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Twenty
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Persecuting Measures of Augustine
I name these measures in this place for the purpose of describing them in connection with the
scenes of the Macarian war, although they were put in operation about half a century later. They
originated in the local councils or synods, as they were sometimes called, at one of which, in 403,
a plan was proposed for a general conference with the Donatists for the discussion of the
differences between them and the Catholics. To Augustine we are indebted for the history of
these councils; in which, although young in the episcopal office, he was evidently their principal
manager; and in all his reports of their doings it plainly appears that the magistrates of Africa were
very remiss in executing the persecuting laws against the Donatists; one of which, he said, had not
been enforced at all, except in Carthage.
In the record of a council in Carthage in 404 we find the following statement: "It is now full time for the emperor to provide for the safety of the
catholic church, and prevent those rash men from terrifying the people, whom they cannot seduce. We
think it is as lawful for us to ask assistance against them, as it was for Paul to employ a military
force against the conspiration of factious men."
This is a new version of the conduct of the apostle Paul in the case here referred to.
From David Benedict's "History of the Donatists," 1875
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Augustine On the Merits and Forgiveness of Sins, and on the Baptism of Infants
In Three Books, Addressed to Marcellinus, a.d. 412.
(21tnt gives you just the chapter titles
which witness to Augustine's belief system.)
Chapter 1 [I.]-Introductory, in the Shape of an Inscription to His Friend Marcellinus.
Chapter 2 [II.]-If Adam Had Not Sinned, He Would Never Have Died.
Chapter 3 [III.] - It is One Thing to Be Mortal, Another Thing to Be Subject to Death.
Chapter 4 [IV.]-Even Bodily Death is from Sin.
Chapter 5 [V.] -The Words, Mortale (Capable of Dying), Mortuum (Dead), and Moriturus (Destined to Die).
Chapter 6 [VI]- How It is that the Body Dead Because of Sin.
Chapter 7 [VII.]-The Life of the Body the Object of Hope, the Life of the Spirit Being a Prelude to It.
Chapter 8 [VIII.]-Bodily Death from Adam's Sin.
Chapter 9 [IX.]-Sin Passes on to All Men by Natural Descent, and Not Merely by Imitation.
Chapter 10.-The Analogy of Grace.
Chapter 11 [X.]-Distinction Between Actual and Original Sin.34
Chapter 12.-The Law Could Not Take Away Sin.
Chapter 13 [XI.]-Meaning of the Apostle's Phrase "The Reign of Death."
Chapter 14.-Superabundance of Grace.
Chapter 15 [XII.]-The One Sin Common to All Men.
Chapter 16 [XIII.]-How Death is by One and Life by One.
Chapter 17.-Whom Sinners Imitate.
Chapter 18.-Only Christ Justifies.
Chapter 19 [XV.]-Sin is from Natural Descent, as Righteousness is from Regeneration; How "All" Are Sinners Through Adam, and "All" Are Just Through Christ.
Chapter 20.-Original Sin Alone is Contracted by Natural Birth.
Chapter 21 [XVI.]-Unbaptized Infants Damned, But Most Lightly;67 The Penalty of Adam's Sin, the Grace of His Body Lost.
Chapter 22 [XVII.]-To Infants Personal Sin is Not to Be Attributed.
Chapter 23 [XVIII.]-He Refutes Those Who Allege that Infants are Baptized Not for the Remission of Sins, But for the Obtaining of the Kingdom of Heaven.74
Chapter 24 [XIX]-Infants Saved as Sinners.
Chapter 25.-Infants are Described as Believers and as Penitents. Sins Alone Separate Between God and Men.
Chapter 26 [XX.]-No One, Except He Be Baptized, Rightly Comes to the Table of the Lord.
Chapter 27.-Infants Must Feed on Christ.
Chapter 28.-Baptized Infants, of the Faithful; Unbaptized, of the Lost.
Chapter 29 [XXI.]-It is an Inscrutable Mystery Why Some are Saved, and Others Not.
Chapter 30.-Why One is Baptized and Another Not, Not Otherwise Inscrutable.
Chapter 31 [XXII.]-He Refutes Those Who Suppose that Souls, on Account of Sins Committed in Another State, are Thrust into Bodies Suited to Their Merits, in Which They are More or Less Tormented.
Chapter 32.-The Case of Certain Idiots and Simpletons.
Chapter 33.-Christ is the Saviour and Redeemer Even of Infants.
Chapter 34 [XXIV.]-Baptism is Called Salvation, and the Eucharist, Life, by the Christians of Carthage.
Chapter 35.-Unless Infants are Baptized, They Remain in Darkness.
Chapter 36.-Infants Not Enlightened as Soon as They are Born.
Chapter 37.-How God Enlightens Every Person.
Chapter 38.-What "Lighteth" Means.
Chapter 39 [XXVI.]-The Conclusion Drawn, that All are Involved in Original Sin.
Chapter 40 [XXVII.]-A Collection of Scripture Testimonies. From the Gospels.
Chapter 41.-From the First Epistle of Peter.
Chapter 42.-From the First Epistle of John.
Chapter 43. -From the Epistle to the Romans.
Chapter 44.-From the Epistles to the Corinthians.
Chapter 45.-From the Epistle to the Galatians.
Chapter 46.-From the Epistle to the Ephesians.
Chapter 47.-From the Epistle to the Colossians.
Chapter 48.-From the Epistles to Timothy.
Chapter 49.-From the Epistle to Titus.
Chapter 50.-From the Epistle to the Hebrews.
Chapter 51.-From the Apocalypse.
Chapter 52.-From the Acts of the Apostles.
Chapter 53.-The Utility of the Books of the Old Testament.
Chapter 54.-By the Sacrifices of the Old Testament, Men Were Convinced of Sins and Led to the Saviour.
Chapter 55 [XXVIII.]-He Concludes that All Men Need the Death of Christ, that They May Be Saved. Unbaptized Infants Will Be Involved in the Condemnation of the Devil. How All Men Through Adam are Unto Condemnation; And Through Christ Unto Justification. No One is Reconciled with God, Except Through Christ.
Chapter 56.-No One is Reconciled to God Except Through Christ.
Chapter 57 [XXIX.]-The Good of Marriage; Four Different Cases of the Good and the Evil Use of Matrimony.
Chapter 58 [XXX.]-In What Respect the Pelagians Regarded Baptism as Necessary for Infants.
Chapter 59.-The Context of Their Chief Text.
Chapter 60 [XXXI.]-Christ, the Head and the Body; Owing to the Union of the Natures in the Person of Christ, He Both Remained in Heaven, and Walked About on Earth; How the One Christ Could Ascend to Heaven; The Head, and the Body, the One Christ.
Chapter 61 [XXXII.]-The Serpent Lifted Up in the Wilderness Prefigured Christ Suspended on the Cross; Even Infants Themselves Poisoned by the Serpent's Bite.
Chapter 62 [XXXIII.]-No One Can Be Reconciled to God, Except by Christ.
Chapter 63 [XXXIV.]-The Form, or Rite, of Baptism. Exorcism.
Chapter 64.-A Twofold Mistake Respecting Infants.
Chapter 65 [XXXV.]-In Infants There is No Sin of Their Own Commission.
Chapter 66.-Infants' Faults Spring from Their Sheer Ignorance.
Chapter 67 [XXXVI.]-On the Ignorance of Infants, and Whence It Arises.
Chapter 68 [XXXVII.]-If Adam Was Not Created of Such a Character as that in Which We are Born, How is It that Christ, Although Free from Sin, Was Born an Infant and in Weakness?
Chapter 69 [XXXVIII.]-The Ignorance and the Infirmity of an Infant.
Chapter 70 [XXXIX.]-How Far Sin is Done Away in Infants by Baptism, Also Inadults, and What Advantage Results
Therefrom.
This document is from the Christian Classics Ethereal Library
at Calvin College. Last updated on May 27, 1999.
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Cresconius
--David Benedict, writing in his "History of the Donatists" remarks:
Extracts from the Writings of the Donatists...
That this people had able defenders of their cause, will be evident from the selections from their
writings which I am preparing to make. The works from which my selections are to be made have
long been lost, and all that has been preserved of them is now found in the works of Augustine,
who lived in the time of most of the writers which will be named. These passages are interspersed
in the copious controversial writings against this people.
They were originally quoted for the purpose of arguing against the sentiments they contain; and by this means there has been
transmitted to us, by their adversary, a large amount of the veritable writings of these ancient and
hitherto entirely neglected people, which otherwise we could never have seen. From the
passages in Augustine's writings the following extracts will be made. Strange as it may seem, no
author, even of those who have shown some friendship to the Donatists, has ever, to my
knowledge, made any reference to the writings under consideration, so creditable to the talents
and religious sentiments of their authors, and which are so conspicuous, always in italics, amidst
hundreds of the Latin folio pages of Augustine's works, in his controversies with the Donatists.
Cresconius Against the Catholics
This able defender of the Donatists was a grammarian, that is, a literary teacher, as that term was
then understood; and although a layman, yet he appears to have been very thoroughly acquainted
with the history and principles of his own people; and from his laborious work, which was
reviewed by Augustine, my extracts will be made.
Cresconius was probably a member of Petilian's church in Constantina, whose work against the Catholics he ably defended. He and
Petilian and Augustine were all in the field at the same time with large works.
"You," said the Donatist to the Catholic, "with intolerable arrogance, have said that you
alone can terminate a controversy which to others has appeared interminable, and must therefore be left to
the judgment of God. You, single-handed," continued Cresconius, "promised to finish a dispute
which, after so many years; after the labors of so many judges and arbitrators; after the learned
disputations of the bishops on both sides, before prominent men, could never be finished!
Since," continued Cresconius, "you well know the thing in question cannot be finished by you,
why do you assume a useless labor? Why enter upon an empty undertaking? Why encounter a
vain and fruitless task? Do you not make a great mistake in thus proposing to do what you
cannot accomplish?"
Neander [Lutheran Historian], in commenting on this discussion, says:
"Cresconius was not so much out of the way when he censured the confidence of Augustine, who
professed to be able to dispose, so easily, of a controversy, on which, for so long a time, so many
things had been said on both sides." Cresconius, like all authors of his party, had one Lord, one
faith, one baptism, for his motto; and to this he added, an uncorrupted and true
catholic church.
The claim of catholic for their church was quite often made by the Donatists, which claim was
very annoying to "the Catholics". All the opponents of Augustine among the Donatists, whether of
the clergy or laity, combated his lax system of discipline; generally, in a serious manner; but
occasionally quite otherwise, as the following example will illustrate.
Sharp Comments of Cresconius on Augustine's Defense of the Validity of Baptism by Bad
Ministers, Who Were Known to be Such:
"There is no difference between a baptism administered by a drunken priest and that of an apostle,"
was the avowed doctrine of Augustine; a sentiment much like this, in his treatise against
Petilian,was thrown at him by Cresconius. Forsooth, said Augustine, thou seemest to thyself to have
found out where thou mightest spread out thy eloquence in reference to that which I laid down in
my epistle to Petilian, namely, that all who are baptized, should place their hope in Christ, whether
the baptizer be a man of faith or a perfidious man.
After this comment on his own position thus referred to, Augustine proceeded, complainingly, to repeat the free and peculiar comments
upon the said position, by his opponent, of which the following is a correct version: "O, said
Cresconius, the excellent power of the Catholic priesthood! "O, the praiseworthy precepts of
righteousness of the Good Father! "Thou mayest, says he, make no difference between a man of
faith and a perfidious man; and a pious and an impious man may seem to thee the same.
And it is no profit to live according to good morals; because whatever is lawful for a righteous
man, an unrighteous man also can fully perform. "What, inquired Cresconius, can be said more
iniquitous than this precept? Can a man of a spotted character purify another, a filthy character
wash another clean, an impure man make another pure, a faithless man impart faith, and a criminal
make another innocent?"
This whole subject had been quite freely discussed by the parties
previously, in detail; it was also topic of frequent and earnest discussion between other Donatists
and the famous church leader of Hippo, who, in his correspondence with Rogatius, the head of
the Rogatians, said: "Perhaps, among your twelve bishops and their clergy, you have not one
drunken priest." From the great corruption of the Catholic clergy, probably arose the policy, if not
the necessity, of tolerating the loose clerical morals above referred to.
Among the remarks of Cresconius in defense of the practice of the repetition of baptism, he referred to the baptism of the
twelve disciples who had been baptized by John. Other Donatist writers did the same. All of
them seemed to take it for granted that the twelve disciples were really baptized again.
David Benedict, "History of the Donatists",
1875
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Quotations from the Writings of Gaudentius
--David Benedict, writing in his "History of the Donatists" remarks:
Extracts from the Writings of the Donatists...
That this people had able defenders of their cause, will be evident from the selections from their
writings which I am preparing to make. The works from which my selections are to be made have
long been lost, and all that has been preserved of them is now found in the works of Augustine,
who lived in the time of most of the writers which will be named. These passages are interspersed
in the copious controversial writings against this people.
They were originally quoted for the purpose of arguing against the sentiments they contain; and by this means there has been
transmitted to us, by their adversary, a large amount of the veritable writings of these ancient and
hitherto entirely neglected people, which otherwise we could never have seen. From the
passages in Augustine's writings the following extracts will be made. Strange as it may seem, no
author, even of those who have shown some friendship to the
Donatists, has ever, to my knowledge, made any reference to the writings under consideration, so creditable to the talents
and religious sentiments of their authors, and which are so conspicuous, always in italics, amidst
hundreds of the Latin folio pages of Augustine's works, in his controversies with the
Donatists.
Quotations from the Writings of Gaudentius
"All who will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution. "The time will come when
whosoever killeth you will think he doeth God service. "Our enemies boast of being in peace and
unity, but their peace is gained by war, and their union is stained with blood. "For the teaching of
the people of Israel the omnipotent God sent prophets; he did not enjoin this service on kings; the
Lord Christ, the Saviour of souls, sent fishermen, not soldiers, for the propagation of his gospel;
he who alone can judge the quick and the dead has never sought the aid of a military force."
On Man's Free Will
"God created man free in his own image. How, then, am I to be deprived of that by human
lordship which God has bestowed on me? What a sacrilege, that human arrogance should take
away what God has bestowed on me, and idly boast of doing this on God's behalf? "It is a great
offence against God, when he is defended by men. "What must he think of God who would
defend him with outward force? Is it that God is unable to punish offenses against himself?
"Hear what the Lord says: Peace I give unto you; not as the world giveth, give I unto you.
"The peace of the world must be introduced among contending nations by arms and the force of
war. The peace of Christ invites the willing, with wholesome mildness; it never forces men
against their wills."
In reply to this eloquent and forcible argument of Gaudentius, in defense of a
primordial principal of the Donatists, Augustine, with entire unfairness, reasoned in the following
style:
"According to these most fallacious and most vain reasonings of yours, said he, the reins
would be relaxed, and all classes of transgressors might sin with impunity, without restraint, and
without correction; and the king would have no power or control over his kingdom, for the
correction of any offenses; the general over his army; the judge in his province; the master with
his servant; the husband with his wife; the father with his son. In the midst of this controversy,"
Augustine said to his opponent that he knew not the scriptures nor the power of God, which
Induced him to contend so strongly for man's free will, and against coercion in religious concerns.
The Ninevites, he said, were compelled to repentance against their wills by the power of their
king. The term "compel them to come in" to the feast, in the parable of the supper, he held as
available for his theory of coercion. His exposition of this parable was in the following terms:
"By highways, we are to understand, heresies; by hedges, schisms. "But in this case," said he, "we
may be sure, highways signify diverse opinions, and hedges, mean perverse opinions."
[Benedict now comments:]
I have thus given specimens of the writings of the prominent men amongst the Donatists, most of whom
appear in the foregoing narratives. Enough of these writings has been copied to exhibit the ability
of this people to defend their cause, and much is it to be lamented that so small a portion of their
writings has been preserved. But scarcely any of all those from which I have made selections
have hitherto been accessible to English readers, as they are in the Latin works of Optatus and
Augustine; and although all that was published of the Donatists was intended by these men to
operate against them, yet so far as their principles were concerned on church discipline, religious
freedom, and whatever is connected with the confederacy of priests and princes, it was directly
the reverse, and objectively they established the evangelical character of the Donatists.
Augustine's theory that the strict discipline of the Donatists would split the Catholic church into a
thousand schisms, was a high commendation of the reformers, and thus, as it often happened, his
censure was their praise. There was an early writer among the Donatists, Tichonius, all of
whose writings were lost. He was a grammarian to whom Augustine ascribed a sprightly genius
and copious eloquence. To this man Parmenian's epistle was addressed.
David Benedict, "History of the Donatists",
1875
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Quotations From the Works of Parmenian
--David Benedict, writing in his "History of the Donatists" remarks:
Extracts from the Writings of the Donatists...
That this people had able defenders of their cause, will be evident from the selections from their
writings which I am preparing to make. The works from which my selections are to be made have
long been lost, and all that has been preserved of them is now found in the works of Augustine,
who lived in the time of most of the writers which will be named. These passages are interspersed
in the copious controversial writings against this people.
They were originally quoted for the purpose of arguing against the sentiments they contain; and by this means there has been
transmitted to us, by their adversary, a large amount of the veritable writings of these ancient and
hitherto entirely neglected people, which otherwise we could never have seen. From the
passages in Augustine's writings the following extracts will be made. Strange as it may seem, no
author, even of those who have shown some friendship to the
Donatists, has ever, to my knowledge, made any reference to the writings under consideration, so creditable to the talents
and religious sentiments of their authors, and which are so conspicuous, always in italics, amidst
hundreds of the Latin folio pages of Augustine's works, in his controversies with the
Donatists.
Quotations From the Works of Parmenian
"Woe unto those who put evil for good, and good for evil; who put darkness for light, and light
for darkness; who put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter. "Behold, the Lord's hand is not
shortened that he cannot save, neither his ear heavy that it cannot hear. "But your iniquities have
separated between you and your God, and your sins have hid his face from you, that he will not
hear. "For your hands are defiled with blood, and your fingers with iniquity; your lips have
spoken lies, and your tongue hath muttered
perverseness".
"None calleth for justice, nor pleadeth for the truth; they trust in vanity, and they speak lies; they conceive mischief and bring forth
iniquity. "Their feet run to evil, and they make haste to shed innocent blood; their thoughts are of
iniquity; wasting and destruction are in their paths. "The way of peace they know not; and there
is no judgment in their goings; they have made them crooked paths; whosoever goeth therein shall
not know peace.
"Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them. "Depart ye, depart ye, go ye out from thence, touch no unclean thing; go ye out from the
midst of her; be clean that bear the vessels of the Lord. "I have not sat with vain persons, neither
will I go in with dissemblers. "I have hated the congregation of evil doers; I will not sit with
sinners. "Gather not my soul with sinners, nor my life with bloody men, in whose hands is
mischief, and their right hand is full of bribes." The works of Parmenian
do not contain so many passages suitable for these brief selections as those hereafter to be noticed.
Benedict's History of the Donatists, 1875
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Twenty
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The
Writings of Petilian (Donatist Pastor of the 4th Century)
Quotations From the Writings of Pertilian Against the Catholics. These writings, like all other of the Donatists which have been preserved and have come down to
us, are dispersed in the writings of Augustine, for the purpose of refuting them. The whole
amount of matter thus preserved of the veritable writings of Petilian alone, would make a
pamphlet of no inconsiderable size. They are without any order as to subjects, but I shall arrange
my selections under appropriate heads, and will begin with the Subject of
Baptism:
"They who throw against us a two-fold baptism under the name of baptism, have polluted their own souls
with a criminal bath. He who accuses me of baptizing twice, does not himself truly baptize once.
We by our baptism put on Christ; you by your contagion put on Judas the traitor. He who
receives the faith from an infidel, receives not faith but guilt. Everything depends on its origin and
root; trees are known by their fruit. The character of a baptizer must be well known. The apostle
Paul says there is one Lord, one faith, one baptism; this one baptism we openly profess, and it is
certain that they who think there are two, are insane."
The most important article on this subject was the following: That Petilian, as he said, might fully discuss the baptism of the Trinity, he
referred to the command of Christ to his apostles to teach the nations, and to baptize them in the
name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. In contrasting the apostolic teaching
and baptism with those of his opponents, the Donatist bishop addressed his Catholic adversary in
the following pungent and pertinent terms:
"Who, O thou betrayer, dost thou teach? Him whom
thou dost capitally condemn? Who, O thou betrayer, dost thou teach? Him whom thou dost
slay? Finally, who dost thou teach? Him whom thou mayest have made a homicide? Thus far
the business of teaching was the subject of discussion; that of baptism followed.
"How," said Petilian to his opponent,
"dost thou baptize in the name of the Trinity? Thou who canst not call
God thy father, since Christ the Lord said: Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called
the sons of God. Thou who hast not peace of mind, hast not God for thy father. But how dost
thou baptize in the name of the Son, thou who betrayest him, and who dost not imitate the Son of
God in any sufferings, nor in any crosses? But how dost thou baptize in the name of the Holy
Spirit, which descended upon those apostles who had not been traitors? Since, therefore, God is
not your father, nor are you truly born from the water of baptism, and no one of you is inwardly
born; neither, O ye impious men, have you a church father or mother; as such, then ought I not to
baptize you, although, just as the Jews, in their daily ablutions, as it were, baptize their bodies,
you may wash yourselves a thousand times."
Petilian on the Persecutions from the Catholics:
"Ye progeny of vipers, how can you escape the judgment of Gehenna? David, in describing your
race, says: 'Their throat is an open sepulchre, and they flatter with their tongues. The poison of
asps in under their lips; their mouth is full of cursing and bitterness, and their feet are swift to shed
blood. Destruction and misery are in their paths, and the way of peace they have known; the fear
of God is not before their eyes. The Lord Christ admonishes us to beware of false prophets who
come to us in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are rapacious wolves. By their fruits you may
know them."
"So, verily, O unprincipled persecutor, with whatever veil of goodness you may
shroud yourself; with whatever pretense of peace upon your lips you may make war against us;
and however much you may allure men with your false union, so far as you practice falsehood and
deception, you are truly a son of the devil whilst you imitate the works of your father."
"Now," said Petilian to his opponent,
[Augustine] "it is not wonderful that you should falsely assume the name of a bishop,
since it is the true custom of Satan to transform himself into an angel of light. Do you think to
serve God by killing us with your own hands? Ye err, miserable men, if you think thus, for the
ministers of God are not executioners. When you kill our bodies we have a two-fold baptism, but
the second is of blood, like that which Christ endured. Be ashamed, be ashamed, O ye
persecutors, that you make martyrs like Christ, with blood, after their true baptism of water."
"The law says thou shalt not kill. Cain killed one brother, but how many brothers have been killed
by you? Did the apostles ever persecute any one? Did Christ ever betray any one? Christ in
dying taught us how to die, not to kill. The apostle Paul tells us of the abundance of his own
sufferings, not what he made others suffer. Christ taught us to suffer wrong, not requite it."
Petilian on the Beatitudes (defending his
people against Catholic persecution)
"Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." You who are inflated with
riches, pursue us with malicious fury. "Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth."
You savage men have lost heaven and earth together. "Blessed are they who mourn, for they
shall be comforted."
You, our executioners, make many mourn, while you do not mourn
yourselves. "Blessed are they who hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled."
Your righteousness consists in thirsting for our blood. "Blessed are the merciful, for they shall
obtain mercy." When can I call you merciful, while you continue to punish just men? And whilst
you do this, do you not pollute their souls with your most iniquitous communion? "Blessed are
the pure in heart, for they shall see God." When will you see God, who, with foul malice, nourish
blindness of heart? "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God."
You frame peace in wickedness, and seek union with war. "Blessed are they who are persecuted
for righteousness' sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." You are not blessed, but you make
blessed martyrs; with souls heaven is replenished, the memory of whose bodies flourishes in the
earth. This peculiar article of the able and distinguished writer among the Donatists, was
followed with the recital of all the woes pronounced by Christ against the hypocritical Scribes and
Pharisees:
"O, ye miserable traitors, ought not the scripture to be fulfilled in you? Paul, the
apostle, in his account of the immense persecutions which he suffered by all nations, says the
greatest were from false brethren. In the description of charity, this writer, after enumerating all
its excellent traits of character mentioned by the apostles, says, it does not persecute, nor inflame
the minds of emperors against their subjects, nor seize on the property of others, nor kill men
whom it would rob. Behold, said Petilian, a most ample warning to all persecutors: "Put up thy
sword into its sheath, O Peter, said Jesus, for they who take the sword shall die with the sword."
In confirmation of this doctrine he gave many examples of distinguished persecutors of the
Donatists, who, in various ways, came to untimely ends. "The Lord God never delights in human
blood." "What have you to do with the king of this world?" said Petilian to his opponents. And
in his comments on the injury which Christianity always reason to apprehend from the kingly race,
an entire folio page is employed. "Where," said he, "is the law of God, and what becomes of your
Christianity, amidst the slaughters and deaths which you command and execute? "What is the
reason, and wherein is the consistency, of your calling us heretics, although falsely, and yet of
being importunate for our communion?"
"Of the two characters ascribed to us," said
Petilian, "choose at length, in which you hold us. "If you say we are innocent, why do you follow us with
the sword? "Or if you say we are criminal, why seek after us as though we were innocent?"
"O, most subtle dilemma, or, rather, most impertinent loqua city," said Augustine. Petilian, in the
language of David, said to his opponent, "It is better to trust in the Lord than to put confidence in
man. It is better to trust in the Lord than to put confidence in princes."
"We do not trust in man," said Augustine, but as much as we are able we admonish them to trust in the Lord; neither do we
put confidence in princes, but as much as we are able we admonish princes to trust in the Lord;
and if we ask of princes anything in aid of the church, yet we do not put our confidence in them.
Neither did the apostle Paul put his trust in that tribune as in a prince from whom he obtained
armed soldiers for a protection against a band of assassins at Jerusalem.
A Pointed Address of Petilian to His Opponents
"Miserable men, indeed, I call you, who seek after our goods, instead of our souls, and are
overwhelmed with fear respecting possessions thus obtained. We who are poor in spirit have no
fear concerning riches, but fear them; but having nothing, we possess all things. We who live in
the fear of the Lord have no fear of any punishments you may inflict upon us with the sword.
Finally, the only thing we fear from you which we strive to flee from is your most injurious
communion, with which you would slay our souls. The Lord himself has said, fear not those who
kill the body, but fear him rather, who is able to send the body and soul into the Gehenna of
fire."
Petilian's Closing Address
Having expatiated quite freely on the errors of the Catholics, as he esteemed them, he thus
addressed his own community: "Come to the true church, O ye people, and flee away from all
traitors, if you are not willing to perish with them. I baptize their members, as having an
imperfect baptism, and as in reality unbaptized. They will receive my members, but far be it from
being done, as truly baptized, which they would not do at all, if they could discover any faults in
our baptism. See, therefore, that the baptism which I give you may be held so holy that not any
sacrilegious enemy will have dared to destroy it."
Benedict's History of the Donatists, 1875
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