Letter 41

Cyprian of CarthageCornelius, on Refusal to Receive Novatian's Ordination|c. 252 AD|cyprian carthage

Cyprian to his brother Cornelius, greetings.

As is fitting for servants of God and for faithful and peaceable priests, dear brother, we recently sent our colleagues Caldonius and Fortunatus to you — not only to persuade by letter but through their personal presence and the counsel of all of you together, to work with all their strength to bring the divided back into the unity of the Catholic Church and bind them again in the bond of Christian charity.

But the stubborn and inflexible obstinacy of the opposing party has not only rejected the embrace of its root and Mother, it has gone further — it has appointed a bishop for itself, and contrary to the sacred ordinance of the divine institution and to Catholic unity, has raised up a rival head, a false head, outside the Church. Having now received your letters and those of our colleagues, and with the arrival of our brothers Pompeius and Stephanus — good men, deeply dear to us — by whom all of this was brought to us as established fact with widespread joy among the faithful, we have acted in keeping with the demands both of holiness and truth.

I want you to know, dearest brother, that my delay in recognizing your ordination arose not from any doubt on my part, but from a desire to act with proper care. I waited until the letters of our colleagues Caldonius and Fortunatus could fully confirm what had to be confirmed. As for the faction of Novatian: from the first moment, I gave my allegiance not to them but to you — I refused even to receive accusations brought against you. This you already know. But now that everything has been set in order by the testimony of men of integrity, I write to you with full confidence: you stand with the Church, the Church stands with you, and we stand together.

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

Related Letters