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Carthage.
Cyprian faced many problems as bishop of this city.
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am a Christian and cannot sacrifice
to the gods. I heartily thank Almighty God who is pleased to set me free
from the chains of this body." With these bold words, spoken in front
of hundreds of onlookers, Cyprian faced persecution under Emperor Valerian.
Many of the pagans standing by were deeply moved.
Cyprian was well-known to them. As Bishop of Carthage, he was an eminent
figure in North Africa. But even before becoming a church leader he had
been notable man.
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Born into wealth around 200, Cyprian inherited a large estate. Like
Augustine, another North African of fame, he trained in rhetoric. Curiously
it was this training which brought him to Christ. Genuinely gifted as
a speaker, he opened his own school of rhetoric. As part of the course
he debated philosophers and Christians. Convinced by the arguments of
Coecilius, a Christian elder, he became a convert when he was about 45
years old. Immediately he applied for admission to the church, was baptized,
and soon after ordained to ministry. "A second birth created me a
new man by means of the Spirit breathed from heaven," he wrote. With
zeal, he gave away his wealth and devoted himself to poverty, celibacy
and Bible studies.
He didn't want the job
Upon the death of Bishop Donatus in 248, less than two years after his
conversion, and over his protests, the people elected him Bishop of Carthage.
Pontius, one of his clergy, wrote an admiring biography telling how his
countenance was joyous, and that he was a man to be both revered and loved.
But well might Cyprian protest his election! His task was never easy.
Many older men felt slighted by his swift ascendancy and begrudged him
his office. Among the clergy were others who neglected their duties. Cyprian
disciplined them, and this increased resentment against him. In 250, the
persecution by Emperor Decian broke out. Cyprian as a church leader became
a marked man. The pagans shouted, "Cyprian to the lions!" But
the bishop managed to escape into hiding. His presence in Carthage would
intensify persecution, he explained. Writing letters, he tried to hold
the church together in his absence. This was not easy, for the Christians
who had stayed and endured suffering looked down on Cyprian. In 251 Gallus
became emperor and Cyprian returned to his church.
Those who had stood firm under suffering called themselves "the
confessors." They gained great prestige from this. Others had renounced
their faith. These were called the "lapsed." The confessors
opposed Cyprian over readmitting the lapsed to the church, saying that
a claim of repentance should be the sole condition of restoration. Cyprian
insisted on stricter terms. Eventually a council of bishops decided that
the lapsed would be readmitted if they repented. Those who had obtained
certificates saying they had sacrificed (without actually doing so) would
also be accepted if certain conditions were met. All would have to appear
in church in sackcloth and ashes. Lapsed clergy would be readmitted only
on the point of death. The "confessors" broke away to form their
own church. Cyprian's enemies elected a rival bishop, Cecilianus by name.
Controversy Continues in Church
Similar problems were encountered in Roman areas. There was a priest named
Novitian, arguing that even the earthly church consisted only of God's
elect. He was stricter than Cyprian and would readmit no lapsed person
to fellowship. Bishop Cornelius of Rome excommunicated Novitian and his
followers. For many years a Novitian church existed side by side with
the Roman Catholic community.
Cyprian was willing to accept the relapsed but not those who had been
baptized by one of the splinter groups (such as the Novitians) unless
they were rebaptized. He argued that there was only one spirit and one
church and "how can he who lacks the Spirit confer the Spirit's gifts?"
The Roman bishop Stephen ordered him to accept the baptism of splinter
groups so long as it was done in the name of the Father, Son and Holy
Spirit. Cyprian protested but obeyed under threat of excommunication.
A council at Arles and the famous Nicean Council later upheld Stephen's
decision.
These controversies brought forth from Cyprian his most influential
book, Unity of the Church. In it he argued that the church is
not the community of those who are already saved. Instead, it is an ark
of salvation for all men, a school for sinners. Today many Protestants
accept this teaching but refuse to accept Cyprian's other claim that the
bishops of the church, as the heirs of the apostles, are the agents through
whom God dispenses grace.
Cyprian was concerned to know who can speak for the church. Without the
bishops there is no church, he taught; and outside the church there is
no salvation. His cryptic and memorable assertion was, "He who has
not the church for his mother, has not God for his Father." Protestants
argue that where two or three are gathered in Christ's name, Christ is
with them; and they clinch their case with Peter's words which describe
every Christian as a priest (1 Peter 2:9). Cyprian's book has long been
used by the Roman Catholic church to buttress its position on the role
of the clergy and apostolic succession.
Love Your Enemies
Controversy did not relax to the very end of Cyprian's life. When a fearsome
plague erupted in 252-4, everyone was abandoning the sick in the streets.
People rushed about in terror. Cyprian instructed the Christians to care
for the sick, including dying pagans. The people obeyed, despite the fact
the pagans blamed them for the disease and persecuted them. Soon after
Bishop Cyprian was brought before the pro-consul Aspasius Paternus. Aspasius
banished him to a town by the sea. When Aspasius died, Cyprian returned
to Carthage. He was seized by the new governor and condemned to death.
At the place of execution, he knelt in prayer and tied the bandage over
his eyes with his own hand. To the executioner he gave a piece of gold.
Thus he was beheaded on September 14, 258, retaining his bold confession
to the end.
What Unity Meant to Cyprian
Can one who does not keep the unity of the Church believe that he
keeps the faith? Can one who resists and struggles against the Church
be sure that he is in the Church? For the blessed apostle Paul gives
the same teaching and declares the same mystery of unity when he says,
“There is one body and one Spirit, one Hope of your calling, one
Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God.” It is particularly incumbent
upon those of us who preside over the church as bishops to uphold this
unity firmly and to be its champions, so that we may prove the episcopate
also to be itself one and undivided. Let no one deceive the brotherhood
with lies or corrupt the true faith with faithless treachery. The episcopate
is a single whole, in which each bishop’s share gives him a right
to, and a responsibility for, the whole. So is the Church a single whole
though she spreads far and wide into a multitude of churches as her
fertility increases. . . . If you leave the church of Christ you will
not come to Christ’s rewards; you will be an alien, an outcast,
an enemy. You cannot have God for your father unless you have the Church
for your mother. If you could escape outside Noah’s ark, you could
escape outside the Church. . . . From The Library of Christian Classics,
Westminster Press, 1956.
Did Cyprian Defer to Stephen I as Bishop of Rome?
The bishops of Rome were not yet called popes when Cyprian and
Stephen I clashed. Stephen, a Roman, became bishop of Rome in 253 and
died a martyr in 257. His short time as bishop is best remembered for
its clash with Cyprian. What view did Cyprian take of the bishop of Rome?
When Stephen commanded Cyprian to accept individuals baptized by splinter
churches, saying, "Let there be no innovation beyond what was handed
down," Cyprian immediately called another African council which reiterated
the African stand on the issue in defiance of Stephen.
Cyprian's writings show that while he respected the special position
of the bishop of Rome, he did not accept his primacy.
"The Lord says to Peter, 'I say unto thee that thou art Peter,
and upon this rock I will build my church. . . .' He builds the church
upon one man. True, after the resurrection he assigned the like power
to all the apostles, saying, 'As the Father hath sent me, even so send
I you. Whatever sins ye remit, they shall be remitted unto him; whatsoever
ye retain they shall be retained.' . . . the rest of the apostles were
exactly what Peter was; they were endowed with an equal share of office
and power. . . ."
Fascinating Facts
- Cyprian most often followed the theology of fellow North African church
father Tertullian, whom he called simply "the master."
- Putting into practice his theories on the role of the clergy, Cyprian
called seven councils of African bishops in Carthage in his ten years
as Bishop.
- Heavily quoted from the earliest days, Cyprian is considered one of
the Fathers of the Church. He was one of the few given a feast day in
the early calendar, the Chronographer of 354. His work was used to refute
Nestorianism.
- Arguing for change, Cyprian uttered one of his most quotable quotes.
"Custom is often only the antiquity of error."
- Another repeatable quote from Cyprian's writing: "The word of
God was led, wordless, to the cross."
Resources:
- Benson, Edward White. Cyprian: his life, his times, his work.
London, New York, Macmillan, 1897.
- Chapman, John. "St. Cyprian of Carthage." The Catholic
Encyclopedia. Robert Appleton, 1908.
- "Cyprian, St." The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian
Church. Edited by F. L. Cross and E. A. Livingstone. Oxford, 1997.
- The Library of Christian Classics. Westminster Press, 1956.
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