Saturday, November 5, 2022

Cyprian of Carthage Appealing to Aaron vs. Korah, Dathan and Abiram to support a New Testament Ministerial Priesthood

  

For your part, you [Rogatianus] have shown us honour and acted with your customary humility in choosing to lay before us your complaint about him, whereas you possessed the right, by the power of the authority of your episcopal chair, to exact immediate punishment from him; you could have rested assured that all of us your colleagues would come whatever action you took by virtue of your episcopal power against this insolent deacon of yours. In fact, you have injunctions from God concerning men of this character, since, in Deuteronomy, the Lord our God says: And whatever man acts with such arrogance that he pays no heed to the priest or the judge, whoever he may be in those days, that man shall die, and when all the people heart of it, they will be afraid and will desist, henceforth, from their wickedness.

 

There is another text which demonstrates to us that these words of God were uttered with all His true and solemn majesty in order to secure honour and vindication for His priests. When three of the temple servants (tres de ministeriis), Core, Dathan, and Abiron, had the arrogant presumption to lift up their heads and act in opposition to Aaron the priest and set themselves on an equal footing with that priest, their appointed leader, the earth opened up, swallowed and devoured them and they were punished forthwith for their insolence and sacrilege. And they were not alone: two hundred and fifty others as well who were their companions in rebellion were consumed by the fire that burst forth by the power of the Lord, thereby proving that priests of God are vindicated by Him who makes priests. (Epistle 3.1-1-2, in The Letters of St. Cyprian, Volume 1 [trans. G. W. Clarke; Ancient Christian Writers 43; New York: Newman Press, 1984], 54-55)

 

Commenting on “three of the temple servants,” Clarke noted the following:

 

Note Cyprian’s careful choice of description to make the diaconate fit in with his Old Testament illustration. Similarly in Ep. 69.8.1 these three are described as loci sui ministerium transgressi. For Cyprian the rhetorician, such parallelisms (as with sacerdotes = OT priest/NT bishop) have more argumentative weight than merely superficial verbal linkages. (Ibid., 166 n. 6)

 

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