The Fathers of The Church. A New Translation. Volume 07.
The Fathers of The Church. A New Translation. Volume 07.
The Fathers of The Church. A New Translation. Volume 07.
7 66-0^08
Fathers of the Church.
i" '."!,;. 7C/2 v. 7 66-C&308
Jc.'hlie;-? of 'bhe CliUi'ch.
DD1 D3D71t4 3
.1
THE FATHERS
OF THE CHURCH
A NEW TRANSLATION
VOLUME 7
THE FATHERS
OF THE CHURCH
Founded by
LUDWIG SCHOPP
EDITORIAL BOARD
ROY JOSEPH DEFERRARI
The Catholic University of America
Editorial Director
SULPICIUS SEVERUS
WRITINGS
Translated by
BERNARD M. PEEBLES
VINCENT OF LERINS
COMMONITORIES
Translated by
RUDOLPH E. MORRIS
PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
GRACE AND FREE WILL
Translated by
New York
FATHERS OF THE CHURCH, INC.
1949
NIHIL OBSTAT:
Censor Librorum
IMPRIMATUR:
The Nihil obstat and Imprimatur are official declarations that a book or
pamphlet free of doctrinal or moral error. No implication is contained
is
therein that those who have granted the Nihil obstat and Imprimatur agree
with the contents, opinions or statements expressed.
Copyright, 1949, by
NICETA OF REMESIANA
INTRODUCTION 3
THE NAMES AND TITLES OF OUR SAVIOUR 9
AN INSTRUCTION ON FAITH . 13
THE POWER OF THE HOLY SPIRIT 23
AN EXPLANATION OF THE CREED . . . . . .43
THE VIGILS OF THE SAINTS 55
LITURGICAL SINGING 65
SULPICIUS SEVERUS
INTRODUCTION 79
LIFE OF SAINT MARTIN, BISHOP AND CONFESSOR . . 101
THE LETTER TO EUSEBIUS (Epist. 1) 141
THE LETTER TO THE DEACON AURELIUS (Epist. 2) . 147
THE LETTER TO BASSULA (Epist. 3) 153
THE FIRST DIALOGUE 161
THE SECOND DIALOGUE 201
THE THIRD DIALOGUE . . . *. 225
APPENDIX: ST. MARTIN AND THE CONDEMNATION OF
PRISCILLIAN 252
VINCENT OF LERINS
INTRODUCTION 257
THE COMMONITORIES 267
PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
INTRODUCTION 335
GRACE AND FREE WILL . 343
INDEX * 421
WRITINGS
OF
NIC ETA OF REMESIANA
Translated
by
Praep. Prov.
Neo Eboraci
die 17 Sept., 1948
INTRODUCTION
invaders. Even the Bessi, whose hearts were harder than the
ice on their mountain tops, have been tamed, he sings, and
led like sheep into the peaceful fold of Christ,
et sua Bessi nive duriores
nunc oves \acti, duce te, gregantttr
pacis in aidam.
4 The relevant parts of the letter and poems of Paulinus are given
in Burn, op. ctt., pp. 141-155,
INTRODUCTION 3
vivere
pacem.
At the end, Paulinus begs Niceta to remember that God
meant him to be a link between East and West, a master
of more than one people, a citizen of both Dacia and Rome,
a shepherd of his new. people and a lover of his old friends.
In a second song, written (not in Horatian Sapphics but
in Virgilian hexameters) on the occasion of another visit
to Rome in 402, Paulinus praises the purity of Niceta's priest-
5 The words resonare Christum, taken from St. Paulinus' poem, ap-
of Boston. The
pear on the coat of arms of Bishop John Wright
sermon preached on the occasion of Bishop Wright's consecration,
of Niceta and Pauhnus.
June 29, 1947, and dealing with the relations
was published in the Congressional Record, July 8, 1947.
6 NICETA OF REMESIANA
may have visited St. Ambrose in Milan shortly after the lat-
singing in 386
or
tcr's introduction of community hymn
thereabouts. The two men, at once poetical, practical and
und
9 \y. A. Patin, Niceta, Bischof von Remesiana, als Schriftsteller
33ff.
Theologe (Munich 1909)
NICETA OF REMESIANA
The man who emerges from these writings may not have
ID Migne, PL 20.526FF.
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
of a just judge,
weak, recall that you are in the presence
severe in weighing the evidence and one who is making
should you
your taste for sin. In your hour of death, brother,
lose hope of obtaining a just reward in heavenly glory, be
set thee over many; enter the joy of thy master , , . take
13
14 NICETA OF REMESIANA
3 Rom. 11.20.
4 Ipsum conditorem et fabricatorem Deum capere et mcnsurare.
5 Sensti colligere et capere.
6 The heresy .of Sabellianism consists in the idea that the three
'Persons' are merely three 'modes* in which one God acts, or three
'parts' which He plays in the
drama of Creation, Incarnation and
Sanctification. When Calvin rejected the Catholic doctrine of real
immanent relations in God, he prepared the way for modern forms
of Sabellianism.
7 Bishop Photinus of Sirmium in Pannonia died in 376. His anti-
Trinitarian views were condemned in 344 by the Synod of Antioch
and again in 545 by the Western bishops at Milan. He was deposed
at the Synod of Sirmium in 351.
INSTRUCTION ON FAITH 15
in 359. No mention was made of the substance, ousia, but the Word
was declared 'like in all things' (hdmoios kata pdnta) However, .
ask how and what sense God could be a Father. Not un-
in
can understand this he
derstanding how since no one
fell into the error of both the Father and the Son.
denying
denies the Father by saying that He could
not beget of
He
Himself a real and proper Son. He denies the Son by say-
not begotten, but was of another origin,
ing that the Son was
and that He was merely a special
being made out of nothing,
the name of
kind of creature whose love merited for Him
Son. He was not really a Son begotten by
the Father. Hence,
substance
Arms imagined that the Son was of some other
as the
Thus, as the Father is God, so the Son is God; and,
Father is light, so the Son is light.
(4-) However,
a number of people take offense at this
that the Son is of the same substance.
Con-
profession
is twisted to a false mean-
sequently, the holy profession c
to imply
ing. Some take
the expression, of one substance,'
that we divide the Father, as though the Son were a part
INSTRUCTION ON FAITH 17
II John 16.15.
12 John 5.23.
18 NJCETA OF REMESIANA
13 Luke 14.11.
14 Matt, 3.17; Luke 9.35.
15 John 5.23.
16 John 14.24.
17 John 6.38.
18 John 5.19.
19 John 16.23.
INSTRUCTION ON FAITH 19
since tears can flow only from a body that is real. On the
24
other hand, when He said: 'Lazarus come forth,' and
one who was already corrupting emerged alive from ths
He a clear indication of divinity. At
gave
opening grave,
the same time, from this resurrection of Lazarus we shall
20 John 10.30,38.
21 John 14.9.
25 Matt. 26.38.
26 John 2.19.
27 John 10.19.
28 Gal. 6.14.
INSTRUCTION ON FAITH 21
him. If we endure we
shall also reign with him. If we dis-
29
own him, he also will disown us.' If we do not believe
what he said, 'I and the Father are one, 530 'he remains faith-
ful, for he cannot disown himself.' 31 The reason is that He
is in the glory of God the Father, and lives with the Father,
and reigns with the Father in one and the same lordship.
When the Apostle said that 'no fornicator or unclean or cov-
etous person has any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ
32
and he spoke of one kingdom 'Of Christ and
of God,'
of God/ because of one will of the Father and the Son, one
us pray that the one grace, one peace, one lordship of Father,
Son and Holy Spirit may ever protect and direct
us.
you this little tract. I trust that, brief as it is, it may bring
to your believing souls abundant joy in God.
29 2 Tim. 2.11,12.
30 John 10.30.
31 2 Tim. 2.13.
32 Eph. 5.15.
33 Phil. 1.12.
34 1 Thess. 3.11.
THE POWER OF THE HOLY SPIRIT
(
2 ) In the formula of the Creed of the Council of Nicaea
it is said: 'We believe also in the Holy Spirit.' This was
sufficient for the faithful, since the main question in debate
at that Council concerned not the Holy Spirit, but the Son.
23
24 NICETA OF REMESIANA
another who is born. If you say He was not born, you will
5
reply on both
sides, the heretic leads you straight into the
ditch by saying: 'If, therefore, the Spirit is neither born
of Father nor unbegotten, nothing is left but to
say that
He is a creature.'
(3) How does the faith of the Church face this dilemma?
Must it bow to a trick of logic and believe, in the face of
the whole witness of Old and New
Testaments, in which
the Spirit is never described as a creature, that the Holy
Spirit of God was created? Of course not. It is obviously
better to despise such human conclusions and insidious ques-
made through Him, we must believe that the Holy Spirit was
made along with all other things. There is here no proof
of the point in debate nothing but a careful selection of
4 John 15.26.
5 John 1.3.
26 NIGETA OF REMESIANA
texts. Just ask the question: In what Spirit did John speak
when he uttered these words? Did he not speak in the
Holy And
he spoke in
if the Spirit, it was the Spirit
Spirit?
Himself who spoke. He spoke of these things because through
Him was made everything in the manifold order of creatures.
The Spirit did not
includeHimself, in the sense that we
should believe that He, too, was among the creatures made
out of nothing.
witness to the same truth
(4) The Apostle Paul bears
when he points out, one by one, the things which were made
created
through Christ, 'In him/ he says, 'were things all
6 Col. 1.16.
7 Ps. 108.91.
8 2 Thcss. 3,5.
POWER OF THE HOLY SPIRIT 27
that 'he will teach you all truth." To make this point even
more obvious, St. Paul tells us that 'the Lord is the Spirit;
and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. 510 So,
too, to the Romans he says: 'Now you have not received a
Spirit of bondage so as to be again in fear, but you have
received a Spirit of adoption as sons.' 11 If He is the Spirit
-
How little the Spirit is a slave is clear from what the Apostle
says: 'But all these things are the work of one and the
13
same Spirit, who divides to everyone according as he will.'
Where there is a question of freely dividing, it is impossible
to talk of servile condition. Yet, in a creature we must imply
the condition of a slave, as in the Trinity there is only Lord-
ship and liberty. Therefore, it follows that if the words
of
5
the psalm, 'all things serve thee, apply to creatures and not
5
the Holy Spirit, in the other dictum, 'all things
then the 'all
9 John 16.13.
10 2 Cor, 3.17.
11 Rom. 8.15.
12 Gal. 4.6,7.
13 1 Cor. 12.11.
28 NICETA OF REMESIANA
14
the Son was begotten, the Spirit proceeds from the Father.
Let us use the very words which the Scripture of God wishes
us to use. No one who loves life and knows the Author of
life and has received in baptism the sacrament of the Three
Names with equal honor will look for any limit in One in
whom, he believes, there was no beginning. Hence, we
believe that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and
is neither the Son nor the Son of the Son as is sometimes
14 It will be noted that Niceta says 'proceeded from the Father/ not
'from the Father and the Son.' The Filioquc is absent, too, in his
at this early date no contro-
Explanation of the Creed. There -was
versy in the matter.
15 John 3.8.
16 Cf. Luke 1.35. Niceta's text differs from the Vulgate.
POWER OF THE HOLY SPIRIT 29
17
into the world/ 'and for whom For, I sanctify myself.'
18
17 John 10,36.
18 John 17,19.
19 . . .virtutem et proprietatem sancti Spiritits.
20 CoL 2.9.
21 John 1.19.
22 John 20.22.
25 Luke 5.21.
24 John 10.58.
30 NICETA OF REMESIANA
the Son, without the Holy Spirit, neither are we made holy
and started on the way to eternal life without the Holy
Spirit. My purpose is to shownot only in baptism,
that it is
but in all other things, that the Holy Spirit has worked and
will ever work with the Father and the Son.
As a matter of fact, it ought to be enough merely
(7)
to show the co-operation of the Holy Spirit in the sacrament
of baptism, because we can argue from this that nothing was
created without the Holy Spirit. What kind of a faith would
it be to believe that man's sanctification and redemption
Thus, in one text, you have the Lord, the Word of the Lord
and the Holy making the full mystery of the Trinity.
Spirit
Some people, of course, have been rash enough to say that
this Word by which the heavens were made was nothing
but the voice of God commanding and that the Spirit was
nothing but a passing breath of air. This position leads inevi-
that
tably to Judaism, since, like Photinus, the Jews deny
25 Pa. 32.6.
26 John 1.3.
POWER OF THE HOLY SPIRIT 31
create, it is He who
creates all things.
27 Job 53.4.
28 Ps. 103.30.
32 NICETA OF REMESIANA
who
29 He
Christ, too, gives life, for
gives life to all things.'
life.'
31
So, too, Paul to the Romans: He who raisedc
Christ
bodies
from the dead will also bring to life your mortal
32 here
because of his Spirit who dwells in you.' You can see
come to pass.'
33
This same foreknowledge belongs to Christ,
to the Evangelist: 'For Jesus knew from the be-
according
did not believe and who it was
ginning who they were who
It is clear, too, that He had
34
who should betray him.'
when He revealed the hidden
knowledge of what is hidden,
'Why do you harbor evil thoughts in
plans of the Jews:
35
your hearts?' , .
29 1 Tim, 6.13.
30 John 10.37.
31 6.64.
John
32 Rom. 6.11,
33 Dan. 13.42.
34 John 6.65.
35 Matt. 9.4.
36 John 16.13.
POWER OF THE HOLY SPIRIT 33
938
Son, and him to whom the Son chooses to reveal him. In
the same way, all revelation belongs to the Spirit, according
to the testimony of Paul: 'But to us God has revealed them
539
through his Holy Spirit. Thus, there is one Revelation com-
mon to the Trinity, which is God.
(12) That God is everywhere present and fills all things,
we have am God drawing nigh, and
the witness of Isaias: 'I
40
not God from afar.' 'If a man should be hidden in a
46
Solomon 'The Spirit of the Lord filled the whole earth.'
says:
God dwells among His saints, according to the promise
46
He made: 'I will dwell and move among them.' Recall,
37 Dan. 2.47.
38 Luke 10.22.
39 1 Cor. 2.10.
40 Is*. 30.27.
41 Jer. 23.24.
42 Matt* 18.20.
43 Eph. 4.10.
44 Ag. 2.5,6.
45 Wisd. 1.7.
46 2 Cor. 6.16*
34 NICETA OF REMESIANA
47 John 15.4.
48 2 Cor. 13.5.
49 1 John 3.24.
50 1 Cor. 3.16.
51 1 Cor. 6.20.
52 Ps. 49.16,21.
53 Ps. 6.2.
54 John 16.8.
55 Ps. 138.7.
56 Rom. 2.16.
POWER OF THE HOLY SPIRIT 35
57 2 Thess. 2.8.
58 Wisd. 5.24.
59 Matt. 19.17.
6& John 10.11.
61 Ps. 142.10.
62 Ps. 32.4.
63 Ps. 50.12.
64 Acts 21.11,
65 1 Tim. 4.1.
36 NIGETA OF REMESIANA
6fi
not by man, but by Jesus Christ and God the Father.'
Yet, in the Acts of the Apostles it is said that he was set
apart and called by the Holy Spirit: The Holy Spirit
said:
"Set apart for me Saul and Barnabas unto the work to
which I have called them." And it is added:
'
'So they, sent
67
forth by the Holy Spirit, went down to Seleucia.'
because He
(16) Let no one think less of the Holy Spirit
is called the Comforter. Advocate or Comforter is simply the
translation of the This name belongs
Greek, Pardcletos.
66 Gal. 1.1.
67 Acts 13.2,4.
68 1 John 2.1.
69 2 Cor. This is the only direct
1.3. citation from the Greek New
Testament in the extant writings of St. Niceta.
70 1 Cor. 6.11.
POWER OF THE HOLY SPIRIT 37
of sin and
so, when He says in the Gospel: 'Every kind
blasphemy be forgiven to men; but the blasphemy
shall
either in this world
against the Spirit will not be forgiven . . .
the sin of one who blasphemes against the Holy Spirit is un-
pardonable. Compare with this judgment
what is said in
the Book of Kings: 'If one man shall sin against another,
God may be appeased in his behalf, but if a man shall sin
73
against the Lord, who shall pray for
him?' Thus, it is one
and the same sin whether we blaspheme against the Holy
71 Acts 5.3,4.
72 Matt. 12.32.
73 1 Kings 2-25.
38 NICETA OF REMESIANA
74
Spirit or against God, and
it is
inexpiable. Hence, the na-
ture of the Holy Spirit begins to dawn in our intelligences,
from the
(18) It would be easy to adduce more proofs
Divine Scriptures to show a Trinity of single power and
76
of words in] the sacra-
operation in accord with [the form
ment of baptism. But, since the wise understand these things
well enough, I may stop here. I shall be content with a short
from the Father;
recapitulation. The Holy Spirit proceeds
He makes us free; He He is the Lord in the sense
sanctifies;
which the Apostle explains; He creates along with the Father
and the Son; He gives life; He has foreknowledge just like
the Father and the Son; He makes revelations; He is every-
where; He fills the whole world; He dwells in the elect; He
convicts the world; He judges; He is good and just; it is
these things'; He
proclaimed of Him: The Holy Spirit says
constituted Prophets; He commissioned Apostles; He is the
Comforter; He cleanses and justifies; He strikes
down
those who seek to deceive Him; anyone who blasphemes
against Him is pardoned neither
in this world nor in the
world to come something that can be said only of God
If or, rather, because all this is true, why should I be
asked to explain the nature of the Holy Spirit? Does He not
prove what He is by the great things
He does? How,
then, can He be other than divine, if He
is not different
adore the Father, adore the Son, and adore the Holy Spirit.
If any find this hard, let them remember how David ex-
horts the faithful to the worship of God: 'Adore his foot-
77
religious to adore His footstool,
stool.' If it is it is surely
'And now the angels can satisfy their eager gaze; the Holy
78
If the angels desire
Spirit has been sent from
heaven.'
to look upon Him, should not men be all the more afraid
to despise Him? We
ought to be afraid lest it be said of
us what was said to the Jews: 'You always oppose the Holy
79
Spirit; as your fathers did.'
fail to move
(20) If, however, so many strong arguments
tions can neither add to nor take away anything from the
Divine Majesty. Still, each of us, according to our purpose,
can gain merit by our faithful veneration or be confounded
if we obstinately resist the Holy Spirit. Certain it is that cap-
80 1 Cor. 14.24.
81 John 14.13.
POWER OF THE HOLY SPIRIT 41
82 These words are quoted from the Byzantine and Syrian Greek
liturgy as appears in the Apostolic Constitutions
it and in St. Cyril
of Jerusalem: heis hdgios, heis Ktirios lesods Christds eis ddxan
Theoti patrds.
83 2 Cor. 13.13.
AN EXPLANATION OF THE CREED
(De symbolo)
l Rom. 10.10.
43
44 NICETA OF REMESIANA
'All things were made through him and without him was
made nothing that was made/ 4
(3) And so, the moment you believe in God the Father,
you confess that you believe also in Jesus Christ, His Son. This
is the Son of God, Jesus Christ. 'Jesus,' in the language of
the Hebrews, means 'saviour.' 'Christ* is a name to indicate
royal majesty. One and the same Christ Jesus is both saviour
man, tell him thatHe who was made a man for the sake
It was the Saviour Himself who declared to the Jews: 'If you
that you
are not willing to believe me, believe the works,
believe that the Father is in me and I am
may know and
7
in the Father/
The next point is that you believe in the Lord's
(5)
Christ suffered, was crucified by
passion. You confess
that
the Proph-
the Jews, according to what had been foretold by
ets. Make sure that you are not ashamed
of the passion of
7 John 10.38.
8 Matt. 10.32.
9 1 Pet. 4.L
EXPLANATION OF THE GREED 47
10
are healed.' Christ suffered for our sins, so that grace might
be given to us.
(6) The
day third He rose again alive from the dead, or in
11
the words of the Prophet, He was 'free among the dead.'
For Christ could not have been held captive by death, since
He has full power over death and life.
He ascended into heaven, whence He had descended. 'No
man has ascended into heaven, but he that descended from
heaven, the Son of man who is in heaven.'
12
He sits at the
right hand
of the Father, according to
what was said to
David, typifying God the Father speaking to His Son: *Sit
thou at my right hand until I make thy enemies
thy foot-
stool.'
13
Thence He shall
judge both
come theto
living and
the dead. Believe that Christ Himself, our God, will come
with the angels and virtues of heaven to judge both the
to each according to his works,
living and the dead, to give
that is, to award eternal life to the just and to subject the
wicked to eternal punishment.
And in the Holy Spirit. This Spirit is one and sanc-
(7)
tifies all. He proceeds from the Father, and He alone pene-
10 Isa. 53.5.
11 Ps. 87.6.
12 John 3.13
13 Ps. 109.1.
48 NICETA OF REMESIANA
14 1 Cor. 12.1JL.
15 1 Pet. 1.12.
16 .. jedes et
17 Matt. 12.32.
18 Matt. 2,19.
19 1 Tim. 630.
EXPLANATION OF THE CREED 49
one Father who is God. After all, not even nature permits a
man to have more than one father. If a
Jew tries to persuade
you not to believe that Christ is the Son of God, treat him
as a foe to be fought, if you are well armed with the Scrip-
20 Cor, 6.11.
l
21 .una fide et conversatione sanctificati, uno Spiritu signati.
. .
22 Col. 1.18,20. In the sentence that follows, we have one of the first
references to the Communion of Saints as an article of the Creed.
50 NIGETA OF REMESIANA
23 These three sects started during the second century. All three were
inspired by a fear of the physical and the natural. The followers of
Mani accepted the idea of a double divinity, one of Light and one
of Darkness. The followers of Montanus, called Cataphrygians be-
cause they were active mainly in katd. Phriigas) , looked
Phrygia (hoi
on their founder as the Organ of the Paraclete, thought of them-
selves as 'pneumatic' or 'spiritual' and not as like
merely jpsychic,'
ordinary Catholics, and they looked for the coming of the Age of
the Holy Spirit. The Marcionites emphasized free grace at the ex-
pense of good works, distinguished the God of mere 'justice* in the
Old Testament from the God of 'love' revealed in the New. The
Manichaeans reappear in the medieval Cathari; the Montanists"
ideas appear in medieval apocalypticism as popularized by Joachim
of Flora; the Marcionite 'puritanism' and 'spiritualism* resembles
that of the pre-Reformers. It is opposition to the organized, visible
Church, in the name of a so-called purer, more ascetic, spiritual,
invisible Church, which Niceta seems to have in mind.
EXPLANATION OF THE CREED 51
24
Apostle says, 'of all men the most to be pitied.' The fact
is that it was
precisely for this that Christ assumed human
flesh, that He might confer on our mortal substance a share
in immortal life.
24 1 Cor. 15.19.
25 Rom. 14.9.
26 Isa. 26.19. Niceta's translation reads: 'The dead men shall rise again,
and those in the grave shall rise, and those who dwell in dust shall give
praise/
27 John 11.25.
28 John 5.28,29.
29 1 Cor. 15.53.
52 NICETA OF REMESIANA
dies. While the body rots in the earth, the soul is kept in
a place of light or in a place of darkness according to its
deserts, so that, in the day of the coming of the Lord from
heaven, when He comes with His holy angels, all will come
to life and the souls will be recalled to their bodies and there
will be a just separation of the good and the evil. Then
the just will shine forth like the sun in the kingdom of their
Father.'
30
The and the wicked will depart to the
impious
darkness of hell, where, as we are told, 'there will be weep-
31
ing and gnashing of teeth.'
the resurrection of the
(12) To remove all doubt about
from the course of nature. The
body, take a single illustration
sowest is not brought
Apostle reminds us: 'What thou thyself
grain of wheat, dead
32
to life, unless it dies.' Here you have a
and dry and sown in the earth. It is softened by the rain from
heaven. Only when it decays does it to life and begin
spring
to grow. I take it that He who raises to life the grain of
wheat for the sake of man will be able to raise to life the
man himself who has been sown in the earth. He both can
and wills to do this. What the rains do for the seed, the dew
of the Spirit does for the body that is to be raised to life.
33
Thus Isaias cries to Christ: 'Thy dew is health for them/
true health, since, once the bodies of the saints have been
raised to life, they feel no pain, they fear no death. They
will live with Christ in heaven, who lived on earth accord-
ing to the words and ways of Christ. This is the eternal and
blessed which you believe. This is the fruit of all our
life in
faith and holy works. This is the hope on acount of which
we are born, believe and are reborn. It was on account of
this that the Prophets, Apostles and martyrs sustained such
30 Matt. 13.43.
31 Matt. 13.42.
32 1 Cor. 15.36.
33 Cf. Isa. 26.19.
EXPLANATION OF THE CREED 53
the day. The good God who foresaw this need so arranged
that man, who was to 'go forth to his work and to his
51
labor until the evening, should have a second period in
which to rest after the hard work and great fatigue. Thus,
He made the day for work, the night for rest. For this, as
for all else, we should thank Him who has arranged it so.
1 Ps. 103.23.
2 The reference is to Prov. 30.13,23.
55
56 NICETA OF REMESIANA
should be enough to
though, for that matter, your years
keep you awake. If, finally, you are too
weak to stand, and
think you are unable, you have no right to recruit to your
own torpor those who are young and strong. You must
remember youth has many temptations and should mortify
with appropriate vigils. Nor, if you are weak in body,
itself
should you criticize what you cannot yourself do; rather, you
3 Prov. 6.6.
4 Prov. 6.9-11.
VIGILS OF THE SAINTS 57
proved. Some men are rewarded for what they do; others,
because of good will.
(3) Even for those with delicate bodies, does it seem
too much or too hard to give, twice in the week, that is, on
Saturday and Sunday, a portion of the night to the service
of God? This is the least we can do to purify, as it were,
the five days or nights in which our bodies have been sunk
in sloth, our spirits defiled by worldly ways.
by your vigils you may guard your treasure and keep your-
self in holiness. If you are in sin, hurry to be cleansed by
5 PS. 62.7.
6 Eccli. 4.25.
7 Ps. 18.13,14.
58 NICETA OF REMESIANA
out to the Lord: 'My soul hath desired thee in the night.
Yea, and with my spirit within me in the morning early I
59
will watch to thee.
enemy could not have sown the weeds. Or, take His other
words: 'Let your loins be girt about and your lamps burn-
ing, and you yourselves like men waiting for the master's re-
turn from the wedding . . .
whom
Blessed are those servants
the master, on his return, shall find watching And if he . . .
24
enter into temptation.' And now, I ask you, is there any
one whom words and examples like these could not rouse even
from a sleep deep enough to look almost like death?
(7) The blessed Apostles, taught by words like these
and strengthened by such examples, kept watch themselves
and ordered vigils. When Peter was in prison, he was
awakened by an angel, and, when the iron gate was opened, he
came to the house of Mary, 'where many had gathered to-
25
gether' and were praying not, I need hardly say, snoring.
It is Peter who puts these words into his epistle 'Be sober, be
:
when Paul and Silas were in the public prison, they were
praying at midnight, singing a hymn while the prisoners were
listening tothem: suddenly, the foundations of the prison
were shaken by an earthquake, and the doors flew open,
and everyone's chains were unfastened. 27 The same blessed
Apostle, when he was about to depart from Troy, 'prolonged
his address until midnight,' so that they 'the many lamps
lit
24 Matt. 26.40,41.
25 Acts 12.7ff.
26 1 Pet. 5.8.
27 Cf. Acts 16.25,26.
28 Cf. Acts 20.7-11.
62 NIGETA OF REMESIANA
drunk, are drunk at night. But let us, who are of the day,
5
be sober. Then he ends with these marvelous words: 'Whether
29
we wake or sleep, we should live together with him.' To
the Corinthians he writes: 'Watch, stand fast in the faith,
30
act like men, be strong.'
(8) I hope I have said enough about the ancient and
31
authentic tradition of vigils. I must turn now to the next
29 1 Thess. 5.6-10. Niceta's text reads: '. . . as, who are of God's (Dei in
place of diet) .
50 1 Cor. 16.13.
31 . .de
.
anttquitate et auctoritate vigiliarum.
32 Ps. 33.9.
VIGILS OF THE SAINTS 63
33
law of the Lord day and night.' Meditation during the day
is, of course, good; but that at night is better. During the
day, there is the clamor of our many cares, the mental dis-
traction of our occupations. A
double preoccupation divides
our attention. The quiet and solitude of the night make it
a favorable time for prayer and most suitable for those who
watch. With worldly occupations put aside and the attention
undivided, the whole man, at night, stands in the divine
presence.
I need not add that the Devil is always skillful in imitat-
ever, those of us who are not moved, by all they have learn-
ed, to practice holy vigils, should at least not pretend that
vigils are opposed to the service of God, because they can
be travestied by the Devil. The truth is that he would not
copy these things for the deception of his followers unless
he realized how pleasing to God they were and how rich
in blessings for those who practice them,
35 Ps. 1.2.
34 Cant. 5.2.
64 NICETA OF REMESIANA
MAN who
keeps a promise pays a debt. I remember
promising at the end of my sermon on the spiritual
value 1 of vigils that, in the next sermon, I would
speak of the ministry of hymns and psalms. 2 That promise
I shall fulfill, God sermon; for I do not see
willing, in this
how any better time can be
found than this, in which the
sons of light think of the night as day, in which silence and
quiet are being offered to us by the night itself and in which"
we are engaged in the very thing which my sermon is to
3
speak about. The proper time to exhort a soldier is when
he is just about to begin the battle. So for sailors a rollicking
song best suits them when they are bending to the oars and
sweeping over the sea. So with us. Now is the very best time
to keep my promise to speak of liturgical singing now that
the congregation has come together for this very purpose.
(2) I am aware that there are some among us, and some
in the Eastern provinces, too, who hold that there is some-
65
66 NICETA OF REMESIANA
4 Eph. 5.18,19, . ,
ing in our hearts. So, too, in another text, 'I will sing with
the spirit, but I will sing with the understanding, 38 he means
with both voice and thought.
The objection to singing is the invention of heretics. When
their faith grows cold, they think up reasons for rejecting
song. They cloak their hatred of the Prophets and, particular-
when his sweet, strong song with his harp subdued the
evil
13 there was kind of
spirit working
in Saul. Not that any
with its wooden frame and the
power in the harp, but,
the Cross of
strings stretched across, it was a symbol of
was
was the Passion that was being sung, and
it
Christ. It
this which subdued the spirit of the Devil.
that can
(5) You will find in David's psalms everything
help edify and console
men and women of every class and
will find milk for their minds; boys,
material
age. Children
their ways; young
to praise God; youths, corrections for
and food for prayer. Wo-
men, a model to Mow; old men,
men can learn modesty. will find in David a father;
Orphans
H of Debbora and Barac after victory.
Judges 5, the Canticle
12 Beut. 32.
13 1 Kings 16.14-23.
LITURGICAL SINGING 69
vindication is
furled; protection from enemies is prayed for;
And what is more
promised; confident hope is fostered.
than all the rest, the Mysteries of Christ are sung. The In-
carnation is clearly indicated and, even more so, His rejection
by an ungrateful people and His welcome among the Gen-
70 NIGETA OF REMESIANA
518
thy praise all the day
long. Without doubt, he had ex-
perience of the good to be derived from this work, for he
reminds us: 'Praising I will call upon the Lord, and I shall
19
be saved from my enemies/ It was with such a shield to
protect him that as a boy he destroyed the great power of
the giant Goliath and, in many other instances, came out
victorious over the invaders.
16 Ps 145.1.
17 Ps. 118.164.
18 Ps. 34.28.
19 Ps. 17.4.
20 Translation is based on d H. Turner's suggestion, pessum data. I
have followed his text for the passage beginning: Cessaverunt
Plane > . .
72 NICETA OF REMESIANA
of MS authority, in-
Mary, sang the Magnificat. The great weight
is in favor of Mary.
cluding all Greek and Syriac texts,
23 Luke 2.14.
24 Matt. 21.15.
25 Matt. 21.16.
26 Luke 19.40.
LITURGICAL SINGING 73
Epistle: 'Is any one of you sad? Let him pray. Is any one
in good spirits? Let him sing a hymn/ 29 And
John in the
Apocalypse reports that, when the Spirit revealed himself to
c
31 Ps. 46,8.
LITURGICAL SINGING 75
praised God
with one voice. Therefore, let us sing all to-
gether, as with one voice, and let all of us modulate our
voices in the same way. If one cannot sing in tune with
the others, it is better to sing in a low voice rather than
drown the others. In this way he will take his part in the
service without interfering with the community singing. Not
pray. So, when the lesson is being read, all should remain
silent, that all may equally hear. No one should be praying
with so loud a voice as to disturb the one who is reading.
And if you should happen to come in while the lesson is
being read, just adore the Lord and make the Sign of the
Cross, and then give an attentive ear to what is being read.
(14) Obviously, the time to pray is when we are all
praying. Of course, you may pray privately whenever and
as often as you choose. But do not, under the pretext of
prayer, miss the lesson. You can always pray whenever you
will,but you cannot always have a lesson at hand. Do not
imagine that there is little to be gained by listening to the
sacred lesson. The fact is that prayer is improved if our
mind has been recently fed on reading and is able to roam
among the thoughts of divine things which it has recently
heard. The word of the Lord assures us that Mary, the sister
of Martha, chose the better part when she sat at the feet
of Jesus, listening intently to the word of God without a
by
1 Decline and Fall, Chap. 27, n. 61 (ed. J. B. Bury [London 1897] &155) .
79
80 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
regrettable.
As basic sources for the life of Sulpicius we are confined
lona, passed the rest of his life in Italy, near the Campanian
town of Nola, ultimately as its bishop. It was only through
letters and visits of common friends that he kept in touch
with Sulpicius, who remained in Gaul.
After spending some time at Eluso (the present Elsonne,
near Toulouse), Sulpicius transferred the seat of his retire-
ment to a place which Paulinus calls Primuliacum, an un-
certain site fixed by some scholars near Beziers, by others near
10 the scene
Perigueux. presumably at Primuliacum that
It is
10 For Eluso, see Paulinus, Epist. 1.11; for Primuliacum, Epist. 31.1. The
latter is located near Briers by F. Mouret, Sulpice Severe ci Primuliac
(Paris 1907) near Perigueux by
,
E.-Ch. Babut, in Annales du Midi 20
(1908) 457-468; Jullian, in
REA 25 (1923) 249f., suggests it should be
looked for farther north, near Bourges.
11 Epist. 32 (Epist. 30 and 31 are also relevant). Cf. the work of Gold-
Schmidt (cited Dial. 3.17, n. 3) 36.
12 Cf. Life 7 and the other references cited in n. 4 there. (Babut 37f. notes
a crescendo in Sulpicius's successive eulogies of St. Martin.) In his
De seruorum Dei beatificatione etc. (3rd ed., Rome 1747-1751) ,
IV.ii.xi.l, Prospero Cardinal Lambertini (later Pope Benedict XIV)
considers the question whether St. Martin is to be held equal to the
Apostles; after quoting Sulpicius
and Odo of Cluny for the affirmative,
he refers to' a passage in St. Thomas Aquinas (In epist. ad Ephes., lect.
3) ,where such comparison is declared to be a temerity, if not an actual
error.
INTRODUCTION 83
among the saints of January 29, and the Bollandists could not
refrain from considering his merits in the Act a Sanctorum
for that date. The appearance of Sulpicius Severus in the
14 So P, Reinelt, Stud ten uber die Briefe des hi Paulinus von Nola
(Diss., Breslau 1904) 57.
15 Edited by Halm in his edition of Sulpicius, CSEL 1.219-256. English
translation by Roberts (cf. below, p. 98 in Select Bibliography) . In
Halm, the title to No. 3 should show Paulinum instead of Paulum; this
letter is the most probably genuine of the lot.
16 Hylt&i 156f. denies them to Sulpicius and also holds the single author-
ship of all seven letters unlikely.
For Pelagius as the author of the first
two, see G. de Plinval, Pttage, ses ecrits, sa vie et sa reforme (Lausanne
etc.: Payot 1943) 31-45; ibid. 42 n.4 for possible Pelagian authorship
of a third.
INTRODUCTION 85
Old Testament history occupies all of the first book and half
of the second. He thought it would be unfitting to reduce
to
18 Chron. 2.9.7 and 27.5 (cf. 33.1) show at least that Sulpicius was using
Stilicho's consulship as a terminus for chronological reference.
19 The in is Chron. 2.46-51.
passage question
20 Chron. 2.53ff. Cf. Paulinus, Epist. 31. . .
they may well have been published along with the Life. The
second is addressed to a certain Aurelius, deacon then but
later a priest, and probably a disciple of St. Martin. It was
22
written, Sulpicius says elsewhere, from Toulouse, that is, in
23
all likelihood, Eluso. It contains express mention of the Life.
24
The third makes a clear reference to the second, and is
addressed to Bassula, the mother of Sulpicius's deceased
wife. Where Bassula was when her son-in-law composed the
letter is not clear perhaps still at Treves, where an unauthor-
ized copy of the letter to Aurelius reached her. In the letter
to Bassula the playful raillery against his mother-in-law (it
iswith traditionally typical mother-in-law conduct he charges
her) is abruptly followed by one of the most eloquent pas-
sages in all hagiographical literature, the moving description
of Martin's last days, his death and burial. The prayer of
the dying Martin and especially his expression of willing-
ness to continue with his earthly work if God so willed, his
Non recuso laborem has often been repeated by other
25
saints. The Letter of Sulpicius seems to be latest in date,
first
for it states that the Life of St. Martin was already being
26
widely read. The Eusebius addressed here by Sul-
priest
picius had become a bishop when the Dialogues were com-
posed.
The most sizeable additions to Martin's biography as con-
tained in the Life are found in the Dialogues. Are we to speak
grouping.
Whatever may be true as to how the Dialogues came to
absent
skepticism, which, perhaps, has never been wholly
critical readers, its fullest expression early in
among gained
the present century, in an important book by Ernest-Charles
Babut, Saint Martin de Tours (Paris 1912). Babut's thesis,
in isbrieflythis: Martin, far from being the influential
part,
figure painted by Sulpicius,
was constantly thwarted by hos-
on the of the clergy and his fellow bishops
and
tility part
ended by falling into almost general disfavor. number of A
outbursts of indignation voiced by Sulpicius against unnamed
the higher clergy are
enemies it seems,
especially, among
32
advanced Contemporary literature of Gaul,
in proof of this.
Bibliography.
INTRODUCTION ^1
36
Gallo-Romanist of France, and Hippolyte Delehaye, S.J., a
and unsurpassed in the study
scholar of the deepest integrity
of hagiography. Few have
spoken since then in Babut's sup-
37
port, and it would appear that the general judgment of
scholars has pronounced his position untenable, even if high
The last date follows from the statement in Did. 2.7 that
49
church at celebrations of his feast. The official cult of St.
omitted.
59
Nor was St. Jerome alone
in taking exception. A
ascribed to Pope Gelasius I
portion of a decree traditionally
in some sense, the first 'Index of Prohibited
(492-496) is,
60 to be 'avoided by
Books.' The writings there listed are
Catholics/ and include Opuscula Postumiani et Galli apocry-
Postumianus
pha surely, the Dialogues of Sulpicius, even
if
inclusion. It
Jerome's criticism prompted their universally is
59 Cf. Babut SOlff. and Chase 60. Cf. the frequent omission (or displace-
ment) of a section in Dial 3 (cf. Dial 3.15 n. 1)
.
60 Latin text in PL 59 (col. 163B for the relevant entry; cf. col. 161C and
in A. Harnack et al
162A) ; or in the edition of E, von Dobschutz,
(eds.), Texte und Untersuchungen ., 38, 4 (Leipzig 1912)
. . llf.
312) Cf. H.
.
Denzinger-J. B. Umberg, Enchiridion symbolorum . . .
(cf.
ed. 21-23, Freiburg im Breisgau 1937) nos. 162-166 (esp. no. 166);
at p. 79, n. 1 the statement that the section of the decree dealing with
'Books Not to be Received' is, as it were (quasi) the first 'Index/ ,
61 Op. cit.
(above, n. 12) , lll.xli.14, III.xli.16, IV.i.xxix,8, etc.
INTRODUCTION 97
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
vols. Verona
1741, 1754) Generally cited below as 'Da Prato,
.
ed. Sulp.' Da Prato's edition, less nearly all of its valuable appa-
ratus, was reprinted in A. Gallandus, BibL vet. patrum (Venice
1772) 8.392JF. and passed thence into PL 20.79ff.
Translations:
Die Schriften des Sulpicius Severus uber den heiligen Martmus . . .
Saint Martin. Recits de Sulpice Severe ?nis en francais avec une intro-
duction par Paul Monceaux (Paris 1927) For an English trans- .
J. Textkritische Bemerkungen zu
Fiirtner, Sulpicius Severus (Pro-
gramm, Landshut 1884/1885) .
INTRODUCTION 99
Other Works:
E.-Ch. Babut, Saint Martin de Tours (Paris n. d.) first issued as, a ;
Manuscripts: D.
J.-M. Besse, Les m.oines de I'ancienne France (Archives de la France
monastique 2) (Paris 1906) .
M. Bloch, 'Saint Martin a propos d'une polemique/ Revue d'histoire
et de litterature religieuses, N. S. 7 (1921) 44-57.
F. Cabrol-H. Leclercq, Dictionnaire d'arche'ologie chretienne et de
nturgie (Paris 1924-) (DACL.) .
(CSEL.)
L. H. Cottineau, O.S.B., Repertoire topo-bibliographique des abbayes
et prieurds (2 vols., Macon 1935, 1937) .
T THE little b
wrote on the ^ fe of St Martin
k I -
>
1 For the date and other circumstances of composition, see above, p. 86.
2 Not surely identifiable. Probably the addressee of St. Jerome's 47th
letter (PL 22.492; CSEL 54.345) and of the 43rd letter of St. Paulinus
of Nola (PL 61.382; CSEL 29.363) . See Seeck in PWK
9.250.
3 The Latin (emissus semel revocari non queat} is reminiscent of
Horace, Satires 1,18,71: et semel emissum volat irrevocabile verbum.
101
102 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
addressed to Sulpicius.
6 The Latin closely imitates the opening line of the prologue of
Terence's Andria: Poeta quom primum animum ad scribendum
adpulit.
7 The beginning of this sentence is quoted by Remigius of Auxerre, In
artem Donati minorem commentum 1 (p. 1 Fox) See also C. Weyman,
.
Poesie (Munich
Beitrdge zur Geschichte der christlicn-lateinischen
1926) 211 (imitation by Hucbald)
.
their trust to what has been written, and to believe that I have
set down nothing without full knowledge and proof. Rather
than tell falsehoods, I should have preferred to be silent.
Chapter 2
1
To begin, Martin was a native of Sabaria, a town of the
2
Pannonians, but was reared in Italy, in Ticinum.
His par-
ents were not of lowly rank according to worldly standards,
but were pagans. His father was first a simple soldier and
afterwards military tribune. Martin himself, entering the
military service in his youth, served in the cavalry of the
3
imperial guard under Emperor Constantius, 4 and subse-
5
quently under Emperor Julian. Yet, this was not of his own
accord, for, from almost his first years, he aspired rather to
the service of God, his saintly childhood foreshadowing the
nobility of his youth. When he was ten years old, against the
wish of his parents, he took refuge in a church and demanded
to be made a catechumen. With a complete and remarkable
6
dedication to the work of God, he longed, at the age of twelve,
for the desert,and would indeed have satisfied his wish if the
weakness of his years had not stood in the way. With his
spirit,none the less, ever drawn toward monasteries or the
Church, he even then in boyhood was reflecting upon what
later his devotion was to fulfill. But, when an imperial
edict was issued, requiring sons of veterans to be enrolled for
Chapter 3
1
One of Amiens, Martin met
day, at the gate of the city
a poor man who was naked. Martin's clothing was reduced
to his armor and his simple military cloak. It was the middle
2 Certainly, the sword and perhaps the cloak were longafter believed
to have survived as In 1425, a distinguished jurist of Verona,
relics.
the sword (sec
Maggio Maggi, testified that he had seen and touched
known
my arts. Da Prato 19-22, 59 and Saibantianus 263ff.) It is well claimed
.
long ago: 'As long as you did it to one of these my least, you
did it to me.' Further, to strengthen the evidence of such a
s
Chapter 4
3 Matt. 25.40. J .
1 Worms. Jullian dates the episode in 356: REA 12 (1910) 264; Histoir*
7.256 n. 2. In one solution of the chronological problem presented by
Martin's career (see above, p. 92) the event here narrated is dated
much earlier, in the reign of Constans (337-350) . See Delehaye 25f.
2 Lat. donativum.
LIFE OF ST. MARTIN 109
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
When
Martin, continuing his journey, had gone past Milan,
human form, met him on the way and asked him
the Devil, in
where he was going. When he had received from Martin the
answer that he was going to where the Lord was calling him,
the Devil said to him: 'Wherever you go or whatever you
attempt, the Devil will oppose you.' Then Martin answered,
in the words of the Prophet 'The Lord is my helper I will
: :
1
not fear what man can do unto me.' And instantly, the
enemy vanished from his sight.
To
continue, he delivered his mother from the error of
paganism, fulfilling the hope his heart and mind had con-
ceived. Though his father persevered in unbelief, Martin
brought salvation to many through his example.
At this time, the Arian heresy was gaining strength through-
2
out the whole world, but especially in Illyria. Against the
errors of the bishops, Martin was almost alone in making
1 Ps. 117.6.
2 Of high importance in the history of Arianism in this period arc
synods held in the (secular) 'Diocese' of Illyricum: at Sardica (343)
and at Sirmium (five: 347-359) .
112 SULPIGIUS SEVERUS
He found that St. Hilary had been forced into exile by the
violence of the heretics and that, at his departure, the Church
in the Gallic provinces also was in great trouble. Consequently,
he established for himself a monastery in Milan. Here also,
4
Auxentius, leader and chief of the Arians, bitterly persecuted
many injuries,
and, after inflicting
drove him from the
him,
And so, Martin decided he should yield to the circum-
city. 5
stances. He retired to an island named Gallinaria, accom-
virtues. Here he lived
panied by a priest, a man of very great
for a while on the roots of herbs. It was during this time that
he ate some hellebore, a plant generally considered poisonous.
But, when he felt the power of
the poison working within him
and death near hand, he repulsed the imminent peril
at
all the pain left him.
through prayer, and at once
Not long afterwards, he learned that the emperor's change
6
to
of heart had permitted St. Hilary to return. Martin sought
meet him at Rome and set out for the city.
Chapter 7
5 A rocky island off the Ligurian coast, nearly opposite the city of Albenga
(prov. Savona) Named for the fowl (gallinae rusticae) which inhab-
.
2 Martin's action here and in the similar case described in the next chap-
ter recalls those of Elias and Eliseus in 3 Kings 17.21, 4 Kings 4.34.
3 Sulpicius records two other cases in which Martin raised the dead;
see the following chapter and Dial. 2.4.
114 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
Chapter 8
4 The same impressive claim is made in the Chronica 2.50 (see below,
p. 253) and in Epist. I and 2 (below, p. 142 and 149) cf. Dial. 2.5; also
;
Chapter 9
At about this time, Martin was sought as bishop for the
church in Tours. Since he could not easily be attracted away
from monastery, one of the men of Tours, a certain
his
1
Rusticius, pretending that his wife was ill, threw himself
at Martin's knees and thus prevailed on him to set out.
1 The name is uncertain. The MSS. show also Rusticus, Ruritius, Rurictus.
2 The role of laymen in the election ofbishops was at that time large;
see Leclercq in DACL
4.2618ff.
3 Bishop of Angers. Cf. Duchesne, Pastes dpiscnpaux 2.356.
116 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
4
infamously branded by a reading from the Prophets. It
happened that the lector whose turn it was to recite the lesson
that day had been blocked by the congregation and was not
at his place. The ministers were
thrown into confusion. While
the absent lector was awaited, one of the bystanders seized
the psalter and pounced upon the first verse he found. And
5
the psalm was this: 'Out of the mouth of infants and of
sucklings thou hast perfected praise, because of thy enemies,
that thou mayst destroy the enemy and the defender' [de-
fensorem]. At this reading the congregation lifted up its
voice; the party of the opposition was confounded, It was
held that the Divine Will had caused that psalm to be read,
so that a judgment upon his work might be heard by Defensor :
when the praise of the Lord had been perfected in the per-
son of Martin, it was he who, out of the mouth of infants
and of sucklings, had been both denounced as the enemy
and destroyed.
Chapter 10
It is not within our power to describe the quality and gran-
deur of Martin's life, once he had assumed the office of
1
bishop. What he had been before, he firmly continued to be.
4 Evidence that in the rite followed at Tours at this time there was a
lessonfrom the Old Testament in addition to the two lessons drawn
from the New.
5 Ps. 8.3. The text quoted varies from the Vulgate chiefly in the* last
word, the key of Sulpicius's story. Here we find defensorem instead of
ultorem ('avenger') or vindicatorem. St. Augustine, Enarrationes in
psalmos 102.14 (PL 37.1328) , reports defensorem as the reading of
certain psalters and word in his Enarratio of Ps. 8 (6;
in fact uses the
PL 36.111) . the reading of the Psalterium Romanum (PL
Defensorem is
There was the same humility in his heart, the same poverty
in his dress. Lacking nothing in authority and grace, he ful-
filledthe dignity of a bishop, yet did not abandon the vir-
tuous resolve of a monk. So, for a while he used a cell at-
tached to the church. Then, unable to bear up under the
distraction caused by throngs of visitors, he set up for himself
a monastery some two miles outside the city. 2
This location was so sheltered and remote that it could have
been a desert solitude. On one side it was hedged
by the in
sheer rock of a high mountain; on the other the plain was
closed in by a little bend of the River Loire. Approach was
possible by a single path, and that a very narrow one. Martin
himself occupied a cell built of wood. While many of the
brothers had similar shelters, the majority fashioned lodgings
for themselves carved out of the rock of the overhanging
mountain. The disciples numbered about eighty, all forming
themselves after the model of their blessed master. No one
there had anything as his own; all property was brought
together for common holding. It was illicit to buy or to sell
anything (as is the practice of many monks). No art was
3
practised there except that of the copyist, and to this work
only the more youthful were assigned; the elders had their
time free for prayer. Rarely was anyone found outside his own
cell,except when they came together at the place of prayer.
All had meals in common and after the hour of fasting. All
abstained from wine, except when compelled by illness. The
majority were dressed in camel's hair; the use of any softer
2 The later Maius monasterium, Marmoutier, across the Loire from the
old city of Tours, bibliography in Cottineau, Repertoire 1762ff. A
visit to the site furnishes even today an instructive commentary on the
present chapter.
3 An early start for the fine tradition of book-copying maintained at
Tours. The importance of this provision of the rule followed at
Marmoutier was duly noted by Ludwig Traube, Vorlesungen und Ab-
handlungen 2 (Munich 1911) 127.
118 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
Chapter 11
Now I come to treat of other miracles of his, those
he performed while bishop. Not far from the town and very
1
close to the monastery was a place which enjoyed a certain
and what his merits were. He then turned to the left and saw
standing near him a grim, unclean spirit. He ordered him
to speak out his name and his deserts. The spirit announced
his name and confessed his criminal formerly a brigand,
life :
he had been executed for his crimes and was receiving vener-
ation through the mistaken opinion of the populace; he had
nothing in common with the martyrs heavenly glory was
their portion; punishment, his. Strange wonder: those who
were with Martin heard the voice, yet saw no one. Martin
then recounted what he had seen and ordered the altar which
had been in that place to be removed. Thus he freed the
people from the error of that superstition.
Chapter 12
Somewhat later, while he was making a journey, it
chanced that he met the funeral procession of a pagan. While
the body was being carried to the tomb with superstitious
rites, he saw the attendant throng approaching
from a dis-
tance. Not knowing what it was, he halted for a while. The
'distance between was some five hundred paces, so that it
was hard to distinguish what he saw. Still, because it was a
band of peasants, and cloths laid over the body were flap-
Chapter 13
the place and the rest of the band of pagans began to op-
the will of the Lord,
pose him. These same men, who, by
were quiet during the demolition of the temple, could not
endure the cutting down of the tree. Martin's urging was
was no a tree trunk; rather,
religious value
in
diligent: there
let them follow the God whose servant he was; the tree was
dedicated to a demon and so deserved to be cut down. Then,
one of the bolder than others, said: 'If you have any
crowd,
faith in this God you say you worship, we
of yours whom
ourselves will cut down the tree, provided you stand
under
and receive the fall. If your Lord is with you, as you say,
Lord, in the
you will escape.' Martin, steadfastly trusting
And that entire
promised he would do so. to this arrangement
to the loss
company of pagans agreed: they were resigned
1 Halm's reading of the singular antistes has been retained, but see Hylte*n
134, who supports the plural.
LIFE OF ST. MARTIN 121
of their tree, if only through its fall they could destroy the
enemy of their rites.
Since the tree leaned to one side, so that there was no doubt
in what direction it would crash when cut, Martin was bound
and placed at a point chosen by the peasants and where no
one doubted the tree would fall. They themselves then began
hewing down their own pine tree with joy and gladness. At
a distance stood a crowd of wondering bystanders. Now, little
by little, the pine began swaying and threatening ruin by
its fall. From their distant stand the monks grew pale, and,
as the peril came
nearer, in their terror they lost all hope and
expecting nothing other than the death of Martin. But,
faith,
he waited with steadfast confidence in the Lord. The pine
cracked as it finally was cut through. It now began to fall,
itnow began to crash upon him, when he finally raised his
hand and made the sign of salvation in its direction. The
tree and you would have likened its backward action to a
tornado crashed in just the opposite direction, so that it all
Chapter 14
At about this same time, he performed a similar, but no
less impressive, miracle. In a certain village he had set fire
to a very ancient and celebrated shrine. Globes of flame, driven
pletely marvelous way, you could have seen the fire turn
back upon itself, in direct opposition to the driving force of
the wind; there seemed to be a conflict among the very ele-
ments as they strove against one another. Through Martin's
miraculous power the force of the fire operated only where
it was bid.
1
Leprosum (spelling doubtful) may be the present-day Levroux, situ-
ated between CMteauroux and Valencay (dep. Indre) (Lecoy de la
Marche 277) but the identification is questioned by Babut 208 n. 1.
,
LIFE OF ST. MARTIN 123
I The chief city of the region was Augustudunum, the present Autun.
124 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
Chapter 16
In the matter of healing, Martin had such a power of
grace within him that hardly anyone who was sick approached
him without at once recovering health. A clear example will
be found in the following incident. 1
At Treves, a girl lay ill in the grip of a fearful paralysis.
For a long time she could make no use of her body for the
needs of human life. Already dead in all her members, her
body breathed feebly and barely pulsed with life. Her kin
were standing by, awaiting only her funeral, when suddenly
the news was brought that Martin had come to that city.
When the girl's father learned this, he ran breathlessly to
beseech him on behalf of his daughter. As it happened, Martin
had already entered the church. There, under the eyes of the
people and in the presence of many other bishops, the old
man, waiting, embraced his knees and said: 'My daughter is
dying from a terrible kind of sickness. Her condition is more
cruel than death only through breathing that she
itself:
is it
her and bless her, for I have faith that she can be restored
5
to health through you. These words confused and astonished
Martin, and he drew back, saying that the grace required for
1 What appears to be another version of the miracle which follows is
found in Dial. 3.2; see n. 4 there.
LIFE OF ST. MARTIN 125
such an act was not his. The old man's judgment had misled
him, he said; he was unworthy to be an agent for the mani-
festation of the Lord's power. The father persisted, weeping
more bitterly and praying him to visit the lifeless girl. Finally,
the bishops who stood about compelled him to go, and he
went down to the house. A great crowd was waiting
girl's
before the door to see what the servant of God would do.
Using the means which were familiar to him in situations
of this kind, he first prostrated himself upon the floor and
prayed. Then he looked at the sick girl and asked that some
oil be given him. He blessed the potent and sanctified fluid
and poured it into the girl's mouth. At once, her voice was
restored to her. Then, at his touch, her members one by one
Chapter 17
In the same period, a slave of a certain proconsul, Taetra-
1
dius, had been possessed by a demon and was suffering ter-
rible torture. Martin, asked to lay his hand upon him, ordered
that the man be brought to him. The evil spirit, however,
could in no way be brought out of the little room where he
was; against those who came near he raged and bared his
teeth. Then, Taetradius threw himself at the knees of the
blessed man and begged him to go down to the house where
the possessed man was. At this, Martin said that he could
not come to the house of a profane and pagan person (for
Taetradius was at that time still entangled in the error of
paganism). So, Taetradius promised to become a Christian
Chapter 18
1
Meanwhile, the city was thrown into confusion by a sud-
1
Probably, Troves.
LIFE OF ST. MARTIN 127
den rumor that the barbarians were on the move and would
attack. Martin had a possessed man brought to him and
ordered him to declare whether the report was true. The
maniac confessed that he had ten demons with him who had
spread the rumor among the people, hoping that fear of the
attack, nothing else, would drive Martin from the city;
if
Chapter 19
1
Arborius, the former prefect, a pious and God-fearing man,
had a daughter who suffered gravely from the burning heat
of a quartan fever. A letter of Martin's had been brought to
him by chance. This letter, when the fever was again intense,
night he saw an angel wash his wounds and anoint the bruises
Chapter 20
To such impressive examples we shall now add others of
officials.
4
tinian. first attack he would be victorious, but would
In the
perish shortly thereafter. We
have lived to see this occur.
Immediately upon the arrival of Maximus, Valentinian took
to flight, but then, about a year later, assembled fresh forces,
he died. It is for
its horn into his groin. Not long afterwards,
thing happened, he
would foresee it long before or, learning
of it by revelation, would announce it to the brothers.
Chapter 22
of the holy
In the course of his attempts to make sport
1
man by a thousand devices of harm-doing, the Devil
fre-
of
quentlyshowed himself to Martin under a great diversity
mask of Jupiter and often
forms. Sometimes he assumed the
2 himself transfig-
that of Mercury; often, too, he presented
ured under the features of Venus or Minerva. When confront-
with
ing him, the ever-fearless
Martin would protect himself
the sign of the cross and the shield of prayer.
The insults
him
with which a crowd of demons would insolently upbraid
were often heard, but Martin would not be moved by
these
one, should stop pursuing mankind and, even now, when the
day of
judgment near, should repent of your deeds, my
is
Chapter 23
A certain Clarus
1
a youth of noble birth, later a priest,
and now, a holy death, blessed gave up everything and
after
Epist. 23.3, 27.3 (PL 61.258, 308; CSEL 29.160, 240) Clarus is com*
.
3 Some of the MSS. here add 'Sabbatius by name.' Cf. Dial. 3.1 n. 8.
LIFE OF ST. MARTIN 135
Chapter 24
We should note the fact that there was in Spain at about
this time a young man who had made a name for himself
through many signs and wonders. His pride reached such a
pitch that he gave himself out to be Elias. When many had
rashly come to believe this, he went further and said that he
was His deception was so successful that a certain
Christ.
1 Da Prato argues well (ed. Sulp. 1.347f.) that the Rufus here in ques-
tion is
probably distinct from the Rufus named in Chronica 2.50 (below,
p. 254) Presumably valueless is an entry in the forged Chronicle of
.
Dexter recording, under the year 424, the removal from office of a
Spanish bishop. Rufus who for some years had been following a pseudo-
Christ: PL 31.559-560.
136 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
Devil took the lead and said 'Recognize, Martin, him whom
:
believe,
5
since see?
you J am Christ. Then Martin received a
revelation of the Spirit and through it understood that it was
the Devil, not the Lord. 'It was not clad in purple/ he said,
'nor with a diadem that the Lord Jesus foretold that
glittering
He would come. Except in that clothing and in that form
which were His when He suffered, and unless the stigmata of
3
the cross be worn, I shall not believe that Christ has come.
At these words, the other instantly vanished like smoke, fill-
2 Cf 2 Thess. 2.7.
3 For prece (Halm) I read with Zellerer (62) prae se.
4 The text is uncertain (Hylt&i 139) , but the meaning is in little doubt,
For Halm's multum it appears likely that mutum should be read.
5 Halm's reading retained, but see Hylten I39f.
LIFE OF ST. MARTIN 137
Chapter 25
When had heard Martin's faith, his career, and miracu-
I
1 In Ch. 19.
Chapter 26
1 With the Lat. (ut inertes poetae extremo in opere nedegentes) cf.
Cicero, De senectute 2 A: extremum actum tamquam ab inerti poeta
esse neglectum.
2 Cf. above, Ch. 2 n. 6.
LIFE OF ST. MARTIN 139
Chapter 27
He wasnever seen to be angry, never violent, never sor-
rowing, never laughing. Always one and the same, he seemed,
somehow beyond the nature of man, to show a heavenly glad-
ness in his countenance. In his speech, only Christ was ever
1
to be found; in his heart, only love, peace, and mercy.
He would often weep even for the sins of those who had
3 A similar expression is used by St. Jerome, Vita Hilarionis, prol. (PL
23.29) .
4 Cf. John 1.47.
turn
1 Hilary of Aries, Vita Honorati 8.37 (PL 50.1270) has a similar ,
of phrase. Less striking resemblances between the two authors are listed
by Babut 16 n. 1 (Delehaye 133f.) .
140 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
he cannot save.'
2
Whoever that man is who now in like
manner blasphemes against a saint of the Lord, he ought to
have been born in those ancient times, so that he could have
used those words against the Lord. 3
1 For the addressee of the letter and the circumstances of its composi-
tion, see above, p. 86f.
2 Matt. 27.42.
3 The text varies in the MSS. I have followed Halm's reading in the
light of HylteVs remarks (p. 76f .) The Dublin MS. shows a fuller
.
text which yields the following translation: 'In truth, that man, who-
ever he is, had he been born in those times, would surely have
uttered that speech against the Lord. He who in like fashion blas-
phemes against a saint of the Lord would certainly not have been
lacking in will towards treachery/ See E.-Ch. Babut, in Le moyen
dge 19 (1906) 207; Zellerer 47f., Hylten, loc. cit.
141
142 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
Is Martin not
What you are saying, whoever you are?
is it
4 Acts 28.4. The text varies significantly from the Vulgate (see
the
Wordsworth -White Novum Testamentum Latine III 1 [Oxford 1905],
ad. loc.) and represents, according to P. Sabatier, Bibl Sacr. tat. Ill
(Paris 1751) 587, the 'Antiqua versio.' The three sentences that fol-
low in Sulpicius are partly a transcript, partly a paraphrase of Acts
28.5-6.
5 Cf. Matt. 14.29f.
LETTER TO EUSEBIUS 143
the deep before the surging sea brought him out. 6 Yet, I do
not consider him inferior to Peter on that account; perhaps
it is even a
greater thing to have lived in the deep than to
have passed over it upon the surface. But you, fool that you
are, have not read this, I suppose, or, if you have read it,
have not comprehended it. It was part of the divine plan that
the blessed Evangelist brought forward in the Sacred Scrip-
tures an example of this kind. The human mind was thereby
to be taught the meaning of disasters caused by shipwrecks
and serpents and 7 of those other dangers mentioned by the
8
Apostle, who glories in nakedness and in hunger and in
perils from robbers. All these disasters are the common lot of
the saints, who must suffer them. It is in enduring them and
in overcoming them that the virtue of the just has always
been conspicuous. With invincible strength they have defied
all trials; the heavier the sufferings they endured, the more
9
courageous were their victories.
was a grave danger that tried him, and he came out victorious.
Yet, no one should be surprised that I omitted this episode
6 According to 2 Cor, 11.25, St. Paul passed only a day and a night in
profundo marts. The three-day duration spoken of by Sulpicius and
his language in general suggests rather the Prophet Jonas's experiences
(cf. Matt. 12.40) than any of St. Paul's. As Da Prato suggested (ed.
Sulp. 1.39 on line 18), something may have fallen out of Sulpicius's
text with the result that what now is said of St. Paul originally
related to Jonas. Da Prato quotes from an anonymous sermon for
the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul ([Augustine], Sermo 203.3: PL 39.2123)
which joins the experiences of the two Apostles as Sulpicius does and
names Jonas in connection with those of St. Paul. Verbal parallels
noted by Da Prato make it in fact likely that one of the texts is an
imitation of the other.
7 This involved passage has been translated in the light of the punctua-
tion and interpretation proposed by Fiirtner (35f.) .
in the book I wrote about his life. I said there I had not em-
parva) .
Sulpicius.
15 Like a hypocaustum in a Roman bath establishment, the sacristy seems
to have been heated by fire burning below the floor. The floor, we are
told, was imperfect.
LETTER TO EUSEBIUS 145
1For the addressee of the letter and the circumstances of its com-
86f.
position, see above, p.
2 The Lat. phrase, pro consuetudine, is omitted in the oldest
Mb (r)
and bracketed by Halm.
147
148 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
air, borne up by
reaches of the a fast-
through the empty
moving cloud, I could follow him with my eyes. Then the
heavens opened up and received him, and he could no
3
sent a heavenly patron ahead of me, but I have lost what gave
me solace in this present life.
no one would have been needed to throw him into the fire.
Like the Hebrew youths, in the midst of the rolling flames and
9
he would have sung a song of praise to the
the fiery furnace,
Lord. Perhaps the persecutor would have chosen for him the
spent 'in the age of Nero or of Decius' and listing a variety of pun-
ishments which, in God's mercy, he might then have endured. Sul-
picius's catalogue of tortures resembles Hilary's.
9 Cf. Dan. 3.51fL
150 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
10 The tradition that Isaias inet his death by being cut in two with a
saw at least as old as Tertullian (De patientia 14: PL 1.1270;
is
CSEL
8.180f.
47.21. References to other early texts in Catholic Encyclopedia
and in F. Vigouroux, Dictionnaire de la Bible 3.944L See the Roman
died ca. 360)
Martyrology (July 6) also Potamius (Bishop of Lisbon;
,
;
the sword.
11 Cf. Martyrology (June 29) for St. Paul's death by
Roman
12 In this passage Sulpicius emphasizes the apostolic virtues of St. Martin
by closely imitating the language of St. Paul (2 Cor. 11.27-30).
LETTER TO AURELIUS 151
13
spirits. Strength to win, patience to wait, evenness of tem-
per to withstand these were always in him and overcame
the temptations which attacked him. A
man unique for his
virtues, which cannot be described piety, mercy, and charity.
:
14
When charity, in this chilly world, was growing cold even
in holy men, in him it increased day by day and lasted to the
end.
I way from his goodness, for, in spite
profited in a special
of my and
faultsunworthiness, he had a particular affection
for me. Now, again, my tears are flowing and a sigh rises from
Martin? After this, will life be joyous, will any day or hour
be free from tears? When I am with you, beloved brother,
shall I be able to mention his name without weeping? Or, in
conversations with you, shall I be able to speak of anything
else?
But why make you weep and sigh? I, who cannot console
myself, desire to see you consoled. Martin will not, believe
me, will not be absent from us. He will be among us when we
converse about him, he will be standing by when we pray. The
favor he did me today will not be unique: he will often show
himself in his glory, that we may see him. As he did a little
while ago, he will always be shielding us with his blessing.
Again, to deal with the rest of my vision, he has shown us that
heaven is open to those who follow him. He has taught us
the path to take, the end our hope should aim for, the goal
for which our spirit should strive.
Nevertheless, my brother, what will happen? I shall be
2
F IT WERE permissible to call one's parents to justice,
I should surely charge you with pillage and lar-
153
154 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
6
parish of Candes. There
was a dispute among the clergy of
that church and he wished to restore peace. He well
knew
the end of his days was close, yet he would not refuse to
make
the trip on that account. He thought it would be a fitting
St. Martin
4 Cf.Sulpwaus's letter to Desiderius prefixed to the Life of
(above, p. lOlf.
their mouths? We know you are longing for Christ, but your
rewards are safe; postpone them and they will not diminish.
3
Have pity on us whom
you abandon.
Martin, absorbed in the Lord as always and overflowing
9
with tender compassion, was not unmoved by these lamen-
7 Cf. Matt. 7.15; Acts 20.29. In the preceding sentences Sulpicius may
be recalling the words of St. Antony to Paul of Thebes: 'Why, Paul,
do you forsake me? Why do you go away without letting me say fare-
well?' (Jerome, Vita Pauli 14: PL 23.27) .
8 Cf. Matt. 26.31; Mark 14.27.
9 Lat. misericordiae visceribus (from Col. 3.12) .
156 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
Toil had not overcome him, nor would death be able to.
Inclining neither one way nor
the other, he neither feared to
die nor refused to live.
12 Viz., 'nothing that is yours.* The dying saint adapts the words of
Christ (John 14.30) in me ... nihil reperies,
.
Sulpicius's reading,
an early Latin version varying from the Vulgate (in me non
reflects
habet quicquam) The Codex Brixianus (/) shows non mventet for
.
non habet (cf. Wordsworth and White, aa loc.) and St, Augsutine
more than once quotes the phrase in the form in me nihil inveniet,
e.g., Sermo 26.10 (PL 38.176) .
many shoots had sprung from the tree his example had
planted for the Lord's service. The shepherd
was leading his
flocks before him, those thronging ranks of holy men, pale of
17
face and dressed in the pallium, old men with long years of
toil behind them or recruits newly professed to Christ's ser-
18
vice. Then came a chorus of virgins, abstaining from tears
death.
16 Tours.
17 Lat. pallidas turbos, agmina paltiata. Similar phrases descriptive of
the appearance of monks in Paulinus, Epist. 22.2 (PL 61.254; CSEL
29.155) and in Salvian, De gubernatione Dei 8.4 (p. 231 of J. F.
O 'Sullivan's translation in this series,) In the word palliata no refer-
.
Chapter 1
2
IALLUS AND i had met together. He was a man very
dear to me, both because of Martin's memory for
I he was one of his disciples and because of his own
good qualities. We
were joined by my friend Postumianus, 3
who had returned from the Orient to see me. (He had left
his owncountry and gone there three years before.) I em-
braced my loving friend and kissed his knees and his feet.
Together, with tears of joy in our eyes, we walked up and
down a few times almost carried away by delight. Then we
spread haircloth on the ground and sat down.
Postumianus was the first to speak. He looked at me and
said: 'When I was in the remoter parts of Egypt, I decided
to journey up to the sea. I found a merchant vessel
there get-
ting ready to set sail for Narbonne, laden with cargo. That
night I seemed to see you in sleep. You had grasped me
my
with your hand and were forcing me to embark on that
ship. When dawn dispelled the darkness, I rose from the place
1On the date of composition and on the Dialogues in general, see
above, pp. 87-89.
2 Apparently unknown outside of the Dialogues. The- birthplace of
Gallus may be indicated below (see Ch. 27 n. 2) Other biographical
.
161
162 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
Chapter 2
c
learn them. But there is one thing I cannot keep back. Those
you ask about have not become any better than when you
knew them. Not only that: the one who once loved me, in
whom I would find relief from the attacks of the others,
has been more unkind to me than he should have. But I
his friend-
shall not sayanything harsh about him. I cultivated
ship and I still loved him when he was thought to be my
enemy. As I think about this in private, I experience a great
grief that I have been all but deprived
of the friendship of a
wise and man. -But this subject is full of sorrow.
religious
Let us leave it and listen to the story you just now promised
us.'
Chapter 3
'It was three years ago, Sulpicius, that I bade you farewell
2 The quicksands of two gulfs on the North African coast were much
dreaded by seafarers of antiquity. The Syrtis Major, which seems to
be here in question, is now the Gulf of Sidra, lying between Misurata
and Bengasi. The Syrtis Minor is the present Gulf of Gabes. Cf.
Acts 27.17.
3 Sallust, Bellum Jugurth. 18.8.
FIRST DIALOGUE 165
Chapter 4
'So I made for the hut I had seen from a distance. I there
found an old man, dressed in skins and working a handmill.
After our greetings, he gave us a kindly reception. We ex-
cast upon that shore and were
plained that we had been
able at once to continue our
prevented by the calm from being
course. Following the bent of human nature, we continued,
we had landed in the hope of learning about the geography
of the place and the manners of the inhabitants. We were,
moreover, Christians, and especially eager to
know whether
there were any Christians in those lonely parts. Then, with
tears of joy in his eyes, he cast himself at our knees. He kissed
Chapter 5
5
said Postumianus. 1 shall be careful from now
Very well,
on to avoid praising anyone's abstinence. I do not wish any
such strenuous to offend our Gallic friends. To be
example
sure, I had intended to speak of the dinner that Cyrenian
it was
offered us and of the banquets which followed, for
seven days that we were with him. But I must refrain, so
Chapter 6
dria. Here, ugly battles were being waged between the bishops
and
2 With this judgment cf, Chronica 1.23,5 (PL 20.109; CSEL 1.26)
Ch. 21 below; also Jerome, Vita Malchi 1 (PL 23.53) Salvian seems .
to have had the present passage of Sulpicius in mind when writing the
final paragraph of Ad ecclesiam 2.13 (p. 315 of J. F. O'Sullivan's trans-
lation in this series) .
3 The final clause belongs, strictly, to the following chapter.
168 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
1
and the monks. The occasion or cause was as follows.
It
errors of Ongen.conye
It was
a council which solemnly condemned certain
authorized the expulsion
also Theophilus who, in the following year,
the reader might con-
of the monks referred to in Ch. 7. For details,
suit G. Fritz in DTC 11.1567-1588; P. de Labnolle, m A. Fhche-V.
Chapter 7
'Among the
passages in Origen's books noted by the
many
bishops and clearly contrary to the Catholic faith, there was
one place that especially provoked hostility. Here it is said
that the Lord Jesus, who had come in human flesh for man's
Among the an ti -Origen ist canons of a synod of 543 (its acts apparently
confirmed by Pope Vigilius) one anathematizes those who hold that the
punishment of demons and of impious men will come to an end;
H. Denzinger, Enchiridion Symbolorum (ed. 21-28, Freiburg i. B. 1937)
no. 211.
170 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
2
this, an unfortunate thing occurred: the prefect was called
in to direct the discipline of the Church. In.terror, the brothers
give rash
4
judgment about anyone. What is in question may
be a simple error and this is my opinion or else, as others
think, a genuine heresy. In any event,
the strenuous measures
the were unable to repress it.
repeatedly taken by bishops
had wide a spread unless dissension
Surely, it could not have
so
had served to increase it.
Martin's sharp
(below, p. 254) records
St.
2 Sulpicius, Chronica 2.50
criticism, in the case of Priscillian, of permitting
a secular judge to
rule in an ecclesiastical case. t
Chapter 8
'So I and made for the town of Bethlehem. This lies
left,
gets very angry with him because he said that we stuff our-
selves to the point of vomiting. For my part, I excuse him,
evaluate the extent of his learning and the vigor of his moral stric-
tures.
2 Gallus alludes to Jerome's long and widely read letter to Eustochium
(Epist. 22: PL 22.394; CSEL 54.143-211) .
3 This Belgicus, mentioned also in the following chapter, was probably
one of the monks living with Sulpicius.
172 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
he
'By no means,' he said. There was absolutely nothing
failed to attack, tear apart, and expose. His principal reproach
was against avarice and, equally, against vanity. He had much
to say about pride and not a little about superstition. To be
a great many
quite frank, I thought he depicted the vices of
5
people.
Chapter 9
1
Jerome, Epist. 22.14 (PL 22.403; CSEL 54.162).
I Bfhfmeyer dt*Jerome, Epist. 130.19 and 52.7 (PI- 22.1133, 539 f.; CSEL
56.199S., 54.440$.
FIRST DIALOGUE 173
Chapter 10
'Not far from the desert, on the banks of the Nile, there
are monasteries. The monks live together, most com-
many
monly in groups of a hundred. The
chief point in their polity
Chapter 11
The monk who had withdrawn heard all this: that the
a serpent, and
boys had been put in peril by encountering
further, after their victory over
the serpent, they had
that,
Hylten 1471
176 SULPJCIUS SEVERUS
Chapter 12
'In this monastery I saw two old men who were said to have
lived there forty years without ever leaving it. What made me
decide to mention them was the report of their virtues I had
from the testimony of the abbot himself and the conversation
of all the brothers, especially this that the sun had never
1
seen one of these two monks eating, nor the other angry/
with Babut's suggestion that the famous Vigilantius was the abductor.
FIRST DIALOGUE 177
3
with him. For my part, if Postumianus had not brought
forward that example of victory over wrath, I should be very
angry about the fugitive's leave-taking. But, because anger
is not permitted, let us stop talking about all those things
Chapter 13
where there are no other plants, the greater part feed them-
selveson palm fruit.
'When we came to the tree to which our kind host was
leading us, we met a lion there. My
guide and I trembled
at the sight of him, but the old man approached without
hesitation. In spite of our fear, we followed him. The beast
Chapter 14
f
saw another man equally remarkable. He lived in a
We
tiny hut not big enough for more than one. It was told of him
that a she-wolf regularly attended him at dinner. The beast
almost never failed to come running up at the regular meal-
time. She would wait outside the door until the hermit would
hand out whatever bread was left over from his meal. She
would hand and, as if having performed the proper
lick his
courtesies and extended her greetings, go away.
'It once happened that the holy man had had a brother
visit him and was accompanying him on his way home. In
away some little while and failed
he was to
consequence,
return until nightfall. Meanwhile, the beast had presented
herself at the customary mealtime. She sensed that
the cell
was empty and that her familiar patron was not at home. She
went in, making a careful search where the master could be.
five
By chance, a palm-leaf basket hung near by, containing
loaves of bread. The wolf took one of these and devoured it.
180 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
power, O
Christ, of Thy charity; these, O
Christ, are Thy
miracles. For, whatever Thy servants do in Thy name, these
do we grieve: that
things are Thine. And for this, indeed,
savage beasts perceive Thy majesty when men do not revere
it.'
FIRST DIALOGUE 181
Chapter 15
2
ing this mode and rule of life whom
two monks of Nitria
set out to find. They were, indeed, coming from a distant
very edge
been inhabiting those solitudes for twelve years. In spite of his
desire to avoid any meeting with man, he did not flee from
the visitors when he recognized them. He even devoted him-
day, when
they left, he went
forward a short distance to
his hand touched the closed eyes of the cubs. At once, the
5
Chapter 16
the old man who had the well and the ox.'
Chapter 17
1
C
two monasteries of the blessed Antony, which are
I visited
and is inaccessible.
It was reported that an anchorite lived in the recesses of
receives visits from men cannot receive visits from angels. This
His life was written in Greek by St. Athanasius (PG 26,835ff.) The .
'As for me, when I left Mount Sinai, I went back toward
the Nile. I covered both its banks and found them thick
with monasteries.I saw that, for the most part, as I said a
3
while back, monks live together in groups of a hundred.
the
However, it is not unknown for two or three thousand to
form a single community. You must not suppose that the
monks who live together in large numbers are inferior in
virtue to those have been speaking of, who have with-
men I
Chapter 18
incredible
'I shall relate two striking miracles of almost
obedience. My memory could supply a good many more; yet,
when a few examples are not enough to excite emulation of
virtue, there is no gain in multiplying
them.
'A certain man who had renounced the active life of the
world sought to be admitted into a monastery where the
observance was very strict. The abbot proposed a number
of things for him the discipline there was very
to consider:
in his orders there was no one
trying; he himself was severe
whose patience could easily execute them; he ought to seek
out another monastery, where the monks lived under an easier
terrifying prospects.
He promised absolute obedience. Yes,
3 Ch. 10.
4 Ibid.
186 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
not refuse. The master, hearing this promise, did not delay
to put ittest. As it happened,
to the an oven stood near,
bread. Flame
heated by a roaring fire and ready for baking
streamed out of its sides and, in the hollow chamber within,
unchecked.
1
The master ordered the newcomer
the fire raged
to go in. The obeyed the command, enter-
disciple instantly
into the midst of the flames. So bold a^faith
ing unhesitatingly
could not be withstood. At his coming, the flames immediately 2
in the case of the Hebrew boys.
receded, as they had long ago
In the retreat of the flames, nature itself was conquered.
It
prised that
the fire did not touch him, when the beginner
was Thine? So it resulted that the abbot did not
being tried
his
have to repent his harsh command, nor the disciple regret
as being weak,
obedience. On the very day of his arrival, tried
he was found He deserved his happiness, he deserved
perfect.
his glory; tested in obedience, he was glorified
in his suffering.'
Chapter 19
the ground and assigned the newcomer the task of caring for
it. He was to water that rod
until, contrary to all that was
natural, the dry wood planted in dry soil should put forth
leaves. Itwas a harsh order that the newcomer must obey. On
his own shoulders he brought water daily, drawn from the
Nile two miles away. When a whole year had passed, his labor
continued and there seemed to be no hope for any result; still,
the strength of his obedience resisted fatigue. The following
year likewise only mocked the vain toil of the brother, who
was now weakened. As time went by, a third year was running
its course, and night and day the water-bearer did not fail in
his work. Finally, the rod flowered. I have myself seen the
shrub that grew from it. With its branches flourishing, it
stands today in the court of the monastery, an abiding witness
1
to the merits of obedience and the power of faith.
'But the day would fail me before I could exhaust the
various miracles I have learned of as proving the virtues of
the saints.'
Chapter 20
various ranks lying before his door. Most holy bishops also
to be
put aside their episcopal dignity and humbly begged
touched and blessed by him. Not without reason, they thought
divine grace every time
they were sanctified and illumined by
that
they touched his hand or his clothing. People believed
he was abstaining from any kind of drink for the rest
strictly
of his life and that, when it came to food this, Sulpicius, I
six dried
ear, so that Gallus will not hear
shall say in it
your
1
figs could sustain
him. As time went by, the honor that came
to the holy man from his miraculous power caused vanity to
thoughts of vanity.
'As the report runs, he turned to God with all the force of
his prayers. He begged that for five months power be given
to the Devil to make him like those persons he had cured.
lain prostrate, this man was seizedby the Devil and held by
his chains. When he had endured for five months all those
Chapter 21
'As I tell all this, I can't help thinking of our own unhappi-
ness and our own weakness. Who of us, if he receives a
1
2 The Lat. phrase spumantibus equis may have been suggested by Virgil,
Aeneid 6.881.
190 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
regions,'
C
I shall do so/ said Postumianus, 'and hold you in suspense
no longer.'
Chapter 22
C
A young man, of Asiatic origin, very rich, of distinguished
man John 2
he had received the message of salvation. There-
upon, he immediately despised as useless the military life
and all its empty honors. He boldly entered the desert and
became a shining example of perfection in all the virtues.
He was mighty in fasting and outstanding for his humility. In
his firm faith and zealous charity he easily
equalled the monks
of old times. Meanwhile, a thought crept into his mind, placed
there by the Devil: it would be better for him to return to
his nativeland and save his only son, his wife, and all his
household. This, surely, would be more acceptable to God
than being content with his own escape from the world; it
would be a defect of charity for him to neglect the salvation
of his own.
'He yielded to this pretext of justice, false
though it was,
and, after
nearly four years, abandoned his cell and his
yet could not dislodge the firm intention to which his mind so
Chapter 23
3
Tell me, I said, 'are you not satisfied with the book I
wrote about Martin? You know well that I published one on
his life and miracles.'
'I am familiar with that fact,' said Postumianus. 'Indeed,
that book of yours has never left my hands. If you recog-
3
nize it, look: here it is! The book had been hidden under
his clothing and he opened it. 'It has been my companion on
land and sea. In all my travels it has been my associate and my
comforter. I shall tell you how far that book of yours has
3 The greater part of the text of Dial. 1 from Ch. 3 to this point is con-
tained in Chs. 1-14 of the fourth book of the Vitae Patrum, edited in
1615 and 1628 by the Jesuit H, Rosweyde: PL 73.813-824; the conver-
sational exchanges between the speakers are not included. While it is
not known who drew up these excerpts Rosweyde suggested a fifth-
century compiler they form a good source for the text of Sulpicius.
FIRST DIALOGUE 193
ever reach your country and find you safe and sound, I was
virtues of the
to compel you to complete your book on the
blessed man, adding what you there said you had omitted.
Come, then What has already been written down is enough
!
rather, all that you left out, for fear, I suppose, of wearying
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
1
The case of the Egyptian untouched
by fire does, indeed,
win our admiration; yet Martin more than once was master
2
over flames. If you are thinking of how the anchorites could
3
conquer and subdue the fierceness of wild beasts, Martin was
no stranger to restraining raging beasts and poisonous ser-
4
pents. Perhaps you bring forward for comparison the
man
who cured the victims of unclean spirits by the power of his
words or even through the virtue found in the fringes of his
5
garments. There are many proofs that Martin was not in-
ferior even in such cases. back on the man whose
6
If you fall
body's hair served him for clothes and who was thought
to
7 8
be visited by angels, angels talked every day with Martin.
'Further, in the face of vanityand presumption, Martin's
spirit was unconquered; no one spurned these vices more
bravely than he. Even when not present, he often cured
persons possessed by unclean spirits. And not only counts and
9
prefects obeyed him, but emperors
themselves. This is, in-
deed, the least among his virtues, but I want you to realize
that he resisted not only vanity as no one else did, but also
the causes and occasions of vanity.
'Althoughwhat I am about to tell is only a small matter,
it should not be passed over. It supplies a basis for praising
Chapter 26
1 In his Vita S. Antonii 93, St. Athanasius includes a similar but shorter
list of places to which the fame of his hero had spread (PG 26.973) ;
cf.
telling us up to now
about the deeds of the Orientals, In
this conversation friends, it is for Gallus to tell the
among
As I have said, he owes it to us to take his turn at
story.
Chapter 27
this passage, declaring its origin unclear (possibly 'Gallic') and its
meaning uncertain. It is tempting to follow Da Prato
and others and
see the word as a derivation from (assigning it then some
gurdus
such meaning as 'rude' or 'rustic') but modern etymology forbids this
,
the long
Bourges, a fact which leads Jullian to propose re-examining
abandoned tradition which made Sulpicius a bishop of Bourges; c.
above, p. 83.
FIRST DIALOGUE 199
Chapter 1
369f).
201
202 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
Chapter 2
1
'Martin was wearing this tunic as he advanced toward
the altar to offer the sacrifice to God. On that day, something
marvellous happened which I shall tell While he was bless-
ing the altar in the appointed manner, we saw
a globe of fire
in the air, leaving a long
spring as if from his head. It rose
2
trail behind it like a fiery lock of hair. This happened on
a feast-day, in the midst of a great multitude of people, yet,
the priests, and
very few saw it: one of the virgins, one of
three of the monks. Why the others did not see it, we
only
cannot judge.
3
'About this same time, my uncle Evanthius, a profoundly
Christian man, though much occupied in worldly business,
was gravely ill. Since death seemed imminent, he called for
Martin. The blessed man hastened to him without delay,
but, before he had come half the way, the sick man felt the
miraculous power of his approach, He instantly recovered
his healthand went out to meet us.
The next day, though Martin wanted to return, he re-
mained when Evanthius begged him to do so. A slave boy
belonging to the household had
been poisoned by a deadly
snake bite and was already nearly dead from the powerful
venom. Evanthius put him on his shoulders and laid him
before the holy man's feet. He was sure that nothing was
impossible to Martin.
The poison had already spread through
the boy's entire body: you could see all the swollen veins
tense like wineskins. Martin
standing out and his vital organs
stretched out his hand and touched all the members
of the
near the wound
boy's body. Then he placed
his finger tiny
in its poison. The effect
through which the beast had poured
was amazing. We saw the poison stream from every part,
attracted to Martin's finger, and then, mixed with blood,
ooze out of the tiny opening of the wound. (It was
like the
Chapter 3
and drew over a little to the other side. Then, the traces
became tangled and the whole team was thrown into dis-
order, for the poor animals had been harnessed together in
long lines in a way you have often seen. It was not easy to
disengage the mules, and this business delayed the officials,
who were in a hurry. They were angered by this, jumped to
the ground and began to attack Martin with whips and
clubs. He said not a word, but with incredible patience gave
his back to their blows.This only aroused the madness of the
unfortunate who were furious that he took their
officials,
before.
it was they had beaten on that spot just a while
learned that the vic-
Putting the question to passers-by they
The whole then
tim of their cruel blows was Martin. thing
became clear to them all. They could not fail to see that they
were being held back because of their misuse of him. So, they
all set off after us at a rapid pace. They
were conscious of
what they had done and what they deserved; they were
and
ashamed and confused. Weeping and with their heads
had defiled them-
faces covered with the dust by which they
at Martin's knees, imploring for-
selves,they flung themselves
that he let them go. They had already
giveness and begging
of con-
been punished enough, they said, by their pangs
knew full well that the earth could have
science. They
4 to have
swallowed them up alive, or, rather, that they ought
into
had their senses snatched from them and been turned
solid as indeed, they had seen their mules nailed
rock, 5 ^to
and
besought him
the ground where they stood. They begged
to pardon their crime and grant them power to go away.
'Even before they came the blessed Martin knew that
up,
they were held fast
and had told us so. Now, he mercifully
back their mules, and permitted
forgave them, gave them
3
them to go away.
Chapter 4
1 Life 7 and 8.
2 Chartres.
3 Probably Vendome, as Lecoy de la Marche suggests (p. 263) .
4 Lat. totus infremuit. I have adopted the Douay translators' iversion of
infremuit at John 11.33, a passage which Sulpicius would
most appropri-
ately have had in mind here.
Babut's interpretataion (p. 210 n.3) unfor-
into account.
tunately fails to take the Biblical parallel
5 Lat. nee mortale sonans; cf. Virgil, Aeneid 6.50 and Statius, Thebaid
4.146.
208 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
have.
3 '
The rest of the multitude joined their cries to the
'But, please keep on, even though you can have nothing
more magnificent to tell us. Keep on, Callus, and finish the
rest of your account of Martin. Our mind is eager to learn
even the least and most ordinary of his deeds, having no doubt
that his least deeds are greater than the greatest of others/
'I shall do so,' said Gallus. 'But note that what I am about
being cruel and proud, had an Arian wife. She prevented him
3
from rendering the holy man the respect due him. When
Martin had made repeated attempts to see the proud prince,
he had recourse to familiar expedients he clothed himself in
:
Chapter 6
banquet.
'Blessed woman, justly tobe compared in her loving devo-
tion to that queen who came from the ends of the earth to
hear Solomon.
3
This comparison is proper if we confine our-
selves to the simple narrative. But we must compare
the faith
of
of the two royal women. So doing, and taking no account
out:
the solemn dignity of the mystery, I have this to point
Chapter 7
remarked: Tor some time, as I
At this point Postumianus
have greatly admired the faith of the
listened to you, Callus, I
stand in respect to the report that
empress. But, where do we
no woman ever approached Martin? Here we have the
em-
^ve have
1 Since the year of this palace incident is known fairly closely,
see
here an important datum in the vexed chronology of Martin's life;
above, p. 91.
SECOND DIALOGUE 213
Chapter 8
6
tormented by a false spirit, At once, quicker than you could
say it, the demon was expelled and the person cured.'
Chapter 9
'About the same time, when Martin was returning from
Treves, he encountered a cow tormented by a demon. She
had left her herd and was going about attacking people; she
had already dangerously gored a number with her horns.
When she came near us, the people who were following her
from a distance began calling out with a loud voice that we
should be careful. But the raging beast, staring savagely, came
nearer to us. Martin raised his hand and ordered her to stand
At his word the cow halted, motionless. Meanwhile,
still.
parishes, we
met a band of hunters. The hounds were pursuing
little beast.
a hare. The long course had overcome the poor
the broad-spreading field
was there any
Nowhere in all
unharmed.
Chapter 10
54
who survives in this swineherd, and put on the new Adam.*
'Some oxen had used up part of a meadow in their graz-
sections had been rooted up by swine.
The
ing, while other
had a
rest of the meadow, which remained undamaged,
retained nothing of the dignity its flowers once gave it. That
part which the filthy animals that are swine have uprooted
supplies the ugly image of fornication. Finally, that portion
which has suffered no damage shows us the glory of virginity:
it abounds in
luxuriating grass there is a rich crop of hay on
;
Chapter 11
*A certain soldier had laid aside his sword belt in a church
to enter upon monastic profession. He had built a cell for
himself in a retired and distant spot, intending to live as a
hermit. But, the cunning Enemy soon was disturbing his un-
trained heart with strange thoughts; his resolution was altered
and he wanted to live again with his wife, whom Martin had
instructed to join a convent.
same service; the bishop could well permit two holy persons
1
who had now become ignorant of their sex through the merit
of their faith to serve together.
Then Martin said (and I am going to cite his very words) :
Chapter 12
refused not one of the things the venerable virgin had sent
220 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
Chapter 13
'What I am now about to tell, Sulpicius, I bring forward
with you as witness' and here Gallus was looking at me.
'One day, Sulpicius and I were keeping vigil before Martin's
SECOND DIALOGUE 221
osity and to tell us what was that divine dread we both de-
clared we had felt, and whom he had talked with in the cell
For, the sound of conversation we had heard through the
door was weak and hardly intelligible. He hesitated long and
earnestly, but there was nothing Sulpicius could not extract
from him, even against his will. What I am about to tell may,
perhaps, be incredible, but Christ is my witness that I do not
lie and surely no one is so sacrilegious as to think that Martin
ever lied. "I shall tell you," he said, "but I beg you to tell no
one. Agnes, Thecla, and Mary have been with me." He de-
scribed to us the countenance and dress of each. He confessed
that it was not only on that day that he had received a visit
from them, but frequently. He also said he had often seen the
Apostles Peter and Paul.
'As to demons, he would rebuke them by name as each
visited him. From Mercury 1 he had to endure a particular
hostility. He said Jupiter was stupid and dull. All this seemed
incredible to most, even to those living in the monastery.
Hence, I am far from confident that all who hear it will be-
1 For Mercury and for Jupiter (mentioned in the next sentence) cf.
l
Chapter 14
the
'One day, we were asking Martin about the end of
world. He said that Nero and the Antichrist would
come first.
ten and rule in the of the
Nero would subdue kings regions
would far as to
West. A he was
persecution
to impose go so
Gallus was just saying this and had not finished what he
had undertaken to relate, when a slave of the household came
in, announcing that the priestRefrigerius stood at the door.
We were in doubt whether it would be better to keep on
listening to Gallus or to go out to
meet one whose arrival
was most welcome to us and who had come to honor us
with a visit.
Chapter 1
about Martin all that you postponed telling until the next day.
To be sure, he already knows everything that can be told.
But, even to review what is known is a pleasing and agreeable
form of knowledge. Nature has so arranged it that one finds
joy in knowing with greater confidence what through numer-
ous witnesses he sees to be quite certain. This priest has been
attached to Martin since his early youth; he knows everything,
indeed, but is glad to relearn what he already knows. And so,
Gallus, I confess it is with me. I have repeatedly heard Mar-
tin's miracles related. I have committed to writing many things
about him. Yet, admiration for his deeds always makes
my
their telling new me, even when people again and again
for
225
226 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
in the morning?'
'We learned yesterday/ they said, 'that Gallus here had
related Martin's miracles all day long, and, because of night-
fall, had off telling the rest until the next day. That is why
put
we have .hastened to offer him a large company of listeners,
Chapter 2
'It is to listen to me that you have come
together/ he said,
*you holy and eloquent men. But the ears you lend me are, I
suppose, eager for matters of religion rather than for those
of scholarship. You mean to listen to me as a witness of the
not as a copious orator.
f aithj
occurred.'
Chapter 3
part free for the stopper. The priest testified that he saw the
oil increase under Martin's
.
power. While the slave carried the vessel in his hands, the
overflow was so abundant as to cover all his clothing. Yet,
when the matron received the vessel it was full to the very
brim. Even today, as the priest testifies, there is no room in
the bottle for the stopper commonly used to seal up liquids
that are being kept with special care.
'This, too, is a remarkable incident that I remember hap-
3
pened to our friend here' and Gallus was looking at me.
'He had placed in a rather high window a glass vessel
filled with oil that Martin had blessed. A slave, not knowing
1 Claudius Avitianus, In the year 363 he was vicarius for Africa. After
366 he was entrusted with the conduct of criminal trials in Gaul, an
office in which he showed great cruelty. See below, Ch. 4, 5, 8. CL Seeck
in PWK 2.2394f.
2 Lat., in ventrem cresceret. Cf. Virgil, Georgia 4.122.
3 Viz,, at Sulpicius.
230 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
some-
'And what, now, of this wonder? It was performed by
for he among us
one whose name I shall suppress, is present
our friend
and has forbidden me to betray him. Anyway,
Saturninus was also there at the time. A dog
was barking at us
with more than usual vigor. "In Martin's name/' said that
other companion, "I order you to be quiet."
The dog ceased
the bark stuck in his throatyou would have thought
at once;
is a relatively small matter that
histongue had been cut off. It
Martin worked miracles in his own person; you can
believe
Chapter 4
spirit he
entered Tours, followed by ranks of captives, pitiful
various
and all in chains. To the city's amazement he ordered
with the
kinds of torture to be prepared for their punishment,
next day set for beginning the gloomy executions.
be-
'When Martin learned of this, he set out alone a little
1 See Ch, 3 n. 1.
THIRD DIALOGUE 231
Chapter 5
'The foregoing facts have been learned by many people
through the testimony of Avitianus. The priest Refrigerius,
whom you see here, recently heard them from a reliable man,
1
the former tribune Dagridus, who called the Divine Majesty
to witness his oath that the incident had been related to him
by Avitianus himself.
'Do not be surprised that I am doing today what I did not
1 The MSS. vary widely in the spelling of this proper name. There is
Callus. Sulpicius,
2 The words of this paragraph are hardly any words of
a careless 'ghost-writer/ has let his own voice be heard.
The pass-
like
that the Dialogues are a literary
age lends force to Babul's argument
90.
artifice; cf. Ch. 2 n. 1 and, above, p.
THIRD DIALOGUE 233
Chapter 6
10813 (PL 22.889; CSEL 55.323) seems to have used the same source.
Cf. Babut 84; Delehaye 49 finds a further parallel in Paulinus,
Carm.
23.82-95.
234 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
Chapter 7
saw, of the repeated damage that might befall his crops, and
experienced a great sorrow that Martin's life had not been
prolonged into the present.'
Chapter 8
C
I to Avitianus. This man who everywhere, in
come back
every unspeakable monuments of his cruelty, in
city, left
doing the will of the Devil who was always hounding him, or
else that the unclean spirit, driven by Martin from his seat,
lost his power of violence. The servant was ashamed of the
master and the master could no longer oppress the servant.
2
ln the village of Amboise, that is, in the old fortress which
c
1 Lat. exsufflans. Bad Latin or not, the word \vas very useful for Christian
Latin, writers from Tertullian on. Du Cange, Glossarium (s.v., ex-
supplies numerous examples; cf. also Da Prato,
ed. Sulp,
sufflatio) ,
1.379f.
2 Lat. in vico Ambatiensi. Cf. Lecoy de la Marche 204.
236 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
construction. It rose
the sanctuary of an idol a magnificent
to a massive tower built of polished stones terminating in a
3 of the construction
cone high at the top. The very grandeur
maintained the superstitious honor paid to the locality. Orders
for the destruction of the temple had often been given by the
in residence. After a
blessed Martin to Marcellus, the priest
and reproached the for having
while, he came himself priest
excuse that a force
left the sanctuary intact. The priest gave
as
workmen would
of soldiers and a powerful band of public
so vast a construction; the bishop
hardly serve to overturn
could have
should not lightly suppose that such an operation
feeble clerics and far from robust
monks.
been handled by
Martin then had recourse to his familiar expedients.
He spent
a
the whole night in prayer and vigil. When morning came,
its foun-
storm broke and overturned the whole temple upon
dations. I have this story on the evidence of Marcellus.'
Chapter 9
a further
have the agreement of Refrigerius concerning
'I
similar actions. .There was
miracle, like the last, and involving
Martin was
a massive column surmounted by an idol. This
trying to overturn,
but he could not do so through lack of
he turned to prayer.
adequate means. In his customary way
certain a
There was seen to fall from heaven the fact is
sort of column of about equal dimensions,
and this, striking
to dust the whole indomitable mass. It was
the idol, reduced
to his aid
not enough that heavenly powers should come
unseen: those very powers had to be observed by the human
service for Martin.
eye in openly doing
and favored
3 Halm's reading m conum retained; adopted by Monceaux
by Chase (H<L Stud, in Class.
Philol.W [1932] 73) and Hylten 80.
tn thronum,
Babut 209 n. 1 preferred the harder reading of V, D,
which was adopted by Bihlmeyer.
THIRD DIALOGUE 237
saint, the evil serpent at once reversed its course and, under
our very eyes, swam across to the farther bank. As we watched
this in amazement, Martin said with a deep sigh: "Serpents
'
hear me and men do not."
Chapter 10
1
'Martin had the habit of eating fish during the Easter days,
A little before meal time, he asked whether there was any on
hand. The deacon Gato, who was charged with the adminis-
tration of the monastery and was himself a capable fisherman,
Chapter 11
because of the
'I come now something which Martin,
to
a
unfortunate circumstances then prevailing, always kept
is that
secret,but could not hide from us. The miracle here
of conversation with an angel face to face.
to the Hercules of
2 Statius, Thebaid 8.750. The line refers capture by
d
the Erymanthian boar (sw) , but the quotation gams f
;
^d
F>jnt 132,
Haheuttca
the fact that sus also designated a kind of fish: Ovid,
cf. Pliny, Hist. Nat. 11.111267.
3 Cf, Life 19 n. L
the synod of Saragossa (380) had part in the first official action taken
,
against the heresy. The events described in Ch. 11-13 of this dialogue
took place five years later, when, in consequence of a trial at Treves
(385) Priscillian and certain of his adherents were condemned to death.
,
That trial and the events immediately leading up to it are the subject
of a passage in Sulpicius's Chronica which is translated below as an
Appendix (pp. 252-254) For initial orientation in Priscillianism, see
.
the count Narses and the governor Leucadius; they had both
and their passionate acts of
belonged to the party of Gratian
resistance had merited the of the victor. But Martin's
anger
chief concern was that tribunes with life-and-death powers
should not be sent to the Spanish provinces. The pious Martin
was anxious to preserve 'not only the Christians whom this
would be an occasion to maltreat, but also the heretics them-
selves.
4
resisted him, or possibly, as
many thought at the time, because
avarice stood in the way, the property of the future victims
Chapter 12
1 The MSS. leave the spelling of this name uncertain. Halm drew the
spelling given above from V, which here shows a manifestly cor-
Editions prior to
rupt form, but a few lines later shows Theognitum.
Halm generally printed Theognistus, the spelling used by Ensslin in
PWK, 2te Reihe 5.1985.
242 SULPIGIUS SEVERUS
Chapter 13
salvation."
care not
'Accordingly, from that time, Martin took great
to be involved in association with the party of Ithacius. After-
than
wards, when he cured possessed persons more slowly
usual and through a diminished gift of grace, he would some-
times declare to us, weeping, that because of the evil of that
communion which he had been involved for only a mo-
in
he
ment, and that through necessity and not from choice
Chapter 14
in him for
The divine grace which had been diminished
with heavy
a time Martin recovered, as we came
to know,
to the rear door
interest. I saw a possessed man being brought
intended is reason-
2 Text markedas"corrupt by Halm, but the meaning
ably clear; cf. HyluSn 78f.
THIRD DIALOGUE 245
3 Lat. sacro tegmini sensit iniuriam. The sense given for the first two
words is gained from the following clause (quis . . . nostrum incestat
habitaculum?) .
Tegmen ( covering generally) is used somewhat
similarly in Statius, Thebaid 1.406.
246 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
l
Chapter 15
his cdl,
'One day, in the tiny space which surrounded
his all know.
Martin was sitting on that wooden stool of you
above the monastery,
Perched on the high rock which rises
and joyous
he spied two demons, who were emitting lively
shouts of encouragement: "On, Brictio!
Come on, Bnctio!
that unfortunate man was ap-
They noticed, I suppose, that
and well knew what madness they had excited
in
proaching,
in a number
1 This chapter and the following are omitted or displaced
of MSS probably out of respect for Brictio, about
,
whom they relate
ot
much that is unpleasant and who succeeded Martin as Bishop
cit. 60f.
Tours. Cf. Babut SOlff.; Delehaye 13f.; Chase, op.
his name, Brictiia.
3 Also railed Brice, from a variant Latin form of
Although perhaps St. Martin's most outspoken enemy (Babut 118),
the succession was
Brice succeeded him in the see of Tours (although
contested at the time) -cf. Duchesne, Pastes episcopaux
2.503-and was
November 13) .
subsequently venerated as a saint (Roman Martyrology,
Babut regards the scene here described as perhaps a fiction (loc cit.) ;
cf. op. dt. 116ff., 285 ff. for his treatment
of Brice.
THIRD DIALOGUE 247
injury, and would often say this: "If Christ put up with Judas,
'
why should I not put up with Brictio?"
l
Chapter 16
C
At this, Postumianus said: I should like that example to
1 See Ch. 15 n. 1.
248 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
2 man who
be heard by that neighbor of ours. He is prudent
a
the or the future,
does not concern himself with either present
been wronged, he goes crazy and loses con-
but, when he has
the clergy, he attacks the
trol of himself.He ragts against
the whole world into commotion to effect his
laity, he puts
Chapter 17
With the sun about to set, I saw that evening had come
has gone, Postumianus; we must
upon us and said, 'The day
such eager listeners have a dinner
get up. At the same time,
that
due them. And as for Martin, you should not expect
about him will find an end. He is a subject of
anyone telling
such scope that no discourse can comprehend him. However,
have just heard about
you can carry to the Orient what you
Martin. Wherever you pass on your return, through whatever
assisted in circulating the book in Illyria by his close friend St. Niceta
of Remesiana (in Dacia) whose influence seems to have extended far
,
beyond his diocese. Paulinus, Epist. 29.14 (PL 61.231; CSEL 29.261) is
especially interesting in connection with Bihlmeyer's suggestion. The
works of Niceta are translated into English elsewhere in this volume.
It is a curious fact that the two friends, Paulinus and Niceta, are
commemorated in the Roman Martyrology on the same day, June 22.
3 Priest and confessor of Nola in Campania; Roman Martyrology (January
14) . Thirteen of the poems of Paulinus are written in honor of St.
Felix birthday pieces (carmina natalitia) for his feast. See the recent
study of R. C. Goldschmidt, Paulinus' Churches at Nola (Amsterdam
1940) 7-10. In Epist. 17.4, Paulinus puts the merits of St. Martin side by
side with those of St. Felix (PL 61.236; CSEL 29.127) .
4 Dial 1.23.
250 SULPICIUS SEVERUS
Chapter 18
'But, when you once more set sail, leaving Egypt and mak-
with which I charge you,
ing for Jerusalem, there is a mission
a mission which concerns a sorrow of mine. If ever you come
1
to the shores of therenowned Ptolemais, inquire carefully of
2
the place where our Pomponius is buried, and do not fail to
visit the where his bones lie in foreign soil. Shed abun-
spot
dant tears there; tears that spring as well from your affection
as from my deep-rooted love. Scatter purple flowers and
if this be but an
sweet-smelling grasses upon the soil, even
3
empty homage. Speak to him, not harshly, not bitterly, not
in thelanguage of reproof, but in a tone of compassion. Tell
him that if he had been willing to listen to you at one time
or to me at all times, and had taken Martin as a model rather
than that man I choose not to name, 4 he would never have
been so cruelly separated from me; he would not now be cov-
ered by the sand of an unknown beach, or, like a shipwrecked
pirate, have met his death in mid-sea and barely secured buri-
al at the very edge of the shore. Let them see this as their work,
all those who have sought to harm me in avenging themselves
on him; them look upon
let their glory, and, now at least,
their vengeance done, let them cease their attacks on me/
I spoke these words of sorrow in a plaintive voice and my
grief moved all to weeping. With our great admiration for
Martin was mingled an equal sadness, awakened by our tears.
And so we parted.
pardon that victim of deception and have mercy on the fugitive; pray
that the Lord be gentle towards him and that judgment be lenient
upon one who yielded to such false teachings.' The genuineness of
the passage has been much disputed since Babut published it in 1906
(Le moyen dge as in the foregoing note; cf. Gwynn, op. cit. cclxxvi n. 1
and 433) See HylteVs careful analysis (pp. 77f.)
. .
4 Cf. n. 2 above.
APPENDIX
1
St. Martin and the Condemnation of Priscillian
1 See Dial. 3.11 n.2, which fits this excerpt into its context. For Maxi-
mus, represented here as occupying his capital after the overthrow of
Gratian, see Life Ch. 20 n. 1.
2 The synod was held in 384.
3 One of the two bishops a Salvianus was the other who, with Pris-
cillian and another layman, were held suspect of heresy by the council
of Saragossa (380) ;cf. Sulpicius, Chronica 2.47 (PL 20.124; CSEL
1.100) .
252
APPENDIX 253
THE
COMMONITORIES
(Commonitoria]
Translated
by
Marquette University
INTRODU GT I ON
257
258 VINCENT OF LERINS
philosophies of life.
3 The reader who is. interested in St. Augustine's teaching an grace does
well to read John Courtney Murray's translation of St. Augustine's
De correptione et gratia (Admonition and Grace) in the 4th volume of
the Works of St. Augustine in this series.
INTRODUCTION 261
Chapter Page
1 Here begins the treatise of Vincent (Peregrinus) on the
antiquity and universality of the Catholic faith against
profane innovations of all heretics 267
2 Holy Scripture must be interpreted from the tradition
of the Catholic Church 269
3 Explanation of the Rule of Faith: Every care must be
taken that we hold fast to what has been believed
everywhere, always, and by all 271
4 The rule illustrated by events of the time of the Donatists
and Arians 272
5 Proof from St. Ambrose that we never have to desist from
the defense of the faith of our forebears .... 273
6 Here ispresented the outstanding example of blessed
Pope Stephen regarding the rebaptism of heretics . 276
.
263
264 VINCENT OF LERINS
trated 312
25 shown that the heretics, in using Scripture, abuse its
It is
and passages from the New Testament
texts .315 . ,
Chapter 1
1 This is the title of the work of St. Vincent in the Paris codices; but
Gennadius states. (De vir. inl. 64) that the title should be 'Of the
Pilgrim, against heretics'. Also, in the codices at the end of the work
we read: 'The explanation of the treati&e of the Pilgrim against
heretics.' In the first edition of Sichardus (Basel 1528) we read: Tn
defense of the antiquity and universality of the Catholic faith, [the
work] of Vincent of Lerins against the profane innovations of all
heretics/
2 Deut. 32.7.
3 Prov. 22.17.
4 Prov. 3.1.
5 We read in Gennadius that Vincent adopted this name.
6 But to this statement the Commonitories themselves, in so far as they
are extant, give only little support, for in them does not appear the
collected testimony of the Fathers, but certain notes and rules whereby
Catholic doctrine may be distinguished from heresy.
267
268 VINCENT OF LERINS
As for the time element: since time snatches away all things
human, we ought to snatch from it something which may
profit us unto life eternal. We are moved
by the particularly
terrible fear of the approaching Judgment which urges us
to increase our studies of religion, and by the deceitfulness
of
at the harbor of
religion, always
the safest place for everyone.
There, after the storms of vanity and pride have ceased, I may
propitiate God by the sacrifice of Christian humility and thus
avoid not only the shipwrecks of the present life, but also the
flames of the world to come.
But now it is time for me to begin, in the name of the
Chapter 2
With greatzeal and full attention I often inquired from
1
the authority of the divine Law; second, by the tradition of
the Catholic Church.
Here, perhaps, someone may ask: Since the canon of the
Scripture is
complete and more than sufficient in itself, why
is it necessary to add to it the authority of ecclesiastical inter-
8 Of those who have forsaken the world, i.e., priests and monks.
in Donatus, in another.
2
and
Sabellius, another; Arius^ 3
Eunomius and Macedonius read it differently; so do Photinus,
and Priscillianus; in another way, Jovinianus,
Apollinaris,
Pelagius, and Celestius; finally, in still another, Nestorius,
caused by various er-
Thus, because of the great distortions
it is, indeed, necessary that the trend of
the interpreta-
rors,
tion of the prophetic and
apostolic writings
be directed in
accordance with the rule of the ecclesiastical and Catholic
meaning.
In the Catholic Church itself, every care should be taken to
hold fast to what has been believed everywhere, always, and
4
as indicated by
by all This is truly and properly 'Catholic/
the force and etymology of the name itself, which com-
universal. This general rule will be
prises everything truly
truly applied if we
follow the principles of universality, anti-
We do so in regard to universality if we
quity, and consent.
confess that faith alone to be true which the entire Church
confesses all over the world. [We do so] in regard "to antiquity
if we in no way deviate from those interpretations
which our
6
ancestors and have manifestly proclaimed as in-
fathers
violable. [We do so] in regard to consent if, in this very
antiquity, we adopt the definitions and propositions of all,
6
or almost all, the bishops and doctors.
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
3
greatest import were affected. Not only personal relations,
kinship, friendships, homes, but even cities, peoples, provinces,
nations, finally, the whole Roman Empire were rocked
and
shaken to their foundations. When this profane Axian novelty,
4
5
like Bellona had
of all captured the emperor
or a Fury, first
and then subjugated to the new laws the leaders in the im-
as well, it no longer avoided mixing up and
perial palace
sacred and
disturbing everything, public and private interests,
It did not discriminate in favor of the good and the
profane.
as
true; it struck down whomever it capriciously selected,
though it were superior to them. Then wives
were dishonored,
widows desecrated, virgins ravished, monasteries demolished,
clerics thrown into panic, Levites beaten, priests exiled. Prisons,
and mines were overcrowded with saintly persons. Most
jails,
of them, forbidden to enter the cities, hunted and exiled, ex-
wild beasts and amid
posed to life in deserts, caves, among
rocks, exhausted by exposure, hunger,
and thirst, perished. And
all this for no other reason than that human superstitions
Chapter 5
martyrs.
can we deny the faith of those whose
How, then,
we proclaim? We proclaim it, indeed, venerable Am-
55
victory
brose; we give them praise and admiration. For who is so
foolish as not to desire (although he may not be able to reach
1 De fide 2.6,141.
2 Apoc. S.lff. , ^ , ,
Confessors who
3 In the third and fourth centuries, those were called
confessed the Name of Christ before a judge, or in chains
and prison
(cf. Cyprian, Ep. 37.1).
Later, all those who lived in and died for
Christ were accorded the title and honor of Confessor.
4 Ambrose is speaking of the bishops, worn down by poverty
and old
whom Constantius, in 359, in the Synod of Rimini, compelled to
age,
to return. When the
abjure the faith, by denying them (permission)
died a short time later, almost all condemned the subscription
Emperor
and the Arian heresy, especially the French under the leadership of
St. Hilary, in the Synod of Paris,
361 (Cf. Jerome, Dial. adv. Lucife-
rianos 19) .
5 De fide 3.15.128.
COMMONITORIES 275
Chapter 6
is oppose innovations.
to
4
for error. When, then, people everywhere protested against
this novelty and priestsfrom all corners of the world each
according to the degree of his zeal strove against it, Pope
Stephen, of blessed memory, who then held the Apostolic See,
opposed it, together with his colleagues, yet more earnestly
than they. He apparently considered it fitting to surpass all
others in his devotion to the faith, inasmuch as he was su-
5
perior to them by virtue of his office. In an epistle, which he
thereupon sent to Africa, he stated
a rule that 'nothing
it as
new is to be accepted save what has been handed down by
tradition.' For that saintly and prudent man realized that the
else, but the rule to which we are used and accustomed? An-
6
the final impact of this African council and its decrees?
Thanks be to God, there was none. The whole matter was
7
like a dream, like a
abolished, rejected, and trodden upon
fable, like an empty thing.
And now, what an amazing reversal of the situation ! The
authors of that same opinion are adjudged to be Catholics,
8
but the followers, heretics; the masters are absolved, the di-
condemned; the writers of the books will be children
sciples,
in the Kingdom, the adherents of their doctrine will be in
Gehenna. For who would be so foolish as to doubt that the
most blessed Cyprian, the light of all saints and bishops and
martyrs, will with his other colleagues reign with
Christ in
Chapter 7
;
1
who, 'according to their own desires had heaped
1 Gal. 1.6,7.
280 VINCENT OF LERINS
6
which they ought not, for filthy lucre's sake/ 'proud, know-
ing nothing, but sick about questions
and strifes of words,
men corrupted in mind and who are destitute of the truth,
7
supposing gain to be godliness.' 'And
withal being idle, they
learn to go about from house to house, and are not only idle
but tattlers also and busybodies, speaking things which they
ought not'; 'having ... a good conscience, which some re-
8
9
jecting have made shipwreck concerning
their faith'; 'profane
11
for their folly shall be manifest to all, as theirs also was/
2 2 Tim, 4.3,4.
3 1 Tim. 5.12.
4 Rom, 16.17,18.
5 2 Tim. 3.6,7.
6 Titus 1.10,11.
7 1 Tim. 6.4,5.
8 1 Tim. 5.13.
9 1 Tim. 1.19.
10 2 Tim. 2,16,17.
11 2 Tim. 3.9.
COMMONITORIES 281
Chapter 8
Some men of this type traveling through provinces and
strictness ! To
assure firmness in the loyalty to the first faith,'
he is ready to spare neither himself nor his fellow Apostles.
But he is not satisfied with that, for his words are Even if 'an
:
1 Gal. 1.8.
282 VINCENT or LERINS
Chapter 9
are aimed only at the Galatians?
Perhaps those precepts
of the same Epistle
Then, other rules mentioned in later parts
for
would likewise be addressed only to the Galatians, as,
us also walk in the
'If we live in the let
Spirit,
example:
Spirit. Let us not be made
desirous of vainglory, provoking
1 if this
one another, envying one another/ and so on. But,
aimed equally at. all, then it
is absurd, and if the rules are
those
follows that, equally with the moral commandments,'
as
concerning faith apply to all in the same manner. Just
to provoke or envy one another,
people are not permitted
than those
so no one is permitted to accept doctrines other
the Catholic Church preaches everywhere. Or, perhaps it
was an order only for that time that whosoever preached
otherwise than had been taught [by the Apostles] be ana-
2 Gal. 1.9.
1 Gal. 5.25,26.
2 Gal. 5.16.
COMMONITORIES 283
3 Acts 9.15.
4 1 Tim. 2.7.
5 By these names he compares the heretics to the plagues of Egypt.
Eccli. 10.1: muscae morientes, flies.
(Exod. 8) dying
284 VINCENT OF LERINS
Chapter 10
There are some who will say: Why, then, does Divine
is, a doctor
of the Church who, in
some
the opinion of his disciples or listeners, is teaching by
'and he fore-
well, what then? Moses
revelation continues:
come to which he
tell a sign and a wonder: and that pass
master of
spoke . .'. Evidently, he has some outstanding
great knowledge in mind,
one who, in the eyes of his followers,
is not only familiar with human affairs but also capable of
such as
a foreknowledge of transcendent matters (a master
and the rest of
Valentine, Donatus, Photinus, Apollinaris, ^
unheard-of ones. 'And let us serve them/ that is, let us have
3
faith in them; let us serve them. And now, what is Moses
conclusion? 'Thou shalt not hear the words of that prophet
5
or dreamer, he says. And why, I ask you, does God not
forbid to be taught what He forbids to be listened to? Tor the
Lord your God trieth you, that it may appear whether you
51
love Him with all your heart, and with all your soul. Clearer
than daylight is the reason why Divine Providence sometimes
suffers certain doctors of the Church to preach new dogmas:
5
to the effect that 'the And great
Lord your God trieth you.
is the temptation indeed when that man whom you look
upon as a prophet, as a disciple of prophets, as a doctor and
a defender of truth, whom you have embraced with highest
veneration and love, suddenly and surreptitiously introduces
noxious errors which you are unable to detect quickly so
long as you still are under the spell of his former teaching,
and which you do not dare to condemn easily so long as
the affection for your old teacher hinders you from so doing,
Chapter 11
to the effects
as a sheep and were therefore the more exposed
of his teeth? For who could readily consider entangled in
error that man whom he saw elected after a judicious examina-
and honored by such deep affec-
tion by the imperial court
tion on the part of the clergy, who
was extolled by the holy
men who loved him so much and by the people who gave
him all their favor when in public he daily explained Holy
disclosed all the noxious errors
of the Jews
Scripture and
then, could he fail to make everyone
and Gentiles? How,
believe that he was teaching, preaching, and thinking orthodox
of all heresies
truthhe who persecuted the blasphemies
in order to open the way for one heresy,
his own? 2 This is
instance, Photinus
4
remembered by the older genera-
is still
on the
bears witness, Bishop Nestorius,
2 As Socrates (Hist, eccles. 1.1)
after his succeeded in his attempt to have the
fifth day appointment,
church of the Arians destroyed by fire. And, if we can
trust Gotho-
fredus, Ne&torius was the author of that severe law enacted against
in that same year
the heretics by the Emperor toward the end of May
(Cod. Theod. 16.5,65).
3 Deut. 13.3.
4 For Photinus, cf. above, Ch. 2.3.
COMMONITORIES 287
Chapter 12
6 These books against Porphyry (d. 304) have been completely destroyed.
COMMONITORIES 289
of good
evil doctrines morethrough the intermediary
easily
words of the 'was that then
ones, according to the Apostle:
31
he deceit-
which is good, made death unto me? Well,
either
that he
in certain passages of his writings
fully overemphasizes
of Christ, or he
believes in one Christ and one Person pretends
the birth from the Virgin, both Persons were
that, only after
is made in such a
united in one Christ. But this statement
way that it means that at the time of the Virgin's conception
or bearing, and even for some time after, two Christs existed.
the first, and
Thus, though Christ, as merely man, was born
in Unity of Person to the Word
of
unique, and not joined
the Word descended into Him,
God, afterwards the Person of
assuming Him. Although now, having been assumed (by the
abides in the glory of God, yet it would
He seem
Word),
that for a time there was no difference
between Him and
other men.
Chapter 13
Nestorius claims that there were always two Christs, but that
for a time they were separated. But the Catholic Church,
which has the true doctrine about God and our Saviour, does
the
not blaspheme against either the mystery of the Trinity or
Incarnation of Christ, For it adores one Divinity in the pleni-
tude of the Trinity and the equality of the Trinity in one and
1 Rom. 7.13.
COMMONITORIES 291
the same Majesty; and confesses one Jesus Christ, not two,
the same Jesus Christ being at once God and man. The
Church believes that there are in Him one Person, but two
substances; two substances, but one Person. Two substances
1
is to be preserved
1 I.e., natures. Cf. Tertullian, Adv. Prax. 27: Therefore
the property of either substance, namely, that in Him the soul per-
formed the acts proper to it, i.e., virtues, works and signs, and the
body functioned in its proper passions,'
292 VINCENT OF LERINS
in one and the same Christ, the one is divine, the other
from the
human; one is from God the Father, the other,
and with the Father,
Virgin Mother; one co-eternal co-equal
the other temporal and less than the Father; one consub-
stantial with the Father, the other consubstantial
with the
2 Since the Arians denied that there was a human soul in Christ, they
referred His Passion to His divinity. Since this took the place of the
soul or substantive form in man, they said that in some manner it had
been transformed -into His humanity (Cf. Hilary, De Trinitate 10.9
and 18: 'But that the power and the nature of the Word might not be
considered as lacking to Him in the flesh,' etc.) .
COMMONITORIES 293
Chapter 14
As we rather frequently use the term 'Person' [persona]
and declare that God became man in person,* we must take
c
affirms that the Word of God was made man in such a way
that He assumed our nature, not fallaciously
and unreally,
but in truth and reality; that He did not imitate human
nature as being something different, but rather as His very
Chapter 15
completed, not after the birth from the Virgin, but in the very
womb of the Virgin. We must therefore take utmost care to
be precise in our confession, so as to say that Christ is not
merely one, but that He
always has been one. It were, indeed,
an intolerable blasphemy to assert that, although you admit
His now being One, you contend that He once was not One
but Two One after His baptism, but Two at the time of His
birth. We cannot escape this enormous sacrilege unless we
assert that humanity has been united to divinity through the
1
John 3.13.
2 1 Cor. 2.8.
3 John 1.14.
4 Eccli. 24.35.
5 Eccli. 1.4; 24.36.
6 Ps. 21.17.
296 VINCENT OF LERINS
Chapter 16
who denies that God was born from the Virgin, and who as-
sertsthat there are two Christs, thus introducing to us the qua-
ternity after having destroyed the faith in the Trinity! But
blessed be the Catholic Church, which adores One God in the
teaches that this Unity of the Person has such power that,
because of it, by a wonderful and ineffable mystery, divine
action can be ascribed to man and human action to God.
For, because of that power, does not deny that man de-
it
as not to
confession proclaims the Unity of Christ in such wise
deny the mystery of the Trinity.
All these foregoing remarks were made in form of a digres-
sion. If it pleases God, these matters will be
treated and ex-
thesis.
Chapter 17
We said above
1
that in the Church of God the teacher's
the
error was thepeople's temptation, and that the greater
erring teacher, the greater the temptation.
We
made this clear,
first, by the authority
of Holy Scripture, then, by examples
taken from the history of the Church that recalled to our
mind the men who had departed from their allegiance to
sound and thus had fallen into the doctrines of a strange
faith
sect orhad founded a heresy of their own. This is an impor-
tant matter, indeed, a useful experience, and to be remem-
bered again and again. We must insist on it and illustrate it
by impressive examples, so that all true Catholics may realize
that they should accept the teachers with the Church, and
not desert the faith of the Church with the teachers.
this kind of
easy to produce innumerable instances of
It is
1 Ch. 10.1.
2 Leonidas suffered martyrdom in 202.
COMMONITORIES 299
the cause of Christ not only his father but also his whole for-
tune, [what was more admirable] than his life in the bonds
of holy poverty a life in which he so progressed as to suffer
more than once (as we are told) for having confessed the
name of the Lord? 3 But these are far from being all the
traits that later would stimulate the temptation. There still
point that they tend not alone to the glory of religion, but
is
9
integrity of the faith, as later events made clear. Hence, to
the same Origen, great and outstanding as he was, should be
applied the words addressed to the Church of God: *If there
5
the midst of thee a prophet, and a little later on, 'thou
rise in
shalt not hear the words of that prophet/ and again, 'for the
Lord your God trieth you, whether you love Him or not.' 10
And this, because he arrogantly abused the grace of God;
because he set too much store on his own ability and relied
too much on himself, neglecting the old simplicity of the
Christian religion; because he presumed to know more than
all the others; because he despised ecclesiastical traditions
and the teachings of the fathers and interpreted some passages
of Holy Scripture in a novel manner. 12 Indeed, it is not an
9 As to the disputes about Origen which arose at the end of the fourth
century between the bishops and the monks of Egypt, we have, as it
were, an eye-witness in Sulpicius Severus, Dial. 1.6.
10 Deut. 13.1-3.
11 Origen
emphasized unduly the allegorical interpretation.
12 Origen himself complained that his writings had been falsified
by
the heretics, and later many made a similar charge, e.g., Sulpicius
*
Severus, Dial. 1.6.
302 VINCENT OF LERINS
Chapter 18
the case of Tertullian. For, as Origen
also, is
Quite similar,
the Latins clear-
among the Greeks, so must Tertullian among
be considered as supreme. was more scholarly than
Who
ly
in divine and human
this man, and who better trained
matters? With his amazing mental capacity
he actually em-
all particular
braced the entire range of philosophy, including
schools, their heads, disciples,
and systems, as well as the
manifold forms of historical and natural sciences.
Did his
such vigor and impetus that
outstanding genius not possess
keenness
whatever he was attacking was either caught by the
or crushed by the weight of his mind? No one is able ade-
quately to evaluate
and to praise his eloquence. The logical
nexus of his was so closely knit that he forced
argumentation
those whom he could not persuade to adhere to his point of
view.
1
Almost each word of his is a thought, and each sen-
tence a victory. all it the followers of
They experienced
the Gen-
Marcion, Apelles, Praxias, Hermogenes, the Jews,
tiles, the Gnostics,
and so many others whose blasphemies he
demolished with many and weighty books, as though by light-
after all, not steadfast
ning. Yet, this same Tertullian was,
and traditional
enough in Catholic dogma, the universal 2
faith. He was more than faithful, and thus ended in
eloquent
confessor Hilary
changing his position, precisely as the blessed
said of him: 'By his subsequent error he deprived his com-
1 Cf. Augustine, De haer. 86, Lactantius, Inst. div. 5.1.25, and Jerome,
Epist. 58.10; 48.13.
2 The text in the four codices (Parisenis and apud Pithoeum) reads
fidelior; but all later editors,
with Sichardus and Costerius, have fell-
dor.
COMMONITORIES 303
3
mendable writings of their authority.' So, too, he turned out
to be a great temptation to the Church. But I do not wish to
say more about this case. Only one point may be added. When
the modern madness Montanus and the foolish imaginings
of
of ridiculous women 4
about a new dogma arose in the Church,
he declared them to be true prophecies contrary to Moses'
advice. Hence, he richly deserved that it also ought to be said
of him and his writings: 'If there rise in the midst of thee a
prophet thou shalt not hear the words of that prophet. And
5
why not? Tor, it is said, 'the Lord your God trieth you
whether you love Him or not.
55
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Since this we may say that a true and genuine Catho-
is so,
lic is the man who loves the Truth of God, the Church, and
1
the Body of Christ; who does not put anything above divine
religion and the Catholic faith neither the authority, nor
the affection, nor the genius, nor the eloquence, nor the philo-
1 Deut. 13.3.
1 1.23.
Eph.
304 VINCENT OF LERINS
fear to
away. Some fly off instantly; others, only shaken up,
perish and are ashamed to return hurt, half-dead and half-
2 1 Cor. 11.19.
3 Matt. 3.12
GOMMONITORIES 305
dread of even the most certain truths never being sure where
to go, where to return, what to desire, what to avoid, what
to hold, what to give up. If only they would understand that
what they are suffering in their wavering and unbalanced
hearts is the medicine which the divine compassion has pre-
Chapter 21
Since this so, I am moved to reflect and ponder again
is
But
were not divine, so that it has to be revealed only once.
human institution, which cannot be
they take it for a merely
rather, by constant
perfected except by constant emendations,
corrections. Yet, the divine prophecies say: 'Pass not beyond
1
the ancient bounds which thy fathers have set/ and 'Judge
not against a judge/ and 'he that breaketh a hedge,
2 a ser-
shall bite him/ 3
And we have this word of the Apostle
pent
that like a spiritual sword has often slaughtered and will for-
ever slaughter all the vicious novelties of all the heretics 'O
:
falselyso called/ A
misnomer indeed for the doctrines of the
heretics ignorance beautified by the name of knowledge,
darkness by that of clarity, night by that of light 'Which some
!
1 Prov. 22.28.
2 Eccli. 8.17.
3 Eccle, 10.8.
4 In Greek, kenophonias.
5 1 Tim. 6.20,21.
COMMONITORIES 307
Chapter 22
It is worth while to study the whole text of the Apostle more
1 1 Tim. 6.20.
308 VINCENT OF LERINS
What is 'committed ? It
you are not the author of, but the keeper of; not the teacher,
but the not
learner;the leader, but the follower. This de-
53
of the Catholic
posit, he guard. Preserve the 'talent
says,
faith unviolated and unimpaired. What has been entrusted to
you may remain with you and may be handed down by you.
You received gold; hand it down as gold. I do not want you
to substitute one thing for another; I do not want you
shamelessly to put lead in the place of gold, or, deceitfully,
that resembles gold, but
copper. I do not want something
Timothy, O priest, interpreter, O doctor,
O 4
real gold. O
if a gift ofheaven has prepared you by mental power, ex-
5
of the spiritual
perience, and knowledge, to be the Beseleel
Tabernacle, to cut the precious gems of divine dogma, to put
them together faithfully, to adorn them judiciously, 'to add
glamor, grace, and loveliness, may that which was formerly
believed with difficulty be made, through your interpretation,
more understandable in the light. May posterity, through
2 Matt. 13.24ff.
3 Matt. 25.15.
4 This term, which was introduced by the writers of that time, means
one who explains, or a teacher (Cf. Ch. 28.7) .
5 Beseleel was chosen, by God above all others to construct the taber-
nacle, the Ark of the Covenant, and the sacred vessels (Cf. Exod. 31.2ff) .
COMMONITORIES 309
Chapter 23
At this point, the question may be asked: If this is right,
the years always completes in adults the parts and forms with
it
trims what seems necessary nor grafts things superfluous;
to it.
neither gives up its own nor usurps what does not belong
to treat tradition
But it devotes all its diligence to one aim:
to nurse and polish what from old
faithfully and wisely;
to con-
times may have remained unshaped and unfinished;
clear and plain;
solidate and to strengthen what already was
and to what was confirmed and defined. After
guard already
all,what have the councils brought forth in their decrees but
that what before was believed plainly and simply might
from
now on be believed more diligently; that what before was
be from now
preached rather unconcernedly might preached
on more eagerly; that what before was practiced with less
concern from now on be cultivated with more care?
might
This, I say, this, has the Catholic Church,
and nothing but
aroused over the novelties of the heretics, again and again
accomplished by the decrees of its councils, i.e., what it earlier
Chapter 24
But let us return to the Apostle. O Timothy/ he says, keep
C c
1 1 Tim. 6.20.
GOMMONITORIES 313
truth, and which will remain so without end for ever and
ever. What then? 'Receive him not/
John continues, 'into
St.
Chapter 25
At this point one may ask me: Do the heretics also make
use of the testimonies of Holy Scripture? Indeed they do;
and to a great degree. They go through each and every book
of the Bible: Moses and the Books
of Kings, the Psalms, the
1 For the extant works of these heretics, cf. Rauschen, Vincentii Leri.
nensisCommonitoria 54, nn. 3ff.
316 VINCENT OF LERINS
and fear
Old and New Testaments. One must be on guard
are concealed under the
them all the more because they
Law. know well that their
protectiveshade of divine They
putrid products
would not easily please anyone if their vapors
them with
were emitted undisguised; therefore, they sprinkle
too well that anyone
the of divine words, knowing
perfume
errors would hesitate to set aside
who readily despises human
those who have to
divine prophecies. Thus, they behave like
for their infants and first smear some
prepare a bitter drink
the rim of the so that the unsuspecting
honey around cup
child may not be averse to the bitterness
when he has first
to
or like those who take great pains
sipped the sweet taste,
with high-sound-
embellish poisonous herbs and noxious juices
while
ing medical names,
so that no one suspects the poison
the mixture.
reading the labels on
After that
all,is the Saviour exclaimed: 'Beware of
why
of sheep, but
false prophets, you in the clothing
who come to
52
wolves. What does 'the clothing
inwardly they are ravening
of sheep mean save the
5
words of the Prophets and Apostles,
2 Matt. 7,15.
3 1 Pet. 1.19.
4 John 1,29.
COMMONITORIES 317
5
continue? 'By their fruits you shall know them.' This
means: Once they begin not only to use the divine expres-
sions but also to explain them, not only to present them but
also to interpret them, then people will realize how bitter,
how sharp, how fierce they are. Then will the poisonous breath
of their new ideas be exhaled, then will 'profane novelties'
appear in the open, then will you see that 'the hedge is
56 7
broken, that the ancient bounds have been passed, that the
5 Matt. 7.16.
6 Eccle. 10.8.
7 Prov. 22.28.
8 2 Cor. 11.13.
9 2 Cor. 11.14,15.
318 VINCENT OF LERINS
1
machinations of their master.
ously imitating the cunning
he had
Satan would never have invented them if
certainly
than
not known that there was no easier way to deceive people
of the Bible when wicked errors
by pretending to the authority
were to be fraudulently introduced.
Chapter 26
offer the objection: Where isthe proof that
Some one may
accustomed to make use of examples taken from the
Satan is
the Gospel in
Bible? Let him who asks such a question read
which it is written: Then the devil took him' (the Saviour,
our Lord ) 'up into the holy city and set him upon the pinnacle
thou be the Son of God,
of the Temple, and said to him, If
cast thyself down; for it is written, that He hath given His
and in their hands they shall bear
angels charge over thee;
thee up, lest thou dash thy foot against a stone.'
1
What can he
not do to wretched human beings he who
assailed the
authority, we should
of never
outstanding example evangelical
texts of the
doubt that, every time we see people offering
the Catholic Satan is
Apostles and Prophets against
faith,
as at that time the head (of
speaking through them. For, just
the devils) spoke to the head (of the Church-to-be), so now
do members speak to members, namely, members of the
Devil's body to members of Christ's Body, perfidious men to
the faithful, sacrilegious ones to the religious; in short, here-
10 Of the Devil.
1 Matt. 4.5,6.
2 1 COT. 2.8.
COMMONITORIES 319
Chapter 27
We now deal with the following question If it is true that
:
some, false prophets, and some, false teachers, but all entirely
Chapter 28
1
Chapter 2.3, above.
COMMONITORIES 321
peace/ i.e., not the God of men who revolt against the common
2 1 Cor. 12.28.
3 1 Cor. 1.10.
COMMONITORIES 323
to show where and how the opinions of the holy fathers have
Chapter 29
9 These words, which are found in all the codices and early editions,
cannot be those of Vincent. In regard to the second Commonitory, Gen-
nadius (De vir. ill. 64) states: 'Since, hy theft, he lost the major por-
tion of his work, written on scrolls, having briefly recapitulated the
meaning, he first assembled, and then produced it in one volume.
the
members
4
of the hierarchy present declared
who were
the most Catholic and truly the
following procedure to be
best in the interests of the faith. [It
was agreed] by the as-
the opinions
sembled bishops that there should be presented
some of whom were martyrs, others con-
of the holy fathers,
5
as was well
fessors but all of them Catholic bishops who,
that what they had unan-
known, had remained so; and
and solemnly confirmed as
imously accepted should be duly
the ancient
of the and thus, vice versa, the
faith,
dogma
of condemned. They actually
blasphemy profane novelty
The impious Nestorius
was formally
proceeded in this way.
as ancient Catholic belief,
and correctly judged opposing
blessed Cyril was declared to be
while, on the other hand,
in agreement with that most sacred tradition. Moreover, to
we also -indi-
make our report on the facts fully trustworthy,
number we had forgotten their
rank
cated the names and
of those fathers according to whose
unanimous and con-
cordant opinion the words of the divine Law were explained
and the rule of divine dogma established. To refresh our
while to recall their names here once
it is worth
memory,
more.
Chapter 30
at that
These are the men whose writings were quoted
as witnesses: St. Peter, Bishop of
council, either as judges or
Alexandria, an outstanding doctor and most blessed martyr;
one
4 At the session of the Council of Ephesus, held on June 22,
first
hundred ninety-eight bishops, joined a short
time later by some others,
deposed Nestorius. Prosper (Chron. ad
annum 431) states as follows:
'At the synod of more than two hundred bishops,
convened at Ephesus,
his name; so also
Nestorius was condemned, as was the heresy bearing
were many Pelagians who were similar doctrines.
supporting very
5 episcopoi (in the text, sacerdotes)
.
mar-
I Peter was Bishop of Alexandria from the year 300, and suffered
Hist. eccL 9.6.2)
in 311 (Cf. Eusebius,
.
tyrdom
COMMONITORIES 327
their colleagues.
Chapter 31
just read to us, may be introduced into the record. Its mean-
is obvious: he wishes that the dogma of traditional faith
ing
be confirmed and that the novelties useless inventions as
be disapproved
they are, propagated by impious hangers-on,
and condemned.' All the bishops acclaimed, and cried:
These are the words of us all; this is what we all mean; this
52
is what all of us desire. To what purpose this unanimous
voice and vote? That the ancient tradition ought to be ad-
hered to, and recent novelties rejected.
we emphatically expressed our admiration
After that, for
This letter
Capreolus succeeded Aurelius in the See of Carthage.
1 is
Chapter 32
All this material that we have accumulated should be more
than sufficient to crush and eliminate every kind of 'profane
5
said in a
sary to repeat them holy Pope Sixtus
here. The
Antioch in the Nestor-
letter
1
to the Bishop of
which he sent
there is one
ian affair: 'Hence, because, as the Apostle said,
2 let us believe in the things
Faith," which he victoriously kept,
the to be maintained.' But which
to be said, and speak things
are the things to be believed in and to
be taught? The Pope
advance of novelty be permitted,
continues: 'Let no further
to ancient tradition;
because it is unbecoming to add anything
of our forefathers should
the transparent faith and belief
to com-
not be soiled by contact with dirt.' It is truly apostolic
to the
belief that our ancestors possessed
pare the riches of
and to describe profane novelties as a
transparence of light
wrote in the same
mixture of dirt. The holy Pope Celestine
the same In a letter which he addressed
manner and spirit.
and them by
that in your provinces you encourage
cities
2 Eph. 4.5.
3 PL 50.528.
COMMONITORIES 331
tacking tradition.
Chapter 33
Everyone who is
opposed to these apostolic and Catholic
decrees first deliberately insults the memory of St. Celestine,
who made the point that novelties should cease from attacking
tradition; secondly, derides the definitions of St. Sixtus, who
was of the opinion that 'no further advance should be per-
mitted to novelties, because it is
unbecoming to add anything
to the ancient tradition' ; and lastly, disregards the statements
of St. Cyril, who in a fine sermon praised the zeal of the
venerable Capreolus, because the latter desired that the
can have
of Nestorius' blasphemy was unjust? Finally, they
entire Church of Christ, for
nothing but disregard for the
its and and above all for the
prophets,
teachers, apostles,
blessed Apostle Paul, as though all of these
were despicable;
it has never abandoned its
contempt for the Church, since
the faith that was once and for all
awe-inspired respect for
and revered. It
handed over to it and that it has ever practised
is contempt for the Apostle,
also who wrote: <O Timothy,
keep that which is committed to thy trust, avoiding the pro-
1
and to
fane novelties of words,' again: 'If anyone preach
that which have received, let him be
you a gospel besides you
anathema. Therefore, it is not lawful to despise the apostolic
32
gius, Celestius,
and Nestorius were). It is, therefore, an
obligation for all Catholics
who are eager to
indispensable
prove that they are true sons
of Holy Mother Church to
1 I Tim. 6.20.
2 Gal. 1.9.
GRACE AND
FREE WILL
(De gratia Dei]
Translated
by
Superior General
Toronto
2 Ibid., p. 154.
335
336 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
3
of the monks of Marseilles. Not
year, he speaks specifically
only was he aware of the public furor caused by the attacks
on the teaching of St. Augustine, but he was also familiar
4
with the discussions carried on in private.
data on Prosper's life are few,
Although the historical
ranks of
nevertheless he holds an undisputed place in the
the moulders of theological understanding of the doctrine of
the date of completion of the De
grace. From the year 397,
diversis quaestionibus VII ad Simplicianum? St. Augustine's
relations of grace and the free
position on the question of the
will was firmly established. He tells us in the Rectractations*
that he did his best to defend a triumphant free will, but the
he was to teach the com-
grace of God won out. Henceforth,
of the free will, unaided by grace, to ful-
plete incapability
fill the Commandments, that every act which is not a fruit
of grace is useless, and that, as a result of the sin of Adam,
the whole human race has become a damnable mass, curable
he expressed
only by the grace of the Redeemer. Likewise,
the opinion that there were a certain number of elect already
one doubt that this gift is given to some, and not to others.
tain it; even if no one at all were delivered from sin, there
10
would be no reason whatsoever to blame God.
As far as I can see, Prosper of Aquitaine quite faithfully
Liber
reproduced the teaching of St. Augustine. Prosper's
contra Collatorem represents, I think, the final opinion of
its author on the problem of the necessity of grace. It was
written while Pope Sixtus (432-440) occupied the Chair of
Peter. Itwas evidently very early in the reign of Sixtus, since
Prosper was not quite sure what position he would take in
11 to
the anti-Augustinian dispute. Consequently, it seems safe
was written within the
conjecture that the work in question
5
first two or three years of Sixtus pontificate.
contra Collatorem contains a step-by-step ref-
The Liber
utation of Conference XIII of the Conlationes of Cassian, en-
n The doctrine advanced
titled On the protection of God.
to entail a denial of free will in man (V. J- Bourke, p. 288) For the
.
Chapter 1
1 The full title, as listed in Migne's Latin Patrology, is: Sancti Prosperi
Aquitani de Gratia Dei et Libero Arbitrio Liber contra Collatorem^
id est, Pro Defensione Sancti Aurelii Augustini Hipponensis Episcopi
contra Cassiani Presbyteri Librum qui Titulo de Protectione Dei
Praenotatur.
2 For a list of the Anti-Pelagian writings, see Otto Bardenhewer,
Patrology. The Lives and Works of the Fathers of the Church, trans,
by Thomas J. Shahan (St. Louis 1908) 486-488. Cf. also, Vernon J.
Bourke, Augustine's Quest of Wisdom (Milwaukee 1945) 175-200. These
writings will be published in this series.
343
344 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
the cause
discernment of spirits.Besides, they strive to reduce
of the Church to such a pass that, when they assert that those
of our side have not spoken truly about grace, they insinuate
that the enemies of grace were unjustly condemned. There
must be, therefore, no overlooking this evil, which from
hidden and tiny seeds is daily increasing and spreading far
and wide from its beginning. Rather, care must be exercised
to the extent of God's help, that the hypocrisy of the deceit-
ful slanderers be uncovered, who from the very magnitude
of the injury they brought as one against all, and especially
are judged by the
against the pontiffs of the Apostolic See,
untutored and incautious to be men of lofty knowledge, and
who with lamentable and perverse success gain through lies
a ready assent, because they have presumptuously created an
awe of themselves. Since they are men of good reputation,
they are not considered to have
been -capable, through any
slowness of wit or rashness of judgment, of having voiced in
unison vain complaints, instead of having labored with great
skill and tireless zeal in order that, once the discussions of the
a presently more rigid
subtle compiler were understood,
examination and sharper scrutiny would discover what a
sumed for this serious task a lean and hungry look in order
that the crafty inquisitor might scrutinize the measures of the
lines, the balance of the sentences
and the quantity of the
syllables,and presume that he was accomplishing something
great, he
if could tag the Catholic preacher with the label
of error? Just as if he were assailing some unknown work
hitherto hidden But, that doctrine is not rent by these ma-
!
Chapter 2
(
1
)
That we may not appear to belabor what the common
herd and the brazen verbosity of the incompetent have ad-
vanced in order to obscure the knowledge of the more learned,
let us set forth the propositions of the one person especially
346 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
"Every best gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming
down from the Father of lights." 2 He it is who begins in us
what is good and likewise accomplishes and fulfills it. In the
words of the Apostle: "And He that ministereth seed to the
sower, will both give you bread to eat and will multiply your
3
seed, and increase the growth of the fruits of your justice."
Lest anyone think that there was nothing left for the free
will to do, he added quite reasonably as proof that it was
not taken away, but rather strengthened, by these gifts, un-
less, bent upon its own iniquities, it preferred to turn away
4
from the divine aid.'It is in our power, he says, each day to
2 James 1.17.
3 2 Cor. 9.10.
4 Cf. Johannis Cassiani, Conlatio XIII 3.5 (CSEL, p. 364) .
5 Acts 7.51.
6 Jer. 8.4.
7 Cassian, op. cit. 6.3 (CSEL, p. 367) .
348 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
9 Ibid.
10 Cf. Matt. 7.7.
11 Rom. 10.20.
12 Cassian, op. dt. 9.1 (CSEL, p. 372) .
GRACE AND FREE WILL 349
*+
Spirit of God.
(5) Quickly, then, did this disputant forget the foregoing
proposition; quickly and with capricious instability did he
dissent from his own statement. For he had correctly stated
that 'the beginning not only of our acts, but also of our good
J
Chapter 3
the Pelagian
(
1 ) You think you guard sufficiently against
fallacies if to us in part what is to be held in the
you grant
whole body of those called. On
your part, however, there is
neither the heretics nor the Catholics.
complete agreement with
The former regard the beginnings in every just work of
man
believe that the
as belonging to the free will; we constantly
from God. You have
beginnings of good thoughts spring
third alternative, unacceptable to
found some indescribable
with the
both sides, by which you neither find agreement
enemies nor retain an understanding with us. How is it that
of to be thought to be with-
all, were the conversion anyone
of man
out the illumination of God, or if in any way the will
could tend toward Gad without God, who attracts him who
1
John 6.44.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 35 1
is called to the Son. He does not compel him who resists and
is unwilling, but makes him, who was unwilling, willing and
in various ways disposes the lack of faith of him who resists,
so that the heart ofhim who hears and obeys, because of the
delight begotten within itself, rises whence it was pressed
grace.
are we being
(2) Thereupon he concludes, saying [what
both the grace
told] 'Except that in all these [Scriptural texts]
of God and the liberty of our will are proclaimed, and also
Chapter 4
from his free will and what from grace, you add: 'For nobody
enjoys health whenever he wishes, nor is
he freed from sick-
ness by the You teach, therefore, that man
desire of his will/
1
physician of his own free will; and the very fact that he does
8 Cassian, op. cit. 9.4 (CSEL, p. 373) . It has been necessary to add
quid sit
quod ad nos dicitur from the text of Cassian to complete
the sense.
9 Ibid. 3.5 (CSEL, p. 364) .
2 Ibid.
3 Rom. 7.18.
4 Cassian, op. cit. 33.5 (C5L, p. 364)
.
354 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
to His will.'
7
The Apostle, therefore, does
according good
will has been
not contradict himself. But when the good
not immediately find its accomplishment,
given us, we do
its accomplishment
unless He who gave the will also grant
and knock. For the words of him who
to those who seek, ask
Tor to will iswith but to accomplish that
me;
says: present
which is I find
8 who has been
not/ are the words of
one
good,
In he is delighted
called and already possessed of grace. fact,
Chapter 5
5 Rom. 7,18,
6 Phil 2.13.
7 Ibid.
8 Rom. 7.18.
9 Rom. 7.22.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 355
1 Cassian,
op. cit. 11.1 (CSEL, p. 375).
2 Cf. Cassian, Conlatio XVII 20 (CSEL, pp. 480ff.) .
356 PROSPER OF AQUITAJNE
was wrong when he said of those who gloried in the free will :
extol the liberty of the free will at the expense of the divine
Chapter 6
(
1
)
When the question about the beginnings of holy wills
and the principles of faith and charity was raised between
our side and the Pelagians, the struggle ended in a positive
victory and a clear-cut finish. Consequently, we now must
treat of the nefarious peace of this compact of yours. The
battle line of the enemy is flattened; the war is finished; we
are the victors through Him who
'has shown might in His
5
'has put down the mighty from their seat and has exalted
the humble' 'has filled the hungry with good things and sent
;
51
the richempty away. Through Him who, performing 'mercy
3
to our fathers,' remembered 'His holy testament, and 'the
1 Luke 1.51-53.
2. Luke 1.72-75.
3 1 Cor. 15.57.
4 1 Cor. 2.12.
360 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
lose the
are despoiled of their liberty. They
35
Spirit of God,
strength of the rational soul
and are deprived of all praise for
free to them is
given the Spirit of wisdom and
devotion;
and piety
understanding, counsel and fortitude, knowledge
6 who think they have no
and fear of the Lord. In fact, they
have turned from the habitude
need of these transformations
remedy, they the
of the old malady to madness; they reject
are children of prom-
declaim, rage and struggle. But,
if they
ise,
will be at rest and healed.
they
Chapter 7
(
1 ) Let us now examine what the soberness of the dis-
self-
offer. By a new art he jumbles together
putant has to
to dispel vice with vice and to
contradictory propositions
to the health
cure error with error. And in order to drink
to color with a mixture
of unsuspecting hearers, he planned
of this cup of his own concoction. He says: Tor,
examples
we of a good will is ours, what was
if say that the beginning
it in Paul the persecutor? What
was it in the tax collector
Matthew? One of whom by the blood and torture of inno-
cent people, the other by brooding upon violence
and public
But if, indeed, we say that
robbery, are drawn to salvation.
the grace
the beginnings of a good will are always inspired by
of God, what about the faith of Zachaeus? What do we say
about the piety of that thief upon the cross? They, bringing
violence to bear upon the Kingdom of Heaven by
their de-
1
admonitions of their vocation.'
sire,, anticipated the explicit
of good beginnings, he
(2) Through that dissimilarity
their free without
attempts to prove that some, through will,
5 Rom. 8.14.
6 Isa. 11 .2.
6
'the fear of the the beginning of wisdom/ Joy draws,
Lord is
2 PS. 76.11.
3 John 6.44.
4 Rom. 1.20.
5 Ps. 77.4.
6 Ps. 110.10.
7 Ps. 121.1-
362 PROSPER OF AgUITAINE
8
of the Lord.'
'my soul longeth and fainteth for the courts
Delights draw, for 'how sweet are the words
to my palate!
9
More than honey and the honey-comb to my mouth.' And
who can perceive or relate through what longings the divine
visitation leads the human soul to follow what it fled, to
love what it hated, to hunger after what was distasteful; and
of the Father.
8 Ps. 83.3.
9 Ps. 118.103.
10 1 Cor. 12.11.
11 2 Cor. 4.6,
12 Luke 19.3.
13 Luke 19.5,
GRACE AND FREE WILL 363
to Me by My Father/
16
and I, when 'I shall be lifted up,
17
will drawthings to Myself?'
all amid everything, his
But,
confession also teaches that this man was either delivered
or drawn; who, when he had for a time blasphemed against
Jesus Christ, was suddenly changed, and said: 'Lord remem-
18
ber me when Thou hast come into Thy kingdom.' The
blessed Apostle teaches us in these words, whence has arisen
so great a diversity of contradictory words in one man: 'No
man speaking by the Spirit of God saith anathema to Jesus.
19
And no man can say the Lord Jesus, but by the Holy Ghost.*
As a consequence, we do not doubt that it was in the will
of the same man and of his strength that he blasphemed, and
of the Holy Spirit that he believed. In vain, therefore, has
that disputant tried to adapt the content of his proposition
to the inscrutable variety of the one grace, so that a part of
the justified be thought to come to Christ by the impulses of
their wills alone, and a part to be drawn reluctantly and un-
20
willingly compelled, since it is God 'Who worketh all in all,'
Chapter 8
3
was not permitted to sin against Rebecca; and of Joseph,
4
sold by his brothers whose ill will God turned into good; he
turns once more to a confirmation of his proposition, to take
I am, and His grace in me hath not been void, but I have
labored more abundantly than all they; yet not I but the
2 Num. 23.
3 Gen. 26.
4 Gen. 37.
5 Cassian, op. cit. 11.4 (CSEL, p, 377) .
6 1 Cor. 12.3.
7 1 Cor. 4.7.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 365
38
grace of God with me. And: 'having obtained mercy, to be
19
faithful. The rule of the Church is: 'But we have this
treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency may be of the
10
power of God, and not of us.' The rule of the Church is:
'By grace you are saved through faith, and that not of your-
11
selves, for it is the gift of Church is:
God.' The rule of the
'And in nothing be ye terrified by the adversaries, which to
them is a cause of perdition, but to you of salvation and this
is from God For unto you it is given for Christ, not only to
:
12
believe in Him but also to suffer for Him.' The rule of the
Church is: 'With fear and trembling work out your salva-
is God Who worketh in
tion. For it
you both to will and to
13
accomplish according to His good will.' The rule of the
Church is: 'Not that we are sufficient to think anything of
14
ourselves, as of ourselves, but our sufficiency is from God.'
The Lord can come to
confirms this rule, saying: 'No man
15
Me, unless it
My And:
be given him by 'All that Father.'
the Father giveth Me shall come to Me.'
16
And: 'Without
Me you can do nothing, 517 and: 'You have not chosen Me,
18
but I have chosen and: 'No one knoweth the Son,
you,'
but the Father, neither doth anyone know the Father, but
the Son, and he to whom it shall please the Son to reveal
19
Him.' And: 'As the Father raiseth up the dead, and giveth
8 Cor. 15.10.
l
9 Cor. 7.25.
1
10 2 Cor. 4.7.
11 Eph. 2.8.
12 Phil. 1.28.
15 Phil. 2.12.
14 2 Cor. 3.5.
15 John 6.66.
16 John 6.37.
17 John 15.5.
18 John 15.16.
19 Matt. 11.27.
366 PROSPER OF AgUITAINE
20
Son also giveth life to whom He will.' And:
life, so the
flesh and blood
'Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-Jona, because
hath not revealed it to thee, but My Father, Who is in
121
heaven.
the will is taken away from no man,
be-
(3) By this rule
it
cause the power of grace does not destroy wills; rather,
ones and brings
makes bad wills good, and faithless faithful;
20 John 5.21.
21 Matt. 16.17.
22 Eph. 5.8.
23 James 1.17.
24 2 Cor. 9.10.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 367
does not understand that he upheld the free will in the former
and grace in the latter.
Chapter 9
does not see that this doctrine gives merit to the free will, by
which grace is 'prevented/ and that this latter is servant to
the former and performs its duty, and does not confer a gift
1 Isa. 30.19.
2 P&. 49.15; cf. Cassian, op. cit. (CSEL, p. 377)
.
the sin of the first man: "Behold Adam is become like one of
8
us, knowing good and evil,"
for he must not be thought to
have been such before the sin that he was wholly ignorant
of good. Otherwise, it must be admitted that he was created
like an irrational and senseless animal; and this is quite
ab-
if he wished in the
helping hand of God, he could persevere
the merit of a
goods which he had received, and through
voluntary perseverance come to such a happiness that he
could neither wish nor settle for the meaner things. But, by
the very free will through which he remained good, as long
as he wished, he transgressed the law established for him.
When he turned from God and followed the Devil, when he
was insubordinate to the Lord, the deliverer, and subservient
8 Gen. 3.22.
9 Eccle. 7.30.
10 Gen. 3.22.
1 1 Cassian, op. cit. 12-2 (CSEL, p. 378) .
GRACE AND FREE WILL 369
13 Luke 19.10.
14 Eph. 2.3.
370 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
and
of wisdom and understanding; he was without counsel
what was
fortitude; and, because he blasphemously pursued
he was cut off from the knowledge of truth and the
higher,
Not even fear was left to him, so that he
piety of obedience.
who would not refrain out of love for justice might avoid
what was forbidden from fear of the penalty. The free will,
therefore, that is, the spontaneous appetite of what pleases it,
tired of the use of the goods which it
had
when it grew
received, and when the bulwarks of its happiness became
desire to a trial of sin; it drank
worthless, directed its insane
the poison of every vice and besot the whole nature of man
own be-
with the drunkenness of its intemperance. Thereupon,
fore eating the Flesh of the Son of Man and drinking
His
a is weak in
Blood, human nature swallows deadly mass,
in-
memory, errant in judgment, staggering in step; it is quite
that of which it was of
capable of and desiring
choosing good
itsown free will deprived, because the fact is not thus that,
15 Zph. 5.8.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 371
16 Col. 1.13.
17 Gen. 8.22.
18 Cassian, op. cit. 12.2 (CSEL, p. 378) .
372 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
Chapter 10
1 ) But, in order that his calamity may not appear to have
(
19 Luke 16,13.
20 John 8.34.
21 2 Pet. 2.19.
22 Rom. 6.20.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 373
*
upon whom He
once had no mercy; and justifying 'circum-
53
cisionby faith, and uncircumcision through faith, He made
4
the two one in Himself; having broken the wall of enmity of
Jew and Gentile, He established the peace in the one new
man, 'concluding all under sin, that the promise by the
5
faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe.'
from the dead; nothing just, from the impious. Their whole
salvation is gratuitous, and is, therefore, the glory of God,
so that he who glories may glory in Him of whose glory he
has stood in need.
1 Rom. 2.14.
2 Eph. 2.11.
3 Rom. 3.30.
4 Eph. 2.14.
5 Gal. 3.22.
6 Rom. 3.23.
7 Rom. 11.35.
374 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
A
8 Ecdi. 24.5.
9 Rom. 3.20.
10 Gal. 6.15.
11 Rom. 7.6.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 375
Chapter 11
12 Rom. 5.5.
IS Heb. 11.6.
14 Rom. 14.23.
15 Gal. 5,6.
1 Isa. 42.18.
2 Ezech. 11.19.
3 Luke 1237.
4 Cassian, op. cit. 12.5 (CSEL, p. 379) .
376 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
therefore, is required
power good: just as understanding,
for,
of them, justice is also demanded, because they can produce
these from the goods of nature without the gifts of God.
But
man was charged with those things, so that, from the very
which what he received was imposed upon him,
precept by
he might acknowledge it to have been lost by his own sin, and
that it is an
not, therefore, requirement that he is
iniquitous
not capable of rendering what he owes. Rather, let him flee
from the letter which kills to the spirit which gives life, and
let him seek from grace the capacity which
he does not find
in nature. If he does this, great is God's mercy; if not, the
penalty of sin is just.
in a state-
(2) Then, complete the foregoing discussion,
to
ment he makes this assertion: 'Where-
according to his rule,
fore, we must beware lest we refer all the merits of the saints
to GAd in way that we ascribe only what is evil and
such a
perverse to human nature. 35 What could be stated more
expressly in accordance
with the invention of
clearly, more
Pelagius and Celestius by any of their disciples? They say
that the grace of God is given according to our merits like- ;
blasphemies, saying:
refer all the merits of the saints to God in such a way that
we ascribe only what is eviland perverse to human nature.'
He means, therefore, that there are many of man's own
merits which are not conferred by the bounty of grace, to
which are owed the gifts from above, for the increase of
natural riches. He means that we do not receive the grace
of God for individual acts; hence, that we do not always
pray for every good work. Thus, as a consequence, we need
5 Ibid.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 377
Chapter 12
)
(
Lest we appear to act on suspicion, and to dig into
1
4 Ps. 139.3.
5 John 2.19.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 379
son, in order that the Son of God and man might be signified
through the son of man, and that the incorruptible taber-
nacle be indicated through the destructible temple. The will
of David was approved to establish this figure, and the execu-
tion was transferred to him whose person was better fitted
for the figure. Thus, both the will of David to build was
from God, and it was from God that Solomon did the build-
ing.
(3) That this may be more apparent by examples, let
us examine where God did not want done what men wished
to do, if God were willing. The Lord commanded the Apostles,
saying: 'Going therefore, teach ye all nations; baptizing them
in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Ghost. Teaching them to observe all things, whatsoever I
have commanded you.' 6 When the Apostles heard this, they
doubtless did not receive the bare words through the bodily
sounds on external ears only, but by virtue of the living word
an inextinguishable flame of charity was enkindled in their
hearts, by which they most ardently desired to preach the
do this from the Spirit of God? Who would say this except
he who does not do so, or he who thinks that faith is not a
gift of God? Yet, what is sought for all is not obtained for all.
6 John 28.19.
7 Acts 16.6.
380 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
body and soul, which not even the evil and the vicious lack;
but in these it does not have the attainment of the true good,
which can make mortal life upright, but cannot bestow eternal
life. For it is well known how Grecian schools
and Roman
and the search of the whole world in the quest of
eloquence
the supreme good, with the most penetrating study and out-
labor except
standing accomplished nothing by their
ability,
to become 'vain in their thoughts and their foolish heart was
9 used themselves as guides.
darkened'; who to know the truth
If, therefore, anyone, ashamed of the
wretched vanities and
that whatever embraced
deceptions, understands
foolish is
in place of the light and the life is darkness and death, and
endeavors to withdraw himself from them, that conversion
is not of himself, although not without himself. Neither does
he toward the sources of salvation by his own strength;
strive
of God does this.
rather, the hidden and powerful grace
And, once the embers of earthly opinions and dead works
are removed, it awakens the torch of the buried heart and
enflames with the desire of truth; not to make man subject
it
8 Luke 18.19.
9 Rom. 1.21.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 381
and follows. The abiding free will, which, indeed, God es-
tablished with man himself, is turned by the Creator, not
himself, from its vanities and cupidities into which it had
fallen neglected the Law of God. Consequently, what-
once it
Chapter 13
(
I
)
Now letus see whither the efforts of the disputant are
leading. He says: 'It cannot, therefore, be doubted that the
seeds of virtue are naturally in every soul,
placed there by
the Creator's favor. But, unless these are aroused by the help
of God, they will not come to the increase of perfection, since,
according to the blessed Apostle: "Neither he that planteth
is anything nor he that watereth; but God that
giveth the
1
increase." But even the book of the so-called Shepherd 2 very
openly teaches that freedom of the will in man is found on
every side. In this book, two angels are said to be attached
to each one of us; namely, one good and one bad. The free
will is said to consist in man's choice to elect which one to
follow. For this reason, the free will always remains in man,
3
because he can either despise or cherish the grace of God.'
If it cannot be doubted that the seeds of virtue are naturally
10 Eph. 2.10.
1 1 Cor. 3.7.
2 Shepherd of Hermas, Mandate 6.2, in The Fathers of the Church
(New York 1947) I 268.
3 Cassian, op. cit. 12.7 (CSEL, p. 381) .
382 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
4
bear us in sin;
conceived in iniquity and our mothers did not
we were not by nature children of wrath, nor were we under
the of darkness ; rather, are we born children of light
power
and peace, with the virtues naturally abiding in us. God for-
doctrine beset
bid that the insidious deception of a fallacious
Virtues cannot dwell with vices. The Apostle
pious souls!
hath justice with injustice? Or
says: Tor what participation 5
what fellowship hath light with darkness?' Virtue is, indeed,
in its source God, for whom to have
virtue is nothing else
counsel, fortitude
hope, charity, continence, understanding,
and the other virtues dwell in us, and, when we depart from
this good, all things arise contrariwise for us from ourselves.
through the Mediator between God and man, the man Jesus
very thing which is left
that to him,
Christ, he can recover, in
gines that those goods, which could be had only from the divine
bounty, are also found in the souls of the impious. Since, in-
deed, many of them pursue justice, temperance, continence
and benevolence, all of which they neither vainly nor use-
lessly possess, they attain from those virtues much honor and
glory in this life; but, because of their zeal for them they serve
not God, but the Devil; although they do have the temporal
reward of an empty praise, nevertheless, these false virtues
do not lead to that truth which belongs to the blessed virtues.
Thus, it is very evident that virtue does not dwell in the souls
of the impious, but all their works are unclean and polluted,
grace, strive to show except that from those seeds the sprouts
of preceding merits give birth to the grace of God? Then,
to appear to grant something to grace, he says: 'These seeds
cannot reach the increase of perfection unless aroused by
7 John 12.31.
8 1 Cor. 2.12.
9 Rom. 8.9.
384 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
God
5 10 of God is an
the help of consequently, the help
;
Christ Jesus our Lord,' who has now given us all things of
15
his divine power, which appertain to life and godliness.'
Does he say: 'who has excited in us by His help the seeds of
3
11 1 Cor. 3.11.
12 Cf. Prov. 1.7.
13 Cf. Prov. 9.10.
14 Eccli. 25.14.
15 2 Pet, 1.2.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 385
16 Ibid.
17 Cf. 1 Cor. 12.6.
18 1 Cor. 4.7.
19 1 Cor. 3.19.
20 1 Cor. 3.18.
21 1 Cor. 1.21.
386 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
was no more protection for him from God than danger from
the Devil, he added the rule of his proposition, saying: 'And,
the grace of God without any choice of their will, and many,
completely senseless in every regard
and fools, are freed by
the sacrament of regeneration from the chains of eternal
death. But, let us understand this statement thus, that the
to those who can use the free
proposition may properly apply
will Is that so free that it has as much pleasure in
liberty
cherishing the grace of God as it has distastefulness
in spurn-
heat melted the icy
ing it? Thus, has no breath of noonday
hardness of the old faithlessness and has the sluggishness of
the mind, benumbed by its coldness, grown warm? In the
22
words of the Lord: 'I came to cast fire on the earth,' has
no spark come to the cold heart and the dead ashes of them-
selves burst into a flame of charity? No such thing has hap-
22 Luke 12.49.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 387
bounty, but from the will alone. What, then, has been re-
paired in the soul by its builder? Or by what boon of grace
will it become more beautiful, if those things are its own,
without which the gifts can be of no advantage? But the
Apostle, who asserts that, without charity, the working of
miracles, knowledge, faith, prophecy, the distribution of
23 Luke 24.32.
24 Acts 16.14.
25 Cf. 1 Cor. 13.2.
26 Rom. 5.5.
27 Eph. 6.23.
28 1 John 4.7.
388 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
29
had loved God, because God hath first loved us.' And again:
530
'Let us love God, because God hath first loved us. Let
human poverty admit that
what rightly said of any
is good
whatsoever is much more rightly said of Him
without whom
no avail. 'What hast thou, that thou hast
all good things are of
not received? And if thou hast received, why dost thou glory,
31
as if thou hadst not received?'
Chapter 14
( 1
)
Since he had attributed as much to man before grace
as he can profitably have through grace, he afterwards added
some vague and confused statements to demonstrate the
strength of the free will. And, along
with those things which
energies given to it, he
he now commits to the endeavors
to strengthen those which he declares are naturally in it; so
that to have perfected it is through the help of God to have ;
that the divine justice made provision for this even in the
case of the most upright Job, His champion, when the Devil
he had fought
sought him out for single combat. For,
if
29 1 John 4.10.
30 1 John 4.19.
31 1 Cor. 4.7.
1
John 15.5.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 389
2 Job l.9ff.
3 Cassian, op. cit. 14.1 (CSL, p. 384)
.
390 PROSPER OF AQXJITAINE
6 Ibid.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 391
Chapter 15
(1) Hitherto,
not to appear in complete disagreement
with the foregoing rule, you transferred the beginnings of
so as to admit
virtues and merits from the free will to grace,
themselves of good desires
that the voluntary movements
can neither be advanced nor perfected without the help of
God. Now, however, God has been moved afar and taken
and you attribute so much
away from the support of man,
not only accepts calmly
power to the free will that he [Job]
and with equanimity the loss of his many resources and a
bitter to the whole family and relatives at once; but by
end
the determination of the bare will he also overcomes the un-
his own body. In order that there be
speakable torments of
no doubt on your side of the discussion, you set up the ex-
death does not conquer and you state that it comes from
human strength alone what praise and merit will there
GRACE AND FREE WILL 393
the last day I shall rise out of the earth. And I shall be clothed
And also 'But the salvation of the just is from the Lord, and
:
9
He is their protector in the time of trouble/ For this endur-
prepared by the Lord; and he
ance he was also referred both
5 job 12.13.
6 job 12.10.
7 Job 14.14ff.
8 Ps. 22.4.
9 Ps. 36.39.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 395
no
to us. And again: 'Who then shall separate usr from the
love of Christ? Shall tribulations? or distress? or famine? or
nakedness? or danger? or persecution? or the sword? (As
it iswritten: ) For Thy sake we are put to death all the day
Him to whom the hearts of all the faithful cry out daily: 'Lead
us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil,' 14 since 'the
Lord preserveth the souls of His saints, He will deliver them
out of the hand of the sinner.' 15
more correctly and truly spoken, if, when you said: 'as He
knew he had the power to resist/ you had rather said: as
He knew He had given him power to resist? For, in the cor-
rection of those words, you would soberly measure that whole
10 Rom. 5.1ff.
11 Ps. 47.32.
12 Rom. 8.35ff.
13 Luke 22.31.
14 Matt. 6.13.
15 Ps. 96.10.
16 Cassian, op. cit. 14.2 (CSEL, p. 385) .
396 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
Chapter 16
turion, who, when he asked for a cure of his servant and the
Lord promised that He would go to his home, replied: 'I
am not worthy that Thou shouldst enter under my roof;
17 Denzinger, op. tit., no. 105.
18 John 15.5.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 397
1
but only say the word, and my servant shall be healed/
The Lord praised him for this with such admiration that
He claimed that He had not 'found so great faith in Israel.'
2
best gift, and every perfect gift, is from above, coming down
from the Father of lights.' 7 And: 'A man cannot receive any-
8
thing, unless it be given him from heaven.' Perhaps it must
be said that all the virtues are to be numbered among the gifts
of God, but that man is praiseworthy in those which he had
of his own, and that there are merits there, where the gifts
of God were not. Therefore, according to your rule, those to
whom it was given not only to believe in Christ, but also to
suffer for Him, have lost both praise and merit; nor do they
have true glory, who glory not in themselves, but in the Lord*
But we hear the Prophet, who says more correctly: 'Cursed
be the man that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm,
1 Matt. 8.8.
2 Matt. 8.10.
3 Cassian, op. cit. 14.4 (CSEL, p. 385) .
9
and whose heart departeth from the Lord/ And him who
10 c
that they have neither praise nor merit, in whom is not found
what is had only by the gift of the Lord.
from the
(2) you thought you could engender
And so,
a for the gifts of
testimony of a lauded faith disadvantage
as where faith is held up for praise, it were not
grace; if,
of the Romans and gives thanks to God for this good, say-
to my God, through Jesus Christ,
ing: 'First I give thanks
for you because your faith is spoken of in the whole
all,
13
world/ He writes to the Corinthians in like vein, saying:
'I give thanks to my God always for you, for the grace of
God that in all things you
that is given you in Christ Jesus,
are made rich in Him, in all utterance and in all knowl-
14
edge/ by giving thanks to God, take away praise
Did he,
from the believers? Or did he, by praising the believers,
deny the Author of merit? Let us hear
what he thought about
the faith of the Ephesians. He says: 'Wherefore I also, hear-
the Lord Jesus, and your 'love
ing of your faith that is in
towards all the Saints, cease not to give thanks for you, mak-
that the God of
ing commemoration of you in my prayers,
our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of Glory, may give unto
you the spirit of wisdom and of revelation in the knowledge
15
of Him; the eyes of your heart enlightened/ Therefore,
9 Jer, 17.5.
10 Ps. 17.1.
11 Ps. 33.3.
12 Ps. 117.14.
15 Rom. 1.8.
14 1 Cor. 1.4.
15 Eph. U5ff.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 399
they had faith; they also had the works of charity, which
could lack neither praise nor merit; but the Apostle does
not cease to give thanks to God for these virtues, knowing
that these gifts came from the Father of lights. And from
Him he declares that he also asks that to whom He gave
faith, which works through charity, He give the spirit of
wisdom and understanding. Thence, the Ephesians might
know that they received what they have; and from Him
they learn to hope for what they do not have. He gives like
thanks for the Philippians, and does not remain silent con-
cerning their merit and praise. He says: 'I give thanks to
my God in every remembrance of you, always in all my
prayers making supplication for you all with joy; for your
communication in the Gospel of Christ from the first day
until now. Being confident of this very thing, that He, Who
hath begun a good work in you, will perfect it unto the day
16
of Christ Jesus.' And is the cause of this human praise
and merit here and now discontinued in God? What virtue
or piety has been received, which has not flowed from the
fountain of grace, when both the beginning and the fulfill-
ment of the good work from the start to finish is attributed
to the Lord? Concerning whose holy ones there is sung:
Chapter 17
(
1 ) In this declaration of yours, there must be taken care-
fully into consideration how much you help those who say
16 Phil. l.Sff.
17 Ps. 88.16ff.
400 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
1
never-
that the grace of God is given according to our merits;
shelter under the shadow of the
theless, in order to find
in their
Catholic faith, you claim these to be irreligious opin-
ion. You say: 'But let no one think that
these things have
to the free will and declare that the grade of God is dis-
1
Epistola 1 Pelagii ad Demetriadem 3 (PL 30.18D) .
5 Rom. 1.17.
4 John 5.24.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 401
5
have life everlasting, and I will raise him up on the last day.'
And again: 'now this is eternal life: that they may know
Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, Whom Thou
56
hast sent. it is clear, then, that the eternal and
Since happy
life is prepared for this faith, which you have accordingly
honored with merits and praises, because you prefer that it
be numbered among the goods of the free will rather than
among the gifts of God, how do you avoid this wound with
which you are transfixed when you say that they are impious
who declare that grace is dispensed according to human
merits, and when you affirm that it is clear that they have
neither praise nor merit who are faithful from the gift of
Chapter 18
(
I ) Therefore, to avoid the appearance of self-contradic-
tion in your absurd declaration, you endeavor to intrude
what is incongruous and (with a new boldness) divide the
that 'the centurion would have had neither praise nor merit,
2
if he excelled in that which God Himself had given/ Al-
though you conduct the whole text of your discussion toward
these two formulae, which can in no way be reconciled, now,
4 Matt. 1.21.
5 Acts 4.12.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 403
praise nor merit, who have nothing good except what they
have received; but the latter abound in glory and are en-
riched with a reward, who devoutly of their own strength
have offered what they had not received. Thus, Jesus Christ
will have found some liberated, and others He will have
liberated. Thus, what He says does not pertain to all: 'You
have not chosen Me; but I have chosen you,' 6 if there are
some by whom He was chosen, although He had not chosen
them. Nor does it
apply to all: 'No man can come to Me,
unless be given him by My Father/ 7 if there are some who,
it
without the Father giving it, have been able to come to the
Son. What the Evangelist says does not apply to all: 'That
was the true which enlighteneth every man that cometh
light,
8
into this world/ there are some who either come into this
if
good until the end are said to be gifts of God; whereas the
10 Rom. 12.16.
GRACE AND FREE WILL 405
Chapter 19
From these propositions hitherto discussed, with some
omissions, it is neither hidden nor doubtful what they think
about the grace of God, who contradict its most authentic
defenders and disturb the peace of the victorious Church,
when they resume the petty questions of the condemned
school of thought. And if we relate them, as they have come
to our ears, our speech will become immoderately long, since,
from these which are known to be from their pen, the pious
reader may easily understand to what precipices these path-
11 Gal. 4.6.
12 Cf. Matt. 10.20.
13 Phil. 2.13.
14 1 John 4.7; Rom. 5J5.
406 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
First Proposition
Second Proposition
2 Ps. 58.11.
3 Cassian, op. cit. 8.4 (CSEL, p. 371) .
GRACE AND FREE WILL 407
Third Proposition
Fourth Proposition
You asserted in the fourth definition: 'In order that it may
be the more evident that the beginnings of a good will some-
times emanate from a good will, through the bounty of na-
ture bestowed by the beneficence of the Creator, and the
good will from a natural inclination and not from the gift of
grace !
Fifth Proposition
In the proposition you state: 'And so these are some-
fifth
Sixth Proposition
Seventh Proposition
Ninth Proposition
Tentn Proposition
c
round about? But stretch forth Thy hand a little,* that is,
me, "and see he
permit him to his strength against if
pit
511
blessethThee not to Thy face.' But, since the slanderous
enemy dared not repeat such an accusation, he confesses that
he was beaten, not by the strength of God, but of Job. But
it must also be believed that the grace of God was not totally
give him
the ability, He was a witness, not a helper of his
Eleventh Proposition
11 Job 1.9ff.
Twelfth Proposition
In the twelfth proposition it was stated: 'Hence it is that,
when we pray, we proclaim that the Lord is not only pro-
tector,but also helper and susceptor. For, in that He
gives the call and attracts us to salvation, even though
first
Chapter 20
(
1 )
Accordingly, by these propositions, this is taught, this
is written, this is preached in the discussion set forth, that
with Adam's sin his soul was not injured, and the source of
his sinremained whole in him. If, indeed, he did not lose
the knowledge of good which he had received, neither has
his posterity lost it, nor did he suffer any loss of it. That the
seeds of the virtues are naturally in every soul, placed there
by goods which are not his own but bestowed upon him.
That we also must be careful that all the merits of the saints
justified by grace,
and part by the free will, they whom na-
ture has carried along are more glorious than those whom
is as free for every good
grace has freed, because the will
work in the of Adam as it was in Adam before the
posterity
Fall.
Chapter 21
51
eth firm. But they do not serve well their factions, for it is
fitting that they imitate the madness of those whose opinion
they follow. They can only utter what is spread about by the
complaints of the condemned and the revilings of the most
2
insolent Julian. The sprouts of one seed are identical; what
is hidden in the roots is made manifest in the fruits. There-
fore, we must not fight them on a new line of battle, nor are
1 2 Tim. 2.19.
2 Cf. A. Bruckner, Julian von Eclamim, sein Leben und seine Lehre,
Texte und Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der Altchristllchen Liter-
atur (Leipzig 1897) XV
5.
3 Cf. Epistola XXIX (PL 20.582ff.) .
of their authority. He
eloquence what was to be thought
clearly stated how much that novel presumption displeased
him, whereby some impudently dared to rise against the an-
cient teachers and clamor with ignorant calumny against
to
the preaching of truth. He said: 'We have always held Au-
15 Epistola CXCIV (PL 33.874ff.) . Pope Sixtus reigned from 432 to 440.
416 PROSPER OF AQUITAINE
16 17
volumes written to the holy Pinian, to Count Valerius,
18 19
and to the servants of Christ, Timasius and James, be
20
unrolled. Let the first six books against Julian
be reviewed.
19 Ibid.
20 Contra Julianum haeresis Pelagianae defensorem (PL 44.641ff.) .
ways to seek from God that, in all our thoughts, in all our
wills, in all our speech and activity, He hold first place, who
says that He is the beginning: Tor of Him, and by Him, and
in Him, are all things: to Him be glory forever. Amen. 51
1 Rom. 11.36.
INDEX
Abimelech, 364 Amphilochius, Bishop of Ico-
Abraham, 67, 363; bosom of, nium, 327 n.
157, 159 Andlepsis Abradm, 67 n.
Acre (Akka), 250 n. Anatolius, 133-135
Adam, 368-3 72 ;
descendants Anchorites: see Hermits
of, 370, 372; old and new, Andethanna, 243
216; sin of, 391 ;
see also Fall
Andrew, St., 281
Aedui, country of, 123
Angels, 184; see also Martin,
Aetherius, 226 St., miracles
Africa, 164, 165, 193, 229 n., 176
Anger, restraint of,
249, 413 115
Angers (city),
Agnes, St., 221
Animals, stories told of: diving
Agricola, 226 birds, 155; ox, 179, penitent
Agrippinus, Bishop, 276 she- wolf,179-180; lioness,
Albenga, 112 182-183; ibex, 183; mules,
Alexander, Emperor, 300 204-206; cow, 215; hare
and hounds, 216; sheep,
Alexandria, 15 n., 164, 167,
168 n., 170, 171, 173, 193 216; oxen and swine, 216-
217; dog, 230; serpent, 237
Amator, 226
Anthony, St., 90, 155 n., 184
Amboise, 235, 236
Antichrist, 135, 223
Ambrose, St., 7, 15 n., 80, 93,
Antioch, 14 n.
196, 274, 327, 369
Amiens, 106 Antiochus, 325
421
422 INDEX
Basil, St., 15 n., 64 n., 327 Boniface, Pope, 413, 416, 417
Bassula, 80 n., 81, 87, 153, Bourke, V. J., 339 n., 343 n.,
154; Letter to, 153-159 415 n.
Cassian, 176
n. 187 n., 258,
; ing water, Peace, Resurrec-
336, 337, 341-412 nn. pass- tion, 10; Judge, Door, 11);
Nicaea, 15 n., 23, 258; Or- Delehaye, H., 91, 92, 99, 106-
253 nn. passim
ange, 340; Paris, 247 n.,
Rimini, 274 n., 325; Syn- Demoniacal possession, 191-
ada, 276 n., Vatican, 261 192; see also: Devil; Mar-
miracles
Creed, 43-53 tin, St.,
46, 53;, sign of, 114, 121, Denzinger, H., 96 n., 169 n.,
132; true, discovery of, 85 357 n., 358 n., 396 n.,
414 n.
Fasting, before vigils, 64; ex- Gallus, 88, 96, 161-251 passim
amples of, 175, 176; see also Gaul, 90, 93, 250, 337, 338 n.,
Martin, St., virtues 340; criminal trials and exe-
cutions in, 229 n., 230, 235;
Fear, 361, 384
invaded by barbarians, 108;
Felix, Bishop of Treves, 242,
life in, unfavorable to Chris-
244 n.
tian living, 163, 190, 197,
Felix, St., 249, 327
213
Filioque, 28 n. Gelasius I, 96, 222 n.
Firmicus Maternus, 199 n.
Gennadius of Marseilles, 3, 13
Firmilianus, Bishop, 276 n. 80, 81
n., n., 83, 84, 86, 88,
Fornication, a symbol of, 217 267 n., 324 n.
91, 93^95, 106 n., 116 n., 109-110, 112, Contra Con-
118n., 127 n., 158 n., 205 n. stantium, 149 n., 233 n.
INDEX 429
Hydatius: see Ydacius 155 n., 167 n., 169 n., 170-
173, 184 n., 188 n., 190, 198
Hylten, Per, 84 n., 97, 99, 102-
n., 222 n., 233 n., 250, 272
251 nn. passim, esp. 251
n., 274 n., 278 n., 299 n.,
Hypocaustum, 144 n.
302 n.
Jovinianus, 270,
315 Leprosum (= Levroux?), 122
Letter to Bassula^ translated,
Judaeism, 30, 31, 41, 44, 49,
373 153-159
Jullian, C.,
82 n., 83 n., 90, 99, Lietzman, 287 n.
Justice,
mistaken
conception Liturgical Singing, translated,
of, an example,
190-192 65-76
Justina, 209 n.
Liturgical singing, arguments
Juvenal, 197 n. for, 66ff.; David and, 68;
objections to, 65-67
Kaniecka, Sister M Simplicia, Livy, 85, 103
93 n.
Loire, river, 117, 154 n,, 155,
158 n., 237
Lactantius, 302 n.
Longnon, A., 100, 106 n., 118
Lambertini: see Benedict XIV 154 n.
n.,
Lavertujon, A., 98 94
Lowe, E. A., n.
Lawrence Giustiniani, St., 95
Lucan, 165 n.
Laymen, early role in electing
Lucesit hoc, 225 n.
bishops, 115 n,
Lupicinus, 114
Lecoy de Marche, A., 92
la n.
Nicaea, 15 258
Mercury, 221; his form as- n., 23,
260 n.
187, 198; in Egyptian mon-
Murray, J. C.,
achism, 173, 185
Mynors, R. A. B., 169 n,
Odo, St., of Cluny, 82 n.
Nature, curable by grace, 341, Opus Dei, 105 n., 138 n., 156
385 n.
Ovid, 238 n.
Pegis, A. C., 339 n.
Paul, St., 142, 143, 150, 221, Perigueux, 82, 93, 237
250, 260, 347, 353, 360, 362, Persians, 196
364, 366, 385-391, 416; see Peter, the Apostle, 142-
St.,
also Scriptures, Holy 143, 221, 281, 357, 384
Paul of Samosata, 315
Peter, St., Bishop of Alexan-
Paul of Thebes, St., 155 n., dria, 326
184 Peter Damiani, 95
St.,
Paulinus of Milan, 92-93
Petrarch, 95
Paulinus of Nola, St., 80-86,
Petschenig, M., 346 n.
92-93, 128, 137-138, 193,
Phalaris, 248
249; Carmina, 233 n., 249
n.; Epistles, 81 n., 82 n., 85
Philip, Emperor, 300 n.
Primuliacum, 81, 82 ;
162 n., Romans, faith of, 394, 398
226 n. Rome, 7, 94, 112, 193
Priscilla, 303 Romulus, 234
Priscillian, 85, 130 n.,
129 n., Rosweyde, H., 192 n.
Savaria (Sabaria?), 104 n. n., 383 n., 384 n., 385 n.,
393 n., 397 n., 398 n.
Schuster, I., Cardinal, 94 n.
2 Corinthians, 15 n., 27 n., 32
Scipio, 165 n. n., 34 n., 41 n., 64 n., 143 n.,
Scolares alae (scolae palatin- 150 n., 317 n., 347 n., 362
ae), 105 n. n., 365 n., 366 n., 382 n.
17 18 19 20
Deuteronomy, 68 n., 267 n., John, n., n., n., n.,
21 25 27 28
284, 285 n., 286 n., 301 n., n., n., n., n.,
Genesis, 216 n., 364 n., 368 n., Luke, 18 n., 28 n., 29 n., 32 n.,
371 n. 60 n., 72 n., 137 n., 157 n.,
199 n,, 211 n., 213 n., 216
Hebrews, 375 n. n., 359 n., 362 n., 363 n.,
369 n., 372 n., 375 n., 380
32 n., 45 n., 47 n., 51 n.,
n., 386 n., 387 n., 395 n.
Isaias,
52 n., 58 n., 351 n., 360 n.,
367 n,, 375 n. Mark, 155 n.
Jeremias, 32 n., 347 n,, 398 n. 142 n., 143 n., 151 n., 155 n.,
351 n., 365 n., 366 n., 393 2 Thessalonians, 26 n., 35 n.,
n., 395 n., 397 n., 402 n., 136 n., 223 n.
n., 354 n., 365 n., 399 n., Sebastianus (Sabbatius), 226
405 n.
Secular power, ruling in eccle-
Proverbs, 55 n., 56 n., 64 n., siastical cases, 169-170, 254
267 306 n., 307 n., 317
n., 114 127
Seeck, O., 101 n., n.,
n., 367 n., 384 n. 130 203 227
n., n., n., n.,
Psalms, 26 n. 30 n., 31 n., 34
5 229 n.
n., 35 n., 39 n., 47 n., 55 n., 319
Semi-Pelagians, 258, n.,
57 n., 58 n., 59 n., 62 n.,
336, 338, 340, 342
63 n., 64 n., 70 n., 71 n., Sens (Senones), 234
74 n., 75 n., 76 n., Ill n.,
Sethe, K., 181 n.
116 n., 268 n., 292 n., 351
Sheba: see Saba
n., 357 n., 361 n., 362 n.,
367 n., 378 n., 382 n., Shepherd of Hermas, 381 n.,
Sulpician Fathers,
83 n. Letter to Aurelius (Epist. 2),
Virgil, 132 n., 174 n., 186 n., Weyman, C., 102 n., 106 n.
189 n., 203 n., 207 n., 229 199 n.
Whatmough, J.,
n., 251 n., 414 n.
Wilson, H., 100
Virgin Birth, 45 Women, St, Martin's counsel
Virginity, a symbol of, 217 to, 218-219
Virtues, cannot dwell with Wordsworth, C., 142 n., 157
vices, 256, 382; seeds of, 217 n.
n.,
lost by sin, 382
World, end of, 95, 222-223
Virtus, virtutes, meaning of,
104 n.
Ydacius ( Idacius, Hydatius ) ,
Vitae Patrum, 192 n.
Bishop of Merida, 253
Voisin, 287 n.
Zabeo, J. P., 6
Waddell, H., 89 n.
Zachaeus, 360, 362, 366, 391
Wadi Natrum, 181 n.
Zacharias, 199
Walsh, G. G., 270 n. Zellerer, J., 99, 126 n., 134
Watt, M. C., 97 n. n., 141 n., 251 n.
Wealth, destroys the Church, Zosimus, Pope, 357, 358, 413,
167 417
cz
n II
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