TERTULLIAN
Introductory Note.
[a.d.
145-220.] When our Lord repulsed the woman of Canaan (Matt. xv. 22) with
apparent harshness, he applied to her people the epithet dogs, with which the
children of Israel had thought it piety to reproach them. When He accepted her
faith and caused it to be recorded for our learning, He did something more: He
reversed the curse of the Canaanite and showed that the Church was designed "for
all people;" Catholic alike for all time and for all sorts and conditions of
men.
Thus the North-African Church was loved before it was born: the Good Shepherd
was gently leading those "that were with young." Here was the charter of those
Christians to be a Church, who then were Canaanites in the land of their father
Ham. It is remarkable indeed that among these pilgrims and strangers to the West
the first elements of Latin Christianity come into view. Even at the close of
the Second Century the Church in Rome is an inconsiderable, though prominent,
member of the great confederation of Christian Churches which has its chief
seats in Alexandria and Antioch, and of which the entire Literature is Greek. It
is an African presbyter who takes from Latin Christendom the reproach of
theological and literary barrenness and begins the great work in which, upon his
foundations, Cyprian and Augustine built up, with incomparable genius, that
Carthaginian School of Christian thought by which Latin Theology was dominated
for centuries. It is important to note (1.) that providentially not one of these
illustrious doctors died in Communion with the Roman See, pure though it was and
venerable at that time; and (2.) that to the works of Augustine the Reformation
in Germany and Continental Europe was largely due; while (3.) the specialties of
the Anglican Reformation were, in like proportion, due to the writings of
Tertullian and Cyprian. The hinges of great and controlling destinies for
Western Europe and our own America are to be found in the period we are now
approaching.
The merest school-boy knows much of the history of Carthage, and how the North
Africans became Roman citizens. How they became Christians is not so clear. A
melancholy destiny has enveloped Carthage from the outset, and its glory and
greatness as a Christian See were transient indeed. It blazed out all at once in
Tertullian, after about a century of missionary labours had been exerted upon
its creation: and having given a Minucius Felix, an Arnobius and a Lactantius to
adorn the earliest period of Western Ecclesiastical learning, in addition to its
nobler luminaries, it rapidly declined. At the beginning of the Third Century,
at a council presided over by Agrippinus, Bishop of Carthage, there were present
not less than seventy bishops of the Province. A period of cruel persecutions
followed, and the African Church received a baptism of blood.
Tertullian was born a heathen, and seems to have been educated at Rome, where he
probably practiced as a jurisconsult. We may, perhaps, adopt most of the ideas
of Allix, as conjecturally probable, and assign his birth to a.d. 145. He became
a Christian about185, and a presbyter about 190. The period of his strict
orthodoxy very nearly expires with the century. He lived to an extreme old age,
and some suppose even till a.d. 240. More probably we must adopt the date
preferred by recent writers, a.d. 220.
It seems to be the fashion to treat of Tertullian as a Montanist, and only
incidentally to celebrate his services to the Catholic Orthodoxy of Western
Christendom. Were I his biographer I should reverse this course, as a mere act
of justice, to say nothing of gratitude to a man of splendid intellect, to whom
the filial spirit of Cyprian accorded the loving tribute of a disciple, and
whose genius stamped itself upon the very words of Latin theology, and prepared
the language for the labours of a Jerome. In creating the Vulgate, and so
lifting the Western Churches into a position of intellectual equality with the
East, the latter as well as St. Augustine himself were debtors to Tertullian in
a degree not to be estimated by any other than the Providential Mind that
inspired his brilliant career as a Christian.
In speaking of Tatian I laid the base for what I wished to say of Tertullian.
Let God only be their judge; let us gratefully recognize the debt we owe to
them. Let us read them, as we read the works of King Solomon. We must, indeed,
approve of the discipline of the Primitive Age, which allowed of no compromises.
The Church was struggling for existence, and could not permit any man to become
her master. The more brilliant the intellect, the more dangerous to the poor
Church were its perversions of her Testimony. Before the heathen tribunals, and
in the market-places, it would not answer to let Christianity appear
double-tongued. The orthodoxy of the Church, not less than her children, was
undergoing an ordeal of fire. It seems a miracle that her Testimony preserved
its unity, and that heresy was branded as such by the instinct of the Faithful.
Poor Tertullian was cut off by his own act. The weeping Church might bewail him
as David mourned for Absalom, but like David, she could not give the Ark of God
into other hands than those of the loyal and the true. I have set the writings
of Tertullian in a natural and logical order,' so as to aid the student, and to
relieve him from the distractions of such an arrangement as one finds in
Oehler's edition. Valuable as it is, the practical use of it is irritating and
confusing. The reader of that edition may turn to the slightly differing schemes
of Neander and Kaye, for a theoretical order of the works; but here he will find
a classification which will aid his inquiries. He will find, first, those works
which connect with the Apologists of the former volumes of this series: which
illustrate the Church's position toward the outside world, the Jews as well as
the Gentiles. Next come those works which contend with internal differences and
heresies. And then, those which reflect the morals and manners of Christians.
These are classed with some reference to their degrees of freedom from the
Montanistic taint, and are followed, last of all, by the few tracts which belong
to the melancholy period of his lapse, and are directed against the Church's
orthodoxy.
Let it be borne in mind, that if this sad close of Tertullian's career cannot be
extenuated, the later history of Latin Christianity forbids us to condemn him,
in the tones which proceeded from the Virgin Church with authority, and which
the law of her testimony and the instinct of self-preservation forced her to
utter. Let us reflect that St. Bernard and after him the Schoolmen, whom we so
deservedly honour, separated themselves far more absolutely than ever Tertullian
did from the orthodoxy of Primitive Christendom. The schism which withdrew the
West from Communion with the original seats of Christendom, and from Nicene
Catholicity, was formidable beyond all expression, in comparison with
Tertullian's entanglements with a delusion which the See of Rome itself had
momentarily patronized. Since the Council of Trent, not a theologian of the
Latins has been free from organic heresies, compared with which the fanaticism
of our author was a trifling aberration. Since the late Council of the Vatican,
essential Montanism has become organized in the Latin Churches: for what are the
new revelations and oracles of the pontiff but the deliria of another claimant
to the voice and inspiration of the Paraclete ? Poor Tertullian ! The sad
influences of his decline and folly have been fatally felt in all the subsequent
history of the West, but, surely subscribers to the Modern Creed of the Vatican
have reason to "speak gently of their father's fall" To Dollinger, with the "Old
Catholic" remnant only, is left the right to name the Montanists heretics, or to
upbraid Tertullian as a lapser from Catholicity.
From Dr. Holmes, I append the following Introductory Notice:1
(I.) Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus, as our author is called in the mss.
of his works, is thus noticed by Jerome in his Catalogus Scriptorus
Ecclesiasticorum2 : "Tertullian, a presbyter, the first Latin writer after
Victor and Apollonius, was a native of the province of Africa and city of
Carthage, the son of a proconsular centurion: he was a man of a sharp and
vehement temper, flourished under Severus and Antoninus Caracalla, and wrote
numerous works, which (as they are generally known) I think it unnecessary to
particularize. I saw at Concordia, in Italy, an old man named Paulus. He said
that when young he had met at Rome with an aged amanuensis of the blessed
Cyprian, who told him that Cyprian never passed a day without reading some
portion of Tertullian's works, and used frequently to say, Give me any master,
meaning Tertullian. After remaining a presbyter of the church until he had
attained the middle age of life, Tertullian was, by the envy and contumelious
treatment of the Roman clergy, driven to embrace the opinions of Montanus, which
he has mentioned in several of his works under the title of the New Prophecy....
He is reported to have lived to a very advanced age, and to have composed many
other works which are not extant." We add Bishop Kaye's notes on this extract,
in an abridged shape: "The correctness of some parts of this account has been
questioned. Doubts have been entertained whether Tertullian was a presbyter,
although these have solely arisen from Roman Catholic objections to a married
priesthood; for it is certain that he was married, there being among his works
two treatises addressed to his wife.... Another question has been raised
respecting the place where Tertullian officiated as a presbyter-whether at
Carthage or at Rome. That he at one time resided at Carthage may be inferred
from Jerome's statement, and is rendered certain by several passages of his own
writings. Allix supposes that the notion of his having been a presbyter of the
Roman Church owed its rise to what Jerome said of the envy and abuse of the
Roman clergy impelling him to espouse the party of Montanus. Optatus,3 and the
author of the work de Haeresibus, which Sirmond edited under tile title of
Praedestinatus, expressly call him a Carthaginian presbyter. Semler, however, in
a dissertation inserted in his edition of Tertullian's works,4 contends that he
was a presbyter of the Roman Church. Eusebius5 tells us that he was accurately
acquainted with the Roman laws, and on other accounts a distinguished person at
Rome.6 Tertullian displays, moreover, a knowledge of the proceedings of the
Roman Church with respect to Marcion and Valentinus, who were once members of
it, which could scarcely have been obtained by one who had not himself been
numbered amongst its presbyters.7 Semler admits that, after Tertullian seceded
from the church, he left and returned to Carthage. Jerome does not inform us
whether Tertullian was born of Christian parents, or was converted to
Christianity. There are passages in his writings8 which seem to imply that he
had been a Gentile; yet he may perhaps mean to describe, not his own condition,
but that of Gentiles in general, before their conversion. Allix and the majority
of commentators understand them literally, as well as some other passages in
which he speaks of his own infirmities and sinfulness. His writings show that he
flourished at the period specified by Jerome-that is, during the reigns of
Severus and Antoninus Caracalla, or between the years a.d. 193 and 216; but they
supply no precise information respecting the date of his birth, or any of the
principal occurrences of his life. Allix places his birth about 145 or 150; his
conversion to Christianity about a.d. 185; his marriage about 186; his admission
to the priesthood9 about 192; his adoption of the opinions of Montanus about
199; and his death about a.d. 220. But these dates, it must be understood, rest
entirely on conjecture."10
(II.) Tertullian's work against Marcion, as it happens, is, as to its date, the
best authenticated-perhaps the only well authenticated-particular connected with
the author's life. He himself s mentions the fifteenth year of the reign of
Severus as the time when he was writing the work: "Ad xv. jam Severi imperatoris."
This agrees with Jerome's Chronicle, where occurs this note: "Anno 2223 Severi
xvº Tertullianus ... celebrator."11 This year is assigned to the year of our
Lord 20712 but notwithstanding the certainty of this date, it is far from clear
that it describes more than the time of the publication of the First look. On
the contrary, it is nearly certain that the other books, although connected
manifestly enough in the author's argument and purpose (compare the initial and
the final chapters of the several books), were yet issued at separate times.
Noesselt13 shows that between the Book i. and Books ii.-iv. Tertullian issued
his De Praescript. Haeret., and previous to Book v. he published his tracts, De
Carne Christi and De Resurrectione Carnis. After giving the incontestable date
of the xv. of Severus for the first book, he says it is a mistake to suppose
that the other books were published with it. He adds: "Although we cannot
undertake to determine whether Tertullian issued his Books ii., iii., iv.,
against Marcion, together or separately, or in what year, we yet venture to
affirm that Book v. appeared apart from the rest. For the tract De Resurr.
Carnis appears from its second chapter to have been published after the tract De
Carne Christi, in which latter work (chap. vii.) he quotes a passage from the
fourth book against Marcion. But in his Book v. against Marcion (chap. x.), he
refers to his work De Resurr. Carnis; which circumstance makes it evident that
Tertullian published his Book v. at a different time from his Book iv. In his
Book i. he announces his intention (chap. i.) of some time or other completing
his tract De Praescript. Haeret., but in his book [De Carne Christi (chap. ii.),
he mentions how he had completed it,-a conclusive proof that his Book i. against
Marcion preceded the other books."
(III.) Respecting Marcion himself, the most formidable heretic who had as yet
opposed revealed truth, enough will turn up in this treatise, with the notes
which we have added in explanation, to satisfy the reader. It will, however, be
convenient to give here a few introductory particulars of him. Tertullian14
mentions Marcion as being, with Valentinus, in communion with the Church at
Rome, "under the episcopate of the blessed Eleutherus." He goes on to charge
them with "ever-restless curiosity, with which they infected even the brethren;"
and informs us that they were more than once put out of communion-"Marcion,
indeed, with the 200 sesterces which he brought into the church."15 He goes on
to say, that "being at last condemned to the banishment of a perpetual
separation, they sowed abroad the poisons of their doctrines. Afterwards, when
Marcion, having professed penitence, agreed to the terms offered to him, that he
should receive reconciliation on condition that he brought back to the church
the rest also, whom he had trained up for perdition, he was prevented by death."
He was a native of Sinope in Pontus, of which city, according to an account
preserved by Epiphanius,16 which, however, is somewhat doubtful, his father was
bishop, and of high character both for his orthodoxy and exemplary practice. He
came to Rome soon after the death of Hyginus, probably about a.d. 141 or 142;
and soon after his arrival he adopted the heresy of Cerdon.17
(IV.) It is an interesting question as to what edition of the Holy Scriptures
Tertullian used in his very copious quotations. It may at once be asserted that
he did not cite from the Hebrew, although some writers have claimed for him,
among his varied learning, a knowledge of the sacred language. Bp. Kaye
observes, page 61, n. 1, that "he sometimes speaks as if he was acquainted with
Hebrew," and refers to the Anti-Marcion iv. 39, the Adv. Praxeam v., and the
Adv. Judaeos ix. Be this as it may, it is manifest that Tertullian's Scripture
passages never resemble the Hebrew, but in nearly every instance the Septuagint,
whenever, as is most frequently the case, that version differs from the
original. In the New Testament there is, as might be expected, a tolerably close
conformity to the Greek. There is, however, it must be allowed, a sufficiently
frequent variation from the letter of both the Greek Testaments to justify
Semler's suspicion that Tertullian always quoted from the old Latin version,18
whatever that might have been, which was current in the African church in the
second and third centuries. The most valuable part of Semler's Dissertatio de
varia et incerta indole Liororum Q. S. F. Tertulliani is his investigation of
this very point. In section iv. he endeavours to prove this proposition: "Hic
scriptor19 non in manibus habuit Graecos libros sacros;" and he states his
conclusion thus: "Certissimum est nec Tertullianum nec Cyprianum nec ullum
scriptorem e Latinis illis ecclesiasticis provocare unquam ad Graecorum librorum
auctoritatem si vel maxime obscure aut contraria lectio occurreret;" and again:
"Ex his satis certum est. Latinos satis diu secutos fuisse auctoritatem quorum
librorum adversus Grcecos, nec concessisse nisi serius, cum Augustini et
Hieronymi nova auctoritas juvare videretur." It is not ignorance of Greek which
is imputed to Tertullian, for he is said to have well understood that language,
and even to have composed in it. He probably followed the Latin, as writers now
usually quote the authorized English, as being current and best known among
their readers. Independent feeling, also, would have weight with such a temper
as Tertullian's, to say nothing of the suspicion which largely prevailed in the
African branch of the Latin church, that the Greek copies of the Scriptures were
much corrupted by the heretics, who were chiefly, if not wholly, Greeks or
Greek-speaking persons.
(V.) Whatever perverting effect Tertullian's secession to the sect of Montanus20
may have had on his judgment in his latest writings, it did not vitiate the work
against Marcion. With a few trivial exceptions, this treatise may be read by the
strictest Catholic without any feeling of annoyance. His lapse to Montanism is
set down conjecturally as having taken place a.d. 199. Jerome, we have seen,
attributed the event to his quarrel with the Roman clergy, but this is at least
doubtful; nor must it be forgotten that Tertullian's mind s ems to have been
peculiarly suited by nature21 to adopt the mystical notions and ascetic
principles of Montanus. It is satisfactory to find that, on the whole, "the
authority of Tertullian," as the learned Dr. Burton says, "upon great points of
doctrine is considered to be little, if at all, affected by his becoming a
Montanist." (Lectures on Eccl. Hist, vol. ii. p. 234.) Besides the different
works which are expressly mentioned in the notes of this volume, recourse has
been had by the translator to Dupin's Hist. Eccl. Writers (trans.), vol. i. pp.
69-86; Tillemont's Mèmoires Hist. Eccl. iii. 85-103; Dr. Smith's Greek and Roman
Biography, articles "Marcion" and "Tertullian;" Schaff's article, in Herzog's
Cyclopaedia, on "Tertullian;" Munter's Primordia Eccl. Africanae, pp. 118-150;
Robertson's Church Hist. vol. i. pp. 70-77; Dr. P. Schaff's Hist. of Christian
Church (New York, 1859, pp.511-519), and Archdeacon Evans' Biography of the
Early Church, vol. i. (Lives of "Marcion," pp. 93-122, and "Tertullian," pp.
325-363). This last work, though of a popular cast, shows a good deal of
research and learning, expressed in the pleasant style of the once popular
author of The Rectory of Vale Head. The translator has mentioned these works,
because they are all quite accessible to the general reader, and will give him
adequate information concerning the subject treated in the present volume.
To this introduction of Dr. Holmes must be added that of Mr. Thelwall, the
translator of the Third volume in the Edinburgh Series, as follows:
To arrange chronologically the works (especially if numerous) of an author whose
own date is known with tolerable precision, is not always or necessarily easy:
witness the controversies as to the succession of St. Paul's epistles. To do
this in the case of an author whose own date is itself a matter of controversy
may therefore be reasonably expected to be still less so; and such is the
predicament of him who attempts to perform this task for Tertullian. I propose
to give a specimen or two of the difficulties with which the task is beset; and
then to lay before the reader briefly a summary of the results at which eminent
scholars, who have devoted much time and thought to the subject, have arrived.
Such a course, I think, will at once afford him means of judging of the absolute
impossibility of arriving at definite certainty in the matter; and induce him to
excuse me if I prefer furnishing him with materials from which to deduce his own
conclusions, rather than venturing on an ex cathedra decision on so doubtful a
subject.
I. The book, as Dr. Holmes has reminded us,22 of the date of which we seem to
have the surest evidence, is Adv. Marc. i. This book was in course of writing,
as its author himself (C. 15) tells us, "in the fifteenth year of the empire of
Severus." Now this date would be clear if there were no doubt as to which year
of our era corresponds to Tertullian's fifteenth of Severus. Pamelius, however,
says Dr. Holmes, makes it a.d. cog; Clinton, (whose authority is more recent and
better,) 207.
2. Another book which promises to give some clue to its date is the de Pallio.23
The writer uses these phrases: "praesentis imperil triplex virtus;" "Deo tot
Augnstis in union favente;" which show that there were at the time three persons
unitedly bearing the title Augusti-not Caesares only, but the still higher
Augusti;-while the remainder of that context, as well as the opening of c. I,
indicates a time of peace of some considerable duration; a time of plenty; and a
time during and previous to which great changes had taken place in the general
aspect of the Roman Empire, and some particular traitor had been discovered and
frustrated. Such a combination of circumstances might seem to fix the date with
some degree of assurance. But unhappily, as Kaye reminds us,24 commentators
cannot agree as to who the three Augusti are. Some say Severus, Caracalla, and
Albinus; some say Severus, Caracalla, and Geta. Hence we have a difference of
some twelve years or thereabouts in the computations. For Albinus was defeated
by Severus in person, and fell by his own hand, in a.d. 197; and Geta, Severus'
second son, brother of Caracalla, was not associated by his father with himself
and his other son as Augustus until a.d. 208, though he had received the title
of Caesar ten years before, in the same year in which Caracalla had received
that of Augustus.25 For my own part, I may perhaps be allowed to say that I
should incline to agree, like Salmasius, with those who assign the later date.
The limits of the present Introduction forbid my entering at large into my
reasons for so doing. I am, however, supported in it by the authority of
Neander.26 In one point, though, I should hesitate to agree with Oehler, who
appears to follow Salmasius and others herein,-namely, in understanding the
expression "et cacto et rubo subdolae familiaritatis convulso" of Albinus. It
seems to me the words might with more propriety be applied to Plautianus; and
that in the word "familiaritatis" we may see (after Tertullian's fashion) a play
upon the meaning, with a reference not only to the long-standing but mischievous
intimacy which existed between Severus and his countryman (perhaps
fellow-townsman) Plautianus, who for his harshness and cruelty is fitly compared
to the prickly cactus. He alludes likewise to the alliance which this ambitious
praetorian pr erect had contrived to contract with the family of the emperor, by
the marriage of his daughter Plautilla to Caracalla,-an event which, as it
turned out, led to his own death. Thus in the "rubo" there may be a reference to
the ambitious and conceited "bramble" of Jotham's parable,27 and perhaps, too,
to the "thistle" of Jehoash's.28 If this be so, the date would be at least
approximately fixed, as Plautianus did not marry his daughter to Caracalla till
a.d. 203, and was himself put to death in the following year, 204, while Geta,
as we have seen, was made Augustus in 208.
3. The date of the Apology, however, is perhaps at once the most contested, and
the most strikingly illustrative of the difficulties to which allusion has been
made. It is not surprising that its date should have been more disputed than
that of other pieces, inasmuch as it is the best known, and (for some reasons)
the most interesting and famous, of all our author's productions. In fact, the
dates assigned to it by different authorities vary from Mosheim's 198 to that
suggested by the very learned Allix, who assigns it to 217.29
4. Once more. In the tract de Monogamia (c. 3) the author says that since the
date of St. Paul's first Epistle to the Corinthians "about 160 years had
elapsed." Here, again, did we only know with certainty the precise date of that
epistle, we could ascertain "about" the date of the tract. But (a) the date of
the epistle is itself variously given, Burton giving it as early as a.d. 52,
Michaelis and Mill as late as 57; and (b) Tertullian only says, "Armis circiter
CLX. exinde productis;" while the way in which, in the ad Natt., within the
short space of three chapters, he states first30 than 150, and then (in c. 9)
that 300, years had not elapsed since the rise of the Christian name, leads us
to think that here again31 he only desires to speak in round numbers, meaning
perhaps more than 150, but less than 170.
These specimens must suffice, though it might be easy to add to them. There is,
however, another classification of our author's writings which has been
attempted. Finding the haplessness of strict chronological accuracy,
commentators have seized on the idea that peradventure there might be found at
all events some internal marks by which to determine which of them were written
before, which after, the writer's secession to Montanism. It may be confessed
that this attempt has been somewhat more successful than the other. Yet even
here there are two formidable obstacles standing in our way. The first and
greatest is, that the natural temper of Tertullian was from the first so akin to
the spirit of Montanism, that, unless there occur distinct allusions to the "New
Prophecy," or expressions specially connected with Montanistic phraseology, the
general tone of any treatise is not a very safe guide. The second is, that the
subject-matter of some of the treatises is not such as to afford much scope for
the introduction of the peculiarities of a sect which professed to differ in
discipline only, not doctrine, from the church at large.
Still the result of this classification seems to show one important feature of
agreement between commentators, however they may differ upon details; and that
is, that considerably the larger part of our author's rather voluminous
productions32 must have been subsequent to his lamented secession. I think the
best way to give the reader means for forming his own judgment will be, as I
have said, to lay before him in parallel columns a tabular view of the
disposition of the books by Dr. Neander and Bishop Kaye. These two modern
writers, having given particular care to the subject, bringing to bear upon it
all the advantages derived from wide reading, eminent abilities, and a diligent
study of the works of preceding writers on the same questions,33 have a special
right to be heard upon the matter in hand; and I think, if I may be allowed to
say so, that, for calm judgment, and minute acquaintance with his author, I
shall not be accused of undue partiality if I express my opinion that, as far as
my own observation goes, the palm must be awarded to the Bishop. In this view I
am supported by the fact that the accomplished Professor Ramsay,s follows Dr.
Kaye's arrangement. I premise that Dr. Neander adopts a threefold division,
into:
1. Writings which were occasioned by the relation of the Christians to the
heathen, and refer to their vindication of Christianity against the heathen;
attacks on heathenism; the sufferings and conduct of Christians under
persecution; and the intercourse of Christians with heathens:
2. Writings which relate to Christian and church life, and to ecclesiastical
discipline
3. The dogmatic and dogmatico-controversial treatises.
And under each head he subdivides into:
Neander
Kaye
1. Pre-Montanist.
11. Pre Montanist (probably).
2. Montanist
17-21.
2. Montanist (certainly).
10
4. Works respecting which nothing certain can be pronounced
33. The
a. Pre-Montanist writings: b. Post-Montanist writings: thus leaving no room for
what Kaye calls "works respecting which nothing certain can be pronounced." For
the sake of clearness, this order has not been followed in the table. On the
other side, it will be seen that Dr. Kaye, while not assuming to speak with more
than a reasonable probability, is careful so to arrange the treatises under each
head as to show the order, so far as it is discoverable, in which the books
under that head were published; i.e., if one book is quoted in another book, the
book so quoted, if distinctly referred to as already before the world, is
plainly anterior to that in which it is quoted. Thus, then, have:
A comparison of these two lists will show that the difference between the two
great authorities is, as Kaye remarks, "not great; and with respect to some of
the tracts on which we differ, the learned author expresses himself with great
diffidence."34 The main difference, in fact, is that which affects two tracts
upon kindred subjects, the de Spectaculis, and Idololatria, the de Cultu
Feminarum (a subject akin to the other two), and the adv. Judeos. With reference
to all these, except the last, to which I believe the Archdeacon does not once
refer, the Bishop's opinion appears to have the support of Archdeacon Evans,
whose learned and interesting essay, referred to in the note, appears in a
volume published in 1837. Dr. Kaye's Lectures, on which his book is founded,
were delivered in 1825. Of the date of his first edition I am not aware. Dr.
Neander's Antignostikus also first appeared in 1825. The preface to his second
edition bears date July 1, 184935 . As to the adv. Judaeos, I confess I agree
with Neander in thinking that, at all events from the beginning of c. 9, it is
spurious. If it be urged that Jerome expressly quotes it as Tertullian's, I
reply, Jerome so quotes it, I believe, when he is expounding Daniel. Now all
that the adv. Jud. has to say about Daniel ends with the end of c. 8. It is
therefore quite compatible with the fact thus stated to recognize the earlier
half of the book as genuine, and to reject the rest, beginning, as it happens,
just after the eighth chapter, as spurious. Perhaps Dr. Neander's Jewish birth
and training peculiarly fit him to be heard on this question. Nor do I think
Professor Ramsay (in the article above alluded to) has quite seen the force of
Kaye's own remarks on Neander.36 What he does say is equally creditable to his
candour and his accuracy; namely: "The instances alleged by Dr. Neander, in
proof of this position, are undoubtedly very remarkable; but if the concluding
chapters of the tract are spurious, no ground seems to be left for asserting
that the genuine portion was posterior to the third Book against Marcion,37 -and
none, consequently, for asserting that it was written by a Montanist." With
which remark I must draw these observations on the genuine extant works of
Tertullian to a close.
The next point to which a brief reference must be made is the lost ivories of
Tertullian, lists of these are given both by Oehler and by Kaye, viz.:
1. A Book on Aaron's Robes: mentioned by Jerome, Epist. 128, ad Fabiolam de
Veste Sacerdotali (tom. ii. p. 586, Opp. ed. Bened.).
2. A Book on the Superstition of the Age.38
3. A Book on the Submission of the Soul.
4. A Book on the Flesh and the Soul.
Nos. 2, 3, and 4 are known only by their titles, which are found in the Index to
Tertullian's works given in the Codex Agobardi; but the tracts themselves are
not extant in the ms., which appears to have once contained-
5. A Book on Paradise, named in the Index, and referred to in de Anima 55, adv.
Marc. iii. 12; and
6. A Book on the Hope of the Faithful: also named in the Index, and referred to
adv. Marc. iii. 24; and by Jerome in his account of Papias,39 and on Ezek.
xxxvi.;40 and by Gennadius of Marseilles.41
7. Six Books on Ecstasy, with a seventh in reply to Apollonius:42 see Jerome.43
See, too, J. A. Fabricius on the words of the unknown author whom the Jesuit
Sirmond edited under the name Praedestinatus; who gathers thence that "Soter,
pope of the City,44 and Apollonius, bishop45 of the Ephesians, wrote a book
against the Montanists; it reply to whom Tertullian, a Carthaginian presbyter,
wrote." J. Pamelius thinks these seven books were originally published it Greek.
8. A Book in reply to the Apellesites (i.e. the followers of Apelles46 ):
referred to in de Carne Christi, c. 8.
9. A Book on the Origin47 of the Soul, in reply to Hermogenes: referred to in de
Anima, CC. 1, 3, 22, 24
10. A Book on Fate: referred to by Fulgentius Planciades, p. 562, Merc.; also
referred to as either written, or intended to be written, by Tertullian himself,
de Anima, c. 20. Jerome48 states that there was extant, or had been extant, a
book on Fate under the name of Minucius Felix, written indeed by a perspicuous
author, but not in the style of Minucius Felix. This, Pamelius judged, should
perhaps be rather ascribed to Tertullian.
11. A Book on the trinity. Jerome says49 "Novatian wrote a large volume on the
Trinity, as if making an epitome of a work of Tertullian's, which most men not
knowing regard it as Cyprian's." Novatian's book stood in Tertullian's name in
the mss. Of J. Gangneius, who was the first to edit it; in a Malmesbury ms.
which Sig. Gelenius used; and in others.
12. A Book addressed to a Philosophic Friend on the Straits of Matrimony. Both
Kaye and Oehler50 are in doubt whether Jerome's words,51 by which some have been
led to conclude that Tertullian wrote some book or books on this and kindred
subjects, really imply as much, or whether they may not refer merely to those
tracts and passages in his extant writings which touch upon such matters. Kaye
hesitates to think that the "Book to a Philosophic Friend" is the same as the de
Exhortatiotce Castitatis, because Jerome says Tertullian wrote on the subject of
celibacy "in his youth;" but as Cave takes what Jerome elsewhere says of
Tertullian's leaving the Church "about the middle of his age" to mean his
spiritual age, the same sense might attach to his words here too, and thus
obviate the Bishop's difficulty.
There are some other works which have been attributed to Tertullian-on
Circumcision; on Animals Clean and Unclean; on the truth that God is a
Judge-which Oehler likewise rejects, believing that the expressions of Jerome
refer only to passages in the Anti-Marcion and other extant works. To Novatian
Jerome does ascribe a distinct work on Circumcision,52 and this may (camp. II.
just above) have given rise to the view that Tertullian had written one also.
There were, moreover, three treatises at least written by Tertullian in Greek.
They are:
1. A Book on Public Shows. See de Car. c. 6.
2. A Book on Baptism. See de Rapt. c. 15.
3. A Book on the Veiling of Virgins. See de V. V. c. I.
Oehler adds that J. Pamelius, in his epistle dedicatory to Philip II. of Spain,
makes mention of a Greek copy of Tertullian in the library of that king. This
report, however, since nothing has ever been seen or heard of the said copy from
that time, Oehler judges to be erroneous.53
It remains briefly to notice the confessedly spurious works which the editions
of Tertullian generally have appended to them. With these Kaye does not deal.
The fragment, adv. omnes Overuses, Oehler attributes to Victorinus Petavionensis,
i.e., Victorinus bishop of Pettaw, on the Drave, in Austrian Styria. It was once
thought he ought to be called Pictaviensis, i.e. of Poictcers; but John Launoy54
has shown this to be an errors Victorinus is said by Jerome to have "understood
Greek better than Latin; hence his works are excellent for the sense, but mean
as to the style."55 Cave believes him to have beer a Greek by birth.
Cassiodorus56 states him to have been once a professor of rhetoric. Jerome's
statement agrees with the style of the tract in question; and Jerome distinctly
says Victorinus did write adversus omnes Haereses. Allix leaves the question of
its authorship quite uncertain. If Victorinus be the author, the book falls
clearly within the Ante-Nicene period; for Victorinus fell a martyr in the
Diocletian persecution, probably about a.d. 303.
The next fragment-"Of the Execrable Gods of the Heathens"-is of quite uncertain
authorship. Oehler would attribute it "to some declaimer not quite ignorant of
Tertullian's writings," but certainly not to Tertullian himself.
Lastly we come to the metrical fragments. Concerning these, it is perhaps
impossible to assign them to their rightful owners. Oehler has not troubled
himself much about them; but he seems to regard the Jonah as worthy of more
regard than the rest, for he seems to have intended giving more labour to its
editing at some future time. Whether he has ever done so, or given us his German
version of Tertullian's own works, which, "si Deus adjuverit," he distinctly
promises in his preface, I do not know. Perhaps the best thing to be done under
the circumstances is to give the judgment of the learned Peter Allix. It may be
premised that by the celebrated George Fabricius57 -who published his great
work, Poetarum Veterum Ecclesiasticorum Opera Christiana, etc., in 1564-the Five
Books in Reply to Marcion, and the Judgment of the lord, are ascribed to
Tertullian, the Genesis and Sodom to Cyprian. Pamelius likewise seems to have
ascribed the Five Books, the Jonah, and the Sodom58 to Tertullian; and according
to Lardner, Bishop Bull likewise attributed the Five Books to him.59 They have
been generally ascribed to the Victorinus above mentioned. Tillemont, among
others, thinks they may well enough be his60 Rigaltius is content to demonstrate
that they are not Tertullian's, but leaves the real authorship without
attempting to decide it. Of the others the same eminent critic says, "They seem
to have been written at Carthage, at an age not far removed from Tertullian's."61
Allix, after observing that Pamelius is inconsistent with himself in attributing
the Genesis and Sodom at one time to Tertullian, at another to Cyprian, rejects
both views equally, and assigns the Genesis with some confidence to Salvian, a
presbyter of Marseilles, whose "floruit" Cave gives cir. 440, a contemporary of
Gennadius, and a copious author. To this it is, Allix thinks, that Gennadius
alludes in his Catalogue of Illustrious Men. c. 77.
The Judgment of the Lord Allix ascribes to one Verecundus, an African bishop,
whose date he finds it difficult to decide exactly. He refers to two of the
name: one Bishop of Tunis, whom Victor of Tunis in his chronicle mentions as
having died in exile at Chalcedon A.D. 552; the other Bishop of Noba, who
visited Carthage with many others A.D. 482, at the summons of King Huneric, to
answer there for their faith;-and would ascribe the poem to the former, thinking
that he finds an allusion to it in the article upon that Verecundus in the de
Viris Illustribus of Isidore of Seville. Oehler agrees with him. The Five Books
Allix seems to hint may be attributed to some imitator of the Victorinus of
Pettaw named above. Oehler attributes them rather to one Victorinus, or Victor,
of Marseilles, a rhetorician, who died a.d. 450. He appears in G. Fabricius as
Claudius Marius Victorinus, writer of a Commentary on Genesis, and an epistle ad
Salomonem Abbata, both in verse, and of some considerable length.