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| To the Roman Confessors, that They Should Return to Unity. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Epistle XLIII.2420
2420 Oxford
ed.: Ep. xlvi. a.d.
251. |
To the Roman Confessors, that They
Should Return to Unity.
Argument.—He Exhorts the Roman Confessors Who Had Been Seduced by
the Faction of Novatian and Novatus, to Return to Unity.
Cyprian to Maximus and Nicostratus, and the other
confessors, greeting. As you have frequently gathered from my
letters, beloved, what honour I have ever observed in my mode of
speaking for your confession, and what love for the associated
brotherhood; believe, I entreat you, and acquiesce in these my letters,
wherein I both write and with simplicity and fidelity consult for you,
and for your doings, and for your praise. For it weighs me down
and saddens me, and the intolerable grief of a smitten, almost
prostrate, spirit seizes me, when I find that you there, contrary to
ecclesiastical order, contrary to evangelical law, contrary to the
unity of the Catholic institution, had consented that another bishop
should be made.2421
2421
[“Another bishop should be made.” What would have
been the outcry of the whole Church, and what the language of Cyprian,
had any idea entered their minds that the case was that of the Divine
Oracle of Christendom, the Vicar of Christ, the Centre of Unity, the
Infallible, etc.] | That is
what is neither right nor allowable to be done; that another church
should be set up; that Christ’s members should be torn asunder;
that the one mind and body of the Lord’s flock should be
lacerated by a divided emulation. I entreat that in you, at all
events, that unlawful rending of our brotherhood may not continue; but
remembering both your confession and the divine tradition, you may
return to the Mother whence you have gone forth; whence you came to the
glory of confession with the rejoicing of the same Mother. And
think not that you are thus maintaining the Gospel of Christ when you
separate yourselves from the flock of Christ, and from His peace
and concord; since it is
more fitting for glorious and good soldiers to sit down within their
own camp, and so placed within to manage and provide for those things
which are to be dealt with in common. For as our unanimity and
concord ought by no means to be divided, and because we cannot forsake
the Church and go outside her to come to you, we beg and entreat you
with what exhortations we can, rather to return to the Church your
Mother, and to our brotherhood. I bid you, dearest brethren, ever
heartily farewell.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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