Letter 76: 1. Hear, O Donatists, what the Catholic Church says to you: O you sons of men, how long will you be slow of heart? Why will you love vanity, and follow after lies?

Augustine of HippoDonatists|c. 398 AD|augustine hippo
donatismimperial politicsproperty economicsslavery captivity
Theological controversy; Imperial politics; Church council

Augustine to the Donatists, greetings.

I address you not as enemies but as brothers estranged — and I write in the hope that the God who made us all may yet bring us together.

You have your grievances. I know them. You have rehearsed them so often and so loudly that the entire world knows them. But grievances are not the same as truth, and the age of a complaint does not make it more valid. Let us examine the facts.

You say the Catholic Church is polluted because it maintained communion with bishops who were traditores. Very well — let us test this claim. Not by shouting, not by violence, not by the intimidation that some of your people have practiced against ours, but by evidence. Produce the documents. Name the traditores. Show us the proof.

We have done this exercise before — at Rome, at Arles, before the Emperor himself. Every time, the charges collapsed. Every time, the Donatist case fell apart when exposed to examination. And every time, the Donatists rejected the verdict and went home to nurse their wounds in private.

But let me set aside the history for a moment and ask a simpler question: even if everything you claim were true — even if Caecilian's consecrator was the worst traditor in Africa — would that justify separating from the entire worldwide Church? You are in communion with no one outside Africa. The churches of Rome, Antioch, Alexandria, Constantinople, Jerusalem — the churches the apostles founded — are all in communion with each other and with us, not with you. Are they all wrong? Has the Lord abandoned the whole world and preserved only one corner of one province?

The Lord said: "The field is the world" [Matthew 13:38]. Not the field is Africa. The world.

Come back. The door is open. It has always been open. And the Father who watches from the door sees farther down the road than you think.

Farewell.

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

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