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| To the Presbyters and Deacons. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Epistle
XXVII.2315
2315
Oxford ed.: Ep. xxxiv. a.d.
250. |
To the Presbyters and
Deacons.
Argument.—The Argument of This Letter is Sufficiently in Agreement
with the Preceding, and It Appears that It is the One of Which He
Speaks in the Following Letter; For He Praises His Clergy for Having
Rejected from Communion Gaius of Didda, a Presbyter, and His Deacon,
Who Rashly Communicated with the Lapsed; And Exhorts Them to Do the
Same with Certain Others.
1. Cyprian to the presbyters and deacons,
his brethren, greeting. You have done uprightly and with
discipline, beloved brethren, that, by the advice of my colleagues who
were present, you have decided not to communicate with Gaius the
presbyter of Didda, and his deacon; who, by communicating with the
lapsed, and offering their oblations,2316 have been frequently taken in their
wicked errors; and who once and again, as you wrote to me, when warned
by my colleagues not to do this, have persisted obstinately, in their
presumption and audacity, deceiving certain brethren also from among
our people, whose benefit we desire with all humility to consult, and
whose salvation we take care for, not with affected adulation, but with
sincere faith, that they may supplicate the Lord with true penitence
and groaning and sorrow, since it is written, “Remember from
whence thou art fallen, and repent.”2317 And again, the divine Scripture
says, “Thus saith the Lord, When thou shalt be converted and
lament, then thou shalt be saved, and shalt know where thou hast
been.”2318
2. Yet how can those mourn and repent, whose
groanings and tears some of the presbyters obstruct when they rashly
think that they may be communicated with, not knowing that it is
written, “They who call you happy2319
2319
“They which lead thee.”—E.V. | cause you to err, and destroy the path
of your feet?”2320 Naturally, our wholesome and true
counsels have no success, whilst the salutary truth is hindered by
mischievous blandishments and flatteries, and the wounded and unhealthy
mind of the lapsed suffers what those also who are bodily diseased and
sick often suffer; that while they refuse wholesome food and beneficial
drink as bitter and distasteful, and crave those things which seem to
please them and to be sweet for the present, they are inviting to
themselves mischief and death by their recklessness and
intemperance. Nor does the true remedy of the skilful physician
avail to their safety, whilst the sweet enticement is deceiving with
its charms.
3. Do you, therefore, according to my
letters, take counsel about this faithfully and wholesomely, and do not
recede from better counsels; and be careful to read these same letters
to my colleagues also, if there are any present, or if any should come
to you; that, with unanimity and concord, we may maintain a healthful
plan for soothing and healing the wounds of the lapsed, intending to
deal very fully with all when, by the Lord’s mercy, we shall
begin to assemble together. In the meantime, if any unrestrained
and impetuous person, whether of our presbyters or deacons or of
strangers, should dare, before our decree, to communicate with the
lapsed, let him be expelled from our communion, and plead the cause of
his rashness before all of us when, by the Lord’s permission, we
shall assemble together again.2321
2321
[Thus Cyprian keeps in view “the whole Church,” and
adheres to his principle in letter xiii. p. 294, note 1,
supra.] | Moreover, you wished me to reply
what I thought concerning Philumenus and Fortunatus, sub-deacons, and
Favorinus, an acolyte, who retired in the midst of the time of trial,
and have now returned. Of which thing I cannot make myself sole
judge, since many of the clergy are still absent, and have not
considered, even thus late, that they should return to their place; and
this case of each one must be considered separately and fully
investigated, not only with my colleagues, but also with the whole of
the people themselves.2322
2322
[Thus Cyprian keeps in view “the whole Church,” and
adheres to his principle in letter xiii. p. 294, note 1,
supra.] | For a matter which hereafter may
constitute an example as regards the ministers of the Church must be
weighed and adjudged with careful deliberation. In the meanwhile,
let them only abstain from the monthly division,2323 not so as to seem to be deprived of
the ministry of the Church, but that all matters being in a sound
state, they may be reserved till my coming. I bid you, beloved
brethren, ever heartily farewell. Greet all the brotherhood, and
fare ye well.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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