Letter 30

Cyprian of CarthageCyprian|c. 251 AD|cyprian carthage
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The presbyters and deacons in Rome to Father Cyprian, greetings.

A conscience that is clear and grounded in the strength of the Gospel is normally content with God alone as its judge — neither seeking the praise nor fearing the criticism of others. Yet those who, despite owing their conscience to God alone, still want their brothers' approval, deserve a double measure of honor. It is no surprise, brother Cyprian, that you should do this. With your characteristic modesty, you have invited us to be not so much judges of your actions as partners in your deliberations — so that we might share in the credit when we approve of what you have done, and be fellow heirs of your good counsel because we fully agree with it. By this method, we are all seen to have labored together in whatever we jointly endorse.

For what could be more fitting in peacetime, or more necessary in a time of persecution, than holding fast to the proper rigor of divine discipline? The one who loosens his grip will drift helplessly, tossed by every shifting wind, and the helm of wise counsel will be wrenched from his hands. He will drive the ship of the Church's safety onto the rocks. The Church cannot be secured except by pushing back against those who crash against it like hostile waves, and by gripping the tested rudder of discipline through every storm.

This is nothing new for us, and these responses to the wicked are not something we have improvised. This was the ancient severity, the ancient faith, the ancient discipline. The Apostle would not have spoken so highly of us when he wrote, "Your faith is proclaimed throughout the whole world" [Romans 1:8], if our faith had not been firmly rooted from the very beginning. To depart from that standard now would be a grave disgrace.

You have done well — exceedingly well — in providing the pattern for the churches. Each case must be weighed individually. The door of mercy is not closed, but neither is it thrown open to whoever pounds on it loudest. Patience and penance are not punishment — they are the path back. And those who walk it sincerely will find, at the end, the full embrace of the Church.

We also thank you for sharing with us your letters to the Roman confessors and martyrs. Whatever honor the world acknowledges in them, your words have returned to them doubled.

Farewell, dearest brother.

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

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