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| Constantine's Edict against the Heretics. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
LXIV.—Constantine’s Edict
against the Heretics.
“Victor
Constantinus, Maximus Augustus, to the heretics.
“Understand now, by this
present statute, ye Novatians, Valentinians, Marcionites, Paulians, ye
who are called Cataphrygians,3304
3304 Sufficiently good general accounts of these various heresies may
be found in Blunt. Dict. of Sects, Heresies, Ecclesiastical Parties,
and Schools of Religious Thought, Lond. 1874, p. 382–389,
Novatians; p. 612–614, Valentinians; p. 296–298,
Marcionites; p. 515–517, Samosatenes (Paulians); p.
336–341, Montanists (Cataphrygians). Or see standard
Encyclopædias. | and all ye who
devise and support heresies by means of your private assemblies, with
what a tissue of falsehood and vanity, with what destructive and
venomous errors, your doctrines are inseparably interwoven; so that
through you the healthy soul is stricken with disease, and the living
becomes the prey of everlasting death. Ye haters and enemies of truth
and life, in league with destruction! All your counsels are opposed to
the truth, but familiar with deeds of baseness; full of absurdities and
fictions: and by these ye frame falsehoods, oppress the innocent, and
withhold the light from them that believe. Ever trespassing under the
mask of godliness, ye fill all things with defilement: ye pierce the
pure and guileless conscience with deadly wounds, while ye withdraw,
one may almost say, the very light of day from the eyes of men. But why
should I particularize, when to speak of your criminality as it
deserves demands more time and leisure than I can give? For so long and
unmeasured is the catalogue of your offenses, so hateful and altogether
atrocious are they, that a single day would not suffice to recount them
all. And, indeed, it is well to turn one’s ears and eyes from
such a subject, lest by a description of each particular evil, the pure
sincerity and freshness of one’s own faith be impaired. Why then
do I still bear with such abounding evil; especially since this
protracted clemency is the cause that some who were sound are become
tainted with this pestilent disease? Why not at once strike, as it
were, at the root of so great a mischief by a public manifestation of
displeasure?E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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