Donatist Controversy: Early Church Fathers and the Early Church
In 303 A.D., Emperor Diocletian launched the most savage persecution Christianity had ever faced. But what happened next nearly destroyed the Church from within.This is the untold story of how one controversial bishop's election in 311 A.D. split African Christianity for over a century.
When Caecilian became Bishop of Carthage, half the Christian world rejected his authority. Why? His consecrator had allegedly betrayed the faith during persecution. The result was civil war in the name of Christ.
You will witness:
The Conference of Carthage (411 A.D.) where 279 Catholic bishops faced 279 rival bishops in the greatest theological debate in historyAugustine of Hippo wielding his brilliant mind against separatist theology that threatened to destroy Christian unity foreverThe Circumcellions, religious extremists who turned martyrdom into terrorismImperial armies crushing Christians who claimed to be the "true church"
This meticulously researched account draws from:
Why every Catholic needs to read this now:
The same questions that divided 4th-century Africa still challenge the Church today. When clergy fail, do the sacraments remain valid? Can the Church be both holy and sinful? How do we maintain unity without compromising truth?
Saint Augustine's theological insights, forged in this ancient controversy, still guide Catholic teaching on church authority, sacramental theology, and Christian unity. His principles helped the Church survive clerical scandals, theological disputes, and institutional crises for 1,600 years.
Written with depth and clarity, this dramatic narrative combines scholarly precision with pastoral wisdom. Each chapter builds toward the climactic confrontation that determined whether Christianity would remain united or fragment into countless competing sects.
For Catholics seeking to understand:
This is history that lives. The ghosts of Carthage still walk among us. Their questions demand our answers. Their struggles illuminate our own.