Donatist

From New World Encyclopedia
Location of Carthage, center of the Donatist controversy

The Donatist movement was a branch of Christianity in north Africa, eventually, deemed heretical which began in 311 C.E. and flourished for more than a century, surving numerous persecutions until it finally disappeared in the wake of the Muslim conquest. Centered in Carthage, the Donatists took their name from their bishop, called Donatus the Great, to distinguish him from several lesser figures of the same name and era.

The movement that would later be called Donatism originated in the African capital of Carthage, during the last great persecution of the Christian church by Emperor Diocletan in the early fourth century CE. It was characterized by a deterimation to face martyrdom rather than cooperate with the Roman authorities who sought to force Christians to surrender their holy scriptures and other sacred objects. They refused to recognize as bishop of Catharge a leader who had ordered Christians not to seek martydom, appointing they candidate, Donatus, instead.

After Constantine the Great legalized and supported the Christian faith, the Donatists declared that priests and bishops who had cooperated with Rome during the persecutions could not administer valid sacraments to their congregations. The movement spread throught the Empire and precipitated a widespread crisis. The emperors generally supported the Catholic view that sacraments performed by even sinful priests were still valid. Violent repression of the Donatists failed to force them into submission especially in northern Africa, where they were often in the majority. It survived into the sixth century and beyond, fading away only in the wake of the Muslim conquest.

The Donatist schism helped define the orthodox Church as "Catholic" (or Universal) and at the same time cemented an alliance between the church and the state which justified the use of state force against "heresy," a doctrine which lasted until the modern era. Some Protestant movement look to the Donatists as an example of opposition against the corruption of Catholicism and a pioneer in the struggle to achieve the separation of church and state.

Background

Eulalia of Mérida was a Christian saint who intentionally challenged Roman authorities during the persecution of Diocletian's era, an act forbidden by the bishops whom the Donatists opposed.

The Donatist movement's roots can be found in the persecution of the Christian church under Emperor Diocletian. On February 24, 303 the Emperor banned the Christian religion and commanded both the destruction of the churches and the buring of Christian scriptures. In 304, he issued an edict declaring that Christians must be willing to offer incense at the altars of the state or face capital punishment. Many Christians met their death as a result, some—eager for martydom—willingly informed authorities that they were Christians and that they possessed sacred scriptures but refused to give them up.

The persecution lasted only a brief time in Africa but it was particularly severe there. Mensurius, the moderate Bishop of Carthage, forbade such intentional martydom and admitted to handing over "heretical" scriptures to the authorities while hiding legitimate scriptures in his home. His archdeacon, Cæcilianus, reportedly even physically prevented the Carthaginian Christians from gathering for worship. On the other hand Secundus, a Bishop of Numidia, praised the martyrs of his province who had been put to death for refusing to deliver up the scriptures. He declared himself "not a traditor"—a term refering to those who had cooperated with authorities by giving them either holy scriptures, sacred church vessels, or the names and persons of fellow Christians.

Some of the Christians of Carthage and other cities broke off relations with Mensurius, considering him, rightly or wrongly, a traditor. Minutes of state investations indeed show that other bishops cooperated with the state, being willing to hand over all that the state required, except, in some cases, their fellow Christians.

By 305 the persecution had abated, and a church council, or synod, was held at the Numidian city of Cirta. Bishop Secundus launched an investigation to ensure that there were no traditors present. Shockingly, it was determined that most of the bishops fell under one definition or another of the term. Later, when Mensurius of Carthage died in 311, his protege, Cæcilianus, succeeded him, but without consultation with Secundus and other bishops. Secundus now convened another synod, and when Cæcilianus failed to appear to defend himself, he was deposed and excommunicated. The synod elected Majorinus in his place as Bishop of Catharge. When Majorinus himself soon died in 313, his successor would be Donatus. It is from this Donatus that the schism received its name.

Carthage now had two bishops and two competing congregations. The schism soon spread throughout the whole province, with a majority of the people, as well as a sizeable number of bishops, supporting Donatus. Outside of Africa, however, the bishops generally recognized Cæcilianus.

The Donatist churches

Theological issues

Constantine the Great liberated the orthodox Christian Church, but ruled against the Donatists.

The Donatists' primary disagreement with the mainstream church was over the question of the legitimacy of sacraments dispensed by traditors and other lapsed priests. Under the Emperor Constantine, the issue became particularly intense, as many fallen-away priests returned to the church to take advantage of the favored positions they would now have under Constantine's protection and support. The Donatists, however, proclaimed that any sacraments celebrated by these lapsed priests and bishops were invalid.

Two theological questions now confronted the Church as a result of the schism. The first was whether the sacrament of penance can bring an apostate Christian, specifically the traditor, into full communion. The Catholic position was "yes. The Donatists, on the other hand, held that such a serious crime, after the forgiveness of baptism, rendered one unfit for further membership in the Church. Indeed, the term Catholic (universal) came into frequent use during this time to express the universality of the orthodox position versus the more narrow definition of holiness expressed by the Donatists.

The second question was the validity of sacraments conferred by priests and bishops who had fallen away. The Donatists held that such sacraments were invalid. By their sinful act, lapsed clerics had rendered themselves incapable of celebrating valid sacraments. The Catholic position was that the validity of the sacrament depends upon the holiness of God, not the minister, so that any priest or bishop, even one in a state of mortal sin, is capable of adminstering a valid sacrament. This pertained not only the Eucharist, which was administered on a weekly or even a daily basis, but also to baptisms, ordinations, marriages, and last rites.

The schism widens

Many towns were divided between Donatist and non-Donatist congregations. Constantine, as emperor, soon involved himself in the dispute. His edict of 313 promised the Church of Africa his protection and favor, but not the Donatists. In 314 Constantine called a council at Arles in France. The issue was debated, and the decision went against the Donatists. Already suspicious of cooperation between the Church and the Empire, the Donatists refused to accept the decision. After Donatus was officially deposed as bishop by a council headed by the Bishop of Rome, the Donatists uncharacteristically appealed directly to the Emperor. At Milan in 316, Consantine ruled that Cæcilianus, not Donatus, was the rightful Bishop of Catharge.

In 317 Constantine sent troops to force the Donatists in Carthage to submit. Thus, for the first time, the Christians of one faction used the military and police power of the state to persecute other Christians. Constantine's actions resulted in banishments and even executions. It also failed completely, as the Donatists grew all the more fierce in their convictions, and Constantine was forced to withdraw in 321.

Constantine's son, Constans, launched a new wave of persecutions . Elements of the Donatists coalesced with the more radical Circumcellions in opposition. By the time Cæcilianus died in 345, all hope of peaceful reconciliation of the two Donatists and Catholics had past. Constans succeeded in repressing the movement somewhat, and Donatus himself was banished.

Julian the Apostate, depicted as conference with "sectarians," possibly including Donatists.

The accession of Julian the Apostate, however, relaxed the restrictions against the Donatists. as Julian sought to encourage those who opposed the Catholics' power. Although Donatus had by this time died, Julian appointed Parmenianus, a Donatist, as the official Bishop of Carthage.

For a time, between 372 and 375, the usurper Firmus ruled an independent government in North Africa and strongly supported the Donatists, while repressing the Catholics. After his revolt was put down, however, more laws against the Donatists were issued by Emperor Valentinian I.

In addition to their theological and political differences with the Catholics, the Donatists also evolved a distinctive worship style, emphasizing what one commentor calls "mystical union of the righteous inspired by the Holy Spirit and instructed by the Bible."[1] In this they may have inherited some of the former zeal of an earlier heretical movement centered in Carthage, namely the Montanists. Indeed, the Donatists consciouly drew from the writings of the pietist Church Father Tertullian, who had been a Montanist in his later years, as well as his fellow Carthaginian Saint Cyprian, who had argued against the validity of heretical baptism.

Fifth century developments

Augustine of Hippo was a vehement opponent of the Donatists.

In the early fifth century Saint Augustine campaigned strongly against the Donatist belief throughout his tenure as Bishop of Hippo, and through his efforts the Catholic Church gained the upper hand theologically. His view was that it was the office of priest, not the personal character of the office-holder, that gave validity to the celebration of the sacraments. Augustine's writings also provided a justification for the state's use of violence to intervene on behalf of orthodoxy, a view which was put to much use by the medieval Church in its various campaigns against heresy.

In 409, Marcellinus of Carthage, Emperor Honorius's Secretary of State, decreed the group heretical and demanded that they give up their churches. The Council of Carthage in 411 featured a large gathering of both Catholic and Donatist bishops. Augustine himself was one of the main spokemen of the former, and the council declared that those who had been baptized in the name of the Trinity must not be re-baptized, regardless of the character the the priest performing the sacrament. The imperial commissioner declared the Donatists to be banned, and severe measures were taken against them. After losing their civil rights in 414, they were forbidden to assemble for worship the next year, under penalty of death. The Donatists were so harshly persecuted that even Augustine, who had earlier justified the state's intervention, protested their treatment.

Honorius' successes in putting down the Donatists, however, were reversed when the Vandals conquered North Africa. Donatism survived both the Vandal occupation and the Byzantine reconquest under Justinian I. It persisted even into the Muslim period, during which it finally disappeared.

Legacy

Later, Anabaptists and other Protestant traditions have looked to Donatists as historical predecessors because of their opposition to the union of Church and state, their emphasis on discipleship and, in some cases, their opposition to the corruption of the Catholic hierarchy.

  1. Murray, Stuart, The Donatists