Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-94fs2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T22:40:41.447Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Theological Legacy of St. Cyprian

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 March 2011

M. F. Wiles
Affiliation:
University Lecturer in Divinity and Dean of Clare College, Cambridge

Extract

‘Into theology Cyprian scarcely ever entered’, wrote W. D. Niven, yet d'Alès's book La Théologie de S. Cyprien covers more than 400 pages without appearing to be dealing with a non-existent subject. The prima facie conflict is not difficult to resolve. A religious leader can no more help talking theology, whether consciously intending to do so or not, than Molière's M. Jourdain could help talking prose. An unconscious theology, indeed, can be every bit as important and as influential as a fully selfconscious one; in fact, its influence is very liable to be the greater, because succeeding generations are less likely to be aware of it and so less likely to submit it to critical scrutiny and review. In no case is this largely-unconscious influence more significant than in the case of Cyprian. All the other outstanding writers of the third-century western Church ended their days in schism. Tertullian, Hippolytus and Novatian were all far greater theologians than Cyprian, but all three broke from the catholic Church in support of the rigorist cause. In spite of this fact, their importance for later theology remains considerable. But that importance is a fully conscious theological one. Where their ideas were accepted and developed, it was because they carried conscious conviction as theological ideas; the fact of who it was who was the father of the ideas did little to commend them.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1963

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

page 139 note 1 Cyprian of Carthage’, in Expository Times, xliv (1932–3), 363Google Scholar.

page 139 note 2 d' Alès, A., La Théologie de S. Cyprien, Paris 1922.Google Scholar

page 140 note 1 Watkins, O. D., A History of Penance, London 1920, i. 177Google Scholar.

page 140 note 2 Vita Cypriani, 2.

page 140 note 3 Ad Donatum, 4.

page 144 note 1 Lightfoot, J. B., St. Paul's Epistle to the Philippians, London–Cambridge 1868, 258Google Scholar.

page 144 note 2 See especially Simon, M., ‘Le Judaisme berbère dans l'Afrique ancienne’, R.H.P.R., xxvi (1946), 131, 105–45Google Scholar.

page 145 note 1 Hanson, R. P. C., ‘Notes on Tertullian's Interpretation of Scripture’, J.T.S., N.S. xii (1961), 273–9.Google Scholar

page 145 note 2 Ep., lxix. 12.

page 145 note 3 Ep., lxiv. 2–4.

page 146 note 1 Ep., lxvii. 4.

page 146 note 2 Ep., i. 1.

page 146 note 3 Epp., iii. 1; iv. 4; xxxix. 7; lix. 4; lxvi. 3.

page 146 note 4 Epp., iii. 1; lxvii. 3; lxix. 9; De Cath. Eccl. Unit., xvii–xviii.

page 146 note 5 Epp., lxv. 2; lxvii. 1; lxxii. 2.

page 147 note 1 I Apology, lxvi.

page 147 note 2 Dialogue with Trypho, cxvii.

page 147 note 3 Ibid., xli. 3; Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, iv. xviii, 4.

page 148 note 1 Ep., lxiii. 9, 17.