THE EPISTLES OF POPE PONTIANUS
THE EPISTLES OF POPE PONTIANUS(1)
THE FIRST EPISTLE.(2)
TO FELIX SUBSCRIBONIUS
ON THE HONOUR TO BE BESTOWED ON PRIESTS.
PONTIANUS, bishop, to Felix Subscribonius, greeting.
Our heart is exceedingly rejoiced with your goodness, in that you strive
by all means in your power to carry out the practice of holy religion, and
strengthen sad and destitute brethren in faith and religion. Wherefore we implore
the mercy of our Redeemer, that His grace may support us in all things, and that
He may grant us to carry out in effect what He has given us to aspire after. In
this good thing, therefore, the benefits of recompense are multiplied just in
proportion as our zeal for the work increases. And because in all these things
we need the assistance of divine grace, we implore with constant prayers the
clemency of Omnipotent God, that He may both grant us the desire for these good
works which should ever be wrought by us, and give us power also to perform
them, and direct us in that way, for the fruit of well-doing--which way the Pastor
of pastors declared Himself to be--so that ye may be able to carry out through
Him, without whom nothing can be done, those good works which you have begun.
Moreover, with respect to the priests of the Lord whom we have heard you aid
against the plots of wicked men, and whose cause you sustain, know ye that in so
doing ye please God greatly, who has called then: to the service of Himself, and
has honoured them with so intimate a fellowship with Him, that through them He
accepts the oblations of others, and pardons their sins, and reconciles them
with Him. They also make the body of the Lord with their own mouth (proprio ore
corpus Domini conficiunt), and give it to the people. For of them it is said:
He that hurteth you, hurteth me; and he that doeth you an injury, shall receive
again that which he hath done unrighteously.(3) And elsewhere: He that heareth
you, heareth me; and he that despiseth you, despiseth me; and he that despiseth
me, despiseth Him that sent me.(4) Hence they are not to be molested, but
honoured. And in them the Lord Himself is honoured, whose commission they execute.
They accordingly, if they happen to fall, are to be raised up and sustained by
the faithful. And again, they are not to be accused by the infamous, or the
wicked, or the hostile, or by the members of another sect or religion. If they
sin, they are to be arraigned by the other priests; further, they are to be held
in check (constringantur) by the chief pontiffs, and they are not to be
arraigned or restrained by seculars or by men of evil life. Not slight, therefore, is
our grief in hearing that you have to sorrow for your brother's passing away
(transitu). For which reason we beseech Almighty God to console you by the
breathing (aspiratione) of His grace, and keep you with heavenly guardianship from
evil spirits and perverse men. For if ye have to bear any turmoil of certain
adversaries after his disease, do not think it strange though ye, who seek to enjoy
good in your own country--that is, in the land of the living--have to bear evil
things at the hands of men in a strange country. For the present life is a
sojourning; and to him who sighs after the true fatherland, the place of his
sojourning is a trial, however pleasant it may seem. And as to you who seek the
fatherland, among the sighs which ye heave I hear the groans also of human
oppression rising. And this happens by the wonderful dispensation of Almighty God, in
order that, while the truth calls you in love, this present world may cast back
your affection from itself through the tribulations which it brings on, and
that the mind may be so much the more easily delivered from the love of this
world, as it is also impelled while it is called. Therefore, as you have begun, give
heed to the duty of hospitality; labour most urgently in prayer and tears;
devote yourselves more liberally and freely now to those almsgivings which you
have ever loved, in order that in the recompense the profit to you for your work
may be greater in proportion as your zeal for the labour has risen to higher
degrees here.
Furthermore, hailing your goodness with paternal pleasantness, we beg you
not to fail in the good works which ye have begun. And may no one be able to
turn you from them; but may the clergy and servants of God, and all Christians
who sojourn in those parts, fully discover by the love of Christ and Saint Peter
the disposition of your charity in all things, and obtain the comforts of your
favour in every necessity that may arise; to the end that all may be defended
and helped by your aid, and that we, too, may owe you thanks, and that our Lord
Jesus Christ may make good to you eternal glory, and that the blessed Apostle
Peter, the chief of the apostles, in whose cause you spend yourselves, may open
the gate of that same glory. -- Given on the 10th day before the kalends of
February (the 23d of January), in the consulship of the most illustrious Severus
and Quintianus. (1)
THE SECOND EPISTLE.
TO ALL BISHOPS.
ON BROTHERLY LOVE, AND ON AVOIDING THE EVIL.
Pontianus, bishop of the holy and universal Church, to all who worship the
Lord aright, and love the divine worship, greeting.
Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men of good will. (1)
These words, most beloved, are not the words of men, but of angels; and they
were not devised by human sense, but were uttered by angels at the birth of the
Saviour. And from these words it can be understood without doubt by all that
peace is given by the Lord, not to men of evil will, but to men of good will.
Whence the Lord, speaking by the prophet, says: "How good is God to Israel, even to
such as are of a clean heart! But as for me, my feet were almost gone; my steps
had well-nigh slipped: for I was envious at the unrighteous, when I saw the
prosperity of the wicked." (2) Of the good, however, the Truth says in His own
person, "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God." (3) And they are
not the pure in heart who think evil things, or things hurtful to their
brethren; for he who is the faithful man devises nothing evil. The faithful man,
accordingly, loves rather to hear things which are becoming, than to speak things
which are not becoming. And if any one is faithful, let him see to it that he
speak no evil, and lay no snares in the way of any one. In this, then, are the
children of God distinguished from the children of the devil. For the children of
God always think and strive to do things which are of God, and give help
unceasingly to their brethren, and wish to injure no one. But, on the other hand,
the children of the devil are always meditating things evil and hurtful, because
their deeds are evil. And of them the Lord, speaking by the prophet Jeremiah,
says: "I will utter my judgments against them touching all their wickedness."
(4) "Wherefore I will yet plead with you, saith the Lord; and with your
children's children will I plead." (5) "Behold, I frame evil against you, and devise a
device against you." (6) These things, brethren, are greatly to be feared, and
to be guarded against by all; for the man on whom the judgment of God may fall
will not depart unhurt. And therefore let every one see to it carefully that he
neither contrive nor do against a brother what he would not wish to have to
endure himself. And let not the man of faith come under the suspicion even of
saying or doing what he would not wish to have to endure himself. Wherefore persons
suspected, or hostile or litigious, and those who are not of good
conversation, or whose life is reprehensible, and those who do not hold and teach the right
faith, have been debarred from being either accusers or witnesses by our
predecessors with apostolic authority; and we too remove them from that function,
and exclude them from it in times to come, lest those lapse wilfully whom we
ought to keep in and save; lest not only (which may God forbid!) the predicted
judgment of God should fall upon both, but we also should perish (which may God
forbid!) through their fault. For it is written, "Have they made thee the master
of a feast? Take care for them, that thou mayst be merry on their account, and
receive as thy crown the ornament of esteem, and find approbation of thine
election." (1) For the evil word affects the heart, out of which proceed these four
objects, good and evil, life and death; and the tongue in its assiduous action
is what determines these. Wherefore the before-named parties are altogether to
be avoided; and until the before-noted matters are investigated, and the
parties are found to be clear of such, they are not to be received: for the right
sacrifice is to give heed to the commandments, and to depart from all iniquity.
"To depart from wickedness is a thing pleasing to the Lord, and to forsake
unrighteousness is a sacrifice of praise." (2) For it is written, "Love thy friend,
and be faithful unto him. But if thou bewrayest his secrets, follow no more
after him. For as a man who destroyeth his friend, so is he who destroys (loseth)
the friendship of his neighbour. And as one that letteth a bird go out of his
hand, so art thou that has let thy neighbour go and shalt not get him again.
Follow after him no more, for he is far off. For he has escaped like a roe out of
the snare, because his soul is wounded. Thou wilt not be able to bind him any
more, and there is reconciliation for the reviled. But to bewray the secrets of a
friend is the desperation of a wretched soul. He that winketh with the eye
worketh evil, and no one will cast him off. When thou art present, he will despise
his own mouth, and express his wonder at thy discourse; but at the last he
will writhe his mouth, and slander thy sayings. I have hated many things, but
nothing like him; and the Lord will hate him. Whoso casteth a stone on high, it
will fall upon his own head, and a deceitful stroke of the deceitful will make
wounds. Whoso diggeth a pit shall fall therein; and he that setteth a stone in his
neighbour's way will all thereon; and he that placeth a snare for another will
perish therein. He that worketh mischief, it shall fall upon him, and he shall
not know whence it cometh on him. Mockery and reproach are from the proud; and
vengeance, as a lion, shall be in wait for them. They that rejoice at the fall
of the righteous shall perish in the snare, and anguish shall consume them
before they die. Anger and wrath are both abominations, and the sinful man shall
have them both." (3) "He that will be avenged shall find vengeance from the
Lord, and he will surely keep his sins. Forgive thy neighbour the hurt that he hath
done unto thee, and then shall thy sins be forgiven thee when thou prayest.
One man beareth hatred against another; and doth he ask redress of God? He
showeth no mercy to a man which is like himself; and doth he ask forgiveness of the
Most High for his own sins? He, though he is flesh, nourisheth hatred; and
doth he ask pardon of God? Who will entreat for his sins? Remember thy end, and
let enmity cease; for corruption and death impend on commandments. Remember the
fear of God, and bear no malice to thy neighbour. Remember the covenant of the
Highest, and look down upon (despice) the ignorance of thy neighbour. Abstain
from strife, and thou shalt diminish thy sins. For a furious man kindleth
strife; and a sinful man will disquiet friends, and make enmity among them that be at
peace. For even as the trees of the wood are, so will the fire bum; and as a
man's strength is, so will his anger be; and as his riches are, so will he make
his anger rise. An hastened contention will kindle a fire, and an hastening
quarrel will shed blood, and a testifying (testificans) tongue will bring death.
If thou blow upon the spark, it will burn like a fire; and if thou spit upon it,
it will be extinguished: and both these come out of the mouth. Cursed be the
whisperer and doubled-tongued, for such have troubled many that were at peace. A
third (tertia) tongue hath disquieted many, and driven them from nation to
nation: the fortified cities of the rich it hath pulled down, and overthrown the
houses of great men. It has subverted the virtues of peoples, and has destroyed
strong nations. A third tongue hath east out truthful (4) women, and deprived
them of their labours. Whoso hearkeneth unto it shall never find rest, and never
dwell quietly. The stroke of the whip maketh marks in the flesh, but the
stroke of the tongue will break bones. Many have fallen by the edge of the sword,
but not in such manner as those who have perished by their tongue. Well is he
that is defended from the evil tongue, who hath not passed into the anger thereof,
and who hath not drawn the yoke thereof, nor hath been bound with the bands of
it; for the yoke thereof is a yoke of iron, and the band thereof is a band of
brass. The death thereof is the vilest death, and the grave were better than
it. The perseverance thereof shall not abide; but it shall hold the ways of the
unrighteous, and its flame shall not burn the righteous. Such as forsake the
Lord shall fall into it, and it shall burn in them, and not be quenched; and it
shall be sent upon them as a lion, and hurt them as a leopard. Hedge thine ears
about with thorns, and listen not to the evil tongue; and make a door for thy
mouth, and bars for thine ears. Smelt (confla) thy gold and silver, and make a
balance for thy words, and fight curbs for thy mouth. And beware that thou slide
not perchance in thy tongue, and fall before thine enemies that lie in wait for
thee, and thy fall be irremediable even to death." (5) "Make no tarrying to
turn to the Lord, and put not off from day to day. For suddenly shall His wrath
come, and in the time of vengeance He will destroy thee. Set not thine heart
upon goods unjustly gotten, for they shall not profit thee in the day of veiling
(for execution, obductionis) and vengeance. Move not with every wind, and go not
into every way; for so is the sinner proved with the double-tongue. Be
stedfast in the way of the Lord, and in the truth of thine understanding, and in
knowledge; and let the word of peace and righteousness attend thee. Be courteous
in hearing the word, that thou mayest understand it, and with wisdom give a true
answer. If thou hast understanding, answer thy neighbour; if not, lay thy hand
upon thy mouth, lest thou be caught in a word of folly, and be confounded.
Honour and glory are in the talk of the intelligent man; the tongue of the unwise
is his fall. Be not called a whisperer, and be not caught in thy tongue, and
confounded. For confusion and penitence are upon the the thief, and the worst
condemnation upon the double-tongued. Moreover, for the whisperer there is hatred,
and enmity, and shame. Justify the small and the great alike." (1) Instead of
a friend, become not an enemy to thy neighbour. For the evil man shall inherit
reproach and shame, and every sinner in like manner that is envious and
double-tongued. Extol not thyself in the counsel of thine own heart as a bull, lest
perchance thy virtue be shattered in folly, and it consume thy leaves, and
destroy thy fruits, and thou be left as a dry tree in the desert. For a wicked soul
shall destroy him that hath it, and makes him to be laughed to scorn by his
enemies, and shall bring him down to the lot of the impious." (2) Most dearly
beloved, study to lift up the oppressed, and always help the necessitous; for if a
man relieves an afflicted brother, delivers a captive, or consoles a mourner,
let him have no doubt that that will be recompensed to him by Him on whom he
bestows it all, and who says: "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of
my brethren, ye have done it unto me." (3) Strive, then, unceasingly to do
what is good in such wise that ye may beth obtain the fruit of good works here,
and enjoy the favour of God in the future, to the intent that hereafter ye may be
worthy to enter the court of the heavenly kingdom. -- Given on the fourth day
before the kalends of May (the 28th of April), in the consulship of the most
illustrious Severus and Quintianus.
NOTE BY THE AMERICAN EDITOR.
Is Bower's History of the Popes (ed. Philadelphia, 1847), vol. i. p. 22,
may be seen an interesting note on the "Pontifical" of Bucherius, under the name
of Pontianus. It was this bishop who is said to have condemned Origen. He
probably shared the fate of Hippolytus in exile, and was martyred under Maximin the
Thracian.