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THE LIFE OF
THE BLESSED EMPEROR CONSTANTINE
BY EUSEBIUS PAMPHILUS
BOOK I
CHAPTER I.
Preface.-- Of the Death of Constantine.
ALREADY (1) have all mankind united in celebrating with joyous festivities
the completion of the second and third decennial period of this great emperor's
reign; already have we ourselves received him as a triumphant conqueror in
the assembly of God's ministers, and greeted him with the due meed of praise
on the twentieth anniversary of his reign: (2) and still more recently we have
woven, as it were, garlands of words, wherewith we encircled his sacred head
in his own palace on his thirtieth anniversary. (3)
But now, while I desire (4) to give utterance to some of the customary sentiments,
I stand perplexed and doubtful which way to turn, being wholly lost in wonder
at the extraordinary spectacle before me. For to whatever quarter I direct
my view, whether to the east, or to the west, or over the whole world, or toward
heaven itself, everywhere and always I see the blessed one yet administering
the self-same empire. On earth I behold his sons, like some new reflectors
of his brightness, diffusing everywhere the luster of their father's character,
(5) and himself still living and powerful, and governing all the affairs of
men more completely than ever before, being multiplied in the succession of
his children. They had indeed had previously the dignity of Caesars; (6) but
now, being invested with his very self, and graced by his accomplishments,
for the excellence of their piety they are proclaimed by the titles of Sovereign,
Augustus, Worshipful, and Emperor.
CHAPTER II.
The Preface continued.
And I am indeed amazed, when I consider that he who was but lately visible
and present with us in his mortal body, is still, even after death, when the
natural thought disclaims everything superfluous as unsuitable, most marvelously
endowed with the same imperial dwellings, and honors, and praises as heretofore.
(1) But farther, when I raise my thoughts even to the arch of heaven, and there
contemplate his thrice-blessed soul in communion with God himself, freed from
every mortal and earthly vesture, and shining in a refulgent robe of light,
and when I perceive that it is no more connected with the fleeting periods
and occupations of mortal life, but honored with an ever-blooming crown, and
an immortality of endless and blessed existence, I stand as it were without
power of speech or thought (2) and unable to utter a single phrase, but condemning
my own weakness, and imposing silence on myself, I resign the task of speaking
his praises worthily to one who is better able, even to him who, being the
immortal God and veritable Word, alone has power to confirm his own saying.
(3)
CHAPTER III.
How God honors Pious Princes, but destroys Tyrants.
Having given assurance that those who glorify and honor him will meet with
an abundant recompense at his hands, while those who set themselves against
him as enemies and adversaries will compass the ruin of their own souls, he
has already established the truth of these his own declarations, having shown
on the one hand the fearful end of those tyrants who denied and opposed him,
(1) and at the same time having made it manifest that even the death of his
servant, as well as his life, is worthy of admiration and praise, and justly
claims the memorial, not merely of perishable, but of immortal monuments.
Mankind, devising some consolation for the frail and precarious duration of
human life, have thought by the erection of monuments to glorify the memories
of their ancestors with immortal honors. Some have employed the vivid delineations
and colors of painting (2) ; some have carved statues from lifeless blocks
of wood; while others, by engraving their inscriptions deep on tablets (3)
and monuments, have thought to transmit the virtues of those whom they honored
to perpetual remembrance. All these indeed are perishable, and consumed by
the lapse of time, being representations of the corruptible body, and not expressing
the image of the immortal soul. And yet these seemed sufficient to those who
had no well-grounded hope of happiness after the termination of this mortal
life. But God, that God, I say, who is the common Saviour of all, having treasured
up with himself, for those who love godliness, greater blessings than human
thought has conceived, gives the earnest and first-fruits of future rewards
even here, assuring in some sort immortal hopes to mortal eyes. The ancient
oracles of the prophets, delivered to us in the Scripture, declare this; the
lives of pious men, who shone in old time with every virtue, bear witness to
posterity of the same; and our own days prove it to be true, wherein Constantine,
who alone of all that ever wielded the Roman power was the friend of God the
Sovereign of all, has appeared to all mankind so clear an example of a godly
life.
CHAPTER IV.
That God honored Constantine.
And God himself, whom Constantine worshiped, has confirmed this truth by the
clearest manifestations of his will, being present to aid him (1) at the commencement,
during the course, and at the end of his reign, and holding him up to the human
race as an instructive example of godliness. Accordingly, by the manifold blessings
he has conferred on him, he has distinguished him alone of all the sovereigns
of whom we have ever heard as at once a mighty luminary and most clear-voiced
herald of genuine piety.
CHAPTER V.
That he reigned above Thirty Years, and lived above Sixty.
With respect to the duration of his reign, God honored him with three complete
periods of ten years, and something more, extending the whole term of his mortal
life to twice this number of years. (1) And being pleased to make him a representative
of his own sovereign power, he displayed him as the conqueror of the whole
race of tyrants, and the destroyer of those God-defying giants (2) of the earth
who madly raised their impious arms against him, the supreme King of all. They
appeared, so to speak, for an instant, and then disappeared: while the one
and only true God, when he had enabled his servant, clad in heavenly panoply,
to stand singly against many foes, and by his means had relieved mankind from
the multitude of the ungodly, constituted him a teacher of his worship to all
nations, to testify with a loud voice in the hearing of all that he acknowledged
the true God, and turned with abhorrence from the error of them that are no
gods.
CHAPTER VI.
That he was the Servant of God, and the Conqueror of Nations.
Thus, like a faithful and good servant, did he act and testify, openly declaring
and confessing himself the obedient minister of the supreme King. And God forthwith
rewarded him, by making him ruler and sovereign, and victorious to such a degree
that he alone of all rulers pursued a continual course of conquest, unsubdued
and invincible, and through his trophies a greater ruler than tradition records
ever to have been before. So dear was he to God, and so blessed; so pious and
so fortunate in all that he undertook, that with the greatest facility he obtained
the authority over more nations than any who had preceded him, (1) and yet
retained his power, undisturbed, to the very close of his life.
CHAPTER VII.
Comparison with Cyrus, King of the Persians and with Alexander of Macedon.
Ancient history describes Cyrus, king of the Persians, as by far the most
illustrious of all kings up to his time. And yet if we regard the end of his
days, (1) we find it but little corresponded with his past prosperity, since
he met with an inglorious and dishonorable death at the hands of a woman. (2)
Again, the sons of Greece celebrate Alexander the Macedonian as the conqueror
of many and diverse nations; yet we find that he was removed by an early death,
before he had reached maturity, being carried off by the effects of revelry
and drunkenness. (3) His whole life embraced but the space of thirty-two years,
and his reign extended to no more than a third part of that period. Unsparing
as the thunderbolt, he advanced through streams of blood and reduced entire
nations and cities, young and old, to utter slavery. But when he had scarcely
arrived at the maturity of life, and was lamenting the loss of youthful pleasures,
death fell upon him with terrible stroke, and, that he might not longer outrage
the human race, cut him off in a foreign and hostile land, childless, without
successor, and homeless. His kingdom too was instantly dismembered, each of
his officers taking away and appropriating a portion for himself. And yet this
man is extolled for such deeds as these. (4)
CHAPTER VIII.
That he conquered nearly the Whale World.
But our emperor began his reign at the time of life at which the Macedonian
died, yet doubled the length of his life, and trebled the length of his reign.
And instructing his army in the mild and sober precepts of godliness, he carried
his arms as far as the Britons, and the nations that dwell in the very bosom
of the Western ocean. He subdued likewise all Scythia, though situated in the
remotest North, and divided into numberless diverse and barbarous tribes. He
even pushed his conquests to the Blemmyans and Ethiopians, on the very confines
of the South nor did he think the acquisition of the Eastern nations unworthy
his care. In short, diffusing the effulgence of his holy light to the ends
of the whole world, even to the most distant Indians, the nations dwelling
on the extreme circumference of the inhabited earth, he received the submission
of all the rulers, (1) governors, (2) and satraps of barbarous nations, who
cheerfully welcomed and saluted him, sending embassies and presents, and setting
the highest value on his acquaintance and friendship; insomuch that they honored
him with pictures and statues in their respective countries, and Constantine
alone of all emperors was acknowledged and celebrated by all. Notwithstanding,
even among these distanttions, he proclaimed the name of his God in his royal
edicts with all boldness.
CHAPTER IX.
That he was the San of a Pious Emperor, and bequeathed the Power to Royal
Sons.
Nor did he give this testimony in words merely, while exhibiting failure in
his own practice, but pursued every path of virtue, and was rich in the varied
fruits of godliness. He ensured the affection of his friends by magnificent
proofs of liberality; and inasmuch as he governed on principles of humanity,
he caused his rule to be but lightly felt and acceptable to all classes of
his subjects; until at last, after a long course of years, and when he was
wearied by his divine labors, the God whom he honored crowned him with an immortal
reward, and translated him from a transitory kingdom to that endless life which
he has laid up in store for the souls of his saints, after he had raised him
up three sons to succeed him in his power. As then the imperial throne had
descended to him from his father, so, by the law of nature, was it reserved
for his children and their descendants, and perpetuated, like some paternal
inheritance, to endless generations. And indeed God himself, who distinguished
this blessed prince with divine honors while yet present with us, and who has
adorned his death with choice blessings from his own hand, should be the writer
of his actions; since he has recorded his labors and successes on heavenly
monuments. (1)
CHAPTER X.
Of the Need for this History, and its Value for Edification.
HOWEVER, hard as it is to speak worthily of this blessed character, and though
silence were the safer and less perilous course, nevertheless it is incumbent
on me, if I would escape the charge of negligence and sloth, to trace as it
were a verbal portraiture, by way of memorial of the pious prince, in imitation
of the delineations of human art. For I should be ashamed of myself were I
not to employ my best efforts, feeble though they be and of little value, in
praise of one who honored God with such surpassing devotion. I think too that
my work will be on other grounds both instructive and necessary, since it will
contain a description of those royal and noble actions which are pleasing to
God, the Sovereign of all. For would it not be disgraceful that the memory
of Nero, and other impious and godless tyrants far worse than he, should meet
with diligent writers to embellish the relation of their worthless deeds with
elegant language, and record them in voluminous histories, and that I should
be silent, to whom God himself has vouchsafed such an emperor as all history
records not, and has permitted me to come into his presence, and enjoy his
acquaintance and society? (1)
Wherefore, if it is the duty of any one, it certainly is mine, to make an
ample proclamation of his virtues to all in whom the example of noble actions
is capable of inspiring the love of God. For some who have written the lives
of worthless characters, and the history of actions but little tending to the
improvement of morals, from private motives, either love or enmity, and possibly
in some cases with no better object than the display of their own learning,
have exaggerated unduly their description of actions intrinsically base, by
a refinement and elegance of diction. (2) And thus they have become to those
who by the Divine favor had been kept apart from evil, teachers not of good,
but of what should be silenced in oblivion and darkness. But my narrative,
however unequal to the greatness of the deeds it has to describe, will yet
derive luster even from the bare relation of noble actions. And surely the
record of conduct that has been pleasing to God will afford a far from unprofitable,
indeed a most instructive study, to persons of well-disposed minds.
CHAPTER XI.
That his Present Object is to record only the Pious Actions of Constantine.
IT is my intention, therefore, to pass over the greater part of the royal
deeds of this thrice-blessed prince; as, for example, his conflicts and engagements
in the field, his personal valor, his victories and successes against the enemy,
and the many triumphs he obtained: likewise his provisions for the interests
of individuals, his legislative enactments for the social advantage of his
subjects, and a multitude of other imperial labors which are fresh in the memory
of all; the design of my present undertaking being to speak and write of those
circumstances only which have reference to his religious character.
And since these are themselves of almost infinite variety, I shall select
from the facts which have come to my knowledge such as are most suitable, and
worthy of lasting record, and endeavor to narrate them as briefly as possible.
Henceforward, indeed, there is a full and opportunity for celebrating in every
way the praises of this truly blessed prince, which hitherto we have been unable
to do, oh the ground that we are forbidden to judge any one blessed before
his death, (1) because of the uncertain vicissitudes of life. Let me implore
then the help of God, and may the inspiring aid of the heavenly Word be with
me, while I commence my history from the very earliest period of his life.
CHAPTER XII.
That like Moses, he was reared in the Palaces of Kings.
ANCIENT history relates that a cruel race of tyrants oppressed the Hebrew
nation; and that God, who graciously regarded them in their affliction, provided
that the prophet Moses, who was then an infant, should be brought up in the
very palaces and bosoms of the oppressors, and instructed in all the wisdom
they possessed. And when in the course of time he had arrived at manhood, and
the time was come for Divine justice to avenge the wrongs of the afflicted
people, then the prophet of God, in obedience to the will of a more powerful
Lord, forsook the royal household, and, estranging himself in word and deed
from the tyrants by whom he had been brought up, openly acknowledging his true
brethren and kinsfolk. Then God, exalting him to be the leader of the whole
nation, delivered the Hebrews from the bondage of their enemies, and inflicted
Divine vengeance through his means on the tyrant race. This ancient story,
though rejected by most as fabulous, has. reached the ears of all. But now
the same God has given to us to be eye-witnesses of miracles more wonderful
than fables, and, from their recent appearance, more authentic than any report.
For the tyrants of our day have ventured to war against the Supreme God, and
have sorely afflicted His Church. (1) And in the midst of these, Constantine,
who was shortly to become their destroyer, but at that time of tender age,
and blooming with the down of early s youth, dwelt, as that other servant of
God had done, in the very home of the tyrants, (2) but t young as he was did
not share the manner of life of the ungodly: for from that early period his
noble nature, under the leading of the Divine Spirit, inclined him to piety
and a life acceptable to God. A desire, moreover, to emulate the example of
his father had its influence in stimulating the son to a virtuous course of
conduct His father was Constantius (3) (and we ought to revive his memory at
this time), the most illustrious emperor of our age; of whose life it is necessary
briefly to relate a few particulars, which tell to the honor of his son.
CHAPTER XIII.
Of Constantius his Father, who refused to imitate Diocletian, Maximian, and
Maxentius, (1) in their Persecution of the Christians.
At a time when four emperors (2) shared the administration of the Roman empire,
Constantius alone, following a course of conduct different from that pursued
by his colleagues, entered into the friendship of the Supreme God.
For while they besieged and wasted the churches of God, leveling them to the
ground, and obliterating the very foundations of the houses of prayer, (3)
he kept his hands pure from their abominable impiety, and never in any respect
resembled them. They polluted their provinces by the indiscriminate slaughter
of godly men and women; but he kept his soul free from the stain of this crime.
(4)The involved in the mazes of impious idolatry, enthralled first themselves,
and then all under their authority, in bondage to the errors of evil demons,
while he at the same time originated the profoundest peace throughout his dominions,
and secured to his subjects the privilege of celebrating without hindrance
the worship of God. In short, while his colleagues oppressed all men by the
most grievous exactions, and rendered their lives intolerable, and even worse
than death, Constantius alone governed his people with a mild and tranquil
sway, and exhibited towards them a truly parental and fostering care. Numberless,
indeed, are the other virtues of this man, which are the theme of praise to
all; of these I will record one or two instances, as specimens of the quality
of those which I must pass by in silence, and then I will proceed to the appointed
order of my narrative.
CHAPTER XIV.
How Constantius his Rather, being reproached with Poverty by, Diocletian,
filled his Treasury, and afterwards restored the Money to those by whom it
had been contributed.
In consequence of the many reports in circulation respecting this prince,
describing his kindness and gentleness of character, and the extraordinary
elevation of his piety, alleging too, that by reason of his extreme indulgence
to his subjects, he had not even a supply of money laid up in his treasury;
the emperor who at that time occupied the place of supreme power sent to reprehend
his neglect of the public weal, at the same time reproaching him with poverty,
and alleging in proof of the charge the empty state of his treasury. On this
he desired the messengers of the emperor to remain with him awhile, and, calling
together the wealthiest of his subjects of all nations under his dominion,
he informed them that he was in want of money, and that this was the time for
them all to give a voluntary proof of their affection for their prince.
As soon as they heard this (as though they had long been desirous of an opportunity
for showing the sincerity of their good will), with zealous alacrity they filled
the treasury with gold and silver and other wealth; each eager to surpass the
rest in the amount of his contribution: and this they did with cheerful and
joyous countenances. And now Constantius desired the messengers of the great
emperor (1) personally to inspect his treasures, and directed them to give
a faithful report of what they had seen; adding, that on the present occasion
he had taken this money into his own hands, but that it had long been kept
for his use in the custody of the owners, as securely as if under the charge
of faithful treasurers. The ambassadors were overwhelmed with astonishment
at what they had witnessed: and on their departure it is said that the truly
generous prince sent for the owners of the property, and, after commending
them severally for their obedience and true loyalty, restored it all, and bade
them return to their homes.
This one circumstance, then, conveys a proof of the generosity of him whose
character we are attempting to illustrate: another will contain the clearest
testimony to his piety.
CHAPTER XV.
Of the Persecution raised by his Colleagues.
By command of the supreme authorities of the empire, the governors of the
several provinces had set on foot a general persecution of the godly. Indeed,
it was from the imperial courts themselves that the very first of the pious
martyrs proceeded, who passed through those conflicts for the faith, and most
readily endured both fire and sword, and the depths of the sea; every form
of death, in short, so that in a brief time all the royal palaces were bereft
of pious men. (1) The result was, that the authors of this wickedness were
entirely deprived of the protecting care of God, since by their persecution
of his worshipers they at the same time silenced the prayers that were wont
to be made on their own behalf.
CHAPTER XVI.
How Constantius, reigning Idolatry, expelled those who consented to offer
Sacrifice, but retained in his Palace all who were willing to confess Christ.
On the other hand, Constantius conceived an expedient full of sagacity, and
did a thing which sounds paradoxical, but in fact was most admirable.
He made a proposal to all the officers of his court, including even those
in the highest stations of authority, offering them the following alternative:
either that they should offer sacrifice to demons, and thus be permitted to
remain with him, and enjoy their usual honors; or, in case of refusal, that
they should be shut out from all access to his person, and entirely disqualified
from acquaintance and association with him. Accordingly, when they had individually
made their choice, some one way and some the other; and the choice of each
had been ascertained, then this admirable prince disclosed the secret meaning
of his expedient, and condemned the cowardice and selfishness of the one party,
while he highly commended the other for their conscientious devotion to God.
He declared, too, that those who had been false to their God must be unworthy
of the confidence of their prince; for how was it possible that they should
preserve their fidelity to him, who had proved themselves faithless to a higher
power? He determined, therefore, that such persons should be removed altogether
from the imperial court, while, on the other hand, declaring that those men
who, in bearing witness for the truth, had proved themselves to be worthy servants
of God, would manifest the same fidelity to their king, he en-trusted them
with the guardianship of his person and empire, saying that he was bound to
treat such persons with special regard as his nearest and most valued friends,
and to esteem them far more highly than the richest treasures.
CHAPTER XVII.
Of his Christian Manner of Life.
The father of Constantine, then, is said to have possessed such a character
as we have briefly described. And what kind of death was vouchsafed to him
in consequence of such devotion to God, and how far he whom he honored made
his lot to differ from that of his colleagues in the empire, may be known to
any one who will give his attention to the circumstances of the case. For after
he had for a long time given many proofs of royal virtue, in acknowledging
the Supreme God alone, and condemning the polytheism of the ungodly, and had
fortified his household by the prayers of holy men, (1) he passed the remainder
of his life in remarkable repose and tranquillity, in the enjoyment of what
is counted blessedness, --neither molesting others nor being molested ourselves.
Accordingly, during the whole course of his quiet and peaceful reign, he dedicated
his entire household, his children, his wife, and domestic attendants, to the
One Supreme God: so that the company assembled within the walls of his palace
differed in no respect from a church of God; wherein were also to be found
his ministers, who offered continual supplications on behalf of their prince,
and this at a time when, with most,(2) it was not allowable to have any dealings
with the worshipers of God, even so far as to exchange a word with them.
CHAPTER XVIII.
That after the Abdication of Diocletian and Maximian, Constantius became Chief
Augustus, and was blessed with a Numerous Offspring.
The immediate consequence of this conduct was a recompense from the hand of
God, insomuch that he came into the supreme authority of the empire. For the
older emperors, for some unknown reason, resigned their power; and this sudden
change took place in the first year after their persecution of the churches.
(1)
From that time Constantius alone received the honors of chief Augustus, having
been previously, indeed, distinguished by the diadem of the imperial Caesars,
(2) among whom he held the first rank; but after his worth had been proved
in this capacity, he was invested with the highest dignity of the Roman empire,
being named chief Augustus of the four who were afterwards elected to that
honor. Moreover, he surpassed most of the emperors in regard to the number
of his family, having gathered around him a very large circle of children both
male and female. And, lastly, when he had attained to a happy old age, and
was about to pay the common debt of nature, and exchange this life for another,
God once more manifested His power in a special manner on his behalf, by providing
that his eldest son Constantine should be present during his last moments,
and ready to receive the imperial power from his hands. (3)
CHAPTER XIX.
Of his Son Constantine, who in his Youth accompanied Diocletian into Palestine.
The latter had been with his father's imperial colleagues, (1) and had passed
his life among them, as we have said, like God's ancient prophet. And even
in the very earliest period of his youth he was judged by them to be worthy
of the highest honor. An instance of this we have ourselves seen, when he passed
through Palestine with the senior emperor, (2) at whose right hand he stood,
and commanded the admiration of all who beheld him by the indications he gave
even then of royal greatness. For no one was comparable to him for grace and
beauty of person, or height of stature; and he so far surpassed his compeers
in personal strength as to be a terror to them. He was, however, even more
conspicuous for the excellence of his mental (3) qualities than for his superior
physical endowments; being gifted in the first place with a sound judgment,
(4) and having also reaped the advantages of a liberal education. He was also
distinguished in no ordinary degree both by natural intelligence and divinely
imparted wisdom.
CHAPTER XX.
Flight of Constantine to his Father because of the Plots of Diocletian. (1)
The emperors then in power, observing his manly and vigorous figure and superior
mind, were moved with feelings of jealousy and fear, and thenceforward carefully
watched for an opportunity of inflicting some brand of disgrace on his character.
But the young man, being aware of their designs, the details of which, through
the providence of God, more than once came to him, sought safety in flight;
(2) in this respect again keeping up his resemblance to the great prophet Moses.
Indeed, in every sense God was his helper; and he had before ordained that
he should be present in readiness to succeed his father.
CHAPTER XXI.
Death of Constantius, who leaves his Son Constantine Emperor. (1)
IMMEDIATELY, therefore, on his escape from the plots which had been thus insidiously
laid for him, he made his way with all haste to his father, and arrived at
length at the very time that he was lying at the point of death. (2) As soon
as Constantius saw his son thus unexpectedly in his presence, he leaped from
his couch, embraced him tenderly, and, declaring that the only anxiety which
had troubled him in the prospect of death, namely, that caused by the absence
of his son, was now removed, he rendered thanks to God, saying that he now
thought death better than the longest life, (3) and at once completed the arrangement
of his private affairs. Then, taking a final leave of the circle of sons and
daughters by whom he was surrounded, in his own palace, and on the imperial
couch, he bequeathed the empire, according to the law of nature, (4) to his
eldest son, and breathed his last.
CHAPTER XXII.
How, after the Burial of Constantius, Constantine was proclaimed Augustus
by the Army.
Nor did the imperial throne remain long unoccupied: for Constantine invested
himself with his father's purple, and proceeded from his father's palace, presenting
to all a renewal, as it were, in his own person, of his father's life and reign.
He then conducted the funeral procession in company with his father's friends,
some preceding, others following the train, and performed the last offices
for the pious deceased with an extraordinary degree of magnificence, and all
united in honoring this thrice blessed prince with acclamations and praises,
and while with one mind and voice, they glorified the rule of the son as a
living again of him who was dead, they hastened at once to hail their new sovereign
by the titles of Imperial and Worshipful Augustus, with joyful shouts. (1)
Thus the memory of the deceased emperor received honor from the praises bestowed
upon his son, while the latter was pronounced blessed in being the successor
of such a father. All the nations also under his dominion were filled with
joy and inexpressible gladness at not being even for a moment deprived of the
benefits of a well ordered government.
In the instance of the Emperor Constantius, God has made manifest to our generation
what the end of those is who in their lives have honored and loved him.
CHAPTER XXIII.
A Brief Notice of the Destruction of the Tyrants.
With respect to the other princes, who made war against the churches of God,
I have not thought it fit in the present work to give any account of their
downfall, (1) nor to stain the memory of the good by mentioning them in connection
with those of an opposite character. The knowledge of the facts themselves
will of itself suffice for the wholesome admonition of those who have witnessed
or heard of the evils which severally befell them.
CHAPTER XXIV.
It was by the Will of God that Constantine became possessed of the Empire.
Trays then the God of all, the Supreme Governor of the whole universe, by
his own will appointed Constantine, the descendant of so renowned a parent,
to be prince and sovereign
so that, while others have been raised to this distinction by the election
of their fellow-men, he is the only one to whose elevation no mortal may boast
of having contributed.
CHAPTER XXV.
Victories of Constantine over the Barbarians and the Britons.
As soon then as he was established on the throne, he began to care for the
interests of his paternal inheritance, and visited with much considerate kindness
all those provinces which had previously been under his father's government.
Some tribes of the barbarians who dwelt on the banks of the Rhine, and the
shores of the Western ocean, having ventured to revolt, he reduced them all
to obedience, and brought them from their savage state to one of gentleness.
He contented himself with checking the inroads of others, and drove from his
dominions, like untamed and savage beasts, those whom he perceived to be altogether
incapable of the settled order of civilized life. (1) Having disposed of these
affairs to his satisfaction, he directed his attention to other quarters of
the world, and first passed over to the British nations, (2) which lie in the
very bosom of the ocean. These he reduced to submission, and then proceeded
to consider the state of the remaining portions of the empire, that he might
be ready to tender his aid wherever circumstances might require it.
CHAPTER XXVI.
How he resolved to deliver Rome from Maxentius.
While, therefore, he regarded the entire world as one immense body, and perceived
that the head of it all, the royal city of the Roman empire, was bowed down
by the weight of a tyrannous oppression; at first he had left the task of liberation
to those who governed the other divisions of the empire, as being his superiors
in point of age. But when none of these proved able to afford relief, and those
who had attempted it had experienced a disastrous termination of their enterprise,
(1) he said that life was without enjoyment to him as long as he saw the imperial
city thus afflicted, and prepared himself for the overthrowal of the tyranny.
CHAPTER XXVII.
That after reflecting on the Dawn fall of those who had worshiped Idols, he
made Choice of Christianity.
Being convinced, however, that he needed some more powerful aid than his military
forces could afford him, on account of the wicked and magical enchantments
which were so diligently practiced by the tyrant, (1) he sought Divine assistance,
deeming the possession of arms and a numerous soldiery of secondary importance,
but believing the co-operating power of Deity invincible and not to be shaken.
He considered, therefore, on what God he might rely for protection and assistance.
While engaged in this enquiry, the thought occurred to him, that, of the many
emperors who had preceded him, those who had rested their hopes in a multitude
of gods, and served them with sacrifices and offerings, had in the first place
been deceived by flattering predictions, and oracles which promised them all
prosperity, and at last had met with an unhappy end, while not one of their
gods had stood by to warn them of the impending wrath of heaven; while one
alone who had pursued an entirely opposite course, who had condemned their
error, and honored the one Supreme God during his whole life, had formal I
him to be the Saviour and Protector of his empire, and the Giver of every good
thing. Reflecting on this, and well weighing the fact that they who had trusted
in many gods had also fallen by manifold forms of death, without leaving behind
them either family or offspring, stock, name, or memorial among men: while
the God of his father had given to him, on the other hand, manifestations of
his power and very many tokens: and considering farther that those who had
already taken arms against the tyrant, and had marched to the battle-field
under the protection of a multitude of gods, had met with a dishonorable end
(for one of them (2) had shamefully retreated from the contest without a blow,
and the other, (3) being slain in the midst of his own troops, became, as it
were, the mere sport of death (4) ); reviewing, I say, all these considerations,
he judged it to be folly indeed to join in the idle worship of those who were
no gods, and, after such convincing evidence, to err from the truth; and therefore
felt it incumbent on him to honor his father's God alone.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
How, while he was praying, God sent him a Vision of a Cross of Light in the
Heavens at Mid-day, with an Inscription admonishing him to conquer by that.
ACCORDINGLY he called on him with earnest prayer and supplications that he
would reveal to him who he was, and stretch forth his right hand to help him
in his present difficulties. And while he was thus praying with fervent entreaty,
a most marvelous sign appeared to him from heaven, the account of which it
might have been hard to believe had it been related by any other person. But
since the victorious emperor himself long afterwards declared it to the writer
of this history, (1) when he was honored with his acquaintance and society,
and confirmed his statement by an oath, who could hesitate to accredit the
relation, especially since the testimony of after-time has established its
truth? He said that about noon, when the day was already beginning to decline,
he saw with his own eyes the trophy of a cross of light in the heavens, above
the sun, and bearing the inscription, CONQUER BY THIS. At this sight he himself
was struck with amazement, and his whole army also, which followed him on this
expedition, and witnessed the miracle. (2)
CHAFFER XXIX.
How the Christ of God appeared to him in his Sleep, and commanded him to use
in his Wars a Standard made in the Form of the Cross.
He said, moreover, that he doubted within himself what the import of this
apparition could be. And while he continued to ponder and reason on its meaning,
night suddenly came on ; then in his sleep the Christ of God appeared to him
with the same sign which he had seen in the heavens, and commanded him to make
a likeness of that sign which he had seen in the heavens, and to use it as
a safeguard in all engagements with his enemies.
CHAPTER XXX.
The Making of the Standard of the Cross.
AT dawn of day he arose, and communicated the marvel to his friends: and then,
calling together the workers in gold and precious stones, he sat in the midst
of them, and described to them the figure of the sign he had seen, bidding
them represent it in gold and precious stones. And this representation I myself
have had an opportunity of seeing.
CHAPTER XXXI.
A Description of the Standard of the Cross, which the Romans now call the
Labarum. (1)
Now it was made in the following manner. A long spear, overlaid with gold,
formed the figure of the cross by means of a transverse bar laid over it. On
the top of the whole was fixed a wreath of gold and precious stones; and within
this, (2) the symbol of the Saviour's name, two letters indicating the name
of Christ by means of its initial characters, the letter P being intersected
by X in its centre: (3) and these letters the emperor was in the habit of wearing
on his helmet at a later period. From the cross-bar of the spear was suspended
a cloth, (4) a royal piece, covered with a profuse embroidery of most brilliant
precious stones; and which, being also richly interlaced with gold, presented
an indescribable degree of beauty to the beholder. This banner was of a square
form, and the upright staff, whose lower section was of great length,(5) bore
a golden half-length portrait (6) of the pious emperor and his children on
its upper part, beneath the trophy of the cross, and immediately above the
embroidered banner.
The emperor constantly made use of this sign of salvation as a safeguard against
every adverse and hostile power, and commanded that others similar to it should
be carried at the head of all his armies.
CHAPTER XXXII.
How Constantine received Instruction, and read the Sacred Scriptures.
These things were done shortly afterwards. But at the time above specified,
being struck with amazement at the extraordinary vision, and resolving to worship
no other God save Him who had appeared to him, he sent for those who were acquainted
with the mysteries of His doctrines, and enquired who that God was, and what
was intended by the sign of the vision he had seen. They affirmed that He was
God, the only begotten Son of the one and only God: that the sign which had
appeared was the symbol of immortality, (1) and the trophy of that victory
over death which He had gained in time past when sojourning on earth. They
taught him also the causes of His advent, and explained to him the true account
of His incarnation. Thus he was instructed in these matters, and was impressed
with wonder at the divine manifestation which had been presented to his sight.
Comparing, therefore, the heavenly vision with the interpretation given, he
found his judgment confirmed; and, in the persuasion that the knowledge of
these things had been imparted to him by Divine teaching, he determined thenceforth
to devote himself to the reading of the Inspired writings.
Moreover, he made the priests of God his counselors, and deemed it incumbent
on him to honor the God who had appeared to him with all devotion. And after
this, being fortified by well-grounded hopes in Him, he hastened to quench
the threatening fire of tyranny.
CHAPTER XXXIII
Of the Adulterous Conduct of Maxentius at Rome. (1)
For the who had tyrannically possessed himself of the imperial city, (2) had
proceeded to great lengths in impiety and wickedness, so as to venture without
hesitation on every vile and impure action.
For example: he would separate women from their husbands, and after a time
send them back to them again, and these insults he offered not to men of mean
or obscure condition, but to those who held the first places in the Roman senate.
Moreover, though he shamefully dishonored almost numberless free women, he
was unable to satisfy his ungoverned and intemperate desires. But (3) when
he assayed to corrupt Christian women also, he could no longer secure success
to his designs, since they chose rather to submit their lives (4) to death
than yield their persons to be defiled by him.
CHAPTER XXXIV.
How the Wife of a Prefect slew herself for Chastity's Sake. (1)
Now a certain woman, wife of one of the senators who held the authority of
prefect, when she understood that those who ministered to the tyrant in such
matters were standing before her house (she was a Christian), and knew that
her husband through fear had bidden them take her and lead her away, begged
a short space of time for arraying herself in her usual dress, and entered
her chamber. There, being left alone, she sheathed a sword in her own breast,
and immediately expired, leaving indeed her dead body to the procurers, but
declaring to all mankind, both to present and future generations, by an act
which spoke louder than any words, that the chastity for which Christians are
famed is the only thing which is invincible and indestructible. Such was the
conduct displayed by this Woman.
CHAPTER XXXV.
Massacre of the Roman People by Maxentius.
All men, therefore, both people and magistrates, whether of high or low degree,
trembled through fear of him whose daring wickedness was such as I have described,
and were oppressed by his grievous tyranny. Nay, though they submitted quietly,
and endured this bitter servitude, still there was no escape from the tyrant's
sanguinary cruelty. For at one time, on some trifling pretense, he exposed
the populace to be slaughtered by his own body-guard; and countless multitudes
of the Roman people were slain in the very midst of the city by the lances
and weapons, not of Scythians or barbarians, but of their own fellow-citizens.
And besides this, it is impossible to calculate the number of senators whose
blood was shed with a view to the seizure of their respective estates, for
at different times and on various fictitious charges, multitudes of them suffered
death.
CHAPTER XXXVI.
Magic Arts of Maxentius against Constantine; and Famine at Rome.
BUT the crowning point of the tyrant's wickedness was his having recourse
to sorcery: sometimes for magic purposes ripping up women with child, at other
times searching into the bowels of new-born infants. He slew lions also. and
practiced certain horrid arts for evoking demons, and averting the approaching
war, hoping by these means to get the victory. In short, it is impossible to
describe the manifold acts of oppression by which this tyrant of Rome enslaved
his subjects: so that by this time they were reduced to the most extreme penury
and want of necessary food, a scarcity such as our contemporaries do not remember
ever before to have existed at Rome. (1)
CHAPTER XXXVII.
Defeat of Maxentius's Armies in Italy.
Constantine, however, filled with compassion on account of all these miseries,
began to arm himself with all warlike preparation against the tyranny. Assuming
therefore the Supreme God as his patron, and invoking His Christ to be his
preserver and aid, and setting the victorious trophy, the salutary symbol,
in front of his soldiers and body-guard, he marched with his whole forces,
trying to obtain again for the Romans the freedom they had inherited from their
ancestors.
And whereas, Maxentius, trusting more in his magic arts than in the affection
of his subjects, dared not even advance outside the city gates, (1) but had
guarded every place and district and city subject to his tyranny, with large
bodies of soldiers, (2) the emperor, confiding in the help of God, advanced
against the first and second and third divisions of the tyrant's forces, defeated
them all with ease at the first assault, (3) and made his way into the very
interior of Italy.
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
Death of Maxentius on the Bridge of the Tiber. (1)
And already
he was approaching very near-Rome itself, when, to save him from the necessity
of fighting with
all the Romans for the tyrant's sake, God himself
drew the tyrant, as it were by secret cords, a long way outside the gates.
(2) And now those miracles recorded in Holy Writ, which God of old wrought
against the ungodly (discredited by most as fables, yet believed by the faithful),
did he in every deed confirm to all alike, believers and unbelievers, who were
eye-witnesses of the wonders. For as once in the days of Moses and the Hebrew
nation, who were worshipers of God, "Pharaoh's chariots and his host hath
he cast into the sea and his chosen chariot-captains are drowned in the Red
Sea," (3) --so at this time Maxentius, and the soldiers and guards (4)
with him, "went down into the depths like stone," (5) when, in his
flight before the divinely-aided forces of Constantine, he essayed to cross
the river which lay in his way, over which, making a strong bridge of boats,
he had framed an engine of destruction, really against himself, but in the
hope of ca-snaring thereby him who was beloved by God. For his God stood by
the one to protect him, while the other, godless, (6) proved to be the miserable
contriver of these secret devices to his own ruin. So that one might well say, "He
hath made a pit, and digged it, and is fallen into the ditch which he made.
His mischief shall return upon his own head, and his violence shall. come down
upon his own pate." (7) Thus, in the present instance, under divine direction,
the machine erected on the bridge, with the ambuscade concealed therein, giving
way unexpectedly before the appointed time, the bridge began to sink, and the
boats with the men in them went bodily to the bottom. (8) And first the wretch
himself, then his armed attendants and guards, even as the sacred oracles had
before described, "sank as lead in the mighty waters." (9) So that
they who thus obtained victory from God might well, if not in the same words,
yet in fact in the same spirit as the people of his great servant Moses, sing
and speak as they did concerning the impious tyrant of old: "Let us sing
unto the Lord, for he hath been glorified exceedingly: the horse and his rider
hath he thrown into the sea. He is become my helper and my shield unto salvation." And
again, "Who is like unto thee, O Lord, among the gods? who is like thee,
glorious in holiness, marvelous in praises, doing wonders?" (10)
CHAPTER XXXIX.
Constantine's Entry into Rome.
HAVING then at this time sung these and suchlike praises to God, the Ruler
of all and the Author of victory, after the example of his great servant Moses,
Constantine entered the imperial city in triumph. And here the whole body of
the senate, and others of rank and distinction in the city, freed as it were
from the restraint of a prison, along with the whole Roman populace, their
countenances expressive of the gladness of their hearts, received him with
acclamations and abounding joy; men, women, and children, with countless multitudes
of servants, greeting him as deliverer, preserver, and benefactor, with incessant
shouts. But he, being possessed of inward piety toward God, was neither rendered
arrogant by these plaudits, nor uplifted by the praises he heard: (1) but,
being sensible that he had received help from God, he immediately rendered
a thanksgiving to him as the Author of his victory.
CHAPTER XL.
Of the Statue of Constantine holding a Cross, and its Inscription.
MOREOVER, by loud proclamation and monumental inscriptions he made known to
all men the salutary symbol, setting up this great trophy of victory over his
enemies in the midst of the imperial city, and expressly causing it to be engraved
in indelible characters, that the salutary symbol was the safeguard of the
Roman government and of the entire empire. Accordingly, he immediately ordered
a lofty spear in the figure of a cross to be placed beneath the hand of a statue
representing himself, in the most frequented part of Rome, and the following
inscription to be engraved on it in the Latin language: BY VIRTUE OF THIS SALUTARY
SIGN, WHICH IS THE TRUE TEST OF VALOR, I HAVE PRESERVED AND LIBERATED YOUR
CITY FROM THE YOKE OF TYRANNY. I HAVE ALSO SET AT LIBERTY THE ROMAN SENATE
AND PEOPLE, AND RESTORED THEM TO THEIR ANCIENT DISTINCTION AND SPLENDOR. (1)
CHAPTER XLI.
Rejoicings throughout the Provinces; and Constantine's Acts of Grace.
Thus the pious emperor, glorying in the confession of the victorious cross,
proclaimed the Son of God to the Romans with great boldness of testimony. And
the inhabitants of the city, one and all, senate and people, reviving, as it
were, from the pressure of a bitter and tyrannical domination, seemed to enjoy
purer rays of light, and to be born again into a fresh and new life. All the
nations, too, as far as the limit of the western ocean, being set free from
the calamities which had heretofore beset them, and gladdened by joyous festivals,
ceased not to praise him as the victorious, the pious, the common benefactor:
all, indeed, with one voice and one mouth, declared that Constantine had appeared
by the grace of God as a general blessing to mankind. The imperial edict also
was everywhere published, whereby those who had been wrongfully deprived of
their estates were permitted again to enjoy their own, while those who had
unjustly suffered exile were recalled to their homes. Moreover, he freed from
imprisonment, and from every kind of danger and fear, those who, by reason
of the tyrant's cruelty, had been subject to these sufferings.
CHAPTER XLII.
The Honors conferred upon Bishops, and the Building of Churches.
The emperor also personally inviting the society of God's ministers, distinguished
them with the highest possible respect and honor, showing them favor in deed
and word as persons consecrated to the service of his God. Accordingly, they
were admitted to his table, though mean in their attire and outward appearance;
yet not so in his estimation, since he thought he saw not the man as seen by
the vulgar eye, but the God in him. He made them also his companions in travel,
believing that He whose servants they were would thus help him. Besides this,
he gave from his own private resources costly benefactions to the churches
of God, both enlarging and heightening the sacred edifices, (1) and embellishing
the august sanctuaries (2) of the church with abundant offerings.
CHAPTER XLIII.
Canstantine's Liberality to the Poor.
He likewise distributed money largely to those who were in need, and besides
these showing himself philanthropist and benefactor even to the heathen, who
had no claim on him; (1) and even for the beggars in the forum, miserable and
shiftless, he provided, not with money only, or necessary food, but also decent
clothing. But in the case of those who had once been prosperous, and had experienced
a reverse of circumstances, his aid was still more lavishly bestowed. On such
persons, in a truly royal spirit, he conferred magnificent benefactions; giving
grants of land to some, and honoring others with various dignities. Orphans
of the unfortunate he cared for as a father, while he relieved the destitution
of widows, and cared for them with special solicitude. Nay, he even gave virgins,
left unprotected by their parents' death, in marriage to wealthy men with whom
he was personally acquainted. But this he did after first bestowing on the
brides such portions as it was fitting they should bring to the communion of
marriage. (2) In short, as the sun, when he rises upon the earth, liberally
imparts his rays of light to all, so did Constantine, proceeding at early dawn
from the imperial palace, and rising as it were with the heavenly luminary,
impart the rays of his own beneficence to all who came into his presence. It
was scarcely possible to be near him without receiving some benefit, nor did
it ever happen that any who had expected to obtain his assistance were disappointed
in their hope. (3)
CHAPTER XLIV.
How he was present at the Synods of Bishops.
SUCH, then, was his general character towards all. But he exercised a peculiar
care over the church of God: and whereas, in the several provinces there were
some who differed from each other in judgment, he, like some general bishop
constituted by God, convened synods of his ministers. Nor did he disdain to
be present and sit with them in their assembly, but bore a share in their deliberations,
ministering to all that pertained to the peace of God. He took his seat, too,
in the midst of them, as an individual amongst many, dismissing his guards
and soldiers, and all whose duty it was to defend his person; but protected
by the fear of God, and surrounded by the guardianship of his faithful friends.
Those whom he saw inclined to a sound judgment, and exhibiting a calm and conciliatory
temper, received his high approbation, for he evidently delighted in a general
harmony of sentiment; while he regarded the unyielding wills aversion. (1)
CHAPTER XLV.
His Forbearance with Unreasonable Men.
MOREOVER he endured with patience some who were exasperated against himself,
directing them in mild and gentle terms to control themselves, and not be turbulent.
And some of these respected his admonitions, and desisted; but as to those
who proved incapable of sound judgment, he left them entirely at the disposal
of God, and never himself desired harsh measures against any one. Hence it
naturally happened that the disaffected in Africa reached such a pitch of violence
as even to venture on overt acts of audacity; (1) some evil spirit, as it seems
probable, being jealous of the present great prosperity, and impelling these
men to atrocious deeds, that he might excite the emperor's anger against them.
He gained nothing, however, by this malicious conduct; for the emperor laughed
at these proceedings, and declared their origin to be from the evil one; inasmuch
as these were not the actions of sober persons, but of lunatics or demoniacs;
who should be pitied rather than punished; since to punish madmen is as great
folly as to sympathize with their condition is supreme philanthropy. (2)
CHAPTER XLVI.
Victories over the Barbarians.
THUS the emperor in all his actions honored God, the Controller of all things,
and exercised an unwearied (1) oversight over His churches. And God requited
him, by subduing all barbarous nations under his feet, so that he was able
everywhere to raise trophies over his enemies: and He proclaimed him as conqueror
to all mankind, and made him a terror to his adversaries: not indeed that this
was his natural character, since he was rather the meekest, and gentlest, and
most benevolent of men.
CHAPTER XLVII.
Death of Maximin, (1) who had attempted a Conspiracy, and of Others whom Constantine
detected by Divine Revelation.
WHILE he was thus engaged, the second of those who had resigned the throne,
being detected in a treasonable conspiracy, suffered a most ignominious death.
He was the first whose pictures, statues, and all similar marks of honor and
distinction were everywhere destroyed, on the ground of his crimes and impiety.
After him others also of the same family were discovered in the act of forming
secret plots against the emperor; all their intentions being miraculously revealed
by God through visions to His servant.
For he frequently vouchsafed to him manifestations of himself, the Divine
presence appearing to him in a most marvelous manner, and according to him
manifold intimations of future events. Indeed, it is impossible to express
in words the indescribable wonders of Divine grace which God was pleased to
vouchsafe to His servant. Surrounded by these, he passed the rest of his life
in security, rejoicing in the affection of his subjects, rejoicing too because
he saw all beneath his government leading contented lives; but above all delighted
at the flourishing condition of the churches of God.
CHAPTER XLVIII.
Celebration of Canstantine's Decennalia.
WHILE he was thus circumstanced, he completed the tenth year of his reign.
On this occasion he ordered the celebration of general festivals, and offered
prayers of thanksgiving to God, the King of all, as sacrifices without flame
or smoke. (1) And from this employment he derived much pleasure: not so from
the tidings he received of the ravages committed in the Eastern provinces.
CHAPTER XLIX.
How Licinius oppressed the East.
FOR he was informed that in that quarter a certain savage beast was besetting
both the church of God and the other inhabitants of the provinces, owing, as
it were, to the efforts of the evil spirit to produce effects quite contrary
to the deeds of the pious emperor: so that the Roman empire, divided into two
parts, seemed to all men to resemble night and day; since darkness overspread
the provinces of the East, while the brightest day illumined the inhabitants
of the other portion. And whereas the latter were receiving manifold blessings
at the hand of God, the sight of these blessings proved intolerable to that
envy which hates all good, as well as to the tyrant who afflicted the other
division of the empire; and who, notwithstanding that his government was prospering,
and he had been honored by a marriage connection (1) with so great an emperor
as Constantine, yet cared not to follow the steps of that pious prince, but
strove rather to imitate the evil purposes and practice of the impious; and
chose to adopt the course of those whose ignominious end he had seen with his
own eyes, rather than to maintain amicable relations with him who was his superior.
(2)
CHAPTER L.
How Licinius attempted a Conspiracy against Constantine.
ACCORDINGLY he engaged in an implacable war against his benefactor, altogether
regardless of the laws of friendship, the obligation of oaths, the ties of
kindred, and already existing treaties. For the most benignant emperor had
given him a proof of sincere affection in bestowing on him the hand of his
sister, thus granting him the privilege of a place in family relationship and
his own ancient imperial descent, and investing him also with the rank and
dignity of his colleague in the empire. (1) But the other took the very opposite
course, employing himself in machinations against his superior, and devising
various means to repay his benefactor with injuries. At first, pretending friendship,
he did all things by guile and treachery, expecting thus to succeed in concealing
his designs; but God enabled his servant to detect the schemes thus devised
in darkness. Being discovered, however, in his first attempts, he had recourse
to fresh frauds; at one time pretending friendship, at another claiming the
protection of solemn treaties. Then suddenly violating every engagement, and
again beseeching pardon by embassies, yet after all shamefully violating his
word, he at last declared open war, and with desperate infatuation resolved
thenceforward to carry arms against God himself, whose worshiper he knew the
emperor to be.
CHAPTER LI.
Intrigues of Licinius against the Bishops, and his Prohibition of Synods.
AND at first he made secret enquiry respecting the ministers of God subject
to his dominion, who had never, indeed, in any respect offended against his
government, in order to bring false accusations against them. And when he found
no ground of accusation, and had no real ground of objection against them,
he next enacted a law, to the effect that the bishops should never on any account
hold communication with each other, nor should any one of them absent himself
on a visit to a neighboring church; nor, lastly, should the holding of synods,
or councils for the consideration of affairs of common interest, (1) be permitted.
Now this was clearly a pretext for displaying his malice against us. For we
were compelled either to violate the law, and thus be amenable to punishment,
or else, by compliance with its injunctions, to nullify the statutes of the
Church; inasmuch as it is impossible to bring important questions to a satisfactory
adjustment, except by means of synods. In other cases also this God-hater,
being determined to act contrary to the God-loving prince, enacted such things.
For whereas the one assembled the priests of God in order to honor them, and
to promote peace and unity of judgment; the other, whose object it was to destroy
everything that was good, used all his endeavors to destroy the general harmony.
CHAPTER LII.
Banishment of the Christians, and Confiscation of their Property.
AND whereas Constantine, the friend of God, had granted to His worshipers
freedom of access to the imperial palaces; this enemy of God, in a spirit the
very reverse of this, expelled thence all Christians subject to his authority.
He banished those who had proved themselves his most faithful and devoted servants,
and compelled others, on whom he had himself conferred honor and distinction
as a reward for their former eminent services, to the performance of menial
offices as slaves to others; and at length, being bent on seizing the property
of all as a windfall for himself, he even threatened with death those who professed
the Saviour's name. Moreover being himself of a nature hopelessly debased by
sensuality, and degraded by the continual practice of adultery and other shameless
vices, he assumed his own worthless character as a specimen of human nature
generally, and denied that the virtue of chastity and continence existed among
men.
CHAPTER LIII.
Edict that Women should not meet with the Men in the Churches.
ACCORDINGLY he passed a second law, which enjoined that men should not appear
in company with women in the houses of prayer, and forbade women to attend
the sacred schools of virtue, or to receive instruction from the bishops, directing
the appointment of women to be teachers of their own sex. These regulations
being received with general ridicule, he devised other, means for effecting
the ruin of the churches. He ordered that the usual congregations of the people
should be held in the open country outside the gates, alleging that the open
air without the city was far more suitable for a multitude than the houses
of prayer within the walls.
CHAPTER LIV.
That those who refuse to sacrifice are to be dismissed from Military Service,
and those in Prison not to be fed.
FAILING, however, to obtain obedience in this respect also, at length he threw
off the mask, and gave orders that those who held military commissions in the
several cities of the empire should be deprived of their respective commands,
in case of their refusal to offer sacrifices to the demons. Accordingly the
forces of the authorities in every province suffered the loss of those who
worshiped God; and he too who had decreed this order suffered loss, in that
he thus deprived himself of the prayers of pious men. And why should I still
further mention how he directed that no one should obey the dictates of common
humanity by distributing food to those who were pining in prisons, or should
even pity the captives who perished with hunger; in short, that no one should
perform a virtuous action, and that those whose natural feelings impelled them
to sympathize with their fellow-creatures should be prohibited from doing them
a single kindness? Truly this was the most utterly shameless and scandalous
of all laws, and one which surpassed the worst depravity of human nature: a
law which inflicted on those who showed mercy the same penalties as on those
who were the objects of their compassion, and visited the exercise of mere
humanity with the severest punishments. (1)
CHAPTER LV.
The Lawless Conduct and Covetousness of Licinius.
Such were the ordinances of Licinius. But why should I enumerate his innovations
respecting marriage, or those concerning the dying, whereby he presumed to
abrogate the ancient and wisely established laws of the Romans, and to introduce
certain barbarous and cruel institutions in their stead, inventing a thousand
pretenses for oppressing his subjects? Hence it was that he devised a new method
of measuring land, by which he reckoned the smallest portion at more than its
actual dimensions, from an insatiable desire of acquisition. Hence too he registered
the names of country residents who were now no more, and had long been numbered
with the dead, procuring to himself by this expedient a shameful gain. His
meanness was unlimited and his rapacity insatiable. So that when he had filled
all his treasuries with gold, and silver, and boundless wealth, he bitterly
bewailed his poverty, and suffered as it were the torments of Tantalus. But
why should I mention how many innocent persons he punished with exile; how
much property he confiscated; how many men of noble birth and estimable character
he imprisoned, whose wives he handed over to be basely insulted by his profligate
slaves, and to how many married women and virgins he himself offered violence,
though already feeling the infirmities of age? I need not enlarge on these
subjects, since the enormity of his last actions causes the former to appear
trifling and of little moment. (1)
CHAPTER LVI.
At length he undertakes to raise a Persecution.
FOR the final efforts of his fury appeared in his open hostility to the churches,
and he directed his attacks against the bishops themselves, whom he regarded
as his worst adversaries, bearing special enmity to those men whom the great
and pious emperor treated as his friends. Accordingly he spent on us the utmost
of his fury, and, being transported beyond the bounds of reason, he paused
not to reflect on the example of those who had persecuted the Christians before
him, nor of those whom he himself had been raised up to punish and destroy
for their impious deeds: nor did he heed the facts of which he had been himself
a witness, though he had seen with his own eyes the chief originator of these
our calamities (whoever he was), smitten by the stroke of the Divine scourge.
CHAPTER LVII.
That Maximian, (1) brought Low by a Fistulous Ulcer with Worms, issued an
Edict in Favor of the Christians.
FOR whereas this man had commenced the attack on the churches, and had been
the first to pollute his soul with the blood of just and godly men, a judgment
from God overtook him, which at first affected his body, but eventually extended
itself to his soul. For suddenly an abscess appeared in the secret parts of
his person, followed by a deeply seated fistulous ulcer; and these diseases
fastened with incurable virulence on the intestines, which swarmed with a vast
multitude of worms, and emitted a pestilential odor. Besides, his entire person
had become loaded, through gluttonous excess, with an enormous quantity of
fat, and this, being now in a putrescent state, is said to have presented to
all who approached him an intolerable and dreadful spectacle. Having, therefore,
to struggle against such sufferings, at length, though late, he came to a realization
of his past crimes against the Church; and, confessing his sins before God,
he put a stop to the persecution of the Christians, and hastened to issue imperial
edicts and rescripts for the rebuilding of their churches, at the same time
enjoining them to perform their customary worship, and to offer up prayers
on his behalf. (2)
CHAPTER LVIII.
That Maximin, who had persecuted the Christians, was compelled to fly, and
conceal himself in the Disguise of a Slave.
SUCH was the punishment which he underwent who had commenced the persecution.
He, (1) however, of whom we are now speaking, who had been a witness of these
things, and known them by his own actual experience, all at once banished the
remembrance of them from his mind, and reflected neither on the punishment
of the first, nor the divine judgment which had been executed on the second
persecutor. (2) The latter had indeed endeavored to outstrip his predecessor
in the career of crime, and prided himself on the invention of new tortures
for us. Fire nor sword, nor piercing with nails, nor yet wild beasts or the
depths of the sea sufficed him. In addition to all these, he discovered a new
mode of punishment, and issued an edict directing that their eyesight should
be destroyed. So that numbers, not of men only, but of women and children,
after being deprived of the sight of their eyes, and the use of the joints
of their feet, by mutilation or cauterization, were consigned in this condition
to the painful labor of the mines. Hence it was that this tyrant also was overtaken
not long after by the righteous judgment of God, at a time when, confiding
in the aid of the demons whom he worshiped as gods, and relying on the countless
multitudes of his troops, he had ventured to engage in battle. For, feeling
himself on that occasion destitute of all hope in God, he threw from him the
imperial dress which so ill became him, hid himself with unmanly timidity in
the crowd around him, and sought safety in flight. (3)
He afterwards lurked about the fields and villages in the habit of a slave,
hoping he should thus be effectually concealed. He had not, however, eluded
the mighty and all-searching eye of God: for even while he was expecting to
pass the residue of his days in security, he fell prostrate, smitten by God's
fiery dart, and his whole body consumed by the stroke of Divine vengeance;
so that all trace of the original lineaments of his person was lost, and nothing
remained to him but dry bones and a skeleton-like appearance.
CHAPTER LIX.
That Maximin, blinded by Disease, issued an Edict in Favor of the Christians.
AND still the stroke of God continued heavy upon him, so that his eyes protruded
and fell from their sockets, leaving him quite blind: and thus he suffered,
by a most righteous retribution, the very same punishment which he had been
the first to devise for the martyrs of God. At length, however, surviving even
these sufferings, he too implored pardon of the God of the Christians, and
confessed his impious fighting against God: he too recanted, as the former
persecutor had done; and by laws and ordinances explicitly acknowledged his
error in worshiping those whom he had accounted gods, declaring that he now
knew, by positive experience, that the God of the Christians was the only true
God. These were facts which Licinius had not merely received on the testimony
of others, but of which he had himself had personal knowledge: and yet, as
though his understanding had been obscured by some dark cloud of error, persisted
in the same evil course.
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