EXCERPTS FROM CYPRIAN
EXCERPTS FROM EARLY CHURCH FATHERS
The lawful Bishop of Carthage
01. On
the dignity of the Episcopal office.
02. Heavenly versus worldly concerns.
03. In abhorrence of idols and idolaters.
04. On the crown of martyrdom.
05. On Cyprian's withdrawal.
06. Cyprian and the good imprisoned confessors.
04. ON THE CROWN OF MARTYRDOM.
Cease to hurt the servants of God and of Christ with your persecutions, since when they are injured the divine vengeance defends them. For this reason it is that none of us, when he is apprehended, makes resistance, nor avenges himself against your unrighteous violence, although our people are numerous and plentiful. Our certainty of a vengeance to follow makes us patient. The innocent give place to the guilty; the harmless acquiesce in punishments and tortures, sure and confident that whatsoever we suffer will not remain unavenged (An Address to Demetrianus, 16-17).
What, then, is martyrdom? It is the end of sins, the limit of dangers, the guide of salvation, the teacher of patience, the home of life, on the journey to which those things moreover befall which in the coming crisis might be considered torments. By this also testimony is borne to the Name, and the majesty of the Name is greatly enhanced ... It is then, therefore, that all the vigour of faith is brought to bear, then facility of belief is approved, when you encounter the speeches and the reproaches of the rabble, and when you strengthen yourself by a religious mind against those madnesses of the people (On the Glory of Martyrdom, 3).
I am not unaware that you abundantly know that we are supported by the judgments of all who stand fast, and that you are not ignorant that this is the teaching handed down to us, that we should maintain the power of so great a Name without any dread of the warfare (On the Glory of Martyrdom, 9).
Wherefore, beloved brethren, with a firm faith, with a robust devotion, with a virtue opposed to the fierce threatenings of the world, and the savage murmurs of the attending crowds, we must resist and not fear ... And yet I believe he has children: for he has a wife associated with him in his house; and yet he does not give way to the bond of his offspring, nor is he withdrawn by the claim of his family affection from his stedfast purpose (On the Glory of Martyrdom, 15).
Whence, that nothing should be sweet or dear that might be preferred to the desires of eternal life, things which are of personal right and individual law are cut off by the Lord's precepts; so that in the undergoing of tortures, for instance, the son should not soften the suffering father, and private affection should not change the heart that was previously pledged to enduring strength, into another disposition (On the Glory of Martyrdom, 17).
Whence also a reward is given to all the saints, in that the punishment of their deeds is inflicted on the unrighteous. Therefore what the Lord has promised to His people is doubtful to none, however ignorant he is; but neither is there any doubt what punitive fires He threatens (On the Glory of Martyrdom, 19).
Everything must absolutely give way to martyrdom. Inestimable is the glory of martyrdom, infinite its measure, immaculate its victory, invaluable its title, immense its triumph; because he who is presented to Him with the special glory of a confessor, is adorned with the kindred blood of Christ (On the Glory of Martyrdom, 29).
When the report of the departure of the excellent man, my colleague (Fabian), was still uncertain among us, my beloved brethren, and I was wavering doubtfully in my opinion on the matter, I received a letter sent to me from you by Crementius the sub-deacon, in which I was most abundantly informed of his glorious end; and I rejoiced greatly that, in harmony with the integrity of his administration, an honourable consummation also attended him. Wherein, moreover, I greatly congratulate you, that you honour his memory with a testimony so public and so illustrious (Epistle 3.1).
Cyprian to Cornelius his brother, greeting. We have been made acquainted, dearest brother, with the glorious testimonies of your faith and courage, and have received with such exultation the honour of your confession, that we count ourselves also sharers and companions in your merits and praises (Epistle 56.1).
Lately, indeed, she (the Church) gloried, when, in consequence of an enduring confession, that punishment was undergone which drove the confessors of Christ into exile; yet the present confession is so much the more illustrious and greater in honour as it is braver in suffering. The combat has increased, and the glory of the combatants has increased also (Epistle 8).
The longer is your strife, the loftier will be your crown. The struggle is one, but it is crowded with a manifold multitude of contests; you conquer hunger, and despise thirst, and tread under foot the squalor of the dungeon, and the horror of the very abode of punishment, by the vigour of your courage. Punishment is there subdued; torture is worn out; death is not feared but desired, being overcome by the reward of immortality (Epistle 15.3).
We not only do not dread, but we even provoke the enemies of the truth; and we have already conquered the opponents of God, by the very fact of our not yielding to them, and have subdued their nefarious laws against the truth. And although we have not yet shed our blood, we are prepared to shed it. Let no one think that this delay of our departure is any clemency; for it obstructs us, it makes a hindrance to our glory, it puts off heaven, it withholds the glorious sight of God (Epistle 25.5).
The Lord desired that we should rejoice and leap for joy in persecutions, because, when persecutions occur, then are given the crowns of faith, then the soldiers of God are proved then the heavens are opened to martyrs (Epistle 55.3).
But how grave is the case of a Christian man, if he, a servant, is unwilling to suffer, when his Master first suffered; and that we should be unwilling to suffer for our own sins, when He who had no sin of His own suffered for us! (Epistle 55.6).
Does he (Novatian) now acknowledge who is the priest of God; which is the Church and the house of Christ; who are God's servants, whom the devil molests; who the Christians, whom Antichrist attacks? For neither does he seek those whom he has already subdued, nor does he take the trouble to overthrow those whom he has already made his own. The foe and enemy of the Church despises and passes by those whom he has alienated from the Church, and led without as captives and conquered; he goes on to harass those in whom he sees Christ dwell.
The secular power suddenly broke forth against the Church of Christ and the bishop Cornelius, the blessed martyr, and all of you; so that, for the confusion and beating down of heretics, the Lord might show which was the Church - which is its one bishop chosen by divine appointment- which presbyters are associated with the bishop in priestly honour - which is the united and true people of Christ, linked together in the love of the Lord's flock- who they were whom the enemy would harass; whom, on the other hand, the devil would spare as being his own. For Christ's adversary does not persecute and attack any except Christ's camp and soldiers; heretics, once prostrated and made his own, he despises and passes by (Epistle 57.3).
Let cruelty, either envious or malignant, hold you here in its bonds and chains as long as it will, from this earth and from these sufferings you shall speedily come to the kingdom of heaven. The body is not cherished in the mines with couch and cushions, but it is cherished with the refreshment and solace of Christ (Epistle 76.2).
You daily expect with joy the saving day of your departure; and already about to withdraw from the world, you are hastening to the rewards of martyrdom, and to the divine homes, to behold after this darkness of the world the purest light, and to receive a glory greater than all sufferings and conflicts (Epistle 76.7).
O blessed prison, which sends the men of God to heaven! O darkness, more bright than the sun itself, and clearer than the light of this world, where now are placed temples of God, and your members are to be sanctified by divine confessions! (Epistle 80.1).
I beg that these things may be made known by your means to the rest of our colleagues, that everywhere, by their exhortation, the brotherhood may be strengthened and prepared for the spiritual conflict, that every one of us may think less of death than of immortality; and, dedicated to the Lord, with full faith and entire courage, may rejoice rather than fear in this confession (Epistle 81.2).
Cyprian
was a Carthaginian bishop who deserted his flock no sooner Decius initiated his
clampdown on the Christian communities; although the Decian decree was not long
enforced, he never regained office. His alleged letters obscurely reported that
when a disturbance arose the Lord bade him withdraw. An exile or else a
concealed fugitive, his patrimony and his episcopal power stood nonetheless
undiminished throughout the epistolary narrative. Both absent and present, he
imperturbably ruled the African Church, presided over large councils and played
an outstanding role in Roman, Gallic or Iberian conflicts. Sometimes he solemnly
declared that bishops were only accountable to God, but on other occasions he
urged other prelates, or even the laity, to remove them. A Novatus whom he often
mistook for Novatian ruthlessly resisted him. Entirely unaware of the existence
of any previous African martyrs –not even in Tertullian’s time– when
Valerian selectively persecuted upright churchmen while sparing his schismatic
opponents, he proclaimed that such dire events had long been foretold.
An
entirely different perspective is submitted in Did Tertullian really exist? Did
Cyprian? Did Hippolytus? ,
which contends that the aforesaid apologists were no more than literary
champions brought down from the preceding century to uphold either of the
religious factions that struggled for the control of the churches after
Diocletian’s resignation. Whereas 4th-century African and Roman
rigorists denounced an entrenched clergy intent on preserving its former
pre-eminence despite the reprehensible conduct of many of its members, the
hierarchical organization under attack disparaged them as raging and unmerciful
apostates. Caecilian and Donatus fought each other through the writings of
Cyprian and Tertullian.