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THE ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY OF THEODORET
BOOK II
CHAPTER I.
Return of St. Athanasius.
THE divine Athanasius returned to Alexandria, after having remained two years
and four months at Treves(1). Constantine, the eldest son of Constantine the
Great, whose imperial sway extended over Western Gaul, wrote the following
letter to the church of Alexandria. Epistle of the Emperor Constantine, the
son of Constantine the Great, to the Alexandrians.
"CONSTANTINUS
CAESAR to the people of the Catholic Church of Alexandria.
"I
think that it cannot have escaped your pious intelligence that Athanasius,
the interpreter
of the venerated
law, was opportunely sent into Gaul, in order
that, so long as the savagery of these bloodthirsty opponents was threatening
peril to his sacred head, he might be saved from suffering irremediable wrongs.
To avoid this imminent peril, he was snatched from the jaws of his foes, to
remain in a city under my jurisdiction, where he might be abundantly supplied
with every necessary. Yet the greatness of his virtue, relying,on the grace
of God, led him to despise all the calamities of adverse fortune. Constantine,
my lord and my father, of blessed memory, intended to have reinstated him in
his former bishopric, and to have restored him to your piety; but as the emperor
was arrested by the hand of death before his desires were accomplished, I,
being his heir, have deemed it fitting to carry into execution the purpose
of this sovereign of divine memory. You will learn from your bishop himself,
when you see him, with how much respect I have treated him. Nor indeed is it
surprising that he should have been thus treated by me. I was moved to this
line of conduct by his own great virtue, and the thought of your affectionate
longing for his return. May Divine Providence watch over you, beloved brethren!"
Furnished with this letter, St. Athanasius returned(2) from exile, and was
most gladly welcomed both by the rich and by the poor, by the inhabitants of
cities, and by those of the provinces. The followers of the madness of Arius
were the only persons who felt any vexation at his return. Eusebius, Theognis,
and those of their faction resorted to their former machinations, and endeavoured
to prejudice the ears of the young emperor against him.
I shall now proceed to relate in what manner Constantius swerved from the
doctrines of the Apostles.
CHAPTER II.
Declension of the Emperor Constantius from the true Faith.
CONSTANTIA,
the widow of Licinius, was the half-sister of Constantine(1). She was intimately
acquainted
with
a certain priest who had imbibed the doctrines
of Arius. He did not openly acknowledge his unsoundness; but, in the frequent
conversations which he had with her, he did not refrain from declaring that
Arius had been unjustly calumniated. After the death of her impious husband,
the renowned Constantine did everything in his power to solace her, and strove
to prevent her from experiencing the saddest trials of widowhood. He attended
her also in her last illness(2), and rendered her every proper attention. She
then presented the priest whom I mentioned to the emperor, and entreated him
to receive him under his protection. Constantine acceded to her request, and
soon after fulfilled his promise. But though the priest was permitted the utmost
freedom of speech, and was most honourably treated, he did not venture to reveal
his corrupt principles, for he observed the firmness with which the emperor
adhered to the truth. When Constantine was on the point of being translated
to an eternal kingdom, he drew up a will, in which he directed that his temporal
dominions should be divided among his sons. None of them was with him when
he was dying, so he entrusted the will to this priest alone, and desired him
to give it to Constantius, who, being at a shorter distance from the spot than
his brothers, was expected to arrive the first. These directions the priest
executed, and thus by putting the will into his hands, became known to Constantius,
who accepted him as an intimate friend, and commanded him to visit him frequently.
Perceiving the weakness of Constantius, whose mind was like reeds driven to
and fro by the wind, he became emboldened to declare war against the doctrines
of the gospel. He loudly deplored the stormy state of the churches, and asserted
it to be due to those who had introduced the unscriptural word "consubstantial" into
the confession of faith, and that all the disputes among the clergy and the
laity had been occasioned by it. He calumniated Athanasius and all who coincided
in his opinions, and formed designs for their destruction, being used as their
fellow-worker by Eusebius(3), Theognis, and Theodorus, bishop of Perinthus.
The last-named, whose see is generally known by the name of Heraclea, was
a man of great erudition, and had written an exposition of the Holy Scriptures(4).
These bishops resided near the emperor, and frequently visited him; they assured
him that the return of Athanasius from banishment had occasioned many evils,
and had excited a tempest which had shaken not only Egypt, but also Palestine,
Phoenicia, and the adjacent countries(5).
CHAPTER III.
Second Exile of St. Athanasius.--Ordination and Death of Gregorius.
WITH these
and similar arguments, the bishops assailed the weak-minded emperor, and
persuaded him
to expel
Athanasius from his church. But Athanasius obtained
timely intimation of their design, and departed to the west(1) The friends
of Eusebius had sent false accusations against him to Julius, who was then
bishop of Rome(2). In obedience to the laws of the church, Julius summoned
the accusers and the accused to Rome, that the cause might be tried(3). Athanasius,
accordingly, set out for Rome, but the calumniators refused to go because they
saw that their falsehood would easily be detected(4). But perceiving that the
flock of Athanasius was left without a pastor, they appointed over it a wolf
instead of a shepherd. Gregorius, for this was his name, surpassed the wild
beasts in his deeds of cruelty towards the flock: but at the expiration of
six years he was destroyed by the sheep themselves. Athanasius went to Constans
(Constantine, the eldest brother, having fallen in battle), and complained
of the plots laid against him by the Arians, and of their opposition to the
apostolical faith(5). He reminded him of his father, and how he attended in
person the great and famous council which he had summoned; how he was present
at its debates, took part in framing its decrees, and confirmed them by law.
The emperor was moved to emulation by his father's zeal, and promptly wrote
to his brother, exhorting him to preserve inviolate the religion of their father,
which they had inherited; "for," he urged, "by piety he made
his empire great, destroyed the tyrants of Rome, and subjugated the foreign
nations on every side." Constantius was led by this letter to summon the
bishops from the east and from the west to Sardica(6), a city of Illyricum,
and the metropolis of Dacia, that they might deliberate on the means of removing
the other troubles of the church, which were many and pressing.
CHAPTER IV.
Paulus, Bishop of Constantinople.
PAULUS
(1), bishop of Constantinople, who faithfully maintained orthodox doctrines,
was accused
by the unsound
Arians of exciting seditions, and of such other
crimes as they usually laid to the charge of all those who preached true piety.
The people, who feared the machinations of his enemies, would not permit him
to go to Sardica. The Arians, taking advantage of the weakness of the emperor,
procured from him an edict of banishment against Paulus, who was, accordingly,
sent to Cucusus, a little town formerly included in Cappadocia, but now in
Lesser Armenia. But these disturbers of the public peace were not satisfied
with having driven the admirable Paulus into a desert. They sent the agents
of their cruelty to despatch him by a violent death. St. Athanasius testifies
to this fact in the defence which he wrote of his own flight. He uses the following
words(2): "They pursued Paulus, bishop of Constantinople, and having seized
him at Cucusus, a city of Cappadocia, they had him strangled, using as their
executioner Philippus the prefect, who was the protector of their heresy, and
the active agent of their most atrocious projects
Such were the murders to which the blasphemy of Arius gave rise. Their mad
rage against the Only-begotten was matched by cruel deeds against His servants.
CHAPTER V.
The Heresy of Macedonius.
THE Arians, having effected the death of Paulus, or rather having despatched
him to the kingdom of heaven, promoted Macedonius(1) in his place, who, they
imagined, held the same sentiments, and belonged to the same faction as themselves,
because he, like them, blasphemed the Holy Ghost. But, shortly after, they
deposed him also, because he refused to call Him a creature Whom the Holy Scriptures
affirm to be the Son of God. After his separation from them, he became the
leader of a sect of his own. He taught that the Son of God is not of the same
substance as the Father, but that He is like Him in every particular. He also
openly affirmed that the Holy Ghost is a creature. These circumstances occurred
not long afterwards as we have narrated them.
CHAPTER VI.
Council held at Sardica.
TWO hundred and fifty bishops assembled at Sardica(1), as is proved by ancient
records. The great Athanasius, Asclepas, bishop of Gaza, already mentioned(2),
and Marcellus(3), bishop of Ancyra, the metropolis of Galatia, who also held
this bishopric at the time of the council of Nicaea, all repaired thither.
The calumniators, and the chiefs of the Arian faction, who had previously judged
the cause of Athanasius, also attended. But when they found that the members
of the synod were staunch in their adherence to sound doctrine, they would
not even enter the council, although they had been summoned to it, but fled
away, both accusers and judges. All these circumstances are far more clearly
explained in a letter drawn up by the council; and I shall therefore now insert
it. Synodical Letter from the Bishops assembled at Sardica, addressed to the
other Bishops.
"The
holy council assembled at Sardica, from Rome, Spain, Gaul, Italy, Campania,
Calabria,
Africa, Sardinia,
Pannonia, Moesia, Dacia, Dardania, Lesser
Dacia, Macedonia, Thessaly, Achaia, Epirus, Thrace, Rhodope, Asia, Caria, Bithynia,
the Hellespont, Phrygia, Pisidia, Cappadocia, Pontus, the lesser Phrygia, Cilicia,
Pamphylia, Lydia, the Cyclades, Egypt, the Thebaid, Libya, Galatia, Palestine
and Arabia, to the bishops throughout the world, our fellow-ministers in the
catholic and apostolic Church, and our beloved brethren in the Lord. Peace
be unto you.
"The
madness of the Arians has often led them to the perpetration of violent atrocities
against
the
servants of God who keep the true faith; they
introduce false doctrines themselves, and persecute those who uphold orthodox
principles. So violent were their attacks on the faith, that they reached the
ears of our most pious emperors. Through the co-operation of the grace of God,
the emperors have summoned us from different provinces and cities to the holy
council which they have appointed to be held in the city of Sardica, in order
that all dissensions may be terminated, all evil doctrines expelled, and the
religion of Christ alone maintained amongst all people. Some bishops from the
east have attended the council at the solicitation of our most religious emperors,
principally on account of the reports circulated against our beloved brethren
and fellow-ministers, Athanasius, bishop of Alexandria, Marcellus, bishop of
Ancyra in Galatia, and Asclepas, bishop of Gaza. Perhaps the calumnies of the
Arians have already reached you, and they have endeavoured thus to forestall
the council, and make you believe their groundless accusations of the innocent,
and prevent any suspicion being raised of the depraved heresy which they uphold.
But they have not long been permitted so to act. The Lord is the Protector
of the churches; for them and for us all He suffered death, and opened for
us the way to heaven.
"The
adherents of Eusebius. Maris, Theodorus, Theognis, Ursacius, Valens, Menophantus,
and
Stephanus,
had already written to Julius, the bishop of Rome,
and our fellow-minister, against our aforesaid fellow-ministers Athanasius,
bishop of Alexandria, Marcellus, bishop of Ancyra in Galatia, and Asclepas,
bishop of Gaza. Some bishops of the opposite party wrote also to Julius, testifying
to the innocence of Athanasius, and proving that all that had been asserted
by the followers of Eusebius was nothing more than lies and slander. The refusal
of the Arians to obey the summons of our beloved brother and fellow-ruler,
Julius, and also the letter written by that bishop, clearly prove the falseness
of their accusation. For, had they believed that what they had done and represented
against our fellow-minister admitted of justification, they would have gone
to Rome. But their mode of procedure in this great and holy council is a manifest
proof of their fraud. Upon their arrival at Sardica, they perceived that our
brethren, Athanasius, Marcellus, Asclepas, and others, were there also; they
were therefore afraid to come to the test, although they had been summoned,
not once or twice only, but repeatedly. There were they waited for by the assembled
bishops, particularly by the venerable Hosius, one worthy of all honour and
respect, on account of his advanced age, his adherence to the faith, and his
labours for the church. All urged them to join the assembly and avail themselves
of the opportunity of proving, in the presence of their fellow-ministers, the
truth of the charges they had brought against them in their absence, both by
word and by letter. But they refused to obey the summons, as we have already
stated, and so by their excesses proved the falsity of their statements, and
all but proclaimed aloud the plot and schemes they had formed. Men confident
of the truth of their assertions are always ready to stand to them openly.
But as these accusers would not appear to substantiate what they had advanced,
any future allegations which they may by their usual artifices bring against
our fellow-ministers, will only be regarded as proceeding from a desire of
slandering them in their absence, without the courage to confront them openly.
"They
fled, beloved brethren, not only because their charges were slander, but
also because they
saw men
arrive with serious and manifold accusations
against themselves. Chains and fetters were produced. Some were present whom
they had exiled: others came forward as representatives of those still kept
in exile. There stood relations and friends of men whom they had put to death.
Most serious of all, bishops also appeared, one of whom(4) exhibited the irons
and the chains with which they had laden him. Others testified that death followed
their false charges. For their infatuation had led them so far as even to attempt
the life of a bishop; and he would have been killed had he not escaped from
their hands. Theodulus(5), our fellow-minister, of blessed memory, passed hence
with their calumny on his name; for, through it, he had been condemned to death.
Some showed the wounds which had been inflicted on them by the sword; others
deposed that they had been exposed to the miseries of famine.
"All
these depositions were made, not by a few obscure individuals, but by whole
churches; the presbyters
of these churches giving evidence that the
persecutors had armed the military against them with swords, and the common
people with clubs; had employed judicial threats, and produced spurious documents.
The letters written by Theognis, for the purpose of prejudicing the emperor
against our fellow-ministers, Athanasius, Marcellus, and Asclepas, were read
and attested by those who had formerly been the deacons of Theognis. It was
also proved that they had stripped virgins naked, had burnt churches, and imprisoned
our fellow-ministers, and all because of the infamous heresy of the Ariomaniacs.
For thus all who refused to make common cause with them were treated.
"The
consciousness of having committed all these crimes placed them in great straits.
Ashamed
of their
deeds, which could no longer be concealed,
they repaired to Sardica, thinking that their boldness in venturing thither
would remove all suspicion of their guilt. But when they perceived the presence
of those whom they had falsely accused, and of those who had suffered from
their cruelty; and that likewise several had come with irrefragable accusations
against them, they would not enter the council. Our fellow-ministers, on the
other hand, Athanasius, Marcellus, and Asclepas, took every means to induce
them to attend, by tears, by urgency, by challenge, promising not only to prove
the falsity of their accusations, but also to show how deeply they had injured
their own churches. But they were so overwhelmed by the consciousness of their
own evil deeds, that they took to flight, and by this flight clearly proved
the falsity of their accusations as well as their own guilt.
"But
though their calumny and perfidy, which had indeed been apparent from the
beginning, were
now
clearly perceived, yet we determined to examine
the circumstances of the case according to the laws of truth, lest they should,
from their very flight, derive pretexts for renewed acts of deceitfulness.
"Upon
carrying this resolution into effect, we proved by their actions that they
were false accusers,
and
that they had formed plots against our fellow-ministers.
Arsenius, whom they declared had been put to death by Athanasius, is still
alive, and takes his place among the living. This fact alone is sufficient
to show that their other allegations are false.
"Although
they spread a report everywhere that a chalice had been broken by Macarius,
one of the
presbyters
of Athanasius, yet those who came from Alexandria,
from Mareotis, anti from other places, testified that this was not the fact;
and the bishops in Egypt wrote to Julius, our fellow-minister, declaring that
there was not the least suspicion that such a deed had been done. The judicial
facts which the Arians assert they possess against Macarius have been all drawn
up by one party; and in these documents the depositions of pagans and of catechumens
were included. One of these catechumens, when interrogated, replied that he
was m the church on the entry of Macarius. Another deposed that Ischyras, whom
they had talked about so much, was then lying ill in his cell. Hence it appears
that the mysteries could not have been celebrated at that time, as the catechumens
were present, and as Ischyras was absent; for he was at that very time confined
by illness. Ischyras, that wicked man who had falsely affirmed that Athanasius
had burnt some of the sacred books, and had been convicted of the crime, now
confessed that he was ill in bed when Macarius arrived; hence the falsehood
of his accusation was clearly demonstrated. His calumny was, however, rewarded
by his party; they gave him the title of a bishop, although he was not yet
even a presbyter. For two presbyters came to the synod, who some time back
had been attached to Meletius, and were afterwards received back by the blessed
Alexander, bishop of Alexandria, and are now with Athanasius, protesting that
he had never been ordained a presbyter, and that Meletius had never had any
church, or employed any minister in Mareotis. Yet, although he had never been
ordained a presbyter, they promote him to a bishopric, in order that his title
may impose upon those who hear his false accusations(6).
"The
writings of our fellow-minister, Marcellus, were also read, and plainly evinced
the duplicity
of the adherents
of Eusebius; for what Marcellus
had simply suggested as a point of inquiry, they accused him of professing
as a point of faith. The statements which he had made, both before and after
the inquiry, were read, and his faith was proved to be orthodox. He did not
affirm, as they represented, that the beginning of the Word of God was dated
from His conception by the holy Mary, or that His kingdom would have an end.
On the contrary, he wrote that His kingdom had had no beginning, and would
have no end. Asclepas, our fellow-minister, produced the reports drawn up at
Antioch in the presence of the accusers, and of Eusebius, bishop of Caesarea,
and proved his innocence by the sentence of the bishops who had presided as
judges.
"It
was not then without cause, beloved brethren, that, although so frequently
summoned, they
would not attend
the council; it was not without cause that
they took to flight. The reproaches of conscience constrained them to make
their escape, and thus, at the same time, to demonstrate the groundlessness
of their calumnies, and the truth of those accusations which were advanced
and proved against them. Besides all the other grounds of complaint, it may
be added that all those who had been accused of holding the Arian heresy, and
had been ejected in consequence, were not only received, but advanced to the
highest dignities by them. They raised deacons to the presbyterate, and thence
to the episcopate; and in all this they were actuated by no other motive than
the desire of propagating and diffusing their heresy, and of corrupting the
true faith.
"Next
to Eusebius, the following are their principal leaders; Theodorus, bishop
of Heraclea,
Narcissus, bishop
of Neronias in Cilicia, Stephanus, bishop
of Antioch, Georgius(7), bishop of Laodicea, Acacius(8), bishop of Caesarea
in Palestine, Menophantus, bishop of Ephesus in Asia, Ursacius, bishop of Singidunum(9)
in Moesia, and Valens, bishop of Mursa(10) in Pannonia. These bishops forbade
those who came with them from the east to attend the holy council, or to unite
with the Church of God. On their road to Sardica they held private assemblies
at different places, and formed a com pact cemented by threats, that, when
they arrived in Sardica, they would not join the holy council, nor assist at
its deliberations; arranging that, as soon as they had arrived they should
present themselves for form's sake, and forthwith betake themselves to flight.
These facts were made known to us by our fellow-ministers, Macarius of Palestine(11),
and Asterius of Arabia(12), who came with them to Sardica, but refused to share
their unorthodoxy. These bishops complained before the holy council of the
violent treatment they had received from them, and of the want of right principles
evinced in all their transactions. They added that there were many amongst
them who still held orthodox opinions, but that these were prevented from going
to the council; and that sometimes threats, sometimes promises, were resorted
to, in order to retain them in that party. For this reason they were compelled
to reside together in one house; and never allowed, even for the shortest space
of time, to be alone.
"It
is not right to pass over in silence and without rebuke the calumnies, the
imprisonments,
the murders,
the stripes, the forged letters, the indignities,
the stripping naked of virgins, the banishments, the destruction of churches,
the acts of incendiarism, the translation of bishops from small towns to large
dioceses, and above all, the ill-starred Arian heresy, raised by their means
against the true faith. For these causes, therefore, we declare the innocence
and purity of our beloved brethren and fellow-ministers, Athanasius, bishop
of Alexandria, Marcellus, bishop of Ancyra in Galatia, and Asclepas, bishop
of Gaza, and of all the other servants of God who are with them; and we have
written to each of their dioceses, in order that the people of each church
may be made acquainted with the innocence of their respective bishops, and
that they may recognise them alone and wait for their return. Men who have
come down on their churches like wolves(13), such as Gregorius in Alexandria,
Basilius in Ancyra, and Quintianus(14) in Gaza, we charge them not even to
call bishops, nor yet Christians, nor to have any communion with them, nor
to receive any letters from them, nor to write to them.
"Theodorus,
bishop of Heraclea in Europe, Narcissus, bishop of Neronias in Cilicia, Acacius,
bishop of Caesarea
in Palestine, Stephanus, bishop of
Antioch, Ursacius, bishop of Singidunum in Moesia, Valens, bishop of Mursa
in Pannonia, Menophantus, bishop of Ephesus, and Georgius, bishop of Laodicea
(for though fear kept him from leaving the East, he has been deposed by the
blessed Alexander, bishop of Alexandria, and has imbibed the infatuation of
the Arians), have on account of their various crimes been cast forth from their
bishoprics by the unanimous decision of the holy council. We have decreed that
they are not only not to be regarded as bishops, but to be refused communion
with us. For those who separate the Son from the substance and divinity of
the Father, and alienate the Word from the Father, ought to be separated from
the Catholic Church, and alienated from all who bear the name of Christians.
Let them then be anathema to you, and to all the faithful, because they have
corrupted the word of truth. For the apostle's precept enjoins, if any one
should bring to you another gospel than that which ye have received, let him
be accursed(15). Command that no one hold communion with them; for light can
have no fellowship with darkness. Keep far off from them; for what concord
has Christ with Belial? Be careful, beloved brethren, that you neither write
to them nor receive their letters. Endeavour, beloved brethren and fellow-ministers,
as though present with us in spirit at the council, to give your hearty consent
to what is enacted, and affix to it your written signature, for the sake of
preserving unanimity of opinion among all our fellow-ministers throughout the
world
"We
declare those men excommunicate from the Catholic Church who say that Christ
is God, but
not the true God;
that He is the Son, but not the true
Son; and that He is both begotten and made; for such persons acknowledge that
they understand by the term 'begotten,' that which has been made; and because,
although the Son of God existed before all ages, they attribute to Him, who
exists not in time but before all time, a beginning and an end(17).
"Valens and Ursacius have, like two vipers brought forth by an asp, proceeded
from the Arian heresy. For they boastingly declare themselves to be undoubted
Christians, and yet affirm that the Word and the Holy Ghost were both crucified
and slain, and that they died and rose again; and they pertinaciously maintain,
like the heretics, that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost are of diverse
and distinct essences(18). We have been taught, and we hold the catholic and
apostolic tradition and faith and confession which teach, that the Father,
the Son, and the Holy Ghost have one essence, which is termed substance(19)
by the heretics. If it is asked, 'What is the essence of the Son?' we confess,
that it is that which is acknowledged to be that of the Father alone; for the
Father has never been, nor could ever be, without the Son, nor the Son without
the Father. It is most absurd to affirm that the Father ever existed without
the Son, for that this could never be so has been testified by the Son Himself,
who said, 'I am in the Father, and the Father in Me(20);' and 'I and My Father
are one(21).' None of us denies that He was begotten; but we say that He was
begotten before all things, whether visible or invisible; anti that He is the
Creator of archangels and angels, and of the world, and of the human race.
It is written, 'Wisdom which is the worker of all things taught me(22),' and
again, 'All things were made by Him(23).' "He could not have existed always
if He had had a beginning, for the everlasting Word has no beginning, and God
will never have an end. We do not say that the Father is Son, nor that the
Son is Father; but that the Father is Father, and the Son of the Father Son.
We confess that the Son is Power of the Father. We confess that the Word is
Word of God the Father, and that beside Him there is no other. We believe the
Word to be the true God, and Wisdom and Power. We affirm that He is truly the
Son, yet not in the way in which others are said to be sons: for they are either
gods by reason of their regeneration, or are called sons of God on account
of their merit, and not on account of their being of one essence(24), as is
the case with the Father and the Son. We confess an Only-begotten and a Firstborn;
but that the Word is only-begotten, who ever was and is in the Father. We use
the word firstborn with respect to His human nature. But He is superior (to
man) in the new creation(25) (of the Resurrection), inasmuch as He is the Firstborn
from the dead.
"We
confess that God is; we confess the divinity of the Father and of the Son
to be one. No
one denies
that the Father is greater than the Son: not
on account of another essence(24), nor yet on account of their difference,
but simply from the very name of the Father being greater than that of the
Son. The words uttered by our Lord, 'I and My Father are one(26),' are by those
men explained as referring to the concord and harmony which prevail between
the Father and the Son; but this is a blasphemous and perverse interpretation.
We, as Catholics, unanimously condemned this foolish and lamentable opinion:
for just as mortal men on a difference having arisen between them quarrel and
afterwards are reconciled, so do such interpreters say that disputes and dissension
are liable to arise between God the Father Almighty and His Son; a supposition
which is altogether absurd and untenable. But we believe and maintain that
those holy words, 'l and My Father are one,' point out the oneness of essence(24)
which is one and the same in the Father and in the Son.
"We
also believe that the Son reigns with the Father, that His reign has neither
beginning
nor end,
and that it is not bounded by time, nor can
ever cease: for that which always exists never begins to be, and can never
cease.
"We
believe in and we receive the Holy Ghost the Comforter, whom the Lord both
promised and
sent. We believe
in It as sent.
"It
was not the Holy Ghost who suffered, but the manhood with which He clothed
Himself; which
He took
from the Virgin Mary, which being man was capable
of suffering; for man is mortal, whereas God is immortal. We believe that on
the third day He rose, the man in God, not God in the man; and that He brought
as a gift to His Father the manhood which He had delivered from sin and corruption.
"We
believe that, at a meet and fixed time, He Himself will judge all men and
all their deeds.
"So
great is the ignorance and mental darkness of those whom we have mentioned,
that they
are unable
to see the light of truth. They cannot comprehend
the meaning of the words: 'that they may be one in us(27).' It is obvious why
the word 'one' was used; it was because the apostles received the Holy Spirit
of God, and yet there were none amongst them who were the Spirit, neither was
there any one of them who was Word, Wisdom, Power, or Only-begotten. 'As Thou,'
He said, 'and I are one, that they, may be one in us.' These holy words, 'that
they may be one in us,' are strictly accurate: for the Lord did not say, 'one
in the same way that I and the Father are one,' but He said, 'that the disciples,
being knit together and united, may be one in faith and in confession, and
so in the grace and piety of God the Father, and by the indulgence and love
of our Lord Jesus Christ, may be able to become one.' "
From this letter may be learnt the duplicity of the calumniators, and the
injustice of the former judges, as well as the soundness of the decrees. These
holy fathers have taught us not only truths respecting the Divine nature, but
also the doctrine of the Incarnation(28).
Constans was much concerned on hearing of the easy temper of his brother,
and was highly incensed against those who had contrived this plot and artfully
taken advantage of it. He chose two of the bishops who had attended the council
of Sardica, and sent them with letters to his brother; he also despatched Salianus,
a military commander who was celebrated for his piety and integrity, on the
same embassy. The letters which he forwarded by them, and which were worthy
of himself, contained not only entreaties and counsels, but also menaces. In
the first place, he charged his brother to attend to all that the bishops might
say, and to take cognizance of the crimes of Stephanus and of his accomplices.
He also required him to restore Athanasius to his flock; the calumny of the
accusers and the injustice and ill-will of his former judges having become
evident. He added, that if he would not accede to his request, and perform
this act of justice, he would himself go to Alexandria, restore Athanasius
to his flock which earnestly longed for him, and expel all opponents.
Constantius was at Antioch when he received this letter; and he agreed to
carry out all that his brother commanded.
CHAPTER VII.
Account of the Bishops Euphratas and Vincentius, and of the plot formed in
Antioch against them.
THE wonted opponents of the truth were so much displeased at these proceedings,
that they planned a notoriously execrable and impious crime.
The two bishops resided near the foot of the mountain, while the military
commander had settled in a lodging in another quarter.
At this period Stephanus held the rudder of the church of Antioch, and had
well nigh sunk the ship, for he employed several tools in his despotic doings,
and by their aid involved all who maintained orthodox doctrines in manifold
calamities. The leader of these instruments was a young man of a rash and reckless
character, who led a very infamous life. He not only dragged away men from
the market-place, and treated them with blows and insult, but had the audacity
to enter private houses, whence he carried off men and women of irreproachable
character. But, not to be too prolix in relating his crimes, I will merely
narrate his daring conduct towards the bishops; for this alone is sufficient
to give an idea of the unlawful deeds of violence which he perpetrated against
the citizens. He went to one of the lowest women of the town, and told her
that some strangers had just arrived, who desired to pass the night with her.
He took fifteen of his band, placed them in hiding among the stone walls at
the bottom of the hill, and then went for the prostitute. After giving the
preconcerted signal, and learning that the folk privy to the plot were on the
spot, he went to the gate of the courtyard belonging to the inn where the bishops
were lodging. The doors were opened by one of the household servants, who had
been bribed by him. He then conducted the woman into the house, pointed out
to her the door of the room where one of the bishops slept, and desired her
to enter. Then he went out to call his accomplices. The door which he had pointed
out happened to be that of Euphratas, the eider bishop, whose room was the
outer of the two. Vincentius, the other bishop, occupied the inner room. When
the woman entered the room of Euphratas, he heard the sound of her footsteps,
and, as it was then dark, asked who was there. She spoke, and Euphratas was
full of alarm, for he thought that it was a devil imitating the voice of a
woman, and he called upon Christ the Saviour for aid. Onager, for this was
the name of the leader of this wicked band (a name(1) peculiarly appropriate
to him, as he not only used his hands but also his feet as weapons against
the pious), had in the meantime returned with his lawless crew, denouncing
as criminals those who were expecting to be judges of crime themselves. At
the noise which was made all the servants came running in, and up got Vincentius.
They closed the gate of the courtyards and captured seven of the gang; but
Onager and the rest made off. The woman was committed to custody with those
who had been seized. At the break of day the bishops awoke the officer who
had come with them, and they all three proceeded together to the palace, to
complain of the audacious acts of Stephanus, whose evil deeds, they said, were
too evident to need either trial or torture to prove them. The general loudly
demanded of the emperor that the audacious act should not be dealt with synodically,
but by ordinary legal process, and offered to give up the clergy attached to
the bishops to be first examined, and declared that the agents of Stephanus
must undergo the torture too. To this Stephanus insolently objected, alleging
that the clergy ought not to be scourged. The emperor and the principal authorities
then decided that it would be better to judge the cause in the palace. The
woman was first of all questioned, and was asked by whom she was conducted
to the inn where the bishops were lodging. She replied, that a young man came
to her, and told her that some strangers had arrived who were desirous of her
company; that in the evening he conducted her to the inn; that he went to look
for his band, and when he had found it, brought her in through the door of
the court, and desired her to go into the chamber adjoining the vestibule.
She added, that the bishop asked who was there; that he was alarmed; and that
he began to pray; and that then others ran to the spot.
CHAPTER VIII.
Stephanus deposed.
AFTER the judges had heard these replies, they ordered the youngest of those
who had been arrested to be brought before them. Before he was subjected to
the examination by scourging, he confessed the whole plot, and stated that
it was planned and carried into execution by Onager. On this latter being brought
in he affirmed that he had only acted according to the commands of Stephanus.
The guilt of Stephanus being thus demonstrated, the bishops then present were
charged to depose him, and expel him from the Church. By his expulsion the
Church was not, however, wholly freed from the plague of Arianism. Leontius,
who succeeded him in his presidency, was a Phrygian of so subtle and artful
a disposition, that he might be said to resemble the sunken rocks of the sea(1).
We shall presently narrate more concerning him(2).
CHAPTER IX.
The second return of Saint Athanasius.
THE emperor Constantius, having become acquainted with the plots formed against
the bishops, wrote to the great Athanasius once, and twice, aye and thrice,
exhorting him to return from the West(1). I shall here insert the second letter,
because it is the shortest of the three.
Constantius Augustus the Conqueror to Athanasius.
"Although
I have already apprised you by previous letters, that you can, without fear
of molestation,
return
to our court, in order that you may, according
to my ardent desire, be reinstated in your own bishopric, yet I now again despatch
another letter to your gravity to exhort you to take immediately, without fear
or suspicion, a public vehicle and return to us, in order that you may receive
all that you desire."
When Athanasius returned, Constantius received him with kindness, and bade
him go back to the Church of Alexandria(2). But there were some attached to
the court, infected with the errors of Arianism, who maintained that Athanasius
ought to cede one church to those who were unwilling to hold communion with
him. On this being mentioned to the emperor, and by the emperor to Athanasius,
he remarked, that the imperial command appeared to be just; but that he also
wished to make a request. The emperor readily promising to grant him whatever
he might ask, he said that those in Antioch(3) who objected to hold communion
with the party now in possession of the churches wanted temples to pray in,
and that it was only fair that one House of God also be assigned to them. This
request was deemed just and reasonable by the emperor; but the leaders of the
Arian faction resisted its being carried into execution, maintaining that neither
party ought to have the churches assigned to them. Constantius on this was
struck with high admiration for Athanasius, and sent him back to Alexandria(4).
Gregorius was dead, having met his end at the hands of the Alexandrians themselves(5).
The people kept high holiday in honour of their pastor; feasting marked their
joy at seeing him again, and praise was given to God(6).Not long after Constans
departed this life(7).
CHAPTER X.
Third exile and flight of Athanasius.
THOSE who had obtained entire ascendency over the mind of Constantius, and
influenced him as they pleased, reminded him that Athanasius had been the cause
of the differences between his brother and himself, which had nearly led to
the rupture of the bonds of nature, and the kindling of a civil war. Constantius
was induced by these representations not only to banish, but also to condemn
the holy Athanasius to death; and he accordingly despatched Sebastianus(1),
a military commander, with a very large body of soldiery to slay him, as if
he had been a criminal. How the one led the attack and the other escaped will
be best told in the words of him who so suffered and was so wonderfully saved.
Thus Athanasius
writes in his Apology for his Flight:--"Let the circumstances
of my retreat be investigated, and the testimony of the opposite faction be
collected; for Arians accompanied the soldiers, as well for the purpose of
spurring them on, as of pointing me out to those who did not know me. If they
are not touched with sympathy at the tale I tell, at least let them listen
in the silence of shame. It was night, and some of the people were keeping
vigil, for a communion(2) was expected. A body of soldiers suddenly advanced
upon them, consisting of a general(3) and five thousand armed men with naked
swords, bows and arrows, and clubs, as I have already stated. The general surrounded
the church, posting his men in close order, that those within might be prevented
from going out. I deemed that I ought not in such a time of confusion to leave
the people, but that I ought rather to be the first to meet the danger; so
I sat down on my throne and desired the deacon to read a psalm, and the people
to respond,' For His mercy endureth for ever.' Then I bade them all return
to their own houses. But now the general with the soldiery forced his way into
the church, and surrounded the sanctuary in order to arrest me. The clergy
and the laity who had remained clamorously besought me to withdraw. This I
firmly refused to do until all the others had retreated. I rose, had a prayer
offered, and directed all the people to retire. 'It is better,' said I, 'for
me to meet the danger alone, than for any of you to be hurt.' When the greater
number of the people had left the church, and just as the rest were following,
the monks and some of the clergy who had remained came up and drew me out.
And so, may the truth be my witness, the Lord leading and protecting me, we
passed through the midst of the soldiers, some of whom were stationed around
the sanctuary, and others marching about the church. Thus I went out unperceived,
and fervently thanked God that I had not abandoned the people, but that after
they had been sent away in safety, I had been enabled to escape from the hands
of those who sought my life
CHAPTER XI.
The evil and daring deeds dane by Georgius(1) in Alexandria.
ATHANASIUS having thus escaped the bloodstained hands of his adversaries,
Georgius, who was truly another wolf, was entrusted with authority over the
flock. He treated the sheep with more cruelty than wolf, or bear, or leopard
could have shewn. He compelled young women who had vowed perpetual virginity,
not only to disown the communion of Athanasius, but also to anathematize the
faith of the fathers. The agent in his cruelty was Sebastianus, an officer
in command of troops. He ordered a fire to be kindled in the centre of the
city, and placed the virgins, who were stripped naked, close to it, commanding
them to deny the faith. Although they formed a most sorrowful and pitiable
spectacle for believers as well as for unbelievers, they considered that all
these dishonours conferred the highest honour on them; and they joyfully received
the blows inflicted on them on account of their faith. All these facts shall
be more clearly narrated by their own pastor.
"About
Lent, Georgius returned from Cappadocia, and added to the evils which he
had been taught
by our enemies.
After the Easter week virgins were
cast into prison, bishops were bound and dragged away by the soldiers, the
homes of widows and of orphans were pillaged, robbery and violence went on
from house to house, and the Christians during the darkness of night were seized
and torn away from their dwellings. Seals were fixed on many houses. The brothers
of the clergy were in peril for their brothers' sake. These cruelties were
very atrocious, but still more so were those which were subsequently perpetrated.
In the week following the holy festival of Pentecost, the people who were keeping
a fast came out to the cemetery(2) to pray, because they all renounced any
communion with Georgius. This vilest of men was informed of this circumstance,
and he incited Sebastianus the military commander, a Manichean(3), to attack
the people; and, accordingly, on the Lord's day itself he rushed upon them
with a large body of armed soldiers wielding naked swords, and bows, and arrows.
He found but few Christians in the act of praying, for most of them had retired
on account of the lateness of the hour. Then he did such deeds as might be
expected from one who had lent his ears to such teachers. He ordered a large
fire to be lighted, and the virgins to be brought close to it, and then tried
to compel them to declare themselves of the Arian creed. When he perceived
that they were conquering, and giving no heed to the fire, he ordered them
to be stripped naked, and to be beaten until their faces for a long while were
scarcely recognisable. He then seized forty men, and inflicted on them a new
kind of torture. He ordered them to be scourged with branches of palm-trees,
retaining their thorns; and by these their flesh was so lacerated that some
because of the thorns fixed fast in them had again and again to put themselves
under the surgeon's hand; others were not able to bear the agony and died.
All who survived, and also the virgins, were then banished to the Greater Oasis.
They even refused to give up the bodies of the dead to their kinsfolk for burial,
but flung them away unburied, and hid them just as they pleased, in order that
it might appear that they had nothing to do with these cruel transactions,
and were ignorant of them. But they were deceived m this foolish expectation:
for the friends of the slain, while they rejoiced at the faithfulness of the
deceased, deeply lamented the loss of the corpses, and spread abroad a full
account of the cruelty that had been perpetrated.
"The
following bishops were banished from Egypt and from Libya:--Ammonius, Muius,
Caius, Philo,
Hermes,
Plenius, Psinosiris, Nilammon, Agapius, Anagamphus,
Marcus, Dracontius, Adelphius, another Ammonius, another Marcus, and Athenodorus;
and also the presbyters Hierax and Dioscorus(4). These were all driven into
exile in so cruel a manner that many died on the road, and others at the place
of their banishment. The persecutors caused the death(5) of more than thirty
bishops. For, like Ahab, their mind was set on rooting out the truth, had it
been possible(6)."
Athanasius
also, in a letter addressed to the virgins(7) who were treated with so much
barbarity,
uses the following
wordS: "Let none of you be
grieved although these impious heretics grudge you burial and prevent your
corpses being carried forth. The impiety of the Arians has reached such a height,
that they block up the gates, and sit like so many demons around the tombs,
in order to hinder the dead from being interred."
These and many other similar atrocities were perpetrated by Georgius in Alexandria.
The holy Athanasius was well aware that there was no spot which could be considered
a place of safety for him; for the emperor had promised a very large reward
to whoever should bring him alive, or his head as a proof of his death.
CHAPTER XII.
Council of Milan.
AFTER the death of Constans, Magnentius assumed the chief authority over the
Western empire; and, to repress his usurpation, Constantius repaired to Europe.
But this war, severe as it was, did not put an end to the war against the Church.
Constantius, who had embraced Arian tenets and readily yielded to the influence
of others, was persuaded to convoke a council at Milan(1), a city of Italy,
and first to compel all the assembled bishops to sign the deposition enacted
by the iniquitous judges at Tyre; and then, since Athanasius had been expelled
from the Church, to draw up another confession of faith. The bishops assembled
in council on the receipt of the imperial letter, but they were far from acting
according to its directions. On the contrary, they told the emperor to his
face that what he had commanded was unjust and impious. For this act of courage
they were expelled from the Church, and relegated to the furthest boundaries
of the empire.
The admirable
Athanasius thus mentions this circumstance in his Apology(2):--"Who," he
writes, "can narrate such atrocities as they have perpetrated? A short
time ago when the Churches were in the enjoyment of peace, and when the people
were assembled for prayer, Liberius(3), bishop of Rome, Paulinus, bishop of
the metropolis of Gaul(4), Dionysius, bishop of the metropolis of Italy(5),
Luciferus, bishop of the metropolis of the Isles of Sardinia(6), and Eusebius,
bishop of one of the cities of Italy(7), who were all exemplary bishops and
preachers of the truth, were seized and driven into exile, for no other cause
than because they could not assent to the Arian heresy, nor sign the false
accusation which had been framed against us. It is unnecessary that I should
speak of the great Hosius, that aged(8) and faithful confessor of the faith,
for every one knows that he also was sent into banishment. Of all the bishops
he is the most illustrious. What council can be mentioned in which he did not
preside, and convince all present by the power of his reasoning? What Church
does not still retain the glorious memorials of his protection? Did any one
ever go to him sorrowing, and not leave him rejoicing? Who ever asked his aid,
and did not obtain all that he desired? Yet they had the boldness to attack
this great man, simply because, from his knowledge of the impiety of their
calumnies, he refused to affix his signature to their artful accusations against
us."
From the
above narrative will be seen the violence of the Arians against these holy
men. Athanasius
also gives
in the same book an account of the numerous
plots formed by the chiefs of the Arian faction against many others:--"Did
any one," said he, "whom they persecuted and got into their power
ever escape from them without suffering what injuries they pleased to inflict?
Was any one who was an object of their search found by them whom they did not
subject to the most agonizing death, or else to the mutilation of all his limbs?
The sentences inflicted by the judges are all attributable to these heretics;
for the judges are but the agents of their will, and of their malice. Where
is there a place which contains no memorial of their atrocities? If any one
ever differed from them in opinion, did they not, like Jezebel, falsely accuse
and oppress him? Where is there a church which has not been plunged in sorrow
by their plots against its bishop? Antioch has to mourn the loss of Eustathius,
the faithful and the orthodox(9). Balaneae weeps for Euphration(10); Paltus(11)
and Antaradus(12) for Cymatius and Carterius. Adrianople has been called to
deplore the loss of the well-beloved Eutropius(13), and of Lucius his successor,
who was repeatedly loaded with chains, and expired beneath their weight(14).
Ancyra, Beroea, and Gaza had to mourn the absence of Marcellus(15), Cyrus(16)
and Asclepas(17), who, after having suffered much ill-treatment from this deceitful
sect, were driven into exile. Messengers were sent in quest of Theodulus(18)
and Olympius(19), bishops of Thrace, as well as of me and of the presbyters
of my diocese; and had they found us, we should no doubt have been put to death.
But at the very time that they were planning our destruction we effected our
escape, although they had sent letters to Donatus, the proconsul, against Olympius,
and to Philagrius(20), against me."
Such were the audacious acts of this impious faction against the most holy
Christians. Hosius was the bishop of Cordova, and was the most highly distinguished
of all those who assembled at the council of Nicaea; he also obtained the first
place among those convened at Sardica.
I now desire to insert in my history an account of the admirable arguments
addressed by the far-famed Liberius, m defence of the truth, to the emperor
Constantius. They are recorded by some of the pious men of that period in order
to stimulate others to the exercise of similar zeal in divine things. Liberius
had succeeded Julius, the successor of Silvester, in the government of the
church of Rome.
CHAPTER XIII.
Conference between Liberius, Pope of Rome, and the Emperor Constantius(1).
CONSTANTIUS.--"We
have judged it right, as you are a Christian and the bishop of our city,
to send for
you in order to admonish you to abjure all
connexion with the folly of the impious Athanasius. For when he was separated
from the communion of the Church by the synod the whole world approved of the
decision."
LIBERIUS.--"O
Emperor, ecclesiastical sentences ought to be enacted with strictest justice:
therefore,
if it be
pleasing to your piety, order the court
to be assembled, and if it be seen that Athanasius deserves condemnation, then
let sentence be passed upon him according to ecclesiasticaI forms. For it is
not possible for us to condemn a man unheard and untried."
CONSTANTIUS.--"The
whole world has condemned his impiety; but he, as he has done from the first,
laughs
at the danger."
LIBERIUS.--"Those
who signed the condemnation were not eye-witnesses of anything that occurred;
but were
actuated by the desire of glory, and by
the fear of disgrace at thy hands."
THE EMPEROR.--"What
do you mean by glory and fear and disgrace?"
LIBERIUS.--"Those
who love not the glory of God, but who attach greater value to thy gifts,
have condemned
a man whom they have neither seen nor judged;
this is very contrary to the principles of Christians."
THE EMPEROR.--"Athanasius
was tried in person at the council of Tyre, and all the bishops of the world
at that synod condemned him."
LIBERIUS.--"No
judgment has ever been passed on him in his presence. Those who there assembled
condemned
him after he had retired."
EUSEBIUS
THE EUNUCH(2) foolishly interposed.--"It was demonstrated at
the council of Nicaea that he held opinions entirely at variance with the catholic
faith."
LIBERIUS.--"Of
all those who sailed to Mareotis, and who were sent for the purpose of drawing
up memorials
against the accused, five only delivered
the sentence against him. Of the five who were thus sent, two are now dead,
namely, Theognis and Theodorus. The three others, Maris, Valens, and Ursacius,
are still living. Sentence was passed at Sardica against all those who were
sent for this purpose to Mareotis. They presented a petition to the council
soliciting pardon for having drawn up at Mareotis memorials against Athanasius,
consisting of false accusations and depositions of only one party. Their petition
is still in our hands. Whose cause are we to espouse, O Emperor? With whom
are we to agree and hold communion? With those who first condemned Athanasius,
and then solicited pardon for having condemned him, or with those who have
condemned these latter?"
EPICTETUS(3)
THE BISHOP.--"O
Emperor, it is not on behalf of the faith, nor in defence of ecclesiastical
judgments that Liberius is pleading; but merely
in order that he may boast before the Roman senators of having conquered the
emperor in argument."
THE EMPEROR
(addressing Liberius).--"What
portion do you constitute of the universe, that you alone by yourself take
part with an impious man, and
are destroying the peace of the empire and of the whole world?"
LIBERIUS.--"My
standing alone does not make the truth a whit the weaker. According to the
ancient
story,
there are found but three men resisting a decree."
EUSEBIUS
THE EUNUCH.--"You
make our emperor a Nebuchadnezzar."
LIBERIUS.--"By
no means. But you rashly condemn a man without any trial. What I desire is,
in the first
place, that a general confession of faith be
signed, confirming that drawn up at the council of Nicaea. And secondly, that
all our brethren be recalled from exile, and reinstated in their own bishoprics.
If, when all this has been carried into execution, it can be shown that the
doctrines of all those who now fill the churches with trouble are conformable
to the apostolic faith, then we will all assemble at Alexandria to meet the
accused, the accusers, and their defender, and after having examined the cause,
we will pass judgment upon it."
EPICTETUS
THE BISHOP.--"There
will not be sufficient post-carriages to convey so many bishops."
LIBERIUS.--"Ecclesiastical
affairs can be transacted without post-carriages. The churches are able to
provide means for the conveyance of their respective
bishops to the sea coast(4)."
THE EMPEROR.--"The
sentence which has once been passed ought not to be revoked The decision
of the greater
number of bishops ought to prevail. You
alone retain friendship towards that impious man."
LIBERIUS.--"O
Emperor, it is a thing hitherto unheard of, that a judge should accuse the
absent
of
impiety, as if he were his personal enemy."
THE EMPEROR.--"All
without exception have been injured by him, but none so deeply as I have
been. Not
content with the death of my eldest brother(5),
he never ceased to excite Constans, of blessed memory, to enmity against me;
but I, with much moderation, put up alike with the vehemence of both the instigator
and his victim. Not one of the victories which I have gained, not even excepting
those over Magnentius and Silvanus, equals the ejection of this vile man from
the government of the Church."
LIBERIUS.--"Do
not vindicate your own hatred and revenge, O Emperor, by the instrumentality
of bishops;
for their hands ought only to be raised
for purposes of blessing and of sanctification. If it be consonant with your
will, command the bishops to return to their own residences; and if it appear
that they are of one mind with him who to-day maintains the true doctrines
of the confession of faith signed at Nicaea, then let them come together and
see to the peace of the world, in order that an innocent man may not serve
as a mark for reproach."
THE EMPEROR.--"One
question only requires to be made. I wish you to enter into communion with
the churches,
and to send you back to Rome. Consent therefore
to peace, and sign your assent, and then you shall return to Rome."
LIBERIUS.--"I
have already taken leave of the brethren who are in that city. The decrees
of
the Church
are of greater importance than a residence
in Rome."
THE EMPEROR.--"You
have three days to consider whether you will sign the document and return
to Rome; if
not, you must choose the place of your
banishment."
LIBERIUS.--"Neither
three days nor three months can change my sentiments. Send me wherever you
please."
After
the lapse of two days the emperor sent for Liberius, and finding his opinions
unchanged, he
commanded
him to be banished to Berets, a city of Thrace.
Upon the departure of Liberius, the emperor sent him five hundred pieces of
gold to defray his expenses. Liberius said to the messenger who brought them, "Go,
and give them back to the emperor; he has need of them to pay his troops." The
empress(6) also sent him a sum of the same amount; he said, "Take it to
the emperor, for he may want it to pay his troops; but if not, let it be given
to Auxentius and Epictetus, for they stand in need of it." Eusebius the
eunuch brought him other sums of money, and he thus addressed him: "You
have turned all the churches of the world into a desert, and do you bring alms
to me, as to a criminal? Begone, and become first a Christian(7)." He
was sent into exile three days afterwards, without having accepted anything
that was offered him.
CHAPTER XIV.
Concerning the Banishment and Return of the Holy Liberius.
THIS victorious
champion of the truth was sent into Thrace, according to the imperial order.
Two years
after
this event Constantius went to Rome. The ladies
of rank urged their husbands to petition the emperor for the restoration of
the shepherd to his flock: they added, that if this were not granted, they
would desert them, and go themselves after their great pastor. Their husbands
replied, that they were afraid of incurring the resentment of the emperor. "If
we were to ask him," they continued, "being men, he would deem it
an unpardonable offence; but if you were yourselves to present the petition,
he would at any rate spare you, and would either accede to your request, or
else dismiss you without injury." These noble ladies adopted this suggestion,
and presented themselves before the emperor in all their customary splendour
of array, that so the sovereign, judging their rank from their dress, might
count them worthy of being treated with courtesy and kindness. Thus entering
the presence, they besought him to take pity on the condition of so large a
city, deprived of its shepherd, and made an easy prey to the attacks of wolves.
The emperor replied, that the flock possessed a shepherd capable of tending
it, and that no other was needed in the city. For after the banishment of the
great Liberius, one of his deacons, named Felix, had been appointed bishop.
He preserved inviolate the doctrines set forth in the Nicene confession of
faith, yet he held communion with those who had corrupted that faith. For this
reason none of the citizens of Rome would enter the House of Prayer while he
was in it. The ladies mentioned these facts to the emperor. Their persuasions
were successful; and he commanded that the great Liberius should be recalled
from exile, and that the two bishops should conjointly rule the Church. The
edict of the emperor was read in the circus, and the multitude shouted that
the imperial ordinance was just; that the spectators were divided into two
factions, each deriving its name from its own colours(1), and that each faction
would now have its own bishop. After having thus ridiculed the edict of the
emperor, they all exclaimed with one voice, "One God, one Christ, one
bishop." I have deemed it right to set down their precise words. Some
time after this Christian people had uttered these pious and righteous acclamations,
the holy Liberius returned, and Felix retired to another city.
I have, for the sake of preserving order, appended this narrative to what
relates to the proceedings of the bishops at Milan. I shall now return to the
relation of events in their due course.
CHAPTER XV.
Council of Ariminum(1).
WHEN all
who defended the faith had been removed, those who moulded the mind of the
emperor according
to
their own will, flattering themselves that the
faith which they opposed might be easily subverted, and Arianism established
in its stead, persuaded Constantius to convene the Bishops of both East and
West at Ariminum(2), in order to remove from the Creed the terms which had
been devised by the Fathers to counteract the corrupt craft of Arius,--"substance(3)," and "of
one substance(4)." For they would have it that these terms had caused
dissension between church and church. On their assembling in synod the partizans
of the Arian faction strove to trick the majority of the bishops, especially
those of cities of the Western Empire, who were men of simple and unsophisticated
ways. The body of the Church, they argued again and again, must not be torn
asunder for the sake of two terms which are not to be found in the Bible; and,
while they confessed the propriety of describing the Son as in all things "like" the
Father, pressed the omission of the word "substance" as unscriptural.
The motives, however, of the propounders of these views were seen through by
the Council, and they were consequently repudiated. The orthodox bishops declared
their mind to the emperor in a letter; for, said they, we are sons and heirs
of the Fathers of the Council of Nicaea, and if we were to have the hardihood
to take away anything from what was by them subscribed, or to add anything
to what they so excellently settled, we should declare ourselves no true sons,
but accusers of them that begat us. But the exact terms of their confession
of faith will be more accurately given in the words of their letter to Constantius.
Letter(5) written to the Emperor Constantius by the Synod assembled at Ariminum.
"Summoned,
we believe, at the bidding of God, and in obedience to your piety, we bishops
of the
Western
Church assembled in synod at Ariminum in order
that the faith of the Church Catholic might be set forth, and its opponents
exposed. After long consideration we have found it to be plainly best for us
to hold fast and guard, and by guarding keep safe unto the end, the faith established
from the first, preached by Prophets, and Evangelists, and Apostles, through
our Lord Jesus Christ, warden of thy empire, and champion of thy salvation.
For it is plainly absurd and unlawful to make any change in the doctrines rightly
and justly defined, and in matters examined at Nicaea with the cognisance of
the right glorious Constantine, thy Father and Emperor, whereof the teaching
and spirit was published and preached that mankind might hear and understand.
This faith was destined to be the one rival and destroyer of the Arian heresy,
and by it not only the Arian itself, but likewise all other heresies were undone.
To this faith to add aught is verily perilous; from it to subtract aught is
to run great risk. If it have either addition or loss, our foes will feel free
to act as they please. Accordingly Ursacius and Valens, declared adherents
and friends of the Arian dogma, were pronounced separate from our communion.
To keep their place in it, they asked to be granted a locus penitentioe and
pardon for all the points wherein they had owned themselves in error; as is
testified by the documents written by themselves, by means of which they obtained
favour and forgiveness. These events were going on at the very time when the
synod was meeting at Milan, the presbyters of the church of Rome being also
present. It was known that Constantine, who, though dead, is worthy of remembrance,
had, with all exactitude and care, set forth the creed drawn up: and now that,
after receiving Baptism, he was dead, and had passed away to the peace which
he deserved. We judged it absurd for us after him to indulge in any innovation,
and throw a slur on all the holy confessors and martyrs who had devised and
formulated this doctrine, in that their minds have ever remained bound by the
old bond of the Church. Their faith God has handed down even to the times of
thy own reign, through our Lord Jesus Christ, by Whose grace such empire is
thine that thou rulest over all the world. Yet again those pitiable and wretched
men, with lawless daring, have proclaimed themselves preachers of their unholy
opinion, and are taking in hand the overthrow of all the force of the truth.
For when at thy command the synod assembled, then they laid bare their own
disingenuous desires. For they set about trying through villany and confusion
to make innovation. They got hold of certain of their own following,--one Germanius(6),
and Auxentius(7), and Caius(8), promoters of heresy and discord, whose doctrine,
though but one, transcends a very host of blasphemies. When, however, they
became aware that we were not of their way of thinking, nor in sympathy with
their vicious projects, they made their way into our meeting as though to make
some other proposal, but a very short time was enough to convict them of their
real intentions. Therefore in order to save the management of the Church from
falling from time to time into the same difficulties, and to prevent them from
being confounded in whirlpools of disturbance and disorder, it has seemed the
safe course to keep what has been defined aforetime fixed and unchanged, and
to separate the above-named from our communion. Wherefore we have sent envoys
to your clemency to signify and explain the mind of the synod as expressed
in this letter. These envoys before all things we have charged to guard the
truth in accordance with the old and right definitions. They are to inform
your holiness, not as did Ursacius and Valens, that there will be peace if
the truth be upset; for how can the destroyers of peace be agents of peace?
but rather that these changes will bring strife and disturbance, as well on
the rest of the cities, as on the Roman church. Wherefore we beseech your clemency
to receive our envoys with kindly ears and gentle mien, and not to suffer any
new thing to flout the dead. Suffer us to abide in the definition and settlement
of our Fathers, whom we would un-hesitatingly declare to have done all they
did with intelligence and wisdom, and with the Holy Ghost. The innovation now
sought to be introduced is filling the faithful with unbelief, and unbelievers
with credulity(9).
"We
beg you to order bishops in distant parts, who are afflicted alike by advanced
age and poverty,
to
be provided with facilities for travelling
home, that the churches be not left long deprived of their bishops.
"And
yet again this one thing we supplicate, that nothing be taken from or added
to the established
doctrines,
but that all remain unbroken, as they
have been preserved by your father's piety, and to our own day. Let us toil
no longer nor be kept away from our own dioceses, but let the bishops with
their own people spend their days in peace, in prayer, and in worship, offering
supplication for thy empire, and health, and peace, which God shall grant thee
for ever and ever. Our envoys, who will also instruct your holiness out of
the sacred Scriptures, convey the signatures and salutations of the bishops."
The letter was written, and the envoys sent, but the high officers of the
Imperial Court, though they took the despatch and delivered it to their master,
refused to introduce the envoys, on the ground that the sovereign was occupied
with state affairs. They took this course in the hope that the bishops, annoyed
at delay, and eager to return to the cities entrusted to their care, would
at length be compelled themselves to break up and disperse the bulwark erected
against heresy. But their ingenuity was frustrated, for the noble champions
of the Faith despatched a second letter to the emperor, exhorting him to admit
the envoys to audience and dissolve the synod. This letter I subjoin.
The Second Letter of the Synod to Constantius.
"To
Constantius the Victorious, the pious emperor, the bishops assembled at Ariminum
send greeting.
"Most
illustrious lord and autocrat, we have received the letter of your clemency,
informing
us that,
in consequence of occupations of state, you have
hitherto been unable to see our envoys. You bid us await their return, that
your piety may come to a decision on the object we have in view, and on the
decrees of our predecessors. But we venture in this letter to repeat to your
clemency the point which we urged before, for we have in no way withdrawn from
our position. We entreat you to receive with benign countenance the letter
of our humility, wherein now we make answer to your piety, and the points which
we have ordered to be submitted to your benignity by our envoys. Your clemency
is no less aware than we are ourselves how serious and unfitting a state of
things it is, that in the time of your most happy reign so many churches should
seem to be without bishops. Wherefore once again, most glorious autocrat, we
beseech you that, if it be pleasing to your humanity, you will command us to
return to our churches before the rigour of winter, that we may be able, with
our people, as we have done and ever do, to offer most earnest prayers for
the health anti wealth of your empire to Almighty God, and to Christ His Son,
our Lord and Saviour."
CHAPTER XVI.
Concerning the Synod held at Nica(1) in Thrace, and the Confession of Faith
drawn up there.
AFTER
this letter they(2) irritated the emperor, and got the majority of the bishops,
against their
will, to
a certain town of Thrace, of the name of Nica.
Some simple men they deluded, and others they terrified, into carrying out
their old contrivance for injuring the true religion, by erasing the words "Substance" and "of
one Substance" from the Creed, and inserting instead of them the word "like." I
insert their formula in this history, not as being couched in proper terms,
but because it convicts the faction of Arius, for it is not even accepted by
the disaffected of the present time. Now, instead of "the like" they
preach "the unlike(3)."
Unsound Creed put forth at Nica in Thrace.
"We
believe in one only true God, Father Almighty, of Whom are all things. And
in the only-begotten
Son
of God, Who before all ages and before every beginning
was begotten of God, through Whom all things were made, both visible and invisible:
alone begotten, only-begotten of the Father alone, God of God: like the Father
that begat Him, according to the Scriptures, Whose generation no one knoweth
except only the Father that begot Him. This Only-begotten Son of God, sent
by His Father, we know to have come down from heaven, as it is written, for
the destruction of sin and death; begotten of the Holy Ghost and the Virgin
Mary, as it is written, according to the flesh. Who companied with His disciples,
and when the dispensation was fulfilled, according to the Father's will, was
crucified, dead, and buried, and descended to the world below, at Whom Hell
himself trembled. On the third day He rose from the dead and companied with
His disciples forty days. He was taken up into Heaven, and sitteth on the right
hand of His Father, and is coming at the last day of the Resurrection, in His
Father's Glory, to render to every one according to his works. And we believe
in the Holy Ghost, which the Only-begotten Son of God, Jesus Christ, both God
and Lord, promised to send to man, the Comforter, as it is written, the Spirit
of Truth. This Spirit He Himself sent after He had ascended into Heaven and
sat at the right hand of the Father, from thence to come to judge both quick
and dead. But the word 'the Substance,' which was too simply inserted by the
Fathers, and, not being understood by the people, was a cause of scandal through
its not being found in the Scriptures, it hath seemed good to us to remove,
and that for the future no mention whatever be permitted of 'Substance,' on
account of the sacred Scriptures nowhere making any mention of the 'Substance'
of the Father and the Son. Nor must one 'essence(4)' be named in relation to
the person s of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. And we call the Son like the Father,
as the Holy Scriptures call Him and teach; but all the heresies, both those
already condemned, and any, if such there be, which have risen against the
document thus put forth, let them be Anathema."
This Creed was subscribed by the bishops, some being frightened and some cajoled,
but those who refused to give in their adhesion were banished to the most remote
regions of the world.
CHAPTER XVII.
Synodical Act of Damasus, Bishop of Rome, and of the Western Bishops, about
the Council at Ariminum.
THE condemnation of this formula by all the champions of the truth, and specially
those of the West, is shewn by the letter which they wrote to the Illyrians(1).
First of the signatories was Damasus, who obtained the presidency of the church
of Rome after Liberius, and was adorned with many virtues(2). With him signed
ninety bishops of Italy and Galatia(3), now called Gaul, who met together at
Rome. I would have inserted their names but that I thought it superfluous.
"The
bishops assembled at Rome in sacred synod Damasus and Valerianus(4) and the
rest, to their
beloved
brethren the bishops of Illyria, send greeting
in God.
"We
believe that we, priests of God, by whom it is fight for the rest to be instructed,
are
holding and
teaching our people the Holy Creed which
was founded on the teaching of the Apostles, and in no way departs from the
definitions of the Fathers. But through a report of the brethren in Gaul and
Venetia we have learnt that certain men are fallen into heresy.
"It
is the duty of the bishops not only to take precautions against this mischief,
but also
to make a stand
against whatever divergent teaching has
arisen, either from incomplete instruction, or the simplicity of readers of
unsound commentators. They should be minded not to slide into slippery paths,
but rather whensoever divergent counsels are carried to their ears, to hold
fast the doctrine of our fathers. It has, therefore, been decided that Auxentius
of Milan is in this matter specially condemned. So it is right that all the
teachers of the law in the Roman Empire should be well instructed in the law,
and not befoul the faith with divergent doctrines.
"When
first the wickedness of the heretics began to flourish, and when, as now,
the blasphemy of the
Arians was crawling to the front, our fathers,
three hundred and eighteen bishops, the holiest prelates in the Roman Empire,
deliberated at Nicaea. The wall which they set up against the weapons of the
devil, and the antidote wherewith they repelled his deadly poisons, was their
confession that the Father and the Son are of one substance, one godhead, one
virtue, one power, one likeness(5), and that the Holy Ghost is of the same
essence(6) and substance. Whoever did not thus think was judged separate from
our communion. Their deliberation was worthy of all respect, and their definition
sound. But certain men have intended by other later discussions to corrupt
and befoul it. Yet, at the very outset, error was so far set right by the bishops
on whom the attempt was made at Ariminum to compel them to manipulate or innovate
on the faith, that they confessed themselves seduced by opposite arguments,
or owned that they had not perceived any contradiction to the opinion of the
Fathers livered at Nicaea. No prejudice could arise from the number of bishops
gathered at Ariminum, since it is well known that neither the bishop of the
Romans, whose opinion ought before all others to have been waited for, nor
Vincentius, whose stainless episcopate had lasted so many years, nor the rest,
gave in their adhesion to such doctrines. And this is the more significant,
since, as has been already said, the very men who seemed to be tricked into
surrender, themselves, in their wiser moments, testified their disapproval.
"Your
sincerity then perceives that this one faith, which was founder at Nicaea
on the authority
of the
Apostles, ought to be kept secure for ever.
You perceive that with us, the bishops of the East, who confess themselves
Catholic, and the western bishops, together glory in it. We believe that before
long those who think otherwise ought without delay to be put out from our communion,
and deprived of the name of bishop, that their flocks may be freed from error
and breathe freely. For they cannot be expected to correct the errors of their
people when they themselves are the victims of error. May the opinion of your
reverence be in harmony with that of all the priests of God. We believe you
to be fixed and firm in it, and thus ought we tightly to believe with you.
May your charity make us glad by your reply.
"Beloved
brethren, farewell."
CHAPTER XVIII.
The Letter of Athanasius, bishop of Alexandria, concerning the same Council.
The great
Athanasius also, in his letter to the Africans, writes thus about the council
at Ariminum. "Under these circumstances who will tolerate
any mention of the council of Ariminum or any other beside the Nicene? Who
would not express detestation of the setting aside of the words of the Fathers,
and the preference for those introduced at Ariminum by violence and party strife?
Who would wish to be associated with these men--fellows who do not, forsooth,
accept their own words? In their own ten or a dozen synods they have laid down,
as has been narrated already, now one thing now another; and at the present
time these synods, one after another, they are themselves openly denouncing.
They are now suffering the fate undergone of old by the traitors of the Jews.
For as is written in the Book of the Prophet Jeremiah "they have forsaken
me the fountain of living waters and hewed them out cisterns, broken cisterns
that can hold no water,"(1) so these men, in their opposition to the OEcumenical
synod, have hewed for themselves many synods which have all proved vain and
like "buds that yield no meal,"(2) let us not therefore admit those
who cite the council of Ariminum or any other but that of Nicaea, for indeed
the very citers of Ariminum do not seem to know what was done there; if they
had they would have held their tongues. For you, beloved, have learnt from
your own representatives at that Council, and are consequently very well aware,
that Ursacius, Valens, Eudoxius, and Auxentius, and with them Demophilus were
asked to anathematize the Arian heresy, and made excuse, choosing rather to
be its champions, and so were all deposed for making propositions contrary
to the Nicene decrees. The bishops, on the contrary, who were the true servants
of the Lord, and of the right faith,--about two hundred in number.--declared
their adherence to the Nicene Council alone, and their refusal to entertain
the thought of either subtraction from, or addition to, its decrees. This conclusion
they have communicated to Constantius, by whose order the council assembled.
On the other hand the bishops who were deposed at Ariminum have been received
by Constantius, and have succeeded in getting the two hundred who sentenced
them grossly insulted, and threatened with not being allowed to return to their
dioceses, and with having to undergo rigorous treatment in Thrace, and that
in the winter, in order to force them to accept the innovators' measures.
If, then, we hear any one appealing to Ariminum, show us, let us rejoin, first
the sentence of deposition, and then the document drawn up by the bishops,
in which they declare that they do not seek to go beyond the terms drawn up
by the Nicene Fathers, nor appeal to any other council than that of Nicaea.
In reality, these are just the facts they conceal, while they put prominently
forward the forced confession of Thrace. They do but shew themselves friends
of the Arian heresy, and strangers to the sound faith. Only let any one be
willing to put side by side that great synod, and those others to which these
men appeal, and he will perceive, on the one side, true religion, on the other,
folly and disorder. The fathers of Nicaea met together not after being deposed,
but after confessing that the Son was of the Substance of the Father. These
men were deposed once, a second time, and again a third time at Ariminum, and
then dared to lay down that it is wrong to attribute Substance or Essence to
God. So strange and so many were the tricks and machinations concocted by the
mad gang of Arius in the West against the dogmas of the Truth.
CHAPTER XIX.
Concerning the cunning of Leontius, Bishop of Antioch, and the boldness of
Flavianus and Diadorus.
AT Antioch
Placidus was succeeded by Stephanus, who was expelled from the Church. Leontius
then accepted
the
Primacy, but in violation of the decrees
of the Nicene Council, for he had mutilated himself, and was an eunuch. The
cause of his rash deed is thus narrated by the blessed Athanasius. Leontius,
it seems, was the victim of slanderous statements on account of a certain young
woman of the name of Eustolia.(1) Finding himself prevented from dwelling with
her he mutilated himself for her sake, in order that he might feel free to
live with her. But he did not clear himself of suspicion, and all the more
for this reason was deposed from the presbyterate. So much Athanasius has written
about the rest of his earlier life. I shall now give a summary exposure of
his evil conduct. Now though he shared the Arian error, he always endeavoured
to conceal his unsoundness. He observed that the clergy and the rest of the
people were divided into two parts, the one, in giving glory to the Son, using
the conjunction ''and," the other using the preposition "through" of
the Son, and applying "in" to the Holy Ghost. He himself offered
all the doxology in silence, and all that those standing near him could hear
was the "For ever and ever." And had not the exceeding wickedness
of his sold been betrayed by other means, it might have been said that he adopted
this contrivance from a wish to promote concord among the people. But when
he had wrought much mischief to the champions of the truth, and continued to
give every support to the promoters of impiety, he was convicted of concealing
his own unsoundness. He was influenced both by his fear of the people, and
by the grievous threats which Constantius had uttered against any who had dared
to say that the Son was unlike the Father. His real sentiments were however
proved by his conduct. Followers of the Apostolic doctrines never received
from him either ordination or indeed the least encouragement. Men, on the other
hand, who sided with the Arian superstition, were both allowed perfect liberty
in expressing their opinions, and were from time to time admitted to priestly
office. At this juncture Aetius, the master of Eunomius, who promoted the Arian
error by his speculations, was admitted to the diaconate. Flavianus and Diodorus,
however, who had embraced an ascetic career, and were open champions of the
Apostolic decrees, publicly protested against the attacks of Leontius against
true religion. That a man nurtured in iniquity and scheming to win notoriety
by ungodliness should be counted worthy of the diaconate, was, they urged,
a disgrace to the Church. They further threatened that they would withdraw
from his communion, travel to the western empire, and publish his plots to
the world. Leontius was now alarmed, and suspended Aetius from his sacred office,
but continued to show him marked favour.
That excellent pair Flavianus and Diodorus,(1) though not vet admitted to
the priesthood and still ranked with the laity, worked night and day to stimulate
men's zeal for truth. They were the first to divide choirs into two parts,
and to teach them to sing the psalms of David antiphonally. Introduced first
at Antioch, the practice spread in all directions, and penetrated to the ends
of the earth. Its originators now collected the lovers of the Divine word and
work into the Churches of the Martyrs, and with them spent the night in singing
psalms to God.
When Leontius
perceived this, he did not think it safe to try to prevent them, for he saw
that the
people
were exceedingly well-disposed towards these excellent
men. However, putting a colour of courtesy on his speech, he requested that
they would perform this act of worship in the churches. They were perfectly
well aware of his evil intent. Nevertheless they set about obeying his behest
and readily summoned their choir(1) to the Church, exhorting them to sing praises
to the good Lord. Nothing, however, could induce Leontius to correct his wickedness,
but be put on the mask of equity,(2) and concealed the iniquity of Stephanus
and Placidus. Men who had accepted the corruption of the faith of priests and
deacons, although they had embraced a life of vile irregularity, he added to
the roll; while others adorned with every kind of virtue and firm adherents
of apostolic doctrines, he left unrecognised. Thus it came to pass that among
the clergy were numbered a majority of men tainted with heresy, while the mass
of the laity were champions of the Faith, and even professional teachers lacked
courage to lay bare their blasphemy. In truth the deeds of impiety and iniquity
done by Placidus, Stephanus, and Leontius, in Antioch are so many as to want
a special history of their own, and so terrible as to be worthy of the lament
of David; for of them too it must be said "For lo thy enemies make a murmuring
and they that hate thee lift up their head. They have imagined craftily against
the people and taken counsel against thy secret ones. They have said come and
let us root them out that they be no more a people: and that the name of Israel
may be no more in remembrance."(1)
Let us now continue the course of our narrative.
CHAPTER XX.
Concerning the innovations of Eudoxius, of Germanicia, and the zeal of Basilius(3)
of Ancyra, and of Eustathius(4) of Sebasteia against him.
GERMANICIA is a city on the coasts of Cilicia, Syria, and Cappadocia, and
belongs to the province called Euphratisia. Eudoxius, the head of its church,
directly, he heard of the death of Leontius, betook himself to Antioch and
clutched the see, where he ravaged the vineyard of the Lord like a wild boar.
He did not even attempt to hide his evil ways, like Leontius, but raged in
direct attack upon the apostolic decrees, and involved in various troubles
all who had the hardihood to gainsay him. Now at this time Basilius had succeeded
Marcellus, and held the helm of the church of Ancyra, the capital of Galatia,
and Sebastia, the chief city of Armenia, was under the guidance of Eustathius.
No sooner had these bishops heard of the iniquity and madness of Eudoxius,
than they wrote to inform the Emperor Constantius of his audacity. Constantius
was now still tarrying in the west, and, after the death of the tyrants, was
endeavouring to heal the harm they had caused. Both bishops were well known
to the Emperor and had great influence with him on account of the high character
they bore.
CHAPTER XXI.
Of the Second Council of Nicaea.
ON receipt
of these despatches Constantius wrote to the Antiochenes denying that he
had committed the see
of Antioch to Eudoxius, as Eudoxius had publicly
announced. He ordered that Eudoxius be banished, and be punished for the course
he had taken at the Bithynian Nicaea, where he bad ordered the synod to assemble.
Eudoxius himself had persuaded the officers entrusted with authority in the
imperial household to fix Nicaea for the Council. But the Supreme Ruler and
Governor, who knows the future like the past, stopped the assembly by a mighty
earthquake, whereby the greater part of the city was overthrown, and most of
the inhabitants destroyed. On learning this the assembled bishops were seized
with panic, and returned to their own churches. But I regard this as a contrivance
of the divine wisdom, for in that city the doctrine of the faith of the apostles
had been defined by the holy Fathers. In that same city the bishops who were
assembling on this later occasion were intending to lay down the contrary.
The sameness of name would have been sure to furnish a means of deception to
the Arian crew, and trick unsophisticated souls. They meant to call the council "the
Nicene," and identify it with the famous council of old. But He who has
care for the churches disbanded the synod.
CHAPTER XXII.
Of the Council held at Seleucia in Isauria.
AFTER a time, at the suggestion of the accusers of Eudoxius, Constantius ordered
the synod to be held at Seleucia. This town of Isauria lies on the seashore
and is the chief town of the district. Hither the bishops of the East, and
with them those of Pontus in Asia, were ordered to assemble.(1)
The see of Caesarea, the capital of Palestine, was now held by Acacius, who
had succeeded Eusebius. He had been condemned by the council of Sardica, but
had expressed contempt for so large an assembly of bishops, and had refused
to accept their adverse decision. At Jerusalem Macarius, whom I have often
mentioned, was succeeded by Maximus, a man conspicuous in his struggles on
behalf of religion, for he had been deprived of his right eye and maimed in
his right arm.(1)
On his translation to the life which knows no old age, Cyrillus, an earnest
champion of the apostolic decrees,(2) was dignified with the Episcopal office.
These men in their contentions with one another for the first place brought
great calamities on the state. Acacius seized some small occasion, deposed
Cyrillus, and drove him from Jerusalem. But Cyrillus passed by Antioch, which
he had found without a pastor, and came to Tarsus, where he dwelt with the
excellent Silvanus, then bishop of that see. No sooner did Acacius become aware
of this than he wrote to Silvanus and informed him of the deposition of Cyrillus.
Silvanus however, both out of regard for Cyrillus, and not without suspicion
of his people, who greatly enjoyed the stranger's teaching, refused to prohibit
him from taking a part in the ministrations of the church. When however they
had arrived at Seleucia, Cyrillus joined with the party of Basilius and Eustathius
and Silvanus and the rest in the council. But when Acacius joined the assembled
bishops, who numbered one hundred and fifty, he refused to be associated in
their counsels before Cyrillus, as one stripped of his bishopric, had been
put out from among them. There were some who, eager for peace, besought Cyrillus
to withdraw, with a pledge that after the decision of the decrees they would
enquire into his case. He would not give way, and Acacius left them and went
out. Then meeting Eudoxius he removed his alarm, and encouraged him with a
promise that he would stand his friend and supporter. Thus he hindered him
from taking part in the council, and set out with him for Constantinople.