Letter 88: 1. Your clergy and your Circumcelliones are venting against us their rage in a persecution of a new kind, and of unparalleled atrocity. Were we to render evil for evil, we should be transgressing the law of Christ.

Augustine of HippoJanuarius|c. 400 AD|augustine hippo
donatismimperial politicsproperty economicstravel mobility
Barbarian peoples/invasions; Theological controversy; Imperial politics

Augustine, with the Catholic clergy of the district of Hippo, to Januarius and the other Donatist bishops, greetings.

We are writing to you not as adversaries but as concerned brothers — and we write collectively because this is a collective matter. The division between our communities has lasted too long, caused too much suffering, and served no purpose that God could approve.

We propose a public conference. Not a brawl, not a shouting match, but a structured, orderly examination of the issues that divide us, conducted before honest witnesses, with records taken by official stenographers, and with both sides given equal time and opportunity to present their case.

Here is what we propose to examine:

First: the historical question. Was the original condemnation of Caecilian valid? Were the charges against Felix of Aptunga proven? What do the documents actually say — not what tradition has said about them, but what the documents themselves contain?

Second: the ecclesiological question. Can the Church of Christ be limited to one province, or must it be universal? What does Scripture teach about the scope of Christ's kingdom?

Third: the sacramental question. Does the validity of baptism depend on the moral state of the minister? What do the apostolic writings teach about this?

If you can demonstrate from Scripture and from the historical record that your position is correct, we will acknowledge it. We ask only the same from you: that if the evidence and the Scriptures point the other way, you will acknowledge it too.

We are not asking you to surrender. We are asking you to argue. And we are willing to accept the consequences of an honest argument, whatever they may be.

Will you come?

Farewell.

[Context: This letter represents one of Augustine's many attempts to arrange a formal public debate with the Donatists — a conference that would not materialize until 411 AD, when the Emperor Honorius convened the Conference of Carthage. That conference, at which Augustine was the leading Catholic spokesman, resulted in an imperial ruling against the Donatists and the beginning of the end for the schism, though Donatist communities persisted in North Africa until the Islamic conquest in the 7th century.]

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

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