Church, let no one prefer custom to reason and truth; because
reason and truth always prevail to the exclusion of custom."(5) Nothing could be
better, if it be reason, and if it be truth; but this we shall see presently.
Meanwhile, it is clear from the words of this man also that the custom was the
other way.
CHAP. 9.--12. Likewise Honoratus of Tucca(6) said: "Since Christ is the Truth, we
ought to follow truth rather than custom."(7) By all these declarations it is
proved that we are not excluded from the communion of the Church, till it shall have
been clearly shown what is the nature of the truth, which they say must be
preferred to our custom. But if the truth has made it clear that the very
regulation ought to be maintained which the said custom had prescribed, then it is
evident both that this custom was not established or confirmed in vain, and also
that, in consequence of the discussions in question, the most wholesome
observance of so great a sacrament, which could never, indeed, have been changed in the
Catholic Church, was even more watch-fully guarded with the most scrupulous
caution, when it had received the further corroboration of Councils.
CHAP. 10.--13. Therefore Cyprian writes to Jubaianus as follows, "concerning the
baptism of heretics, who, being placed without, and set down out of the Church," seem
to him to "claim to themselves a matter over which they have neither right nor
power. Which we," he says, "cannot account valid or lawful, since it is clear
that among them it is unlawful."(8) Neither, indeed, do we deny that a man who
is baptized among heretics, or in any schism outside the Church, derives no
profit from it so far as he is partner in the perverseness of the heretics and
schismatics; nor do we hold that those who baptize, although they confer the real
true sacrament of baptism, are yet acting rightly, in gathering adherents
outside the Church, and entertaining opinions contrary to the Church. But it is one
thing to be without a sacrament, another thing to be in possession of it
wrongly, and to usurp it unlawfully. Therefore they do not cease to be sacraments of
Christ and the Church, merely because they are unlawfully used, not only by
heretics, but by all kinds of wicked and impious persons. These, indeed, ought to
be corrected and punished, but the sacraments should be acknowledged and
revered.
14. Cyprian, indeed, says that on this subject not one, but two or more
Councils were held; always, however, in Africa. For indeed in one he mentions
that seventy-one bishops had been assembled,(8)--to all whose authority we do not
hesitate, with all due deference to Cyprian, to prefer the authority, supported
by many more bishops, of the whole Church spread throughout the whole world,
of which Cyprian himself rejoiced that he was an inseparable member.
15. Nor is the water "profane and adulterous"(8) over which the name of
God is invoked, even though it be invoked by profane and adulterous persons;
because neither the creature itself of water, nor the name invoked, is adulterous.
But the baptism of Christ, consecrated by the words of the gospel, is
necessarily holy, however polluted and unclean its ministers may be; because its
inherent sanctity cannot be polluted, and the divine excellence abides in its
sacrament, whether to the salvation of those who use it aright, or to the destruction
of those who use it wrong. Would you indeed maintain that, while the light of
the sun or of a candle, diffused through unclean places, contracts no foulness in
itself therefrom, yet the baptism of Christ can be defiled by the sins of any
man, whatsoever he may be? For if we turn our thoughts to the visible materials
themselves, which are to us the medium of the sacraments, every one must know
that they admit of corruption. But if we think on that which they convey to us,
who can fail to see that it is incorruptible, however much the men through
whose ministry it is conveyed are either being rewarded or punished for the
character of their lives?
CHAP. 11.--16. But Cyprian was right in not being moved by what Jubaianus wrote, that
"the followers of Novatian(1) rebaptize those who come to them from the Catholic
Church."(2) For, in the first place, it does not follow that whatever heretics
have done in a perverse spirit of mimicry, Catholics are therefore to abstain
from doing, because the: heretics do the same. And again, the reasons are
different for which heretics and the Catholic Church ought respectively to abstain
from rebaptizing. For it would not be right for heretics to do so, even if it
were fitting in the Catholic Church; because their argument is, that among the
Catholics is wanting that which they themselves received whilst still within the
pale, and took away with them when they departed. Whereas the reason why the
Catholic Church should not administer again the baptism which was given among
heretics, is that it may not seem to decide that a power which is Christ's alone
belongs to its members, or to pronounce that to be wanting in the heretics which
they have received within her pale, and certainly could not lose by straying
outside. For thus much Cyprian himself, with all the rest, established, that if
any should return from heresy to the Church, they should be received back, not
by baptism, but by the discipline of penitence; whence it is clear that they
cannot be held to lose by their secession what is not restored to them when they
return. Nor ought it for a moment to be said that, as their heresy is their
own, as their error is their own, as the sacrilege of disunion is their own, so
also the baptism is their own, which is really Christ's. Accordingly, while the
evils which are their own are corrected when they return, so in that which is
not theirs His presence should be recognised, from whom it is.
CHAP. 12.--17. But the blessed Cyprian shows that it was no new or sudden thing that he
decided, because the practice had already begun under Agrippinus. "Many
years," he says, "and much time has passed away since, under Agrippinus of honored
memory, a large assembly of bishops determined this point." Accordingly, under
Agrippinus, at any rate, the thing was new. But I cannot understand what Cyprian
means by saying, "And thenceforward to the present day, so many thousand
heretics in our provinces, having been converted to our Church, showed no hesitation
or dislike, but rather with full consent of reason and will, have embraced the
opportunity of the grace of the layer of life and the baptism unto
salvation,"(3) unless indeed he says, "thenceforward to the present day," because from the
time when they were baptized in the Church, in accordance with the Council of
Agrippinus, no question of excommunication had arisen in the case of any of the
rebaptized. Yet if the custom of baptizing those who came over from heretics
remained in force from the time of Agrippinus to that of Cyprian, why should new
Councils have been held by Cyprian on this point? Why does he say to this same
Jubaianus that he is not doing anything new or sudden, but only what had been
established by Agrippinus? For why should Jubaianus be disturbed by the question
of novelty, so as to require to be satisfied by the authority of Agrippinus,
if this was the continuous practice of the Church from Agrippinus till Cyprian?
Why, lastly, did so many of his colleagues urge that reason and truth must be
preferred to custom, instead of saying that those who wished to act otherwise
were acting contrary to truth and custom alike?
CHAP. 13.--18. But as regards the remission of sins, whether it is granted through
baptism at the hands of the heretics, I have already expressed my opinion on this
point in a former book;(4) but I will shortly recapitulate it here. If remission
of sins is there conferred by the sacredness of baptism, the sins return again
through obstinate perseverance in heresy or schism; and therefore such men
must needs return to the peace of the Catholic Church, that they may cease to be
heretics and schismatics, and deserve that those sins which had returned on them
should be cleansed away by love working in the bond of unity. But if, although
among heretics and schismatics it be still the same baptism of Christ, it yet
cannot work remission of sins owing to this same foulness of discord and
wickedness of dissent, then the same baptism begins to be of avail for the remission
of sins when they come to the peace of the Church,--[not](1) that what has been
already truly remitted should not be retained; nor that heretical baptism
should be repudiated as belonging to a different religion, or as being different
from our own, so that a second baptism should be administered; but that the very
same baptism, which was working death by reason of discord outside the Church,
may work salvation by reason of the peace within. It was, in fact, the same
savor of which the apostle says, "We are a sweet savor of Christ in every place;"
and yet, says he, "both in them that are saved and in them that perish. To the
one we are the savor of life unto life; and to the other the savor of death
unto death."(2) And although he used these words with reference to another
subject, I have applied them to this, that men may understand that what is good may
not only work life to those who use it aright, but also death to those who use it
wrong.
CHAP. 14.--19. Nor is it material, when we are considering the question of the
genuineness and holiness of the sacrament, "what the recipient of the sacrament
believes, and with what faith he is imbued." It is of the very highest consequence as
regards the entrance into salvation, but is wholly immaterial as regards the
question of the sacrament. For it is quite possible that a man may be possessed
of the genuine sacrament and a corrupted faith, as it is possible that he may
hold the words of the creed in their integrity, and yet entertain an erroneous
belief about the Trinity, or the resurrection, or any other point. For it is no
slight matter, even within the Catholic Church itself, to hold a faith entirely
consistent with the truth about even God Himself, to say nothing of any of His
creatures. Is it then to be maintained, that if any one who has been baptized
within the Catholic Church itself should afterwards, in the course of reading,
or by listening to instruction, or by quiet argument, find out, through God's
own revelation, that he had before believed otherwise than he ought, it is
requisite that he should therefore be baptized afresh? But what carnal and natural
man is there who does not stray through the vain conceits(3) of his own heart,
and picture God's nature to himself to be such as he has imagined out of his
carnal sense, and differ from the true conception of God as far as vanity from
truth? Most truly, indeed, speaks the apostle, filled with the light of truth: "The
natural man," says he, "receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God."(4) And
yet herein he was speaking of men whom he himself shows to have been baptized.
For he says to them, "Was Paul crucified for you? or were ye baptized in the
name of Paul?"(5) These men had therefore the sacrament of baptism; and yet,
inasmuch as their wisdom was of the flesh, what could they believe about God
otherwise than according to the perception of their flesh, according to which "the
natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God?" To such he says: "I
could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal, even as unto
babes in Christ. I have fed you with milk, and not with meal: for hitherto ye
were not able to bear it, neither yet now are ye able. For ye are yet carnal."(6)
For such are carried about with every wind of doctrine, of which kind he says,
"That we be no more children, tossed to and fro, and carried about with every
wind of doctrine."(7) It is then true that, if these men shall have advanced
even to the spiritual age of the inner man, and in the integrity of understanding
shall have learned how far different from the requirements of the truth has
been the belief which they have been led by the fallacious character of their
conceits to entertain of God, they are therefore to be baptized again? For, on this
principle, it would be possible for a Catholic catechumen to light upon the
writings of some heretic, and, not having the knowledge requisite for discerning
truth from error, he might entertain some belief contrary to the Catholic
faith, yet not condemned by the words of the creed, just as, under color of the same
words, innumerable heretical errors have sprung up. Supposing, then, that the
catechumen was under the impression that he was studying the work of some great
and learned Catholic, and was baptized with that belief in the Catholic
Church, and by subsequent research should discover what he ought to believe, so that,
embracing the Catholic faith, he should reject his former error, ought he, on
confessing this, to be baptized again? Or supposing that, before learning and
confessing this for himself, he should be found to entertain such an opinion,
and should be taught what he ought to reject and what he should believe, and it
were to become clear that he had held this false belief when he was baptized,
ought he therefore to be baptized again? Why should we maintain the contrary?
Because the sanctity of the sacrament, consecrated in the words of the gospel,
remains upon him in, its integrity, just as he received it from the hands of the
minister, although he, being firmly rooted in the vanity of his carnal mind
entertained a belief other than was right at the time when he was baptized.
Wherefore it is manifest that it is possible that, with defective faith, the sacrament
of baptism may yet remain without defect in any man; and therefore all that is
said about the diversity of the several heretics is beside the question. For
in each person that is to be corrected which is found to be amiss by the man who
undertakes his correction. That is to be made whole which is unsound; that is
to be given which is wanting, and, above all, the peace of Christian charity,
without which the rest is profitless. Yet, as the rest is there, we must not
administer it as though it were wanting, only take care that its possession be to
the profit, not the hurt of him who has it, through the very bond of peace and
excellence of charity.
CHAP. 15.--20. Accordingly, if Marcion consecrated the sacrament of baptism with the
words of the gospel, "In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Ghost,"(1) the sacrament was complete, although his faith expressed under the
same words, seeing that he held opinions not taught by the Catholic truth, was
not complete, but Stained with the falsity of fables.(2) For under these same
words, "In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost," not
Marcion only, or Valentinus, or Arius, or Eunomius, but the carnal babes of the
Church themselves (to whom the apostle said, "I could not speak unto you as unto
spiritual, but as unto carnal"), if they could be individually asked for an
accurate exposition of their opinions, would probably show a diversity of
opinions as numerous as the persons who held them, "for the natural man receiveth not
the things of the Spirit of God." Can it, however, be said on this account that
they do not receive the complete sacrament? or that, if they shall advance,
and correct the vanity of their carnal opinions, they must seek again what they
had received? Each man receives after the fashion of his own faith; yet how much
does he obtain under the guidance of that mercy of God, in the confident
assurance of which the same apostle says, "If in anything ye be otherwise minded,
God shall reveal even this unto you"?(3) Yet the snares of heretics and
schismatics prove for this reason only too pernicious to the carnally-minded, because
their very progress is intercepted when their vain opinions are confirmed in
opposition to the Catholic truth, and the perversity of their dissension is
strengthened against the Catholic peace. Yet if the sacraments are the same, they are
everywhere complete, even when they are wrongly understood, and perverted to be
instruments of discord, just as the very writings of the gospel, if they are
only the same, are everywhere complete, even though quoted with a boundless
variety of false opinions. For as to what Jeremiah says:--"Why do those who grieve
me prevail against me? My wound is stubborn, whence shall I be healed? In its
origin it became unto me as lying water, having no certainty,"(4)--if the term
"water" were never used figuratively and in the allegorical language of prophecy
except to signify baptism, we should have trouble in discovering what these
words of Jeremiah meant; but as it is, when "waters" are expressly used in the
Apocalypse(5) to signify "peoples," I do not see why, by "lying water having no
certainty," I should not understand, a "lying people, whom I cannot trust."
CHAP. 16.--21. But when it is said that "the Holy Spirit is given by the imposition of
hands in the Catholic Church only, I suppose that our ancestors meant that we
should understand thereby what the apostle says, "Because the love of God is
shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us."(6) For this
is that very love which is wanting in all who are cut off from the communion of
the Catholic Church; and for lack of this, "though they speak with the tongues
of men and of angels, though they understand all mysteries and all knowledge,
and though they have the gift of prophecy, and all faith, so that they could
remove mountains, and though they bestow all their goods to feed the poor, and
though they give their bodies to be burned, it profiteth them nothing."(7) But
those are wanting in God's love who do not care for the unity of the Church; and
consequently we are right in understanding that the Holy Spirit may be said not
to be received except in the Catholic Church. For the Holy Spirit is not only
given by the laying on of hands amid the testimony of temporal sensible
miracles, as He was given in former days to be the credentials of a rudimentary faith,
and for the extension of the first beginnings of the Church. For who expects in
these days that those on whom hands are laid that they may receive the Holy
Spirit should forthwith begin to speak with tongues? but it is understood that
invisibly and imperceptibly, on account of the bond of peace, divine love is
breathed into their hearts, so that they may be able to say, "Because the love of
God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us." But
there are many operations of the Holy Spirit, which the same apostle
commemorates in a certain passage at such length as he thinks sufficient, and then
concludes: "But all these worketh that one and the selfsame Spirit, dividing to every
man severally as He will."(1) Since, then, the sacrament is one thing, which
even Simon Magus could have;(2) and the operation of the Spirit is another
thing, which is even often found in wicked men, as Saul had the gift of prophecy;(3)
and that operation of the same Spirit is a third thing, which only the good
can have, as "the end of the commandment is charity out of a pure heart, and of a
good conscience, and of faith unfeigned:"(4) whatever, therefore, may be
received by heretics and schismatics, the charity which covereth the multitude of
sins is the especial gift of Catholic unity and peace; nor is it found in all
that are within that bond, since not all that are within it are of it, as we shall
see in the proper place. At any rate, outside the bond that love cannot exist,
without which all the other requisites, even if they can be recognized and
approved, cannot profit or release from sin. But the laying on of hands in
reconciliation to the Church is not, like baptism, incapable of repetition; for what
is it more than a prayer offered over a man?(5)
CHAP. 17.--22. "For as regards the fact that to preserve the figure of unity the Lord
gave the power to Peter that whatsoever he should loose on earth should be
loosed,"(6) it is clear that that unity is also described as one dove without
fault.(7) Can it be said, then, that to this same dove belong all those greedy ones,
whose existence in the same Catholic Church Cyprian himself so grievously
bewailed? For birds of prey, I believe, cannot be called doves, but rather hawks.
How then did they baptize those who used to plunder estates by treacherous
deceit, and increase their profits by compound usury,(8) if baptism is only given by
that indivisible and chaste and perfect dove, that unity which can only be
understood as existing among the good? Is it possible that, by the prayers of the
saints who are spiritual within the Church, as though by the frequent
lamentations of the dove, a great sacrament is dispensed, with a secret administration
of the mercy of God, so that their sins also are loosed who are baptized, not by
the dove but by the hawk, if they come to that sacrament in the peace of
Catholic unity? But if this be so, why should it not also be the case that, as each
man comes from heresy or schism to the Catholic peace, his sins should be
loosed through their prayers? But the integrity of the sacrament is everywhere
recognized, though it will not avail for the irrevocable remission of sins outside
the unity of the Church. Nor will the prayers of the saints, or, in other words,
the groanings of that one dove, be able to help one who is set in heresy or
schism; just as they are not able to help one who is placed within the Church, if
by a wicked life he himself retain the debts of his sins against himself, and
that though he be baptized, not by this hawk, but by the pious ministry of the
dove herself.
CHAP. 18.--23. "As my Father hath sent me," says our Lord, "even so send I you. And
what He had said this, He breathed on them, and saith unto them, Receive ye the
Holy Ghost. Whose soever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them; and whose
soever sins ye retain, they are retained."(9) Therefore, if they represented the
Church, and this was said to them as to the Church herself, it follows that the
peace of the Church looses sins, and estrangement from the Church retains
them, not according to the will of men, but according to the will of God and the
prayers of the salts who are spiritual, who "judge air things, but themselves are
judged of no man."(10) For the rock retains, the rock remits; the dove
retains, the dove remits; unity retains, unity remits. But the peace of this unity
exists only in the good, in those who are either already spiritual, or are
advancing by the obedience of concord to spiritual things; it exists not in the bad,
whether they make disturbances abroad, or are endured within the Church with
lamentations, baptizing and being baptized. But just as those who are tolerated
with groanings within the Church, although they do not belong to the same unity
of the dove, and to that "glorious Church, not having spot or wrinkle, or any
such thing,"(1) yet if they are corrected, and confess that they approached to
baptism most unworthily, are not baptized again, but begin to belong to the dove,
through whose groans those sins are remitted which were retained in them who
were estranged from her peace; so those also who are more openly without the
Church, if they have received the same sacraments, are not freed from their sins
on coming, after correction, to the unity of the Church, by a repetition of
baptism, but by the same law of charity and bond of unity. For if "those only may
baptize who are set over the Church, and established by the law of the gospel
and ordination as appointed by the Lord," were they in any wise of this kind who
seized on estates by treacherous frauds, and increased their gains by compound
interest? I trow not, since those are established by ordination as appointed of
the Lord, of whom the apostle, in giving them a standard, says, "Not greedy,
not given to filthy lucre."(2) Yet men of this kind used to baptize in the time
of Cyprian himself; and he confesses with many lamentations that they were his
fellow-bishops, and endures them with the great reward of tolerance. Yet did
they not confer remission of sins, which is granted through the prayers of the
saints, that is, the groans of the dove, whoever it be that baptizes, if those to
whom it is given belong to her peace. For the Lord would not say to robbers
and usurers, "Whose soever sins ye remit, they shall be remitted to him; and
whose soever sins ye retain, they shall be retained." "Outside the Church, indeed,
nothing can be either bound or loosed, since there there is no one who can
either bind or loose;" but he is loosed who has made peace with the dove, and he is
bound who is not at peace with the dove, whether he is openly without, or
appears to be within.
24. But we know that Dathan, Korah, and Abiram,(3) who tried to usurp to
themselves the right of sacrificing, contrary to the unity of the people of God,
and also the sons of Aaron who offered strange fire upon the altar,(4) did not
escape punishment. Nor do we say that such offenses remain unpunished, unless
those guilty of them correct themselves, if the patience of God leading them to
repentance s give them time for correction.
CHAP. 19.--25. They indeed who say that baptism is not to be repeated, because only
hands were laid on those whom Philip the deacon had baptized,(6) are saying what
is quite beside the point; and far be it from us, in seeking the truth, to use
such arguments as this. Wherefore we are all the further from "yielding to
heretics,"(7) if we deny that what they possess of Christ's Church is their own
property, and do not refuse to acknowledge the standard of our General because of
the crimes of deserters; nay, all the more because "the Lord our God is a
jealous God,"(8) let us refuse, whenever we see anything of His with an alien, to
allow him to consider it his own. For of a truth the jealous God Himself rebukes
the woman who commits fornication against Him, as the type of an erring people,
and says that she gave to her lovers what belonged to Him, and again received
from them what was not theirs but His. In the hands of the adulterous woman and
the adulterous lovers, God in His wrath, as a jealous God, recognizes His
gifts; and do we say that baptism, consecrated in the words of the gospel, belongs
to heretics? and are we willing, from consideration of their deeds, to
attribute to them even what belongs to God, as though they had the power to pollute it,
or as though they could make what is God's to be their own, because they
themselves have refused to belong to God?
26. Who is that adulterous woman whom the prophet Hosea points out, who
said, "I will go after my lovers, that give me my bread and my water, my wool and
my flax, and everything that befits me?"(9) Let us grant that we may
understand this also of the people of the Jews that went astray; yet whom else are the
false Christians (such as are all heretics and schismatics) wont to imitate,
except false israelites? For there were also true Israelites, as the Lord Himself
bears witness to Nathanael, "Behold an Israelite indeed, in Whom is no
guile."(10) But who are true Christians, save those of whom the same Lord said, "He
that hath my commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me?"(11) But
what is it to keep His commandments, except to abide in love? Whence also He says,
"A new commandment I give unto you, that ye love one another;" and again, "By
this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to
another."(12) But who can doubt that this was spoken not only to those who heard His
words with their fleshly ears when He was present with them, but also to those
who learn His words through the gospel, when He is sitting on His throne in
heaven? For He came not to destroy the law, but to fulfill.(1) But the fulfilling
of the law is love.(2) And in this Cyprian abounded greatly, insomuch that
though he held a different view concerning baptism, he yet did not forsake the
unity of the Church, and was in the Lord's vine a branch firmly rooted, bearing
fruit, which the heavenly Husbandman purged with the knife of suffering, that it
should bear more fruit.(3) But the enemies of this brotherly love, whether they
are openly without, or appear to be within, are false Christians, and
antichrists. For when they have found an opportunity, they go out, as it is written: "A
man wishing to separate himself from his friends, seeketh opportunities."(4)
But even if occasions are wanting, while they seem to be within, they are severed
from that invisible bond of love. Whence St. John says, "They went out from
us, but they were not of us; for had they been of us, they would no doubt have
continued with us."(5) He does not say that they ceased to be of us by going out,
but that they went out because they were not of us. The Apostle Paul also
speaks of certain men who had erred concerning the truth, and were overthrowing the
faith of some; whose word was eating as a canker. Yet in saying that they
should be avoided, he nevertheless intimates that they were all in one great house,
but as vessels to dishonor,--I suppose because they had not as yet gone out.
Or if they had already gone out, how can he say that they were in the same great
house with the honorable vessels, unless it was in virtue of the sacraments
themselves, which even in the severed meetings of heretics are not changed, that
he speaks of all as belonging to the same great house, though in different
degrees of esteem, some to honor and some to dishonor? For thus he speaks in his
Epistle to Timothy: "But shun profane and vain babblings; for they will increase
unto more ungodliness. And their word will eat as doth a canker; of whom is
Hymenaeus and Philetus; who concerning the truth have erred, saying that the
resurrection is past already; and overthrow the faith of some. Nevertheless the
foundation of God standeth firm, having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that are
His. And, Let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity. But
in a great house there are not only vessels of gold and of silver, but also of
wood and of earth; and some to honor, and some to dishonor. If a man
therefore purge himself from these, he shall be a vessel unto honor, sanctified, and
meet for the master's use, and prepared unto every good work."(6) But what is
it to purge oneself from such as these, except what he said just before, "Let
every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity." And lest any one
should think that, as being in one great house with them, he might perish with
such as these, he has most carefully forewarned them, "The Lord knoweth them
that are His,"--those, namely, who, by departing from iniquity, purge themselves
from the vessels made to dishonor, lest they should perish with them whom they
are compelled to tolerate in the great house.
27. They, therefore, who are wicked, evildoers, carnal, fleshly, devilish,
think that they receive at the hands of their seducers what are the gifts of
God alone, whether sacraments, or any spiritual workings about present
salvation. But these men have not love towards God, but are busied about those by whose
pride they are led astray, and are compared to the adulterous woman, whom the
prophet introduces as saying, "I will go after my lovers, that give me my bread
and my water, my wool and my flax, and my oil, and everything that befits me."
For thus arise heresies and schisms, when the fleshly people which is not
rounded on the love of God says, "I will go after my lovers," with whom, either by
corruption of her faith, or by the puffing up of her pride, she shamefully
commits adultery. But for the sake of those who, having undergone the difficulties,
and straits, and barriers of the empty reasoning of those by whom they are led
astray, afterwards feel the prickings of fear, and return to the way of peace,
to seeking God in all sincerity,--for their sake He goes on to say, "Therefore,
behold, I will hedge up thy way with thorns, and make a wall, that she shall
not find her paths. And she shall follow after her lovers, but she shall not
overtake them: and she shall seek them, but she shall not find them: then shall
she say, I will go and return to my first husband; for then was it better with me
than now." Then, that they may not attribute to their seducers what they have
that is sound, and derived from the doctrine of truth, by which they lead them
astray to the falseness of their own dogmas and dissensions; that they may not
think that what is sound in them belongs to them, he immediately added, "And
she did not know that I gave her corn, and wine, and oil, and multiplied her
money; but she made vessels of gold and silver for Baal."(1) For she had said
above, "I will go after my lovers, that give me my bread," etc., not at all
understanding that all this, which was held soundly and lawfully by her seducers, was
of God, and not of men. Nor would even they themselves claim these things for
themselves, and as it were assert a right in them, had not they in turn been led
astray by a people which had gone astray, when faith is reposed in them, and
such honors are paid to them, that they should be enabled thereby to say such
things, and claim such things for themselves, that their error should be called
truth, and their iniquity be thought righteousness, in virtue of the sacraments
and Scriptures, which they hold, not for salvation, but only in appearance.
Accordingly, the same adulterous woman is addressed by the mouth of Ezekiel: "Thou
hast also taken thy fair jewels of my gold and of my silver, which I had given
thee, and madest to thyself images of men, and didst commit whoredom with them;
and tookest my(2) broidered garments, and coveredst them: and thou hast set
mine oil and mine incense before them. My meat also which I gave thee, fine
flour, and oil, and honey, wherewith I fed thee, thou hast even set it before thine
idols for a sweet savor: and this thou hast done."(3) For she turns all the
sacraments, and the words of the sacred books, to the images of her own idols,
with which her carnal mind delights to wallow. Nor yet, because those images are
false, and the doctrines of devils, speaking lies in hypocrisy,(4) are those
sacraments and divine utterances therefore so to lose their due honor, as to be
thought to belong to such as these; seeing that the Lord says," Of my gold, and
my silver, and my broidered garments, and mine oil, and mine incense, and my
meat," and so forth. Ought we, because those erring ones think that these things
belong to their seducers, therefore not to recognize whose they really are, when
He Himself says, "And she did not know that I gave her corn, and wine, and
oil, and multiplied her money"? For He did not say that she did not have these
things because she was an adulteress; but she is said to have had them, and that
not as belonging to herself or her lovers, but to God, whose alone they are.
Although, therefore, she had her fornication, yet those things wherewith she
adorned it, whether as seduced or in her turn seducing, belonged not to her, but to
God. If these things were spoken in a figure of the Jewish nation, when the
scribes and Pharisees were rejecting the commandment of God in order to set up
their own traditions, so that they were in a manner committing whoredom with a
people which was abandoning their God; and yet for all that, whoredom at that time
among the people, such as the Lord brought to light by convicting it, did not
cause that the mysteries should belong to them, which were not theirs but
God's, who, in speaking to the adulteress, says that all these things were His;
whence the Lord Himself also sent those whom He cleansed from leprosy to the same
mysteries, that they should offer sacrifice for themselves before the priests,
because that sacrifice had not become efficacious for them, which He Himself
afterwards wished to be commemorated in the Church for all of them, because He
Himself proclaimed the tidings to them all;--if this be so, how much the more
ought we, when we find the sacraments of the New Testament among certain heretics
or schismatics, not to attribute them to these men, nor to condemn them, as
though we could not recognize them? We ought to recognize the gifts of the true
husband, though in the possession of an adulteress, and to amend, by the word of
truth, that whoredom which is the true possession of the unchaste woman, instead
of finding fault with the gifts, which belong entirely to the pitying Lord.
28. From these considerations, and such as these, our forefathers, not
only before the time of Cyprian and Agrippinus, but even afterwards, maintained a
most wholesome custom, that whenever they found anything divine and lawful
remaining in its integrity even in the midst of any heresy or schism, they approved
rather than repudiated it; but whatever they found that was alien, and
peculiar to that false doctrine or division, this they convicted in the light of the
truth, and healed. The points, however, which remain to be considered in the
letter written by Jubaianus, must, I think, when looking at the size of this book,
be taken in hand and treated with a fresh beginning.
BOOK IV.
IN WHICH HE TREATS OF WHAT FOLLOWS IN THE SAME EPISTLE OF CYPRIAN TO JUBAIANUS.
CHAP. 1.--1. The comparison of the Church with Paradise(1) shows us that men may
indeed receive her baptism outside her pale, but that no one outside can either
receive or retain the salvation of eternal happiness. For, as the words of
Scripture testify, the streams from the fountain of Paradise flowed copiously even
beyond its bounds. Record indeed is made of their names; and through what countries
they flow, and that they are situated beyond the limits of Paradise, is known
to all;(2) and yet in Mesopotamia, and in Egypt, to which countries those
rivers extended, there is not found that blessedness of life which is recorded in
Paradise. Accordingly, though the waters of Paradise are found beyond its
boundaries, yet its happiness is in Paradise alone. So, therefore, the baptism of the
Church may exist outside, but the gift of the life of happiness is found alone
within the Church, which has been rounded on a rock, which has received the
keys of binding and loosing.(3) "She it is alone who holds as her privilege the
whole power of her Bridegroom and Lord;"(4) by virtue of which power as bride,
she can bring forth sons even of handmaids. And these, if they be not
high-minded, shall be called into the lot of the inheritance; but if they be high-minded,
they shall remain outside.
CHAP. 2.--2. All the more, then, because "we are fighting s for the honor and unity"
of the Church, let us beware of giving to heretics the credit of whatever we
acknowledged among them as belonging to the Church; but let us teach them by
argument, that what they possess that is derived from unity is of no efficacy to
their salvation, unless they shall return to that same unity. For "the water of
the Church is full of faith, and salvation, and holiness"(6) to those who use it
rightly. No one, however, can use it well outside the Church. But to those who
use it perversely, whether within or without the Church, it is employed to work
punishment, and does not conduce to their reward. And so baptism "cannot be
corrupted and polluted," though it be handled by the corrupt or by adulterers,
just as also "the Church herself is uncorrupt, and pure, and chaste."(7) And so
no share in it belongs to the avaricious, or thieves, or usurers,--many of whom,
by the testimony of Cyprian himself in many places of his letters, exist not
only without, but actually within the Church,--and yet they both are baptized
and do baptize, with no change in their hearts.
3. For this, too, he says, in one of his epistles(8) to the clergy on the
subject of prayer to God, in which, after the fashion of the holy Daniel, he
represents the sins of his people as falling upon himself. For among many other
evils of which he makes mention, he speaks of them also as "renouncing the
world in words only and not in deeds;" as the apostle says of certain men, "They
profess that they know God, but in works they deny Him."(9) These, therefore, the
blessed Cyprian shows to be contained within the Church herself, who are
baptized without their hearts being changed for the better, seeing that they
renounce the world in words and not in deeds, as the Apostle Peter says, "The like
figure whereunto even baptism doth also now save us, (not the putting away of the
filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience),"(10) which certainly
they had not of whom it is said that they "renounced the world in words only,
and not in deeds;" and yet he does his utmost, by chiding and convincing them,
to make them at length walk in the way of Christ, and be His friends rather than
friends of the world.
CHAP. 3.--4. And if they would have obeyed him, and begun to live rightly, not as
false but as true Christians, would he have ordered them to be baptized anew?
Surely not; but their true conversion would have gained this for them, that the
sacrament which availed for their destruction while they were yet unchanged, should
begin when they changed to avail for their salvation.
5. For neither are they "devoted to the Church"(1) who seem to be within
and live contrary to Christ, that is, act against His commandments; nor can they
be considered in any way to belong to that Church, which He so purifies by the
washing of water, "that He may present to Himself a glorious Church, not
having spot or wrinkle, or any such thing."(2) But if they are not in that Church to
whose members they do not belong, they are not in the Church of which it is
said, "My dove is but one; she is the only one of her mother;"(3) for she herself
is without spot or wrinkle. Or else let him who can assert that those are
members of this dove who renounce the world in words but not in deeds. Meantime
there is one thing which we see, from which I think it was said, "He that
regardeth the day, regardeth it unto the Lords"(4) for God judgeth every day. For,
according to His foreknowledge, who knows whom He has foreordained before the
foundation of the world to be made like to the image of His Son, many who are even
openly outside, and are called heretics, are better than many good Catholics.
For we see what they are to-day, what they shall be to-morrow we know not. And
with God, with whom the future is already present, they already are what they
shall hereafter be. But we, according to what each man is at present, inquire
whether they are to be to-day reckoned among the members of the Church which is
called the one dove, and the Bride of Christ without a spot or wrinkle,(5) of whom
Cyprian says in the letter which I have quoted above,that "they did not keep
in the way of the Lord, nor observe the commandments given unto them for their
salvation; that they did not fulfill the will of their Lord, being eager about
their property and gains, following the dictates of pride, giving way to envy
and dissension, careless about single-mindedness and faith, renouncing the world
in words only and not in deeds, pleasing each himself, and displeasing all
men."(6) But if the dove does not acknowledge them among her members, and if the
Lord shall say to them, supposing that they continue in the same perversity, "I
never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity;"(7) then they seem indeed
to be in the Church, but are not; "nay, they even act against the Church. How
then can they baptize with the baptism of the Church," a which is of avail
neither to themselves, nor to those who receive it from them, unless they are
changed in heart with a true conversion, so that the sacrament itself, which did not
avail. them when they received it whilst they were renouncing the world in
words and not in deeds, may begin to profit them when they shall begin to
renounce it in deeds also? And so too in the case of those whose separation from the
Church is open; for neither these nor those are as yet among the members of the
dove, but some of them perhaps will be at some future time.
CHAP. 4.--6. We do not, therefore, "acknowledge the baptism of heretics,"(9) when we
refuse to baptize after them; but because we acknowledge the ordinance to be of
Christ even among evil men, whether openly separated from us, or secretly
severed whilst within our body, we receive it with due respect, having corrected
those who were wrong in the points wherein they went astray. However as I seem to
be hard pressed when it is said to me, "Does then a heretic confer remission of
sins?" so I in turn press hard when I say, Does then he who violates the
commands of Heaven, the avaricious man, the robber, the usurer, the envious man,
does he who renounces the world in words and not in deeds, confer such remission?
If you mean by the force of God's sacrament, then both the one and the other;
if by his own merit, neither of them. For that sacrament, even in the hands of
wicked men, is known to be of Christ; but neither the one nor the other of these
men is found in the body of the one uncorrupt, holy, chaste dove, which has
neither spot nor wrinkle. And just as baptism is of no profit to the man who
renounces the world in words and not in deeds, so it is of no profit to him who is
baptized in heresy or schism; but each of them, when he amends his ways, begins
to receive profit from that which before was not profitable, but was yet
already in him.
7. "He therefore that is baptized in heresy does not become the temple of
God;(10) but does it therefore follow that he is not to be considered as
baptized? For neither does the avaricious man, baptized within the Church, become the
temple of God unless he depart from his avarice; for they who become the
temple of God certainly inherit the kingdom of God. But the apostle says, among many
other things, "Neither the covetous, nor extortioners, shall inherit the
kingdom of God."(1) For in another place the same apostle compares covetousness to
the worship of idols: "Nor covetous man," he says, "who is an idolater;"(2)
which meaning the same Cyprian has so far extended in a letter to Antonianus, that
he did not hesitate to compare the sin of covetousness with that of men who in
time of persecution had declared in writing that they would offer incense.(3)
The man, then, who is baptized in heresy in the name of the Holy Trinity, yet
does not become the temple of God unless he abandons his heresy, just as the
covetous man who has been baptized in the same name does not become the temple of
God unless he abandons his covetousness, which is idolatry. For this, too, the
same apostle says: "What agreement hath the temple of God with idols?"(4) Let it
not, then, be asked of us "of what God he is made the temple"(5) when we say
that he is not made the temple of God at all. Yet he is not therefore
unbaptized, nor does his foul error cause that what he has received, consecrated in the
words of the gospel, should not be the holy sacrament; just as the other man's
covetousness (which is idolatry) and great uncleanness cannot prevent what he
receives from being holy baptism, even though he be baptized with the same words
of the gospel by another man covetous like himself.
CHAP. 5.--8. "Further," Cyprian goes on to say, "in vain do some, who are overcome by
reason, oppose to us custom, as though custom were superior to truth, or that
were not to be followed in spiritual things which has been revealed by the Holy
Spirit, as the better way."(6) This is clearly true, since reason and truth are
to be preferred to custom. But when truth supports custom, nothing should be
more strongly maintained. Then he proceeds as follows: "For one may pardon a man
who merely errs, as the Apostle Paul says of himself, 'Who was before a
blasphemer, a persecutor, and injurious; but I obtained mercy, because I did it
ignorantly;'(7) but he who, after inspiration and revelation given, perseveres
advisedly and knowingly in his former error, sins without hope of pardon on the
ground of ignorance. For he rests on a kind of presumption and obstinacy, when he
is overcome by reason." This is most true, that his sin is much more grievous
who has sinned wittingly than his who has sinned through ignorance. And so in the
case of the holy Cyprian, who was not only learned, but also patient of
instruction, which he so fully himself understood to be a part of the praise of the
bishop whom the apostle describes,(8) that he said, "This also should be
approved in a bishop, that he not only teach with knowledge, but also learn with
patience."(9) I do not doubt that if he had had the opportunity of discussing this
question, which has been so long and so much disputed in the Church, with the
pious and learned men to whom we owe it that subsequently that ancient custom was
confirmed by the authority of a plenary Council, he would have shown, without
hesitation, not only how learned he was in those things which he had grasped
with all the security of truth, but also how ready he was to receive instruction
in what he had failed to perceive. And yet, since it is so clear that it is
much more grievous to sin wittingly than in ignorance, I should be glad if any one
would tell me which is the worse,--the man who falls into heresy, not knowing
how great a sin it is, or the man who refuses to abandon his covetousness,
knowing its enormity? I might even put the question thus: If one man unwittingly
fall into heresy, and another knowingly refuse to depart from idolatry, since the
apostle himself says, "The covetous man, which is an idolater;" and Cyprian
too understood the same passage in just the same way, when he says, in his letter
to Antonianus, "Nor let the new heretics flatter themselves in this, that they
say they do not communicate with idolaters, whereas there are amongst them
both adulterers and covetous persons, who are held guilty of the sin of idolatry;
'for know this, and understand, that no whoremonger, nor unclean person, nor
covetous man, who is an idolater, hath any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ
and of God;'(10) and again, 'Mortify therefore your members which are upon the
earth; fornication, uncleanness, inordinate affection, evil concupiscence, and
covetousness, which is idolatry.'"(11) I ask, therefore,which sins more
deeply,--he who ignorantly has fallen into heresy, or he who wittingly has refused to
abandon covetousness, that is idolatry? According to that rule by which the sins
of those who sin wittingly are placed before those of the ignorant, the man
who is covetous with knowledge takes the first place in sin. But as it is
possible that the greatness of the actual sin should produce the same effect in the
case of heresy that the witting commission of the sin produces in that of
covetousness, let us suppose the ignorant heretic to be on a par in guilt with the
consciously covetous man, although the evidence which Cyprian himself has advanced
from the apostle does not seem to prove this. For what is it that we abominate
in heretics except their blasphemies? But when he wished to show that
ignorance of the sin may conduce to ease in obtaining pardon, he advanced a proof from
the case of the apostle, when he says; "Who was before a blasphemer, and a
persecutor, and injurious; but I obtained mercy, because I did it ignorantly."(1)
But if possible, as I said before, let the sins of the two men--the blasphemy of
the unconscious, and the idolatry of the conscious sinner--be esteemed of
equal weight; and let them be judged by the same sentence,--he who, in seeking for
Christ, falls into a truth-like setting forth of what is false, and he who
wittingly resists Christ speaking through His apostle, "seeing that no whoremonger,
nor unclean person, nor covetous man, which is an idolater, hath any
inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God,"(2)--and then I would ask why baptism
and the words of the gospel are held as naught in the former case, and accounted
valid in the latter, when each is alike found to be estranged from the members
of the dove. Is it because the former is an open combatant outside, that he
should not be admitted, the latter a cunning assenter within the fold, that he
may not be expelled?
CHAP. 6.--9. But as regards his saying, "Nor let any one affirm that what they have
received from the apostles, that they follow; for the apostles handed down only
one Church and one baptism, and that appointed only in the same Church:"(3) this
does not so much move me to venture to condemn the baptism of Christ when
found amongst heretics (just as it is necessary to recognize the gospel itself when
I find it with them, though I abominate their error), as it warns me that
there were some even in the times of the holy Cyprian who traced to the authority
of the apostles that custom against which the African Councils were held, and in
respect of which he himself said a little above, "In vain do those who are
beaten by reason oppose to us the authority of custom." Nor do I find the reason
why the same Cyprian found this very custom, which after his time was confirmed
by nothing less than a plenary Council of the whole world, already so strong
before his time, that when with all his learning he sought an authority worth
following for changing it, he found nothing but a Council of Agrippinus held in
Africa a very few years before his own time. And seeing that this was not enough
for him, as against the custom of the whole world, he laid hold on these
reasons which we just now, considering them with great care, and being confirmed by
the antiquity of the custom itself, and by the subsequent authority of a plenary
Council, found to be truth-like rather than true; which, however, seemed to
him true, as he toiled in a question of the greatest obscurity, and was in doubt
about the remission of sins,--whether it could fail to be given in the baptism
of Christ, and whether it could be given among heretics. In which matter, if an
imperfect revelation of the truth was given to Cyprian, that the greatness of
his love in not deserting the unity of the Church might be made manifest, there
is yet not any reason why any one should venture to claim superiority over the
strong defenses and excellence of his virtues, and the abundance of graces
which were found in him, merely because, with the instruction derived from the
strength of a general Council, he sees something which Cyprian did not see,
because the Church had not yet held a plenary Council on the matter. Just as no one
is so insane as to set himself up as surpassing the merits of the Apostle Peter,
because, taught by the epistles of the Apostle Paul, and confirmed by the
custom of the Church herself, he does not compel the Gentiles to judaize, as Peter
once had done.(4)
10. We do not then "find that any one, after being baptized among
heretics, was afterwards admitted by the apostles with the same baptism, and
communicated;"(5) but neither do we find this, that any one coming from the society of
heretics, who had been baptized among them, was baptized anew by the apostles.
But this custom, which even then those who looked back to past ages could not
find to have been invented by men of a later time, is rightly believed to have
been handed down from the apostles. And there are many other things of the same
kind, which it would be tedious to recount. Wherefore, if they had something to
say for themselves to whom Cyprian, wishing to persuade them of the truth of his
own view, says, "Let no one say, What we have received from the apostles, that
we follow," with how much more force we now say, What the custom of the Church
has always held, what this argument has failed to prove false, and what a
plenary Council has confirmed, this we follow! To this we may add that it may also
be said, after a careful inquiry into the reasoning on both sides of the
discussion, and into the evidence of Scripture, What truth has declared, that we
follow.
CHAP. 7.--11. For in fact, as to what some opposed to the reasoning of Cyprian, that
the apostle says, "Notwithstanding every way, whether in pretence or in truth,
let Christ be preached;"(1) Cyprian rightly exposed their error, showing that it
has nothing to do with the case of heretics, since the apostle was speaking of
those who were acting within the Church, with malicious envy seeking their own
profit. They announced Christ, indeed, according to the truth whereby we
believe in Christ, but not in the spirit in which He was announced by the good
evangelists to the sons of the dove. "For Paul," he says, "in his epistle was not
speaking of heretics, or of their baptism, so that it could be shown that he had
laid down anything concerning this matter. He was speaking of brethren, whether
as walking disorderly and contrary to the discipline of the Church, or as
keeping the discipline of the Church in the fear of God. And he declared that some
of them spoke the word of God steadfastly and fearlessly, but that some were
acting in envy and strife; that some had kept themselves encompassed with kindly
Christian love, but that others entertained malice and strife: but yet that he
patiently endured all things, with the view that, whether in truth or in
pretence, the name of Christ, which Paul preached, might come to the knowledge of the
greatest number, and that the sowing of the word, which was as yet a new and
unaccustomed work, might spread more widely by the preaching of those that
spoke. Furthermore, it is one thing for those who are within the Church to speak in
the name of Christ, another thing for those who are without, acting against the
Church, to baptize in the name of Christ."(2) These words of Cyprian seem to
warn us that we must distinguish between those who are bad outside, and those
who are bad within the Church. And those whom he says that the apostle represents
as preaching the gospel impurely and of envy, he says truly were within. This
much, however, I think I may say without rashness, if no one outside can have
anything which is of Christ, neither can any one within have anything which is
of the devil. For if that closed garden can contain the thorns of the devil, why
cannot the fountain of Christ equally flow beyond the garden's bounds? But if
it cannot contain them, whence, even in the time of the Apostle Paul himself,
did there arise amongst those who were within so great an evil of envy and
malicious strife? For these are the words of Cyprian. Can it be that envy and
malicious strife are a small evil? How then were those in unity who were not at
peace? For it is not my voice, nor that of any man, but of the Lord Himself; nor did
the sound go forth from men, but from angels, at the birth of Christ, "Glory
to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men of good will."(3) And this
certainly would not have been proclaimed by the voice of angels when Christ was
born upon the earth, unless God wished this to be understood, that those are in
the unity of the body of Christ who are united in the peace of Christ, and those
are in the peace of Christ who are of good will. Furthermore, as good will is
shown in kindliness, so is bad will shown in malice.
CHAP. 8.--12. In short, we may see how great an evil in itself is envy, which cannot
be other than malicious. Let us not look for other testimony. Cyprian himself is
sufficient for us, through whose mouth the Lord poured forth so many thunders
in most perfect truth, and uttered so many useful precepts about envy and
malignity. Let us therefore read the letter of Cyprian about envy and malignity, and
see how great an evil it is to envy those better than ourselves,--an evil
whose origin he shows in memorable words to have sprung from the devil himself. "To
feel jealousy," he says, "of what you regard as good, and to envy those who
are better than yourselves, to some, dearest brethren, seems a light and minute
offense."(4) And again a little later, when he was inquiring into the source and
origin of the evil, he says, "From this the devil, in the very beginning of
the world, perished first himself, and led others to destruction."(5) And further
on in the same chapter: "What an evil, dearest brethren, is that by which an
angel fell! by which that exalted and illustrious loftiness was able to be
deceived and overthrown! by which he was deceived who was the deceiver ! From that
time envy stalks upon the earth, when man, about to perish through malignity,
submits himself to the teacher of perdition,--when he who envies imitates the
devil, as it is written, 'Through envy of the devil came death into the world, and
they that do hold of his side do find it.'"(6) How true, how forcible are
these words of Cyprian, in an epistle known throughout the world, we cannot fail to
recognize. It was truly fitting for Cyprian to argue and warn most forcibly
about envy and malignity, from which most deadly evil he proved his own heart to
be so far removed by the abundance of his Christian love; by carefully guarding
which he remained in the unity of communion with his colleagues, who without
ill-feeling entertained different views about baptism, whilst he himself
differed in opinion from them, not through any contention of ill will, but through
human infirmity, erring in a point which God, in His own good time, would reveal
to him by reason of his perseverance in love. For he says openly, "Judging no
one, nor depriving any of the right of communion if he differ from us. For no one
of us setteth himself up as a bishop of bishops, or by tyrannical terror
forces his colleagues to a necessity of obeying."(1) And in the end of the epistle
before us he says, "These things I have written to you briefly, dearest brother,
according to my poor ability, prescribing to or prejudging no one, so as to
prevent each bishop from doing what he thinks right in the free exercise of his
own judgment. We, so far as in us lies, do not strive on behalf of heretics with
our colleges and fellow-bishops, with whom we hold the harmony that God
enjoins, and the peace of our Lord, especially as the apostle says, 'If any man seem
to be contentious, we have no such custom, neither the churches of God.'(2)
Christian love in our souls, the honor of our fraternity, the bond of faith, the
harmony of the priesthood, all these are maintained by us with patience and
gentleness. For this cause we have also, so far as our poor ability admitted, by
the permission and inspiration of the Lord, written now a treatise on the benefit
of patience,(3) which we have sent to you in consideration of our mutual
affection."(4)
CHAP. 9.--13. By this patience of Christian love he not only endured the difference of
opinion manifested in all kindliness by his good colleagues on an obscure
point, as he also himself received toleration, till, in process of time, when it so
pleased God, what had always been a most wholesome custom was further
confirmed by a declaration of the truth in a plenary Council, but he even put up with
those who were manifestly bad, as was very well known to himself, who did not
entertain a different view in consequence of the obscurity of the question, but
acted contrary to their preaching in the evil practices of an abandoned life, as
the apostle says of them "Thou that preachest a man should not steal, dost
thou steal?"(5) For Cyprian says in his letter of such bishops of his own time,
his own colleagues, and remaining in communion with him, "While they had brethren
starving in the Church, they tried to amass large sums of money, they took
possession of estates by fraudulent proceedings, they multiplied their gains by
accumulated usuries."(6) For here there is no obscure question. Scripture
declares openly, "Neither covetous nor extortioners shall inherit the kingdom of
God;"(7) and "He that putteth out his money to usury,"(8) and "No whoremonger, nor
unclean person, nor covetous man, who is an idolater, hath any inheritance in
the kingdom of Christ and of God."(9) He therefore certainly would not, without
knowledge, have brought accusations of such covetousness, that men not only
greedily treasured up their own goods, but also fraudulently appropriated the goods
of others, or of idolatry existing in such enormity as he understands and
proves it to exist; nor assuredly would he bear false witness against his
fellow-bishops. And yet with the bowels of fatherly and motherly love he endured them,
lest that, by rooting out the tares before their time, the wheat should also
have been rooted up,(10) imitating assuredly the Apostle Paul, who, with the same
love towards the Church, endured those who were ill-disposed and envious
towards him.(11)
14. But yet because "by the envy of the devil death entered into the
world, and they that do hold of his side do find it,"(12) not because they are
created by God, but because they go astray of themselves, as Cyprian also says
himself, seeing that the devil, before he was a devil, was an angel, and good, how
can it be that they who are of the devil's side are in the unity of Christ?
Beyond all doubt, as the Lord Himself says, "an enemy hath done this," who "sowed
tares among the wheat."(13) As therefore what is of the devil within the fold
must be convicted, so what is of Christ without must be recognized. Has the devil
what is his within the unity of the Church, and shall Christ not have what is
His without? This, perhaps, might be said of individual men, that as the devil
has none that are his among the holy angels, so God has none that are His
outside the communion of the Church. But though it may be allowed to the devil to
mingle tares, that is, wicked men, with this Church which still wears the mortal
nature of flesh, so long as it is wandering far from God, he being allowed this
just because of the pilgrimage of the Church herself, that men may desire more
ardently the rest of that country which the angels enjoy, yet this cannot be
said of the sacraments. For, as the tares within the Church can have and handle
them, though not for salvation, but for the destruction to which they are
destined in the fire, so also can the tares without, which received them from
seceders from within; for they did not lose them by seceding. This, indeed, is made
plain from the fact that baptism is not conferred again on their return, when
any of the very men who seceded happen to come back again. And let not any one
say, Why, what fruit hath the tares? For if this be so, their condition is the
same, so far as this goes, both inside and without. For it surely cannot be that
grains of corn are found in the tares inside, and not in those without. But
when the question is of the sacrament, we do not consider whether the tares bear
any fruit, but whether they have any share of heaven; for the tares, both within
and without, share the rain with the wheat itself, which rain is in itself
heavenly and sweet, even though under its influence the tares grow up in
barrenness. And so the sacrament, according to the gospel of Christ, is divine and
pleasant; nor is it to be esteemed as naught because of the barrenness of those on
whom its dew falls even without.
CHAP. 10.--15. But some one may say that the tares within may more easily be converted
into wheat. I grant that it is so; but what has this to do with the question of
repeating baptism? You surely do not maintain that if a man converted from
heresy, through the occasion and opportunity given by his conversion, should bear
fruit before another who, being within the Church, is more slow to be washed
from his iniquity, and so corrected and changed, the former therefore needs not
to be baptized again, but the churchman to be baptized again, who was
outstripped by him who came from the heretics, because of the greater slowness of his
amendment. It has nothing, therefore, to do with the question now at issue who is
later or slower in being converted from his especial waywardness to the
straight path of faith, or hope, or charity. For although the bad within the fold are
more easily made good yet it will sometimes happen that certain of the number
of those outside will outstrip in their conversion certain of those within; and
while these remain in barrenness, the former, being restored to unity and
communion, will bear fruit with patience, thirty-fold, or sixty-fold, or a
hundred-fold.(1) Or if those only are to be called tares who remain in perverse error to
the end, there are many ears of corn outside, and many tares within.
16. But it will be urged that the bad outside are worse than those within.
It is indeed a weighty question, whether Nicolaus, being already severed from
the Church,(2) or Simon, who was still within it,(3) was the worse,--the one
being a heretic, the other a sorcerer. But if the mere fact of division, as being
the clearest token of violated charity, is held to be the worse evil, I grant
that it is so. Yet many, though they have lost all feelings of charity, yet do
not secede from considerations of worldly profit; and as they seek their own,
not the things which are Jesus Christ's,(4) what they are unwilling to secede
from is not the unity of Christ, but their own temporal advantage. Whence it is
said in praise of charity, that she "seeketh not her own."(5)
17. Now, therefore, the question is, how could men of the party of the
devil belong to the Church, which has no spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing,(6)
of which also it is said, "My dove is one?"(7) But if they cannot, it is clear
that she groans among those who are not of her, some treacherously laying wait
within, some barking at her gate without. Such men, however, even within, both
receive baptism, and possess it, and transmit it holy in itself; nor is it in
any way defiled by their wickedness, in which they persevere even to the end.
Wherefore the same blessed Cyprian teaches us that baptism is to be considered as
consecrated in itself by the words of the gospel, as the Church has received,
without joining to it or mingling with it any consideration of waywardness and
wickedness on the part of either minister or recipients; since he himself points
out to us both truths,--both that there have been some within the Church who
did not cherish kindly Christian love, but practised envy and unkind dissension,
of whom the Apostle Paul spoke; and also that the envious belong to the
devil's party, as he testifies in the most open way in the epistle which he wrote
about envy and malignity. Wherefore, since it is clearly possible that in those
who belong to the devil's party, Christ's sacrament may yet be holy,--not,
indeed, to their salvation, but to their condemnation,and that not only if they are
led astray after they have been baptized, but even if they were such in heart
when they received the sacrament, renouncing the world (as the same Cyprian
shows) in words only and not in deeds;(1) and since even if afterwards they be
brought into the right way, the sacrament is not to be again administered which they
received when they were astray; so far as I can see, the case is already clear
and evident, that in the question of baptism we have to consider, not who
gives, but what he gives; not who receives, but what he receives not who has, but
what he has. For if men of the party of the devil, and therefore in no way
belonging to the one dove, can yet receive, and have, and give baptism in all its
holiness, in no way defiled by their waywardness, as we are taught by the letters
of Cyprian himself, how are we ascribing to heretics what does not belong to
them? how are we saying that what is really Christ's is theirs, and not rather
recognizing in them the signs of our Sovereign, and correcting the deeds of
deserters from Him? Wherefore it is one thing, as the holy Cyprian says, "for those
within in the Church, to speak in the name of Christ another thing for those
without, who are acting against the Church, to baptize in His name."(2) But both
many who are within act against the Church by evil living, and by enticing
weak souls to copy their lives; and some who are without speak in Christ's name,
and are not forbidden to work the works of Christ, but only to be without, since
for the healing of their souls we grasp at them, or reason with them, or
exhort them. For he, too, was without who did not follow Christ with His disciples,
and yet in Christ's name was casting out devils, which the Lord enjoined that
he should not be prevented from doing;(3) although, certainly, in the point
where he was imperfect he was to be made whole, in accordance with the words of the
Lord, in which He says, "He that is not with me is against me; and he that
gathereth not with me scattereth abroad."(4) Therefore both some things are done
outside in the name of Christ not against the Church, and some things are done
inside on the devil's part which are against the Church.
CHAP. 11.--18. What shall we say of what is also wonderful, that he who carefully
observes may find that it is possible that certain persons, without violating
Christian charity, may yet teach what is useless, as Peter wished to compel the
Gentiles to observe Jewish customs,(5) as Cyprian himself would force heretics to be
baptized anew? whence the apostle says to such good members, who are rooted in
charity, and yet walk not rightly in some points, "If in anything ye be
otherwise minded, God shall reveal even this unto you;"(6) and that some again,
though devoid of charity, may teach something wholesome? of whom the Lord says, "The
scribes and the Pharisees sit in Moses' seat: all therefore whatsoever they
bid you observe, that observe and do; but do not ye after their works: for they
say and do not."(7) Whence the apostle also says of those envious and malicious
ones who yet preach salvation through Christ, "Whether in pretense, or in
truth, let Christ be preached."(8) Wherefore, both within and without, the
waywardness of man is to be corrected, but the divine sacraments and utterances are not
to be attributed to men. He is not, therefore, a "patron of heretics" who
refuses to attribute to them what he knows not to belong to them, even though it be
found among them. We do not grant baptism to be theirs; but we recognize His
baptism of whom it is said, "The same is He which baptizeth,"(9) wheresoever we
find it. But if "the treacherous and blasphemous man" continue in his treachery
and blasphemy, he receives no "remission of sins either without" or within the
Church; or if, by the power of the sacrament, he receives it for the moment,
the same force operates both without and within, as the power of the name of
Christ used to work the expulsion of devils even without the Church.
CHAP. 12.--19. But he urges that "we find that the apostles, in all their epistles,
execrated and abhorred the sacrilegious wickedness of heretics, so as to say that
'their word does spread as a canker.'"(10) What then? Does not Paul also show
that those who said, "Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die," were
corrupters of good manners by their evil communications, adding immediately afterwards,
"Evil communications corrupt good manners;" and yet he intimated that these
were within the Church when he says, "How say some among you that there is no
resurrection of the dead?"(11) But when does he fail to express his abhorrence of
the covetous? Or could anything be said in stronger terms, than that
covetousness should be called idolatry, as the same apostle declared?(12) Nor did Cyprian
understand his language otherwise, inserting it when need required in his
letters; though he confesses that in his time there were in the Church not covetous
men of an ordinary type, but robbers and usurers, and these found not among
the masses, but among the bishops. And yet I should be willing to understand that
those of whom the apostle says, "Their word does spread as a canker," were
without the Church, but Cyprian himself will not allow me. For, when showing, in
his letter to Antonianus,(1) that no man ought to sever himself from the unity
of the Church before the time of the final separation of the just and unjust,
merely because of the admixture of evil men in the Church, when he makes it
manifest how holy he was, and deserving of the illustrious martyrdom which he won,
he says, "What swelling of arrogance it is, what forgetfulness of humility and
gentleness, that any one should dare or believe that he can do what the Lord did
not grant even to the apostles,--to think that he can distinguish the tares
from the wheat, or, as if it were granted to him to carry the fan and purge the
floor, to endeavor to separate the chaff from the grain! And whereas the apostle
says, 'But in a great house there are not only vessels of gold and of silver,
but also of wood and of earth,'(2) that he should seem to choose those of gold
and of silver, and despise and cast away and condemn those of wood and of
earth, when really the vessels of wood are only to be burned in the day of the Lord
by the burning of the divine conflagration, and those of earth are to be broken
by Him to whom the 'rod of iron(3) has been given.'"(4) By this argument,
therefore, against those who, under the pretext of avoiding the society of wicked
men, had severed themselves from the unity of the Church, Cyprian shows that by
the great house of which the apostle spoke, in which there were not only
vessels of gold and of silver, but also of wood and of earth, he understood nothing
else but the Church, in which there should be good and bad, till at the last day
it should be cleansed as a threshing-floor by the winnowing-fan. And if this
be so, in the Church herself, that is, in the great house itself, there were
vessels to dishonor, whose word did spread like a canker. For the apostle,
speaking of them, taught as follows: "And their word," he says, "will spread as doth a
canker; of whom is Hymenaeus and Philetus; who concerning the truth have
erred, saying that the resurrection is past already; and overthrow the faith of
some. Nevertheless the foundation of God standeth sure. having this seal, The Lord
knoweth them that are His. And, Let every one that nameth the name of Christ
depart from iniquity. But in a great house there are not only vessels of gold and
of silver, but also of wood and of earth."(5) If, therefore, they whose words
did spread as doth a canker were as it were vessels to dishonor in the great
house, and by that "great house" Cyprian understands the unity of the Church
itself, surely it cannot be that their canker polluted the baptism of Christ.
Accordingly, neither without, any more than within, can any one who is of the
devil's party, either in himself or in any other person, stain the sacrament which is
of Christ. It is not, therefore, the case that "the word which spreads as a
canker to the ears of those who hear it gives remission of sins;"(6) but when
baptism is given in the words of the gospel, however great be the perverseness of
understanding on the part either of him through whom, or of him to whom it is
given, the sacrament itself is holy in itself on account of Him whose sacrament
it is. And if any one, receiving it at the hands of a misguided man, yet does
not receive the perversity of the minister, but only the holiness of the
mystery, being closely bound to the unity of the Church in good faith and hope and
charity, he receives remission of his sins,--not by the words which do eat as doth
a canker, but by the sacraments of the gospel flowing from a heavenly source.
But if the recipient himself be misguided, on the one hand, what is given is of
no avail for the salvation of the misguided man; and yet, on the other hand,
that which is received remains holy in the recipient, and is not renewed to him
if he be brought to the right way.
CHAP. 13.--20. There is therefore "no fellowship between righteousness and
unrighteousness,"(7) not only without, but also within the Church; for "the Lord knoweth
them that are His," and "Let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from
iniquity." There is also "no communion between light and darkness,"(8) not
only without, but also within the Church; for "he that hateth his brother is still
in darkness."(9) And they at any rate hated Paul, who, preaching Christ of
envy and malicious strife, supposed that they added affliction to his bonds;(10)
and yet the same Cyprian understands these still to have been within the Church.
Since, therefore, "neither darkness can enlighten, nor unrighteousness
justify,"(1) as Cyprian again says, I ask, how could those men baptize within the very
Church herself ? I ask, how could those vessels which the large house contains
not to honor, but to dishonor, administer what is holy for the sanctifying of
men within the great house itself, unless because that holiness of the
sacrament cannot be polluted even by the unclean, either when it is given at their
hands, or when it is received by those who in heart and life are not changed for
the better? of whom, as situated within the Church, Cyprian himself says,
"Renouncing the world in word only, and not in deed."(2)
21. There are therefore also within the Church "enemies of God, whose
hearts the spirit of Antichrist has possessed;" and yet they, "deal with spiritual
and divine things,"(3) which cannot profit for their salvation so long as they
remain such as they are; and yet neither can they pollute them by their own
uncleanness. With regard to what he says, therefore, "that they have no part given
them in the saving grace of the Church, who, scattering and fighting against
the Church of Christ, are called adversaries by Christ Himself, and antichrists
by His apostles,(3) this must be received under the consideration that there
are men of this kind both within and without. But the separation of those that
are within from the perfection and unity of the dove is not only known in the
case of some men to God, but even in the case of some to their fellow-men; for, by
regarding their openly abandoned life and confirmed wickedness, and comparing
it with the rules of God's commandments, they understand to what a multitude of
tares and chaff, situated now some within and some without, but destined to be
most manifestly separated at the last day, the Lord will then say, "Depart
from me, ye that work iniquity,"(4) and "Depart into everlasting fire, prepared
for the devil and his angels."(5)
CHAP. 14.--22. But we must not despair of the conversion of any man, whether situated
within or without, so long as "the goodness of God leadeth him to
repentance,"(6) and "visits their transgressions with the rod, and their inquiry with
stripes." For in this way "He does not utterly take from them His loving-kindness,"(7)
if they will themselves sometimes "love their own soul, pleasing God."(8) But
as the good man "that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved,"(9)
so the bad man, whether within or without, who shall persevere in his wickedness
to the end, shall not be saved. Nor do we say that "all, wheresoever and
howsoever baptized, obtain the grace of baptism,"(10) if by the grace of baptism is
understood the actual salvation which is conferred by the celebration of the
sacrament; but many fail to obtain this salvation even within the Church,
although it is clear that they possess the sacrament, which is holy in itself. Well,
therefore, does the Lord warn us in the gospel that we should not company with
ill-advisers,(11) who walk under the pretence of Christ's name; but these are
found both within and without, as, in fact, they do not proceed without unless
they have first been ill-disposed within. And we know that the apostle said of
the vessels placed in the great house, "If a man therefore purge himself from
these, he shall be a vessel unto honor, sanctified, and meet for the Master's use,
and prepared unto every good work."(12) But in what manner each man ought to
purge himself from these he shows a little above, saying, "Let every due that
nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity,"(13) that he may not in the last
day, with the chaff, whether with that which has already been driven from the
threshing-floor, or with that which is to be separated at the last, hear the
command, "Depart from me, ye that work iniquity."(14) Whence it appears, indeed,
as Cyprian says, that "we are not at once to admit and adopt whatsoever is
professed in the name of Christ, but only what is done in the truth of Christ."(15)
But it is not an action done in the truth of Christ that men should "seize on
estates by fraudulent pretenses, and increase their gains by accumulated
usury,"(16) or that they should "renounce the world in word only;"(17) and yet, that
all this is done within the Church, Cyprian himself bears sufficient testimony.
CHAP. 15.--23. To go on to the point which he pursues at great length, that "they who
blaspheme the Father of Christ cannot be baptized in Christ,"(18) since it is
clear that they blaspheme through error (for he who comes to the baptism of
Christ will not openly blaspheme the Father of Christ, but he is led to blaspheme by
holding a view contrary to the teaching of the truth about the Father of
Christ), we have already shown at sufficient length that baptism, consecrated in the
words of the gospel, is not affected by the error of any man, whether
ministrant or recipient, whether he hold views contrary to the revelation of divine
teaching on the subject of the Father, or the Son, or the Holy Ghost. For many
carnal and natural men are baptized even within the Church, as the apostle
expressly says: "The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God;"(1)
and after they had received baptism, he says that they "are yet carnal."(2) But
according to it carnal sense, a soul given up to fleshly appetites cannot
entertain but fleshly wisdom about God. Wherefore many, progressing after baptism,
and especially those who have been baptized in infancy or early youth, in
proportion as their intellect becomes clearer and brighter, while "the inward man is
renewed day by day,"(3) throw away their former opinions which they held about
God while they were mocked with vain imaginings, with scorn and horror and
confession of their mistake. And yet they are not therefore considered not to have
received baptism, or to have received baptism of a kind corresponding to their
error; but in them both the perfection of the sacrament is honored and the
delusion of their mind is corrected, even though it had become inveterate through
long confirmation, or been, perhaps, maintained in many controversies. Wherefore
even the heretic, who is manifestly without, if he has there received baptism
as ordained in the gospel, has certainly not received baptism of a kind
corresponding to the error which blinds him. And therefore, in returning into the way
of wisdom he perceives that he ought to relinquish what he has held amiss, he
must not at the same time give up the good which he had received; nor because his
error is to be condemned, is the baptism of Christ in him to be therefore
extinguished. For it is already sufficiently clear, from the case of those who
happen to be baptized within the Church with false views about God, that the truth
of the sacrament is to be distinguished from the error of him who believes
amiss, although both may be found in the same man. And therefore, when any one
grounded in any error, even outside the Church, has yet been baptized with the true
sacrament, when he is restored to the unity of the Church, a true baptism
cannot take the place of a true baptism, as a true faith takes the place of a false
one, because a thing cannot take the place of itself, since neither can it
give place. Heretics therefore join the Catholic Church to this end, that what
they have evil of themselves may be corrected, not that what they have good of God
should be repeated.
CHAP. 16.--24. Some one says, Does it then make no difference, if two men, rooted in
like error and wickedness, be baptized without change of life or heart, one
without, the other within the Church? I acknowledge that there is a difference. For
he is worse who is baptized without, in addition to his other sin,--not because
of his baptism, however, but because he is without; for the evil of division
is in itself far from insignificant or trivial. Yet the difference exists only
if he who is baptized within has desired to be within not for the sake of any
earthly or temporal advantage, but because he has preferred the unity of the
Church spread throughout the world to the divisions of schism; otherwise he too
must be considered among those who are without. Let us therefore put the two cases
in this way. Let us suppose that the one, for the sake of argument, held the
same opinions as Photinus(4) about Christ, and was baptized in his heresy
outside the communion of the Catholic Church; and that another held the same opinion
but was baptized in the Catholic Church, believing that his view was really the
Catholic faith. I consider him as not yet a heretic, unless, when the doctrine
of the Catholic faith is made clear to him, he chooses to resist it, and
prefers that which he already holds; and till this is the case, it is clear that he
who was baptized outside is the worse. And so in the one case erroneous opinion
alone, in the other the sin of schism also, requires correction; but in
neither of them is the truth of the sacrament to be repeated. But if any one holds
the same view as the first, and knows that it is only in heresy severed from the
Church that such a view is taught or learned, but yet for the sake of some
temporal emolument has desired to be baptized in the Catholic unity, or, having
been already baptized in it, is unwilling on account of the said emolument to
secede from it, he is not only to be considered as seceding, but his offense is
aggravated, in so far as to the error of heresy and the division of unity he adds
the deceit of hypocrisy. Wherefore the depravity of each man, in proportion as
it is more dangerous and wanting in straightforwardness, must be corrected with
the more earnestness and energy; and yet, if he has anything that is good in
him, especially if it be not of himself, but from God, we ought not to think it
of no value because of his depravity, or to be blamed like it, or to be
ascribed to it, rather than to His bountiful goodness, who even to a soul that plays
the harlot, and goes after her lovers, yet gives His bread, and His wine, and
His oil, and other food or ornaments, which are neither from herself nor from her
lovers, but from Him who in compassion for her is even desirous to warn her to
whom she should return.(1)
CHAP. 17.--25. "Can the power of baptism," says Cyprian, "be greater or better than
confession? than martyrdom ? that a man should confess Christ before men, and be
baptized in his own blood? And yet," he goes on to say, "neither does this
baptism profit the heretic, even though for confessing Christ he be put to death
outside the Church. "(2) This is most true; for, by being put to death outside the
Church, he is proved not to have had charity, of which the apostle says,
"Though I give my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth in,
nothing."(3) But if martyrdom is of no avail for this reason, because it has not
charity, neither does it profit those who, as Paul says, and Cyprian further sets
forth, are living within the Church without charity in envy and malice; and yet
they can both receive and transmit true baptism. "Salvation," he says, "is not
without the Church."(4) Who says that it is? And therefore, whatever men have
that belongs to the Church, it profits them nothing towards salvation outside the
Church. But it is one thing not to have, another to have so as to be of no use.
He who has not must be baptized that he may have; but he who has to no avail
must be corrected, that what he has may profit him. Nor is the water in the
baptism of heretics "adulterous,"(4) because neither is the creature itself which
God made evil, nor is fault to be found with the words of the gospel in the
mouths of any who are astray; but the fault is theirs in whom there is an
adulterous spirit, even though it may receive the adornment of the sacrament from a
lawful spouse. Baptism therefore can "be common to us, and the heretics,"(4) just
as the gospel can be common to us, whatever difference there may be between our
faith and their error,--whether they think otherwise than the truth about the
Father, or the Son, or the Holy Spirit; or, being cut away from unity, do not
gather with Christ, but scatter abroad,(5)--seeing that the sacrament of baptism
can be common to us, if we are the wheat of the Lord, with the covetous within
the Church, and with robbers, and drunkards, and other pestilent persons of the
same sort, of whom it is said, "They shall not inherit the kingdom of God,"(6)
and yet the vices by which they are separated from the kingdom of God are not
shared by us.
CHAP. 18.--26. Nor indeed, is it of heresies alone that the apostle says "that they
which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God." But it may be worth
while to look for a moment at the things which he groups together. "The works of
the flesh," he says "are manifest, which are these; fornication, uncleanness,
lasciviousness, idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulations, wrath,
strife, seditions, heresies, envyings, murders, drunkenness, revellings, and such
like: of the which I tell you before, as I have also told you in time past, that
they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God."(7) Let us
suppose some one, therefore, chaste, continent, free from covetousness, no
idolater, hospitable, charitable to the needy, no man's enemy, not contentious,
patient, quiet, jealous of none, envying none, sober, frugal, but a heretic; it is of
course clear to all that for this one fault only, that he is a heretic, he will
fail to inherit the kingdom of God. Let us suppose another, a fornicator,
unclean, lascivious, covetous, or even more openly given to idolatry, a student of
witchcraft, a lover of strife and contention, envious, hot-tempered, seditious,
jealous, drunken, and a reveller, but a Catholic; can it be that for this sole
merit, that he is a Catholic, he will inherit the kingdom of God, though his
deeds are of the kind of which the apostle thus concludes: "Of the which I tell
you before, as I have also told you in time past, that they which do such
things shall not inherit the kingdom of God ?" If we say this, we lead ourselves
astray. For the word of God does not lead us astray, which is neither silent, nor
lenient, nor deceptive through any flattery. Indeed, it speaks to the same
effect elsewhere: "For this ye know, that no whoremonger, nor unclean person, nor
covetous man, which is an idolater, hath any inheritance in the kingdom of
Christ and of God. Let no man deceive you with vain words."(8) We have no reason,
therefore, to complain of the word of God. It certainly says, and says openly and
freely, i that those who live a wicked life have no part in the kingdom of God.
CHAP. 19.--27.--Let us therefore not flatter the Catholic who is hemmed in with all
these vices, nor venture, merely because he is a Catholic Christian, to promise
him the impunity which holy Scripture does not promise him; nor, if he has any
one of the faults above mentioned, ought we to promise him a partnership in that
heavenly land. For, in writing to the Corinthians, the apostle enumerates the
several sins, under each of which it is implicitly understood that it shall not
inherit the kingdom of God: "Be not deceived, he says: "neither fornicators,
nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with
mankind, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners,
shall inherit the kingdom of God."(1) He does not say, those who possess all
these vices together shall not inherit the kingdom of God; but neither these nor
those: so that, as each is named, you may understand that no one of them shall
inherit the kingdom of God. As, therefore, heretics shall not possess the
kingdom of God, so the covetous shall not inherit the kingdom of God. Nor can we
indeed doubt that the punishments themselves, with which they shall be tortured
who do not inherit the kingdom of God, will vary in proportion to the difference
of their offences, and that some will be more severe than others; so that in
the eternal fire itself there will be different tortures in the punishments,
corresponding to the different weights of guilt. For indeed it was not idly that
the Lord said, "It shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom in the day of
judgment than for thee."(2) But yet, so far as failing to inherit the kingdom of
God is concerned, it is just as certain, if you choose any one of the less
heinous of these vices, as if you choose more than one, or some one which you saw
was more atrocious; and because those will inherit the kingdom of God whom the
Judge shall set on His right hand, and for those who shall not be found worthy
to be set at the right hand nothing will remain but to be at the left, no other
announcement is left for them to hear like goats from the mouth of the
Shepherd, except, "Depart into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his
angels;"(3) though in that fire, as I said before, it may be that different
punishments will be awarded corresponding to the difference of the sins.
CHAP. 20.--28. But on the question whether we ought to prefer a Catholic of the most
abandoned character to a heretic in whose life, except that he is a heretic, men
can find nothing to blame, I do not venture to give a hasty judgment. But if
any one says, because he is a heretic, he cannot be this only without other vices
also following,--for he is carnal and natural, and therefore must be also
envious, and hot-tempered, and jealous, and hostile to truth itself, and utterly
estranged from it,--let him fairly understand, that of those other faults of
which he is supposed to have chosen some one less flagrant, a single one cannot
exist by itself in any man, because he in turn is carnal and natural; as, to take
the case of drunkenness, which people have now become accustomed to talk of not
only without horror, but with some degree of merriment, can it possibly exist
alone in any one in whom it is found? For what drunkard is not also
contentious, and hot-tempered, and jealous, and at variance with all soundness of counsel,
and at grievous enmity with those who rebuke him? Further, it is not easy for
him to avoid being a fornicator and adulterer, though he may be no heretic;
just as a heretic may be no drunkard, nor adulterer, nor fornicator, nor
lascivious, nor a lover of money, or given to witchcraft, and cannot well be all these
together. Nor indeed is any one vice followed by all the rest. Supposing,
therefore, two men,--one a Catholic with all these vices, the other a heretic free
from all from which a heretic can be free,--although they do not both contend
against the faith, and yet each lives contrary to the faith, and each is deceived
by a vain hope, and each is far removed from charity of spirit, and therefore
each is severed from connection with the body of the one dove; why do we
recognise in one of them the sacrament of Christ, and not in the other, as though it
belonged to this or that man, whilst really it is the same in both, and belongs
to God alone, and is good even in the worst of men? And if of the men who have
it, one is worse than another, it does not follow that the sacrament which they
have is worse in the one than in the other, seeing that neither in the case of
two bad Catholics, if one be worse than the other, does he possess a worse
baptism, nor, if one of them be good and another bad, is baptism bad in the bad
one and good in the good one; but it is good in both. Just as the light of the
sun, or even of a lamp, is certainly not less brilliant when displayed to bad
eyes than when seen by better ones; but it is the same in the case of both,
although it either cheers or hurts them differently according to the difference of
their powers.
CHAP. 21.--29. With regard to the objection brought against Cyprian, that the
catechumens who were seized in martyrdom, and slain for Christ's name's sake, received a
crown even without baptism, I do not quite see what it has to do with the
matter, unless, indeed, they urged that heretics could much more be admitted with
baptism to Christ's kingdom, to which catechumens were admitted without it,
since He Himself has said, "Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he
cannot enter into the kingdom of God."(1) Now, in this matter I do not hesitate
for a moment to place the Catholic catechumen, who is burning with love for God,
before the baptized heretic; nor yet do we thereby do dishonor to the sacrament
of baptism which the latter has already received, the former not as yet; nor
do we consider that the sacrament of the catechumen(2) is to be preferred to the
sacrament of baptism, when we acknowledge that some catechumens are better and
more faithful than some baptized persons. For the centurion Cornelius, before
baptism, was better than Simon, who had been baptized. For Cornelius, even
before his baptism, was filled with the Holy Spirit;(3) Simon, even after baptism,
was puffed up with an unclean spirit.(4) Cornelius, however, would have been
convicted of contempt for so holy a sacrament, if, even after he had received the
Holy Ghost, he had refused to be baptized. But when he was baptized, he
received in no wise a better sacrament than Simon; but the different merits of the
men were made manifest under the equal holiness of the same sacrament--so true is
it that the good or ill deserving of the recipient does not increase or
diminish the holiness of baptism. But as baptism is wanting to a good catechumen to
his receiving the kingdom of heaven, so true conversion is wanting to a bad man
though baptized. For He who said, "Except a man be born of water and of the
Spirit. he cannot enter into the kingdom of God," said also Himself, "except your
righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye
shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven:"(5) For that the
righteousness of the catechumens might not feel secure, it is written, "Except a man be
born again of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God."
And again, that the unrighteousness of the baptized might not feel secure
because they had received baptism, it is written, "Except your righteousness shall
exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter
into the kingdom of heaven." The one were too little without the other; the two
make perfect the heir of that inheritance. As, then, we ought not to
depreciate a man's righteousness, which begins to exist before he is joined to the
Church, as the righteousness of Cornelius began to exist before he was in the body
of Christian men,--which righteousness was not thought worthless, or the angel
would not have said to him, "Thy prayers and thine alms are come up as a
memorial before God;" nor did it yet suffice for his obtaining the kingdom of heaven,
or he would not have been told to send to Peter,(6)--so neither ought we to
depreciate the sacrament of baptism, even though it has been received outside the
Church. But since it is of no avail for salvation unless he who has baptism
indeed in full perfection be incorporated into the Church, correcting also his own
depravity, let us therefore correct the error of the heretics, that we may
recognize what in them is not their own but Christ's.
CHAP. 22.--30. That the place of baptism is sometimes supplied by martyrdom is
supported by an argument by no means trivial, which the blessed Cyprian adduces(7) from
the thief, to whom, though he was not baptized, it was yet said, "To-day shall
thou be with me in Paradise."(8) On considering which, again and again, I find
that not only martyrdom for the sake of Christ may supply what was wanting of
baptism, but also faith and conversion of heart, if recourse may not be had to
the celebration of the mystery of baptism for want of time.(9) For neither was
that thief crucified for the name of Christ, but as the reward of his own
deeds; nor did he suffer because he believed, but he believed while suffering. It
was shown, therefore, in the case of that thief, how great is the power. even
without the visible sacrament of baptism, of what the apostle says, "With the
heart man believeth unto righteousness, and with the mouth confession is made unto
salvation."(10) But the want is supplied invisibly only when the administration
of baptism is prevented, not by contempt for religion, but by the necessity of
the moment. For much more in the case of Cornelius and his friends, than in
the case of that robber, might it seem superfluous that they should also be
baptized with water, seeing that in them the gift of the Holy Spirit, which,
according to the testimony of holy Scripture, was received by other men only after
baptism, had made itself manifest by every unmistakable sign apppropriate to those
times when they spoke with tongues. Yet they were baptized, and for this
action we have the authority of an apostle as the warrant. So far ought all of us to
be from being induced by any imperfection in the inner man, if it so happen
that before baptism a person has advanced, through the workings of a pious heart,
to spiritual understanding, to despise a sacrament which is applied to the
body by the hands of the minister, but which is God's own means for working
spiritually a man's dedication to Himself. Nor do I conceive that the function of
baptizing was assigned to John, so that it should be called John's baptism, for
any other reason except that the Lord Himself, who had appointed it, in not
disdaining to receive the baptism of His servant,(1) might consecrate the path of
humility, and show most plainly by such an action how high a value was to be
placed on His own baptism, with which He Himself was afterwards to baptize. For He
saw, like an excellent physician of eternal salvation, that overweening pride
would be found in some, who, having made such progress in the understanding of
the truth and in uprightness of character that they would not hesitate to place
themselves, both in life and knowledge, above many that were baptized, would
think it was unnecessary for them to be baptized, since they felt that they had
attained a frame of mind to which many that were baptized were still only
endeavoring to raise themselves.
CHAP. 23.--31. But what is the precise value of the sanctification of the sacrament
(which that thief did not receive, not from any want of will on his part, but
because it was unavoidably omitted) and what is the effect on a man of its material
application, it is not easy to say. Still, had it not been of the greatest
value, the Lord would not have received the baptism of a servant. But since we
must look at it in itself, without entering upon the question of the salvation of
the recipient, which it is intended to work, it shows clearly enough that both
in the bad, and in those who renounce the world in word and not in deed, it is
itself complete, though they cannot receive salvation unless they amend their
lives. But as in the thief, to whom the material administration of the sacrament
was necessarily wanting, the salvation was complete, because it was
spiritually present through his piety, so, when the sacrament itself is present,
salvation is complete, if what the thief possessed be unavoidably wanting. And this is
the firm tradition of the universal Church, in respect of the baptism of
infants, who certainly are as yet unable "with the heart to believe unto
righteousness, and with the mouth to make confession unto salvation," as the thief could
do; nay, who even, by crying and moaning when the mystery is performed upon them,
raise their voices in opposition to the mysterious words, and yet no Christian
will say that they are baptized to no purpose.
CHAP. 24.--32. And if any one seek for divine authority in this matter, though what is
held by the whole Church, and that not as instituted by Councils, but as a
matter of invariable custom, is rightly held to have been handed down by
apostolical authority, still we can form a true conjecture of the value of the sacrament
of baptism in the case of infants, from the parallel of circumcision, which was
received by God's earlier people, and before receiving which Abraham was
justified, as Cornelius also was enriched with the gift of the Holy Spirit before he
was baptized. Yet the apostle says of Abraham himself, that "he received the
sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith," having already
believed in his heart, so that "it was counted unto him for righteousness."(2)
Why, therefore, was it commanded him that he should circumcise every male child
in order on the eighth day,(3) though it could not yet believe with the heart,
that it should be counted unto it for righteousness, because the sacrament in
itself was of great avail? And this was made manifest by the message of an
angel in the case of Moses' son; for when he was carried by his mother, being yet
uncircumcised, it was required, by manifest present peril, that he should be
circumcised,(4) and when this was done, the danger of death was removed. As
therefore in Abraham the justification of faith came first, and circumcision was
added afterwards as the seal of faith; so in Cornelius the spiritual sanctification
came first in the gift of the Holy Spirit, and the sacrament of regeneration
was added afterwards in the layer of baptism. And as in Isaac, who was
circumcised on the eighth day after his birth, the seal of this righteousness of faith
was given first, and afterwards, as he imitated the faith of his father, the
righteousness itself followed as he grew up, of which the seal had been given
before when he was an infant; so in infants, who are baptized, the sacrament of
regeneration is given first, and if they maintain a Christian piety, conversion
also in the heart will follow, of which the mysterious sign had gone before in
the outward body. And as in the thief the gracious goodness of the Almighty
supplied what had been wanting in the sacrament of baptism, because it had been
missing not from pride or contempt, but from want of opportunity; so in infants who
die baptized, we must believe that the same grace of the Almighty supplies the
want, that, not from perversity of will, but from insufficiency of age, they
can neither believe with the heart unto righteousness, nor make confession with
the mouth unto salvation. Therefore, when others take the vows for them, that
the celebration of the sacrament may be complete in their behalf, it is
unquestionably of avail for their dedication to God, because they cannot answer for
themselves. But if another were to answer for one who could answer for himself, it
would not be of the same avail. In accordance with which rule, we find in the
gospel what strikes every one as natural when he reads it, "He is of age, he
shall speak for himself."(1)
CHAP. 25.--33. By all these considerations it is proved that the sacrament of baptism
is one thing, the conversion of the heart another; but that man's salvation is
made complete through the two together. Nor are we to suppose that, if one of
these be wanting, it necessarily follows that the other is wanting also; because
the sacrament may exist in the infant without the conversion of the heart; and
this was found to be possible without the sacrament in the case of the thief,
God in either case filling up what was involuntarily wanting. But when either of
these requisites is wanting intentionally, then the man is responsible for the
omission. And baptism may exist when the conversion of the heart is wanting;
but, with respect to such conversion, it may indeed be found when baptism has
not been received, but never when it has been despised. Nor can there be said in
any way to be a turning of the heart to God when the sacrament of God is
treated with contempt. Therefore we are right in censuring, anathematizing,
abhorring, and abominating the perversity of heart shown by heretics; yet it does not
follow that they have not the sacrament of the gospel, because they have not what
makes it of avail. Wherefore, when they come to the true faith, and by
penitence seek remission of their sins, we are not flattering or deceiving them, when
we instruct them by heavenly discipline for the kingdom of heaven, correcting
and reforming in them their errors and perverseness, to the intent that we may
by no means do violence to what is sound in them, nor, because of man's fault,
declare that anything which he may have in him from God is either valueless or
faulty.
CHAP. 26.--34. A few things still remain to be noticed in the epistle to Jubaianus; but
since these will raise the question both of the past custom of the Church and
of the baptism of John, which is wont to excite no small doubt in those who pay
slight attention to a matter which is sufficiently obvious, seeing that those
who had received the baptism of John were commanded by the apostle to be
baptized again? they are not to be treated in a hasty manner, and had better be
reserved for another book, that the dimensions of this may not be inconveniently
large.