Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
Massa Candida
Under the date 24 August, the Martyrologium Romanum
records this
commemoration:
At Carthage, of three hundred holy martyrs in the time of Valerian and Gallienus. Among other torments, the governor ordering a limekiln to be lighted and live coals with incense to be set near by, said to these confessors of the Faith:Choose whether you will offer incense to Jupiter or be thrown down into lime.And they, armed with faith, confessing Christ, the Son of God, with one swift impulse hurled themselves into the fire, where in the fumes of the burning lime, they were reduced to a powder. Hence this band of blessed ones in white raiment have been held worthy of the name, White Mass.
The date of this event may be placed between A.D. 253, when Gallienus was
associated with his father in the imperial office and A.D. 260 when Valerian was
entrapped and made prisoner by Sapor, King of Persia. As to the exact place, St.
Augustine [Ser. cccvi (al. cxii), 2] calls these martyrs the White Mass of
Utica
, indicating that there they were specially commemorated. Utica was only
25 miles from the city of Carthage, which was the capital of a thickly populated
district, and the three hundred may have been brought from Utica to be judged by
the procurator (Galerius Maximus).
The fame of the Massa Candida has been perpetuated chiefly through two early
references to them: that of St. Augustine, and that of the poet Prudentius
(q.v.). The latter, in the thirteenth hymn of his peri stephanon collection, has
a dozen lines describing the pit dug in the midst of the plain, filled nearly
to the brim with lime that emitted choking vapours
, how the stones vomit fire,
and the snowy dust burns.
After telling how they faced this ordeal, he
concludes: Whiteness [candor] possesses their bodies; purity [candor] bears
their minds [or, souls] to heaven. Hence it [the
Both St. Augustine and Prudentius were at the height of their
activity before the end of the fourth century. Moreover, St. Augustine was a
native and a resident of this same Province of Africa, while Prudentius was a
Spaniard. It is natural to suppose that the glorious tale of the three hundred
of Carthage had become familiar to both writers through a fresh and vivid
tradition - no older than the traditions of the Civil War now [1911] are in, say,
the American South. It is not even probable that either of them originated the
metaphor under which the martyrs of the limekiln have been known to later
generation: the name Massa Candida had, most likely been long in use among the
faithful of Africa and Spain. As Christians, they would have been reminded of
Apocalypse 7:13-14, by every commemoration of a martyrdom; as Romans - at least
in language and habit of thought - they were aware that candidates (candidati)
for office were said to have been so called in Republican Rome from the custom
of whitening the toga with chalk or lime (calx) when canvassing for votes. Given
the Apocalyptic image and the Latin etymology (candor - candidus - candidatus;
cf. in the head-long swarm
to which the
poet has referred in a preceding line] has merited to be forever called the
Massa Candida.Te Deum
, Candidatus martyrum exercitus
), it was almost inevitable
that this united body of witnesses for Christ, together winning their heavenly
white raiment in the incandescent lime, which reduced their bodies to a
homogeneous mass, should, by the peculiar form of their agony, have suggested
this name to the African and Spanish Christians.
(For the casuistry of the self-destruction of the Massa Candida, see SUICIDE.)
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