Letter 72

Cyprian of CarthageJubaianus, Concerning Baptism of Heretics|c. 256 AD|cyprian carthage
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Cyprian to his brother Jubaianus, greetings.

You wrote to me, dearest brother, asking my view on the baptism of heretics — those who stand outside the Church and claim for themselves a right and a power that is not theirs. Since we have already laid out our position on this matter, I am sending you copies of our previous letters: the decree of the council when a large number of us bishops were present, and my subsequent reply to our colleague Quintus when he raised the same question. And now, in our most recent gathering — seventy-one bishops from Africa and Numidia together — we have confirmed the same position once more.

Our judgment is this: there is one baptism, and it belongs to the Catholic Church. Those who come to us from the adulterous and unholy water of heresy are not re-baptized — they are baptized, since they received nothing valid in a place where nothing valid exists.

I know the Novatians re-baptize people they lure away from us. That does not trouble me. What the enemies of the Church do among themselves is their business. What matters is that we maintain our own authority and the steadfastness of reason and truth. Novatian, like an ape — imitating human actions without being human — tries to claim the authority and truth of the Catholic Church for himself, while he himself is not in the Church. He has been a rebel and enemy of the Church from the start. Knowing there is one baptism, he seizes it for himself, claiming the Church is where he is and calling us the heretics.

But we who hold the head and root of the one Church know with certainty that nothing is lawful outside it. The one baptism is ours — among us — because we are one. Those who invent a false baptism outside the Church only confirm that the true one belongs to us alone. Since there cannot be two, the one that is true remains with the true Church.

Let me address the specific arguments your enclosed letter raised. Some say the apostle Paul approved heretical baptism, citing his words about Christ being preached "whether in pretense or in truth" [Philippians 1:18]. But Paul was speaking about preaching within the Church by people of mixed motives — not about heretics performing sacraments outside it. There is a vast difference between a flawed servant within the household and a stranger who has left the house entirely.

The position is clear, the tradition is firm, and the consensus of the African bishops is unanimous. I hope this will set your mind at ease.

Farewell, dearest brother.

[Context: This is one of Cyprian's most substantial letters on the baptismal controversy. The council of 71 bishops he references was held in Carthage in September 256 AD — an enormous gathering that voted unanimously to reject the validity of heretical baptism. This put the African church in direct conflict with Bishop Stephen of Rome, who threatened excommunication over the issue. The dispute was cut short by both men's deaths — Stephen in 257, Cyprian by martyrdom in 258.]

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

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