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Tertullian
(QUINTUS SEPTIMIUS FLORENS TERTULLIANUS).
Ecclesiastical writer in the second and third centuries, b. probably about 160 at Carthage, being the son of a centurion in the proconsular service. He was evidently by profession an advocate in the law-courts, and he shows a close acquaintance with the procedure and terms of Roman law, though it is doubtful whether he is to be identified with a jurist Tertullian who is cited in the Pandects. He knew Greek as well as Latin, and wrote works in Greek which have not come down to us. A pagan until middle life, he had shared the pagan prejudices against Christianity, and had indulged like others in shameful pleasures. His conversion was not later than the year 197, and may have been earlier. He embraced the Faith with all the ardour of his impetuous nature. He became a priest, no doubt of the Church of Carthage. Monceaux, followed by d'Ales, considers that his earlier writings were composed while he was yet a layman, and if this be so, then his ordination was about 200. His extant writings range in date from the apologetics of 197 to the attack on a bishop who is probably Pope Callistus (after 218). It was after the year 206 that he joined the Montanist sect, and he seems to have definitively separated from the Church about 211 (Harnack) or 213 (Monceaux). After writing more virulently against the Church than even against heathen and persecutors, he separated from the Montanists and founded a sect of his own. The remnant of the Tertullianists was reconciled to the Church by St. Augustine. A number of the works of Tertullian are on special points of belief or discipline. According to St. Jerome he lived to extreme old age.
The year 197 saw the publication of a short address by Tertullian, To the
Martyrs
, and of his great apologetic works, the Ad nationes
and the
Apologeticus
. The former has been considered a finished sketch for the latter;
but it is more true to say that the second work has a different purpose, though
a great deal of the same matter occurs in both, the same arguments being
displayed in the same manner, with the same examples and even the same phrases.
The appeal to the nations suffers from its transmission in a single codex, in
which omissions of a word or several words or whole lines are to be deplored.
Tertullian's style is difficult enough without such super added causes of
obscurity. But the text of the Ad nationes
must have been always rougher than
that of the Apologeticus
, which is a more careful as well as a more perfect
work, and contains more matter because of its better arrangement; for it is just
the same length as the two books Ad nationes
.
The Ad nationes
has for its entire object the refutation of calumnies
against Christians. In the first place they are proved to repose on unreasoning
hatred only; the procedure of trial is illogical; the offence is nothing but the
name of Christian, which ought rather to be a title of honour; no proof is
forthcoming of any crimes, only rumour; the first persecutor was Nero, the worst
of emperors. Secondly, the individual charges are met; Tertullian challenges the
reader to believe in anything so contrary to nature as the accusations of
infanticide and incest. Christians are not the causes of earthquakes and floods
and famine, for these happened long before Christianity. The pagans despise
their own gods, banish them, forbid their worship, mock them on the stage; the
poets tell horrid stories of them; they were in reality only men, and bad men.
You say we worship an ass's head, he goes on, but you worship all kinds of
animals; your gods are images made on a cross framework, so you worship crosses.
You say we worship the sun; so do you. A certain Jew hawked about a caricature
of a creature half ass, half goat, as our god; but you actually adore
half-animals. As for infanticide, you expose your own children and kill the
unborn. Your promiscuous lust causes you to be in danger of the incest of which
you accuse us. We do not swear by the genius of Caesar, but we are loyal, for we
pray for him, whereas you revolt. Caesar does not want to be a god; he prefers
to be alive. You say it is through obstinacy that we despise death; but of old
such contempt of death was esteemed heroic virtue. Many among you brave death
for gain or wagers; but we, because we believe in judgment. Finally, do us
justice; examine our case, and change your minds. The second book consists
entirely in an attack on the gods of the pagans; they are marshalled in classes
after Varro. It was not, urges the apologist, owing to these multitudinous gods
that the empire grew.
Out of this fierce appeal and indictment was developed the grander
Apologeticus
, addressed to the rulers of the empire and the administrators of
justice. The former work attacked popular prejudices; the new one is an
imitation of the Greek Apologies, and was intended as an attempt to secure an
amelioration in the treatment of Christians by alteration of the law or its
administration. Tertullian cannot restrain his invective; yet he wishes to be
conciliating, and it breaks out in spite of his argument, instead of being its
essence as before. He begins again by an appeal to reason. There are no
witnesses, he urges, to prove our crimes; Trajan ordered Pliny not to seek us
out, but yet to punish us if we were known; - what a paralogism! The actual
procedure is yet more strange. Instead of being tortured until was confess, we
are tortured until we deny. So far the Ad Nationes
is merely developed and
strengthened. Then, after a condensed summary of the second book as to the
heathen gods, Tertullian begins in chapter xvii an exposition of the belief of
Christians in one God, the Creator, invisible, infinite, to whom the soul of man,
which by nature is inclined to Christianity, bears witness. The floods and the
fires have been His messengers. We have a testimony, he adds, from our sacred
books, which are older than all your gods. Fulfilled prophecy is the proof that
they are divine. It is then explained that Christ is God, the Word of God born
of a virgin; His two comings, His miracles, passion, resurrection, and forty
days with the disciples, are recounted. The disciples spread His doctrine
throughout the world; Nero sowed it with blood at Rome. When tortured the
Christian cries, We worship God through Christ
. The demons confess Him and
they stir men up against us. Next, loyalty to Ceasar is discussed at greater
length than before. When the populace rises, how easily the Christians could
take vengeance: We are but of yesterday, yet we fill your cities, islands,
forts, towns, councils, even camps, tribes, decuries, the palace, the senate,
the forum; we have left you the temples alone
. We might migrate, and leave you
in shame and in desolation. We ought at least to be tolerated; for what are we?
- a body compacted by community of religion, of discipline, and of hope. We meet
together to pray, even for the emperors and authorities, to hear readings from
the holy books and exhortations. We judge and separate those who fall into crime.
We have elders of proved virtue to preside. Our common fund is replenished by
voluntary donations each month, and is expended not on gluttony but on the poor
and suffering. This charity is quoted against us as a disgrace; see, it is said,
how they love one another. We call ourselves brethren; you also are our brethren
by nature, but bad brethren. We are accused of every calamity. Yet we live with
you; we avoid no profession, but those of assassins, sorcerers, and such like.
You spare the philosophers, though their conduct is less admirable than ours.
They confess that our teaching is older than theirs, for nothing is older than
truth. The resurrection at which you jeer has many parallels in nature. You
think us fools; and we rejoice to suffer for this. We conquer by our death.
Inquire into the cause of our constancy. We believe this martyrdom to be the
remission of all offences, and that he who is condemned before your tribunal is
absolved before God.
These points are all urged with infinite wit and pungency. The faults are
obvious. The effect on the pagans may have been rather to irritate than to
convince. The very brevity results in obscurity. But every lover of eloquence,
and there were many in those days, will have relished with the pleasure of an
epicure the feast of ingenious pleading and recondite learning. The rapier
thrusts are so swift, we can hardly realize their deadliness before they are
renewed in showers, with sometimes a blow as of a bludgeon to vary the effect.
The style is compressed like that of Tacitus, but the metrical closes are
observed with care, against the rule of Tacitus; and that wonderful maker of
phrases is outdone by his Christian successor in gemlike sentences which will be
quoted while the world lasts. Who does not know the anima naturaliter Christiana
(soul by nature Christian); the Vide, inquiunt, ut invicem se diligant (see they
exclaim, how they love one another), and the Semen est sanguis Christianorum
(The blood of Christians is seed)? It was probably about the same time that
Tertullian developed his thesis of the Testimony of the Soul
to the existence
of one God, in his little book with this title. With his usual eloquence he
enlarges on the idea that common speech bids us use expressions such as God
grant
, or If God will
, God bless
, God sees
, May God repay
. The soul
testifies also to devils, to just vengeance, and to its own immortality.
Two or three years later (about 200) Tertullian assaulted heresy in a
treatise even more brilliant, which, unlike the Apologeticus
, is not for his
own day only but for all time. It is called Liber de praescriptione
haereticorum
. Prescription now means the right obtained to something by long
usage. In Roman law the signification was wider; it meant the cutting short of a
question by the refusal to hear the adversary's arguments, on the ground of an
anterior point which must cut away the ground under his feet. So Tertullian
deals with heresies: it is of no use to listen to their arguments or refute them,
for we have a number of antecendent proofs that they cannot deserve a hearing.
Heresies, he begins, must not astonish us, for they were prophesied. Heretics
urge the text, Seek and ye shall find
, but this was not said to Christians; we
have a rule of faith to be accepted without question. Let curiosity give place
to faith and vain glory make way for salvation
, so Tertullian parodies a line
of Cicero's. The heretics argue out of Scripture; but, first, we are forbidden
to consort with a heretic after one rebuke has been delivered, and secondly,
disputation results only in blasphemy on the one side and indignation on the
other, while the listener goes away more puzzled than he came. The real question
is, To whom does the Faith belong? Whose are the Scriptures? By whom, through
whom, when and to whom has been handed down the discipline by which we are
Christians? The answer is plain: Christ sent His apostles, who founded churches
in each city, from which the others have borrowed the tradition of the Faith and
the seed of doctrine and daily borrow in order to become churches; so that they
also are Apostolic in that they are the offspring of the Apostolic churches. All
are that one Church which the Apostles founded, so long as peace and
intercommunion are observed [dum est illis communicatio pacis et appellatio
fraternitatis et contesseratio hospitalitatis]. Therefore the testimony to the
truth is this: We communicate with the apostolic Churches
. The heretics will
reply that the Apostles did not know all the truth. Could anything be unknown to
Peter, who was called the rock on which the Church was to be built? or to John,
who lay on the Lord's breast? But they will say, the churches have erred. Some
indeed went wrong, and were corrected by the Apostle; though for others he had
nothing but praise. But let us admit that all have erred: is it credible that
all these great churches should have strayed into the same faith?
Admitting
this absurdity, then all the baptisms, spiritual gifts, miracles, martyrdoms,
were in vain until Marcion and Valentinus appeared at last! Truth will be
younger than error; for both these heresiarchs are of yesterday, and were still
Catholics at Rome in the episcopate of Eleutherius (this name is a slip or a
false reading). Anyhow the heresies are at best novelties, and have no
continuity with the teaching of Christ. Perhaps some heretics may claim
Apostolic antiquity: we reply: Let them publish the origins of their churches
and unroll the catalogue of their bishops till now from the Apostles or from
some bishop appointed by the Apostles, as the Smyrnaeans count from Polycarp and
John, and the Romans from Clement and Peter; let heretics invent something to
match this. Why, their errors were denounced by the Apostles long ago. Finally
(36), he names some Apostolic churches, pointing above all to Rome, whose
witness is nearest at hand, - happy Church, in which the Apostles poured out
their whole teaching with their blood, where Peter suffered a death like his
Master's, where Paul was crowned with an end like the Baptist's, where John was
plunged into fiery oil without hurt! The Roman Rule of Faith is summarized, no
doubt from the old Roman Creed, the same as our present Apostles' Creed but for
a few small additions in the latter; much the same summary was given in chapter
xiii, and is found also in De virginibus velandis
(chapter I). Tertullian
evidently avoids giving the exact words, which would be taught only to
catechumens shortly before baptism. The whole luminous argument is founded on
the first chapters of St. Irenaeus's third book, but its forceful exposition is
not more Tertullian's own than its exhaustive and compelling logic. Never did he
show himself less violent and less obscure. The appeal to the Apostolic churches
was unanswerable in his day; the rest of his argument is still valid.
A series of short works addressed to catechumens belong also to Tertullian's
Catholic days, and fall between 200 and 206. De spectaculis
explains and
probably exaggerates the impossibility for a Christian to attend any heathen
shows, even races or theatrical performances, without either wounding his faith
by participation in idolatry or arousing his passions. De idololatria
is by
some placed at a later date, but it is anyhow closely connected with the former
work. It explains that the making of idols is forbidden, and similarly astrology,
selling of incense, etc. A schoolmaster cannot elude contamination. A Christian
cannot be a soldier. To the question, How am I then to live?
, Tertullian
replies that faith fears not famine; for the Faith we must give up our life, how
much more our living? De baptismo
is an instruction on the necessity of
baptism and on its effects; it is directed against a female teacher of error
belonging to the sect of Gaius (perhaps the Anti-Montanist). We learn that
baptism was conferred regularly by the bishop, but with his consent could be
administered by priests, deacons, or even laymen. The proper times were Easter
and Pentecost. Preparation was made by fasting, vigils, and prayers.
Confirmation was conferred immediately after by unction and laying on of hands.
De paenitentia
will be mentioned later. De oratione
contains aan exposition
of the Lord's Prayer, totius evangelii breviarium. De cultu feminarum
is an
instruction on modesty and plainness in dress; Tertullian enjoys detailing the
extravagances of female toilet and ridiculing them. Besides these didactic works
to catechumens, Tertullian wrote at the same period two books, Ad uxorem
, in
the former of which he begs his wife not to marry again after his death, as it
is not proper for a Christian, while in the second book he enjoins upon her at
least to marry a Christian if she does marry, for pagans must not be consorted
with. A little book on patience is touching, for the writer admits that it is an
impudence in him to discourse on a virtue in which he is so conspicuously
lacking. A book against the Jews contains some curious chronology, used to prove
the fulfilment of Daniel's prophecy of the seventy weeks. The latter half of the
book is nearly identical with part of the third book against Marcion. It would
seem that Tertullian used over again what he had written in the earliest form of
that work, which dates from this time. Adversus Hermogenem
is against a
certain Hermogenes, a painter (of idols?) who taught that God created the world
out of pre-existing matter. Tertullian reduces his view ad absurdum, and
establishes the creation out of nothing both from Scripture and reason.
The next period of Tertullian's literary activity shows distinct evidence of
Montanist opinions, but he has not yet openly broken with the Church, which had
not as yet condemned the new prophecy. Montanus and the prophetesses Priscilla
and Maximilla had been long dead when Tertullian was converted to belief in
their inspiration. He held the words of Montanus to be really those of the
Paraclete, and he characteristically exaggerated their import. We find him
henceforth lapsing into rigorism, and condemning absolutely second marriage and
forgiveness of certain sins, and insisting on new fasts. His teaching had always
been excessive in its severity; now he positively revels in harshness. Harnack
and d'Alès look upon De Virginibus velandis
as the first work of this time,
though it has been placed later by Monceaux and others on account of its
irritated tone. We learn that Carthage was divided by a dispute whether virgins
should be veiled; Tertullian and the pro-Montanist party stood for the
affirmative. The book had been preceded by a Greek writing on the same subject.
Tertullian declares that the Rule of Faith is unchangeable, but discipline is
progressive. He quotes a dream in favour of the veil. The date may be about 206.
Shortly afterwards Tertullian published his largest extant work, five books
against Marcion. A first draft had been written much earlier; a second recension
had been published, when yet unfinished, without the writer's consent; the first
book of the final edition was finished in the fifteenth year of Severus, 207.
The last book may be a few years later. This controversy is most important for
our knowledge of Marcion's doctrine. The refutation of it out of his own New
Testament, which consisted of St. Luke's Gospel and St. Paul's Epistles, enables
us to reconstitute much of the heretic's Scripture text. The result may be seen
in Zahn's, Geschichte des N. T. Kanons
, II, 455-524. A work against the
Valentinians followed. It is mainly based on the first book of St. Irenaeus.
In 209 the little book De pallio
appeared. Tertullian had excited remark by
adopting the Greek pallium, the recognized dress of philosophers, and he defends
his conduct in a witty pamphlet. A long book, De anima
, gives Tertullian's
psychology. He well describes the unity of the soul; he teaches that it is
spiritual, but immateriality in the fullest sense he admits for nothing that
exists, - even God is corpus. Two works are against the docetism of the Gnostics,
De carne Christi
and De resurrectione carnis
. Here he emphasizes the reality
of Christ's Body and His virgin-birth, and teaches a corporal resurrection. But
he seems to deny the virginity of Mary, the Mother of Christ, in partu, though
he affirms it ante partum. He addressed to a convert who was a widower an
exhortation to avoid second marriage, which is equivalent to fornication. This
work, De exhortatione castitatis
, implies that the writer is not yet separated
from the Church. The same excessive rigour appears in the De corona
, in which
Tertullian defends a soldier who had refused to wear a chaplet on his head when
he received the donative granted to the army on the accession of Caracalla and
Geta in 211. The man had been degraded and imprisoned. Many Christians thought
his action extravagant, and refused to regard him as a martyr. Tertullian not
only declares that to wear the crown would have been idolatry, but argues that
no Christian can be a soldier without compromising his faith. Next in order is
the Scorpiace
, or antidote to the bite of the Scorpion, directed against the
teaching of the Valentinians that God cannot approve of martyrdom, since He does
not want man's death; they even permitted the external act of idolatry.
Tertullian shows that God desires the courage of the martyrs and their victory
over temptation; he proves from Scripture the duty of suffering death for the
Faith and the great promises attached to this heroism. To the year 212 belongs
the open letter Ad scapulam
, addressed to the proconsul of Africa who was
renewing the persecution, which had ceased since 203. He is solemnly warned of
the retribution which overtakes persecutors.
The formal secession of Tertullian from the Church of Carthage seems to have
taken place either in 211 or at the end of 212 at latest. The earlier date is
fixed by Harnack on account of the close connection between the De corona
of
211 with the De fuga
, which must, he thinks, have immediately followed the De
corona
. It is certain that De fuga in persecutione
was written after the
secession. It condemns flight in time of persecution, for God's providence has
intended the suffering. This intolerable doctrine had not been held by
Tertullian in his Catholic days. He now terms the Catholics Psychici
, as
opposed to the spiritual
Montanists. The cause of his schism is not mentioned.
It is unlikely that he left the Church by his own act. Rather it would seem that
when the Montanist prophecies were finally disapproved at Rome, the Church of
Carthage excommunicated at least the more violent among their adherents. After
De fuga
come De monogamia
(in which the wickedness of second marriage is yet
more severely censured) and De jejunio
, a defence of the Montanist fasts. A
dogmatic work, Adversus Prazean
, is of great importance. Praxeas had prevented,
according to Tertullian, the recognition of the Montanist prophecy by the pope;
Tertullian attacks him as a Monarchian, and develops his own doctrine of the
Holy Trinity (see MONARCHIANS and PRAXEAS). The last remaining work of the
passionate schismatic is apparently De pudicitia
, if it is a protest, as is
generally held, aagainst a Decree of Pope Callistus, in which the pardon of
adulterers and fornicators, after due penance done, was published at the
intercession of the martyrs. Monceaux, however, still supports the view which
was once commoner than it now is, that the Decree in question was issued by a
bishop of Carthage. In any case Tertullian's attribution of it to a would-be
episcopus episcoporum and pontifex maximus merely attests its peremptory
character. The identification of this Decree with the far wider relaxation of
discipline with which Hippolytus reproaches Callistus is uncertain.
The argument of Tertullian must be considered in some detail, since his
witness to the ancient system of penance is of first-rate importance. As a
Catholic, he addressed De paenitentia
to catechumens as an exhortation to
repentance previous to baptism. Besides that sacrament he mentions, with an
expression of unwillingness, a last hope
, a second plank of salvation, after
which there is no other. This is the severe remedy of exomologesis, confession,
involving a long penance in sackcloth and ashes for the remission of
post-baptismal sin. In the De pudicitia
the Montanist now declared that there
is no forgiveness for the gravest sins, precisely those for which exomologesis
is necessary. It is said by some modern critics, such as Funk and Turmel among
Catholics, that Tertullian did not really change his view on this point the
writing of the two treatises. It is pointed out that in De paenitentia
there
is no mention of the restoration of the penitent to communion; he is to do
penance, but with no hope of pardon in this life; no sacrament is administered,
and the satisfaction is lifelong. This view is impossible. Tertullian declares
in De pud.
That he has changed his mind and expects to be taunted for his
inconsistency. He implies that he used to hold such a relaxation, as the one he
is attacking, to be lawful. At any rate in the De paen.
he parallels baptism
with exomologesis, and supposes that the latter has the same effect as the
former, obviously the forgiveness of sin in this life. Communion is never
mentioned, since catechumens are addressed; but if exomologesis did not
eventually restore all Christian privileges, there could be no reason for
fearing that the mention of it should act as an encouragement to sin, for a
lifelong penance would hardly be a reassuring prospect. No length is mentioned,
evidently because the duration depended on the nature of the sin and the
judgment of the bishop; had death been the term, this would have been
emphatically expressed. Finally. And this is conclusive, it could not be
insisted on that no second penance was ever allowed, if all penance was lifelong.
For the full understanding of Tertullian's doctrine we must know his division
of sin into three classes. There are first the terrible crimes of idolatry,
blasphemy, homicide, adultery, fornication, false witness, fraud (Adv. Marc., IV,
ix; in De Pud.
he substitutes apostasy for false witness and adds unnatural
vice). As a Montanist he calls these irremissible. Between these and mere venial
sins there are modica or media (De Pud.., I), less grave but yet serious sins,
which he enumerates in De Pud.
, xix: Sins of daily committal, to which we are
all subject; to whom indeed does it not occur to be angry without cause and
after the sun has set, or to give a blow, or easily to curse, or to swear rashly,
or break a contract, or lie through shame or necessity? How much we are tempted
in business, in duties, in trade, in food, in sight, in hearing! So that, if
there were no forgiveness for such things, none could be saved. Therefore there
will be forgiveness for these sins by the prayer of Christ to the Father
(De
Pud., xix).
Another list (De pud., vii) represents the sins which may constitute a lost
sheep, as distinguished from one that is dead: The faithful is lost if he
attend the chariot races, or gladiatorial combats, or the unclean theatre, or
athletic shows, or playing, or feasts on some secular solemnity, or if he has
exercised an art which in any way serves idolatry, or has lapsed without
consideration into some denial or blasphemy
. For these sins there is
forgiveness, though the sinner has strayed from the flock. How is forgiveness
obtained? We learn this only incidentally from the words: That kind of
penitence which is subsequent to faith, which can either obtain forgiveness from
the bishop for lesser sins, or from God only for those which are irremissible
(ib.,xviii). Thus Tertullian admits the power of the bishop for all but
irremissible
sins. The absolution which he still acknowledges for frequent
sins was obviously not limited to a single occasion, but must have been
frequently repeated. It is not even referred to in De paen
, which deals only
with baptism and public penance for the gravest sins. Again, in De pud.
,
Tertullian repudiates his own earlier teaching that the keys were left by Christ
through Peter to His Church (Scorpiace, x); he now declares (De pud., xxi) that
the gift was to Peter personally, and cannot be claimed by the Church of the
Psychici. The spiritual have the right to forgive, but the Paraclete said: The
Church has the power to forgive sins but I will not do so, lest they sin afresh.
The system of the Church of Carthage in Tertullian's time was therefore manifestly this: Those who committed grievous sins confessed them to the bishop, and he absolved them after due penance enjoined and performed, unless the case was in his judgment so grave that public penance was obligatory. This public penance was only allowed once; it was for protracted periods, even sometimes until the hour of death, but at the end of it forgiveness and restoration were promised. The term was frequently shortened at the prayer of martyrs.
Of the lost works of Tertullian the most important was the defence of the
Montanist manner of prophesying, De ecstasi
, in six books, with a seventh book
against Apollonius. To the peculiarities of Tertullian's views which have
already been explained must be added some further remarks. He did not care for
philosophy: the philosophers are the patriarchs of the heretics
. His notion
that all things, pure spirits and even God, must be bodies, is accounted for by
his ignorance of philosophical terminology. Yet of the human soul he actually
says that it was seen in a vision as tender, light, and of the colour of air!
All our souls were contained in Adam, and are transmitted to us with the taint
of original sin upon them, - an ingenious if gross form of traducianism. His
Trinitarian teaching is inconsistent, being an amalgamation of the Roman
doctrine with that of St. Justin Martyr. Tertullian has the true formula for the
Holy Trinity, tres Personae, una Substantia. The Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are
numerically distinct, and each is God; they are of one substance, one state, and
one power. So far the doctrine is accurately Nicene. But by the side of this
appears the Greek view which was one day to develop into Arianism: that the
unity is to be sought not in the Essence but in the origin of the Persons. He
says that from all eternity there was reason (ratio) in God, and in reason the
Word (Sermo), not distinct from God, but in vulva cordis. For the purpose of
creation the Word received a perfect birth as Son. There was a time when there
was no Son and no sin, when God was neither Father nor Judge. In his Christology
Tertullian has had no Greek influence, and is purely Roman. Like most Latin
Fathers he speaks not of two Natures but of two Substances in one Person, united
without confusion, and distinct in their operations. Thus he condemns by
anticipation the Nestorian, Monophysite, and Monothelite heresies. But he seems
to teach that Mary, the Mother of Christ, had other children. Yet he makes her
the second Eve, who by her obedience effaced the disobedience of the first Eve.
Tertullian's doctrine of the Holy Eucharist has been much discussed,
especially the words: Acceptum panem et distributum discipulis corpus suum
illum fecit, hoc est corpus meum dicendo, id est, figura corporis mei
. A
consideration of the context shows only one interpretation to be possible.
Tertullian is proving that Our Lord Himself explained bread in Jer., xi, 19
(mittamus lignum in panem ejus) to refer to His Body, when He said, This is My
Body
, that is, that bread was the symbol of His Body. Nothing can be elicited
either for or against the Real Presence; for Tertullian does not explain whether
the bread is the symbol of the Body present or absent. The context suggests the
former meaning. Another passage is: Panem, quo ipsum corpus suum repraesentat.
This might mean Bread which stands for His Body
, or Presents, makes present
.
D'Ales has calculated that the sense of presentation to the imagination occurs
seven times in Tertullian, and the similar moral sense (presentation by picture,
etc.) occurs twelve times, whereas the sense of physical presentation occurs
thirty-three times. In the treatise in question against Marcion the physical
sense alone is found, and fourteen times. A more direct assertion of the Real
Presence is Corpus ejus in pane censetur (De orat., vi). As to the grace given,
he has some beautiful expressions, such as: Itaque petendo panem quotidianum,
perpetuitatem postulamus in Christo et individuitatem a corpore ejus
(In
petitioning for daily bread, we ask for perpetuity in Christ, and indivisibility
from His body. - Ibid.). A famous passage on the Sacraments of Baptism, Unction,
Confirmation, Orders and Eucharist runs: Caro abluitur ut anima maculetur; caro
ungitur ut anima consecretur; caro signatur ut et anima muniatur; caro manus
impositione adumbratur ut et anima spiritu illuminetur; caro corpore et sanguine
Christi vescitur ut et anima de Deo saginetur
(The flesh is washed, in order
that the soul may be cleansed; the flesh is anointed, that the soul may be
consecrated; the flesh is signed [with the cross], that the soul, too, may be
fortified; the flesh is shadowed with the imposition of hands, that the soul
also may be illuminated by the Spirit; the flesh feeds on the body and blood of
Christ, that the soul likewise may have its fill of God - Deres. Carnis.
,
viii). He testifies to the practice of daily communion, and the preserving of
the Holy Eucharist by private persons for this purpose. What will a heathen
husband think of that which is taken by his Christian wife before all other food?
If he knows that it is Bread, will he not believe that it is simply what it is
called?
This implies not merely the Real Presence, but transubstantiation. The
station days were Wednesday and Friday; on what other days besides Holy Mass was
offered we do not know. Some thought that Holy Communion would break their fast
on Station days; Tertullian explains: When you have received and reserved the
Body of the Lord, you will have assisted at the Sacrifice and have accomplished
the duty of fasting as well
(De oratione, xix). Tertullian's list of customs
observed by Apostolic tradition though not in Scripture (De cor., iii) is famous:
the baptismal renunciations and feeding with milk and honey, fasting Communion,
offerings for the dead (Masses) on their anniversaries, no fasting or kneeling
on the Lord's Day and between Easter and Pentecost, anxiety as to the falling to
the ground of any crumb or drop of the Holy Eucharist, the Sign of the Cross
made continually during the day.
Tertullian's canon of the Old Testament included the deuterocanonical books,
since he quotes most of them. He also cites the Book of Enoch as inspired, and
thinks those who rejected it were wrong. He seems also to recognize IV Esdras,
and the Sibyl, though he admits that there are many sibylline forgeries. In the
New Testament he knows the Four Gospels, Acts, Epistles of St. Paul, I Peter (Ad
Ponticos), I John, Jude, Apocalypse. He does not know James and II Peter, but we
cannot tell that he did not know II, III John. He attributes Hebrews to St.
Barnabas. He rejects the Pastor
of Hermas and says that many councils of the
Psychici had also rejected it. Tertullian was learned, but careless in his
historical statements. He quotes Varro and a medical writer, Soranus of Ephesus,
and was evidently well read in pagan literature. He cites Irenaeus, Justin,
Miltiades, and Proclus. He probably knew parts of Clement of Alexandria's
writings. He is the first of Latin theological writers. To some extent, how
great we cannot tell, he must have invented a theological idiom and have coined
new expressions. He is the first witness to the existence of a Latin Bible,
though he seems frequently to have translated from the Greek Bible as he wrote.
Zahn has denied that he possessed any Latin translation, but this opinion is
commonly rejected, and St. Perpetua certainly had one at Carthage in 203.
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