Letter 51: An invitation to Crispinus, Donatist bishop at Calama, to discuss the whole question of the Donatist schism. (No salutation at the beginning of the letter.) 1. I have adopted this plan in regard to the heading of this letter, because your party are offended by the humility which I have shown in the salutations prefixed to others.

Augustine of HippoCrispinus|c. 394 AD|augustine hippo
barbarian invasiondonatismproperty economics
Barbarian peoples/invasions; Theological controversy; Imperial politics

Augustine to Crispinus, greetings.

I am writing to you, brother, not as an enemy — though I know you consider me one — but as a fellow servant of the same Lord, who commanded us to love even those who regard themselves as our opponents.

You are the Donatist bishop of Calama. I am the Catholic bishop of Hippo. Between us lies a schism that has wounded the Church in Africa for nearly a century. I do not want to rehearse the entire history again — you know my views, and I know yours. But I do want to address something specific that has come to my attention: your people have been rebaptizing Catholics who come to your side.

Let me say plainly what I think about this. Baptism is not ours to give or take away. It is Christ's. When a man is baptized in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, with water and with faith, he has received Christ's baptism — regardless of which community performed it. To baptize him again is not to give him something he lacked but to insult what he already has. It is to say that Christ's own sacrament is ineffective unless it passes through the right human hands.

I know your answer: you say that a sacrament administered by a traditor or by those in communion with traditores is invalid. But I ask you: do you really want to make the effectiveness of God's grace depend on the hidden moral state of the minister? If so, no one can ever be certain of any sacrament, because no one can see into the heart of the man who administers it.

I am not asking you to surrender your convictions. I am asking you to examine them. Come and talk. Let us open the Scriptures together and see what the Lord actually teaches about his own sacraments. If you can show me from Scripture that I am wrong, I will change my mind. Can you say the same?

Farewell.

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

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