A TREATISE CONCERNING THE CORRECTION OF THE DONATISTS, OR EPISTLE CLXXXV
A TREATISE CONCERNING THE CORRECTION OF THE DONATISTS;
OR EPISTLE CLXXXV.(1)
A LETTER OF AUGUSTIN(2) TO BONIFACE, WHO, AS WE LEARN FROM EPISTLE 220, WAS
TRIBUNE, AND AFTERWARDS COUNT IN AFRICA. IN IT AUGUSTIN SHOWS THAT THE HERESY OF
THE DONATISTS HAS NOTHING IN COMMON WITH THAT OF ARIUS; AND POINTS OUT THE
MODERATION WITH WHICH IT WAS POSSIBLE TO RECALL THE HERETICS TO THE COMMUNION OF
THE CHURCH THROUGH AWE OF THE IMPERIAL LAWS. HE ADDS REMARKS CONCERNING THE
SAVAGE CONDUCT OF THE DONATISTS AND CIRCUMCELLIONES, CONCLUDING WITH ADISCUSSION OF
THE UNPARDONABLE NATURE OF THE SIN AGAINST THE HOLY GHOST.(3)
CHAP. 1.--1. I must express my satisfaction, and congratulations, and admiration, my
son Boniface,(4) in that, amid all the cares of wars and arms, you are eagerly
anxious to know concerning the things that are of God. From hence it is clear
that in you it is actually a part of your military valor to serve in truth the
faith which is in Christ. To place, therefore, briefly before your Grace the
difference between the errors of the Arians and the Donatists, the Arians say that
the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost are different in substance; whereas the
Donatists do not say this, but acknowledge the unity of substance in the
Trinity. And if some even of them have said that the Son was inferior to the Father,
yet they have not denied that He is of the same substance; whilst the greater
part of them declare that they hold entirely the same belief regarding the
Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost as is held by the Catholic Church. Nor is
this the actual question in dispute with them; but they carry on their unhappy
strife solely on the question of communion, and in the perversity of their error
maintain rebellious hostility against the unity of Christ. But sometimes, as we
have heard, some of them, wishing to conciliate the Goths, since they see that
they are not without a certain amount of power, profess to entertain the same
belief as they. But they are refuted by the authority of their own leaders; for
Donatus himself, of whose party they boast themselves to be, is never said to
have held this belief.
2. Let not, however, things like these disturb thee, my beloved son. For
it is foretold to us that there must needs be heresies and stumbling-blocks,
that we may be instructed among our enemies; and that so both our faith and our
love may be the more approved,--our faith, namely, that we should not be deceived
by them; and our love, that we should take the utmost pains we can to correct
the erring ones themselves; not only watching that they should do no injury to
the weak, and that they should be delivered from their wicked error, but also
praying for them, that God would open their understanding, and that they might
comprehend the Scriptures. For in the sacred books, where the Lord Christ is
made manifest, there is also His Church declared; but they, with wondrous
blindness, while they would know nothing of Christ Himself save what is revealed in the
Scriptures, yet form their notion of His Church from the vanity of human
falsehood, instead of learning what it is on the authority of the sacred books.
3. They recognize Christ together with us in that which is written, "They
pierced my hands and my feet. They can tell all my bones: they look and stare
upon me. They part my garments among them, and cast lots upon my vesture;" and
yet they refuse to recognize the Church in that which follows shortly after:
"All the ends of the world shall remember, and turn unto the Lord; and all the
kindreds of the nations shall worship before Thee. For the kingdom is the Lord's;
and He is the Governor among the nations."(1) They recognize Christ together
with us in that which is written, "The Lord hath said unto me, Thou art my Son,
this day have I begotten Thee;" and they will not recognize the Church in that
which follows: "Ask of me, and I shall give Thee the heathen for Thine
inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for Thy possession."(2) They recognize
Christ together with us in that which the Lord Himself says in the gospel,
"Thus it behoved Christ to suffer, and to rise from the dead the third day;" and
they will not recognize the Church in that which follows: "And that repentance
and remission of sins should be preached in His name among all nations,
beginning at Jerusalem."(3) And the testimonies in the sacred books are without number,
all of which it has not been necessary for me to crowd together into this
book. And in all of them, as the Lord Christ is made manifest, whether in
accordance with His Godhead, in which He is equal to the Father, so that, "In the
beginning was the Word, and; the Word was with God, and the Word was God;" or
according to the humility of the flesh which He took upon Him, whereby "the Word was
made flesh and dwelt among us;"(4) so is His Church made manifest, not in Africa
alone, as they most impudently venture in the madness of their vanity to
assert, but spread abroad throughout the world.
4. For they prefer to the testimonies of Holy Writ their own contentions,
because, in the case of Caecilianus, formerly a bishop of the Church of
Carthage, against whom they brought charges which they were and are unable to
substantiate, they separated themselves from the Catholic Church,--that is, from the
unity of all nations. Although, even if the charges had been true which were
brought by them against Caecilianus, and could at length be proved to us, yet,
though we might pronounce an anathema upon him even in the grave,(5) we are still
bound not for the sake of any man to leave the Church, which rests for its
foundation on divine witness, and is not the figment of litigious opinions, seeing
that it is better to trust in the Lord than to put confidence in man.(6) For we
cannot allow that if Caecilianus had erred,--a supposition which I make without
prejudice to his integrity,--Christ should therefore have forfeited His
inheritance. It is easy for a man to believe of his fellow-men either what is true or
what is false; but it marks abandoned impudence to desire to condemn the
communion of the whole world on account of charges alleged against a man, of which
you cannot establish the truth in the face of the world.
5. Whether Caecilianus was ordained by men who had delivered up the sacred
books, I do not know. I did not see it, I heard it only from his enemies. It
is not declared to me in the law of God, or in the utterances of the prophets,
or in the holy poetry of the Psalms, or in the writings of any one of Christ's
apostles, or in the eloquence of Christ Himself. But the evidence of all the
several scriptures with one accord proclaims the Church spread abroad throughout
the world, with which the faction of Donatus does not hold communion. The law of
God declared, "In thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed."(7)
The Lord said by the mouth of His prophet, "From the rising of the sun, even
unto the going down of the same, a pure sacrifice shall be offered unto my name:
for my name shall be great among the heathen."(8) The Lord said through the
Psalmist, "He shall have dominion also from sea to sea, and from the river unto
the ends of the earth."(9) The Lord said by His apostle, "The gospel is come unto
you, as it is in all the world, and bringeth forth fruit."(1) The Son of God
said with His own mouth, "Ye shall be witnesses unto me, both in Jerusalem, and
in all Judea, and in Samaria, and even unto the uttermost part of the
earth."(2) Caecilianus, the bishop of the Church of Carthage, is accused with the
contentiousness of men; the Church of Christ, established among all nations, is
recommended by the voice of God. Mere piety, truth, and love forbid us to receive
against Caecilianus the testimony of men whom we do not find in the Church, which
has the testimony of God; for those who do not follow the testimony of God
have forfeited the weight which otherwise would attach to their testimony as men.
CHAP. 2.--6. I would add, moreover, that they themselves, by making it the subject of
an accusation, referred the case of Caecilianus to the decision of the Emperor
Constantine; and that, even after the bishops had pronounced their judgment,(3)
finding that they could not crush Caecilianus, they brought him in person
before the above-named emperor for trial, in the most determined spirit of
persecution. And so they were themselves the first to do what they censure in us, in
order that they may deceive the unlearned, saying that Christians ought not to
demand any assistance from Christian emperors against the enemies of Christ. And
this, too, they did not dare to deny in the conference which we held at the
same time in Carthage nay, they even venture to make it a matter of boasting that
their fathers had laid a criminal indictment against Caecilianus before the
emperor; adding furthermore a lie, to the effect that they had there worsted him,
and procured his condemnation. How then can they be otherwise than persecutors,
seeing that when they persecuted Caecilianus by their accusations, and were
overcome by him, they sought to claim false glory for themselves by a most
shameless life; not only considering it no reproach, but glorying in it as conducive
to their praise, if they could prove that Caecilianus had been condemned on the
accusation of their fathers? But in regard to the manner in which they were
overcome at every turn in the conference itself, seeing that the records are
exceedingly voluminous, and it would be a serious matter to have them read to you
while you are occupied in other matters that are essential to the peace of Rome,
perhaps it may be possible to have a digest(4) of them read to you, which I
believe to be m the possession of my brother and fellow-bishop Optatus; or if he
has not a copy, he might easily procure one from the church at Sitifa; for I
can well believe that even that volume will prove wearisome enough to you from
its lengthiness, amid the burden of your many cares.
7. For the Donatists met with the same fate as the accusers of the holy
Daniel.(5) For as the lions were turned against them, so the laws by which they
had proposed to crush an innocent victim were turned against the Donatists; save
that, through the mercy of Christ, the laws which seemed to be opposed to them
are in reality their truest friends; for through their operation many of them
have been, and are daily being reformed, and return God thanks that they are
reformed, and delivered from their ruinous madness. And those who used to hate
are now filled with love; and now that they have recovered their right minds,
they congratulate themselves that these most wholesome laws were brought to bear
against them, with as much fervency as in their madness they detested them; and
are filled with the same spirit of ardent love towards those who yet remain as
ourselves, desiring that we should strive in like manner that those with whom
they had been like to perish might be saved. For both the physician is irksome
to the raging madman, and a father to his undisciplined son,--the former because
of the restraint, the latter because of the chastisement which he inflicts;
yet both are acting in love. But if they were to neglect their charge, and allow
them to perish, this mistaken kindness would more truly be accounted cruelty.
For if the horse and mule, which have no understanding, resist with all the
force of bites and kicks the efforts of the men who treat their wounds in order to
cure them; and yet the men, though they are often exposed to danger from their
teeth and heels, and sometimes meet with actual hurt, nevertheless do not
desert them till they restore them to health through the pain and annoyance which
the healing process gives,--how much more should man refuse to desert his
fellow-man, or brother to desert his brother, test he should perish everlastingly,
being himself now able to comprehend the vastness of the boon accorded to himself
in his reformation, at the very time that he complained of suffering
persecution?
8. As then the apostle says, "As we have therefore opportunity, let us do
good unto all men, not being weary in well-doing,"(1) so let all be called to
salvation, let all be recalled from the path of destruction,--those who may, by
the sermons of Catholic preachers; those who may, by the edicts of Catholic
princes; some through those who obey the warnings of God, some through those who
obey the emperor's commands. For, moreover, when emperors enact bad laws on the
side of falsehood, as against the truth, those who hold a right faith are
approved, and, if they persevere, are crowned; but when the emperors enact good laws
on behalf of the truth against falsehood, then those who rage against them are
put in fear, and those who understand are reformed. Whosoever, therefore,
refuses to obey the laws of the emperors which are enacted against the truth of
God, wins for himself a great reward; but whosoever refuses to obey the laws of
the emperors which are enacted in behalf of truth, wins for himself great
condemnation. For in the times, too, of the prophets, the kings who, in dealing with
the people of God, did not prohibit nor annul the ordinances which were issued
contrary to God's commands, are all of them censured; and those who did prohibit
and annul them are praised as deserving more than other men. And king
Nebuchadnezzar, when he was a servant of idols, enacted an impious law that a certain
idol should be worshipped; but those who refused to obey his impious command
acted piously and faithfully. And the very same king, when converted by a miracle
from God, enacted a pious and praiseworthy law on behalf of the truth, that
every one who should speak anything amiss against the true God, the God of
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, should perish utterly, with all his house.(2) If any
persons disobeyed this law, and justly suffered the penalty imposed, they might
have said what these men say, that they were righteous because they suffered
persecution through the law enacted by the king: and this they certainly would
have said, had they been as mad as these who make divisions between the members
of Christ, and spurn the sacraments of Christ, and take credit for being
persecuted, because they are prevented from doing such things by the laws which the
emperors have passed to preserve the unity of Christ and boast falsely of their
innocence, and seek from men the glory of martyrdom, which they cannot receive
from our Lord.
9. But true martyrs are such as those of whom the Lord says. "Blessed are
they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake."(3) It is not, therefore,
those who suffer persecution for their unrighteousness, and for the divisions
which they impiously introduce into Christian unity, but those who suffer for
righteousness' sake, that are truly martyrs. For Hagar also suffered persecution at
the hands of Sarah;(4) and in that case she who persecuted was righteous, and
she unrighteous who suffered persecution. Are we to compare with this
persecution which Hagar suffered the case of holy David, who was persecuted by
unrighteous Saul?(5) Surely there is in essential difference, not in respect of his
suffering, but because he suffered for righteousness' sake. And the Lord Himself
was crucified with two thieves;(6) but those who were joined in their suffering
were separated by the difference of its cause. Accordingly, in the psalm, we
must interpret of the true martyrs, who wish to be distinguished from false
martyrs, the verse in which it is said, "Judge me, O Lord, and distinguish(7) my
cause from an ungodly nation."(8) He does not say, Distinguish my punishment, but
"Distinguish my cause." For the punishment of the impious may be the same; but
the cause of the martyrs is always different. To whose mouth also the words are
suitable, "They persecute me wrongfully; help Thou me;"(9) in which the
Psalmist claimed to have a right to be helped in righteousness, because his
adversaries persecuted him wrongfully; for if they had been right in persecuting him, he
would have deserved not help, but correction.
10. But if they think that no one can be justified in using violence,--as
they said in the course of the conference that the true Church must necessarily
be the one which suffers persecution, not the one inflicting it,--in that case
I no longer urge what I observed above; because, if the matter stand as they
maintain that it does, then Caecilianus must have belonged to the true Church,
seeing that their fathers persecuted him, by pressing his accusation even to the
tribunal of the emperor himself. For we maintain that he belonged to the true
Church, not merely because he suffered persecution, but because he suffered it
for righteousness' sake; but that they were alienated from the Church, not
merely because they persecuted, but because they did so in unrighteousness. This,
then, is our position. But if they make no inquiry into the causes for which
each person inflicts persecution, or for which he suffers it, but think that it is
a sufficient sign of a true Christian that he does not inflict persecution,
but suffers it, then beyond all question they include Caecilianus in that
definition, who did not inflict, but suffered persecution; and they equally exclude
their own fathers from the definition, for they inflicted, but did not suffer it.
11. But this, I say, I forbear to urge. Yet one point I must press: If the
true Church is the one which actually suffers persecution, not the one which
inflicts it, let them ask the apostle of what Church Sarah was a type, when she
inflicted persecution on her hand-maid. For he declares that the free mother of
us all, the heavenly Jerusalem, that is to say, the true Church of God, was
prefigured in that woman who cruelly entreated her hand-maid.(1) But if we
investigate the story further, we shall find that the handmaid rather persecuted
Sarah by her haughtiness, than Sarah the handmaid by her severity: for the handmaid
was doing wrong to her mistress; the mistress only imposed on her a proper
discipline in her haughtiness. Again I ask, if good and holy men never inflict
persecution upon any one, but only suffer it, whose words they think that those
are in the psalm where we read, "I have pursued mine enemies, and overtaken them;
neither did I turn again till they were consumed?"(2) If, therefore, we wish
either to declare or to recognize the truth, there is a persecution of
unrighteousness, which the impious inflict upon the Church of Christ; and there is a
righteous persecution, which the Church of Christ inflicts upon the impious. She
therefore is blessed in suffering persecution for righteousness' sake; but they
are miserable, suffering persecution for unrighteousness. Moreover, she
persecutes in the spirit of love, they in the spirit of wrath; she that she may
correct, they that they may overthrow: she that she may recall from error, they that
they may drive headlong into error. Finally, she persecutes her enemies and
arrests them, until they become weary in their vain opinions, so that they should
make advance in the truth; but they, returning evil for good, because we take
measures for their good, to secure their eternal salvation, endeavor even to
strip us of our temporal safety, being so in love with murder, that they commit it
on their own persons, when they cannot find victims in any others. For in
proportion as the Christian charity of the Church endeavors to deliver them from
that destruction, so that none of them should die, so their madness endeavors
either to slay us, that they may feed the lust of their own cruelty, or even to
kill themselves, that they may not seem to have lost the power of putting men to
death.
CHAP. 3.--12. But those who are unacquainted with their habits think that they only
kill themselves now that all the mass of the people are freed from the fearful
madness of their usurped dominion, in virtue of the laws which have been passed
for the preservation of unity. But those who know what they were accustomed to
do before the passing of the laws, do not wonder at their deaths, but call to
mind their character; and especially how vast crowds of them used to come in
procession to the most frequented ceremonies of the pagans, while the worship of
idols still continued,--not with the view of breaking the idols, but that they
might be put to death by those who worshipped them. For if they had sought to
break the idols under the sanction of legitimate authority, they might, in case of
anything happening to them, have had some shadow of a claim to be considered
martyrs; but their only object in coming was, that while the idols remained
uninjured, they themselves might meet with death. For it was the general custom of
the strongest youths among the worshippers of idols, for each of them to offer
in sacrifice to the idols themselves any victims that he might have slain. Some
went so far as to offer themselves for slaughter to any travellers whom they
met with arms, using violent threats that they would murder them if they failed
to meet with death at their hands. Sometimes, too, they extorted with violence
from any passing judge that they should be put to death by the executioners, or
by the officer of his court. And hence we have a story, that a certain judge
played a trick upon them, by ordering them to be bound and led away, as though
for execution, and so escaped their violence, without injury to himself or them.
Again, it was their daily sport to kill themselves, by throwing themselves
over precipices, or into the water, or into the fire. For the devil taught them
these three modes of suicide, so that, when they wished to die, and could not
find any one whom they could terrify into slaying them with his sword, they threw
themselves over the rocks, or committed themselves to the fire or the eddying
pool. But who can be thought to have taught them this, having gained possession
of their hearts, but he who actually suggested to our Saviour Himself as a duty
sanctioned by the law, that He should throw Himself down from a pinnacle of
the temple?(3) And his suggestion they would surely have thrust far from them,
had they carried Christ, as their Master, in their hearts. But since they have
rather given place within them to the devil, they either perish like the herd of
swine, whom the legion of devils drove down from the hill-side into the sea,(1)
or, being rescued from that destruction, and gathered together in the loving
bosom of our Catholic Mother, they are delivered just as the boy was delivered
by our Lord, whom his father brought to be healed of the devil, saying that
ofttimes he was wont to fall into the fire, and oft into the water.(2)
13. Whence it appears that great mercy is shown towards them, when by the
force of those very imperial laws they are in the first instance rescued
against their will from that sect in which, through the teaching of lying devils,
they learned those evil doctrines, so that afterwards they might be made whole in
the Catholic Church, becoming accustomed to the good teaching and example which
they find in it. For many of the men whom we now admire in the unity of
Christ, for the pious fervor of their faith, and for their charity, give thanks to
God with great joy that they are no longer in that error which led them to
mistake those evil things for good,--which thanks they would not now be offering
willingly, had they not first, even against their will, been severed from that
impious association. And what are we to say of those who confess to us, as some do
every day, that even in the olden days they had long been wishing to be
Catholics; but they were living among men among whom those who wished to be Catholics
could not be so through the infirmity of fear, seeing that if any one there
said a single word in favor of the Catholic Church, he and his house were utterly
destroyed at once? Who is mad enough to deny that it was right that assistance
should have been given through the imperial decrees, that they might be
delivered from so great an evil, whilst those whom they used to fear are compelled in
turn to fear, and are either themselves corrected through the same terror, or,
at any rate, whilst they pretend to be corrected, they abstain from further
persecution of those who really are, to whom they formerly were objects of
continual dread?
14. But if they have chosen to destroy themselves, in order to prevent the
deliverance of those who had a right to be delivered, and have sought in this
way to alarm the pious hearts of the deliverers, so that in their apprehension
that some few abandoned men might perish, they should allow others to lose the
opportunity of deliverance from destruction, who were either already unwilling
to perish, or might have been saved from it by the employment of compulsion;
what is in this case the function of Christian charity, especially when we
consider that those who utter threats of their own violent and voluntary deaths are
very few in number in comparison with the nations that are to be delivered? What
then is the function of brotherly love? Does it, because it fears the
shortlived fires of the furnace for a few, therefore abandon all to the eternal fires
of hell? and does it leave so many, who are either already desirous, or
hereafter are not strong enough to pass to life eternal, to perish everlastingly, while
taking precautions that some few should not perish by their own hand, who are
only living to be a hindrance in the way of the salvation of others, whom they
will not permit to live in accordance with the doctrines of Christ, in the
hopes that some day or other they may teach them too to hasten their death by their
own hand, in the manner which now causes them themselves to be a terror to
their neighbors, in accordance with the custom inculcated by their devilish
tenets? or does it rather save all whom it can, even though those whom it cannot save
should perish in their own infatuation? For it ardently desires that all
should live, but it more especially labors that not all should die. But thanks be to
the Lord, that both amongst us--not indeed everywhere, but in the great
majority of places--and also in the other parts of Africa, the peace of the Catholic
Church both has gained and is gaining ground, without any of these madmen being
killed. But those deplorable deeds are done in places where there is an
utterly furious and useless set of men, who were given to such deeds even in the days
of old.
CHAP. 4.--15. And indeed, before those laws were put in force by the emperors of the
Catholic faith, the doctrine of the peace and unity of Christ was beginning by
degrees to gain ground, and men were coming over to it even from the faction of
Donatus, in proportion as each learned more, and became more willing, and more
master of his own actions; although, at the same time, among the Donatists
herds of abandoned men were disturbing the peace of the innocent for one reason or
another in the spirit of the most reckless madness. What master was there who
was not compelled to live in dread of his own servant, if he had put himself
under the guardianship of the Donatists? Who dared even threaten one who sought
his ruin with punishment? Who dared to exact payment of a debt from one who
consumed his stores, or from any debtor whatsoever, that sought their assistance or
protection? Under the threat of beating, and burning, and immediate death, all
documents compromising the worst of slaves were destroyed, that they might
depart in freedom. Notes of hand that had been extracted from debtors were returned
to them. Any one who had shown a contempt for their hard words were compelled
by harder blows to do what they desired. The houses of innocent persons who had
offended them were either razed to the ground or burned. Certain heads of
families of honorable parentage, and brought up with a good education were carried
away half dead after their deeds of violence, or bound to the mill, and
compelled by blows to turn it round, after the fashion of the meanest beasts of
burden. For what assistance from the laws rendered by the civil powers was ever of
any avail against them? What official ever ventured so much as to breathe in
their presence? What agents ever exacted payment of a debt which they had been
unwilling to discharge? Who ever endeavored to avenge those who were put to death
in their massacres? Except, indeed, that their own madness took revenge on them,
when some, by provoking against themselves the swords of men, whom they
obliged to kill them under fear of instant death, others by throwing themselves over
sundry precipices, others by waters, others by fire, gave themselves over on
the several occasions to a voluntary death, and gave up their lives as offerings
to the dead by punishments inflicted with their own hands upon themselves.
16. These deeds were looked upon with horror by many who were firmly
rooted in the same superstitious heresy; and accordingly, when they supposed that it
was sufficient to establish their innocence that they were ill contented with
such conduct, it was urged against them by the Catholics: If these evil deeds
do not pollute your innocence, how then do you maintain that the whole Christian
world has been polluted by the alleged sin of Caecilianus, which are either
altogether calumnies, or at least not proved against him? How come you, by a deed
of gross impiety, to separate yourselves from the unity of the Catholic
Church, as from the threshing-floor of the Lord, which must needs contain, up to the
time of the final winnowing, both corn which is to be stored in the garner, and
chaff that is to be burned up with fire?(1) And thus some were so convinced by
argument as to come over to the unity of the Catholic Church, being prepared
even to meet the hostility of abandoned men; whilst the greater number, though
equally convinced, and though desirous to do the same, yet dared not make
enemies of these men, who were so unbridled in their violence, seeing that some who
had come over to us experienced the greatest cruelty at their hands.
17. To this we may add, that in Carthage itself some of the bishops of the
same party, making a schism among themselves, and dividing the party of
Donatus among the lower orders of the Carthaginian people, ordained as bishop against
bishop a certain deacon named Maximianus, who could not brook the control of
his own diocesan. And as this displeased the greater part of them, they
condemned the aforesaid Maximinus, with twelve others who had been present at his
ordination, but gave the rest that were associated in the same schism a chance of
returning to their communion on an appointed day. But afterwards some of these
twelve, and certain others of those who had had the time of grace allowed to
them, but had only returned after the day appointed, were received by them without
degradation from their orders; and they did not venture to baptize a second
time those whom the condemned ministers had baptized outside the pale of their
communion. This action of theirs at once made strongly against them in favor of
the Catholic party, so that their mouths were wholly closed. And on the matter
being diligently spread abroad, as was only right, in order to cure men's souls
of the evils of schism, and when it was shown in every possible direction by the
sermons and discussions of the Catholic divines, that to maintain the peace of
Donatus they had not only received back those whom they had condemned, with
full recognition of their orders, but had even been afraid to declare that
baptism to be void which had been administered outside their Church by men whom they
had condemned or even suspended; whilst, in violation of the peace of Christ,
they cast in the teeth of all the world the stain conveyed by contact with some
sinners, it matters little with whom, and declared baptism to be consequently
void which had been administered even in the very Churches whence the gospel
itself had come to Africa;--seeing all this, very many began to be confounded, and
blushing before what they saw to be mostly manifest truth, they submitted to
correction in greater numbers than was their wont; and men began to breathe with
a somewhat freer sense of liberty from their cruelty, and that to a
considerably greater extent in every direction.
18. Then indeed they blazed forth with such fury, and were so excited by
the goadings of hatred, that scarcely any churches of our communion could be
safe against their treachery and violence and most undisguised robberies; scarcely
any road secure by which men could travel to preach the peace of the Catholic
Church in opposition to their madness, and convict the rashness of their folly
by the clear enunciation of the truth. They went so far, besides, in proposing
hard terms of reconciliation, not only to the laity or to any of the clergy,
but even in a measure to certain of the Catholic bishops. For the only
alternative offered was to hold their tongues about the truth, or to endure their savage
fury. But if they did not speak about the truth, not only was it impossible for
any one to be delivered by their silence, but many were even sure to be
destroyed by their submitting to be led astray; while if, by their preaching the
truth, the rage of the Donatists was again provoked to vent its madness, though
some would be delivered, and those who were already on our side would be
strengthened, yet the weak would again be deterred by fear from following the truth.
When the Church, therefore, was reduced to these straits in its affliction, any
one who thinks that anything was to be endured, rather than that the assistance
of God, to be rendered through the agency of Christian emperors, should be
sought, does not sufficiently observe that no good account could possibly be
rendered for neglect of this precaution.
CHAP. 5.--19. But as to the argument of those men who are unwilling that their impious
deeds should be checked by the enactment of righteous laws, when they say that
the apostles never sought such measures from the kings of the earth, they do
not consider the different character of that age, and that everything comes in
its own season. For what emperor had as yet believed in Christ, so as to serve
Him in the cause of piety by enacting laws against impiety, when as yet the
declaration of the prophet was only in the course of its fulfillment, "Why do the
heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain thing? The kings of the earth set
themselves, and their rulers take counsel together, against the Lord, and against
His Anointed;" and there was as yet no sign of that which is spoken a little
later in the same psalm: "Be wise now, therefore, O ye kings; be instructed, ye
judges of the earth. Serve the Lord with fear, and rejoice with trembling."(1)
How then are kings to serve the Lord with fear, except by preventing and
chastising with religious severity all those acts which are done in opposition to the
commandments of the Lord? For a man serves God in one way in that he is man,
in another way in that he is also king. In that he is man, he serves Him by
living faithfully; but in that he is also king, he serves Him by enforcing with
suitable rigor such laws as ordain what is righteous, and punish what is the
reverse. Even as Hezekiah served Him, by destroying the groves and the temples of
the idols, and the high places which had been built in violation of the
commandments of God;(2) or even as Josiah served Him, by doing the same things in his
turn;(3) or as the king of the Ninevites served Him, by compelling all the men of
his city to make satisfaction to the Lord;(4) or as Darius served Him, by
giving the idol into the power of Daniel to be broken, and by casting his enemies
into the den of lions;(5) or as Nebuchadnezzar served Him, of whom I have spoken
before, by issuing a terrible law to prevent any of his subjects from
blaspheming God.(6) In this way, therefore, kings can serve the Lord, even in so far as
they are kings, when they do in His service what they could not do were they
not kings.
20. Seeing, then, that the kings of the earth were not yet serving the
Lord in the time of the apostles, but were still imagining vain things against the
Lord and against His Anointed, that all might be fulfilled which was spoken by
the prophets, it must be granted that at that time acts of impiety could not
possibly be prevented by the laws, but were rather performed under their
sanction. For the order of events was then so rolling on, that even the Jews were
killing those who preached Christ, thinking that they did God service in so doing,
just as Christ had foretold,(7) and the heathen were raging against the
Christians, and the patience of the martyrs was overcoming them all. But so soon as
the fulfillment began of what is written in a later psalm, "All kings shall fall
down before Him; all nations shall serve Him,"(8) what sober-minded man could
say to the kings, "Let not any thought trouble you within your kingdom as to who
restrains or attacks the Church of your Lord; deem it not a matter in which
you should be concerned, which of your subjects may choose to be religious or
sacrilegious," seeing that you cannot say to them, "Deem it no concern of yours
which of your subjects may choose to be chaste, or which unchaste?" For why, when
free-will is given by God to man, should adulteries be punished by the laws,
and sacrilege allowed? Is it a lighter matter that a soul should not keep faith
with God, than that a woman should be faithless to her husband ? Or if those
faults which are committed not in contempt but in ignorance of religious truth
are to be visited with lighter punishment, are they therefore to be neglected
altogether?
CHAP. 6.--21. It is indeed better (as no one ever could deny) that men should be led
to worship God by teaching, than that they should be driven to it by fear of
punishment or pain; but it does not follow that because the former course produces
the better men, therefore those who do not yield to it should be neglected.
For many have found advantage (as we have proved, and are daily proving by actual
experiment), in being first compelled by fear or pain, so that they might
afterwards be influenced by teaching, or might follow out in act what they had
already learned in word. Some, indeed, set before us the sentiments of a certain
secular author, I who said,
"'Tis well, I ween, by shame the young to train, And dread of meanness,
rather than by pain." [1]
This is unquestionably true. But while those are better who are guided aright
by love, those are certainly more numerous who are corrected by fear. For, to
answer these persons out of their own author, we find him saying in another
place,
"Unless by pain and suffering thou art taught,
Thou canst not guide thyself aright in aught." [2]
But, moreover, holy Scripture has both said concerning the former better
class, "There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear; "[3] and also
concerning the latter lower class, which furnishes the majority, "A servant will
not be corrected by words; for though he understand, he will not answer." [4]
In saying, "He will not be corrected by words," he did not order him to be left
to himself, but implied an admonition as to the means whereby he ought to be
corrected; otherwise he would not have said, "He will not be corrected by
words," but without any qualification," He will not be corrected." For in another
place he says that not only the servant, but also the undisdained son, must be
corrected with stripes, and that with great fruits as the result; for he says,
"Thou shall beat him with the rod, and shall deliver his soul from hell; "[5] and
elsewhere he says, "He that spareth the rod hateth his son." [6] For, give us a
man who with right faith and true understanding can say with all the energy of
his heart, "My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God: when shall I come
and appear before God? "[7] and for such an one there is no need of the terror
of hell, to say nothing of temporal punishments or imperial laws, seeing that
with him it is so indispensable a blessing to cleave unto the Lord, that he not
only dreads being parted from that happiness as a heavy punishment, but can
scarcely even bear delay in its attainment. But yet, before the good sons can say
they have "a desire to depart, and to be with Christ," [8] many must first be
recalled to their Lord by the stripes of temporal scourging, like evil slaves,
and in some degree like good-for-nothing fugitives.
22. For who can possibly love us more than Christ, who laid down His life
for His sheep?[9] And yet, after calling Peter and the other apostles by His
words alone, when He came to summon Paul, who was before called Saul,
subsequently the powerful builder of His Church, but originally its cruel persecutor, He
not only constrained him with His voice, but even dashed him to the earth with
His power; and that He might forcibly bring one who was raging amid the
darkness of infidelity to desire the light of the heart, He first struck him with
physical blindness of the eyes. If that punishment had not been inflicted, he would
not afterwards have been healed by it; and since he had been wont to see
nothing with his eyes open, if they had remained unharmed, the Scripture would not
tell us that at the imposition of Ananias' hands, in order that their sight
might be restored, there fell from them as it had been scales, by which the sight
had been obscured.[10] Where is what the Donatists were wont to cry: Man is at
liberty to believe or not believe? Towards whom did Christ use violence? Whom
did He compel? Here they have the Apostle Paul. Let them recognize in his case
Christ first compelling, and afterwards teaching; first striking, and afterwards
consoling. For it is wonderful how he who entered the service of the gospel in
the first instance under the compulsion of bodily punishment, afterwards
labored more in the gospel than all they who were called by word only; [11] and he
who was compelled by the greater influence of fear to love, displayed that
perfect love which casts out fear.
23. Why, therefore, should not the Church use force in compelling her lost
sons to return, if the lost sons compelled others to their destruction?
Although even men who have not been compelled, but only led astray, are received by
their loving mother with more affection if they are recalled to her bosom
through the enforcement of terrible but salutary laws, and are the objects of far
more deep congratulation than those whom she had never lost. Is it not a part of
the care of the shepherd, when any sheep have left the flock, even though not
violently forced away, but led astray by tender words and coaxing blandishments,
to bring them back to the fold of his master when he has found them, by the
fear or even the pain of the whip, if they show symptoms of resistance; especially
since, if they multiply with growing abundance among the fugitive slaves and
robbers, he has the more right in that the mark of the master is recognized on
them, which is not outraged in those whom we receive but do not rebaptize? For
the wandering of the sheep is to be corrected in such wise that the mark of the
Redeemer should not be destroyed on it. For even if any one is marked with the
royal stamp by a deserter who is marked with it himself, and the two receive
forgiveness,[1] and the one returns to his service, and the other begins to be in
the service in which he had no part before, that mark is not effaced in either
of the two, but rather it is recognized in both of them, and approved with the
honor which is due to it because it is the king's. Since then they cannot show
that the destination is bad to which they are compelled, they maintain that
they ought to be compelled by force even to what is good. But we have shown that
Paul was compelled by Christ; therefore the Church, in trying to compel the
Donatists, is following the example of her Lord, though in the first instance she
waited in the hopes of needing to compel no one, that the prediction of the
prophet might be fulfilled concerning the faith of kings and peoples.
24. For in this sense also we may interpret without absurdity the
declaration of the blessed Apostle Paul, when he says, " Having in a readiness to
revenge all disobedience, when your obedience is fulfilled." [2] Whence also the
Lord Himself bids the guests in the first instance to be invited to His great
supper, and afterwards compelled; for on His servants making answer to Him, "Lord,
it is done as Thou hast commanded, and yet there is room," He said to them, "Go
out into the highways and hedges, and compel them to come in."[3] In those,
therefore, who were first brought in with gentleness, the former obedience is
fulfilled; but in those who were compelled, the disobedience is avenged. For what
else is the meaning of "Compel them to come in," after it had previously said,
"Bring in," and the answer had been made, "Lord, it is done as Thou commanded,
and yet there is room "? If He had wished it to be understood that they were to
be compelled by the terrifying force of miracles, many divine miracles were
rather wrought in the sight of those who were first called, especially in the
sight of the Jews, of whom it was said, "The Jews require a sign; "[4] and,
moreover, among the Gentiles themselves the gospel was so commended by miracles in
the time of the apostles, that had these been the means by which they were
ordered to be compelled, we might rather have had good grounds for supposing, as I
said before, that it was the earlier guests who were compelled. Wherefore, if the
power which the Church has received by divine appointment in its due season,
through the religious character and the faith of kings, be the instrument by
which those who are found in the highways and hedges--that is, in heresies and
schisms--are compelled to come in, then let them not find fault with being
compelled, but consider whether they be so compelled. The supper of the Lord is the
unity of the body of Christ, not only in the sacrament of the altar, but also in
the bond of peace. Of the Donatists themselves, indeed, we can say that they
compel no man to any good thing; for whomsoever they compel, they compel to
nothing rise but evil.
CHAP. 7.--25. However, before those laws were sent into Africa by which men are
compelled to come in to the sacred Supper, it seemed to certain of the brethren, of
whom I was one, that although the madness of the Donatists was raging in every
direction, yet we should not ask of the emperors to ordain that heresy should
absolutely cease to be, by sanctioning a punishment to be inflicted on all who
wished to live in it; but that they should rather content themselves with
ordaining that those who either preached the Catholic truth with their voice, or
established it by their study, should no longer be exposed to the furious violence
of the heretics, And this they thought might in some measure be effected, if
they would take the law which Theodosius of pious memory, enacted generally
against heretics of all kinds, to the effect that any heretical bishop or clergyman,
being found in any place, should be fined ten pounds of gold, and confirm it in
more express terms against the Donatists, who denied that they were heretics;
but with such reservations, that the fine should not be inflicted upon all of
them, but only in those districts where the Catholic Church suffered any
violence from their clergy, or from the Circumcelliones, or at the hands of any of
their people; so that. after a formal complaint had been made by the Catholics who
had suffered the violence the bishops or other ministers should forthwith be
obliged, under the commission given to the officers, to pay the fine. For we
thought that in this way, if they were terrified and no longer dared do anything
of the sort the Catholic truth might be freely taught and held under such
conditions, that while no one was compelled to it, any one might follow it who was
anxious to do so without intimidation, so that we might not have false and
pretended Catholics. And although a different view was held by other brethren, who
either were more advanced in years, or had experience of many states and places
where we saw the true Catholic Church firmly established, which had, however,
been planted and confirmed by God's great goodness at a time when men were
compelled to come in to the Catholic communion by the laws of previous emperors, yet
we carried our point, to the effect that the measure which I have described
above should be sought in preference from the emperors: it was decreed in our
council,[1] and envoys were sent to the court of the Count.
26. But God in His great mercy, knowing how necessary was the terror
inspired by these laws, and a kind of medicinal inconvenience for the cold and
wicked hearts of many men, and for that hardness of heart which cannot be softened
by words, but yet admits of softening through the agency of some little severity
of discipline, brought it about that our envoys could not obtain what they had
undertaken to ask. For our arrival had already been anticipated by the serious
complaints of certain bishops from other districts, who had suffered much
ill-treatment at the hands of the Donatists themselves, and had been thrust out
from their sees; and, in particular, the attempt to murder Maximianus, the
Catholic bishop of the Church of Bagai, under circumstances of incredible atrocity,
had caused measures to be taken which left our deputation nothing to do. For a
law had already been published, that the heresy of the Donatists, being of so
savage a description that mercy towards it really involved greater cruelty than
its very madness wrought, should for the future be prevented not only from being
violent, but from existing with impunity at all; but yet no capital punishment
was imposed upon it, that even in dealing with those who were unworthy,
Christian gentleness might be observed, but a pecuniary fine was ordained, and
sentence of exile was pronounced against their bishops or ministers.
27. With regard to the aforesaid bishop of Bagai, in consequence of his
claim being allowed in the ordinary courts, after each party had been heard in
turn, in a basilica[2] of which the Donatists had taken possession, as being the
property of the Catholics, they rushed upon him as he was standing at the
altar, with fearful violence and cruel fury, beat him savagely with cudgels and
weapons of every kind, and at last with the very boards of the broken altar. They
also wounded him with a dagger in the groin so severely, that the effusion of
blood would have soon put an end to his life, had not their further cruelty
proved of service for its preservation; for, as they were dragging him along the
ground thus severely wounded, the dust forced into the spouting vein stanched the
blood, whose effusion was rapidly on the way to cause his death. Then, when
they had at length abandoned him, some of our party tried to carry him off with
psalms; but his enemies, inflamed with even greater rage, tore him from the hands
of those who were carrying him, inflicting grievous punishment on the
Catholics, whom they put to flight, being far superior to them in numbers, and easily
inspiring terror by their violence. Finally, they threw him into a certain
elevated tower, thinking that he was by this time dead, though in fact he still
breathed. Lighting then on a soft heap of earth, and being espied by the light of a
lamp by some men who were passing by at night, be was recognized and picked
up, and being carried to a religious house, by dint of great care, was restored
in a few days from his state of almost hopeless danger. Rumor, however, had
carried the tidings even across the sea that he had been killed by the violence of
the Donatists; and when afterwards he himself went abroad, and was most
unexpectedly seen to be alive, he showed, by the number, the severity, and the
freshness of his wounds, how fully rumor had been justified in bringing tidings of his
death.
28. He sought assistance, therefore, from the Christian emperor, not so
much with any desire of revenging himself, as with the view of defending the
Church entrusted to his charge. And if he had omitted to do this, he would have
deserved not to be praised for his forbearance, but to be blamed for negligence.
For neither was the Apostle Paul taking precautions on behalf of his own
transitory life, but for the Church of God when he caused the plot of those who had
conspired to slay him to be made known to the Roman captain, the effect of which
was that he was conducted by an escort of armed soldiers to the place where
they proposed to send him, that he might escape the ambush of his foes.[1] Nor did
he for a moment hesitate to invoke the protection of the Roman laws,
proclaiming that he was a Roman citizen, who at that time could not be scourged;[2] and
again, that he might not be delivered to the Jews who sought to kill him, he
appealed to Caesar,[3]--a Roman emperor, indeed, but not a Christian. And by this
he showed sufficiently plainly what was afterwards to be the duty of the
ministers of Christ, when in the midst of the dangers of the Church they found the
emperors Christians. And hence therefore, it came about that a religious and
pious emperor, when such matters were brought to his knowledge, thought it well,
by the enactment of most pious laws, entirely to correct the error of this great
impiety, and to bring those who bore the standards of Christ against the cause
of Christ into the unity of the Catholic Church, even by terror and
compulsion, rather than merely to take away their power of doing violence, and to leave
them the freedom of going astray, and perishing in their error.
29. Presently, when the laws themselves arrived in Africa, in the first
place those who were already seeking an opportunity for doing so, or were afraid
of the raging madness of the Donatists, or were previously deterred by a
feeling of unwillingness to offend their friends, at once came over to the Church.
Many, too, who were only restrained by the force of custom handed down in their
homes from their parents, but had never before considered what was the
groundwork of the heresy itself,--had never, indeed, wished to investigate and
contemplate its nature,--beginning now to use their observation, and finding nothing in
it that could compensate for such serious loss as they were called upon to
suffer, became Catholics without any difficulty; for, having been made careless by
security, they were now instructed by anxiety. But when all these had set the
example, it was followed by many who were less qualified of themselves to
understand what was the difference between the error of the Donatists and Catholic
truth.
30. Accordingly, when the great masses of the people had been received by
the true mother With rejoicing into her bosom, there remained outside cruel
crowds, persevering with unhappy animosity in that madness. Even of these the
greater number communicated in feigned reconciliation, and others escaped notice
from the scantiness of their numbers. But those who feigned conformity, becoming
by degrees accustomed to our communion, and hearing the preaching of the truth,
especially after the conference and disputation which took place between us
and their bishops at Carthage, were to a great extent brought to a right belief.
Yet in certain places, where a more obstinate and implacable body prevailed,
whom the smaller number that entertained better views about communion with us
could not resist, or where the masses were under the influence of a few more
powerful leaders, whom they followed in a wrong direction, our difficulties
continued somewhat longer. Of these places there are a few in which trouble still
exists, in the course of which the Catholics, and especially the bishops and clergy,
have suffered many terrible hardships, which it would take too long to go
through in detail, seeing that some of them had their eyes put out, and one bishop
his hands and tongue cut off, while some were actually murdered. I say nothing
of massacres of the most cruel description, and robberies of houses, committed
in nocturnal burglaries, with the burning not only of private houses, but even
of churches,--some being found abandoned enough to cast the sacred books into
the flames.
31. But we were consoled for the suffering inflicted on us by these evils,
by the fruit which resulted from them. For wherever such deeds were committed
by unbelievers, there Christian unity has advanced with greater fervency and
perfection, and the Lord is praised with greater earnestness for having deigned
to grant that His servants might win their brethren by their sufferings, and
might gather together into the peace of eternal salvation through His blood His
sheep who were dispersed abroad in deadly error. The Lord is powerful and full
of compassion, to whom we daily pray that He will give repentance to the rest as
well, that they may recover themselves out of the snare of the devil, by whom
they are taken captive at his will,[1] though now they only seek materials for
calumniating us, and returning to us evil for good; because they have not the
knowledge to make them understand what feelings and love we continue to have
towards them, and how we are anxious, in accordance with the injunction of the
Lord, given to His pastors by the mouth of the prophet Ezekiel, to bring again
that which was driven away, and to seek that which was lost.[1]
CHAP. 8.--32. But they, as we have sometimes said before in other places, do not
charge themselves with what they do to us; while, on the other hand, they charge us
with what they do to themselves. For which of our party is there who would
desire, I do not say that one of them should perish, but should even lose any of
his possessions? But if the house of David could not earn peace on any other
terms except that Absalom his son should have been slain in the war which he was
waging against his father, although he had most carefully given strict
injunctions to his followers that they should use their utmost endeavors to preserve him
alive and safe, that his paternal affection might be able to pardon him on his
repentance, what remained for him except to weep for the son that he had lost,
and to console himself in his sorrow by reflecting on the acquisition of peace
for his kingdom?[3] The same, then, is the case with the Catholic Church, our
mother; for when war is waged against her by men who are certainly different
from sons, since it must be acknowledged that from the great tree, which by the
spreading of its branches is extended over all the world, this little branch in
Africa is broken off, whilst she is willing in her love to give them birth, that
they may return to the root, without which they cannot have the true life, at
the same time if she collects the remainder in so large a number by the loss of
some, she soothes and cures the sorrow of her maternal heart by the thoughts
of the deliverance of such mighty nations; especially when she considers that
those who are lost perish by a death which they brought upon themselves, and not,
like Absalom, by the fortune of war. And if you were to see the joy of those
who are delivered in the peace of Christ, their crowded assemblies, their eager
zeal, the gladsomeness with which they flock together, both to hear and sing
hymns, and to be instructed in the word of God; the great grief with which many
of them recall to mind their former error, the joy with which they come to the
consideration of the truth which they have learned, with the indignation and
detestation which they feel towards their lying teachers, now that they have found
out what falsehoods they disseminated concerning our sacraments; and how many
of them, moreover, acknowledge that they long ago desired to be Catholics, but
dared not take the step in the midst of men of such violence,--if, I say, you
were to see the congregations of these nations delivered from such perdition,
then you would say that it would have been the extreme of cruelty, if in the fear
that certain desperate men, in number not to be compared with the multitudes
of those who were rescued, might be burned in fires which they voluntarily
kindled for themselves, these others had been left to be lost for ever, and to be
tortured in fires which shall not be quenched.
33. For if two men were dwelling together in one house, which we knew with
absolute certainty to be upon the point of falling down, and they were
unwillingly to believe us when we warned them of the danger, and persisted in
remaining in the house; if it were in our power to rescue them, even against their
will, and we were afterwards to show them the ruin threatening their house, so that
they should not dare to return again within its reach, I think that if we
abstained from doing it, we should well deserve the charge of cruelty. And further,
if one of them should say to us. Since you have entered the house to save our
lives, I shall forthwith kill myself; while the other was not indeed willing to
come forth from the house, nor to be rescued, but yet had not the hardihood to
kill himself: which alternative should we choose,--to leave both of them to be
overwhelmed in the ruin, or that, while one at any rate was delivered by our
merciful efforts, the other should perish by no fault of ours, but rather by his
own ? No one is so unhappy as not to find it easy enough to deride what should
be done in such a case. And I have proposed the question of two
individuals,--one, that is to say, who is lost, and one who is delivered; what then must we
think of the case where some few are lost, and an innumerable multitude of
nations are delivered ? For there are actually not so many persons who thus perish
of their own free will, as there are estates, villages, streets, fortresses,
municipal towns, cities, that are delivered by the laws under consideration from
that fatal and eternal destruction.
34. But if we were to consider the matter under discussion with yet
greater care, I think that if there were a large number of persons in the house which
was going to fall, and any single one of them could be saved, and whet we
endeavored to effect his rescue, the others were to kill themselves by jumping out
of the windows, we should console ourselves in our grief for the loss of the
rest by the thoughts of the safety of the one; and we should not allow all to
perish without a single rescue, in the fear lest the remainder should destroy
themselves. What then should we think of the work of mercy to which we ought to
apply ourselves, in order that men may attain eternal life and escape eternal
punishment, if true reason and benevolence compel us to give such aid to men, in
order to secure for them a safety which is not only temporal, but very
short,--for the brief space of their life on earth ?
CHAP. 9.--35. As to the charge that they bring against us, that we covet and plunder
their possessions, I would that they would become Catholics, and possess in
peace and love with us, not only what they call theirs, but also what confessedly
belongs to us. But they are so blinded with the desire of uttering calumnies,
that they do not observe how inconsistent their statements are with one another.
At any rate, they assert, and seem to make it a subject of most invidious
complaint among themselves, that we constrain them to come in to our communion by
the violent authority of the laws,--which we certainly should not do by any
means, if we wished to gain possession of their property. What avaricious man ever
wished for another to share his possessions ? Who that was inflamed with the
desire of empire, or elated by the pride of its possession, ever wished to have a
partner ? Let them at any rate look on those very men who once belonged to
them, but now are our brethren joined to us by the bond of fraternal affection, and
see how they hold not only what they used to have, but also what was ours,
which they did not have before; which yet, if we are living as poor in fellowship
with poor, belongs to us and them alike; whilst, if we possess of our private
means enough for our wants, it is no longer ours, inasmuch as we do not commit
so infamous an act of usurpation as to claim for our own the property of the
poor, for whom we are in some sense the trustees.
36. Everything, therefore, that was held in the name of the churches of
the party of Donatus, was ordered by the Christian emperors, in their pious laws,
to pass to the Catholic Church, with the possession of the buildings
themselves.[1] Seeing, then, that there are with us poor members of those said churches
who used to be maintained by these same paltry possessions, let them rather
cease themselves to covet what belongs to others whilst they remain outside, and
so let them enter within the bond of unity, that we may all alike administer,
not only the property which they call their own, but also with it what is
asserted to be ours. For it is written "All are yours; and ye are Christ's; and Christ
is God's."[2] Under Him as our Head, let us all be one in His one body; and in
all such matters as you speak of, let us follow the example which is recorded
in the Acts of the Apostles: "They were of one heart and of one soul: neither
said any of them that aught of the things which he possessed was his own; but
they bad all things common."[3] Let us love what we sing: "Behold, how good and
how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity ! "[4] that so they
may know, by their own experience, with what perfect truth their mother, the
Catholic Church, calls out to them what the blessed apostle writes to the
Corinthians: "I seek not yours, but you."[5]
37. But if we consider what is said in the Book of Wisdom, "Therefore the
righteous spoiled the ungodly;"[6] and also what is said in the Proverbs, "The
wealth of the sinner is laid up for the just;"[7] then we shall see that the
question is not, who are in possession of the property of the heretics ? but who
are in the society of the just ? We know, indeed, that the Donatists arrogate
to themselves such a store of justice, that they boast not only that they
possess it, but that they also below it upon other men. For they say that any one
whom they have baptized is justified by them, after which there is nothing left
for them but to say to the person who is baptized by them that he must needs
believe on him who has administered the sacrament; for why should he not do so,
when the apostle says, "To him that believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly,
his faith is counted for righteousness?"[8] Let him believe, therefore, upon
the man by whom he is baptized,, if it be none else that justifies him. that his
faith may be counted for righteousness. But I think that even they themselves
would look with horror on themselves, if they ventured for a moment to entertain
such thoughts as these. For there is none that is just and able to justify,
save God alone. But the stone might be said of them that the apostle says of the
Jews, that "being ignorant of God's righteousness, and going a bout to
establish their own righteousness, they have not submitted themselves unto the
righteousness of God." [1]
38. But far be it from us that any one of our number should call himself
in such wise just, that he should either go about to establish his own
righteousness, as though it were conferred upon him by himself, whereas it is said to
him, "For what hast thou that thou didst not receive ?" [2] or venture to boast
himself as being without sin in this world, as the Donatists themselves declared
in our conference that they were members of a Church which has already neither
spot nor wrinkle, nor any such thing,[3]--not knowing that this is only
fulfilled in those individuals who depart out of this body immediately after baptism,
or after the forgiveness of sins, for which we make petition in our prayers;
but that for the Church, as a whole, the time will not come when it shall be
altogether without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing, till the day when we shall
hear the words, "O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory ?
The sting of death is sin." [4]
39. But in this life, when the corruptible body presseth down the soul,[5]
if their Church is already of such a character as they maintain, they would
not utter unto God the prayer which our Lord has taught us to employ: "Forgive us
our debts." [6] For since all sins have been remitted in baptism, why does the
Church make this petition, if already, even in this life, it has neither spot
nor wrinkle, nor any such thing? They would also have a fight to despise the
warning of the Apostle John, when he cries out in his epistle, "If we say that we
have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. But if we
confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us
from all unrighteousness" [7] On account of this hope, the universal Church
utters the petition, "Forgive us our debts," that when He sees that we are not
vainglorious, but ready to confess our sins, He may cleanse us from all
unrighteousness, and that so the Lord Jesus Christ may show to Himself in that day a
glorious Church, not having spot or wrinkle, or any such thing, which now He
cleanses with the washing of water in the word: because, on the one hand, there is
nothing that remains behind in baptism to hinder the forgiveness of every bygone
sin (so long, that is, as baptism is not received to no effect without the
Church, but is either administered within the Church, or, at least, if it has been
already administered without, the recipient does not remain outside with it);
and, on the other hand, whatever pollution of sin, of whatsoever kind, is
contracted through the weakness of human nature by those who live here after baptism,
is cleansed away in virtue of the same laver's efficacy. For neither is it of
any avail for one who has not been baptized to say, "Forgive us our debts."
40. Accordingly, He so now cleanses His Church by the washing of water in
the word, that He may hereafter show it to Himself as not having spot, or
wrinkle, or any such thing,--altogether beautiful, that is to say, and in absolute
perfection, when death shall be "swallowed up in victory." [8] Now, therefore,
in so far as the life is flourishing within us that proceeds from our being born
of God, living by filth, so far we are righteous; but in so far as we drag
along with us the traces of our mortal nature as derived from Adam, so far we
cannot be free from sin. For there is truth both in the statement that "whosoever
is born of God doth not commit sin,"9 and also in the former statement, that "if
we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us."
[10] The Lord Jesus, therefore, is both righteous and able to justify; but we
are justified freely by no other grace than His.[11] For there is nothing that
justifieth save His body, which is the Church; and therefore, if the body of
Christ bears off the spoils of the unrighteous, and the riches of the unrighteous
are laid up in store as treasures for the body of Christ` the unrighteous
ought not therefore to remain outside, but rather to enter within, that so they may
be justified.
41. Whence also we may be sure that what is written concerning the day of
judgment, "Then shall the righteous man stand in great boldness before the face
of such as have afflicted him, and made no account of his labors," [12] is not
to be taken in such a sense as that the Canaanite shall stand before the face
of Israel, though Israel made no account of the labors of the Canaanite; but
only as that Naboth shall stand before the face of Ahab, since Ahab made no
account of the labors of Naboth, since the Canaanite was unrighteous, while Naboth
was a righteous man. In the same way the heathen shall not stand before the face
of the Christian, who made no account of his labors, when the temples of the
idols were plundered and destroyed; but the Christian shall stand before the
face of the heathen, who made no account of his labors, when the bodies of the
martyrs were laid low in death. In the same way, therefore, the heretic shall not
stand in the face of the Catholic, who made no account of his labors, when the
laws of the Catholic emperors were put in force; but the Catholic shall stand
in the face of the heretic, who made no account of his labors when the madness
of the ungodly Circumcelliones was allowed to have its way. For the passage of
Scripture derides the question in itself, seeing that it does not say, Then
shall men stand, but "Then shall the righteous stand;" and they shall stand "in
great boldness" because they stand in the power of a good conscience.
42. But in this world no one is righteous by his own righteousness,--that
is, as though it were wrought by himself and for himself; but as the apostle
says, "According as God hath dealt to every man the measure of faith." But then
he goes on to add the following: "For as we have many members in one body, and
all members have not the same office; so we, being many, are one body in
Christ."[1] And according to this doctrine, no one can be righteous so long as he is
separated from the unity of this body. For in the same manner as if a limb be
cut off from the body of a living man, it cannot any longer retain the spirit of
life; so the man who is cut off from the body of Christ, who is righteous, can
in no wise retain the spirit of righteousness, even if he retain the form of
membership which he received when in the body. Let them therefore come into the
framework of this body, and so possess their own labors, not through the lust of
lordship, but through the godliness of using them aright. But we, as has been
said before, cleanse our wills from the pollution of this concupiscence, even
in the judgment of any enemy you please to name as judge, seeing that we use our
utmost efforts in entreating the very men of whose labors we avail ourselves
to enjoy with us, within the society of the Catholic Church, the fruits both of
their labors and of our own.
CHAP. 10.--43. But this, they say, is the very thing which disquiets us,--If we are
unrighteous, wherefore do you seek our company? To which question we answer, We
seek the company of you who are unrighteous, that you may not remain unrighteous;
we seek for you who are lost, that we may rejoice over you as soon as you are
found, saying, This our brother was dead, and is alive again; and was lost, and
is found.[2] Why, then, he says, do you not baptize me, that you might wash me
from my sins? I reply: Because I do not do despite to the stamp of the
monarch, when I correct the ill-doing of a deserter. Why, he says, do I not even do
penance in your body? Nay truly, except you have done penance, you cannot be
saved; for how shall you rejoice that you have been reformed, unless you first
grieve that you had been astray? ? What, then, he says, do we receive with you,
when we come over to your side? I answer, You do not indeed receive baptism, which
was able to exist in you outside the framework of the body of Christ, although
it could not profit you; but you receive the unity of the Spirit in the bond
of peace[3] without which no one can see God; and you receive charity, which,
as it is written, "shall cover the multitude of sins."[4] And in regard to this
great blessing, without which we have the apostle's testimony that neither the
tongues of men or of angels, nor the understanding of all mysteries, nor the
gift of prophecy, nor faith so great as to be able to remove mountains, nor the
bestowal of all one's goods to feed the poor, nor giving one's body to be
burned, can profit anything;[5] if, I say, you think this mighty blessing to be
worthless or of trifling value, you are deservedly but miserably astray; and
deservedly you must necessarily perish, unless you come over to Catholic unity.
44. If, then, they say, it is necessary that we should repent of having
been outside, and hostile to the Church, if we would gain salvation, how comes it
that after the repentance which you exact from us we still continue to be
clergy, or it may be even bishops in your body? This would not be the case, as
indeed, in simple truth, we must confess it should not be the case, were it not
that the evil is cured by the compensating power of peace itself. But let them
give themselves this lesson, and most especially let those feel sorrow in their
hearts, who are lying in this deep death of severance from the Church, that they
may recover their life even by this sort of wound inflicted on our Catholic
mother Church. For when the bough that has been cut off is grafted in, a new wound
is made in the tree, to admit of its reception, that life may be given to the
branch which was perishing for lack of the life that is furnished by the root.
But when the newly-received branch has become identified with the stock in
which it is received, the result is both vigor and fruit; but if they do not become
identified, the engrafted bough withers, but the life of the tree continues
unimpaired. For there is further a mode of grafting of such a kind, that without
cutting away any branch that is within, the branch that is foreign to the tree
is inserted, not indeed without a wound, but with the slightest possible wound
inflicted on the tree. In like manner, then, when they come to the root which
exists in the Catholic Church, without being deprived of any position which
belongs to them as clergy or bishops after ever so deep repentance of their error,
there is a kind of wound inflicted as it were upon the bark of the mother tree,
breaking in upon the strictness of her discipline; but since neither he that
planteth is anything, neither he that watereth,[1] so soon as by prayers poured
forth to the mercy of God peace is secured through the union of the: engrafted
boughs with the parent stock, charity then covers the multitude of sins.
45. For although it was made an ordinance in the Church, that no one who
had been called upon to do penance for any offense should be admired into holy
orders, or return to or continue in the body of the clergy,[2] this was done not
to cause despair of any indulgence being granted, but merely to maintain a
rigorous discipline; otherwise an argument will be raised against the keys that
were given to the Church, of which we have the testimony of Scripture:
"Whatsoever thou shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.'' [3] But lest it should
so happen that, after the detection of offenses, a heart swelling with the
hope of ecclesiastical preferment might do penance in a spirit of pride, it was
determined, with great severity, that after doing penance for any mortal sin, no
one should be admitted to the number of the clergy, in order that, when all
hope of temporal preferment was done away, the medicine of humility might be
endowed with greater strength and truth. For even the holy David did penance for
deadly sin, and yet was not degraded from his office. And we know that the
blessed Peter, after shedding the bitterest of tears, repented that he had denied his
Lord, and yet remained an apostle. But we must not therefore be induced to
think that the care of those in later times was in any way superfluous, who, when
there was no risk of endangering salvation, added something to humiliation, in
order that the salvation might be more a thoroughly protected,--having, I
suppose, ex- perienced a feigned repentance on the part of some who were influenced
by the desire of the power attaching to office. For experience in many
diseases necessarily brings in the invention of many remedies. But in cases of this
kind, when, owing to the serious ruptures of dissensions in the Church, it is no
longer a question of danger to this or that particular individual, but whole
nations are lying in ruin, it is right to yield a little from . our severity,
that true charity may give her aid in healing the more serious evils.
46. Let them therefore feel bitter grief for their detestable error of the
past, as Peter did for his fear that led him into falsehood, and let them come
to the true Church of Christ, that is, to the Catholic Church our mother; let
them be in it clergy, let them be bishops unto its profit, as they have been
hitherto in enmity against it. We feel no jealousy towards them, nay, we embrace
them; we wish, we advise, we even compel those to come in whom we find in the
highways and hedges, although we fail as yet in persuading some of them that we
are seeking not their property, but themselves. The Apostle Peter, when he
denied his Savior, and wept, and did not cease to be an apostle, had not as yet
received the Holy Spirit that was promised; but much more have these men not
received Him, when, being severed from the framework of the body, which is alone
enlivened by the Holy Spirit, they have usurped the sacraments of the Church
outside the Church and in hostility to the Church, and have fought against us in a
kind of civil war, with our own arms and our own standards raised in opposition
to us. Let them come; let peace be concluded in the virtue of Jerusalem, which
virtue is Christian charity,--to which holy city it is said, "Peace be in thy
virtue, and plenteousness within thy palaces." Let them not exalt themselves
against the solicitude of their mother, which she both has entertained and does
entertain with the object of gathering within her bosom themselves, and all the
mighty nations whom they are, or recently were, deceiving; at them not be puffed
up with pride, that she receives them in such wise; let them not attribute to
the evil of their own exaltation the good which she on her part does in order
to make peace.
47. So it has been her wont to come to the aid of multitudes who were
perishing through schisms and heresies. This displeased Lucifer,[5] when it was
carried out in receiving and healing those who had perished beneath the poison of
the Arian heresy; and, being displeased at it, he fell into the darkness of
schism, losing the light of Christian charity. In accordance with this principle
the Church of Africa has recognized the Donatists from the very beginning,
obeying herein the decree of the bishops who gave sentence in the Church at Rome
between Caecilianus and the party of Donatus; and having condemned one bishop
named Donatus,[1] who was proved to have been the author of the schism, they
determined that the others should be received, after correction, with full
recognition of their orders even if they had been ordained outside the Church,--not that
they could have the Holy Spirit even outside the unity of the body of Christ,
but, in the first place, for the sake of those whom it was possible they might
deceive while they remained outside, and prevent from obtaining that gift; and,
secondly, that their own weakness also being mercifully received within, might
thus be rendered capable of cure, no obstinacy any longer standing in the way
to dose their eyes against the evidence of truth. For what other intention could
have given rise to their own conduct, when they received with full recognition
of their orders the followers of Maximianus, whom they had condemned as guilty
of sacrilegious schism, as their council[2] shows, and to fill whose places
they had already ordained other men, when they saw that the people did not depart
from their company, that all might not be involved in ruin? And on what other
ground did they neither speak against nor question the validity of the baptism
which had been administered outside by men whom they had condemned? Why, then,
do they wonder, why do they complain, and make it the subject of their
calumnies, that we receive them in such wise to promote the true peace of Christ, while
yet they do not remember what they themselves have done to promote the false
peace of Donatus, which is opposed to Christ? For if this act of theirs be borne
in mind, and intelligently used in argument against them, they will have no
answer whatsoever that they can make.
CHAP. 11.--48. But as to what they say, arguing as follows: If we have sinned against
the Holy Ghost, in that we have treated your baptism with contempt, why is it
that you seek us, seeing that we cannot possibly receive remission of this sin,
as the Lord says, "Whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be
forgiven him, neither in this world, neither in the world to come?"[3]--they do
not perceive that according to their interpretation of the passage none can be
delivered. For who is there that does not speak against the Holy Ghost and sin
against, him, whether we take the case of one who is not yet a Christian, or of
one who shares in the heresy of Arius, or of Eunomius, or of Macedonius, who
all say that He is a creature; or of Photinus, who denies that He has any sub
stance at all, saying that there is only one God, the Father; or of any of the
other heretics, whom it would now take too long a time to mention in detail? Are
none, therefore, of these to be delivered? Or if the Jews themselves, against
whom the Lord directed His reproach, were to believe in Him, would they not be
allowed to be baptized? for the Saviour does not say, Shall be forgiven in
baptism: but "Shall not be forgiven, nether in this world, neither in the world to
come."
49. Let them understand, therefore, that it is not every sin, but only
some sin, against the Holy Ghost which is incapable of forgiveness. For just as
when our Lord said, "If I had not come and spoken unto them, they had not had
sin,"[4] it is clear that He did not wish it to be understood that they would have
been free from all sin, since they were filled with many grievous sins, but
that they would have been free from some special sin, the absence of which would
have left them in a position to receive remission of all the sins which yet
remained in them, viz., the sin of not believing in Him when He came to them; for
they could not have had this sin, had He not come. In like manner, also, when
He said, "Whosoever sinneth against the Holy Ghost,"or, "Whosoever speaketh
against the Holy Ghost;" it is dear that He does. not refer to every sin of
whatsoever kind against the Holy Ghost, in word or deed, but would have us understand
some special and peculiar sin. But this is the hardness of heart even to the
end of this life, which leads a man to refuse to accept remission of his sins in
the unity of the body of Christ, to which life is given by the Holy Ghost. For
when He had said to His disciples "Receive the Holy Ghost,"` immediately added,
Whosesoever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them; and whosesoever sins
ye retain, they are retained." [5] Whosoever therefore has resisted or fought
against this gift of the grace of God, or has been estranged from it in any way
whatever to the end of this mortal life, shall not receive the remission of that
sin, either in this world, or in the world to come, seeing that it is so great
a sin that in it is included every sin; but it cannot be proved to have been
committed by any one, till he has passed away from life. But so long as he lives
here, "the goodness of God," as the apostle says, "is leading him to
repentance;" but if he deliberately, with the utmost perseverance in iniquity, as the
apostle adds in the succeeding verse, "after his hardness and impenitent heart,
treasures up unto himself wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the
righteous judgment of God," [1] he shall not receive forgiveness, neither in
this world, neither in that which is to come.
50. But those with whom we are arguing, or about whom we are arguing, are
not to be despaired of, for they are yet in the body; but they cannot seek the
Holy Spirit, except in the body of Christ, of which they possess the outward
sign outside the Church, but they do not possess the actual reality itself within
the Church of which that is the outward sign, and therefore they eat and drink
damnation to themselves.[2] For there is but one bread which is the sacrament
of unity, seeing that, as the apostle says, "We, being many, are one bread,
and one body."s Furthermore, the Catholic Church alone is the body of Christ, of
which He is the Head and Saviour of His body.[4] Outside this body the Holy
Spirit giveth life to no one seeing that, as the apostle says himself, "The love
of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto
us;"[5] but he is not a partaker of the divine love who is the enemy of unity.
Therefore they have not the Holy Ghost who are outside the Church; for it is written
of them, "They separate themselves being sensual, having not the Spirit." 6 But
neither does he receive it who is insincerely in the Church, since this is
also the intent of what is written: "For the Holy Spirit of discipline will flee
deceit."[7] If any one, therefore, wishes to receive the Holy Spirit, let him
beware of continuing in alienation from the Church, let him beware of entering it
in the spirit of dissimulation; or if he has already entered it in such wise,
let him beware of persisting in such dissimulation, in order that he may truly
and indeed become united with the tree of life.
51. I have despatched to you a somewhat lengthy epistle, which may prove
burdensome among your many occupations. If, therefore, it may be read to you
even in portions, the Lord will grant you understanding, that you may have some
answer which you can make for the correction and healing of those men who are
commended to you as to a faithful son by our mother the Church, that you may
correct and heal them, by the aid of the Lord wherever you can, and howsoever you
can, either by speaking and replying to them in your own person, or by bringing
them into communication with the doctors of the Church.