The Writings of Cyprian
Letters and Treatises
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A Bishop, a Pastor, and a Church under Persecution
The letters and treatises of Cyprian of Carthage offer an unparalleled view of Christian leadership during one of the most turbulent periods of the early church.
Includes all letters and twelve treatises traditionally found in Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 5
Addresses persecution, repentance, martyrdom, church unity, and ecclesial authority
Major works such as On the Unity of the Church, On the Lapsed, and On the Lord’s Prayer
Essential source for understanding third-century Latin Christianity
Carefully modernized English for clarity and sustained reading
Cyprian of Carthage (d. 258) served as bishop during sustained imperial persecution and internal ecclesial crisis. His letters reveal a pastor navigating disputes over discipline, authority, and reconciliation, especially in the aftermath of persecution when questions surrounding the lapsed threatened the unity of the church. These writings preserve the voice of a bishop actively governing, correcting, and encouraging his communities.
The twelve treatises in this volume develop Cyprian’s theological vision in close connection with lived experience. Works such as On the Unity of the Church and On the Lapsed articulate a strong ecclesiology grounded in episcopal responsibility, while On Mortality, On Works and Alms, and On the Advantage of Patience address suffering, repentance, and Christian virtue. Exhortation to Martyrdom, Addressed to Fortunatus offers a direct and urgent appeal to faithfulness in the face of death.
Other treatises engage the surrounding cultural and religious environment. An Address to Demetrianus and On the Vanity of Idols respond to pagan criticism of Christianity, while The Testimonies against the Jews reflects early Christian interpretation of Scripture and its application to debates about Christ and Israel. Together, these works present Cyprian as both a theologian and a working bishop shaped by crisis rather than abstraction.
This edition updates the classic Ante-Nicene Fathers translations into clear, readable modern English while preserving Cyprian’s argumentation and rhetoric. It is intended for readers who want reliable access to primary pre-Nicene sources without the obstacles of nineteenth-century prose.
This revision was prepared through an AI-assisted process, combining digital tools with traditional editorial work.