Upvote:-1
Edward Gibbon tells us, in The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, (D.M. Low abridgement page 290), as soon as the defeat of Licinius had invested Constantine with total dominion of the Roman world, he immediately, by circular letters, exhorted all his subjects to imitate, without delay, the example of their sovereign, and to embrace the divine truth of Christianity. Lactantius was very possibly being pragmatic taking on the role of eulogist for an emperor who gave favours to those who became Christians.
Anders Cullhed says, in The Shadow of Creusa: Negotiating Fictionality in Late Antique Latin Literature (ebook) Lactantius saw an opportunity for covert, albeit legitimate Christian indoctrination. Cullhed says Lactantius considered it downright legitimate to treat truth as a contraband of sorts, concealing it by means of a lie. The siginificance of this is that we can never know whether Lactantius sincerely believed anything he said in support of any position he took. He knew that Constantine looked favourably on work that progressed the Christian cause in his empire and did not need any reason to do the emperor's bidding and would naturally say it was good for Christians to live under a Christian government.
Upvote:2
Yes, though in terms of the Church. In The Divine Institutes he writes:
For if the ruler is wicked, the state also will be wicked; but if the ruler is good, the state also will be good. And this is not only true of the ruler, but of all who have authority. For as the rudder is to a ship, so is the government to a state. If the rudder is straight, the ship also will go straight; but if the rudder is crooked, the ship also will go crooked. For this reason, it is more advantageous to the worship of God, and to the peace of the Church, that the state should be administered by good princes, who themselves worship God. And this is the reason why the Lord has so often, by the mouth of the prophets, exhorted kings and princes to worship Him (Book VI, Ch. 20)