Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| To the Clergy, on the Letters Sent to Rome, and About the Appointment of Saturus as Reader, and Optatus as Sub-Deacon. A.D. 250. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Epistle XXIII.2284
2284
Oxford ed.: Ep. xxix. The numbering of the epistles has
hitherto been in accordance with Migne’s edition of the
text: but as he here follows a typographical error in numbering
the epistle “xxiv.,” and all the subsequent ones
accordingly, it has been thought better to continue the correct order
in this translation. In each case, therefore, after this, the
number of the epistle in the translation will be one earlier than in
Migne. |
To the Clergy, on the Letters Sent to
Rome, and About the Appointment of Saturus as Reader, and Optatus as
Sub-Deacon. a.d. 250.
Argument.—The Clergy are Informed by This Letter of the Ordination
of Saturus and Optatus, and What Cyprian Had Written to
Rome.
Cyprian to the presbyters and deacons, his
brethren, greeting. That nothing may be unknown to your
consciousness, beloved brethren, of what was written to me and what I
replied, I have sent you a copy of each letter, and I believe that my
rejoinder will not displease you. But I ought to acquaint you in
my letter concerning this, that for a very urgent reason I have sent a
letter to the clergy who abide in the city. And since it behoved
me to write by clergy, while I know that very many of ours are absent,
and the few that are there are hardly sufficient for the ministry of
the daily duty, it was necessary to appoint some new ones, who might be
sent. Know, then, that I have made Saturus a reader, and Optatus,
the confessor, a sub-deacon; whom already, by the general advice, we
had made next to the clergy, in having entrusted to Saturus on
Easter-day, once and again, the reading; and when with the
teacher-presbyters2285
2285 Not
“teachers and presbyters,” as in the Oxford
translation, but “teaching presbyters.” For
these were a distinct class of presbyters—all not being
teachers,—and these were to be judges of the fitness of such as
were to be teachers of the hearers. [According to
Cyprian’s theory, all presbyters shared in the government and
celebrated the Lord’s Supper, but only the more learned and
gifted were preachers. 1 Tim. iv. 17.] | we were carefully trying
readers—in appointing Optatus from among the readers to be a
teacher of the hearers;—examining, first of all, whether all
things were found fitting in them, which ought to be found in such as
were in preparation for the clerical office. Nothing new,
therefore, has been done by me in your absence; but what, on the
general advice of all of us had been begun, has, upon urgent necessity,
been accomplished. I bid you, beloved brethren, ever heartily
farewell; and remember me. Fare ye well.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|