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| Introductory Notice to Novatian, a Roman Presbyter. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Introductory
Notice
to
Novatian, a Roman Presbyter.
————————————
[a.d.
210–280.] When we reflect upon the history of Solomon, and
his marvellous contributions to the sacred canon of Scripture, we must
not be surprised to find a Tatian, a Tertullian, and a Novatian among
the Fathers. We deplore the lapse of such characters, but after
death they are not subject to human judgment. Let us cherish the
gratitude we owe to them for their good works, and use their testimony
so far as it was faithful; covering their shame with the mantle of
charity, and praying for grace never to imitate their faults.
“If any teacher have wandered from the faith, it is
permitted,” says St. Vincent of Lerins5000
5000
In his Commonitory, cap. xix. p. 57, ed. Baltimore,
1847. This useful edition contains the text, and a translation,
with valuable notes, by the Late Bishop Whittingham of
Maryland. | , “by Divine Providence for
our trial, whether we love God or not, with all our heart and with
all our soul.”
We find Novatian apparently exercising jurisdiction,
sede vacante, in Rome, with his co-presbyters, and as
vicar-general (to use a later term) corresponding with
Cyprian. This was about a.d. 250, after
the death of Fabian. His marked abilities and real services had
fitted him to preside thus over the Roman presbytery, and to be their
“secretary for foreign affairs.” But he laboured
under the impediment of clinic baptism, and had not an unblemished
record, if we credit Eusebius,5001
in his conduct during persecution.
He was not called, therefore, to the
episcopate. Cornelius was made bishop June 4, a.d. 251; and, apparently, disappointed ambition soon bore
its thorny fruits. “Emulation of the episcopal office is
the mother of schisms,” said Tertullian;5002
5002 Vol.
iii. cap 17, p. 677, this series. | even in that period when to be a bishop
was so often to be a martyr. And we find Novatian grasping a
shadowy titular bishopric, which, wholly irregular and universally
disowned, could have been to such a man the source of nothing but
misery. I say, “to such a man,” for, without
hearing the other side, I cannot accept what was unquestionably
supposed to be fact amid the excitements of the times. And
Novatian was not a common or a vulgar character. The arguments of
Lardner5003
5003 His
elaborate chapter (xlvii. and the note) must be read by all students
who wish to understand the matter, or even to read Cyprian
advantageously. | teach us at
least to be Christians,—to accept the facts, but “forbear
to judge,” seeing, as that writer observes, “we have not
one remaining line of his in self-defence or against his
adversaries.”
Now as to his orthodoxy, so far as his extant
writings are concerned, I think any scholar, not anxious to make out a
case, will abide by the candid judgment of Bull, who defends his
reputation against Petavius.5004
5004
Defensio Fid. Nicæn., Works, vol. v. p. 374. | “By no means,” he
says, “should we tolerate that injustice of the Jesuit Petau
towards the ancient writers, against their manifest mind and purpose;
twisting, as he everywhere does, their sound and Catholic sayings into
a sense alien and heretical.”
The work upon the Trinity, which is a most
valuable contribution to ante-Nicene theology, is said by Cave to have
been written about a.d. 257; and that upon the
Jewish meats seems to have
been composed during the Decian persecution. His heresy, such as
it was, turned upon unrelenting discipline, and was a sin against
charity, which is greater than faith itself. It violated the
“seventy times seven” maxim of our Lord, and the
comprehensive precept, “Forgive, and ye shall be
forgiven.” It wounded Christian unity at a perilous period,
and when every breach in the wall of the fold was sure to let in the
wolves.
“He may have aspired to the papal
chair,” says a contemporary writer5005 of no mean repute, adding, “to
which he had the best claim.” Then he says, “Novatian
was elected anti-pope by a minority, and consecrated by three
Italian bishops.” Is this history? What impression
must it give to the young student? The learned writer whom I
quote shows clearly enough that there was no “papacy” in
primitive times, as that word is universally understood. Why,
then, put a face upon Antiquity so utterly misleading? Neither
Novatian, nor his consecrators, nor Cornelius, against whom he
rebelled, ever dreamed of anything more than of an episcopal chair;
venerable, indeed, for its succession of pastors from the times of SS.
Peter and Paul, but as yet hardly felt in the Christian brotherhood;
which for two centuries had produced many pious but few eminent men,
and in which Novatian himself was the earliest contributor to the
“Latin Christianity,” already founded and flourishing, not
in Italy, but in Northern Africa.
The following is the Introductory
Notice of the Edinburgh translator, the Rev. Dr. Wallis, who, I
am glad to observe, is tender towards our author’s
memory:—
The biography of Novatian
belongs to the ecclesiastical history of the third century. He
was, or is reputed to have been, the founder of a sect which claimed
for itself the name of “Puritan”5006
5006
[This is again putting a false face upon Antiquity.
Purists, rather; i.e., in morals.] | (καθαροί).
For a long time he was in determined opposition to Cornelius, bishop of
Rome, in regard to the admission of the lapsed and penitent into the
Church; but the facts of the controversy and much of our information in
regard to Novatian are to be got only from his enemies, the Roman
bishop and his adherents. Accordingly, some have believed all the
accusations that have been brought against him, while others have been
inclined to doubt them all.5007
5007
See the last portion of Section Second of Neander’s
Church History. |
It is not known where Novatian was born.
Some have appealed to Philostorgius5008
5008
Hist. Eccl., lib. viii. c. 15. The text of Valesius has
Οὔατον, not Novatus or
Novatian. | in behalf of the opinion that he was a
Phrygian; but others maintain that, supposing this to be a statement of
the historian, it is a mere conjecture of his, based on the character
of Novatian’s teaching. It is also stated by Cyprian, that
he was a Stoic before he passed over to the Christian Church; but this
also has been doubted. While amongst the catechumens, he was
seized by a violent disease, attributed to demoniac agency; and, being
near death, he received baptism. He was ordained presbyter by
Fabian, bishop of Rome, against the wishes of the rest of the clergy,
who objected thereto because he had received clinic baptism.5009
5009
[See p. 400, note 5, supra.] | The
subsequent circumstances of his schism and his contest with Cornelius,
are stated at length with no friendly spirit in a letter to Antonianus
by Cyprian.5010
5010
Ep. li. p. 327, supra. [How could it be stated truly
and yet seem friendly? The unfortunate man had violated
discipline, and broken his most sacred obligations to the Christian
flock, at a time when the heathen persecutions made all such scandals
little less than mutiny against Christ Himself. Consult
Matt. xviii. 7 and Luke xvii.
1. We owe to such
discipline the sure canon of Scripture.] |
Socrates5011
5011
Hist. Eccl., lib. iv. c. 28. | states that he
suffered martyrdom; but his authority, amid the silence of all others,
is not sufficient to guarantee the fact.
Novatian composed many works. The following are
extant:—
I. De Trinitate, formerly attributed
by some to Tertullian, by others to Cyprian; but now on all hands
allowed to be the work of Novatian, to whom Jerome expressly assigns
it.5012
5012 De
viris Illustribus, c. 70. | It was
written after the heresy of Sabellius, which appeared 256 a.d.
II.
De Cibis Judaicis: at first also attributed by some to
Tertullian or Cyprian; but now assigned to Novatian on the testimony of
Jerome. It was written during the time of the Decian persecution,
about 250 a.d.
III. Novatian was the author of the
letter5013
5013
Ep. xxx. p. 308, supra. | addressed by
the Roman clergy to Cyprian. So Cyprian himself states.5014
5014
Ep. li. 5, p. 328, supra. [Also, see Ep. xli. 2, p.
320, supra.] | Some
have also attributed to him Ep. xxix. without any authority.
IV. Jerome attributes to him writings on
Circumcision, on the Sabbath, on the Passover, on the Priesthood, on
Prayer, on Attalus, on the Present Crisis, and Letters.
The best editions of Novatian are by Welchman, Oxford,
1724; and by Jackson, London, 1728. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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