Letter 73

Cyprian of CarthagePompey, Against Epistle of Stephen About Baptism of Heretics|c. 256 AD|cyprian carthage
conversiondonatismhumorimperial politicsmonasticismpapal authorityslavery captivity

Cyprian to his brother Pompeius, greetings.

Although I have laid out the case concerning the baptism of heretics fully enough in the letters I sent you copies of, dearest brother, you have asked me to share what our brother Stephen wrote in reply. I am enclosing a copy of his letter so you can judge for yourself. When you read it, you will see his error all the more clearly — his determination to defend the cause of heretics against Christians, and against the Church of God.

Among other things in his letter — some of them arrogant, some irrelevant, some contradicting his own position, all of them poorly thought through — he added this declaration: "If anyone comes to you from any heresy whatsoever, let nothing be changed from what has been handed down — namely, that hands be laid on him for repentance. For the heretics themselves do not baptize those who come to them from other heresies, but merely admit them to communion."

There it is. He has forbidden baptizing anyone who comes from heresy. He has declared the baptism of all heretics to be just and lawful. Although different heresies have different baptisms and different sins, Stephen holds communion with the baptism of every one of them, gathering up the sins of all into his own lap.

"Let nothing be changed," he says. "Nothing maintained except what has been handed down." But where does this tradition come from? Does it descend from the authority of the Lord and the Gospel? Does it come from the commands and letters of the apostles? God testifies and warns that the things which are written must be observed. If it is prescribed in the Gospel, or contained in the letters of the apostles, then yes — let the holy tradition be maintained. But if the opposite is the case, then those who claim to follow tradition must show us where this tradition originates.

And here is the irony: Stephen calls us the innovators. But who is the real innovator — the one who holds to the unity of the Church and claims one baptism for one Church? Or the one who, forgetting unity, adopts the lies and contaminations of a profane washing?

Custom without truth is merely the age of error. The longer a thing has been wrong, the more urgently it needs to be corrected.

Farewell, dearest brother.

[Context: This letter preserves fragments of the lost letter from Stephen, Bishop of Rome, to Cyprian — including Stephen's famous dictum: "Let nothing be innovated beyond what has been handed down." Stephen's position — that heretical baptism was valid if performed with the correct Trinitarian formula — eventually became the standard teaching of the universal Church. But Cyprian's argument — that authority and truth reside only within the Church's communion — remained deeply influential in African Christianity for centuries, shaping both Donatist and Augustinian theology.]

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

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