有声读物: Epistles of Cyprian
Epistles of Cyprian
1 - The Life and Passion of Cyprian, Bishop and Martyr by Pontius the Deacon
- Download The Life and Passion of Cyprian, Bishop and Martyr by Pontius the Deacon audio
- Download To Donatus [AD 246] audio
- Download To the Carthaginian clergy from the clergy of Rome, about Cyprian's retirement [AD 250] audio
- Download To the presbyters and deacons abiding at Rome [AD 250] audio
- Download To the presbyters and deacons of Carthage [AD 250] audio
- Download To the same [AD 250] audio
- Download To Rogatianus the presbyter, and the other confessors [AD 250] audio
- Download To the clergy, concerning prayer to God [AD 250] audio
- Download To the Martyrs and confessors [AD 250] audio
- Download To the clergy, concerning granting peace to the lapsed prematurely, without the privity of the bishops [AD 250] audio
- Download To the martyrs and confessors who sought that peace should be granted to the lapsed [AD 250] audio
- Download To his people [AD 250] audio
- Download To the clergy, concerning the lapsed and catechumens, that they should not be left without superintendence [AD 250] audio
- Download To the clergy, concerning those who were in haste to receive peace [AD 250] audio
- Download To the presbyters and deacons assembled at Rome [AD 250] audio
- Download To Moyses and Maximus, and the rest of the confessors [AD 250] audio
- Download The confessors to Cyprian [AD 250] audio
- Download To the presbyters and deacons about the foregoing and following letters [AD 250] audio
- Download Caldonius to Cyprian [AD 250] audio
- Download Cyprian to Caldonius [AD 250] audio
- Download Celerinus to Lucian [AD 250] audio
- Download Lucian to Celerinus [AD 250] audio
- Download To the clergy at Rome, concerning the confessors, and the forwardness of Lucian, and the modesty of Celerinus [AD 250] audio
- Download To the clergy, on the letters sent to Rome; and about the appointment of Saturus as reader and Optatus as subdeacon [AD 250] audio
- Download To Moyses and Maximus and the rest of the confessors [AD 250] audio
- Download Moyses, Maximus, Nicostratus, and the other confessors, in reply [AD 250] audio
- Download Cyprian to the lapsed [AD 250] audio
- Download To the presbyters and deacons [AD 250] audio
- Download To the presbyters and deacons abiding at Rome [AD 250] audio
- Download The presbyters and deacons abiding at Rome to Cyprian [AD 250] audio
- Download The Roman clergy to Cyprian [AD 250] audio
- Download To the Carthaginian clergy, about the letters sent to Rome and received thence [AD 250] audio
- Download To the clergy and people about the ordination of Aurelius as a reader [AD 250] audio
- Download To the same about the ordination of Celerinus as a reader [AD 250] audio
- Download To the same about the ordination of Numidicus as presbyter [AD 250] audio
- Download To the clergy, concerning the case of the poor and strangers [AD 250] audio
- Download To the clergy, bidding them show every kindness to the confessors in prison [AD 251 or 250] audio
- Download To Caldonius, Herculanus, and others, about the Excommunication of Felicissimus [AD 250] audio
- Download Caldonius, Herculanus, and others, on the Excommunication of Felicissimus with his people [AD 251] audio
- Download To the people, concerning five schismatic presbyters of the faction of Felicissimus [AD 251] audio
- Download To Cornelius on his refusal to receive Novatian's ordination [AD 251] audio
- Download To Cornelius about Cyprian's approval of his ordination, and concerning Felicissimus [AD 251] audio
- Download To the same on his having sent letters to the confessors whom Novatian had seduced [AD 251] audio
- Download To the Roman confessors, urging their return to unity [AD 251] audio
- Download To Cornelius, concerning Polycarp the Adrumetine [AD 251] audio
- Download Cornelius to Cyprian on the return of the confessors to unity [AD 251] audio
- Download Cyprian to Cornelius, congratulating him on the return of the confessors from schism [AD 251] audio
- Download Cornelius to Cyprian, concerning the faction of Novatian with his party [AD 251] audio
- Download Cyprian's answer to Cornelius concerning the crimes of Novatus [AD 251] audio
- Download Maximus and the other confessors to Cyprian about their return from schism [AD 251] audio
- Download Cyprian to the confessors, congratulating them on their return from schism [AD 252] audio
- Download To Antonianus about Cornelius and Novatian [AD 252] audio
- Download To Fortunatus and his other colleagues concerning those who had been overcome by tortures [AD 252] audio
- Download To Cornelius, concerning granting peace to the lapsed [AD 252] audio
- Download To Cornelius, concerning Fortunatus and Felicissimus, or against the heretics [AD 252] audio
- Download To the people of Thibaris, exhorting to martyrdom [AD 252] audio
- Download To Cornelius in exile, concerning his confession [AD 252] audio
- Download To Lucius, bishop of Rome, returned from banishment [AD 252] audio
- Download To Fidus on the baptism of infants [AD 253] audio
- Download To the Numidian bishops on the redemption of their brethren from captivity among the barbarians [AD 253] audio
- Download To Euchratius about an actor [probably AD 249] audio
- Download To Pomponius, concerning some virgins [probably AD 249] audio
- Download To Caecilius on the sacrament of the cup of the Lord [AD 253] audio
- Download To Epictetus and the congregation at Assurae, concerning Fortunatianus, formerly their bishop [AD 253] audio
- Download To Rogatianus, concerning the deacon who contended against the bishop [AD 249 or AD 253] audio
- Download To the clergy and people at Furni, about Victor, who had made the presbyter Faustinus a guardian [AD 249] audio
- Download To Pope Stephanus, concerning Marcion of Arles, who had joined himself to Novatian [AD 254] audio
- Download To the clergy and people abiding in Spain, concerning Basilides and Martial [AD 254] audio
- Download To Florentius Pupianus, on calumniators [AD 254] audio
- Download To Januarius and other Numidian bishops on baptizing heretics [AD 255] audio
- Download To Quintus, concerning the baptism of heretics [AD 255] audio
- Download To Pope Stephen, concerning a council [AD 255] audio
- Download To Jubaianus, concerning the baptism of heretics [AD 256] audio
- Download To Pompey, against the epistle of Stephen about the baptism of heretics [AD 256] audio
- Download Firmilian, bishop of Caesarea in Cappadocia, to Cyprian, against the letter of Stephen [AD 256] audio
- Download To Magnus on baptizing the Novatians, and those who obtain grace on a sick-bed [AD 255] audio
- Download Cyprian to Nemesianus, and other martyrs in the mines [AD 257] audio
- Download Reply of Nemesianus and others to Cyprian [AD 257] audio
- Download Reply of Lucius and the rest to the same [AD 257] audio
- Download Reply to Felix and the rest of the martyrs to the same [AD 257] audio
- Download Cyprian to Sergius Rogatianus and the other confessors in prison [AD 250 or AD 257] audio
- Download To Successus on the tidings of the persecution brought from Rome [AD 258] audio
- Download To his clergy and people, concerning his retirement a little before his martyrdom [AD 258] audio
有声读物类型
作者
描述
Little is known of the early history of Thascius Cyprian (born probably about 200 A.D.) until the period of his intimacy with the Carthaginian presbyter Cæcilius, which led to his conversion A.D. 246. That he was born of respectable parentage, and highly educated for the profession of a rhetorician, is all that can be said with any degree of certainty. At his baptism he assumed the name of his friend Cæcilius, and devoted him self, with all the energies of an ardent and vigorous mind, to the study and practice of Christianity. His ordination and his elevation to the episcopate rapidly followed his conversion. With some resistance on his own part, and not without great objections on the part of older presbyters, who saw themselves superseded by his promotion, the popular urgency constrained him to accept the office of bishop of Carthage [A.D. 248], which he held until his martyrdom [A.D. 258]. The writings of Cyprian, apart from their intrinsic worth, have a very considerable historical interest and value, as illustrating the social and religious feelings and usages that then prevailed among the members of the Christian community. Nothing can enable us more vividly to realize the intense convictions-the high-strained enthusiasm which formed the common level of the Christian experience, than does the indignation with which the prelate denounces the evasions of those who dared not confess, the lapses of those who shrank from martyrdom. Living in the atmosphere of persecution, and often in the immediate presence of a lingering death, the professors of Christianity were nerved up to a wonderful contempt of suffering and of worldly enjoyment, and saw every event that occurred around them in the glow of their excited imagination; so that many circumstances were sincerely believed and honestly recorded, which will not be for a moment received as true by the calm and critical reader. The account given by Cyprian in his treatise on the Lapsed may serve as an illustration, p. 368, vol. i. Of this Dean Milman observes: "In what a high wrought state of enthusiasm must men have been, who could relate and believe such statements as miraculous!" -Summary by Robert Ernest Wallis. As with all historical texts, the language used in this volume should be interpreted within the context of the entire work and the cultural context of its publication. - David Ronald
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