THE THREE BOOKS OF AUGUSTIN, BISHOP OF HIPPO IN ANSWER TO THE LETTERS OF
PETILIAN, THE DONATIST, BISHOP OF CIRTA (BOOK III)
BOOK III.
IN THIS BOOK AUGUSTIN REFUTES THE SECOND LETTER(1) WHICH PETILIANUS WROTE TO
HIM AFTER HAVING SEEN THE FIRST OF AUGUSTIN'S EARLIER BOOKS. THIS LETTER HAD
BEEN FULL OF VIOLENT LANGUAGE; AND AUGUSTIN RATHER SHOWS THAT THE ARGUMENTS OF
PETILIANUS HAD BEEN DEFICIENT AND IRRELEVANT, THAN BRINGS FORWARD ARGUMENTS IN
SUPPORT OF HIS OWN STATEMENTS.
CHAP. 1.--1. Being able to read, Petilianus, I have read your letter, in which you
have shown with sufficient clearness that, in supporting the party of Donatus
against the Catholic Church, you have neither been able to say anything to the
purpose, nor been allowed to hold your tongue. What violent emotions did you
endures what a storm of feelings surged within your heart, on reading the answer
which I made, with all possible brevity and clearness, to that portion of your,
letter which alone at that time had come into, my hands ! For you saw that the
truth which we maintain and defend was confirmed with such strength of argument,
and illustrated with such abundant light, that you could not find anything which
could be said against it, whereby the charges which we make might be refuted.
You observed, also, that the attention of many who had read it was fixed on
you, since they desired to know what you would say, what you would do, how you
would escape from the difficulty, how you would make your way out of the strait in
which the word of God had encompassed you. Hereupon you, when you ought to
have shown contempt for the opinion of the foolish ones, and to have gone on to
adopt sound and truthful sentiments, preferred rather to do what Scripture has
foretold of men like you: "Thou hast loved evil more than good, and lying rather
than to speak righteousness."(2) Just as if I in turn were willing to
recompense unto you railing for railing; in which case, what should we be but two evil
speakers, so that those who read our words would either preserve their
self-respect by throwing us aside with abhorrence, or eagerly devour what we wrote to
gratify their malice? For my own part, since I answer every one, whether in
writing or by word of mouth, even when I have been attacked with insulting
accusations, in such language as the Lord puts in my mouth, restraining and crushing the
stings of empty indignation in the interests of my hearer or reader, I do not
strive to prove myself superior to my adversary by abusing him, but rather to
be a source of health in him by convicting him of his error.
2. For if those who take into consideration what you have written have any
feelings whatsoever, how did it serve you in the cause which is at issue
between us respecting the Catholic communion and the party of Donatus, that, leaving
a matter which was in a certain sense of public interest, you should have been
led by private animosity to attack the life of an individual with malicious
revilings, just as though that individual were the question in debate? Did you
think so badly, I do not say of Christians, but of the whole human race, as not
to suppose that your writings might come into the hands of some prudent men, who
would lay aside all thoughts of individuals like us, and inquire rather into
the question which was at issue between us, and pay heed, not to who and what we
were, but to what we might be able to advance in defense of the truth or
against error? You should have paid respect to these men's, judgment, you should
have guarded yourself against their censure, lest they should think that you could
find nothing to say, unless you set before yourself some one whom you might
abuse by any means within your power. But one may see by the thoughtlessness and
foolishness of some men, who listen eagerly to the quarrels of any learned
disputants, that while they take notice of the eloquence wherewith you lavish your
abuse, they do not perceive with what truth you are refuted. At the same time,
I think your object partly was that I might be driven, by the necessity of
defending myself, to desert the very cause which I had undertaken; and that so,
while men's attention was turned to the words of opponents who were engaged not in
disputation, but in quarrelling, the truth might be obscured, which you are so
afraid should come to light and be well known among men. What therefore was I
to do in opposing such a design as this, except to keep strictly to my subject,
neglecting rather my own defense, praying withal that no personal calumny may
lead me to withdraw from it? I will exalt the house of my God, whose honor I
have loved, with the tribute of a faithful servant's voice, but myself I will
humiliate and hold of no account. "I had rather be a door-keeper in the house of
my God, than to dwell in the tents of heretics."(1) I will therefore turn my,
discourse from you, Petilianus, for a time, and direct it rather to those whom
you have endeavored to turn away from me by your revilings, as though my endeavor
rather were that men should be converted unto me, and not rather with me unto
God.
CHAP. 2.--3. Hear therefore, all ye who have read his revilings, what Petilianus has
vented against me with more anger than consideration. To begin with, I will
address you in the words of the apostle, which certainly are true, whatever I
myself may be: "Let a man so account of us as of the ministers of Christ, and
stewards of the mysteries of God. Moreover, it is required in stewards, that a man be
found faithful. But with me it is a very small thing that I should be judged
of you, or of man's judgment: yea, I judge not mine own self." With regard to
what immediately follows, although I do not venture to apply to myself the words,
"For I am conscious of nothing in myself,"(2) yet I say confidently in the
sight of God, that I am conscious in myself of none of those charges which
Petilianus has brought against my life since the time when I was baptized in Christ;
"yet am I not hereby justified, but He that judgeth me is the Lord. Therefore
judge nothing before the time, until the Lord come, who both will bring to light
the hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the
hearts; and then shall every man have praise of God. And these things, brethren, I
have in a figure transferred to myself; that ye might learn in us not to think
of men above that which is written, that no one of you be puffed up for one
against another."(3) "Therefore let no man glory in men: for all things are yours;
and ye are Christ's; and Christ is God's."(4) Again I say, "Let no man glory in
men;" nay, oftentimes I repeat it, "Let no man glory in men." If you perceive
anything in us which is deserving of praise, refer it all to His praise, from
whom is every good gift and every perfect gift; for it is "from above, and
cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow
of turning."(5) For what have we which we did not receive? and if we have
received it, let us not boast as though we had not received it.(6) And in all these
things which you know to be good in us, be ye our followers, at any rate, if we
are Christ's;(7) but if, on the other hand, you either suspect, or believe, or
see that any evil is in us, hold fast to that saying of the Lord's, in which
you may safely resolve not to desert His Church because of men's ill deeds..
Whatsoever we bid you observe, that observe and do; but whatsoever evil works you
think or know to be in us, those do ye not. For this is not the time for me to
justify myself before you, when I have undertaken, neglecting all
considerations of self, to recommend to you what is for your salvation, that no one should
make his boast of men. For "cursed be the man that trusteth in man."(9) So long
as this precept of the Lord and His apostle be adhered to and observed, the
cause which I serve will be victorious, even if I myself, as my enemy would fain
have thought, am faint and oppressed in my own cause. For if you cling most
firmly to what I urge on you with all my might, that every one is cursed who places
his trust in man, so that none should make his boast of man, then you will in
no wise desert the threshing-floor of the Lord on account of the chaff which
either is now being dispersed beneath the blast of the wind of pride, or will be
separated by the final winnowing;(10) nor will you fly from the great house on
account of the vessels made to dishonor;(11) nor will you quit the net through
the breaches made in it because of the bad fish which are to be separated on
the shore;(12) nor will you leave the good pastures of unity, because of the
goats which are to be placed on the left when the Good Shepherd shall divide the
flock;(13) nor will you separate yourselves by an impious secession, because of
the mixture of the tares, from the society of that good wheat, whose source is
that grain that dies and is multiplied thereby, and that grows together
throughout the world until the harvest. For the field is the world,--not only Africa;
and the harvest is the end of the world,(1)--not the era of Donatus.
CHAP. 3.--4. These comparisons of the gospel you doubtless recognize. Nor can we
suppose them given for any other purpose, except that no one should make his boast
in man, and that no one should be puffed up for one against another, or divided
one against another, saying, "I am of Paul," when certainly Paul was not
crucified for you, nor were you baptized in the name of Paul, much less in that of
Caecilianus, or of any one of us,(2) that you may learn, that so long as the
chaff is being bruised with the corn, so long as the bad fishes swim together with
the good in the nets of the Lord, till the time of separation shall come, it is
your duty rather to endure the admixture of the bad out of consideration for
the good, than to violate the principle of brotherly love towards the good from
any consideration of the bad. For this admixture is not for eternity, but for
time alone nor is it spiritual, but corporal. And in this the angels will not be
liable to err, when they shall collect the bad from the midst of the good, and
commit them to the burning fiery furnace. For the Lord knoweth those which are
His. And if a man cannot depart bodily from those who practise iniquity so
long as time shall last, at any rate, let every one that nameth the name of Christ
depart from iniquity itself.(3) For in the meantime he may separate himself
from the wicked in life, and in morals, and in heart and will, and in the same
respects depart from his society; and separation such as this should always be
maintained. But let the separation in the body be waited for till the end of
time, faithfully, patiently, bravely. In consideration of which expectation it is
said, "Wait on the Lord; be of good courage, and He shall strengthen thine
heart; wait, I say, upon the Lord."(4) For the greatest palm of toleration is won by
those who, among false brethren that have crept in unawares, seeking their
own, and not the things of Jesus Christ, yet show that they on their part seek not
to disturb the love which is not their own, but Jesus Christ's, by any
turbulent or rash dissension, nor to break the unity of the Lord's net, in which are
gathered together fish of every kind; till it is drawn to the shore, that is,
till the end of time, by any wicked strife fostered in the spirit of pride:
whilst each might think himself to be something, being really nothing, and so might
lead himself astray, and wish that sufficient reason might be found for the
separation of Christian peoples in the judgment of himself or of his friends, who
declare that they know beyond all question certain wicked men unworthy of
communion in the sacraments of the Christian religion: though whatever it may be
that they know of them, they cannot persuade the universal Church, which, as it
was foretold, is spread abroad throughout all nations, to give credit to their
tale. And when they refuse communion with these men, as men whose character they
know, they desert the unity of the Church; whereas they ought rather, if there
really were in them that charity which endureth all things, themselves to bear
what they know in one nation, lest they should separate themselves from the
good whom they were unable throughout all nations to fill with the teaching of
evil alien to them. Whence even, without discussing the case, in which they are
convicted by the weightiest proofs of having uttered calumnies against the
innocent, they are believed with greater probability to have invented false charges
of giving up the sacred books, when they are found to have themselves committed
the far more heinous crime of Wicked division in the Church. For even, if
whatever imputations they have cast of giving up the sacred books were true, yet
they in no wise ought to have abandoned the society of Christians, who are
commended by holy Scripture even to the ends of the world, on considerations which
they have been familiar with, while these men showed that they were not acquainted
with them.
CHAP. 4.--5. Nor would I therefore be understood to urge that ecclesiastical
discipline should be set at naught, and that every one should be allowed to do exactly
as he pleased, without any check, without a kind of healing chastisement, a
lenity which should inspire fear, the severity of love. For then what will become
of the precept of the apostle, "Warn them that are unruly, comfort the
feeble-minded, support the weak, be patient toward all men; see that none render evil
for evil unto any man?"(5) At any rate, when he added these last words, "See that
none render evil for evil unto any man," he showed with sufficient clearness
that there is no rendering of evil for evil when one chastises those that are
unruly, even though for the fault of unruliness be administered the punishment of
chastising. The punishment of chastising therefore is not an evil, though the
fault be an evil. For indeed it is the steel, not of an enemy inflicting a
wound, but of a surgeon performing an operation. Things like this are done within
the Church, and that spirit of gentleness within its pale burns with zeal
towards God, lest the chaste virgin which is espoused to one husband, even Christ.
should in any of her members be corrupted from the simplicity which is in Christ,
as Eve was beguiled by the subtilty of the serpent.(1) Notwithstanding, far be
it from the servants of the father of the family that they should be unmindful
of the precept of their Lord, and be so inflamed with the fire of holy
indignation against the multitude of the tares, that while they seek to gather them in
bundles before the time, the wheat should be rooted up together with them. And
of this sin these men would be held to be guilty, even though they showed that
those were true charges which they brought against the traditors whom they
accused; because they separated themselves in a spirit of impious presumption, not
only from the wicked, whose society they professed to be avoiding, but also
from the good and faithful in all nations of the world, to whom they could not
prove the truth of what they said they, knew; and with themselves they drew away
into the same destruction many others over whom they had some slight authority,
and who were not wise enough to understand that the unity of the Church
dispersed throughout the world was on no account to be forsaken for other men's sins.
So that, even though they themselves knew that they were pressing true charges
against certain of their neighbors, yet in this way a weak brother, for whom
Christ died, was perishing through their knowledge;(2) whilst, being offended at
other men's sins, he was destroying in himself the blessing of peace which he
had with the good brethren, who partly had never heard such charges, partly had
shrunk froth giving hasty credence to what was neither discussed nor proved,
partly, in the peaceful spirit of humility, had left these charges, whatsoever
they might be, to the cognizance of the judges of the Church, to whom the whole
matter had been referred, across the sea.
CHAP. 5.--6. Do you, therefore, holy scions of our one Catholic mother, beware with
all the watchfulness of which you are capable, in due submission to the Lord, of
the example of crime and error such as this. With however great light of
learning and of reputation he may shine, however much he may boast himself to be a
precious stone, who endeavors to lead you after him, remember always that that
brave woman who alone is lovely only to her husband, whom holy Scripture portrays
to us in the last chapter of the Book of Proverbs, is more precious than any
precious stones. Let no one say, I will follow such an one, for it was even he
that made me a Christian; or, I will follow such an one, for it was even he that
baptized me. For "neither is he that planteth anything, neither he that
watereth, but God that giveth the increase."(3) And "God is love; and he that
dwelleth in love, dwelleth in God, and God in him."(4) No one also that preaches the
name of Christ, and handles or administers the sacrament of Christ, is to be
followed in opposition to the unity of Christ. "Let every man prove his own work;
and then shall he have rejoicing in himself alone, and not in another. For
every man shall bear his own burden,"(5)--the burden, that is, of rendering an
account; for "every one of shall give an account of himself. Let us not therefore
judge one another any more."(6) For, so far as relates to the burdens of mutual
love, "bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ. For if
a man think himself to be something, when he is nothing, he deceiveth
himself."(7) Let us therefore "forbear one another in love, endeavoring to keep the
unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace;"(8) for no one who gathers outside that
peace is gathering with Christ; but "he that gathering not with Him scattereth
abroad."(9)
CHAP. 6.--7. Furthermore, whether concerning Christ, or concerning His Church, or any
other matter whatsoever which is connected with your faith and life, to say
nothing of ourselves, who are by no means to be compared with him who said,
"Though we," at any rate, as he went on to say, "Though an angel from heaven preach
any other gospel unto you than that which" ye have received in the lawful and
evangelical Scripture, "let him be accursed."(10) While carrying out this
principle of action in our dealings with you, and with all whom we desire to gain in
Christ, and, amongst other things, while preaching the holy Church which we read
of as promised in the epistles of God, and see to be fulfilled according to
the promises in all nations of the world, we have earned, not the rendering of
thanks, but the flames of hatred, from those whom we desire to have attracted
into His most peaceful bosom; as though we had bound them fast in that party for
which they cannot find any defense that they should make; or as though we so
long before had given injunctions to prophets and apostles that they should insert
in their books no proofs by which it might be shown that the party of Donatus
was the Church of Christ. And we indeed, dear brethren, when we hear false
charges brought against us by those whom we have offended by preaching the
eloquence of truth, and confuting the vanity of error, have, as you know, the most
abundant consolation. For if, in the matters which they lay to my charge, the
testimony of my conscience does not stand against me in the sight of God, where no
mortal eye can reach, not only ought I not to be cast down, but I should even
rejoice and be exceeding glad, for great is my reward in heaven.(1) For in fact I
ought to consider, not how bitter, but how false is what I hear, and how true
He is in defense of whose name I am exposed to it, and to whom it is said, "Thy
name is as ointment poured forth."(2) And deservedly does it smell sweet in
all nations, though those who speak evil of us endeavor to confine its fragrance
within one corner of Africa. Why therefore should we take amiss that we are
reviled by men who thus detract from the glory of Christ, whose party and schism
find offense in what was foretold so long before of His ascent into the heavens,
and of the pouring forth of His name, as of the savor of ointment: "Be Thou
exalted, O God, above the heavens: let Thy glory be above all the earth"?(3)
CHAP. 7.--8. Whilst we bear the testimony of God to this and the like effect against
the vain speaking of men, we are forced to undergo bitter insults from the
enemies of the glory of Christ. Let them say what they will, whilst He exhorts us,
saying, "Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake: for
theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and
persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely for my sake."
What He says in the first instance, "for righteousness' sake," He has repeated
in the words that He uses afterwards, "for my sake;" seeing that He "is made
unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption, that,
according as it is written, He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord."(4) And
when He says, "Rejoice, and be exceeding glad, for great is your reward in
heaven,"(5) if I hold in a good conscience what is said "for righteousness' sake,"
and "for my sake," whosoever willfully detracts from my reputation is against his
will contributing to my reward. For neither did He only instruct me by His
word, without also confirming me by His example. Follow the faith of the holy
Scriptures, and you will find that Christ rose from the dead, ascended into heaven,
sitteth at the right hand of the Father. Follow the charges brought by His
enemies, and you will presently believe that He was stolen from the sepulchre by
His disciples. Why then should we, while defending His house to the best of the
abilities given us by God, expect to meet with any other treatment from His
enemies? "If they have called the Master of the house Beelzebub, how much more
shall they call them of His household?"(6) If, therefore, we suffer, we shall also
reign with Him. But if it be not only the wrath of the accuser that strikes
the ear, but also the truth of tile accusation that stings the conscience, what
does it profit me if the whole world were to exalt me with perpetual praise? So
neither the eulogy of him who praises has power to heal a guilty conscience,
nor does the insult of him, who reviles wound the good conscience. Nor, however,
is your hope which is in the Lord deceived, even though we chance to be in
secret what our enemies wish us to be thought; for you have not placed your hope in
us, nor have you ever heard from us any doctrine of the kind. You therefore
are safe, whatever we may be, who have learned to say, "I have trusted in the
Lord; therefore I shall not slide;"(7) and "In God have I put my trust: I will not
be afraid what man can do unto me."(8) And to those who endeavor to lead you
astray to the earthly heights of proud men, you know how to answer, "In the Lord
put I my trust: how say ye to my soul, Flee as a bird to your
mountain?"(9)
CHAP. 8.--9. Nor is it only you that are safe, whatever we may be, because you are
satisfied with the very truth of Christ which is in us, in so far as it is
preached through us, and everywhere throughout the world, and because, listening to it
willingly, so far as it is set forth by the humble ministry of our tongue, you
also think well and kindly of us,--for so your hope is in Him whom we preach
to you out of His loving-kindness, which extends over you,--but further, all of
you, who also received the sacrament of holy baptism from our ministering, may
well rejoice in the same security, seeing that you were baptized, not into us,
but into Christ. You did not therefore put on us, but Christ; nor did I ask you
whether you were converted unto me, but unto the living God; nor whether you
believed in me, but in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. But if you
answered my question with truthful hearts, you were placed in a state of salvation,
not by the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but by the answer of a good
conscience towards God;(1) not by a fellow-servant, but by the Lord; not by the
herald, but by the judge. For it is not true, as Petilianus inconsiderately
said, that "the conscience of the giver," or, as he added "the conscience of him
who gives in holiness is what we look for to wash the conscience of the
recipient." For when something is given that is of God, it is given in holiness, even
by a conscience which is not holy. And certainly it is beyond the power of the
recipient to discern whether the said conscience is holy or not holy; but that
which is given he can discern with clearness. That which is known to Him who is
ever holy is received with perfect safety, whatever be the character of the
minister at whose hands it is received. For unless the words which are spoken
from Moses' seat were necessarily holy, He that is the Truth would never have
said, "Whatsoever they bid you observe, that observe and do." But if the men who
uttered holy words were themselves holy, He would not have said, "Do not ye after
their works: for they say, and do not."(2) For it is true that in no way do
men gather grapes of thorns, because grapes never spring from the root of a
thorn; but when the shoot of the vine has entwined itself in a thorn hedge, the
fruit which hangs upon it is not therefore looked upon with dread, but the thorn is
avoided, while the grape is plucked.
CHAP. 9.--10. Therefore, as I have often said before, and am desirous to bring home to
you, whatsoever we may be, you are safe, who have God for your Father and His
Church for your mother. For although the goats may feed in company with the
sheep, yet they shall not stand on the right hand; although the chaff may be
bruised together with the wheat, it shall not be gathered into the barn; although
the bad fish may swim in company with the good within the Lord's nets, they shall
not be gathered into vessels. Let no man make his boast even in a good man:
let no man shun the good gifts of God even in a bad man.
CHAP. 10.--11. Let these things suffice you, my beloved Christian brethren of the
Catholic Church, so far as the present business is concerned; and if you hold fast
to this in Catholic affection, so long as you are one sure flock of the one
Shepherd, I am not too much concerned with the abuse that any enemy may lavish on
me, your partner in the flock, or, at any rate, your watch-dog, so long as he
compels me to bark rather in your defense than in my own. And yet, if it were
necessary for the cause that I should enter on my own defense, I should do so with
the geatest brevity and the greatest ease, joining freely with all men in
condemning and bearing witness against the whole period of my life before I
received the baptism of Christ, so far as relates to my evil passions and my errors,
lest, in defending that period, I should seem to be seeking my own glory, not
His, who by His grace delivered me even from myself. Wherefore, when I hear that
life of mine abused, in whatever spirit he may be acting who abuses it, I am
not so thankless as to be grieved. However much he finds fault with any vice of
mine, I praise him in the same degree as my physician. Why then should I disturb
myself about defending those past and obsolete evils in my life, in respect of
which, though Petilianus has said much that is false, he has yet left more
that is true unsaid? But concerning that period of my life which is subsequent to
my baptism, to you who know me I speak unnecessarily in telling of those things
which might be known to all mankind; but those who know me not ought not to
act with such unfairness towards me as to believe Petilianus rather than you
concerning me. For if one should not give credence to the panegyrics of a friend,
neither should one believe the detraction of an enemy. There remain, therefore,
those things which are hidden in a man, in which conscience alone can bear
testimony, which cannot be a witness before men. Herein Petilianus says that I am a
Manichaean, speaking of the conscience of another man; I, speaking of my own
conscience, aver that I am not. Choose which of us you had sooner believe.
Notwithstanding, since there is not any need even of this short and easy defense on
my part, where the question at issue is not concerning the merits of any
individual, whoever he may be, but concerning the truth; of the whole Church, I have
more also to say to any of you, who, being of the party of Donatus, have read
the evil words which Petilianus has written about me, which I should not have
heard from him if I had had no care about the loss of your salvation; but then I
should have been wanting in the bowels of Christian love.
CHAP. 11.--12. What wonder is it then, if, when I draw in the grain that has been
shaken forth from the threshing-floor of the Lord, together with the soil and chaff,
I suffer injury from the dust that rebounds against me; or that, when I am
diligently seeking after the lost sheep of my Lord, I am torn by the briars of
thorny tongues? I entreat you, lay aside for a time all considerations of party
feeling, and judge with some degree of fairness between Petilianus and myself. I
am desirous that you should be acquainted with the cause of the Church; he,
that you should be familiar with mine. For what other reason than because he dares
not bid you disbelieve my witnesses, whom I am constantly citing in the cause
of the Church,--for they are prophets and apostles, and Christ Himself, the
Lord of prophets and apostles,--whereas you easily give him credit in whatever he
may choose to say concerning me, a man against a man, and one, moreover, of
your own party against a stranger to you? And should I adduce any witnesses to my
life, however important the thing he might say would be, it would not be
believed by them, and of this Petilianus would quickly persuade you; especially when
any one would bring forward a plea for me. Since he is an enemy of the Donatist
party, in virtue of this fact he would also continually be considered your
enemy. Petilianus therefore reigns supreme. Whenever he aims any abuse at me, of
whatever character it may be, you all applaud and shout assent. This cause he
has found wherein the victory is possible for him, but only with you for judges.
He will seek for neither proof nor witness; for all that he has to prove in his
words is this, that he lavishes most copious abuse on one whom you most
cordially hate. For whereas, when the testimony of divine Scripture is quoted in such
abundance and in such express terms in favor of the Catholic Church, he
remains silent amidst your grief, he has chosen for himself a subject on which he may
speak amidst applause from you; and though really conquered, yet, pretending
that he stands unmoved, he may make statements concerning me like this, and even
worse than this. It is enough for me,(1) in respect of the cause which I am
now pleading, that whatsoever I may be found to be, yet the Church for which I
speak unconquered.
CHAP. 12.--13. For I am a man of the threshing-floor of Christ: if a bad man, then part
of the chaff; if good, then of the grain. The winnowing-fan of this
threshing-floor is not the tongue of Petilianus; and hereby, whatever evil he may have
uttered, even with truth, against the chaff of this threshing-floor, this in no
way prejudices its grain. But whereinsoever he has cast any revilings or
calumnies against the grain itself, its faith is tried on earth, and its reward
increased in the heavens. For where men are holy servants of the Lord, and are
fighting with holiness for God, not against Petilianus, or any flesh and blood like
him, but against principalities and powers, and the rulers of the darkness of
this world,(2) such as are all enemies of the truth, to whom I would that we
could say, "Ye were sometime darkness, but now are ye light in the Lord,"(3)--where
the servants of God, I say, are waging such a war as this, then all the
calumnious revilings that are uttered by their enemies, which cause an evil report
among the malicious and those that are rash in believing, are weapons on the left
hand: it is with such as these that even the devil is defeated. For when we
are tried by good report, whether we resist the exaltation of ourselves to pride,
and are tried by evil report, whether we love even those very enemies by whom
it is invented against us, then we overcome the devil by the armor of
righteousness on the right hand and on the left. For when the apostle had used the
expression, "By the armor of righteousness on the right hand and on the left," he at
once goes on to say, as if in explanation of the terms, "By honor and
dishonor, by evil report and good report,"(4) and so forth,--reckoning honor and good
report among the armor on the right hand, dishonor and evil report among that
upon the left.
CHAP. 13.--14. If, therefore, I am a servant of the Lord, and a soldier that is not
reprobate, with whatever eloquence Petilianus stands forth reviling me, ought I in
any way to be annoyed that he has been appointed for me as a most accomplished
craftsman of the armor on the left? It is necessary that I should fight in
this armor as skillfully as possible in defence of my Lord, and should smite with
it the enemy against whom I wage an unseen fight, who in all cunning strives
and endeavors, with the most perverse and ancient craftiness, that this should
lead me to hate Petilianus, and so be unable to fulfill the command which Christ
has given, that we should "love our enemies."(1) But from this may I be saved
by the mercy of Him who loved me, and gave Himself for me, so that, as He hung
upon the cross, He said, "Father, forgive them; for they know not what they
do;"(2) and so taught me to say of Petilianus and all other enemies of mine like
him "Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do."
CHAP. 14.--15. Furthermore, if I have obtained from you, in accordance with my earnest
endeavors, that, laying aside from your minds all prejudice of party, you
should be impartial judges between Petilianus and myself I will show to you that he
has not replied to what I wrote, that you may understand that he has been
compelled by lack of truth to abandon the dispute, and also see what revilings he
has allowed himself to utter against the man who so conducted it that he had no
reply to make. And yet what I am going to say displays itself with such manifest
clearness, that, even though your minds were estranged from me by party
prejudice and personal hatred, yet, if you would only read what is written on both
sides, you could not but confess among yourselves, in your inmost hearts, that I
have spoken truth.
16. For, in replying to the former part of his writings, which then alone
had come into my hands, without taking any notice of his wordy and sacrilegious
revilings, where he says, "Let those men cast in our teeth our twice-repeated
baptism, who, under the name of baptism, have polluted their souls with a
guilty washing; whom I hold to be so obscene that no manner of filth is less clean
than they; whose lot it has been, by a perversion of cleanliness, to be defiled
by the water wherein they washed;" I thought that what follows was worthy of
discussion and refutation, where he says, "For what we look for is the conscience
of the giver, that the conscience of the recipient may thereby be cleansed;'
and I asked what means were to be found for cleansing one who receives baptism
when the conscience of the giver is polluted, without the knowledge of him who
is to receive the sacrament at his hands.(3)
CHAP. 15.--17. Read now the most profuse revilings which he has poured forth whilst
puffed up with indignation against me, and see whether he has given me any answer,
when I ask what means are to be found for cleansing one who receives baptism
when the conscience of the giver is polluted, without the knowledge of him who
receives the sacrament at his hands. I beg of you to search minutely, to examine
every page, to reckon every line, to ponder every word, to sift the meaning of
each syllable, and tell me, if you can discover it, where he has made answer
to the question, What means are to be found for cleansing the conscience of the
recipient who is unaware that the conscience of the giver is polluted?
18. For how did it bear upon the point that he added a phrase which he
said was suppressed by me, maintaining that he had written in the following terms:
"The conscience of him who gives in holiness is what we look for to cleanse
the conscience of the recipient?" For to prove to you that it was not suppressed
by me, its addition in no way hinders my inquiry, or makes up the deficiency
which was found in him. For in the face of those very words I ask again, and I
beg of you to see whether he has given any answer, If "the conscience of him who
gives in holiness is what we look for to cleanse the conscience of the
recipient," what means are to be found for cleansing the conscience of the recipient
when the conscience of the giver is stained with guilt, without the knowledge of
him who is to receive the sacrament at his hands? I insist upon an answer being
given to this. Do not allow that any one should be prejudiced by revilings
irrelevant to the matter in hand. If the conscience of him who gives in holiness
is what we look for,--observe that I do not say "the conscience of him who
gives," but that I added the words, "of him who gives in holiness,"--if the
conscience, then, of him who gives in holiness is what we look for, what means are to
be found for cleansing one who receives baptism when the conscience of the giver
is polluted, without the knowledge of him who is to receive the sacrament at
his hands?
CHAP. 16.--19. Let him go now, and with panting lungs and swollen throat find fault
with me as a mere dialectician. Nay, let him summon, not me, but the science of
dialectics itself, to the bar of popular opinion as a forger of lies, and let him
open his mouth to its widest against it, with all the noisiest uproar of a
special pleader. Let him say whatever he pleases before the inexperienced, that so
the learned may be moved to wrath, while the ignorant are deceived. Let him
call me, in virtue of my rhetoric, by the name of the orator Tertullus, by whom
Paul was accused;(1) and let him give himself the name of Advocate,(2) in virtue
of the pleading in which he boasts his former power, and for this reason
delude himself with the notion that he is, or rather was, a namesake of the Holy
Ghost. Let him, with all my heart, exaggerate the foulness of the Manichaeans, and
endeavor to divert it on to me by his barking. Let him quote all the exploits
of those who have been condemned, whether known or unknown to me; and let him
turn into the calumnious imputation of a prejudged crime, by some new right
entirely his own, the fact that a former friend of mine there named me in my
absence to the better securing of his own defense. Let him read the titles that have
been placed upon my letters by himself or by his friends, as suited their
pleasure, and boast that he has, as it were, involved me hopelessly in their
expressions. When I acknowledge certain eulogies of bread, uttered in all simplicity
and merriment, let him take away my character with the absurd imputations of
poisonous baseness and madness. And let him entertain so bad an opinion of your
understanding, as to imagine that he can be believed when he declares that
pernicious love-charms were given to a woman, not only with the knowledge, but
actually with the complicity(3) of her husband. What the man who was afterwards to
ordain me bishop(4) wrote about me in anger, while I was as yet a priest, he may
freely seek to use as evidence against me. That the same man sought and
obtained forgiveness from a holy Council for the wrong he thus had done me, he is
equally at liberty to ignore as being in my favor,--being either so ignorant or so
forgetful of Christian gentleness, and the commandment of the gospel, that he
brings as an accusation against a brother what is wholly unknown to that brother
himself, as he humbly entreats that pardon may in kindness be extended to him.
CHAP. 17.--20. Let him further go on, in his discourse of many but manifestly empty
words, to matters of which he is wholly ignorant, or in which rather he abuses the
ignorance of the mass of those who hear him, and from the confession of a
certain woman, that she had called herself a catechumen of the Manichaeans, being
already a full member of the Catholic Church, let him say or write what he
pleases concerning their baptism,--not knowing, or pretending not to know, that the
name of catechumen is not bestowed among them upon persons to denote that they
are at some future time to be baptized, but that this name is given to such as
are also called Hearers, on the supposition that they cannot observe what are
considered the higher and greater commandments, which are observed by those whom
they think right to distinguish and honor by the name of Elect. Let him also
maintain with wonderful rashness, either as himself deceived or as seeking to
deceive, that I was a presbyter among the Manichaeans. Let him set forth and
refute, in whatever sense seems good to him, the words of the third book of my
Confessions, which, both in themselves, and from much that I have said before and
since, are perfectly clear to all who read them. Lastly, let him triumph in my
stealing his words, because I have suppressed two of them, as though the victory
were his upon their restoration.
CHAP. 18.--21. Certainly in all these things, as you can learn or refresh your memory
by reading his letter, he has given free scope to the impulse of his tongue,
with all the license of boasting which he chose to use, but nowhere has he told us
where means are to be found for cleansing the conscience of the recipient,
when that of the giver has been stained with sin without his knowing it. But amid
all his noise, and after all his noise, serious as it is, too terrible as he
himself supposes it to be, I deliberately, as it is said, and to the purpose,(5)
ask this question once again:" If the conscience of him who gives in holiness
is what we look for, what means are to be found for cleansing one who receives
baptism without knowing that the conscience of the giver is stained with sin?
And throughout his whole epistle I find nothing said in answer to this question.
CHAP. 19.--22. For perhaps some one of you will say to me, All these things which he
said against you he wished to have force for this purpose, that he might take
away your character, and through you the character of those with whom you hold
communion, that neither they themselves, nor those whom you endeavor to bring over
to your communion, may hold you to be of any further importance. But, in
deciding whether he has given no answer to the words of your epistle, we must look
at them in the light of the passage in which he proposed them for consideration.
Let us then do so: let us look at his writings in the light of that very
passage. Passing over, therefore, the passage in which I sought to introduce my
subject to the reader, and to ignore those few prefatory words of his, which were
rather insulting than revelant to the subject under discussion, I go on to say,
"He says, 'What we look for is the conscience of the giver, to cleanse that of
the recipient.' But supposing the conscience of the giver is concealed from
view, and perhaps defiled with sin, how will it be able to cleanse the conscience
of the recipient, if, as he says, 'what we look for is the conscience of the
giver, to cleanse that of the recipient?' For if he should say that it makes no
matter to the recipient what amount of evil may be concealed from view in the
conscience of the giver, perhaps that ignorance may have such a degree of
efficacy as this, that a man cannot be defiled by the guilt of the conscience of him
from whom he receives baptism, so long as he is unaware of it. Let it then be
granted that the guilty conscience of his neighbor cannot defile a man so long as
he is unaware of it;but is it therefore clear that it can further cleanse him
from his own guilt? Whence then is a man to be cleansed who receives baptism,
when the conscience of the giver is polluted without the knowledge of him who is
to receive it, especially when he goes on to say, 'For he who receives faith
from the faithless receives not faith but guilt?'"(1)
CHAP. 20.--23. All these statements in my letter Petilianus set before himself for
refutation. Let us see, therefore, whether he has refuted them; whether he has made
any answer to them at all. For I add the words which he calumniously accuses
me of having suppressed, and, having done so, I ask him again the same question
in an even shorter form; for by adding these two words he has helped me much in
shortening this proposition. If the conscience of him who gives in holiness is
what we look for to cleanse that of the recipient, and if he who has received
his faith wittingly from one that is faithless, receives not faith but guilt,
where shall we find means to cleanse the conscience of the recipient, when he
has not known that the conscience of the giver is stained with guilt, and when he
receives his faith unwittingly from one that is faithless? I ask, where shall
we find means to cleanse it? Let him tell us; let him not pass off into another
subject; let him not cast a mist over the eyes of the inexperienced. To end
with, at any rate, after many tortuous circumlocutions have been interposed and
thoroughly worked out, let him at last tell us where we shall find means to
cleanse the conscience of the recipient when the stains of guilt in the conscience
of the faithless baptizer are concealed from view, if the conscience of him who
gives in holiness is what we look for to cleanse that of the recipient, and if
he who has received his faith wittingly from one that is faithless, receives
not faith but guilt? For the man in question receives it from a faithless man
who has not the conscience of one who gives in holiness, but a conscience stained
with guilt, and veiled from view. Where then shall we find means to cleanse
his conscience? whence then does he receive his faith? For if he is neither then
cleansed, nor then receives faith, when the faithlessness and guilt of the
baptizer are concealed, why, when these are afterwards brought to light and
condemned, is he not then baptized afresh, that he may be cleansed and receive faith?
But if, while the faithlessness and guilt of the other are concealed, he is
cleansed and does receive faith, whence does he obtain his cleansing, whence does
he receive faith, when there is not the conscience of one that gives in
holiness to cleanse the conscience of the recipient? Let him tell us this; let him
make reply to this: Whence does he obtain his cleansing, whence does he receive
faith, if the conscience of him that gives in holiness is what we look for to
cleanse the conscience of the recipient, seeing that this does not exist, when the
baptizer conceals his character of faithlessness and guilt? To this no answer
has been made whatever.
CHAP. 21.--24. But see, when he is reduced to straits in the argument, he again makes
an attack on me full of mist and wind, that the calm clearness of the truth may
be obscured; and through the extremity of his want he becomes full of
resources, shown not in saying what is true, but in unbought empty revilings. Hold fast,
with the keenest attention and utmost perseverance, what he ought to
answer,--that is, where means may be found for cleansing the conscience of the recipient
when the stains in that of the giver are concealed,--lest possibly the blast
of his eloquence should wrest this from your hands, and you in turn should be
carried away by the dark tempest of his turgid discourse, so as wholly to fail in
seeing whence he has digressed, and to what point he should return; and see
where the man can wander, whilst he cannot stand in the matter which he has
undertaken. For see how much he says, through having nothing that he ought to say.
He says "that I slide in slippery places, but am held up; that I neither destroy
nor confirm the objections that I make; that I devise uncertain things in the
place of certainty; that I do not permit my readers to believe what is true,
but cause them to look with increased suspicion on what is doubtful." He says
"that I have the accursed talents of the Academic philosopher Carneades."(1) He
endeavors to insinuate what the Academics think of the falseness or the falsehood
of human sensation, showing in this also that he is wholly without knowledge
of what he says. He declares that "it is said by them that snow is black,
whereas it is white; and that silver is black; and that a tower is round, or free
from projections, when it is really angular; that an oar is broken in the water,
while it is whole."(2) And all this because, when he had said that "the
conscience of him that gives," or "of him that gives in holiness, is what we look for
to cleanse the conscience of the recipient," I said in reply, What if the
conscience of the giver be hidden from sight, and possibly be stained with guilt?
Here you have his black snow, and black silver, and his tower round instead of
angular, and the oar in the water broken while yet whole, in that I suggested a
state of the case which might be conceived, and could not really exist, that the
conscience of the giver might be hidden from view, and possibly might be
stained with guilt
25. Then he continues in the same strain, and cries out: "What is that
what if? what is that possibly? except the uncertain and wavering hesitation of
one who doubts, of whom your poet says'--
'What if I now return to those who say, What if the sky should fall?'"(2)
Does he mean that when I said, What if the conscience of the giver be hidden
from sight, and possibly be stained with guilt? that it is much the same as if I
had said, What if the sky should fall? There certainly is the phrase What if,
because it is possible that it may be hidden from view, and it is possible that
it may not. For when it is not known what the giver is thinking of, or what
crime he has committed, then his conscience is certainly hidden from the view of
the recipient; but when his sin is plainly manifest, then it is not hidden. I
used the expression, And possibly may be stained with guilt, because it is
possible that it may be hidden from view and yet be pure; and again, it is possible
that it may be hidden from view and be stained with guilt. This is the meaning
of the What if; this the meaning of the Possibly. Is this at all like "What if
the sky should fall?" O how often have men been convicted, how often have they
confessed themselves that they had consciences stained with guilt and adultery,
whilst men were unwittingly baptized by them after they were degraded by the
sin subsequently brought to light, and yet the sky did not fall ! What have we
here to do with Pilus and Furius,(3) who defended the cause of injustice against
justice? What have we here to do with the atheist Diagoras,(4) who denied that
there was any God, so that he would seem to be the man of whom the prophet
spoke beforehand, "The fool hath said in his heart there is no God?"(5) What have
we here to do with these? Why were their names brought in, except that they
might make a diversion in favor of a man who had nothing to say? that while he is
at any rate saying something, though needlessly, about these, the matter in
hand may seem to be progressing, and an answer may be supposed to be made to a
question which remains without an answer?
CHAP. 22.--26. Lastly, if these two or three words, What if, and Possibly, are so
absolutely intolerable, that on their account we should have aroused from their long
sleep the Academics, and Carneades, and Pilus, and Furius, and Diagoras, and
black snow, and the falling of the sky, and everything else that is equally
senseless and absurd, let them be removed from our argument. For, as a matter of
fact, it is by no means impossible to express what we desire to say without them.
There is quite sufficient for our purpose in what is found a little later, and
has been introduced by himself from my letter: "By what means then is he to be
cleansed who receives baptism when the conscience of the giver is polluted,
and that without the knowledge of him who is to receive the sacrament?"(1) Do you
acknowledge that here there is no What if, no Possibly? Well then, let an
answer be given. Give close heed, test he be found to answer this in what follows.
"But," says he, "I bind you in your cavilling to the faith of believing, that
you may not wander further from it. Why do you turn away your life from errors
by arguments of folly? Why do you disturb the system of belief in respect of
matters without reason? By this one word I bind and convince you." It was
Petilianus that said this, not I. These words are from the letter of Petilianus; but
from that letter, to which I just now added the two words which he accuses me of
having suppressed, showing that, notwithstanding their addition, the pertinency
of my question, to which he makes no answer, remains with greater brevity and
simplicity. It is beyond dispute that these two words are, In holiness, and
Wittingly: so that it should not be, "The conscience of him who gives," but "The
conscience of him who gives in holiness;" and that it should not be, "He who has
received his faith from one that is faithless," but "He who has wittingly
received his faith from one that is faithless." And yet I had not really suppressed
these words; but I had not found them in the copy which was placed in my
hands. It is possible enough that it was incorrect; nor indeed is it wholly beyond
the possibility of belief that even by this suggestion Academic grudge should be
roused against me, and that it should be asserted that, in declaring the copy
to be incorrect, I had said much the same sort of thing as if I had declared
that snow was black. For why should I repay in kind his rash suggestion, and say
that, though he pretends that I suppressed the words, he really added them
afterwards himself, since the copy, which is not angry, can confirm that mark of
incorrectness, without any abusive rashness on my part?
CHAP. 23.--27. And, in the first place, with regard to that first expression, "Of him
who gives in holiness," it does not interfere in the least with my inquiry, by
which he is so much distressed, whether I use the expression, "If the conscience
of him that gives is what we look for," or the fuller phrase, "If the
conscience of him that gives in holiness is what we look for, to cleanse the conscience
of the recipient," by what means then is he to be cleansed who receives
baptism if the conscience of the giver is polluted, without the knowledge of him who
is to receive the sacrament? And with regard to the other word that is added,
"wittingly," so that the sentence should not run," He who has received his faith
from one that is faithless," but "He who has wittingly received his faith from
one that is faithless, receives not faith but guilt," I confess that I had
said some things as though the word were absent, but I can easily afford to do
without them; for they caused more hindrance to the facility of my argument than
they gave assistance to its power. For how much more readily, how much more
plainly and shortly, can I put the question thus: "If the conscience of him who
gives in holiness is what we look for to cleanse the conscience of the recipient,"
and "if he who has wittingly received his faith from one that is faithless
receives not faith but guilt," by what means is he cleansed, from whom the stain
on the conscience of him who gives, but not in holiness, is hidden? and whence
does be receive true faith, who is baptized unwittingly by one that is
faithless? Let it be declared whence this shall be, and then the whole theory of baptism
will be disclosed; then all that is matter of investigation will be brought to
light,--but only if it be declared, not if the time be consumed in
evil-speaking.
CHAP. 24.--28. Whatever, therefore, he finds in these two words,--whether he brings
calumnious accusations about their suppression, or boasts of their being
added,--you perceive that it in no way hinders my question, to which he can find no
answer that he can make; and therefore, not wishing to remain silent, he takes the
opportunity of making an attack upon my character,--retiring, I should have
said, from the discussion, except that he had never entered on it. For just as
though the question were about me, and not about the truth of the Church, or of
baptism, therefore he says that I, by suppressing these two words, have argued as
though it were no stumblingblock in the way of my conscience, that I have
ignored what he calls the sacrilegious conscience of him who polluted me. But if
this were so, the addition of the word "wittingly," which is thus introduced,
would be in my favor, and its suppression would tell against me. For if I had
wished that my defense should be urged on the ground that I should be supposed to
have been unacquainted with the conscience of the man that baptized me, then I
would accept Petilianus as having spoken in my behalf, since he does not say in
general terms, "He that has received his faith from one that is faithless," but
"He that has wittingly received his faith from one that is faithless, receives
not faith but guilt;" so that hence I might boast that I had received not
guilt, but faith, since I could say I did not receive it wittingly from one that
was faithless, but was unacquainted with the conscience of him that gave it. See,
therefore, and reckon carefully, if you can, what an amount of superfluous
words he wastes on the one phrase, "I was unacquainted with" which he declares
that I have used; whereas I never used it at all,--partly because the question
under discussion was not concerning me, so that I should need to use it; partly
because no fault was apparent in him that baptized me, so that I should be forced
to say in my defense that I had been unacquainted with his conscience.
CHAP. 25.--29. And yet Petilianus, to avoid answering what I have said, sets before
himself what I have not, and draws men's attention away from the consideration of
his debt, lest they should exact the answer which he ought to make. He
constantly introduces the expressions, "I have been unacquainted with," "I say," and
makes answer, "But if you were unacquainted with;" and, as though convicting me,
so that it should be out of my power to say, "I was unacquainted with," he
quotes Mensurius, Caecilianus, Macarius, Taurinus, Romanus, and declares that "they
had acted in opposition to the Church of God, as I could not fail to know,
seeing that I am an African, and already well advanced in years," whereas, so far
as I hear, Mensurius died in the unity of the communion of the Church, before
the faction of Donatus separated itself therefrom; whilst I had read the history
of Caecilianus, that they themselves had referred his case to Constantine, and
that he had been once and again acquitted by the judges whom that emperor had
appointed to try the matter, and again a third; time by the sovereign himself,
when they appealed to him. But whatever Macarius and Taurinus and Romanus did,
either in their judicial or executive functions, in behalf of unity as against
their pertinacious madness, it is beyond doubt that it was all done in
accordance with the laws, which these same persons made it unavoidable should be passed
and put in force, by referring the case of Caecilianus to the judgment of the
emperor.
30. Among many other things which are wholly irrevelant, he says that "I
was so hard hit by the decision of the proconsul Messianus, that I was forced to
fly from Africa." And in consequence of this falsehood (to which, if he was
not the author of it, he certainly lent malicious ears when others maliciously
invented it), how many other falsehoods had he the hardihood not only to utter,
but actually to write with wondrous rashness, seeing that I went to Milan before
the consulship of Banto, and that, in pursuance of the profession of
rhetorician which I then followed, I recited a panegyric in his honor as consul on the
first of January, in the presence of a vast assembly of men; and after that
journey I only returned to Africa after the death of the tyrant Maximus: whereas
the proconsul Messianus heard the case of the Manichaeans after the consulship of
Banto, as the day of the chronicles inserted by Petilianus himself
sufficiently shows. And if it were necessary to prove this for the satisfaction of those
who are in doubt, or believe the contrary, I could produce many men, illustrious
in their generation, as most sufficient witnesses to all that period of my
life.
CHAP. 26.--31. But why do we make inquiry into these points? Why do we both suffer and
cause unnecessary delay? Are we likely to find out by such a course as this
what means we are to use for cleansing the conscience of the recipient, who does
not know that the conscience of the giver is stained with guilt: whence the man
is to receive faith who is unwittingly baptized by one that is faithless?--the
question which Petilianus had proposed to himself to answer in my epistle, then
going on to say anything else he pleased except what the matter in hand
required. How often has he said, "If ignorant you were,"--as though I had said, what
I never did say, that I was unacquainted with the conscience of him who
baptized me. And he seemed to have no other object in all that his evil-speaking mouth
poured forth, except that he should appear to prove that I had not been
ignorant of the misdeeds of those among whom I was baptized, and with whom I was
associated in communion, understanding fully, it would seem, that ignorance did not
convict me of guilt. See then that if I were ignorant, as he has repeated so
often, beyond all doubt I should be innocent of all these crimes. Whence
therefore should I be cleansed, who am unacquainted with the conscience of him who
gives but not in holiness, so that I may be least ensnared by his offenses? Whence
then should I receive faith, seeing that I was baptized unwittingly by one
that was faithless? For he has not repeated "If ignorant you were" so often
without purpose, but simply to prevent my being reputed innocent, esteeming beyond
all doubt that no man's innocence is violated if he unwittingly receives his
faith from one that is faithless, and is not acquainted with the stains on the
conscience of him that gives, but not in holiness. Let him say, therefore, by what
means such men are to be cleansed, whence they are to receive not guilt but
faith. But let him not deceive you. Let him not, while uttering much, say nothing;
or rather, let him not say much while saying nothing. Next, to urge a point
which occurs to me, and must not be passed over,--if I am guilty because I have
not been ignorant, to use his own phraseology, and I am proved not to have been
ignorant, because I am an African, and already advanced in years, let him grant
that the youths of other nations throughout the world are not guilty, who had
no opportunity either from their race, or from that age you bring against me,
of knowing the points that are laid to our charge, be they true, or be they
false; and yet they, if they have fallen into your hands, are rebaptized without
any considerations of such a kind.
CHAP. 27.--32. But this is not what we are now inquiring. Let him rather answer (what
he wanders off into the most irrelevant matters in order to avoid answering) by
what means the conscience of the recipient is cleansed who is unacquainted with
the stain on the conscience of the giver, if the conscience of one that gives
in holiness is what we look for to cleanse the conscience of the recipient? and
from what source he receive faith who is unwittingly baptized by one that is
faithless, if he that has wittingly received his faith from one that is
faithless receives not faith but guilt? Omitting, therefore, his revilings, which he
has cast at me without any sound consideration, let us still notice that he does
not say what we demand in what follows. But I should like to look at the
garrulous mode in which he has set this forth, as though he were sure to overwhelm us
with confusion. "But let us return," he says, "to that argument of your fancy,
whereby you seem to have represented to yourself in a form of words the
persons you baptize. For since you do not see the truth, it would have been more
seemly to have imagined what was probable." These words of his own, Petilianus put
forth by way of preface, being about to state the words that I had used. Then
he went on to quote: "Behold, you say, the faithless man stands ready to
baptize, but he who is to be baptized knows nothing of his faithlessness."(1) He has
not quoted the whole Of my proposition and question; and presently he begins to
ask me in his turn, saying, "Who is the man, and from what corner has he
started up, that you propose to us? Why do you seem to see a man who is the produce
of your imagination, in order to avoid seeing one whom you are bound to see, and
to examine and test most carefully? But since I see that you are unacquainted
with the order of the sacrament, I tell you this as shortly as I can: you were
bound both to examine your baptizer, and to be examined by him." What is it,
then, that we were waiting for? That he should tell us by what means the
conscience of the recipient is to be cleansed, who is unacquainted with the stain on
the conscience of him that gives but not in holiness, and whence the man is to
receive not guilt but faith, who has received baptism unwittingly from one that
is faithless. All that we have heard is that the baptizer ought most diligently
to be examined by him who wishes to receive not guilt but faith, that the
latter may make himself acquainted with the conscience of him that gives in
holiness, which is to cleanse the conscience of the recipient. For the man that has
filled to make this examination, and has unwittingly received baptism from one
that is faithless, from the very fact that he did not make the examination, and
therefore did not know of the stain on the conscience of the giver, was
incapacitated from receiving faith instead of guilt. Why therefore did he add what he
made so much of adding,--the word wittingly, which he calumniously accused me of
having suppressed? For in his unwillingness that the sentence should run, "He
who has received his faith from one that is faithless, receives not faith but
guilt," he seems to have left some hope to the man that acts unwittingly. But
now, when he is asked whence that man is to receive faith who is baptized
unwittingly by one that is faithless, he has answered that he ought to have examined
his baptizer; so that, beyond all doubt, he refuses the wretched man permission
even to be ignorant, by not finding out from what source he may receive faith,
unless he has placed his trust in the man that is baptizing him.
CHAP. 28.--33. This is what we look upon with horror in your party; this is what the
sentence of God condemns, crying out with the utmost truth and the utmost
clearness, "Cursed is every one that trusteth in man."(2) This is what is most openly
forbidden by holy humility and apostolic love, as Paul declares, "Let no man
glory in men."(3) This is the reason that the attack of empty calumnies and of
the bitterest invectives grows even fiercer against us, that when human authority
is as it were overthrown, there may remain no ground of hope for those to whom
we administer the word and sacrament of God in accordance with the
dispensation entrusted unto us. We make answer to them: How long do you rest your support
on man? The venerable society of the Catholic Church makes answer to them:
"Truly my soul waiteth upon God: from Him cometh my salvation. He only is my God
and my helper; I shall not be moved."(1) For what other reason have they had for
removing from the house of God, except that they pretended that they could not
endure those vessels made to dishonor, from which the house shall not be free
until the day of judgment? whereas all the time they rather appear, by their
deeds and by the records of the time, to have themselves been vessels of this
kind, while they threw the imputation in the teeth of others; of which said vessels
made unto dishonor, in order that no one should on their account remove in
confusion of mind from the great house, which alone belongs to the great Father of
our family, the servant of God, one who was good and faithful, or was capable
of receiving faith in baptism, as I have shown above, expressly says, "Truly my
soul waiteth upon God" (on God, you see, and not on man): "from Him cometh my
salvation" (not from man). But Petilianus would refuse to ascribe to God the
cleansing and purifying of a man, even when the stain upon the conscience of him
who gives, but not in holiness, is hidden from view, and any one receives his
faith unwittingly from one that is faithless. "I tell you this," he says, "as
shortly as I can: you were bound both to examine your baptizer, and to be
examined by him."
CHAP. 29.--34. I entreat of you, pay attention to this: I ask where the means shall be
found for cleansing the conscience of the recipient, when he is not acquainted
with the stain upon the conscience of him that gives but not in holiness, if
the conscience of him that gives in holiness is waited for to cleanse the
conscience of the recipient? and from what source he is to receive faith, who is
unwittingly baptized by one that is faithless, if, whosoever has received his faith
wittingly. from one that is faithless, receives not faith but guilt? and he
answers me, that both the baptizer and the baptized should be subjected to
examination. And for the proof of this point, out of which no question arises, he
adduces the example of John, in that he was examined by those who asked him who he
claimed to be,(2) and that he also in turn examined those to whom he says, "O
generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come?"(3)
What has this to do with the subject? What has this to do with the question under
discussion? God had vouchsafed to John the testimony of most eminent holiness
of life, confirmed by the previous witness of the noblest prophecy, I both when
he was conceived, and when he was born. But the Jews put their question,
already believing him to be a saint, to find out which of the saints he maintained
himself to be, or whether he was himself the saint of saints, that is, Christ
Jesus. So much favor indeed was shown to him, that credence would at once have
been given to whatever he might have said about himself. If, therefore, we are to
follow this precedent in declaring that each several baptizer is now to be
examined, then each must also be believed, whatever he may say of himself. But who
is there that is made up of deceit, whom we know that the Holy Spirit flees
from, in accordance with the Scripture,(4) who would not wish the best to be
believed of him, or who would hesitate to bring this about by the use of any words
within his reach? Accordingly, when he shall have been asked who he is, and
shall have answered that he is the faithful dispenser of God's ordinances, and
that his conscience is not polluted with the stain of any crime, will this be the
whole examination, or will there be a further more careful investigation into
his character and life? Assuredly there will. But it is not written that this
was done by those who in the desert of Jordan asked John who he was.
CHAP. 30.--35. Accordingly this precedent is wholly without bearing on the matter in
hand. We might rather say that the declaration of the apostle sufficiently
inculcates this care, when he says, "Let these also first be proved; then let them
use the office of a deacon, being found blameless."(5) And since this is done
anxiously and habitually in both parties, by almost all concerned, how comes it
that so many are found to be reprobates subsequently to the time of having
undertaken this ministry, except that, on the one hand, human care is often deceived,
and, on the other hand, those who have begun well occasionally deteriorate?
And since things of this sort happen so frequently as to allow no man to hide
them or to forget them, what is the reason that Petilianus now teaches us
insultingly, in a few words, that the baptizer ought to be examined by the candidate
for baptism, since our question is, by what means the conscience of the recipient
is to be cleansed, when the stain on the conscience of him that gives, but not
in holiness, has been concealed from view, if the conscience of one that gives
in holiness is what we look for to cleanse the conscience of the recipient.
"Since I see," he says, "that you are unacquainted with the order of the
sacrament, I tell you this as shortly as I can: you were bound both to examine your
baptizer, and to be examined by him." What an answer to make! He is surrounded in
so many places by such a multitude of men that have been baptized by ministers
who, having in the first instance seemed righteous and chaste, have
subsequently been convicted and degraded in consequence of the disclosure of their faults:
and he thinks that he is avoiding the force of this question, in which we ask
by what means the conscience of the recipient is to be cleansed, when he is
unacquainted with the stain upon the conscience of him that gives but not in
holiness, if the conscience of one that gives in holiness is what we look for to
cleanse the conscience of the recipient,--he thinks, I say, that he is avoiding
the force of this question, by saying shortly that the baptizer ought to be
examined. Nothing is more unfortunate than not to be consistent with truth, by which
every one is so shut in, that he cannot find a means of escape. We ask from
whom he is to receive faith who is baptized by one that is faithless? The answer
is, "He ought to have examined his baptizer." Is it therefore the case that,
since he does not examine him, and so even unwittingly receives his faith from
one that is faithless, he receives not faith but guilt? Why then are those men
not baptized afresh, who are found to have been baptized by men that are detected
and convicted reprobates, while their true character was yet concealed?
CHAP. 31.--36. "And where," he says, "is the word that I added, wittingly? so that I
did not say, He that has received his faith from one that is faithless; but, He
that has received his faith wittingly from one that is faithless, receives not
faith but guilt." He therefore who received his faith unwittingly from one that
was faithless, received not guilt but faith; and accordingly I ask from what
source he has received it? And being thus placed in a strait, he answers, "He
ought to have examined him." Granted that he ought to have done so; but, as a
matter of fact, he did not, or he was not able: what is your verdict about him? Was
he cleansed, or was he not? If he was cleansed, I ask from what source? For
the polluted conscience of him that gave but not in holiness, with which he was
unacquainted, could not cleanse him. But if he was not cleansed, command that he
be so now. You give no such orders, therefore he was cleansed. Tell me by what
means? Do you at any rate tell me what Petilianus has failed to tell. For I
propose to you the very same words which he was unable to answer. "Behold the
faithless man stands ready to baptize; but he who is to be baptized knows nothing
of his faithlessness: what do you think that he will receive--faith, or
guilt?"(1) This is sufficient as a constant form of question: answer, or search
diligently to find what he has answered. You will find abuse that has already been
convicted. He finds fault with me, as though in derision, maintaining that I
ought to suggest what is probable for consideration, since I cannot see the truth.
For, repeating my words, and cutting my sentence in two, he says, "Behold, you
say, the faithless man stands ready to baptize; but he who is to be baptized
knows nothing of his faithlessness." Then he goes on to ask, "Who is the man, and
from what corner has he started up, that you propose to us?" Just as though
there were some one or two individuals, and such cases were not constantly
occurring everywhere on either side! Why does he ask of me who the man in question
is, and from what corner he has started up, instead of looking round, and seeing
that the churches are few and far between, whether m cities or in country
districts, which do not contain men detected in crimes, and degraded from the
ministry? While their true character was concealed, while they wished to be thought
good, though really bad, and to be reputed chaste, though really guilty of
adultery, so long they were involved in deceit; and so the Holy Spirit, according to
the Scripture, was fleeing from them.(2) It is from the crowd, therefore, of
these men who hitherto concealed their character that the faithless man whom I
suggested started up. Why does he ask me whence he started up, shutting his eyes
to all this crowd, from which sufficient noise arises to satisfy the blind, if
we take into consideration none but those who might have been convicted and
degraded from their office?
CHAP. 32.--37. What shall we say of what he himself advanced in his epistle, that
"Quodvultdeus, having been convicted of two adulteries, and cast out from among you,
was received by those of our party?"(1) What then (I would speak without
prejudice to this man, who proved his case to be a good one, or at least persuaded
men that it was so), when such men among you, being as yet undetected,
administer baptism, what is received at their hands,--faith, or guilt? Surely not faith,
because they have not the conscience of one who gives in holiness to cleanse
the conscience of the recipient. But yet not guilt either, in virtue of that
added word: "For he that has received his faith wittingly from one that is
faithless, receives not faith but guilt." But when men were baptized by those of whom
I speak, they were surely ignorant what sort of men they were. Furthermore, not
receiving faith from their baptizers, who had not the conscience of one that
gives in holiness, and not receiving guilt, because they were baptized not
knowing but in ignorance of their faults, they therefore remained without faith and
without guilt. They are not, therefore, in the number of men of such abandoned
character. But neither can they be in the number of the faithful, because, as
they could not receive guilt, so neither could they receive faith from their
baptizers. But we see that they are reputed by you in the number of the faithful,
and that no one of you declares his opinion that they ought to be baptized, but
all of you hold valid the baptism which they have already received. They have
therefore received faith; and yet they have not received it from those who had
not the conscience of one that gives in holiness, to cleanse the conscience of
the recipient. Whence then did they receive it? This is the point from which I
make my effort; this is the question that I press most earnestly; to this I do
most urgently demand an answer.
CHAP. 33.--38. See now how Petilianus, to avoid answering this question, or to avoid
being proved to be incapable of answering it, wanders off vainly into irrelevant
matter in abuse of us, accusing us and proving nothing; and when he chances to
make an endeavor to resist, with something like a show of fighting for his
cause, he is everywhere overcome with the greatest ease. But yet he nowhere gives
an answer of any kind to this one question which we ask: If the conscience of
one that gives in holiness is what we look for to cleanse the conscience of the
recipient, by what means is he to be cleansed who received baptism while the
conscience of the giver was polluted, without the knowledge of him who was to
receive it? for in these words, which he quoted from my epistle, he set me forth as
asking a question, while he showed himself as giving no answer. For after
saying what I have just now recited, and when, on being brought into a great strait
on every side, he had been compelled to say that the baptizer ought to be
examined by the candidate for baptism, and the candidate in turn by the baptizer;
and when he had tried to fortify this statement by the example of John, in hopes
that he might find auditors either of the greatest negligence or of the
greatest ignorance, he then went on to advance other testimonies of Scripture wholly
irrelevant to the matter in hand, as the saying of the eunuch to Philip, "See,
here is water; what doth hinder me to be baptized?"(2) "inasmuch as he knew,"
says he, "that those of abandoned character were prevented;" arguing that the
reason why Philip did not forbid him to be baptized was because he had proved, in
his reading of the Scriptures, how far he believed in Christ,--as though he
had prohibited Simon Magus. And again, he urges that the prophets were afraid of
being deceived by false baptism, and that therefore Isaiah said, "Lying water
that has not faith,"(3) as though showing that water among faithless men is
lying; whereas it is not Isaiah but Jeremiah that says this of lying men, calling
the people in a figure water, as is most clearly shown in the Apocalypse.(4) And
again, he quotes as words of David, "Let not the oil of the sinner anoint my
head," when David has been speaking of the flattery of the smooth speaker
deceiving with false praise, so as to lead the head of the man praised to wax great
with pride. And this meaning is made manifest by the words immediately preceding
in the same psalm. For he says, "Let the righteous smite me, it shall be a
kindness; and let him reprove me: but the oil of the sinner shall not break my
head."(5) What can be clearer than this sentence? what more manifest? For he
declares that he had rather be reproved in kindness with the sharp correction of the
righteous, so that he may be healed, than anointed with the soft speaking of
the flatterer, so as to be puffed up with pride.
CHAP. 34.--39. Petilianus quotes also the warning of the Apostle John, that we should
not believe every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God,(6) as
though this care should be bestowed in order that the wheat should be separated
from the chaff in this present world before its time, and not rather for fear
that the wheat should be deceived by the chaff; or as though, even if the lying
spirit should have said something that was true, it was to be denied, because the
spirit whom we should abominate had said it. But if any one thinks this, he is
mad enough to contend that Peter ought not to have said, "Thou art the Christ,
the Son of the living God,"(1) because the devils had already said something
to the same effect.(2) Seeing, therefore, that the baptism of Christ, whether
administered by an unrighteous or a righteous man, is nothing but the baptism of
Christ what a cautious man and faithful Christian should do is to avoid the
unrighteousness of man, not to condemn the sacraments of God.
40. Assuredly in all these things Petilianus gives no answer to the
question, If the conscience of one that gives in holiness is what we look for to
cleanse the conscience of the recipient, by what means is he to be cleansed who
receives baptism, when the conscience of the giver is polluted without the
knowledge of the proposed recipient? A certain Cyprian, a colleague of his from
Thubursicubur, was caught in a brothel with a woman of most abandoned character, and
was brought before Primianus of Carthage, and condemned. Now, when this man
baptized before he was detected and condemned, it is manifest that he had not the
conscience of one that gives in holiness, so as to cleanse the conscience of
the recipient. By what means then have they been cleansed who at this day, after
he has been condemned, are certainly not washed again? It was not necessary to
name the man save only to prevent Petilianus from repeating, 'Who is the man,
and from what corner has he started up, that you propose to us?" Why did not
your party examine that baptizer, as John, in the opinion of Petilianus, was
examined? Or was the real fact this, that they examined him so far as man can
examine man, but were unable to find him out, as he long lay hid with cunning
falseness?
CHAP. 35.--Was the water administered by this man not lying? or is the oil of the
fornicator not the oil of the sinner? or must we hold what the Catholic Church says,
and what is true, that that water and that oil are not his by whom they were
administered, but His whose name was then invoked? Why did they who were
baptized by that hypocrite, whose sins were concealed, fail to try the spirit, to
prove that it was not of God? For the Holy Spirit of discipline was even then
fleeing from the hypocrite? Was it that He was fleeing from him, but at the same
time not deserting His sacraments, though ministered by him? Lastly, since you do
not deny that those men have been already cleansed, whom you take no care to
have cleansed now that he is condemned, see whether, after shedding over the
subject so many mists in so many different ways, Petilianus, after all, in any
place gives any answer to the question by what means these men have been cleansed,
if what we look for to cleanse the conscience of the recipient is the
conscience of one that gives in holiness, such as the man who was secretly unclean could
not have had.
41. Making then, no answer to this which is so urgently asked of him, and,
in the next place, even seeking for himself a latitude of speech, he says,
"since both prophets and apostles have been cautious enough to fear these things,
with what face do you say that the baptism of the sinner is holy to those who
believe with a good conscience?" Just as though I or any Catholic maintained
that that baptism was of the sinner which is administered or received with a
sinner to officiate, instead of being His in virtue of belief in whose name the
candidate is baptized! Then he goes off to an invective against the traitor Judas,
saying against him whatever he can, quoting the testimony of the prophets
uttered concerning him so long a time before, as though he would steep the Church of
Christ dispersed throughout the world, whose cause is involved in this
discussion, in the impiety of the traitor Judas,--not considering what this very thing
should have recalled to his mind, that we ought no more to doubt that that is
the Church of Christ which is spread abroad throughout the world, since this
was prophesied with truth so many years before, than we ought to doubt that it
was necessary that Christ should be betrayed by one of His disciples, because
this was prophesied in like manner.
CHAP. 36.--42. But after this, when Petilianus came to that objection of ours, that
they allowed the baptism of the followers of Maximianus, whom they had
condemned,(4)--although in the statement of this question he thought it right to use his
own words rather than mine; for neither do we assert that the baptism of sinners
is of profit to us, seeing that we maintain it to belong not only to no
sinners, but to no men whatsoever, in that we are satisfied that it is Christ's
alone,--having put the question in this form, he says, "Yet you obstinately aver
that it is right that the baptism of sinners should be of profit to you, because
we too, according to your statement, maintained the baptism of criminals whom we
justly condemned." When he came to this question, as I said before, even all
the show of fight which he had made deserted him. He could not find any way to
go, any means of escape, any path by which, either through subtle watching or
bold enterprise, he could either secretly steal away, or sally forth by force.
"Although this," he says, 'I will demonstrate in my second book, how great the
difference is between those of our party and those of yours whom you call
innocent, yet, in the meantime, first extricate yourselves from the offenses with
which you are acquainted in your colleagues, and then seek out the mode of dealing
with those whom we cast out." Would any one, any man upon the earth, give an
answer like this, save one who is setting himself against the truth, against
which he cannot find any answer that can be made? Accordingly, if we too were to
use the same words: In the meantime, first extricate yourselves from the offenses
with which you are acquainted in your colleagues, and then bring up against us
any charge connected with those whom you hold to be wicked amongst us,--what
is the result? Have we both won the victory, or are we both defeated? Nay,
rather He has gained the victory for His Church and in His Church, who has taught us
in His Scriptures that no man should glory in men, and that he that glorieth
should glory in the Lord.(1) For behold in our case who assert with the
Eloquence of truth that the man who believes is not justified by him by whom he is
baptized, but by Him of whom it is written, "To him that believeth on Him that
justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness,"(2) since we do not
glory in men, and strive, when we glory, to glory in the Lord in virtue of His
own gift, how wholly safe are we, whatever fault or charge Petilianus may have
been able to prove concerning certain men of our communion! For among us,
whatever wicked men are either wholly undetected, or, being known to certain
persons, are yet tolerated for the sake of the bond of unity and peace, in
consideration of other good men to whom their wickedness is unknown, and before whom they
could not be convicted, in order that the wheat may not be rooted up together
with the tares, yet they so bear the burden of their own wickedness, that no
one shares it with them except those who are pleased with their unrighteousness.
Nor indeed have we any apprehension that those whom they baptize cannot be
justified, since they believe in Him that justifieth the ungodly that their faith
may be counted for righteousness.(3)
CHAP. 37.--43. Furthermore, according to our tenets, neither he of whom Petilianus said
that he was cast forth by us for the sin of the men of Sodom, another being
appointed in his place, and that afterwards he was actually restored to our
college,--talking all the time without knowing what he was saying,--nor he whom he
declares to have been penitent among you, in whatever degree their respective
cases do or do not admit of any defense, can neither of them prejudice the
Church, which is spread abroad throughout all nations, and increases in the world
until the harvest. For if they were really wicked members of it that you accuse,
then they were already not in it, but among the chaff; but if they are good,
while you defame their character with unrighteous accusations, they are themselves
being tried like gold, while you burn after the similitude of chaff. Yet the
sins of other men do not defile the Church, which is spread abroad throughout
the whole world, according to most faithful prophesies, waiting for the end of
the world as for its shore, on which, when it is landed, it will be freed from
the bad fish, in company with which the inconvenience of nature might be borne
without sin within the same nets of the Lord, so long as it was not right to be
impatiently separated from them. Nor yet is the discipline of the Church on this
account neglected by constant and diligent and prudent ministers of Christ, in
whose province crimes are in such wise brought to light that they cannot be
defended on any plea of probability. Innumerable proofs of this may be found in
those who have been bishops or clergy of the second degree of orders, and now,
being degraded, have either gone abroad into other lands through shame, or have
gone over to you yourselves or to other heresies, or are known in their own
districts; of whom there is so great a multitude dispersed throughout the earth,
that if Petilianus, bridling for a time his rashness in speaking, had taken them
into consideration, he would never have fallen into so manifestly false and
groundless a misconception, as to think that we ought to join in what he says:
None of you is free from guilt, where no one that is guilty is condemned.
CHAP. 38.--44. For, to pass over others dwelling in different quarters of the
earth,--for you will scarcely find any place in which this kind of men is not
represented, from whom it may appear that overseers and ministers are wont to be
condemned even in the Catholic Church,--we need not look far to find the example of
Honorius of Milevis. But take the case of Splendonius, whom Petilianus ordained
priest after he had been condemned in the Catholic Church, and rebaptized by
himself, whose condemnation in Gaul, communicated to us by our brethren, our
colleague Fortunatus caused to be publicly read in Constantina, and whom the same
Petilianus afterwards cast forth on experience of his abominable deceit. From the
case of this Splendonius, when was there a time when he might not have been
reminded after what fashion wicked men are degraded from their office even in the
Catholic Church? I wonder on what precipice of rashness his heart was resting
when he dictated those words in which he ventured to say, "No one of you is free
from guilt, where no one that is guilty is condemned." Wherefore the wicked,
being bodily intermingled with the good, but spiritually separated from them in
the Catholic Church, both when they are undetected through the infirmity of
human nature, and when they are condemned from considerations of discipline, in
every case bear their own burden. And in this way those are free from danger who
are baptized by them with the baptism of Christ, if they keep free from share
in their sins either by imitation or consent; seeing that in like manner, if
they were baptized by the best of men, they would not be justified except by Him
that justifieth the ungodly: since to those that believe on Him that justifieth
the ungodly their faith is counted for righteousness.
CHAP. 39.--45. But as for you, when the case of the followers of Maximianus is brought
up against you, who, after being condemned by the sentence of a Council of 310
bishops;(1) after being utterly defeated in the same Council, quoted in the
records of so many proconsuls, in the chronicles of so many municipal towns; after
being driven forth from the basilicas of which they were in possession, by the
order of the judges, enforced by the troops of the several cities, were yet
again received with all honor by you, together with those whom they had baptized
outside the pale of your communion, without any question respecting their
baptism,--when confronted, I say, with their case, you can find no reply to make.
Indeed, you are vanquished by an expressed opinion, not indeed true, but
proceeding from yourselves, by which you maintain that men perish for the faults of
others in the same communion of the sacraments, and that each man's character is
determined by that of the man by whom he is baptized,--that he is guilty if his
baptizer is guilty, innocent if he is innocent. But if these views are true,
there can be no doubt that, to say nothing of innumerable others, you are
destroyed by the sins of the followers of Maximianus, whose guilt your party, in so
large a Council, has exaggerated even to the proportions of the sin of those whom
the earth swallowed up alive. But if the faults of the followers of Maximianus
have not destroyed you, then are these opinions false which you entertain; and
much less have certain indefinite unproved faults of the Africans been able to
destroy the entire world. And accordingly, as the apostle says, "Every man
shall bear his own burden;"(2) and the baptism of Christ is no one's except
Christ's; and it is to no purpose that Petilianus promises that he will take as the
subject of his second book the charges which we bring concerning the followers
of Maximianus, entertaining too low an opinion of men's intellects, as though
they do not perceive that he has nothing to say.
CHAP. 40.--46. For if the baptism which Praetextatus and Felicianus administered in the
communion of Maximianus was their own, why was it received by you in those
whom they baptized as though it were the baptism of Christ? But if it is truly the
baptism of Christ, as indeed it is, and yet could not profit those who had
received it with the guilt of schism, what do you say that you could have granted
to those whom you have received into your body with the same baptism, except
that, now that the offense of their accursed division is wiped out by the bond of
peace, they should not be compelled to receive the sacrament of the holy layer
as though they had it not, but that, as what they had was before for their
destruction, so it should now begin to be of profit to them? Or if this is not
granted to them in your communion, because it could not possibly be that it should
be granted to schismatics among schismatics, it is at any rate granted to you
in the Catholic communion, not that you should receive baptism as though it
were lacking in you, but that the baptism which you have actually received should
be of profit to you. For all the sacraments of Christ, if not combined with the
love which belongs to the unity of Christ, are possessed not unto salvation,
but unto judgment. But since it is not a true verdict, but your verdict, "that
through the baptism of certain traditors the baptism of Christ has perished from
the world in general," it is with good reason that you cannot find any answer
to make respecting the recognition of the baptism of the followers of
Maximianus.
47. See therefore, and remember with the most watchful care, how
Petilianus has made no answer to that very question, which he proposes to himself in
such terms as to seem to make it a starting-point from which to say something. For
the former question he has dismissed altogether, and has not wished to speak
of it to us, because I suppose it was beyond his power; nor is he at any time,
up to the very end Of his volume, going to say anything about it, though he
quoted it from the first part of my epistle as though it were a matter calling for
refutation. For even though he has added the two words which he accused me of
having suppressed, as though they were the strongest bulwarks of his position,
he yet lies wholly defenseless, unable to find any answer to make when he is
asked, If the conscience of one that gives in holiness is what we look for to
cleanse the conscience of the recipient, where are we to find means for cleansing
the conscience of the man who is unacquainted with the conscience of him gives,
but not in holiness? and if it be the case that any one who has received his
faith from one that is faithless, receives not faith but guilt, from what source
is he to receive not guilt but faith, who is unwittingly baptized by one that
is faithless? To this question it has long been manifest from what he says that
he has made no answer.
48. In the next place, he has gone on, with calumnious mouth, to abuse
monasteries and monks, finding fault also with me, as having been the founder of
this kind of life.(1) And what this kind of life really is he does not know at
all, or rather, though it is perfectly well known throughout all the world, he
pretends that he is unacquainted with it. Then, asserting that I had said that
Christ was the baptizer, he has also added certain words from my epistle as
though I had set this forth as my own sentiment, when I had really quoted it as his
and yours, and it was inveighed against with most copious harshness, as if it
were I who had said these things against myself, when what he reprehended was
not mine, but his and your sentiment, as I will presently show clearly to the
best of my abilIty.(2) Then he has endeavored to show us, in many unnecessary
words, that Christ does not baptize, but that baptism is administered in His name,
at once in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost; of
which Trinity itself he has said, either because it was what he wished, or
because it was all that he could say, that "Christ is the centre of the Trinity." In
the next place, he has taken occasion of the names of the sorcerers Simon and
Barjesus to vent against us what insults he thought fit. Then he goes on,
keeping in guarded suspense the case of Optatus of Thamugas, that he might not be
steeped in the odium that arose from it, denying that neither he or his party
could have passed judgment upon him, and actually intimating in respect of him,
that he was crushed in consequence of suggestions from myself.
CHAP. 41.--49. Lastly, he has ended his epistle with an exhortation and warning to his
own party, that they should not be deceived by us, and with a lamentation over
those of our party, that we had made them worse than they had been before.
Having therefore carefully considered and discussed these points, as appears with
sufficient clearness from the words of the epistle which he wrote, Petilianus
has made no answer at all to the position which I advanced to begin with in my
epistle, when I asked, Supposing it to be true, as he asserts, that the
conscience of one that gives--or rather, to add what he considers so great a support to
his argument--that the conscience of one that gives in holiness is what we look
for to cleanse the conscience of the recipient, by what means he who receives
baptism is to be cleansed, when, if the conscience of the giver is polluted, it
is without the knowledge of the proposed recipient? Whence it is not
surprising that a man resisting in the cause of falsehood, pressed hard in the straits
of the truth that contradicts it, should have chosen rather to gasp forth mad
abuse, than to walk in the path of that truth which cannot be overcome.
50. And now I would beg of you to pay especial attention to the next few
words, that I may show you clearly what he has been afraid of in not answering
this, and that I may bring into the light what he has endeavored to shroud in
obscurity. It certainly was in his power, when we asked by what means he is to be
cleansed, who receives baptism when the conscience of the giver is polluted
without the knowledge of the proposed recipient, to answer with the greatest
ease, From our Lord God; and at any rate to say with the utmost confidence, God
wholly cleanses the conscience of the recipient, when he is unacquainted with the
stain upon the conscience of him that gives but not in holiness. But when a man
had already been compelled by the tenets of your sect to rest the cleansing of
the recipient on the conscience of the giver, in that he had said, "For the
conscience of him that gives," or "of him that gives in holiness, is looked for
to cleanse the conscience of the recipient," he was naturally afraid lest any
one should seem to be better baptized by a wicked man who concealed his
wickedness, than by one that was genuinely and manifestly good; for in the former case
his cleansing would depend not on the conscience of one that gave in holiness,
but on the most excellent holiness of God Himself. With this apprehension,
therefore, that he might not be involved in so great an absurdity, or rather
madness, as not to know where he could make his escape, he was unwilling to say by
what means the conscience of the recipient should be cleansed, when he does not
know of the stain upon the conscience of him that gives but not in holiness; and
he thought it better, by making a general confusion with his quarrelsome
uproar, to conceal what was asked of him, than to give a reply to his question, which
should at once discomfit him; never, however, thinking that our letter could
be read by men of such good understanding, or that his would be read by those
who had read ours as well, to which he has professed to make an answer.
CHAP. 42.--51. For what I just now said is put with the greatest clearness in that very
epistle of mine, in answering which he has said nothing; and I would beg of
you to listen for a few moments to what he there has done. And although you are
partisans of his, and hate us, yet, if you can, bear it with equanimity. For in
his former epistle, to the first portion of which--the only portion which had
then come into our hands--I had in the first instance made my reply, he had so
rested the hope that is found in baptism in the baptizer, as to say, "For
everything consists of an origin and root; and if anything has not a head, it is
nothing." Since then Petilianus had said this, not wishing anything to be
understood by the origin and root and head of baptizing a man, except the man by whom he
might be baptized, I made a comment, and said "We ask, therefore, in a case
where the faithlessness of the baptizer is undetected, if then the man whom he
baptizes receives faith and not guilt? if then the baptizer is not his origin and
root and head, who is it from whom he receives faith? where is the origin from
which he springs? where is the root of which he is a shoot? where the head
which is his starting-point? Can it be that, when he who is baptized is unaware of
the faithlessness of his baptizer, it is then Christ who is the origin and
root and head?" This therefore I say and exclaim now also, as I did there as well:
"Alas for human rashness and conceit ! Why do you not allow that it is always
Christ who gives faith, for the purpose of making a man a Christian by giving
it? Why do you not allow that Christ is always the origin of the Christian, that
the Christian always plants his root in Christ, that Christ is the Head of the
Christian? Will it then be urged that, even where spiritual grace is dispensed
to those that believe by the hands of a holy and faithful minister, it is
still not the minister himself who justifies, but that One of whom it is said, ' He
justifieth the ungodly'?(1) But unless we admit this, either the Apostle Paul
was the head and origin of those whom he had planted, or Apollos the root of
those whom he had watered, rather than He who had given them faith in briefing;
whereas the same Paul says, 'I have planted, Apollos watered; but God gave the
increase. So that neither is he that planteth anything, neither he that
watereth; but God that giveth the increase."(2) Nor was the apostle himself their root,
but rather He who says, 'I am the vine, ye are the branches.'(3) How, too,
could he be their head, when he says that 'we, being many, are one body in
Christ."(4) and expressly declares in many passages that Christ Himself is the Head of
the whole body? Wherefore, whether a man receives the sacrament of baptism
from a faithful or a faithless minister his whole hope is in Christ, that he fall
not under the condemnation, that ' Cursed is he that placeth his hope in
man!"'(5)
CHAP. 43.--52. These things, I think, I put with clearness and truth in my former
epistle, when I made answer to Petilianus. These things I have also now quoted,
intimating and commending to you the truth that our faith rests on something else
altogether than man, and that we believe that the Lord Christ is the cleanser
and the justifier of men that believe in Him that justifieth the ungodly, that
their faith may be counted unto them for righteousness, whether the man who
administers the baptism be righteous, or such an impious and deceitful man as the
Holy Spirit flees. Then I went on to point out what absurdity would follow were
it otherwise, and I said, as I say now: "Otherwise, if each man is born again in
spiritual grace of the same sort as he by whom he is baptized, and if, when he
who baptizes him is manifestly a good man, then he himself gives faith, he is
himself the origin and root and head of him who is being born; whilst, when the
baptizer is faithless without its being known, then the baptized person
receives faith from Christ, then derives his origin from Christ, then he is rooted in
Christ then he boasts in Christ as his head; in that case all who are baptized
should wish that they might have faithless baptizers, and be ignorant of their
faithlessness. For however good their baptizers might have been, Christ is
certainly beyond comparison better still, and He will then be the Head of the
baptized if the faithlessness of the baptizer shall escape detection. But if it be
perfect madness to hold such a view (for it is Christ always that justifieth he
ungodly, by changing his ungodliness into Christianity; it is from Christ
always that faith is received; Christ is always he origin of the regenerate, and he
Head of the Church), what weight then will those words have, which thoughtless
readers value by their sound, without inquiring what their inner meaning
is?"(1) This much I said at that time; this is written in my epistle.
CHAP. 44.--53. Then a little after, as he had said, "This being so, brethren, what
perversity must that be, that he who is guilty by reason of his own faults should
make another free from guilt, whereas the Lord Jesus Christ says, ' Every good
tree bringeth forth good fruit, but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit: do
men gather grapes of thorns?(2) and again, 'A good man, out of the good
treasure of the heart, bringeth forth good things: and an evil man, out of the evil
treasure, bringeth forth evil things,'"3--by which words Petilianus showed with
sufficient clearness, that the man who baptizes is to be looked on as the tree,
and he who is baptized as the fruit: to this I had answered, If the good tree
is the good baptizer, and his good fruit he whom he has baptized, then any one
who has been baptized by a bad man, even if his wickedness be not manifest,
cannot by any possibility be good, for he is sprung from an evil tree. For a good
tree is one thing; a tree whose quality is concealed, but yet bad, is another.
What else did I wish to be understood by those words, except what I had stated
a little above, that the tree and its fruit do not represent him that baptizes
and him that is baptized; but that the man ought to be received as signified by
the tree, his works and his life by the fruit, which are always good in the
good man, and evil in the evil man, lest this absurdity should follow, that a man
should be bad when baptized by a bad man, even though his wickedness were
concealed, being, as it were, the fruit of a tree whose quality was unknown, but
yet bad? To which he has answered nothing whatsoever.
CHAP. 45.--54. But that neither he nor any one of you might say that, when any one of
concealed bad character is the baptizer,then he whom he baptizes is not his
fruit, but he fruit of Christ, I went on immediately to point out what a foolish
error is consequent also on that opinion; and I repeated, though in other words,
what I had said shortly before: If, when the quality of the tree is concealed,
but evil, any one who may have been baptized by it is born, no of it butt of
Christ, then they are justified with greater holiness who are baptized by wicked
men, whose wickedness is concealed, than they who are baptized by men that are
genuinely and manifestly good.(4) Petilianus then, being hemmed in bythese
embarrassing straits, said nothing about the earlier part on which these remarks
depended, and in his answer so quoted his absurd consequence of his error as
though I had stated it as my own opinion, whereas it was really stated in order
that he might perceive the amount of evil consequent on his opinion, and so be
forced to alter it. Imposing, therefore, this deceit on those who hear and read
his words, and never for a moment supposing that what we have written could
beread, he begins a vehement and petulant invective against me, as though I had
thought that all who are baptized ought to wish that they might have as their
baptizers men who are faithless, without knowing this themselves,since, however good
the men might be whom they had to baptize them, Christ is incomparably better,
who will then be the head ofthe person baptized, if the faithless baptizer
conceal his true character. As though, too, I had thought that those were
justified withgreater holiness who are baptized by evil men, whose character is
concealed, than those who are baptized by men that are genuinely and manifestly good;
when this marvellous piece of madness was only mentioned by me asfollowing
necessarily on the opinion of those who think with Petilianus, that a man, when
baptized, bears the same relation to his baptizer as fruit does to the tree from
which it springs,--good fruit springing from a good tree, evil fruit from an
evil tree,--seeing that they, when they are bidden by me to answer whose fruit
they think a man that is baptized to be when he is baptized by one of secretly bad
character, since they do not venture to rebaptize him, are compelled to
answer, that then he is not the fruit of that man of secretly bad character, but that
he is the fruit of Christ. And so they are followed by a consequence contrary
to their inclination,which none but a madman would entertain,--that if a man is
the fruit of his baptizer when he is baptized by one that is genuinely and
manifestly good, but when he is baptized by one of secretly bad character, he is
then not his fruit, but the fruit of Christ,--it cannot but follow that they are
justified with greater holiness who are baptized by men of secretly bad
character, than those who are baptized by men who are genuinely and manifestly good.
CHAP. 46.--55. Now, seeing that when Petilianus attributes this to me as though it were
my opinion, he makes it an occasion for a serious and vehement invective
against me, he at any rate shows, by the very force of his indignation, how great a
sin it is in his opinion to entertain such views; and, accordingly, whatever he
has wished it to appear that he said against me for holding this opinion will
be found to have been really said against himself, who is proved to entertain
the view. For he shows heroin by how great force on the side of truth he is
overcome, when he cannot find any other door of escape except to pretend that it
was I who entertained the views which really are his own. Just as if those whom
the apostle confutes for maintaining that there was no resurrection from the
dead, were to wish to bring an accusation against the same apostle, on the ground
that he said, "Then is Christ not risen," and to maintain that the preaching of
the apostle was vain, and the faith of those who believed in it was also vain,
and that false witnesses were found against God in those who had said that He
raised up Christ from the dead. This is what Petilianus wished to do to me,
never expecting that any one could read what I had written, which he could not
answer, though very anxious that men should believe him to have answered it. But
just as, if any one had done this to the apostle, the whole calumnious
accusation would have recoiled on the head of those who made it so soon as the entire
passage in his epistle was read, and the preceding words restored, on which any
one who reads them must perceive that those which I have quoted depend, in the
same way, so soon as the preceding words of my epistle are restored, the
accusation which Petilianus brings against me is cast back with all the greater force
upon his own head, from which he had striven to remove it.
56. For the apostle, in confuting those who denied that there was any
resurrection of the dead, corrects their view by showing the absurdity which
follows those who entertain this view, however loth they may be to admit the
consequence, in order that, while they shrink in abhorrence from what is impious to
say, hey may correct what they have ventured to believe. His argument continues
thus: "But if there be no resurrection of the dead, then is Christ not risen: and
if Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also
vain. Yea, and we are found false witnesses of God: because we have testified of
God that He raised up Christ; whom He raised not up, if so be that the dead rise
not."(1) in order that, while they fear to say that Christ had not risen, with
the other wicked and accursed conclusions which follow from such a statement,
they may correct what they said in a spirit of folly and infidelity, that there
is no resurrection of the dead. If, therefore, you take away what stands at
the head of this argument, "If there be no resurrection of the dead," the rest is
spoken amiss, and yet must be ascribed to the apostle. But if you restore the
supposition on which the rest depends, and place as the hypothesis from which
you start, "There is no resurrection of the dead," then the conclusion will
follow rightly, "Then is Christ not risen, and our preaching is vain, and your
faith is also vain," with all the rest that is appended to it. And all these
statements of the apostle are wise and good, since whatever evil they have in them is
to be imputed to those who denied the resurrection of the dead. In the same
manner also, in my epistle, take away my supposition, If every one is born again
in spiritual grace of the same character as he by whom he is baptized, and if,
when the man who baptizes is genuinely and manifestly good, he does of himself
give faith, he is the origin and root and head of him who is being born again;
but when the baptizer is a wicked man, and undetected in his wickedness, then
each man who is baptized receives his faith from Christ, derives his origin from
Christ, is rooted in Christ, makes his boast in Christ as his Head:--take
away, I say, this hypothesis, on which all that follows depends, and there remains
a saying of the worst description which must fairly be ascribed to me, viz.,
that all who are baptized should desire that they should have faithless men to
baptize them, and be ignorant of their faithlessness. For however good men they
may have to baptize them, Christ is incomparably better who will then be the
Head of the baptized, if the baptizer be a faithless man, but undetected.(1) But
let the statements that you make be restored, and then it will forthwith be
found that this which depends upon it and follows in close connection from it is
not my sentiment, and that any evil which it contains is retorted on the opinion
which you maintain. In like manner, take away the supposition, If the good
baptizer is the good tree, so that he whom he has baptized is his good fruit, and
if, when the character of an evil tree is concealed, then any one that has been
baptized by it is born, not of it, but of Christ,--take away this hypothesis,
which you were compelled to confess had its origin in your sect and in the
letter of Petilianus, and the mad conclusion which follows from it will be mine, to
be ascribed to me alone, Then they are justified with greater holiness who are
baptized by undetected evil men, than they who are baptized by men that are
genuinely and manifestly good.(2) But restore the hypothesis on which this
depends, and you will at once see both that I have been right in making this statement
for your correction, and that all that with good reason diseases you in this
opinion has recoiled upon your own head.
CHAP. 47.--57. Furthermore, in like manner as those who denied the resurrection of the
dead could in no way defend themselves from the evil consequences which the
apostle proved to follow from their premises, in order to refute their error,
saying, "Then is not Christ raised," with the other conclusions of similar
atrocity, unless they changed their opinions, and acknowledged that there was a
resurrection of the dead; so is it necessary that you should change your opinion, and
cease to rest on man the hope of those who are baptized, if you do not wish to
have imputed to you what we say for your refutation and correction, that they
are justified with greater holiness who are baptized by undetected evil men than
those that are baptized by men that are genuinely and manifestly good. For if
you make your first assertion, see what I say, unless some one shall suppress
this a second time, and make out that I have entertained the opinion which I
quote for your refutation and correction. See what I lay down as my premiss, from
which hangs the statement which I shall subsequently make: If you rest the hope
of those who are to be baptized on the man by whom they are baptized, and if
you maintain, as Petilianus wrote, that the man who baptizes is the origin and
root and head of him that is baptized; if you receive as the good tree the good
man who baptizes, and as his good fruit the man who has been baptized by him;
then you put it into our heads to ask from what origin he springs, from what
root he shoots up, to what head he is joined, from what tree he is born, who is
baptized by an undetected bad man? For to this inquiry, belongs also the
following, to which I have over and over again maintained that Petilianus has given no
reply: By what means is a man to be cleansed who receives baptism while he is
ignorant of the stain upon the conscience of him that gives but not in holiness?
for this conscience of him that gives, or of him that gives in holiness,
Petilianus wishes to be the origin, root, head, seed, tree from which the
sanctification of the baptized has its existence,--springs, begins, sprouts forth, is
born.
CHAP. 48.--58. When we ask, therefore, by what means the man is to be cleansed whom you
do not baptize again in your communion, even when it has been made clear that
he has been baptized by some one who, on account of some concealed iniquity,
did not at the time possess the conscience of one that gives in holiness, what
answer do you intend to make, except that he is cleansed by Christ or by God,
although, indeed, Christ is Himself God over alI, blessed for ever,(3) or by the
Holy Spirit since He too is Himself God, because this Trinity of Persons is one
God? Whence Peter, after saying to a man, "Thou hast dared to lie to the Holy
Ghost," immediately went on to add what was the nature of the Holy Ghost,
saying, "Thou hast not lied unto men, but unto God."(4) Lastly, even if you were to
say that he was cleansed and purified by an angel when he is unacquainted with
the pollution in the conscience of him that gives but not in holiness, take
notice that it is said of the saints, when they shall have risen to eternal life,
that they shall then be equal to the angels of God.(5) Any one, therefore, that
is cleansed even by an angel is cleansed with greater holiness than if he were
cleansed by any kind of conscience of man. Why then are you unwilling that it
should be said to you, If cleaning is wrought by the hands of a man when he is
genuinely and manifestly good; but when the man is evil, but undetected in his
wickedness, then since he has not the conscience of one that gives in holiness,
it is no longer he, but God, or an angel, that cleanses; therefore they who are
baptized by undetected evil men are justified with greater holiness than those
who are baptized by men that are genuinely and manifestly good? And if this
opinion is displeasing to you, as in reality it ought to be displeasing to every
one, then take away the source from which it springs, correct the premiss to
which it is indissolubly bound; for if these do not precede as hypotheses, the
other will not follow as a consequence.
CHAP. 49.--59. Do not therefore any longer say, "The conscience of one that gives in
holiness is what we look for to cleanse the conscience of the recipient," lest
you be asked, When a stain on the conscience of the giver is concealed, who
cleanses the conscience of the recipient? And when you shall have answered, Either
God or an angel (since there is no other answer which you possibly can make),
then should follow a consequence whereby you would be confounded: Those then are
justified with greater holiness who are baptized by undetected evil men, so as
to be cleansed by God or by an angel, than those who are baptized by men who
are genuinely and manifestly good, who cannot be compared with God or with the
angels. But prevail upon yourselves to say what is said by Truth and by the
Catholic Church, that not only when the minister of baptism is evil, but also when
he is holy and good, hope is still: not to be placed in man, but in Him that
justifieth the ungodly, in whom if any man believe, his faith is counted for
righteousness.(1) For when we say, Christ baptizes, we do not mean by a visible
ministry, as Petilianus believes, or would have men think that he believes, to be
our meaning, but by a hidden grace, by a hidden power in the Holy Spirit as it
is said of Him by John the Baptist, "The same is He which baptizeth with the
Holy Ghost."(2) Nor has He, as Petilianus says, now ceased to baptize; but He
still does it, not by any ministry of the body, but by the invisible working of His
majesty. For in that we say, He Himself baptizes, we do not mean, He Himself
holds and dips in the water the bodies of the believers; but He Himself
invisibly cleanses, and that He does to the whole Church without exception. Nor,
indeed, may we refuse to believe the words of the Apostle Paul who says concerning
Him, "Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the Church, and gave
Himself for it, that He might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water
by the word."(3) Here you see that Christ sanctifies; here you see that Christ
also Himself washes, Himself purifies with the self-same washing of water by
the word, wherein the ministers are seen to do their work in the body. Let no
one, therefore, claim unto himself what is of God. The hope of men is only sure
when it is fixed on Him who cannot deceive, since "Cursed be every one that
trusteth in man,"(4) and "Blessed is that man that maketh the Lord His trust."(5)
For the faithful steward shall receive as his reward eternal life; but the
unfaithful steward, when he dispenses his lord's provisions to his fellow-servants,
must in no wise be conceived to make the provisions useless by his own
unfaithfulness. For the Lord says, "Whatsoever they bid you observe, that observe and
do; but do not ye after their works."(6) And this is therefore the injunction
that is given us against evil stewards, that the good things of God should be
received at their hands, but that we should beware of their own evil life, by
reason of its unlikeness to what they thus dispense.
CHAP. 50.--60. But if it iS clear that Petilianus has made no answer to those first
words of my epistle, and that, when he has endeavored to make an answer, he has
shown all the more clearly how incapable he was of answering, what shall I say in
respect of those portions of my writings which he has not even attempted to
answer, on which he has not touched at all? And yet if any one shall be willing
to review their character, having in his possession both my writings and those
of Petilianus, I think he will understand by what confirmation they are
supported. And that I may show you this as shortly as I can, I would beg you to call to
mind the proofs that were advanced from holy Scripture, or refresh your memory
by reading both what he has brought forward as against me, and what I have
brought forward in my answer as against you, and see how I have shown that the
passages which he has brought forward are antagonistic not to me, but rather to
yourselves; whilst he has altogether failed to touch those which I brought
forward as especially necessary, and in that one passage of the apostle which he has
endeavored to make use of as though it favored him, you will see how he found
himself without the means of making his escape.
61. For the portion of this epistle which he wrote to his adherents--from
the beginning down to the passage in which he says, "This is the commandment of
the Lord to us, 'When they persecute you in this city, flee ye into
another;'(1) and if they persecute you in that also, flee ye to a third"--came first into
my hands, and to it I made a reply; and when this reply of ours had fallen, in
turn, into his hands, he wrote in answer to it this which I am now refuting,
showing that he has made no reply to mine. In that first portion, therefore, of
his writings to which I first replied, these are the passages of Scripture
which he conceives to be opposed to us: "Every good tree bringeth forth good fruit,
but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit. Do men gather grapes of
thorns?"(2) And again: "A good man, out of the good treasure of his heart, bringeth
forth good things: and an evil man, out of the evil treasure, bringeth forth evil
things."(3) And again: "When a man is baptized by one that is dead, his washing
profiteth him nothing."(4) From these passages he is anxious to show that the
man who is baptized by one that is dead, his washing profiteth him nothing."(4)
From these passages he is anxious to show that the man who is baptized is made
to partake of the character of him by whom he is baptized; I on the other
hand, have shown in what sense these passages should be received, and that they
could in no wise aid his view. But as for the other expressions which he has used
against evil and accursed men, I have sufficiently shown that they are
applicable to the Lord's wheat, dispersed, as was foretold and promised, throughout the
world, and that they might rather be used by us against you. Examine them
again, and you will find it so.
62. But the passages which I have advanced to assert the truth of the
Catholic Church,, are the following: As regards the question of baptism, that our
being born again, cleansed, justified by the grace of God, should not be
ascribed to the man who administered the sacrament, I quoted these: "It is better to
trust in the Lord than to put confidence in man:"(5) and "Cursed beevery one
that trusteth in man;"(6) and that, "Salvation belongeth unto the Lord;"(7) and
that, "Vain is the help of man;"(8) and that, "Neither is he that planteth
anything, neither he that watereth, but God that giveth the increase;"(9) and that He
in whom men believe justifieth the ungodly, that his faith may be counted to
him for righteousness.(10) But in behalf of the unity of the Church itself,
which is spread abroad throughout all the world, with which you do not hold
communion, I urged that the following passages were prophesied of Christ: that "He
shall have dominion also from sea to sea, and from the river unto the ends of the
earth;"(11) and, "I shall give Thee the heathen for Thine inheritance, and the
uttermost parts of the earth for Thy possession;"(12) and that the covenant of
God made with Abraham may be quoted in behalf of our, that is, of the Catholic
communion, in which it is written, "In thy seed shall all nations of the earth
be blessed;"(13) which seed the apostle interprets, saying, "And to thy seed,
which is Christ."(14) Whence it is evident that in Christ not only Africans or
Africa, but all the nations through which the Catholic Church is spread abroad,
should receive the blessing which was promised so long before. And that the
chaff is to be with the wheat even to the time of the last winnowing, that no one
may excuse the sacrilege of his own separation from the Church by calumnious
accusations of other men's offenses, if he shall have left or deserted the
communion of all nations; and to show that the society of Christians may not be
divided on account of evil ministers, that is, evil rulers in the Church, I further
quoted the passage, "All whatsoever they bid you observe, that observe and do;
but do not ye after their works; for they say and do not."'(15) With regard to
these passages of holy Scripture which I advanced to prove my points, he
neither showed how they ought to be otherwise interpreted, so as to prove that they
neither made for us nor against you, nor was he willing to touch them in any
way. Nay, his whole object was could it have been achieved, that by the tumultuous
outpouring of his abuse, it might never occur to any one at all, who after
reading my epistle might have been willing to read his as well, that these things
had been said by me
CHAP. 51.--63. Next, listen for a short time to the kind of way in which he has tried
to use, in his own behalf, the passages which I had advanced from the writings
of the Apostle Paul. "For you asserted," he says, "that the Apostle Paul finds
fault with those who used to say that they were of the Apostle Paul, saying,
'Was Paul crucified for you? or were ye baptized in the name of Paul?'(16)
Wherefore, if they were in error, and would have perished had they not been corrected,
because they wished to be of Paul, what hope can there possibly be for those
who have wished to be of Donatus? For this is their sole object, that the
origin, and root, and head of him that is baptized should be none other than he by
whom he is baptized."(17) These words, and this confirmation from the writings of
the apostle, he has quoted from my epistle, and he has proposed to himself the
task of refuting them. Go on then, I beg of you, to see how he has fulfilled
the task. For he says, "This assertion is meaningless, and inflated, and
childish, and foolish, and something very far from a true exposition of our faith. For
you would only be right in asserting this, if we were to say, We have been
baptized in the name of Donatus, or Donatus was crucified for us, or we have been
baptized in our own name. But since such things as this neither have been said
nor are said by us,--seeing that we follow the formula of the holy Trinity,--it
is dear that you are mad to bring such accusations against us. Or if you think
that we have been baptized in the name of Donatus, or in our own name, you are
miserably deceived, and at the same time confess in your sacrilege that you on
your part defile your wretched selves in the name of Caecilianus." This is the
answer which Petilianus has made to those arguments of mine, not supposing--or
rather making a noise that no one might suppose--that he has made no answer at
all which could bear in any way upon the question which is under discussion.
For who could fail to see that this witness of the apostle has been adduced by
us with all the more propriety, in that you do not say that you were baptized in
the name of Donatus, or that Donatus was crucified for you, and yet separate
yourselves from the communion of the Catholic Church out of respect to the party
of Donatus; as also those whom Paul was rebuking certainly did not say that
they had been baptized in the name of Paul, or that Paul has been crucified for
them, and yet they were making a schism in the name of Paul. As therefore in
their case, for whom Christ, not Paul, was crucified, and who were baptized in the
name of Christ, not of Paul, and who yet said, "I am of Paul," the rebuke is
used with all the more propriety, "Was Paul crucified for you? or were ye
baptized in the name of Paul?" to make them cling to Him who was crucified for them,
and in whose name they were baptized, and not be guilty of division in the name
of Paul; so in your case, also, the rebuke, Was Donatus crucified for you? or
were ye baptized in the name of Donatus? is used all the more appositely,
because you do not say, We were baptized in the name of Donatus, and yet desire to
be of the party of Donatus. For you know that it was Christ who was crucified
for you, and Christ in whose name you were baptized; and yet, out of respect to
the name and party of Donatus, you show such obstinacy in fighting against the
unity of Christ, who was crucified for you, and in whose name you were baptized.
CHAP. 52.--64. But if you wish to see that the object of Petilianus in his writings
really was to prove "that the origin, and root, and head of him that is baptized
is none other than he by whom he is baptized," and that this has not been
asserted by me without meaning, or childishly, or foolishly, review the beginning of
the epistle itself to which I made my reply, or rather pay careful attention to
me as I quote it. "The conscience," he says, "of one that gives in holiness is
what we look for to cleanse the conscience of the recipient; for he who has
received his faith from one that is faithless, receives not faith but guilt." And
as though some one had said to him, Whence do you derive your proof of this?
he goes on to say, "For everything has its existence from a source and root; and
if anything has not a head, it is nothing; nor does anything well confer a new
birth, unless it be born again of good seed. And this being so, brethren, what
perversity must it be to maintain that he who is guilty by reason of his own
offenses should make another free from guilt; whereas our Lord Jesus Christ
says, 'A good tree bringeth forth good fruit: do men gather grapes of thorns?' And
again, 'A good man, out of the good treasure of his heart, bringeth forth good
things; and an evil man, out of the evil treasure, bringeth forth evil things.'
And again, 'When a man is baptized by one that is dead, his washing profiteth
him nothing.'" You see to what end all these things tend, viz., that the
conscience of him that gives in holiness (lest any one, by receiving his faith from
one that is faithless, should receive not faith but guilt) should be itself the
origin, and root, and head, and seed of him that is baptized. For, wishing to
prove that the conscience of one that gives in holiness is what we look for to
cleanse the conscience of the recipient, and that the receives not froth but
guilt, who wittingly receives his faith from one that is faithless, he has added
immediately afterwards, "For everything has its existence from a source and
root; and if anything has not a head, it is nothing; nor does anything well confer
a new birth, unless it be born again of good seed." And for fear that any one
should be so dull as still not to understand that in each case he is speaking
of the man by whom a person is baptized, he explains this afterwards, and says,
"This being so, brethren, what perversity must it be to maintain that he who is
guilty by reason of his own offenses should make another free from guilt;
whereas our Lord Jesus Christ says, 'A good tree bringeth forth good fruit: do men
gather grapes of thorns?'" And lest, by some incredible stupidity of
understanding, the hearer or seer should be blind enough not to see that he is speaking
of the man that baptizes, he adds another passage, where he actually specifies
the man. "And again," he says, "'A good man, out of the good treasure of his
heart, bringeth forth good things; and an evil man, out of the evil treasure,
bringeth forth evil things;' and again, 'When a man is baptized by one that is
dead, his washing profiteth him nothing,'" Certainly it is now plain, certainly he
needs no longer any interpreter, or disputant, or demonstrator, to show that
the object of his party is to prove that the origin, and root, and head of him
that is baptized is none other than he by whom he is baptized. And yet, being
overwhelmed by the force of truth, and as though forgetful of what he had said
before, Petilianus acknowledges afterwards to me that Christ is the origin and
root of them that are regenerate, and the Head of the Church, and not any one that
may happen to be the dispenser and minister of baptism. For having said that
the apostles used to baptize in the name of Christ, and set forth Christ as the
foundation of their faith, to make men Christians, and being fain to prove
this, too, by passages and examples from holy Scripture, just as though we were
denying it, he says, "Where is now that voice, from which issued the noise of
those minute and constant petty questionings, wherein, in the spirit of envy and
self-conceit, you uttered many involved sayings about Christ, and for Christ, and
in Christ, in opposition to the rashness and haughtiness of men? Lo, Christ is
the origin, Christ, in the head, Christ is the root of the Christian." When,
therefore, I heard this, what could I do but give thanks to Christ, who had
compelled the man to make confession? All those things, therefore, are false which
he said in the beginning of his epistle, when he wished to persuade us that the
conscience of one that gives in holiness must be looked for to cleanse the
conscience of the recipient; and that when one has wittingly received his faith
from one that is faithless he receives not faith but guilt. For, wishing as it
were to show clearly how much rested in the man that baptizes, he had added what
he seems to think most weighty proofs, saying "For everything has its existence
from a source and root; and if anything has not a head, it is nothing." But
afterwards, when be says what we also say, "Lo, Christ is the origin, Christ is
the head, Christ is the root of the Christian," he wipes out what he had said
before, "that the conscience of one that gives in holiness is the origin, and
root, and head of the recipient." The truth, therefore, has prevailed, so that the
man who is desirous to receive the baptism of Christ should not rest his hope
upon the man who administers the sacrament, but should approach in all security
to Christ Himself, as to the source which is not changed, to the root which is
not plucked up, to the head which is not cast down.
CHAP. 53.--65. Then who is there that could fail to perceive from what a vein of
conceit it proceeds, that in explaining as it were the declaration of the apostle, he
says, "He who said, 'I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the increase,'
surely meant nothing else than this, that 'I made a man a catechumen in Christ,
Apollo baptized him; God confirmed what we had done?'" Why then did not
Petilianus add what the apostle added, and I especially took pains to quote, "So then
neither is he that planteth anything, neither he that watereth; but God that
giveth the increase"?(1) And if he be willing to interpret this on the same
principle as what he has set down above, it follows beyond all doubt, that neither
is he that baptizeth anything but God that giveth the increase. For what matter
does it make in reference to the question now before us, in what sense it has
been said, "I planted, Apollos watered. "whether it is really to be taken as
equivalent to his saying, "I made a catechumen, Apollos baptized him;" or whether
there be any other truer and more congruos understanding of it?--for in the
mean time, according to his own interpretation of the words, neither is he that
makes the catechumen anything, neither he that baptizes, but God that gives the
increase. But there is a great difference between confirming what another does,
and doing anything oneself. For He who gives the increase does not confirm a
tree or a vine, but creates it. For by that increase it comes to pass that even a
piece of wood planted in the ground produces and establishes a root; by that
increase it comes to pass that a seed cast into the earth puts forth a shoot.
But why should we make a longer dissertation on this point? It is enough that,
according to Petilianus himself neither he that maketh a catechumen, nor he that
baptizes, is anything, but God that gives the increase. But when would
Petilianus say this, so that we should understand that he meant, Neither is Donatus of
Carthage anything, neither Januarius, neither Petilianus? When would the
swelling of his pride permit him to say this, which now causes the man to think
himself to be something, when he is nothing, deceiving himself?(1)
CHAP. 54.--66. Finally, again, a little afterwards, when he resolved and was firmly pub
posed, as it were, to reconsider once more the words of the apostle which he
had brought up against him, he was unwilling to set down this that I had said,
preferring something else in which by some means or other the swelling of human
pride might find means to breathe. "For to reconsider," he says, "those words
of the apostle, on which you founded an argument against us; he said, 'What is
Apollos, what is Paul, save only ministers of Him in whom ye have believed?'(2)
What else for example, does he say to all of us than this What is. Donatus of
Carthage, what is Januarius, what is Petilianus, save only ministers of Him in
whom ye have believed?" I did not bring forward this passage of the apostle,
but I did bring forward that which he has been unwilling to quote, "Neither he
that planteth is anything, neither he that watereth; but God that giveth the
increase." But Petilianus was willing to insert those words of the apostle, in
which he asks what is Paul, and what is Apollos, and answers that "They are
ministers of Him in whom ye have believed." This the muscles of the heretic's neck
could bear; but he was wholly unable to endure the other, in which the apostle did
not ask and answer what he was, but said that he was nothing. But now I am
willing to ask whether it be true that the minister of Christ is nothing. Who will
say so much as this? In what sense, therefore, is it true that "Neither is he
that planteth anything, neither he that watereth, but God that giveth the
increase," except that he who is something in one point of view may be nothing in
another? For ministering and dispensing the word and sacrament he is something,
but for purifying and justifying he is nothing, seeing that this is not
accomplished in the inner man, except by Him by whom the whole man was created, and who
while He remained God was made man,--by Him, that is, of whom it was said,
"Purifying their hearts by faith;"(3) and "To him that believeth on Him that
justifieth the ungodly."(4) And this testimony Petilianus has been willing to set
forth in my words, whilst in his own he has neither handled it nor even touched
it.
CHAP. 55.--67. A minister, therefore, that is a dispenser of the word and sacrament of
the gospel, if he is a good man, becomes a fellow-partner in the working of the
gospel; but if he is a bad man, he does not therefore cease to be a dispenser
of the gospel. For if he is good, he does it of his own free will; but if he is
a bad man,--that is, one who seeks his own and not the things of Jesus
Christ,--he does it unwillingly, for the sake of other things which he is seeking
after. See, however, what the same apostle has said: "For if I do this thing
willingly," he says, "I have a reward; but if against my will, a dispensation of the
gospel is committed unto me;"(5) as though he were to say, If I, being good,
announce what is good, I attain unto it also myself; but if, being evil, I
announce it, yet I announce what is good. For has he in any way said, If I do it
against my will, then shall I not be a dispenser of the gospel? Peter and the other
disciples announce the good tidings, as being good themselves. Judas did it
against his will, but yet, when he was sent, he announced it in common with the
rest. They have a reward; to him a dispensation of the gospel was committed. But
they who received the gospel at the mouth of all those witnesses, could not be
cleansed and justified by him that planted, or by him that watered, but by Him
alone that gives the increase. For neither are we going to say that Judas did
not baptize, seeing that he was still among the disciples when that which is
written was being accomplished, "Jesus Himself baptized not, but His
disciples."(6) Are we to suppose that, because he had not betrayed Christ, therefore he who
had the bag, and bare what was put therein,(7) was still enabled to dispense
grace without prejudice to those who received it, though he could not be an
upright guardian of the money entrusted to his care? Or if he did not baptize, at
any rate we must acknowledge that he preached the gospel. But if you consider
this a trifling function, and of no importance, see what you must think of the
Apostle Paul himself, who said, "For Christ sent me not to baptize, but to preach
the gospel."(8) To this we may add, that according to this, Apollos begins to
be more important, who watered by baptizing, than Paul, who planted by
preaching the gospel, though Paul claims to himself the relation of father towards the
Corinthians in virtue of this very act, and does not grant this tire to those
who came to them after him. For he says," Though ye have ten thousand
instructors in Christ, yet have ye not many fathers; for in Christ Jesus I have begotten
you through the gospel."(1) He says, "I have begotten you" to the same men to
whom he says in another place, "I thank God that I baptized none of you but
Crispus and Gaius, and I baptized also the household of Stephanus."(2) He had
begotten them, therefore, not through himself, but through the gospel. And even
though he had been seeking his own, and not the things of Jesus Christ, and had
been doing this unwillingly, so as to receive no reward for himself, yet he would
have been dispensing the treasure of the Lord; and this, though evil himself,
he would not have been making evil or useless to those who received it wall.
CHAP. 56.--68. And if this is rightly said of the gospel, with how much greater
certainty should it be said of baptism, which belongs to the gospel in such wise, that
without it no one can reach the kingdom of heaven, and with it only if to the
sacrament be added righteousness? For He who said, "Except a man be born of
water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God,"(3) said Himself
also, "Except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes
and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven."(4) The
form of the sacrament is given through baptism, the form of righteousness
through the gospel Neither one without the other leads to the kingdom of heaven. Yet
even men of inferior learning can baptize perfectly, but to preach the gospel
perfectly is a task of much greater difficulty and rarity. Therefore the teacher
of the Gentiles, that was superior in excellence to the majority, was sent to
preach the gospel, not to baptize; because the latter could be done by many,
the former only by a few, of whom he was chief. And yet we read that he said in
certain places, "My gospel;"(5) but he never called baptism either his, or any
one's else by whom it was administered. For that baptism alone which John gave
is called John's baptism.6 This that man received as the special pledge of his
ministry, that the preparatory sacrament of washing should even be called by the
name of him by whom it was administered; whereas the baptism which the
disciples of Christ administered was never called by the name of any one of them, that
it should be understood to be His alone of whom it is said, "Christ loved the
Church, and gave Himself for it, that He might sanctify and cleanse it with the
washing of water by the word."(7) If, therefore, the gospel, which is
Christ's, but so that a minister also may call it his in virtue of his office of
administering it, can be received by a man even at the hands of an evil minister
without danger to himself, if he does according to what he says, and not after the
example of what he does, how much more may any one who comes in good faith to
Christ receive without fear of contagion from an evil minister the baptism of
Christ, which none of the apostles so administered as to dare to call it his own?
CHAP. 57.--69. Furthermore, if, while I have continued without intermission to prove
how entirely the passages of Scripture which Petilianus has quoted against us
have against us have failed to hurt our cause, he himself has in some cases not
touched at all what I have quoted, and party, when he has endeavored to handle
them, has shown that the only thing that he could do was to fail in finding an
escape from them, you require no long exhortation or advice in order to see what
you ought to maintain, and what you should avoid. But it may be that this has
been the kind of show that he has made in dealing with the testimony of holy
Scripture, but that he has not been without force in the case of the documentary
evidence found in the records of the schism itself. Let us then see in the case
of these too, though it is superfluous to inquire into them after testimony
from the word of God, what he has quoted, or what he has proved. For, after
pouring forth a violent invective against traditors, and quoting loudly many passages
against them from the holy books themselves, he yet said nothing which could
prove his opponents to be traditors. But I quoted the case of Silvanus of Cirta,
who held his own see some little time before himself, who was expressly
declared in the Municipal Chronicles to have been a traditor while he was yet a
sub-deacon. Against this fact he did not venture to whisper a syllable. And yet you
cannot fail to see how strong the pressure was which must have been urging him
to reply that he might show a man, who was his predecessor, not only one of his
party, but a partner, so to speak, in his see, to have been innocent of the
crime of delivering up the sacred books, especially as you rest the whole
strength of your cause on the fact that you give the name of traditor to all whom you
either pretend or believe to have been the successors of traditors in the path
of their communion. Although, then, the very exigencies of your cause would
seem to compel him to undertake the defence of a citizen even of Russicadia, or
Calama, or any other city of your party, whom I should declare to be a traditor,
on the authority of the Municipal Chronicles, yet he did not open his mouth
even in defense of his own predecessor. For what reason, except that he could not
find any mist dark enough to deceive the minds of even the slowest and
sleepiest of men? For what could he have said, except that the charges brought against
Silvanus were false? But we quote the words of the Chronicles, both as to the
date of the fact, and as to the time of the information laid before Zenophilus
the ex-consul.(1) And how could he resist this evidence, being encompassed on
every side by the most excellent cause of the Catholics, while yours was bad as
bad could be? For which reason I quote these words from my epistle to which he
would fain be thought to have replied in this which I am now refuting, that you
may see for yourselves how impregnable the position must be against which he
has been able to find no safer weapon than silence.
CHAP. 58.--70. For when he quoted a passage from the gospel as making against us, where
our Lord says, "They will come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they
are ravening wolves; ye shall know them by their fruits,"(2)--I answered and
said, "Then let us consider their fruits;" and then I at once went on to add the
following words: "You bring up against them their delivery of the sacred books.
This very charge we urge with greater probability, against their accusers
themselves. And not to carry our search too far: in the same city of Constantina,
your predecessors ordained Silvanus bishop at the very outset of his schism. He,
while he was still a sub-deacon, was most unmistakably entered as a traditor in
the archives of the city. If you, on your side, bring forward documents
against our predecessors, all that we ask is equal terms, that we should either
believe both to be true, or both to be false. If both are true, you are
unquestionably guilty of schism, who have pretended that you avoid offenses in the
communion of the whole world, though these were common among you in your own
fragmentary sect. But again, if both are false, you are unquestionably guilty of schism,
who, on account of the false charges of traditors, are staining yourselves with
the heinous offense of severance from the Church. But if we have something to
urge in accusation, while you have nothing, or if our charges are true, while
yours are false, it is no longer matter of discussion how thoroughly your mouths
are closed. What if the holy and true Church of Christ were to convince and
overcome you, even if we held no documents in support of our cause, or only such
as were false, while you had possession of some genuine proof of delivery of
the sacred books, what would then remain for you, except that, if you would, you
should show your love of peace, or otherwise should hold your tongues? For
whatever in that case you might bring forward in evidence, I should be able to say
with the greatest ease and with the most perfect truth, that then you are bound
to prove as much to the full and Catholic unity of the Church, already spread
abroad and established throughout so many nations, to the end that you should
remain within, and that those whom you convict should be expelled. And if you
have endeavored to do this, certainly you have not been able to make good your
proof; and, being vanquished or enraged, you have separated yourselves, with all
the heinous guilt of sacrilege, from the guiltless men who could not condemn on
insufficient proof. But if you have not even endeavored to do this, then with
most accursed and unnatural blindness you have cut yourselves off from the
wheat of Christ, which grows throughout His whole fields, that is, throughout the
whole world until the end, because you have taken offense at a few tares in
Africa."(3) To this, which I have quoted from my former epistle, Petilianus has
made no answer whatsoever. And, at all events, you see that in these few words is
comprised the whole question which is at issue between us. For what should he
endeavor to say, when, whatever course he chose, he was sure to be debated?
71. For when documents are brought forward relating to the traditors, both
by us against the men of your party, and by you against the men of our party,
(if indeed any really are brought forward on your side, for to this very day we
are left in total ignorance of them; nor indeed can we believe that Petilianus
would have omitted to insert them in ibis letter, seeing that he has taken so
much pain to secure the quotation and insertion of those portions of the
Chronicles which bear on the matter in opposition to me),--but still, as I began to
say, if such documents are brought forward both by us and by you,documents of
whose existence we are wholly ignorant to this very day,--surely you must
acknowledge that either both are true, or both false, or ours true and yours false,
or yours true and ours false; for there is no further alternative that can be
suggested.
CHAP. 59.--But according to all these four hypotheses, the truth is on the side of the
communion of the Catholic Church. For if both are true, then you certainly
should not have deserted the communion of the whole world on account of men such as
you too had among yourselves. But if both are false, you should have guarded
against the guilt of most accursed division, which had not even any pretext to
allege of any delivery of the sacred books. If ours are true and yours are
false, you have long been without anything to say for yourselves. If yours are true
and ours are false, we have been liable to be deceived, in common with the
whole world, not about the truth of the faith, but about the unrighteousness of
men. For the seed of Abraham, dispersed throughout the world, was bound to pay
attention, not to what you said you knew, but to what you proved to the judges.
Whence have we any knowledge of what was done by those men who were accused by
your ancestors, even if the allegations made against them were true, so long as
they were held to be not true but false, either by the judges who took
cognizance of the case, or at least by the general body of the Church dispersed
throughout the world, which was only bound to pay heed to the sentence of the judges?
God does not necessarily pardon any human guilt that others in the weakness of
human judgment fail to discover; yet I maintain that no one is rightly deemed
guilty for having believed a man to be innocent who was not convicted. How then
do you prove the world to be guilty, merely because it did not know what
possibly was really guilt in the Africans,--its ignorance arising either from the fact
that no one reported the sin to it, or from its having given credence, in
respect of the information which was given, rather to the judges who took
cognizance of the case, than to the murmurers who were defeated? So far then, Petilianus
deserves all praise, in that, when he saw that on this point I was absolutely
impregnable, he passed it by in silence. Yet he does not deserve praise for his
attempts to obscure in a mist of words other points which were equally
impregnable, which yet he thought could be obscured; or for having put me in the place
of his cause, when the cause left him nothing to say; while even about myself
he could say nothing except what was either altogether false, or undeserving of
any blame, or without any bearing whatsoever upon me. But, in the meantime,
are you, whom I have made judges between Petilianus and myself, possessed of
discrimination enough to decide in any degree between what is true and what is
false, between what is mere empty swelling and what is solid, between what is
troubled and what is calm, between inflammation and soundness, between divine
predictions and human assumptions, between bringing an accusation and establishing
it, between proofs and fictions, between pleading a cause and leading one away
from it? If you have such power of discrimination, well and good; but if you have
it not, we shall not repent of having bestowed our pains on you, for even
though your heart be not converted unto peace, yet our peace shall return unto
ourselves.