, or Lucius Cælius, or Cæcilius (Firmianus), an eminent father of the church, was,
, or Lucius Cælius, or
Cæcilius (Firmianus), an eminent father of the church,
was, as some say, an African, or, according to others, a
native of Fermo, a town in the marche of Ancdna, whence
Le is supposed to have taken his surname. Arnobius was
his preceptor. He studied rhetoric in Africa, and with so
great reputation, that Constantine the Roman emperor
appointed him preceptor to his son Crispus. This brought
him to court; but he was so far from giving into the pleasures or corruptions incident to that station, that, amidst
very great opportunities of amassing riches, he lived so
poor as even frequently to want necessaries. He is account^d the most eloquent of all the ecclesiastical Latin
authors. He formed himself upon Cicero, and wrote in
such a pure, smooth, and natural, style, and so much in
the taste and manner of the lloman orator, that he is generally distinguished by the title of “The Christian Cicero.
” We have several pieces of his, the principal of
which is his “Institutiones Divinae,
” in seven books, composed about the year De Ira Divina.
” In De Justitia,
” Edin. 12mo.
Lactantius had before written a book “De Operibus Dei,
”
in which he proves the creation of man, and the divine
providence. St. Jerome mentions other works of our author, as “Two Books to Æsclepiades;
” “Eight Books of
Letters;
” a book entitled “The Festin,
” composed before
he went to Nicomedia; a poem in hexameter verse, containing a description of his journey thither; a treatise
entitled “The Grammarian;
” and another, “De Persecutione.
” Concerning this last tract, there are various opinions. Dr. Lardner, after stating the evidence on both
sides, seems inclined to deny that it was written by LaCtantius. He allows, however, that it is a very valuable
work, containing; a short account of the sufferings of Christians under several of the Roman emperors, from the death
and resurrection of Christ to Dioclesian; and then a particular history of the persecution excited by that emperor,
with the causes and springs of it; as well as the miserable
deaths of its chief instruments. The learned judge above
mentioned, who published a translation of this work in
1782, Edin. 12mo, has also examined the opinions of those
who have treated of its authenticity, with far more acuteness than Lardner, and concludes with Baluze, Mosheim,
and other eminent critics, that the treatise “De Mortibus
Persecutorum
” was written by Lactantius. Lord Hailes’s
preface is a master-piece of critical inquiry, nor are his
notes and illustrations, which occupy one half of the volume,
of less merit or utility.