
Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Letter written by the Emperor Constantine to Sapor, the King of Persia, respecting the Christians. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXIV.—Letter written by the Emperor Constantine to
Sapor419
419 Sapor
II. (Shapur) Postumus, the son of Hormisdas II., was one of the
greatest of the Sassanidæ. He reigned from a.d. 310 to 381, and fought with success against
Constantius II. and Julian, “augendi regni cupiditate supra
homines flagrans.” Amm. Marc xviii. 4. | , the King of Persia, respecting
the Christians.
“In protecting the holy faith I enjoy the light of truth,
and by following the light of truth I attain to fuller knowledge of the
faith. Therefore, as facts prove, I recognize that most holy worship as
teaching the knowledge of the most holy God. This service I profess.
With the Power of this God for my ally, beginning at the furthest
boundaries of the ocean, I have, one after another, quickened every
part of the world with hope. Now all the peoples once enslaved by many
tyrants, worn by their daily miseries, and almost extinct, have been
kindled to fresh life by receiving the protection of the
State.
“The God I reverence is He
whose emblem my dedicated troops bear on their shoulders, marching
whithersoever the cause of justice leads them, and rewarding me by
their splendid victories. I confess that I reverence this God with
eternal remembrance. Him, who dwelleth in the highest heavens, I
contemplate with pure and unpolluted mind. On Him I call on bended
knees, shunning all abominable blood, all unseemly and ill-omened
odours, all fire of incantation420
420 The
reading of Basil. Gr. and Lat., and Pini Codex, ἐπῳδῆ for
γεώδη, is approved by Schulze, and may indicate a side-hit at the
Magian fire-worship. But the adjectival form ἐπῳδής for ἐπῳδός is doubtful. | , and all pollution
by which unlawful and shameful error has destroyed whole nations and
hurled them down to hell.
“God does not permit those
gifts which, in His beneficent Providence, He has bestowed upon men for the supply
of their wants to be perverted according to every man’s desire.
He only requires of men a pure mind and a spotless soul, and by these
He weighs their deeds of virtue and piety. He is pleased with
gentleness421 and modesty; He loves the meek422 , and hates those who excite contentions;
He loves faith, chastises unbelief; He breaks all power of boasting423 , and punishes the insolence of the
proud424 . Men exalted with pride He utterly
overthrows, and rewards the humble425 and the
patient426 according to their deserts. Of a just
sovereignty He maketh much, strengthens it by His aid, and guards the
counsels of Princes with the blessing of peace.
“I know that I am not in
error, my brother, when I confess that this God is the Ruler and the
Father of all men, a truth which many who preceded me upon the imperial
throne were so deluded by error as to attempt to deny. But their end
was so dreadful that they have become a fearful warning to all mankind,
to deter others from similar iniquity427
427 The
imperial writer may have had in his mind Tiberius, whose miserable old
age was probably ended by murder; Caius, stabbed by his own guard;
Claudius, poisoned by his wife; Nero, driven to shameful suicide;
Vitellius, beaten to death by a brutal mob; Domitian, assassinated by
his wife and freedmen; Commodus, murdered by his courtiers, and
Pertinax by his guards; Caracalla, murdered; Heliogabalus, murdered;
Alexander Severus, Maximinus, Gordianus, murdered; Decius, killed in
war; Gallus, Æmilianus, Gallienus, all murdered; Aurelianus,
Probus, Carus, murdered. On the other hand Trajan, Marcus Aurelius, and
Diocletian, who persecuted the Church with less or more severity, died
peaceful deaths. | . Of these I
count that man one whom the wrath of God, like a thunderbolt, drove
hence into your country, and who made notorious the memorial of his
shame which exists in your own land428
428 Valerianus, proclaimed Emperor in Rhœtia, a.d. 254, was defeated in his campaign against the
Persians, and treated with indignity alive and dead. After being made
to crouch as a footstool for his conqueror to tread on when mounting on
horseback, he was flayed alive, a.d. 260, and
his tanned skin nailed in a Persian temple as a “memorial of his
shame.” Cf. Const. Orat. xxiv. Gibbon’s catholic scepticism
includes the humiliation of Valerianus. “The tale,” he
says, “is moral and pathetic, but the truth of it may very fairly
be called in question.” (Decline and Fall, Chap. X.). But the
passage in the text, in which the allusion has not always been
perceived, and the parallel reference in the Emperor’s oration,
indicate the belief of a time little more than half a century after the
event. Lactantius (de Morte Persecutorum V.), was probably about ten
years old when Valerianus was defeated, and, if so, gives the testimony
of a contemporary. Orosius (vii. 22) and Agathias (iv. p. 133) would
only copy earlier writers, but the latter states that for the fact of
Sapor’s thus treating Valerianus there is “abundant
historical testimony.” Cf. Tillemont, Hist. Emp. iii. pp. 314,
315. | . Indeed it
appears to have been well ordered that the age in which we live should
be distinguished by the open and manifest punishments inflicted on such
persons. I myself have witnessed the end of those who have persecuted
the people of God by unlawful edicts. Hence it is that I more
especially thank God for having now, by His special Providence,
restored peace to those who observe His law, in which they exalt and
rejoice.
“I am led to expect future
happiness and security whenever God in His goodness unites all men in
the exercise of the one pure and true religion. You may therefore well
understand how exceedingly I rejoice to hear that the finest provinces
of Persia are adorned abundantly with men of this class; I mean
Christians; for it is of them I am speaking. All then is well with you
and with them, for you will have the Lord of all merciful and
beneficent to you. Since then you are so mighty and so pious, I commend
the Christians to your care, and leave them in your protection. Treat
them, I beseech you, with the affection that befits your goodness. Your
fidelity in this respect will confer on yourself and on us
inexpressible benefits.”
This excellent emperor felt so
much solicitude for all who had embraced the true religion, that he not
only watched over those who were his own subjects, but also over the
subjects of other sovereigns. For this reason he was blessed with the
special protection of God, so that although he held the reins of the
whole of Europe and of Africa, and the greater part of Asia, his
subjects were all well disposed to his rule, and obedient to his
government. Foreign nations submitted to his sway, some by voluntary
submission, others overcome in war. Trophies were everywhere erected,
and the emperor was styled Victorious.
The praises of Constantine have,
however, been proclaimed by many other writers. We must resume the
thread of our history. This emperor, who deserves the highest fame,
devoted his whole mind to matters worthy of the apostles, while men who
had been admitted to the sacerdotal dignity not only neglected to edify
the church, but endeavoured to uproot it from the very foundations.
They invented all manner of false accusations against those who
governed the church in accordance with the doctrines taught by the
apostles, and did their best to depose and banish them. Their envy was
not satisfied by the infamous falsehood which they had invented against
Eustathius, but they had recourse to every artifice to effect the
overthrow of another great bulwark of religion. These tragic
occurrences I shall now relate as concisely as possible. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|