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Cyprian
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Introductory Notice to Cyprian.
[4839] [Ps. lxiv. 3. The revilings of the multitude are reckoned by the Psalmist among the most cruel tortures of Christ; and we cannot doubt that the early Christians found the like cruelty of the heathen a daily martyrdom, before they came to their crowning passion. Compare Tertullian, vol. iii. p. 712.]
[4842] “Coguntur,” or “coquuntur,”—“are matured.”
[4843] [The heathen attributed this pestilence to the “atheism” of Christians, and hence persecuted them the more fiercely; and, as it was better to die by martyrdom than by the pestilence, he thus speaks. Death an advantage. Shaks., Hen. V., act. iv. sc. 1.]
[4845] Wisd. iii. 7.
[4846] [The sufferings of this life are here supposed to be retributive in the case of those who must be weaned from the world. Martyrs have weaned themselves, and go gladly to their rest.]
[4847] Ecclesiasticus 2.1.
[4849] [The terrible pictures in S. Stefano Rotondo (see p. 288, supra) might seem to have been taken from this graphic treatise. Can our faith and love be compared with that of these sufferers?]
[4850] [To me, these dramatic narrations of what was going on among the crowds that gazed upon the tortures of Christ’s witnesses, are very suggestive of the whole scene. Compare pp. 295–296, supra.]
[4851] Ecclesiasticus 2.4.
[4852] Or, “earth.”
[4853] Wisd. iii. 4.
[4857] [The adoption of “the sign of the cross,” after the immersion of baptism, is referable to this martyr-age. It was meant to impress the idea of soldiership.]
[4858] Matt. iii. 10. [Elucidation II.]
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