Letter 23: 1. Before entering on the subject on which I have resolved to write to your Grace, I shall briefly state my reasons for the terms used in the title of this letter, lest these should surprise either yourself or any other person. I have written to my lord, because it is written: Brethren, you have been called unto liberty; only use not liberty for...

Augustine of HippoMaximin, Donatist|c. 390 AD|augustine hippo
barbarian invasiondonatismgrief deathhumorslavery captivitywomen
Barbarian peoples/invasions; Theological controversy; Church council
From: Augustine, Presbyter of the Catholic Church in Hippo
To: Maximin, Donatist bishop
Date: ~392 AD
Context: Augustine writes to a Donatist bishop, addressing him with respectful titles despite the schism, and urging dialogue. The Donatists [a North African Christian faction who believed the Church must be morally pure and refused communion with those who had handed over Scriptures to Roman persecutors] had separated from the Catholic Church roughly eighty years earlier.

Augustine, Presbyter of the Catholic Church, to my dear lord and brother Maximin — greetings in the Lord.

1. Before I turn to the matter at hand, let me say a word about the way I have addressed you — "my lord" and "dear brother" — in case it surprises anyone. I call you "my lord" because Scripture says: "You were called to freedom, brothers; only do not use your freedom as an occasion for the flesh, but through love serve one another" (Galatians 5:13). Since in writing to you I am serving you through love, calling you "lord" is not empty flattery but simply obedience to that command. And I call you "brother" because, whatever divides us, we were both born of the same God — whether we have chosen to acknowledge that kinship or not is a different question.

2. I am writing because I believe we need to speak with each other, not merely about each other. The division between our communities has lasted for the better part of a century [the Donatist schism began around 311 AD], and in that time we have accomplished nothing but mutual harm. Christians on both sides have been wounded — spiritually, physically, in some cases fatally. The poor have suffered most, as they always do when those who should protect them are busy fighting each other.

3. I want to propose a conference. Not a formal council or tribunal — simply a meeting at which each side can explain its position and hear the other's. I am not asking you to surrender your convictions in advance. I am asking you to trust that the truth can be found, and that finding it together is better than proclaiming it separately.

4. I know what you will say: that there is nothing to discuss, because the matter was settled long ago, and we are the schismatics. Very well. Say that to my face, with the evidence you rely on, and let me respond with what I know. If you are right, I want to be corrected. If I am right, I hope you will want the same.

5. Hold fast to your Christian freedom, my brother — I urge you in the name of that freedom. Fix your eyes on Christ. Do not let fear of what others might say keep you from a conversation that could heal the Church. Do not tremble before any human tribunal. The only judgment that matters is his.

I am waiting for your reply.

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

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