Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Novatus, his Manner of Life and his Heresy. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XLIII.—Novatus,2105
2105 Eusebius, and the Greeks in general, write the name Νοου€τος (though in Bk. VII. chap. 8, below, Dionysius writes
Νοουατι€νος). Socrates has the form Ναυ€τος, which appears also in some mss. of
Eusebius. Cyprian and the Latins write the name Novatianus. Lardner, in
a note on chap. 47 of his Credibility, argues with great force
for the correctness of the name Novatus, while Heinichen and others
maintain that Novatianus is the right form. The name
Novatiani, Νοουατιανοί, which was given to his followers, is urged with some
reason by Lardner as an argument for the shorter form of the name. But
even if his opinion is correct, the name Novatian is too long
established to be displaced, and serves to distinguish him from the
Carthaginian presbyter Novatus. The schism of Novatian was only one of
the outcrops of the old strife between lax and strict discipline in the
Church, the strife which had shown itself in connection with Montanism
and also between Callistus and Hippolytus (see above, chap. 21, note
3). But in the present case the immediate cause of the trouble was the
treatment of the lapsed. The terrible Decian persecution had naturally
caused many to deny the faith, but afterward, when the stress was past,
they repented and desired to be readmitted to the Church. The question
became a very serious one, and opinions were divided, some advocating
their acceptance after certain prescribed penances, others their
continued exclusion. The matter caused a great deal of discussion,
especially in Rome and Carthage. The trouble came to a head in Rome,
when Cornelius, who belonged to the lax party, was chosen bishop in the
year 251, after the see had been vacant for more than a year. The
stricter party at once aroused to action and chose Novatian, the leader
of the party, opposition bishop. He had been made a presbyter by the
bishop Fabian, and occupied a very prominent position in the Roman
Church. He seems originally to have held less rigid notions in regard
to the treatment of the lapsed, but before the end of the persecution
he became very decided in his opposition to their absolution and
restoration. His position, as well as his ability and piety, made him
the natural leader of the party and the rival candidate for the
bishopric. He does not, however, seem to have desired to accept
consecration as an opposition bishop, but his party insisted. He
immediately sent the usual letters announcing the fact to the bishops
of the principal sees, to Carthage, Alexandria, and Rome. Cyprian at
once refused to recognize his appointment. Dionysius wrote to him
advising him to withdraw (see his epistle, quoted in chap. 45). But
Fabius of Antioch was inclined to take his side (see chap. 44,
§1). Novatian was excommunicated by the council mentioned just
below, and then founded an independent church, baptizing all who came
over to his side. We know nothing of his subsequent career (according
to the tradition of his followers, and also Socrates, H. E. IV.
28, he suffered martyrdom under Valerian), but his sect spread
throughout the East and West, and continued in existence until the
sixth century. Novatian was not at all heretical in doctrine. His work
upon the Trinity is both able and orthodox. His character was austere
and of unblemished purity (the account given by Cornelius below is a
gross misrepresentation, from the pen of an enemy) and his talents were
of a high order. But the tendency of the Church was toward a more
merciful treatment of the lapsed and of other sinners, and the stricter
methods advocated by him fell more and more into disfavor. Novatian was
quite a prolific writer. According to Jerome, de vir. ill. chap.
10, he wrote de Pascha, de Sabbato, de Circumcisione, de Sacerdote,
de Oratione, de Cibis Judaicis, de Instantia, de Attalo Multaque alia,
et de Trinitate grande Volumen. The de Cibis Judaicis and
the de Trinitate are still extant. The best edition of his works
is that of Jackson (London, 1728). An English translation is given in
the Ante-Nicene Fathers, V. 611–650. Novatian was the
author also of one of the epistles of the Roman clergy to Cyprian
(Ep. 30). Our contemporaneous sources for a knowledge of
Novatian and his schism are the epistles of Cyprian (some ten of them),
and the epistles of Dionysius and Cornelius, quoted by Eusebius in this
chapter and in chaps. 44 and 45. | his Manner of Life and
his Heresy.
1. After this, Novatus, a presbyter of the church at Rome,
being lifted up with arrogance against these persons, as if there was
no longer for them a hope of salvation, not even if they should do all
things pertaining to a genuine and pure conversion, became leader of
the heresy of those who, in the pride of their imagination, call
themselves Cathari.2106
2. There upon a very large synod
assembled at Rome,2107
2107 This council is undoubtedly identical with the one mentioned in
Cyprian’s epistle to Antonianus (Ep. 51, §6;
al. 55). It was held, according to Cyprian, soon after the
Carthaginian synod, in which the treatment of the lapsi was
first discussed, and accepted the decisions of that council. The
Carthaginian synod met in the spring of 251 (see Hefele,
Conciliengesch. I. p. 112). The Roman synod must, therefore,
have been held before the end of the same year; Hefele thinks about
October (ibid. p. 114). Cornelius would not, of course, have
waited long before procuring the official condemnation of the
opposition bishop. We know nothing more about the constitution of the
council than is told us here. It was, of course, only a local synod.
The pastors of the remaining provinces were the other Italian bishops
who could not be present at the council. Cornelius solicits their
opinion, in order that the decree passed by the council may represent
as large a number of bishops as possible. | of bishops in
number sixty, and a great many more presbyters and deacons; while the
pastors of the remaining provinces deliberated in their places
privately concerning what ought to be done. A decree was confirmed by
all, that Novatus and those who joined with him, and those who adopted
his brother-hating and inhuman opinion, should be considered by the
church as strangers; but that they should heal such of the brethren as
had fallen into misfortune,2108
2108 τοὺς δὲ τῇ
συμφορŽ
περιπεπτοκότας. The Carthaginian synod had decided that no offenses are
beyond the regular power of the Church to remit. | and should
minister to them with the medicines of repentance.
3. There have reached us
epistles2109
2109 Jerome (de vir. ill. chap. 66) gives the singular instead
of the plural (epistolam ad Fabium); so also Rufinus; but there
is no reason for doubting the integrity of the Greek text of Eusebius,
which runs, ἦλθον δ᾽
οὖν εἰς ἡμᾶς
ἐπιστολαὶ
Κορνηλίου. Valesius, although translating epistolæ
Cornelii, yet follows Jerome and Rufinus in believing that only one
epistle is meant here. Neither Rufinus nor, apparently, Jerome knew
anything about the epistle, except what they read in Eusebius, and
therefore it is more probable that Eusebius was correct in using the
plural than that they were correct in using the singular. It is easy to
understand the change of Eusebius’ indefinite plural into their
definite singular. They were evidently written in Greek; for in
speaking of Cyprian’s epistles immediately afterward, Eusebius
especially mentions the fact that they were written in Latin. The
epistle from which Eusebius quotes just below was also written in
Greek, for Eusebius would otherwise, as is his custom have mentioned
the fact that he gives only a translation of it. This has been pointed
out by Valesius; but, as Routh remarks, we can certainly go further,
and say that the other epistle mentioned by Eusebius must have been in
Greek, too, since it was written by the same Cornelius, and addressed
to the same Fabius. These epistles are no longer extant. | of Cornelius, bishop of Rome, to
Fabius, of the church at Antioch, which show what was done at the synod
at Rome, and what seemed best to all those in Italy and Africa and the
regions thereabout.2110
2110 Eusebius says, τὰ
περὶ τῆς
῾Ρωμαίων
συνόδου καὶ
τὰ δόξαντα
πᾶσι τοῖς
κατὰ τὴν
᾽Ιταλίαν
κ.τ.λ., which Jerome has
transformed or compressed into de Synodo Romana, Italica,
Africana, another instance of the careless way in which his de
vir. ill. was composed. | Also other
epistles, written in the Latin language, of Cyprian and
those with him in Africa,2111
2111 These epistles from Cyprian and the African bishops Jerome
transforms into a single epistle from Cornelius to Fabius, de
Novatiano, et de his qui lapsi sunt. At least, it seems impossible
to explain this epistle mentioned by Jerome in any other way. Knowing
the slovenly way in which he put his work together, it is not
surprising that he should attribute these epistles to the same person
who wrote the ones mentioned just before and after. Since the first
epistles mentioned are said to have been addressed to Fabius and also
the last one, from which Eusebius quotes, it is reasonable to conclude
that all mentioned in this connection were addressed to him; and it
would of course be quite natural for Cyprian, too, to write to Fabius
(who was known to be inclined to favor Novatian), in order to confirm
the account of Cornelius, and to announce that he agreed with the
latter in regard to the treatment of the lapsed. No epistle, however,
of Cyprian or of other African bishops to Fabius are extant, though the
same subject is discussed in many epistles of Cyprian addressed to the
people. | which show that
they agreed as to the necessity of succoring those who had been
tempted, and of cutting off from the Catholic Church the leader of the
heresy and all that joined with him.
4. Another epistle of Cornelius,
concerning the resolutions of the synod, is attached to these; and yet
others,2112
2112 Rufinus mentions only two epistles of Cornelius in this
connection, apparently confounding this one on the deeds of the
Novatians with the one mentioned just before on the Decrees of the
Council. Jerome, on the other hand, making Cornelius, as already
mentioned, the author of the epistles of Cyprian and the African
bishops, assigns four epistles to Cornelius. None of the epistles
mentioned in this section are extant, except the long fragment of the
last one quoted just below. As mentioned in the next chapter, Fabius
inclined to take the side of Novatian over against the laxer party; and
it was on this account that Cornelius wrote him so many epistles
(compare also the epistle of Dionysius of Alexandria, quoted in chaps.
41 and 42, and see note 1 on the former chapter), and endeavored to
blacken the character of Novatian as he does in the passages
quoted. | on the conduct of Novatus, from
which it is proper for us to make selections, that any one who sees
this work may know about him.
5. Cornelius informs Fabius what
sort of a man Novatus was, in the following words:
“But that you may know
that a long time ago this remarkable man desired the episcopate, but
kept this ambitious desire to himself and concealed it,—using as
a cloak for his rebellion those confessors who had adhered to him from
the beginning,—I desire to speak.
6. Maximus,2113
2113 This Maximus was a presbyter, and one of a party of Roman
confessors who played a prominent part in the controversy about the
lapsed. He and his companions were imprisoned at the very beginning of
the Decian persecution (Cyprian, Ep. 24; al. 28), i.e.
early in the year 250, and while in prison they adopted rigoristic
views and wrote to some Carthaginian confessors, urging strict methods
in dealing with the lapsed (see Cyprian, Ep. 22; al. 27).
Early in the year 251, after eleven months in prison, the presbyter
Moses, the leading spirit of the party, died, and Maximus became the
chief one among them. Moses before his death, in spite of his
rigoristic principles, refused to commune with Novatian and his five
presbyters (as we learn from §20 of this chapter), apparently
because he saw that his insistence upon strict discipline was tending
toward schism, and that such discipline could not be maintained without
sacrificing the Church. But Maximus and those mentioned with him here,
together with some others (see Cyprian, Ep. 45; al. 49),
became even stricter than at first, and finally went over to the party
of Novatian (which took its rise after the election of Cornelius in
251), but were at length reconciled to Cornelius and the rest of the
Church, and received back with rejoicing (see Cyprian, Ep. 43,
45, 46, 49, 50; al. 46, 49, 51, 53, 54). The notices of Maximus
and Urbanus in Cyprian’s epistles, which with the epistle of
Cornelius constitute our only source for a knowledge of their lives, do
not mention a second confession made by these two men, so that we
cannot tell when it took place, but it must of course have been during
the persecution of Decius. | one of our presbyters, and Urbanus,2114
2114 Urbanus was a confessor only, not a presbyter or deacon as we
learn from the notices of him in Cyprian’s epistles, in
connection with the party referred to in the previous note. | who twice gained the highest honor by
confession, with Sidonius,2115
2115 Sidonius likewise was a confessor simply, and is mentioned with
the others in the epistles of Cornelius and Cyprian. | and Celerinus,2116
2116 Celerinus was also one of this party of Roman confessors (as we
learn from Cyprian, Ep. 15, al. 87), who, upon his
release from prison, went to Carthage, and was there ordained a reader
by Cyprian (Ep. 33, al. 39). His release from prison and
departure for Carthage took place before the release of the others and
before the death of Moses (as we learn from Ep. 15), that is,
before the end of the year 250. He was still in Rome, however, at
Easter of that year, as we learn from his epistle to Lucian, mentioned
below. He came of a family of martyrs (Ep. 33), and was himself
one of the most celebrated confessors of his time. There is extant an
epistle written by him to Lucian, the Carthaginian confessor (Cyprian,
Ep. 21), in which he begs absolution for his sisters, who had
denied the faith. The epistle (as we learn from its own statements) was
written at Easter time and in the year 250, for there was no bishop of
Rome at the time of its composition. As we learn from this passage,
Celerinus went over with these other Roman confessors to the party of
Novatian, and returned with them to the Church. He is, however,
mentioned neither by Cyprian nor by Cornelius (in his epistle to
Cyprian) in connection with the schism of these confessors. This is
very remarkable, especially since Celerinus was quite a prominent
character. It is possible that he was in Carthage the greater part of
the time, and did not return to Rome until shortly before the
confessors returned to the Church. He might then have thrown in his lot
with them, and have returned with them to the orthodox church; and yet,
not having been mentioned by Cornelius’ earlier epistle to
Cyprian, announcing the schismatic position of the confessors, he was
omitted also in the later letters announcing their return (which in
fact only mentions the three leaders), and in Cyprian’s reply,
which of course would only mention those of whom he had been told in
Cornelius’ first epistle. Of the subsequent career of Celerinus
and of these other confessors we know nothing. | a man who by the grace of God most
heroically endured all kinds of torture, and by the strength of his
faith overcame the weakness of the flesh, and mightily conquered the
adversary,—these men found him out and detected his craft and
duplicity, his perjuries and falsehoods, his unsociability and cruel
friendship. And they returned to the holy church and proclaimed in the
presence of many, both bishops and presbyters and a large number of the
laity, all his craft and wickedness, which for a long time he had
concealed. And this they did with lamentations and repentance, because
through the persuasions of the crafty and malicious beast they had left
the church for the time.” A little farther on he says:
7. “How remarkable,
beloved brother, the change and transformation which we have seen take
place in him in a short time. For this most illustrious man, who bound
himself with terrible oaths in nowise to seek the bishopric,2117
2117 There is no reason to doubt, as Cornelius does, Novatian’s
sincerity in declaring that he did not seek the office of bishop. Both
Cornelius and Cyprian make his ambition and his jealousy of Cornelius,
the successful candidate, the cause of his schism. But such an
accusation was made against every schismatic, even when there was not a
shadow of support for it, and there is no reason to suppose it nearer
the truth in this than in other cases. In fact, his own protestation,
as recorded here by Cornelius, and as testified to by Dionysius in
chap. 45, as well as the character of the man as revealed in his life
previous to his episcopal ordination (as certified to even by his
enemies), and in his writings, are entirely opposed to the supposition
that he sought the episcopal office and that his schism was a result of
his defeat. We shall do much better to reject entirely this exceedingly
hostile and slanderous account of his enemy Cornelius, and to accept
his own account of the matter as reported by Dionysius in chap. 25. He
was the natural head of the rigoristic party, made such by his
commanding ability, his deep piety, and his ascetic principles of
living; and when Cornelius, the head of the lax party, was made bishop
(in March, 251), the strict party revolted, and it could not be
otherwise than that Novatian should be elected bishop, and that even if
reluctant he should feel compelled to accept the office in order to
assert the principles which he believed vital, and to prevent the
complete ruin of the Church. Cornelius gives a sad story of his
ordination to the episcopate. But one thing is certain, he had with him
for some time a large portion of the best people in the Roman church,
among them Maximus and others of the most influential confessors, who
seem at length to have returned to the Church only because they saw
that the schism was injuring it. Certainly if Novatian had been a
self-seeker, as Cornelius describes him, and if his ordination had been
of such a nature as Cornelius reports, he could never have had the
support of so many earnest and prominent men. It is doubtless true, as
Cornelius states, that Novatian was ordained by three Italian bishops,
very likely bishops of rural and comparatively insignificant sees, and
it is quite possible that one of them, as he also records, afterwards
repented of his act as schismatic, and returned to the Church and
received absolution. But all this does not imply that these three
bishops were deceived by false pretenses on the part of Novatian, or
that they were intoxicated when they performed the service. This, in
fact, may be looked upon as baseless calumny. Novatus, the Carthaginian
agitator who had caused Cyprian so much trouble, took a prominent part
in the Novatian schism, though to make him the author of it, as Cyprian
does, is undoubtedly incorrect (see Lardner, Works, III. p. 94
sq.; London ed. 1829). It was perhaps he (as reported by Eulogius,
according to Photius, Cod. 182, and by Theodoret, Hær.
Fab. III. 5) that found these three bishops to ordain Novatian. It
is not at all improbable, when so many prominent men in the Roman
church favored the stricter principles and supported Novatian, that
bishops could be found in Italy who held the same principles and would
be glad to ordain Novatian as bishop of Rome. | suddenly appears a bishop as if
thrown among us by some machine.2118
8. For this dogmatist, this
defender of the doctrine of the Church,2119
2119 As
Closs remarks, these words are evidently an allusion to
Novatian’s work, de Trinitate. |
attempting to grasp and seize the episcopate, which had not been given
him from above, chose two of his companions who had given up their own
salvation. And he sent them to a small and insignificant corner of
Italy, that there by some counterfeit argument he might deceive three
bishops, who were rustic and very simple men. And they asserted
positively and strongly that it was necessary that they should come
quickly to Rome, in order that all the dissension which had arisen
there might be appeased through their mediation, jointly with other
bishops.
9. When they had come, being, as
we have stated, very simple in the craft and artifice of the wicked,
they were shut up with certain selected men like himself. And by the
tenth hour, when they had become drunk and sick, he compelled them by
force to confer on him the episcopate through a counterfeit and vain
imposition of hands. Because it had not come to him, he avenged himself
by craft and treachery.
10. One of these bishops shortly
after came back to the church, lamenting and confessing his
transgression. And we communed with him as with a layman, all the
people present interceding for him. And we ordained successors of the
other bishops, and sent them to the places where they were.
11. This avenger of the Gospel2120
2120 ἐκδικητἡς
τοῦ
εὐαγγελίου. Possibly another sarcastic reference to Novatian’s
work in defense of the doctrine of the Church; possibly only an
allusion to the fact that he prided himself on his
orthodoxy. | then did not know that there should be one
bishop in a catholic church;2121
2121 The
principle, that there should be only one bishop in a city, was not
clearly enunciated and forcibly emphasized until the third century.
Cyprian’s writings are full of it (cf. his treatise On the
Unity of the Church), and in connection with this Novatian schism,
which showed so plainly the disintegrating effects of a division of the
church under two bishops, the principle was established so firmly as
never again to be questioned. I do not mean to assert here that the
principle so clearly and conclusively established at this time was a
new principle. We find it enunciated even by Ignatius at the beginning
of the second century, and it was the common opinion of Christendom, or
otherwise Cyprian could not have appealed to universal custom as he
does in discussing the matter. I mean simply that the principle had
never before been brought to such a test as to require its formal
enunciation and public recognition by the clergy and the Church at
large. The emergency which now arose compelled such formal statement of
it; and the Council of Nicæa made it canon law (cf.
Bingham’s Antiquities, I. p. 160 sq.). | yet he was not
ignorant (for how could he be?) that in it there were forty-six
presbyters, seven2122
2122 The limitation of the deacons to seven in number was due to the
fact that the appointment of the Seven by the apostles (Acts vi.) was commonly
looked upon as the institution of the office of the diaconate. But upon
this matter, see above, Bk. II. chap. 1, note 2a. The practice
of limiting the number of the deacons to seven was quite a common one,
and was enacted as a law in the fifteenth canon of the Council of
Neo-Cæsarea (held early in the third century). The practice,
however, was by no means universal, as we are informed by Sozomen
(H. E. VII. 19). Indeed, at least in Alexandria and in
Constantinople, their number was much greater (see Bingham’s
Ant. I. p. 286). | deacons, seven
sub-deacons,2123
2123 The sub-deacons (the highest of the inferior orders of the clergy)
are first mentioned in this epistle of Cornelius and in various
epistles of Cyprian. At what time they arose we cannot tell, but they
seem to have appeared in the East later than in the West, at least the
first references we have to them in the Orient are in the fourth
century, e.g. in the Apost. Const. VIII. 21. They acted as
deacons’ assistants, preparing the sacred vessels for use at the
altar, attended the doors during communion service, and were often
employed by the bishops for the conveyance of letters or messages to
distant churches. See Bingham’s Ant. Bk. III. chap.
2. | forty-two acolyths,2124
2124 The Acolyths (ἀκόλουθοι), another of the inferior orders of the clergy, are
likewise first mentioned here and in Cyprian’s epistles. They
seem to have been of much later institution in the East, for we first
hear of them there in the time of Justinian (Justin. Novel. 59).
Their duties seem to have been to attend to the lights of the church
and to procure the wine for communion service. See Bingham,
ibid. chap. 3. | fifty-two exorcists,2125
2125 The
Exorcists likewise constituted one of the inferior orders of the
clergy; but although we find exorcism very frequently referred to by
the Fathers of the second century, there seems to have been no such
office until the third century, the present being the earliest distinct
reference to it. In the fourth century we find the office in all parts
of the Church East and West. Their duty was to take charge of those
supposed to be possessed of an evil spirit; to pray with them, care for
them, and exorcise the demon when possible. See Bingham, ibid.
chap. 4. | readers,2126
2126 The Readers, or Lectors (Greek, ἀναγνῶσται; Latin, Lectores), constituted still another of the
inferior orders, and were already a distinct office in the time of
Tertullian (cf. de Præscrip. chap. 41). From the third
century on the order seems to have been universal. Their duty was to
read the Scriptures in the public services of the sanctuary. See
Bingham, ibid. chap. 5. |
and janitors,2127
2127 The Janitors, or Doorkeepers (Greek, πυλωροί or θυρωροί; Latin, ostiarii or janitores), are first mentioned
in this passage. In the fourth century, however, we find them
frequently referred to. Their office seems to have been about the same
as that of the modern janitor or sexton. See Bingham, ibid.
chap. 6. | and over
fifteen hundred widows and persons in distress, all of whom the grace
and kindness of the Master nourish.
12. But not even this great
multitude, so necessary in the church, nor those who, through
God’s providence, were rich and full, together with the very
many, even innumerable people, could turn him from such desperation and
presumption and recall him to the Church.”
13. Again, farther on, he adds
these words: “Permit us to say further: On account of what works
or conduct had he the assurance to contend for the episcopate? Was it
that he had been brought up in the Church from the beginning, and had
endured many conflicts in her behalf, and had passed through many and
great dangers for religion? Truly this is not the fact.
14. But Satan, who entered and
dwelt in him for a long time, became the occasion of his believing.
Being delivered by the exorcists, he fell into a severe sickness; and
as he seemed about to die, he received baptism by affusion,
on the bed where
he lay;2128 if indeed we can say that such a
one did receive it.
15. And when he was healed of
his sickness he did not receive the other things which it is necessary
to have according to the canon of the Church, even the being sealed by
the bishop.2129
2129 τοῦ τε
σφραγισθῆναι
ὑπὸ τοῦ
ἐπισκόπου σφραγισθῆναι
here means confirmation or consignation (as it was
commonly called among the Latins); that is, the imposition of the hands
of the bishop which regularly followed baptism, immediately if the
bishop were on the ground, in other cases at as early a date as
possible. The imposition of hands was for the purpose of conveying the
Holy Spirit, who should supply the newly baptized Christian with the
necessary grace to fit him for the Christian life. Confirmation was
thus looked upon as completing the baptism and as a necessary
pre-condition of receiving the eucharist. At the same time, if a person
died after baptism, before it was possible to receive imposition of
hands, the baptism was not regarded as rendered invalid by the
omission, for in the baptism itself the full remission of sins was
supposed to be granted. The confirmation was not necessary for such
remission, but was necessary for the bestowal of the requisite
sustaining grace for the Christian life. Cornelius in the present
paragraph does not intend to imply that regenerating grace was not
given in Novatian’s baptism. He means simply that the Holy Spirit
was not given in that full measure in which it was given by the laying
on of hands, and which was necessary for growth in grace and Christian
living. The baptism was looked on in ordinary cases as in a sense
negative,—effecting the washing away of sin, the laying on of
hands as positive, confirming the gift of the Spirit. The former,
therefore, was sufficient to save the man who died immediately
thereafter; the latter was necessary to sustain the man who still
remained in the world. Compare with these words of Cornelius
Tertullian’s de Baptism. chap. 6. The earliest extant
canon on this subject is the thirty-eighth of the synod of Elvira (306
a.d.), which decrees that a sick person may in
case of necessity be baptized by a layman, but that he is afterward, if
he recovers, to be taken to the bishop that the baptism may be
perfected by the laying on of hands. The seventy-seventh canon decrees
the same thing for those baptized by deacons, but expressly declares
that if the baptized person die before the imposition of hands, he is
to be regarded as saved in virtue of the faith which he confessed in
his baptism. It is not necessary to give other references in connection
with this matter. For further particulars, see Bingham, ibid.
Bk. XII.
On the signification of
the verb σθραγίζω, see Suicer’s Thesaurus. We can hardly believe
that Novatian failed to receive imposition of hands from the bishop,
for it is inconceivable that the latter would have omitted what was
regarded as such an important prerequisite to church communion in the
case of one whom he ordained to the presbyterate. Novatian may not have
received confirmation immediately after his recovery, but he must have
received it before his ordination. As seen in §17, it is not the
omission of confirmation that causes the objections on the part of the
clergy, but the clinical baptism. | And as he did not receive this,2130
2130 The
majority of the mss., followed by Schwegler,
Laemmer, and Heinichen, read τούτων. But
some of the best mss., followed by all the
other editors, read τούτου. | how could he receive the Holy
Spirit?”
16. Shortly after he says
again:
“In the time of
persecution, through cowardice and love of life, he denied that he was
a presbyter. For when he was requested and entreated by the deacons to
come out of the chamber in which he had imprisoned himself and give aid
to the brethren as far as was lawful and possible for a presbyter to
assist those of the brethren who were in danger and needed help, he
paid so little respect to the entreaties of the deacons that he went
away and departed in anger. For he said that he no longer desired to be
a presbyter, as he was an admirer of another philosophy.”2131
2131 This is certainly a calumny. It is possible, as Neander suggests,
that Novatian, although a presbyter, withdrew somewhat from active duty
and lived the life of an ascetic, and that it is this to which
Cornelius refers in speaking of his admiration for “another
philosophy.” But however that may be, Cornelius’
interpretation of his conduct as cowardly or unworthy is quite false.
See above, note 1. |
17. Passing by a few things, he
adds the following:
“For this illustrious man
forsook the Church of God, in which, when he believed, he was judged
worthy of the presbyterate through the favor of the bishop who ordained
him to the presbyterial office. This had been resisted by all the
clergy and many of the laity; because it was unlawful that one who had
been affused on his bed on account of sickness as he had been should
enter into any clerical office;2132
2132 Clinic baptism (so-called from κλίνη, “a
bed”) was ordinarily looked upon in the early Church, in which
immersion was the common mode of baptism, as permanently debarring a
person from the presbyterate, and by many persons it was denied that
such baptism was baptism at all. The latter opinion, however, the
Church refused to sustain (cf. Cyprian, Ep. 75; al. 19). The
twelfth canon of the Council of Neo-Cæsarea (held early in the
fourth century) says, “If any man is baptized only in time of
sickness, he shall not be ordained a presbyter; because his faith was
not voluntary, but as it were of constraint; except his subsequent
faith and diligence recommend him, or else the scarcity of men make it
necessary to ordain him.” It is clear that this canon meant to
apply only to persons whose baptism was delayed by their own fault. It
was common for catechumens to postpone the rite as long as possible in
order not to forfeit baptismal grace by their post-baptismal sins, and
it was to discourage this practice that such canons as this of
Neo-Cæsarea were passed. Even this canon, however, provided for
exceptional cases, and the fact that Novatian was ordained in spite of
his irregular baptism is a proof that he must have been an
exceptionally pious and zealous man. | but the
bishop requested that he might be permitted to ordain this one
only.”
18. He adds to these yet
another, the worst of all the man’s offenses, as
follows:
“For when he has made the
offerings, and distributed a part to each man, as he gives it he
compels the wretched man to swear in place of the blessing. Holding his
hands in both of his own, he will not release him until he has sworn in
this manner (for I will give his own words):
‘Swear to me by the body
and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ that you will never forsake me and
turn to Cornelius.’
19. And the unhappy man does not
taste until he has called down imprecations on himself; and instead of
saying Amen, as he takes the bread, he says, I will never return to
Cornelius.” Farther on he says again:
20. “But know that he has
now been made bare and desolate; as the brethren leave him every day
and return to the church. Moses2133
2133 On Moses (or Moyses, as he is called by Cyprian), see note 9,
above.
Lipsius (Chron. der
röm. Bischöfe, p. 202, note) maintains that Cornelius is
referring, at this point, not to Novatian, but to Novatus, the
Carthaginian presbyter, and that Eusebius has confounded the two men.
He bases this opinion upon the mention of the five presbyters, whom he
identifies with those who, with Novatus, separated from the
Carthaginian church in connection with the schism of Felicissimus (see
Cyprian, Ep. 39; al. 43), and also upon the fact that
Moses died before the election of Novatian as opposition bishop. In
regard to the first point, it must be noticed that, in an epistle to
Cyprian upon the schism of Novatian (Cyprian, Ep. 47; al.
50), Cornelius mentions five presbyters (including Novatus) as
connected with Novatian in his schism. Certainly it is most natural to
refer Cornelius’ words in this paragraph to the same five men.
Indeed, to speak of Novatus and the five presbyters with him would be
very peculiar, for Novatus himself was one of the five, and therefore
there were but four with him. As to the second point, it may simply be
said that Moses might well have refused to commune with Novatian,
before the election of the latter, seeing that his position would
inevitably lead to schism. There remains, therefore, no reason for
supposing Eusebius mistaken, and for referring these words to Novatus
of Carthage, instead of Novatian of Rome. |
also, the blessed
martyr, who lately suffered among us a glorious and admirable
martyrdom, while he was yet alive, beholding his boldness and folly,
refused to commune with him and with the five presbyters who with him
had separated themselves from the church.”
21. At the close of his letter
he gives a list of the bishops who had come to Rome and condemned the
silliness of Novatus, with their names and the parish over which each
of them presided.
22. He mentions also those who
did not come to Rome, but who expressed by letters their agreement with
the vote of these bishops, giving their names and the cities from which
they severally sent them.”2134
2134 These lists of the bishops present at the council, and of those
who expressed their agreement with the decision of the synod, are no
longer extant. | Cornelius
wrote these things to Fabius, bishop of Antioch.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|