Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
St. Cyprian of Carthage
(Thaschus Cæcilius Cyprianus).
Bishop and martyr. Of the date of the saint's birth and of his early life nothing is known. At the time of his conversion to Christianity he had, perhaps, passed middle life. He was famous as an orator and pleader, had considerable wealth, and held, no doubt, a great position in the metropolis of Africa. We learn from his deacon, St. Pontius, whose life of the saint is preserved, that his mien was dignified without severity, and cheerful without effusiveness. His gift of eloquence is evident in his writings. He was not a thinker, a philosopher, a theologian, but eminently a man of the world and an administrator, of vast energies, and of forcible and striking character. His conversion was due to an aged priest named Caecilianus, with whom he seems to have gone to live. Caecilianus in dying commended to Cyprian the care of his wife and family. While yet a catechumen the saint decided to observe chastity, and he gave most of his revenues to the poor. He sold his property, including his gardens at Carthage. These were restored to him (Dei indulgentiâ restituti, says Pontius), being apparently bought back for him by his friends; but he would have sold them again, had the persecution made this imprudent. His baptism probably took place c. 246, presumably on Easter eve, 18 April.
Cyprian's first Christian writing is Ad Donatum
, a monologue spoken to a
friend, sitting under a vine-clad pergola. He tells how, until the grace of God
illuminated and strengthened the convert, it had seemed impossible to conquer
vice; the decay of Roman society is pictured, the gladiatorial shows, the
theatre, the unjust law-courts, the hollowness of political success; the only
refuge is the temperate, studious, and prayerful life of the Christian. At the
beginning should probably be placed the few words of Donatus to Cyprian which
are printed by Hartel as a spurious letter. The style of this pamphlet is
affected and reminds us of the bombastic unintelligibilty of Pontius. It is not
like Tertullian, brilliant, barbarous, uncouth, but it reflects the preciosity
which Apuleius made fashionable in Africa. In his other works Cyprian addresses
a Christian audience; his own fervour is allowed full play, his style becomes
simpler, though forcible, and sometimes poetical, not to say flowery. Without
being classical, it is correct for its date, and the cadences of the sentences
are in strict rhythm in all his more careful writings. On the whole his beauty
of style has rarely ben equalled among the Latin Fathers, and never surpassed
except by the matchless energy and wit of St. Jerome.
Another work of his early days was the Testimonia ad Quirinum
, in two books.
It consists of passages of Scripture arranged under headings to illustrate the
passing away of the Old Law and its fulfillment in Christ. A third book, added
later, contains texts dealing with Christian ethics. This work is of the
greatest value for the history of the Old Latin version of the Bible. It gives
us an African text closely related to that of the Bobbio manuscript known as k
(Turin). Hartel's edition has taken the text from a manuscript which exhibits a
revised version, but what Cyprian wrote can be fairly well restored from the
manuscript cited in Hartel's notes as L. Another book of excerpts on martyrdom
is entitled Ad Fortunatum
; its text cannot be judged in any printed edition.
Cyprian was certainly only a recent convert when he became Bishop of Carthage c.
218 or the beginning of 249, but he passed through all the grades of the
ministry. He had declined the charge, but was constrained by the people. A
minority opposed his election, including five priests, who remained his enemies;
but he tells us that he was validly elected after the Divine judgment, the vote
of the people and the consent of the bishops
.
THE DECIAN PERSECUTION
The prosperity of the Church during a peace of thirty-eight years had produced great disorders. Many even of the bishops were given up to worldliness and gain, and we hear of worse scandals. In October, 249, Decius became emperor with the ambition of restoring the ancient virtue of Rome. In January, 250, he published an edict against Christians. Bishops were to be put to death, other persons to be punished and tortured till they recanted. On 20 January Pope Fabian was martyred, and about the same time St. Cyprian retired to a safe place of hiding. His enemies continually reproached him with this. But to remain at Carthage was to court death, to cause greater danger to others, and to leave the Church without government; for to elect a new bishop would have been as impossible as it was at Rome. He made over much property to a confessor priest, Rogatian, for the needy. Some of the clergy lapsed, others fled; Cyprian suspended their pay, for their ministrations were needed and they were in less danger than the bishop. Form his retreat he encouraged the confessors and wrote eloquent panegyrics on the martyrs. Fifteen soon died in prison and one in the mines. On the arrival of the proconsul in April the severity of the persecution increased. St. Mappalicus died gloriously on the 17th. Children were tortured, women dishonoured. Numidicus, who had encouraged many, saw his wife burnt to alive, and was himself half burnt, then stoned and left for dead; his daughter found him yet living; he recovered and Cyprian made him a priest. Some, after being twice tortured, were dismissed or banished, often beggared.
But there was another side to the picture. At Rome terrified Christians
rushed to the temples to sacrifice. At Carthage the majority apostatized. Some
would not sacrifice, but purchased libelli, or certificates, that they had done
so Some bought the exemption of their family at the price of their own sin. Of
these libellatici there were several thousands in Carthage. Of the fallen some
did not repent, others joined the heretics, but most of them clamoured for
forgiveness and restoration. Some, who had sacrificed under torture, returned to
be tortured afresh. Castus and Æmilius were burnt for recanting, others were
exiled; but such cases were necessarily rare. A few began to perform canonical
penance. The first to suffer at Rome had been a young Carthaginian, Celerinus.
He recovered, and Cyprian made him a lector. His grandmother and two uncles had
been martyrs, but his two sisters apostatized under fear of torture, and in
their repentance gave themselves to the service of those in prison. Their
brother was very urgent for their restoration. His letter from Rome to Lucian, a
confessor at Carthage, is extant, with the reply of the latter. Lucian obtained
from a martyr named Paul before his passion a commission to grant peace to any
who asked for it, and he distributed these indulgences
with a vague formula:
Let such a one with his family communicate
. Tertullian speaks in 197 of the
custom
for those who were not at peace with the Church to beg this peace from
the martyrs. Much later, in his Montanist days (c. 220) he urges that the
adulterers whom Pope Callistus was ready to forgive after due penance, would now
get restored by merely imploring the confessors and those in the mines.
Correspondingly we find Lucian issuing pardons in the name of confessors who
were still alive, a manifest abuse. The heroic Mappalicus had only interceded
for his own sister and mother. It seemed now as if no penance was to be enforced
upon the lapsed, and Cyprian wrote to remonstrate.
Meanwhile official news had arrived from Rome of the death of Pope Fabian,
together with an unsigned and ungrammatical letter to the clergy of Carthage
from some of the Roman clergy, implying blame to Cyprian for the desertion of
his flock, and giving advice as to the treatment of the lapsed. Cyprian
explained his conduct (Ep. xx), and sent to Rome copies of thirteen of the
letter he had written from his hiding-place to Carthage. The five priests who
opposed him were now admitting at once to communion all who had recommendations
from the confessors, and the confessors themselves issued a general indulgence,
in accordance with which the bishops were to restore to communion all whom they
had examined. This was an outrage on discipline, yet Cyprian was ready to give
some value to the indulgences thus improperly granted, but all must be done in
submission to the bishop. He proposed that libellatici should be restored, when
in danger of death, by a priest or even by a deacon, but that the rest should
await the cessation of persecution, when councils could be held at Rome and at
Carthage, and a common decision be agreed upon. Some regard must be had for the
prerogative of the confessors, yet the lapsed must surely not be placed in a
better position than those who had stood fast, and had been tortured, or
beggared, or exiled. The guilty were terrified by marvels that occurred. A man
was struck dumb on the very Capitol where he had denied Christ. Another went mad
in the public baths, and gnawed the tongue which had tasted the pagan victim. In
Cyprian's own presence an infant who had been taken by its nurse to partake at
the heathen altar, and then to the Holy Sacrifice offered by the bishop, was
though in torture, and vomited the Sacred Species it had received in the holy
chalice. A lapsed woman of advanced age had fallen in a fit, on venturing to
communicate unworthily. Another, on opening the receptacle in which, according
to custom, she had taken home the Blessed Sacrament for private Communion, was
deterred from sacrilegiously touching it by fire which came forth. Yet another
found nought within her pyx save cinders. About September, Cyprian received
promise of support from the Roman priests in two letters written by the famous
Novatian in the name of his colleagues. In the beginning of 251 the persecution
waned, owing to the successive appearance of two rival emperors. The confessors
were released, and a council was convened at Carthage. By the perfidy of some
priests Cyprian was unable to leave his retreat till after Easter (23 March).
But he wrote a letter to his flock denouncing the most infamous of the five
priests, Novatus, and his deacon Felicissimus (Ep. xliii). To the bishop's order
to delay the reconciliation of the lapsed until the council, Felicissimus had
replied by a manifesto, declaring that none should communicate with himself who
accepted the large alms distributed by Cyprian's order. The subject of the
letter is more fully developed in the treatise De Ecclesiae Catholicae Unitate
which Cyprian wrote about this time (Benson wrongly thought it was written
against Novatian some weeks later).
This celebrated pamphlet was read by its author to the council which met in
April, that he might get the support of the bishops against the schism started
by Felicissimus and Novatus, who had a large following. The unity with which St.
Cyprian deals is not so much the unity of the whole Church, the necessity of
which he rather postulates, as the unity to be kept in each diocese by union
with the bishop; the unity of the whole Church is maintained by the close union
of the bishops who are glued to one another
, hence whosoever is not with his
bishop is cut off from the unity of the Church and cannot be united to Christ;
the type of the bishop is St. Peter, the first bishop. Protestant
controversialists have attributed to St. Cyprian the absurd argument that Christ
said to Peter what He really meant for all, in order to give a type or picture
of unity. What St. Cyprian really says is simply this, that Christ, using the
metaphor of an edifice, founds His Church on a single foundation which shall
manifest and ensure its unity. And as Peter is the foundation, binding the whole
Church together, so in each diocese is the bishop. With this one argument
Cyprian claims to cut at the root of all heresies and schisms. It has been a
mistake to find any reference to Rome in this passage (De Unit., 4).
CHURCH UNITY
About the time of the opening of the council (251), two letters arrived from
Rome. One of these, announcing the election of a pope, St. Cornelius, was read
by Cyprian to the assembly; the other contained such violent and improbable
accusations against the new pope that he thought it better to pass it over. But
two bishops, Caldonius and Fortunatus, were dispatched to Rome for further
information, and the whole council was to await their return-such was the
importance of a papal election. Meantime another message arrived with the news
that Novatian, the most eminent among the Roman clergy, had been made pope.
Happily two African prelates, Pompeius and Stephanus, who had been present at
the election of Cornelius, arrived also, and were able to testify that he had
been validly set in the place of Peter
, when as yet there was no other
claimant. It was thus possible to reply to the recrimination of Novatian's
envoys, and a short letter was sent to Rome, explaining the discussion which had
taken place in the council. Soon afterwards came the report of Caldonius and
Fortunatus together with a letter from Cornelius, in which the latter complained
somewhat of the delay in recognizing him. Cyprian wrote to Cornelius explaining
his prudent conduct. He added a letter to the confessors who were the main
support of the antipope, leaving it to Cornelius whether it should be delivered
or no. He sent also copies of his two treatises, De Unitate
and De Lapsis
(this had been composed by him immediately after the other), and he wishes the
confessors to read these in order that they may understand what a fearful thing
is schism. It is in this copy of the De Unitate
that Cyprian appears most
probably to have added in the margin an alternative version of the fourth
chapter. The original passage, as found in most manuscripts and as printed in
Hartel's edition, runs thus:
If any will consider this, there is no need of a long treatise and of arguments. 'The Lord saith to Peter: 'I say unto thee that thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it; to thee I will give the keys to the kingdom of heaven, and what thou shalt have bound on earth shall be bound in heaven, and what thou shalt have loosed shall be loosed in heaven.' Upon one He builds His Church, and though to all His Apostles after His resurrection He gives an equal power and says: 'As My Father hath sent Me, even so send I you: Receive the Holy Ghost, whosesoever sins you shall have remitted they shall be remitted unto them, and whosesoever sins you shall have retained they shall be retained', yet that He might make unity manifest, He disposed the origin of that unity beginning from one. The other Apostles were indeed what Peter was, endowed with a like fellowship both of honour and of power, but the commencement proceeds from one, that the Church may be shown to be one. This one Church the Holy Ghost in the person of the Lord designates in the Canticle of Canticles, and says, One is My Dove, My perfect one, one is she to her mother, one to her that bare her. He that holds not this unity of the Church, does he believe that he holds the Faith? He who strives against and resists the Church, is he confident that he is in the Church?
The substituted passage is as follows:
… bound in heaven. Upon one He builds His Church, and to the same He says after His resurrection, 'feed My sheep'. And though to all His Apostles He gave an equal power yet did He set up one chair, and disposed the origin and manner of unity by his authority. The other Apostles were indeed what Peter was, but the primacy is given to Peter, and the Church and the chair is shown to be one. And all are pastors, but the flock is shown to be one, which is fed by all the Apostles with one mind and heart. He that holds not this unity of the Church, does he think that he holds the faith? He who deserts the chair of Peter, upon whom the Church is founded, is he confident that he is in the Church?
These alternative versions are given one after the other in the chief family
of manuscripts which contains them, while in some other families the two have
been partially or wholly combined into one. The combined version is the one
which has been printed in man editions, and has played a large part in
controversy with Protestants. It is of course spurious in this conflated form,
but the alternative form given above is not only found in eighth- and
ninth-century manuscripts, but it is quoted by Bede, by Gregory the Great (in a
letter written for his predecessor Pelagius II), and by St. Gelasius; indeed, it
was almost certainly known to St. Jerome and St. Optatus in the fourth century.
The evidence of the manuscripts would indicate an equally early date. Every
expression and thought in the passage can be paralleled from St. Cyprian's
habitual language, and it seems to be now generally admitted that this
alternative passage is an alteration made by the author himself when forwarding
his work to the Roman confessors. The one chair
is always in Cyprian the
episcopal chair, and Cyprian has been careful to emphasize this point, and to
add a reference to the other great Petrine text, the Charge in John, xxi. The
assertion of the equality of the Apostles as Apostles remains, and the omissions
are only for the sake of brevity. The old contention that it is a Roman forgery
is at all events quite out of the question. Another passage is also altered in
all the same manuscripts which contain the interpolation
; it is a paragraph in
which the humble and pious conduct of the lapsed on this hand
(hic) is
contrasted in a long succession of parallels with the pride and wickedness of
the schismatics on that hand
(illic), but in the delicate manner of the
treatise the latter are only referred to in a general way. In the interpolated
manuscripts we find that the lapsed, whose caused had now been settled by the
council, are on that hand
(illic), whereas the reference to the schismatics -
meaning the Roman confessors who were supporting Novatian, and to whom the book
was being sent - are made as pointed as possible, being brought into the
foreground by the repeated hic, on this hand
.
NOVATIANISM
The saint's remonstrance had its effect, and the confessors rallied to
Cornelius. But for two or three months the confusion throughout the Catholic
Church had been terrible. No other event in these early times shows us so
clearly the enormous importance of the papacy in East and West. St. Dionysius of
Alexandria joined his great influence to that of the Carthaginian primate, and
he was very soon able to write that Antioch, Caesarea, and Jerusalem, Tyre and
Laodicea, all Cilicia and Cappadocia, Syria and Arabia, Mesopotamia, Pontus, and
Bithynia, had returned to union and that their bishops were all in concord
(Eusebius, Hist. Eccl., VII, v). From this we gauge the area of disturbance.
Cyprian says that Novatian assumed the primacy
(Ep. lxix, 8) and sent out his
new apostles to very many cities; and where in all provinces and cities there
were long established, orthodox bishops, tried in persecution, he dared to
create new ones to supplant them, as though he could range through the whole
world (Ep. lv, 24). Such was the power assumed by a third-century antipope. Let
it be remembered that in the first days of the schism no question of heresy was
raised and that Novatian only enunciated his refusal of forgiveness to the
lapsed after he had made himself pope. Cyprian's reasons for holding Cornelius
to be the true bishop are fully detailed in Ep. lv to a bishop, who had at first
yielded to Cyprian's arguments and had commissioned him to inform Cornelius that
he now communicated with him, that is with the Catholic Church
, but had
afterwards wavered. It is evidently implied that if he did not communicate with
Cornelius he would be outside the Catholic Church. Writing to the pope, Cyprian
apologizes for his delay in acknowledging him; he had at least urged all those
who sailed to Rome to make sure that they acknowledged and held the womb and
root of the Catholic Church (Ep. xlviii, 3). By this is probably meant the womb
and root which is the Catholic Church
, but Harnack and many Protestants, as
well as many Catholics, find here a statement that the Roman Church is the womb
and root. Cyprian continues that he had waited for a formal report form the
bishops who had been sent to Rome, before committing all the bishops of Africa,
Numidia, and Mauretania to a decision, in order that, when no doubt could remain
all his colleagues might firmly approve and hold your communion, that is the
unity and charity of the Catholic Church
. It is certain that St. Cyprian held
that one who was in communion with an antipope held not the root of the Catholic
Church, was not nourished at her breast, drank not at her fountain.
So little was the rigorism of Novatian the origin of his schism, that his
chief partisan was no other than Novatus, who at Carthage had been reconciling
the lapsed indiscriminately without penance. He seems to have arrived at Rome
just after the election of Cornelius, and his adhesion to the party of rigorism
had the curious result of destroying the opposition to Cyprian at Carthage. It
is true that Felicissimus fought manfully for a time; he even procured five
bishops, all excommunicated and deposed, who consecrated for the party a certain
Fortunatus in opposition to St. Cyprian, in opposition to St. Cyprian, in order
not to be outdone by the Novatian party, who had already a rival bishop at
Carthage. The faction even appealed to St. Cornelius, and Cyprian had to write
to the pope a long account of the circumstances, ridiculing their presumption in
sailing to Rome, the primatial Church (ecclesia principalis), the Chair of
Peter, whence the unity of the Episcopate had its origin, not recollecting that
these are the Romans whose faith was praised by St. Paul (Rom., i, 8), to whom
unfaith could have no access
. But this embassy was naturally unsuccessful, and
the party of Fortunatus and Felicissimus seems to have melted away.
THE LAPSED
With regard to the lapsed the council had decided that each case must be judged on its merits, and that libellatici should be restored after varying, but lengthy, terms of penance, whereas those who had actually sacrificed might after life-long penance receive Communion in the hour of death. But any one who put off sorrow and penance until the hour of sickness must be refused all Communion. The decision was a severe one. A recrudescence of persecution, announced, Cyprian tells us, by numerous visions, caused the assembling of another council in the summer of 252 (so Benson and Nelke, but Ritsch and Harnack prefer 253), in which it was decided to restore at once all those who were doing penance, in order that they might be fortified by the Holy Eucharist against trial. In this persecution of Gallus and Volusianus, the Church of Rome was again tried, but this time Cyprian was able to congratulate the pope on the firmness shown; the whole Church of Rome, he says, had confessed unanimously, and once again its faith, praised by the Apostle, was celebrated throughout the whole world (Ep. lx). About June 253, Cornelius was exiled to Centumcellae (Civitavecchia), and died there, being counted as a martyr by Cyprian and the rest of the Church. His successor Lucius was at once sent to the same place on his election, but soon was allowed to return, and Cyprian wrote to congratulate him. He died 5 March, 254, and was succeeded by Stephen, 12 May, 254.
REBAPTISM OF HERETICS
Tertullian had characteristically argued long before, that heretics have not
the same God, the same Christ with Catholics, therefore their baptism is null.
The African Church had adopted this view in a council held under a predecessor
of Cyprian, Agrippinus, at Carthage. In the East it was also the custom of
Cilicia, Cappadocia, and Galatia to rebaptize Montanists who returned to the
church. Cyprian's opinion of baptism by heretics was strongly expresses: Non
abluuntur illic homines, sed potius sordidantur, nec purgantur delicta sed immo
cumulantur. Non Deo nativitas illa sed diabolo filios generat
(De Unit.
, xi).
A certain bishop, Magnus, wrote to ask if the baptism of the Novatians was to be
respected (Ep. lxix). Cyprian's answer may be of the year 255; he denies that
they are to be distinguished from any other heretics. Later we find a letter in
the same sense, probably of the spring of 255 (autumn, according to d'Ales),
from a council under Cyprian of thirty-one bishops (Ep. lxx), addressed to
eighteen Numidian bishops; this was apparently the beginning of the controversy.
It appears that the bishops of Mauretania did not in this follow the custom of
Proconsular Africa and Numidia, and that Pope Stephen sent them a letter
approving their adherence to Roman custom.
Cyprian, being consulted by a Numidian bishop, Quintus, sent him Ep. lxx, and
replied to his difficulties (Ep. lxxi). The spring council at Carthage in the
following year, 256, was more numerous than usual, and sixty-one bishops signed
the conciliar letter to the pope explaining their reasons for rebaptizing, and
claiming that it was a question upon which bishops were free to differ. This was
not Stephen's view, and he immediately issued a decree, couched apparently in
very peremptory terms, that no innovation
was to be made (this is taken by
some moderns to mean no new baptism
), but the Roman tradition of merely laying
hands on converted heretics in sign of absolution must be everywhere observed,
on pain of excommunication. This letter was evidently addressed to the African
bishops, and contained some severe censures on Cyprian himself. Cyprian writes
to Jubainus that he is defending the one Church, the Church founded on Peter-Why
then is he called a prevaricator of the truth, a traitor to the truth;? (Ep.
lxxiii, 11). To the same correspondent he sends Epp. lxx, lxxi, lxxii; he makes
no laws for others, but retains his own liberty. He sends also a copy of his
newly written treatise De Bono Patientiae
. To Pompeius, who had asked to see a
copy of Stephen's rescript, he writes with great violence: As you read it, you
will note his error more and more clearly: in approving the baptism of all the
heresies, he has heaped into his own breast the sins of all of them; a fine
tradition indeed! What blindness of mind, what depravity!
- ineptitude
, hard
obstinacy
- such are the expressions which run from the pen of one who declared
that opinion on the subject was free, and who in this very letter explains that
a bishop must never be quarrelsome, but meek and teachable. In september, 256, a
yet larger council assembled at Carthage. All agreed with Cyprian; Stephen was
not mentioned; and some writers have even supposed that the council met before
Stephen's letter was received (so Ritschl, Grisar, Ernst, Bardenhewer). Cyprian
did not wish the responsibility to be all his own. He declared that no one made
himself a bishop of bishops, and that all must give their true opinion. The vote
of each was therefore given in a short speech, and the minutes have come down to
us in the Cyprianic correspondence under the title of Sententiae Episcoporum
.
But the messengers sent to Rome with this document were refused an audience and
even denied all hospitality by the pope. They returned incontinently to Carthage,
and Cyprian tried for support from the East. He wrote to the famous Bishop of
Caesarea in Cappadocia, Firmilian, sending him the treatise De Unitate
and the
correspondence on the baptismal question. By the middle of November Firmilian's
reply had arrived, and it has come down to us in a translation made at the time
in Africa. Its tone is, if possible, more violent than that of Cyprian. (See
FIRMILIAN.) After this we know no more of the controversy.
Stephen died on 27 August, 257, and was succeeded by Sixtus II, who certainly
communicated with Cyprian, and is called by Pontius a good and peace-loving
bishop
. Probably when it was seen at Rome that the East was largely committed
to the same wrong practice, the question was tacitly dropped. It should be
remembered that, though Stephen had demanded unquestioning obedience, he had
apparently, like Cyprian, considered the matter as a point of discipline. St.
Cyprian supports his view by a wrong inference from the unity of the Church, and
no one thought of the principle afterwards taught by St. Augustine, that, since
Christ is always the principal agent, the validity of the sacrament is
independent of the unworthiness of the minister: Ipse est qui baptizat. Yet this
is what is implied in Stephen's insistence upon nothing more than the correct
form, because baptism is given in the name of Christ
, and the effect is due
to the majesty of the Name
. The laying on of hands enjoined by Stephen is
repeatedly said to be in poenitentiam, yet Cyprian goes on to argue that the
gift of the Holy Ghost by the laying on of hands is not the new birth, but must
be subsequent to it and implies it. This has led some moderns into the notion
that Stephen meant confirmation to be given (so Duchesne), or at least that he
has been so misunderstood by Cyprian (d'Alès). But the passage (Ep. lxxiv, 7)
need not mean this, and it is most improbable that confirmation was even thought
of in this connection. Cyprian seems to consider the laying on of hands in
penance to be a giving of the Holy Ghost. In the East the custom of rebaptizing
heretics had perhaps arisen from the fact that so many heretics disbelieved in
the Holy Trinity, and possibly did not even use the right form and matter. For
centuries the practice persisted, at least in the case of some of the heresies.
But in the West to rebaptize was regarded as heretical, and Africa came into
line soon after St. Cyprian. St. Augustine, St. Jerome, and St. Vincent of
Lérins are full of praise for the firmness of Stephen as befitting his place.
But Cyprian's unfortunate letters became the chief support of the puritanism of
the Donatists. St. Augustine in his De Baptismo
goes through them one by one.
He will not dwell on the violent words quae in Stephanum irritatus effudit, and
expresses his confidence that Cyprian's glorious martyrdom will have atoned for
his excess.
APPEALS TO ROME
Ep. lxviii was written to Stephen before the breach. Cyprian has heard twice from Faustinus, Bishop of Lyons, that Marcianus, Bishop of Arles, has joined the party of Novatian. The pope will certainly have been already informed of this by Faustinus and by the other bishops of the province. Cyprian urges:
You ought to send very full letters to our fellow-bishops in Gaul, not to allow the obstinate and proud Marcianus any more to insult our fellowship … Therefore send letters to the province and to the people of Arles, by which, Marcianus having been excommunicated, another shall be substituted in his place … for the whole copious body of bishops is joined together by the glue of mutual concord and the bond of unity, in order that if any of our fellowship should attempt to make a heresy and to lacerate and devastate the flock of Christ, the rest may give their aid … For though we are many shepherds, yet we feed one flock.
It seems incontestable that Cyprian is here explaining to the pope why he ventured to interfere, and that he attributes to the pope the power of deposing Marcanus and ordering a fresh election. We should compare his witness that Novatian usurped a similar power as antipope.
Another letter dates perhaps somewhat later. It emanates form a council of thirty seven bishops, and was obviously composed by Cyprian. It is addressed to the priest Felix and the people of Legio and Asturica, and to the deacon Ælius and the people of Emerita, in Spain. It relates that the bishops Felix and Sabinus had come to Carthage to complain. They had been legitimately ordained by the bishops of the province in the place of the former bishops, Basilides and Martialis, who had both accepted libelli in the persecution. Basilides had further blasphemed God, in sickness, had confessed his blasphemy, had voluntarily resigned his bishopric, and had been thankful to be allowed lay communion. Martialis had indulged in pagan banquets and had buried his sons in a pagan cemetery. He had publicly attested before the procurator ducenarius that he had denied Christ. Wherefore, says the letter, such men are unfit to be bishops, the whole Church and the late Pope Cornelius having decided that such men may be admitted to penance but never to ordination; it does not profit them that they have deceived Pope Stephen, who was afar off and unaware of the facts, so that they obtained to be unjustly restored to their sees; nay, by this deceit they have only increased their guilt. The letter is thus a declaration that Stephen was wickedly deceived. No fault is imputed to him, no is there any claim to reverse his decision or to deny his right to give it; it is simply pointed out that it was founded on false information, and was therefore null. But it is obvious that the African council had heard only one side, whereas Felix and Sabinus must have pleaded their cause at Rome before they came to Africa. On this ground the Africans seem to have made too hasty a judgment. But nothing more is known of the matter.
MARTYRDOM
The empire was surrounded by barbarian hordes who poured in on all sides. The
danger was the signal for a renewal of persecution on the part of the Emperor
Valerian. At Alexandria St. Dionysius was exiled. On 30 August, 257, Cyprian was
brought before the Proconsul Paternus in his secretarium. His interrogatory is
extant and forms the first part of the Acta proconsularia
of his martyrdom.
Cyprian declares himself a Christian and a bishop. He serves one God to Whom he
prays day and night for all men and for the safety of the emperor. Do you
persevere in this?
asks Paternus. A good will which knows God cannot be
altered.
Can you, then, go into exile at Curubis?
I go.
He is asked for the
names of the priests also, but replies that delation is forbidden by the laws;
they will be found easily enough in their respective cities. On September he
went to Curubis, accompanied by Pontius. The town was lonely, but Pontius tells
us it was sunny and pleasant, and that there were plenty of visitors, while the
citizens were full of kindness. He relates at length Cyprian's dream on his
first night there, that he was in the proconsul's court and condemned to death,
but was reprieved at his own request until the morrow. He awoke in terror, but
once awake he awaited that morrow with calmness. It came to him on the very
anniversary of the dream. In Numidia the measurers were more severe. Cyprian
writes to nine bishops who were working in the mines, with half their hair shorn,
and with insufficient food and clothing. He was still rich and able to help them.
Their replies are preserved, and we have also the authentic Acts of several
African martyrs who suffered soon after Cyprian.
In August, 258, Cyprian learned that Pope Sixtus had been put to death in the
catacombs on the 6th of that month, together with four of his deacons, in
consequence of a new edict that bishops, priests, and deacons should be at once
put to death; senators, knights, and others of rank are to lose their goods, and
if they still persist, to die; matrons to be exiled; Caesarians (officers of the
fiscus) to become slaves. Galerius Maximus, the successor of Paternus, sent for
Cyprian back to Carthage, and in his own gardens the bishop awaited the final
sentence. Many great personages urged him to fly, but he had now no vision to
recommend this course, and he desired above all to remain to exhort others. Yet
he hid himself rather than obey the proconsul's summons to Utica, for he
declared it was right for a bishop to die in his own city. On the return of
Galerius to Carthage, Cyprian was brought from his gardens by two principes in a
chariot, but the proconsul was ill, and Cyprian passed the night in the house of
the first princeps in the company of his friends. Of the rest we have a vague
description by Pontius and a detailed report in the proconsular Acts. On the
morning of the 14th a crowd gathered at the villa of Sextus
, by order of the
authorities. Cyprian was tried there. He refused to sacrifice, and added that in
such a matter there was no room for thought of the consequences to himself. The
proconsul read his condemnation and the multitude cried, Let us be beheaded
with him!
He was taken into the grounds, to a hollow surrounded by trees, into
which many of the people climbed. Cyprian took off his cloak, and knelt down and
prayed. Then he took off his dalmatic and gave it to his deacons, and stood in
his linen tunic in silence awaiting the executioner, to whom he ordered
twenty-five gold pieces to be given. The brethren cast cloths and handkerchiefs
before him to catch his blood. He bandaged his own eyes with the help of a
priest and a deacon, both called Julius. So he suffered. For the rest of the day
his body was exposed to satisfy the curiosity of the pagans. But at night the
brethren bore him with candles and torches, with prayer and great triumph, to
the cemetery of Macrobius Candidianus in the suburb of Mapalia. He was the first
Bishop of Carthage to obtain the crown of martyrdom.
WRITINGS
The correspondence of Cyprian consists of eighty-one letters. Sixty-two of
them are his own, three more are in the name of councils. From this large
collection we get a vivid picture of his time. The first collection of his
writings must have been made just before or just after his death, as it was
known to Pontius. It consisted of ten treatises and seven letters on martyrdom.
To these were added in Africa a set of letters on the baptismal question, and at
Rome, it seems, the correspondence with Cornelius, except Ep. xlvii. Other
letters were successively aggregated to these groups, including letters to
Cyprian or connected with him, his collections of Testimonies, and many spurious
works. To the treatises already mentioned we have to add a well-known exposition
of the Lord's Prayer; a work on the simplicity of dress proper to consecrated
virgins (these are both founded on Tertullian); On the Mortality
, a beautiful
pamphlet, composed on the occasion of the plague which reached Carthage in 252,
when Cyprian, with wonderful energy, raised a staff of workers and a great fund
of money for the nursing of the sick and the burial of the dead. Another work,
On Almsgiving
, its Christian character, necessity, and satisfactory value, was
perhaps written, as Watson has pointed out, in reply to the calumny that
Cyprian's own lavish gifts were bribes to attach men to his side. Only one of
his writings is couched in a pungent strain, the ad Demetrianum
, in which he
replies in a spirited manner to the accusation of a heathen that Christianity
had brought the plague upon the world. Two short works, On Patience
and On
Rivalry and Envy
, apparently written during the baptismal controversy, were
much read in ancient times. St. Cyprian was the first great Latin writer among
the Christians, for Tertullian fell into heresy, and his style was harsh and
unintelligible. Until the days of Jerome and Augustine, Cyprian's writings had
no rivals in the West. Their praise is sung by Prudentius, who joins with Pacian,
Jerome, Augustine, and many others in attesting their extraordinary popularity.
DOCTRINE
The little that can be extracted from St. Cyprian on the Holy Trinity and the Incarnation is correct, judged by later standards. On baptismal regeneration, on the Real Presence, on the Sacrifice of the Mass, his faith is clearly and repeatedly expressed, especially in Ep. lxiv on infant baptism, and in Ep. lxiii on the mixed chalice, written against the sacrilegious custom of using water without wine for Mass. On penance he is clear, like all the ancients, that for those who have been separated from the Church by sin there is no return except by a humble confession (exomologesis apud sacerdotes), followed by remissio facta per sacerdotes. The ordinary minister of this sacrament is the sacerdos par excellence, the bishop; but priests can administer it subject to him, and in case of necessity the lapsed might be restored by a deacon. He does not add, as we should at the present day, that in this case there is no sacrament; such theological distinctions were not in his line. There was not even a beginning of canon law in the Western Church of the third century. In Cyprian's view each bishop is answerable to God alone for his action, though he ought to take counsel of the clergy and of the laity also in all important matters. The Bishop of Carthage had a great position as honorary chief of all the bishops in the provinces of Proconsular Africa, Numidia, and Mauretania, who were about a hundred in number; but he had no actual jurisdiction over them. They seem to have met in some numbers at Carthage every spring, but their conciliar decisions had no real binding force. If a bishop should apostatize or become a heretic or fall into scandalous sin, he might be deposed by his comprovincials or by the pope. Cyprian probably thought that questions of heresy would always be too obvious to need much discussion. It is certain that where internal questions of heresy would always be too obvious to need much discussion. It is certain that where internal discipline was concerned he considered that Rome should not interfere, and that uniformity was not desirable - a most unpractical notion. We have always to remember that his experience as a Christian was of short duration, that he became a bishop soon after he was converted, and that he had no Christian writings besides Holy Scripture to study besides those of Tertullian. He evidently knew no Greek, and probably was not acquainted with the translation of Irenaeus. Rome was to him the centre of the Church's unity; it was inaccessible to heresy, which had been knocking at its door for a century in vain. It was the See of Peter, who was the type of the bishop, the first of the Apostles. Difference of opinion between bishops as to the right occupant of the Sees of Arles or Emerita would not involve breach of communion, but rival bishops at Rome would divide the Church, and to communicate with the wrong one would be schism. It is controverted whether chastity was obligatory or only strongly urged upon priests in his day. The consecrated virgins were to him the flower of his flock, the jewels of the Church, amid the profligacy of paganism.
SPURIA
A short treatise, Quod Idola dii non sint
, is printed in all editions as
Cyprian's. It is made up out of Tertullian and Minucius Felix. Its genuineness
is accepted by Benson, Monceaux, and Bardenhewer, as it was anciently by Jerome
and Augustine. It has been attributed by Haussleiter to Novatian, and is
rejected by Harnack, Watson, and von Soden. De Spectaculis
and De bono
pudicitiae
are, with some probability, ascribed to Novatian. They are
well-written letters of an absent bishop to his flock. De Laude martyrii
is
again attributed by Harnack to Novatian; but this is not generally accepted.
Adversus Judaeos
is perhaps by a Novatianist and Harnack ascribes it to
Novatian himself. Ad Novatianum
is ascribed by Harnack to Pope Sixtus II.
Ehrhard, Benson, Nelke, and Weyman agree with him that it was written in Rome.
This is denied by Julicher, Bardenhewer, Monceaux. Rombold thinks it is by
Cyprian. De Rebaptismate
is apparently the work attributed by Genadius to a
Roman named Ursinus, c. 400. He was followed by some earlier critics, Routh,
Oudin, and lately by Zahn. But it was almost certainly written during the
baptismal controversy under Stephen. It comes from Rome (so Harnack and others)
or from Mauretania (so Ernst, Monceaux, d'Arles), and is directed against the
view of Cyprian. The little homily De Aleatoribus
has had quite a literature
of its own within the last few years, since it was attributed by Harnack to Pope
Victor, and therefore accounted the earliest Latin ecclesiastical writing. The
controversy has at least made it clear that the author was either very early or
not orthodox. It has been shown to be improbable that he was very early, and
Harnack now admits that the work is by an antipope, either Novatianist or
Donatist. References to all the brochures and articles on the subject will be
found in Ehrhard, in Bardenhewer, and especially in Harnack (Chronol., II, 370
sqq.).
De Montibus Sina et Sion
is possibly older than Cyprian's time (see Harnack,
and also Turner in Journal of Theol. Studies, July 1906). Ad Vigilium Episcopum
de Judaica incredulitate
is by a certain Celsus, and was once supposed by
Harnack and Zahn to be addressed to the well-known Vigilius of Thapsus, but
Macholz has now convinced Harnack that it dates from either the persecution of
Valerian or that of Maxentius. The two Orationes
are of uncertain date and
authorship. The tract De Singularitate clericorum
has been attributed by Dom
Morin and by Harnack to the Donatist Bishop Macrobius in the fourth century. De
Duplici Martyrio ad Fortunatum
is found in no manuscript, and was apparently
written by Erasmus in 1530. De Paschâ computus
was written in the year
preceding Easter, 243. All the above spuria are printed in Hartel's edition of
Cyprian. The Exhortatio de paenitentia
(first printed by Trombelli in 1751) is
placed in the fourth or fifth century by Wunderer, but in Cyprian's time or
Monceaux. Four letter are also given by Hartel; the first is the original
commencement of the Ad Donatum
. The others are forgeries; the third, according
to Mercati, is by a fourth-century Donatist. The six poems are by one author, of
quite uncertain date. The amusing Cena Cypriani
is found in a large number of
Cyprianic manuscripts. Its date is uncertain; it was re-edited by Blessed
Rhabanus Maurus. On the use of it at pageants in the early Middle Ages, see Mann,
History of the Popes
, II, 289.
The principal editions of the works of St. Cyprian are: Rome, 1471 (the ed.
princeps), dedicated to Paul II; reprinted, Venice, 1471, and 1483; Memmingen, c.
1477; Deventer, c. 1477; Paris, 1500; ed. by Rembolt (Paris, 1512); by Erasmus
(Basle, 1520 and frequently; the ed. of 1544 was printed at Cologne). A careful
critical edition was prepared by Latino Latini, and published by Manutius (Rome,
1563); Morel also went to the manuscripts (Paris, 1564); so did Pamele (Antwerp,
1568), but with less success; Rigault did somewhat better (Paris, 1648, etc.).
John Fell, Bishop of Oxford and Dean of Christ Church, published a well-known
edition from manuscripts in England (Oxford, 1682). The dissertations by Dodwell
and the Annales Cyprianici
by Pearson, who arranged the letters in
chronological order, make this edition important, though the text is poor. The
edition prepared by Etienne Baluze was brought out after his death by Dom
Prudence Maran (Paris, 1726), and has been several times reprinted, especially
by Migne (P.L., IV and V). The best edition is that of the Vienna Academy
(C.S.E.L., vol. III, in 3 parts, Vienna, 1868-1871), edited from the manuscripts
by Hartel. Since then much work has been done upon the history of the text, and
especially on the order of the letters and treatises as witnessing to the
genealogy of the codices.
A stichometrical list, probably made in 354, of the Books of the Bible, and of many works of St. Cyprian, was published in 1886 from a manuscript then at Cheltenham by MOMMSEN, Zur lat. Stichometric; Hermes, XXI, 142; ibid. (1890), XXV, 636, on a second MS. at St. Gall. See SANDAY and TURNER in Studia Biblica (Oxford, 1891), III; TURNER in Classical Review (1892), etc.), VI, 205. On Oxford MSS., see WORDSWORTh in Old Lat. Biblical Texts (Oxford, 1886), II, 123; on Madrid MSS., SCHULZ, Th. Lit. Zeitung (1897), p. 179. On other MSS., TURNER in Journal of Th. St., III, 282, 586, 579; RAMSAY, ibid., III, 585, IV, 86. On the significance of the order, CHAPMAN, ibid., IV, 103; VON SODEN, Die cyprianische Briefsammlung (Leipzig, 1904). There are many interesting points in MERCATI, D'alcuni nuovi sussidi per la critica del testo di S. Cipriano (Rome, 1899).
On the life of St. Cyprian: PEARSON, Annales Cyprianici, ed. FELL; Acta SS., 14 Sept; RETTBERG, Th. Caec. Cyprianus (Gottingen, 1831); FREPPEL, Saint Cyprien et l'Eglise d'Afrique (Paris, 1865, etc.); PETERS, Der hl. Cypr. v. Karth. Ratisbon, 1877); Freppel and Peters occasionally exaggerate in the Catholic interest. FECHTRUP, Der hl. Cyprian (Munster, 1878); RITSCHL, Cyprian v. K. und die Verfassung der Kirche (Gottingen, 1885); BENSON, Cyprian, his life, his times, his work (London, 1897). (This is the fullest and best English life; it is full of enthusiasm, but marred by odium theologicum, and quite untrustworthy when controversial point arise, whether against Nonconformists or against Catholics.) MONCEAUX, Hist. litt. de l'Afrique chret. (Paris, 1902), II, a valuable work. Of the accounts in histories, encyclopedias, and patrologies, the best is that of BARDENHEWER, Gesch. der altkirchl. Lit. (Freiburg, 1903), II. PEARSON's chronological order of the letters is given in HARTEL's edition. Rectifications are proposed by RITSCHL, De Epistulis Cyprianicis (Halle, 1885), and Cyprian v. Karthago (Gottingen, 1885); by NELKE, Die Chronologie der Korresp. Cypr. (Thorn, 1902); by VON SODEN, op. cit.; by BENSON and MONCEAUX. These views are discussed by BARDENHEWER. loc. cit., and HARNACK, Chronol., II. BONACCORSI, Le lettere di S. Cipriano in Riv. storico-critica delle scienze teol. (Rome, 1905), I, 377; STUFLER, Die Behandlung der Gefallenen zur Zeit der decischen Verfolgung in Zeitschrift fur Kathol. Theol., 1907, XXXI, 577; DWIGHT, St. Cyprian and the libelli martyrum in Amer. Cath. Qu. Rev. (1907), XXXII, 478. On the chronology of the baptismal controversy, D'ALES, La question baptismale au temps de Saint-Cyprien in Rev. des Questions Hist. (1907), p. 353.
On Cyprian's Biblical text: CORSSEN, Zur Orientierung über die bisherige Erforschung der klass. Altertumswiss. (1899); SANDAY in Old Latin Bibl. Texts (1886), II; TURNER in Journ. Theol. St., II, 600, 610; HEIDENREICH, Der ntl. Text bei Cyprian (Bamberg, 1900); MONCEAUX, op. cit.; CORSSEN, Der cypr. Text der Acta Ap. (Berlin, 1892); ZAHN, Forschungen (Erlangen, 1891), IV, 79 (on Cyprian's text of the Apoc.). A new edition (Oxford Univ. Press) is expected of the Testimonia by SANDAY and TURNER. Tentative prolegomena to it by TURNER in Journal Theological Studies (1905), VI, 246, and (1907), IX, 62. The work has been interpolated; see RAMSAY, On early insertions in the third book of St. Cyprian's Text in Journal of Theol. St. (1901), II, 276. Testimonies of the ancients to Cyprian in HARNACK, Gesch. der altchristl. Lit., I; GOTZ, Gesch. der cyprianischen Literatur bis zu der Zeit der ersten erhaltenen Handschriften (Basle, 1891). On the Latin of St. Cyprian an excellent essay by WATSON, The Style and Language of St. Cyprian in Stud. Bibl. (Oxford, 1896), IV; BAYARD, Le Latin de Saint Cyprien (Paris, 1902). The letters of Cornelius are in Vulgar Latin (see MERCATI, op. cit.), and so are Epp. viii (anonymous) and xxi-xxiv (Celerinus, Lucian, Confessors, Caldonius); they have been edited by MIODONSKI, Adversus Alcatores (Erlangen and Leipzig, 1889). On the interpolations in De Unitate Eccl., see HARTEL, Preface; BENSON, pp. 200-21, 547-552; CHAPMAN, Les interpolations dans le traite de Saint Cyprien sur l'unite de l'Eglise in Revue Benedictine (1902), XIX, 246, 357, and (1903), XX, 26; HARNACK in Theo. Litt. Zeitung (1903), no. 9, and in Chronol., II; WATSON in Journal Theol. St. (1904), p. 432; CHAPMAN, ibid., p. 634, etc. On particular points see HARNACK in Texte und Untersuch., IV, 3, VIII, 2; on the letters of the Roman clergy HARNACK in Theol. Abhandl. Carl v. Weisacker gewidmet (Freiburg, 1896).
On Cyprian's theology much has been written. RITSCHL is fanciful and unsympathetic, BENSON untrustworthy. GOTZ, Das Christentum Cyprians (Giessen, 1896). On his trust in visions, HARNACK, Cyprian als Enthusiast in Zeitschr. fur ntl. Wiss. (1902), III, ibid. On the baptismal controversy and Cyprian's excommunication, see GRISAR in Zeitschr. fur kath. Theol. (1881), V; HOENSBROECH, ibid. (1891), XV; ERNST, ibid., XVII, XVIII, XIX. POSCHMANN, Die Sichtbarkeit der Kirche nach der Lehre des h. Cypr. (Breslau, 1907); RIOU, La genese de l'unite catholique et la pensee de Cyprien (Paris, 1907). To merely controversial works it is unnecessary to refer.
The above is only a selection from an immense literature on Cyprian and the pseudo-Cyprianic writings, for which see CHEVALIER, Bio-Bibl., and RICHARDSON, Bibliographical Synopsis. Good lists in VON SODEN, and in HARNACK, Chronol., II; the very full references in BARDENHEWER are conveniently classified.
Heiligenlexikon als USB-Stick oder als DVD
Unterstützung für das Ökumenische Heiligenlexikon
Artikel kommentieren / Fehler melden
Suchen bei amazon: Bücher über Catholic Encyclopedia - St. Cyprian of Carthage
Wikipedia: Artikel über Catholic Encyclopedia - St. Cyprian of Carthage
Fragen? - unsere FAQs antworten!
Impressum - Datenschutzerklärung
korrekt zitieren: Artikel
Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet das Ökumenische Heiligenlexikon in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über https://d-nb.info/1175439177 und https://d-nb.info/969828497 abrufbar.