Contents:
The Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume 1 (Second
Century), The Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus
History of the Christian
Church. Philip Schaff, Volume III, CHAPTER III,
17. Legal Sanction of Sunday
The
Ante-Nicene Fathers
Volume 1 (Second Century)
The Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and
Irenaeus
The Ages Digital Library
Collections, The Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume 1
Edited by A. Roberts and J.
Donaldson
Books for the Ages,
Ages software • Albany, or USA
American Reprint of the
Edinburgh Edition
Volume 1, The Apostolic
Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus
American Edition,
Chronologically arranged, With Notes, Prefaces, and Elucidations, by A.
Cleveland Coxe, DD
The Nicene Council
The Ante-Nicene Fathers, The
Writings of the Fathers Down to A.D. 325
The Rev. Alexander Roberts,
D.D., And James Donaldson, LL.D., Editors
Edinburgh, 1867.
[Note: Bold
Underlines added by Editor]
PG 126-127
The Epistle of Ignatius to the Magnesians
Shorter and Longer
Versions.
Chapter 9
Let Us Live With Christ
[Shorter]
If, therefore, those who were
brought up in the ancient order of things have come to the possession of a new
hope, no longer observing the Sabbath, but living in the
observance of the Lord’s Day, on which also our life has sprung up
again by Him and by His death — whom some deny, by which mystery we have
obtained faith, and therefore endure, that we may be found the disciples of
Jesus Christ, our only Master — how shall we be able to live apart from Him,
whose disciples the prophets themselves in the Spirit did wait for Him as their
Teacher? And therefore He whom they rightly waited for, being come, raised them
from the dead.
[Longer]
If, then, those who were conversant with the ancient Scriptures came to
newness of hope, expecting the coming of Christ, as the Lord teaches us when
He says, “If ye had believed Moses, ye would have believed Me, for he wrote
of Me;” and again, “Your father Abraham rejoiced to see My day, and he saw
it, and was glad; for before Abraham was, I am;” how shall we be able to
live without Him? The prophets were His servants, and foresaw Him by the
Spirit, and waited for Him as their Teacher, and expected Him as their Lord
and Savior, saying, “He will come and save us.” Let us therefore no longer
keep the Sabbath after the Jewish manner, and rejoice in days
of idleness; for “he that does not work, let him not eat.” For say the
[holy] oracles, “In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat thy bread.” But let
every one of you keep the Sabbath after a spiritual manner,
rejoicing in meditation on the law, not in relaxation of the body, admiring
the workmanship of God, and not eating things prepared the day before, nor
using lukewarm drinks, and walking within a prescribed space, nor finding
delight in dancing and plaudits which have no sense in them. And after the
observance of the Sabbath, let every friend of Christ keep the
Lord’s Day as a festival, the resurrection-day, the queen and
chief of all the days [of the week]. Looking forward to this, the prophet
declared, “To the end, for the eighth day,” on which our life both sprang up
again, and the victory over death was obtained in Christ, whom the children
of perdition, the enemies of the Savior, deny, “whose God is their belly,
who mind earthly things,” who are “lovers of pleasure, and not lovers of
God, having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof.” These
makemerchandise of Christ, corrupting His word, and giving up Jesus to
sale:they are corrupters of women, and covetous of other men’s possessions,
swallowing up wealth insatiably; from whom may ye be delivered by the mercy
of God through our Lord Jesus Christ!
Pgs 140-141
The Epistle of Ignatius to the Trallians
Chapter 9
Reference to the History of
Christ
[Shorter]
Stop your ears, therefore,
when any one speaks to you at variance with Jesus Christ, who was descended from
David, and was also of Mary; who was truly born, and did eat and drink. He was
truly persecuted under Pontius Pilate; He was truly crucified, and [truly] died,
in the sight of beings in heaven, and on earth, and under the earth. He was also
truly raised from the dead, His Father quickening Him, even as after the same
manner His Father will so raise up us who believe in Him by Christ Jesus, apart
from whom we do not possess the true life.
[Longer]
Stop your ears, therefore,
when any one speaks to you at variance with Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who
was descended from David, and was also of Mary; who was truly begotten of God
and of the Virgin, but not after the same manner. For indeed God and man are not
the same. He truly assumed a body; for “the Word was made flesh,” and lived upon
earth without sin. For says He, “Which of you convicteth me of sin?” He did in
reality both eat and drink. He was crucified and died under Pontius Pilate. He
really, and not merely in appearance, was crucified, and died, in the sight of
beings in heaven, and on earth, and under the earth. By those in heaven I mean
such as are possessed of incorporeal natures; by those on earth, the Jews and
Romans, and such persons as were present at that time when the Lord was
crucified; and by those under the earth, the multitude that arose along with the
Lord. For says the Scripture, “Many bodies of the saints that slept arose,”
their graves being opened. He descended, indeed, into Hades alone, but He arose
accompanied by a multitude; and rent asunder that means of separation which had
existed from the beginning of the world, and cast down its partition-wall. He
also rose again in three days, the Father raising Him up; and after spending
forty days with the apostles, He was received up to the Father, and “sat down at
His right hand, expecting till His enemies are placed under His feet.” On the
day of the preparation, then, at the third hour, He received the sentence from
Pilate, the Father permitting that to happen; at the sixth hour He was
crucified; at the ninth hour He gave up the ghost; and before sunset He was
buried. During the Sabbath He continued under the earth in the tomb in which
Joseph of Arimathaea had laid Him. At the dawning of the Lord’s day
He arose from the dead, according to what was spoken by Himself, “As Jonah was
three days and three nights in the whale’s belly, so shall the Son of man also
be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.” The day of the
preparation, then, comprises the passion; the Sabbath embraces the
burial; the Lord’s Day contains the resurrection.
Pgs 230-231
Chapter 13
Various Exhortations and
Directions
These things, brethren, out of
the affection which I entertain for you, I have felt compelled to write,
exhorting you with a view to the glory of God, not as if I were a person of any
consequence, but simply as a brother. Be ye subject to the bishop, to the
presbyters, and to the deacons. Love one another in the Lord, as being the
images of God. Take heed, ye husbands, that ye love your wives as your own
members. Ye wives also, love your husbands, as being one with them in virtue of
your union. If any one lives in chastity or continence, let him not be lifted
up, lest he lose his reward. Do not lightly esteem the festivals. Despise not
the period of forty days, for it comprises an imitation of the conduct of the
Lord. After the week of the passion, do not neglect to fast on the fourth and
sixth days, distributing at the same time of thine abundance to the poor. If any
one fasts on the Lord’s Day or on the Sabbath,
except on the paschal Sabbath only, he is a murderer of Christ.
Pgs 343-344
The First Apology of Justin Martyr
Chapter 67
Weekly Worship of the Christians
And we afterwards continually
remind each other of these things. And the wealthy among us help the needy; and
we always keep together; and for all things wherewith we are supplied, we bless
the Maker of all through His Son Jesus Christ, and through the Holy Ghost. And
on the day called Sunday, all who live in cities or in the country
gather together to one place, and the memoirs of the apostles or the writings of
the prophets are read, as long as time permits; then, when the reader has
ceased, the president verbally instructs, and exhorts to the imitation of these
good things. Then we all rise together and pray, and, as we before said, when
our prayer is ended, bread and wine and water are brought, and the president in
like manner offers prayers and thanksgivings, according to his ability, and the
people assent, saying Amen; and there is a distribution to each, and a
participation of that over which thanks have been given, and to those who are
absent a portion is sent by the deacons. And they who are well to do, and
willing, give what each thinks fit; and what is collected is deposited with the
president, who succors the orphans and widows and those who, through sickness or
any other cause, are in want, and those who are in bonds and the strangers
sojourning among us, and in a word takes care of all who are in need. But
Sunday is the day on which we all hold our common assembly, because it
is the first day on which God, having wrought a change in the darkness and
matter, made the world; and Jesus Christ our Savior on the same day rose from
the dead. For He was crucified on the day before that of Saturn (Saturday); and
on the day after that of Saturn, which is the day of the Sun, having appeared to
His apostles and disciples, He taught them these things, which we have submitted
to you also for your consideration.
Pg 393-394
Dialogue of Justin, Philosopher and Martyr, with
Trypho, a Jew
Chapter 27
Why God Taught the Same Things by the Prophets
as by Moses
And Trypho said, “Why do you
select and quote whatever you wish from the prophetic writings, but do not refer
to those which expressly command the Sabbath to be observed? For
Isaiah thus speaks: ‘If thou shalt turn away thy foot from the Sabbaths,
so as not to do thy pleasure on the holy day, and shalt call the Sabbaths
the holy delights of thy God; if thou shalt not lift thy foot to work, and shalt
not speak a word from thine own mouth; then thou shalt trust in the Lord, and He
shall cause thee to go up to the good things of the land; and He shall feed thee
with the inheritance of Jacob thy father: for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken
it.’”
And I replied, “I have passed
them by, my friends, not because such prophecies were contrary to me, but
because you have understood, and do understand, that although God commands you
by all the prophets to do the same things which He also commanded by Moses, it
was on account of the hardness of your hearts, and your ingratitude towards Him,
that He continually proclaims them, in order that, even in this way, if you
repented, you might please Him, and neither sacrifice your children to demons,
nor be partakers with thieves, nor lovers of gifts, nor hunters after revenge,
nor fail in doing judgment for orphans, nor be inattentive to the justice due to
the widow nor have your hands full of blood. ‘For the daughters of Zion have
walked with a high neck, both sporting by winking with their eyes, and sweeping
along their dresses. For they are all gone aside,’ He exclaims, ‘they are all
become useless. There is none that understands, there is not so much as one.
With their tongues they have practiced deceit, their throat is an open
sepulcher, the poison of asps is under their lips, destruction and misery are in
their paths, and the way of peace they have not known.’ So that, as in the
beginning, these things were enjoined you because of your wickedness, in like
manner because of your steadfastness in it, or rather your increased proneness
to it, by means of the same precepts He calls you to a remembrance or knowledge
of it. But you are a people hard-hearted and without understanding, both blind
and lame, children in whom is no faith, as He Himself says, honoring Him only
with your lips, far from Him in your hearts, teaching doctrines that are your
own and not His. For, tell me, did God wish the priests to sin when they offer
the sacrifices on the Sabbaths? or those to sin, who are
circumcised and do circumcise on the Sabbaths; since He commands
that on the eighth day — even though it happen to be a Sabbath —
those who are born shall be always circumcised? or could not the infants be
operated upon one day previous or one day subsequent to the Sabbath, if He knew
that it is a sinful act upon the Sabbaths? Or why did He not teach those —
who are called righteous and pleasing to Him, who lived before Moses and
Abraham, who were not circumcised in their foreskin, and observed no Sabbaths —
to keep these institutions?”
Pg 410
Chapter 41
The Oblation of Fine Flour was a Figure of the
Eucharist
“And the offering of fine
flour, sirs,” I said, “which was prescribed to be presented on behalf of those
purified from leprosy, was a type of the bread of the Eucharist, the celebration
of which our Lord Jesus Christ prescribed, in remembrance of the suffering which
He endured on behalf of those who are purified in soul from all iniquity, in
order that we may at the same time thank God for having created the world, with
all things therein, for the sake of man, and for delivering us from the evil in
which we were, and for utterly overthrowing principalities and powers by Him who
suffered according to His will. Hence God speaks by the mouth of Malachi, one of
the twelve [prophets], as I said before, about the sacrifices at that time
presented by you: ‘I have no pleasure in you, saith the Lord; and I will not
accept your sacrifices at your hands: for, from the rising of the sun unto the
going down of the same, My name has been glorified among the Gentiles, and in
every place incense is offered to My name, and a pure offering: for My name is
great among the Gentiles, saith the Lord: but ye profane it.’ [So] He then
speaks of those Gentiles, namely us, who in every place offer sacrifices to Him,
i.e., the bread of the Eucharist, and also the cup of the Eucharist, affirming
both that we glorify His name, and that you profane [it]. The command of
circumcision, again, bidding [them] always circumcise the children on the eighth
day, was a type of the true circumcision, by which we are circumcised from
deceit and iniquity through Him who rose from the dead on the first day after
the Sabbath, [namely through] our Lord Jesus Christ. For the first
day after the Sabbath, remaining the first of all the days, is
called, however, the eighth, according to the number of all the days of the
cycle, and [yet] remains the first.
Pg 412
Chapter 43
He Concludes that the Law Had an End in Christ,
Who was Born of the Virgin
“As, then, circumcision began
with Abraham, and the Sabbath and sacrifices and offerings and
feasts with Moses, and it has been proved they were enjoined on account of the
hardness of your people’s heart, so it was necessary, in accordance with the
Father’s will, that they should have an end in Him who was born of a virgin, of
the family of Abraham and tribe of Judah, and of David; in Christ the Son of
God, who was proclaimed as about to come to all the world, to be the everlasting
law and the everlasting covenant, even as the forementioned prophecies show. And
we, who have approached God through Him, have received not carnal, but spiritual
circumcision, which Enoch and those like him observed. And we have received it
through baptism, since we were sinners, by God’s mercy; and all men may equally
obtain it. But since the mystery of His birth now demands our attention I shall
speak of it. Isaiah then asserted in regard to the generation of Christ, that it
could not be declared by man, in words already quoted: ‘Who shall declare His
generation? for His life is taken from the earth: for the transgressions of my
people was He led to death.’ The Spirit of prophecy thus affirmed that the
generation of Him who was to die, that we sinful men might be healed by His
stripes, was such as could not be declared. Furthermore, that the men who
believe in Him may possess the knowledge of the manner in which He came into the
world, the Spirit of prophecy by the same Isaiah foretold how it would happen
thus: ‘And the Lord spoke again to Ahaz, saying, Ask for thyself a sign from the
Lord thy God, in the depth, or in the height. And Ahaz said, I will not ask,
neither will I tempt the Lord. And Isaiah said, Hear then, O house of David; Is
it a small thing for you to contend with men, and how do you contend with the
Lord? Therefore the Lord Himself will give you a sign. Behold, the virgin shall
conceive, and shall bear a son, and his name shall be called Immanuel. Butter
and honey shall he eat, before he knows or prefers the evil, and chooses out the
good; for before the child knows good or ill, he rejects evil by choosing out
the good. For before the child knows how to call father or mother, he shall
receive the power of Damascus and the spoil of Samaria in presence of the king
of Assyria. And the land shall be forsaken, which thou shalt with difficulty
endure in consequence of the presence of its two kings. But God shall bring on
thee, and on thy people, and on the house of thy father, days which have not yet
come upon thee since the day in which Ephraim took away from Judah the king of
Assyria.’ Now it is evident to all, that in the race of Abraham according to the
flesh no one has been born of a virgin, or is said to have been born [of a
virgin], save this our Christ. But since you and your teachers venture to affirm
that in the prophecy of Isaiah it is not said, ‘Behold, the virgin shall
conceive,’ but, ‘Behold, the young woman shall conceive, and bear a son;’ and
[since] you explain the prophecy as if [it referred] to Hezekiah, who was your
king, I shall endeavor to discuss shortly this point in opposition to you, and
to show that reference is made to Him who is acknowledged by us as Christ.
Pg 417
Chapter 47
Justin Communicates with Christians Who Observe
the Law. Not a Few Catholics Do Otherwise
And Trypho again inquired,
“But if some one, knowing that this is so, after he recognizes that this man is
Christ, and has believed in and obeys Him, wishes, however, to observe these
[institutions], will he be saved?”
I said, “In my opinion, Trypho,
such an one will be saved, if he does not strive in every way to persuade other
men, — I mean those Gentiles who have been circumcised from error by Christ, to
observe the same things as himself, telling them that they will not be saved
unless they do so. This you did yourself at the commencement of the discourse,
when you declared that I would not be saved unless I observe these
institutions.”
Then he replied, “Why then
have you said, ‘In my opinion, such an one will be saved,’ unless there are some
who affirm that such will not be saved?”
“There are such people, Trypho,”
I answered; “and these do not venture to have any intercourse with or to extend
hospitality to such persons; but I do not agree with them. But if some, through
weak-mindedness, wish to observe such institutions as were given by Moses, from
which they expect some virtue, but which we believe were appointed by reason of
the hardness of the people’s hearts, along with their hope in this Christ, and
[wish to perform] the eternal and natural acts of righteousness and piety, yet
choose to live with the Christians and the faithful, as I said before, not
inducing them either to be circumcised like themselves, or to keep the
Sabbath, or to observe any other such ceremonies, then I hold that we
ought to join ourselves to such, and associate with them in all things as
kinsmen and brethren. But if, Trypho,” I continued, “some of your race, who say
they believe in this Christ, compel those Gentiles who believe in this Christ to
live in all respects according to the law given by Moses, or choose not to
associate so intimately with them, I in like manner do not approve of them. But
I believe that even those, who have been persuaded by them to observe the legal
dispensation along with their confession of God in Christ, shall probably be
saved. And I hold, further, that such as have confessed and known this man to be
Christ, yet who have gone back from some cause to the legal dispensation, and
have denied that this man is Christ, and have repented not before death, shall
by no means be saved. Further, I hold that those of the seed of Abraham who live
according to the law, and do not believe in this Christ before death, shall
likewise not be saved, and especially those who have anathematized and do
anathematize this very Christ in the synagogues, and everything by which they
might obtain salvation and escape the vengeance of fire. For the goodness and
the loving-kindness of God, and His boundless riches, hold righteous and sinless
the man who, as Ezekiel tells, repents of sins; and reckons sinful, unrighteous,
and impious the man who fails away from piety and righteousness to
unrighteousness and ungodliness. Wherefore also our Lord Jesus Christ said, ‘In
whatsoever things I shall take you, in these I shall judge you.’”
Pg 476
Chapter 92
Unless the Scriptures Be Understood Through
God’s Great Grace, God Will Not Appear to Have Taught Always the Same
Righteousness.
“Unless, therefore, a man by God’s great grace receives the
power to understand what has been said and done by the prophets, the appearance
of being able to repeat the words or the deeds will not profit him, if he cannot
explain the argument of them. And will they not assuredly appear contemptible to
many, since they are related by those who understood them not? For if one should
wish to ask you why, since Enoch, Noah with his sons, and all others in similar
circumstances, who neither were circumcised nor kept the Sabbath,
pleased God, God demanded by other leaders, and by the giving of the law after
the lapse of so many generations, that those who lived between the times of
Abraham and of Moses be justified by circumcision, and that those who lived
after Moses be justified by circumcision and the other ordinances — to wit, the
Sabbath, and sacrifices, and libations, and offerings; [God will
be slandered] unless you show, as I have already said, that God who foreknew was
aware that your nation would deserve expulsion from Jerusalem, and that none
would be permitted to enter into it.(For you are not distinguished in any other
way than by the fleshly circumcision, as I remarked previously. For Abraham was
declared by God to be righteous, not on account of circumcision, but on account
of faith. For before he was circumcised the following statement was made
regarding him: ‘Abraham believed God, and it was accounted unto him for
righteousness.’ And we, therefore, in the uncircumcision of our flesh, believing
God through Christ, and having that circumcision which is of advantage to us who
have acquired it — namely, that of the heart — we hope to appear righteous
before and well-pleasing to God: since already we have received His testimony
through the words of the prophets.) [And, further, God will be slandered unless
you show] that you were commanded to observe the Sabbath, and to
present offerings, and that the Lord submitted to have a place called by the
name of God, in order that, as has been said, you might not become impious and
godless by worshipping idols and forgetting God, as indeed you do always appear
to have been. (Now, that God enjoined the ordinances of Sabbaths
and offerings for these reasons, I have proved in what I previously remarked;
but for the sake of those who came to-day, I wish to repeat nearly the whole.)
For if this is not the case, God will be slandered, as having no foreknowledge,
and as not teaching all men to know and to do the same acts of righteousness
(for many generations of men appear to have existed before Moses); and the
Scripture is not true which affirms that ‘God is true and righteous, and all His
ways are judgments, and there is no unrighteousness in him.’ But since the
Scripture is true, God is always willing that such even as you be neither
foolish nor lovers of yourselves, in order that you may obtain the salvation of
Christ, who pleased God, and received testimony from Him, as I have already
said, by alleging proof from the holy words of prophecy.
Pgs 959-960
Irenaeus Against Heresies
Book 4
Chapter 16
Perfect Righteousness was Conferred Neither by
Circumcision Nor by any Other Legal Ceremonies.
The Decalogue, However, was Not Canceled by
Christ, But Is Always in Force: Men Were Never Released From Its Commandments
1. Moreover, we learn
from the Scripture itself, that God gave circumcision, not as the completer of
righteousness, but as a sign, that the race of Abraham might continue
recognizable. For it declares: “God said unto Abraham, Every male among you
shall be circumcised; and ye shall circumcise the flesh of your foreskins, as a
token of the covenant between Me and you.” This same does Ezekiel the prophet
say with regard to the Sabbaths: “Also I gave them My
Sabbaths, to be a sign between Me and them, that they might know that I
am the Lord, that sanctify them.” And in Exodus, God says to Moses: “And ye
shall observe My Sabbaths; for it shall be a sign between Me and you for your
generations.” These things, then, were given for a sign; but the signs were not
unsymbolical, that is, neither unmeaning nor to no purpose, inasmuch as they
were given by a wise Artist; but the circumcision after the flesh typified that
after the Spirit. For “we,” says the apostle, “have been circumcised with the
circumcision made without hands.” And the prophet declares, “Circumcise the
hardness of your heart.” But the Sabbaths taught that we should
continue day by day in God’s service. “For we have been counted,” says the
Apostle Paul, “all the day long as sheep for the slaughter;” that is,
consecrated [to God], and ministering continually to our faith, and persevering
in it, and abstaining from all avarice, and not acquiring or possessing
treasures upon earth. Moreover, the Sabbath of God (requietio
Dei), that is, the kingdom, was, as it were, indicated by created things; in
which [kingdom], the man who shall have persevered in serving God (Deo
assistere) shall, in a state of rest, partake of God’s table.
2. And that man was not
justified by these things, but that they were given as a sign to the people,
this fact shows, — that Abraham himself, without circumcision and without
observance of Sabbaths, “believed God, and it was imputed unto him
for righteousness; and he was called the friend of God.” Then, again, Lot,
without circumcision, was brought out from Sodom, receiving salvation from God.
So also did Noah, pleasing God, although he was uncircumcised, receive the
dimensions [of the ark], of the world of the second race [of men]. Enoch, too,
pleasing God, without circumcision, discharged the office of God’s legate to the
angels although he was a man, and was translated, and is preserved until now as
a witness of the just judgment of God, because the angels when they had
transgressed fell to the earth for judgment, but the man who pleased [God] was
translated for salvation. Moreover, all the rest of the multitude of those
righteous men who lived before Abraham, and of those patriarchs who preceded
Moses, were justified independently of the things above mentioned, and without
the law of Moses. As also Moses himself says to the people in Deuteronomy: “The
LORD thy God formed a covenant in Horeb. The LORD formed not this covenant with
your fathers, but for you.”
Pg 1142
Fragments From the Lost Writings of Irenaeus
7
This [custom], of not bending
the knee upon Sunday, is a symbol of the resurrection, through
which we have been set free, by the grace of Christ, from sins, and from death,
which has been put to death under Him. Now this custom took its rise from
apostolic times, as the blessed Irenaeus, the martyr and bishop of Lyons,
declares in his treatise On Easter, in which he makes mention of
Pentecost also; upon which [feast] we do not bend the knee, because it is of
equal significance with the Lord’s day, for the reason already alleged
concerning it.
Constantine’s
Legal Sanction of Sunday
http://www.ccel.org/s/schaff/history/3_ch03.htm
History of the Christian
Church. Philip
Schaff,
Volume III
THIRD PERIOD
THE CHURCH IN UNION WITH THE
ROMAN EMPIRE
FROM CONSTANTINE THE GREAT
TO GREGORY THE GREAT.
a.d.
311–590.
CHAPTER III.
ALLIANCE OF CHURCH AND STATE
AND ITS INFLUENCE ON PUBLIC MORALS AND RELIGION.
§ 17. Legal Sanction of
Sunday.
7. The civil sanction of the
observance of Sunday and other festivals of the church.
The state, indeed, should
not and cannot enforce this observance upon any one, but may undoubtedly and
should prohibit the public disturbance and profanation of the Christian Sabbath,
and protect the Christians in their right and duty of its proper observance.
Constantine in 321 forbade the sitting of courts and all secular labor in towns
on "the venerable day of the sun," as he expresses himself, perhaps with
reference at once to the sun-god, Apollo, and to Christ, the true Sun of
righteousness; to his pagan and his Christian subjects. But he distinctly
permitted the culture of farms and vineyards in the country, because frequently
this could be attended to on no other day so well;165
though one would suppose that the hard-working peasantry were the very ones who
most needed the day of rest. Soon afterward, in June, 321, he allowed the
manumission of slaves on Sunday;166
as this, being an act of benevolence, was different from ordinary business, and
might be altogether appropriate to the day of resurrection and redemption.
According to Eusebius, Constantine also prohibited all military exercises on
Sunday, and at the same time enjoined the observance of Friday in memory of the
death of Christ.167
Nay, he went so far, in
well-meaning but mistaken zeal, as to require of his soldiers, even the pagan
ones, the positive observance of Sunday, by pronouncing at a signal the
following prayer, which they mechanically learned: "Thee alone we acknowledge as
God; thee we confess as king; to thee we call as our helper; from thee we have
received victories; through thee we have conquered enemies. Thee we thank for
good received; from thee we hope for good to come. Thee we all most humbly
beseech to keep our Constantine and his God-fearing sons through long life
healthy and victorious."168
Though this formula was held in a deistical generalness, yet the legal
injunction of it lay clearly beyond the province of the civil power, trespassed
on the rights of conscience, and unavoidably encouraged hypocrisy and empty
formalism.
Later emperors declared
the profanation of Sunday to be sacrilege, and prohibited also the
collecting of taxes and private debts (368 and 386), and even theatrical and
circus performances, on Sunday and the high festivals (386 and 425).169
But this interdiction of public amusements, on which a council of Carthage
(399 or 401) with reason insisted, was probably never rigidly enforced, and
was repeatedly supplanted by the opposite practice, which gradually
prevailed all over Europe.170
165
This exception is entirely
unnoticed by many church histories, but stands in the same law of 321 in the
Cod. Justin. lib. iii. tit. 12, de feriis, l. 3: "Omnes judices, urbanaeque
plebes, et cunctarum artium officia venerabili die Solis quiescant. Ruri tamen
positi agrorum culturae libere licenterque inserviant: quoniam frequenter evenit,
ut non aptius alio die frumenta sulcis, aut vineae scrobibus mandentur, ne
occasione momenti pereat commoditas coelesti provisione concessa." Such work was
formerly permitted, too, on the pagan feast days. Comp. Virgil. Georg. i. v. 268
sqq. Cato, De re rust. c. 2.
166
Cod. Theodos. lib. ii. tit.
8. l. 1: "Emancipandi et manumittendi die festo cuncti licentiam habeant, et
super his rebus actus non prohibeantur."
167
Eus. Vit. Const. iv. 18-20.
Comp. Sozom. i. 8. In our times military parades and theatrical exhibitions in
Paris, Vienna, Berlin, and other European cities are so frequent on no other day
as on the Lord’s day! In France, political elections are usually held on the
Sabbath!
168
Eus. Vit. Const. l. iv. c.
20. The formulary was prescribed in the Latin language, as Eusebius says in c.
19. He is speaking of the whole army (comp. c. 18), and it may presumed that
many of the soldiers were heathen.
169
The second law against
opening theatres on Sundays and festivals (a.d.
425) in the Cod. Theodos. l. xv. tit. 7,
I.
5, says expressly: "Omni theatrorum atque circensium voluptate per universas
urbes ... denegata, totae Christianorum ac fidelium mentes Dei cultibus
occupentur."
170
As Chrysostom, at the end
of the fourth century and the beginning of the fifth, often complains that the
theatre is better attended than the church; so down to this day the same is true
in almost all the large cities on the continent of Europe. Only in England and
the United States, under the influence of Calvinism and Puritanism, are the
theatres closed on Sunday.