14
September 258 A.D. Cyprian
Beheaded (Timely in Light of Reprobate-land & Beheadings in Iraq)
Saint Cyprian, Latin
in full Thascius Caecilius Cyprianus (born ad 200, Carthage—died September 14, 258, Carthage; Western and Eastern feast day
September 16; Anglican feast day September 26), early Christian theologian
and bishop of Carthage who led the Christians of North Africa during a period of persecution from Rome. Upon his execution he became the first bishop-martyr of Africa.
Bishop during the Decian persecution.
Cyprian was born of
wealthy pagan parents and was educated in law. He practiced as a lawyer in
Carthage before he was converted to Christianity about 246. In baptism he found complete release from the sinful and useless life he believed he
had led hitherto. Within two years he was elected bishop of Carthage and a few
months later, early in 250, was confronted by the Decian
persecution. He went into hiding. Bereft of his leadership, thousands of
Christians apostatized (rejected their faith) or obtained
libelli (certificates), by which
they declared that they had sacrificed to the pagan gods. When the persecution
began to diminish, the confessors—i.e., those who had stood firm for their faith—reconciled the lapsed on easy
terms, claiming that as “friends of Christ” they had the right of granting
pardon, even more than did priests and bishops. Cyprian returned to Carthage
(early 251) and at a council of bishops in May 251 was able to regain his
authority. The decision of the council was that, though no one should be
totally excluded from penance, those who truly had sacrificed (the sacrificati) should be readmitted only on their deathbeds, and those who had merely
accepted certificates (the libellatici) were to be readmitted after varying periods of penance. Three important
principles of church discipline were thus established. First, the right and
power to remit deadly sins, even that of apostasy, lay in the hands of the church; second, the final authority in
disciplinary matters rested with the bishops in council as repositories of the Holy
Spirit; and, third, unworthy members among the laity must be accepted in the
New Israel of Christianity just as in the Old Israel of Judaism.
In 252 a renewed
threat of persecution by the emperor Gallus encouraged a more speedy
reintegration of the lapsed, because many now wanted to prove themselves as
martyrs. In the same year, the steadfastness of the Christian clergy in face of
a plague won for the church further popular support, and Cyprian defeated
internal enemies who had set up a rival bishop in Carthage.
Relations with Rome.
In the summer of
254 his position was tested again by a dispute with Stephen, bishop of Rome (254–257). Until then
relations between the churches of Carthage and Rome had been cordial. In 251
Cyprian had supported Bishop Cornelius against his rival, Novatian, and had written on his behalf the treatise On the Unity of the Catholic Church, which stressed the centrality of the see of Peter (Rome) as the source of
the episcopacy. Though Cyprian may have written two drafts of an important
passage concerning the primacy of the chair of Peter, he implied no acceptance
of Roman jurisdictional prerogatives. When in 254 two Spanish congregations
(Mérida and León) appealed to him against a decision by Stephen to restore
bishops who had lapsed during the persecution, he summoned a council to
consider the case. The council decided that the congregations not only had a
right but a duty to separate themselves from a cleric who had committed a
deadly sin such as apostasy. Cyprian wrote (Letter 67) that the Holy Spirit was
no longer in such a priest and that his sacraments would lead to perdition and
not salvation. The church as the “pure Bride of Christ” might be obliged to absorb a
sinful laity, but a sinful priest making offerings on behalf of the people was
unthinkable.
Within months there
was an even more serious dispute with Rome. For a few years the supporters of Novatian had been active in Africa, asserting against Cyprian that no forgiveness
for lapsed Christians was possible. With the recovery of Cyprian’s prestige,
however, their threat began to fade. Many of those whom they had baptized
clamoured to be admitted to the church. Was their baptism valid or not? In Rome, Stephen, confronted by
the same problem, decided that all baptism in the name of the Trinity was valid. The Africans at first were of two minds. Cyprian held three
councils between the autumn of 255 and September 256. The last, at which 87
bishops were present, decided unanimously that there could be no baptism
outside the church, just as there could not be faith, hope, or salvation for
those outside it. A minister could not dispense what he himself did not
possess, namely, the Holy Spirit. Those who had received baptism from
Novatianists must be baptized anew. Behind this clash over rites lay the more
fundamental question concerning the nature of the church. Though Rome
emphasized the church’s universal and inevitably mixed character on earth, the
North Africans stressed its integrity under all circumstances. Baptism entailed
total renunciation of the world and the reception of the Spirit.
Persecution under Valerian.
A complete breach
between Rome and Carthage was averted by Stephen’s death on Aug. 2, 257, and
his successor, Sixtus II, was more conciliatory. Meanwhile, persecution had
been renewed by the emperor Valerian (253–260). On Aug. 30, 257, Cyprian was
summoned before the proconsul, Aspasius Paternus, and assigned an enforced residence at Curubis (Kurba)
on the Gulf of Hammamet. Following a more severe edict the next year, he was
brought back to Carthage, tried, and condemned to death.
During the previous
seven years his character had matured. Though not the “man of moderation”
eulogized by his biographer, he had shown himself a brave and resourceful
leader of the church in Africa. His theology was based on the central idea of the unity and uniqueness of the church:
“He no longer has God for his Father, who does not have the Church for his
mother” (On the Unity of the Catholic Church). Unity was expressed through the consensus of bishops, all equally
possessing the Holy Spirit and sovereign in their own sees. There was no
“bishop of bishops.” The church consisted of the people united to their bishop.
Schism and rebellion against the priesthood were viewed as the worst of sins.
These views—associated with an uncompromising insistence on the integrity and
exclusive character of the church, which are believed to have been derived from
the North African theologian Tertullian—received divine sanction for most North
African Christians through his martyrdom.
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