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THE ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY OF THEODORET
BOOK IV
CHAPTER I.
Of the reign and piety of Jovianus.
AFTER
Julian was slain the generals and prefects met in council and deliberated
who ought to succeed
to the imperial
power and effect both the salvation of
the army in the campaign, and the recovery of the fortunes of Rome, now, by
the rashness of the deceased Emperor, placed to use the common saying, on the
razor edge of peril. But while the chiefs were in deliberation the troops met
together and demanded Jovianus for emperor, though he was neither a general
nor in the next highest rank; a man however remarkably distinguished, and for
many reasons well known. His stature was great; his soul lofty. In war, and
in grave struggles it was his wont to be first. Against impiety be delivered
himself courageously with no fear of the tyrant's power, but with a zeal that
ranked him among the martyrs of Christ. So the generals accepted the unanimous
vote of the soldiers as a divine election. The brave man was led forward and
placed upon a raised platform hastily constructed. The host saluted him with
the imperial titles, calling him Augustus and Caesar. With his usual bluntness,
and fearless alike in the presence of the commanding officers and in view of
the recent apostasy of the troops, Jovianus admirably said "I am a Christian.
I cannot govern men like these. I cannot command Julian's army trained as it
is in vicious discipline. Men like these, stripped of the covering of the providence
of God, will fall an easy and ridiculous prey to the foe." On hearing
this the troops shouted with one voice, "Hesitate not, O emperor; think
it not a vile thing to command us. You shall reign over Christians nurtured
in the training of truth; our veterans were taught in the school of Constantine
himself; younger men among us were taught by Constantius. This dead man's empire
lasted but a few years, all too few to stamp its brand even on those whom it
deceived."(1)
CHAPTER II.
Of the return of Athanasius.
DELIGHTED with these words the emperor undertook for the future to take counsel
for the safety of the state, and how to bring home the army without loss from
the campaign. He was in no need of much deliberation, but at once reaped the
fruit sprung from the seeds of true religion, for the God of all gave proof
of His own providence, and caused all difficulty to disappear. No sooner had
the Persian sovereign been made acquainted with Jovian's accession than he
sent envoys to treat for peace; nay more, he despatched provisions for the
troops and gave directions for the establishment of a market for them in the
desert. A truce was concluded for thirty years, and the army brought home in
safety from the war.(2) The first edict of the emperor on setting foot upon
his own territory was one recalling the bishops from their exile, and announcing
the restoration of the churches to the congregations who had held inviolate
the confession of Nicaea. He further sent a despatch to Athanasius, the famous
champion of these doctrines, beseeching that a letter might be written to him
containing exact teaching on matters of religion. Athanasius summoned the most
learned bishops to meet him, and wrote back exhorting the emperor to hold fast
the faith delivered at Nicaea, as being in harmony with apostolic teaching.
Anxious to benefit all who may meet with it I here subjoin the letter.(3)
CHAPTER III.
Synodical letter to the Emperor Jovian concerning the Faith.
TO Jovianus
Augustus most devout, most humane, victorious, Athanasius, and the rest of
the bishops
assembled,
in the name of all the bishops from Egypt
to Thebaid, and Libya. The intelligent preference and pursuit of holy things
is becoming to a prince beloved of God. Thus may you keep your heart in truth
in God's hand and reign for many years in peace.(1) Since your piety has recently
expressed a wish to learn from us the faith of the Catholic Church, we have
given thanks to the Lord and have determined before all to remind your reverence
of the faith confessed by the fathers at Nicaea. This faith some have set at
nought, and have devised many and various attacks on us, because of our refusal
to submit to the Arian heresy. They have become founders of heresy and schism
in the Catholic Church. The true and pious faith in our Lord Jesus Christ has
been made plain to all as it is known and read from the Holy Scriptures. In
this faith the martyred saints were perfected, and now departed are with the
Lord. This faith was destined everywhere to stand unharmed, had not the wickedness
of certain heretics dared to attempt its falsification; for Arius and his party
endeavoured to corrupt it and to bring in impiety for its destruction, alleging
the Son of God to be of the nonexistent, a creature, a Being made, and susceptible
of change. By these means they deceived many, so that even men who seemed to
be somewhat,(2) were led away by them. Then our holy Fathers took the initiative,
met, as we said, at Nicaea, anathematized the Arian heresy, and subscribed
the faith of the Catholic Church so as to cause the putting out of the flames
of heresy by proclamation of the truth throughout the world. Thus this faith
throughout the whole church was known and preached. But since some men who
wished to start the Arian heresy afresh have had the hardihood to set at naught
the faith confessed by the Fathers at Nicaea, and others are pretending to
accept it, while in reality they deny it, distorting the meaning of the <greek>omoousion</greek> and
thus blaspheming the Holy Ghost, by alleging it to be a creature and a Being
made through the Son's means, we, perforce beholding the harm accruing from
blasphemy of this kind to the people, have hastened to offer to your piety
the faith confessed at Nicaea, that your reverence may know with what exactitude
it is drawn up, and how great is the error of them whose teaching contradicts
it. Know, O holiest Augustus, that this faith is the faith preached from everlasting,
this is tile faith that the Fathers assembled at Nicaea confessed. With this
faith all the churches throughout the world are in agreement, in Spain, in
Britain,(1) in Gaul, in all Italy and Campania, in Dalmatia and Mysia, in Macedonia,
in all Hellas, in all the churches throughout Africa, Sardinia, Cyprus, Crete,
Pamphylia and Isauria, and Lycia, those of all Egypt and Libya, of Pontus,
Cappadocia and the neighbouring districts and all the churches of the East
except a few who have embraced Arianism. Of all those above mentioned we know
the sentiments after trial made. We have letters and we know, most pious Augustus,
that though some few gainsay this faith they cannot prejudice(2) the decision
of the whole inhabited world.
After being long trader the injurious influence of the Arian heresy they are
the more contentiously withstanding true religion. For the information of your
piety, though indeed you are already acquainted with it, we have taken pains
to subjoin the faith confessed at Nicaea by the three hundred and eighteen
bishops. It is as follows.
We believe
in one God, Father Almighty, maker of all things visible and invisible; and
in one Lord
Jesus Christ,
the Son of God, begotten of the Father, that
is of the substance of the Father, God of God, Light of Light, very God of
very God: begotten not made, being of one substance with the Father, by whom
all things were made both in Heaven and in earth. Who for us men and for our
salvation came down from Heaven, was incarnate and was made man. He suffered
and rose again the third day. He ascended into Heaven, and is coming to judge
both quick and dead. And we believe in the Holy Ghost; the Holy Catholic and
Apostolic Church anathematizes those who say there was a time when the Son
of God was not; that before He was begotten He was not; that He was made out
of the non-existent, or that He is of a different essence or different substance,
or a creature or subject to variation or change. In this faith, most religious
Augustus, all must needs abide as divine and apostolic, nor must any strive
to change it by persuasive reasoning and word battles, as from the beginning
did the Arian maniacs in their contention that the Son of God is of the non
existent, and that there was a time when He was not, that He is created and
made and subject to variation. Wherefore, as we stated, the council of Nicaea
anathematized this heresy and confessed the faith of the truth. For they have
not simply said that the Son is like the Father, that he may be believed not
to be simply like God but very God of God. And they promulgated the term "Homousion" because
it is peculiar to a real and true son of a true and natural father. Yet they
did not separate the Holy Spirit from the Father and the Son, but rather glorified
It together with the Father and the Son in the one faith of the Holy Trinity,
because the Godhead of the Holy Trinity(1) is one.
CHAPTER IV.
Of the restoration of allowances to the churches; and of the Emperor's death.
WHEN the emperor had received this letter, his former knowledge of and disposition
to divine things was confirmed, and he issued a second edict wherein he ordered
the amount of corn which the great Constantine had appropriated to the churches
to be restored.(2) For Julian, as was to be expected of one who had gone to
war with our Lord and Saviour, had stopped even this maintenance, and since
the famine which visited the empire in consequence of Julian's iniquity prevented
the collection of the contribution of Constantine's enactment, Jovian ordered
a third part to be supplied for the present, and promised that on the cessation
of the famine he would give the whole.
After distinguishing the beginning of his reign by edicts of this kind, Jovian
set out from Antioch for the Bosphorus; but at Dadastanae, a village lying
on the confines of Bithynia and Galatia, he died.(1) He set out on his journey
from this world with the grandest and fairest support and stay, but all who
had experienced the clemency of his sway were left behind in pain. So, me-thinks,
the Supreme Ruler, to convict us of our iniquity, both shews us good things
and again deprives us of them; so by the former means He teaches us how easily
He can give us what He will; by the latter He convicts us of our unworthiness
of it, and points us to the better life.
CHAPTER V.
Of the reign of Valentinianus, and haw he associated Valens his brother with
him.
WHEN the
troops had become acquainted with the emperor's sudden death, they wept for
the departed prince
as for
a father, and made Valentinian emperor
in his room. It was he who smote the officer of the temple(2) and was sent
to the castle. He was distinguished not only for his courage, but also for
prudence, temperance, justice, and great stature. He was of so kingly and magnanimous
a character that, on an attempt being made by the army to appoint a colleague
to share his throne, he uttered the well-known words which are universally
repeated, "Before I was emperor, soldiers, it was yours to give me the
reins of empire: now that I have taken them, it is mine, not yours, to take
counsel for the state." The troops were struck with admiration at what
he said, and contentedly followed the guidance of his authority. Valentinian,
however, sent for his brother from Pannonia, and shared the empire with him.
Would that he had never done so! To Valens,(1) who had not yet accepted unsound
doctrines, was committed the charge of Asia and of Egypt, while Valentinian
allotted Europe to himself. He journeyed to the Western provinces, and beginning
with a proclamation of true religion, instructed them in all righteousness.
When the Arian Auxentius, bishop of Milan, who was condemned in several councils,
departed this life,(2) the emperor summoned the bishops and addressed them
as follows: "Nurtured as you have been in holy writ, you know full well
what should be the character of one dignified by the episcopate, and how he
should rule his subjects aright, not only with his lip, but with his life;
exhibit himself as an example of every kind of virtue, and make his conversation
a witness of his teaching. Seat now upon your archiepiscopal throne a man of
such character that we who rule the realm may honestly bow our heads before
him and welcomeh is reproofs,--for, in that we are men, it needs must be that
we sometimes stumble,--as a physician's healing treatment."
CHAPTER VI.
Of the election of Ambrosius, the Bishop of Milan.
THUS spoke
the emperor, and then the council begged him, being a wise and devout prince,
to make
the choice.
He then replied, "The responsibility
is too great for us. You who have been dignified with divine grace, and have
received illumination from above, will make a better choice." So they
left the imperial presence and began to deliberate apart. In the meanwhile
the people of Milan were torn by factions, some eager that one, some that another,
should be promoted. They who had been infected with the unsoundness of Auxentius
were for choosing men of like opinions, while they of the orthodox party were
in their turn anxious to have a bishop of like sentiments with themselves.
When Ambrosius, who held the chief civil magistracy(3) of the district, was
apprised of the contention, being afraid lest some seditious violence should
be attempted he hurried to the church; at once there was a lull in the strife.
The people cried with one voice "Make Ambrose our pastor,"--although
up to this time he was still(1) unbaptized. News of what was being done was
brought to the emperor, and he at once ordered the admirable man to be baptized
and ordained, for be knew that his judgment was straight and true as the rule
of the carpenter and his sentence more exact than the beam of the balance.
Moreover he concluded from the agreement come to by men of opposite sentiments
that the selection was divine. Ambrose then received the divine gift of holy
baptism, and the grace of the archiepiscopal office. The most excellent emperor
was present on the occasion and is said to have offered the following hymn
of praise to his Lord and Saviour. "We thank thee, Almighty Lord and Saviour;
I have committed to this man's keeping men's bodies; Thou hast entrusted to
him their souls, and hast shown my choice to be righteous."
Not many
days after the divine Ambrosius addressed the emperor with the utmost freedom,
and found
fault
with certain proceedings of the magistrates as improper.
Valentinian remarked that this freedom was no novelty to him, and that, well
acquainted with it as he was, he had not merely offered no opposition to, but
had gladly concurred in, the appointment to the bishopric. "Go on," continued
the emperor, "as God's law bids you, healing the errors of our souls."
Such were the deeds and words of Valentinian at Milan.
CHAPTER VII.
Letters of the Emperors Valentinianus and Valens, written to the diocese(2)
of Asia about the Homousion, on hearing that same men in Asia and in Phrygia
were in dispute about the divine decree.
VALENTINIAN ordered a council to be held in Illyricum(3) and sent to the disputants
the decrees ratified by the bishops there assembled. They had decided to hold
fast the creed put forth at Nicaea and the emperor himself wrote to them, associating
his brother with him in the dispatch, urging that the decrees be kept.
The edict clearly proclaims the piety of the emperor and similarly exhibits
the soundness of Valens in divine doctrines at that time. I shall therefore
give it in full. The mighty emperors, ever august, augustly victorious, Valentinianus,
Valens, and Gratianus,(1) to the bishops of Asia, Phrygia, Carophrygia Pacatiana,(2)
greeting in the Lord.
A great
council having met in Illyricum,(2) after much discussion concerning the
word of salvation,
the thrice blessed
bishops have declared that the Trinity
of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost is of one substance.(4) This Trinity they worship,
in no wise remitting the service which has duly fallen to their lot, the worship
of the great King. It is our imperial will that this Trinity be preached, so
that none may say "We accept the religion of the sovereign who rules this
world without regard to Him who has given us the message of salvation," for,
as says the gospel of our God which contains this judgment, "we should
render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's and to God the things that are
God's."(5)
What say you, ye bishops, ye champions of the Word of salvation? If these
be your professions, thus then continue to love one another, and cease to abuse
the imperial dignity. No longer persecute those who diligently serve God, by
whose prayers both wars cease upon the earth, and the assaults of apostate
angels are repelled. These striving through supplication to repel all harmful
demons both know how to pay tribute as the law enjoins, and do not gainsay
the power of their sovereign, but with pure minds both keep the commandment
of the heavenly King, and are subject to our laws. But ye have been shewn to
be disobedient. We have tried every expedient but you have given yourselves
up.(6) We however wish to be pure from you, as Pilate at the trial of Christ
when He lived among us, was unwilling to kill Him, and when they begged for
His death, turned to the East,(1) asked water for his hands and washed his
hands, saying I am innocent of the blood of this righteous man.(2)
Thus our majesty has invariably charged that those who are working in the
field of Christ are not to be persecuted, oppressed, or ill treated; nor the
stewards of the great King driven into exile; lest to-day under our Sovereign
you may seem to flourish and abound, and then together with your evil counsellor
trample on his covenant,(3) as in the case of the blood of Zacharias,(4) but
he and his were destroyed by our Heavenly King Jesus Christ after (at) His
coming, being delivered to death's judgment, they and the deadly fiend who
abetted them. We have given these orders to Amegetius, to Ceronius to Damasus,
to Lampon and to Brentisius by word of mouth, and we have sent the actual decrees
to you also in order that you nay know what was enacted in the honourable synod.
To this letter we subjoin the decrees of the synod, which are briefly as follows.
In accordance
with the great and orthodox synod we confess that the Son is of one substance
with
the Father.
And we do not so understand the term 'of
one substance' as some formerly interpreted it who signed their names with
reigned adhesion; nor as some who now-a-days call the drafters of the old creed
Fathers, but make the meaning of the word of no effect, following the authors
of the statement that "of one substance" means "like," with
the understanding that since the Son is comparable to no one of the creatures
made by Him, He is like to the Father alone. For those who thus think irreverently
define the Son "as a special creation of the Father," but we, with
the present synods, both at Rome and in Gaul, hold that there is one and the
same substance of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, in three persons, that is in
three perfect essences.(1) And we confess, according to the exposition of Nicaea,
that the Son of God being of one substance, was made flesh of the Holy Virgin
Mary, and hath tabernacled among men, and fulfilled all the economy(2) for
our sakes in birth, in passion, in resurrection, and in ascension into Heaven;
and that He shall come again to render to us according to each man's manner
of life, in the day of judgment, being seen in the flesh, and showing forth
His divine power, being God bearing flesh, and not man bearing Godhead.
Them that think otherwise we damn, as we do also them that do not honestly
damn him that said that before the Son was begotten He was not, but wrote that
even before He was actually begotten He was potentially in the Father. For
this is true in the case of all creatures, who are not for ever with God in
the sense in which the Son is ever with the Father, being begotten by eternal
generation.
Such was the short summary of the emperor. I will now subjoin the actual dispatch
of the synod.
CHAPTER VIII.
Synodical Epistle of the Synod in Illyricum concerning the Faith.
"THE
bishops of Illyricum to the churches of God, and bishops of the dioceses
of Asia, of Phrygia,
and Carophrygia Pacatiana, greeting in the Lord.
"After
meeting together and making long enquiry concerning the Word of salvation,
we have set forth
that
the Trinity of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost
is of one substance. And it seemed fitting to pen a letter to you, not that
we write what concerns the worship of the Trinity in vain disputation, but
in humility deemed worthy of the duty.
"This
letter we have sent by our beloved brother and fellow labourer Elpidius the
presbyter. For
not
in the letters of our hands, but in the books
of our Saviour Jesus Christ, is it written 'I am of Paul and I of Apollos and
I of Cephas and I of Christ. Was Paul crucified for you? Or were ye baptized
in the name of Paul?'(1)
"It
seemed indeed fitting to our humility not to pen any letter to you, on account
of the great
terror
which your preaching causes to all the region
under your jurisdiction, separating as you do the Holy Spirit from the Father
and Son. We were therefore constrained to send to you our lord and fellow labourer
Elpidius to ascertain if your preaching is really of this character and to
carry this dispatch from the imperial government of Rome.
"Let
them who do not regard the Trinity as one substance be anathema, and if any
man be detected
in communion
with them let him be anathema.
"But
for them that preach that the Trinity is of one substance the Kingdom of
Heaven is prepared.
"We
exhort you therefore brethren to teach no other doctrine, nor even hold any
other and vain belief,
but
that always and everywhere, preaching the
Trinity to be of one substance, ye may be able to inherit the Kingdom of Heaven.
"While
writing on this point we have also been reminded to pen this letter to you
about the
present or
future appointment of our fellow ministers as bishops,
if there be any sound men among the bishops who have already discharged a public
office;(1) and, if not, from the order of presbyters: in like manner of the
appointment of presbyters and deacons out of the actual priestly (2) order
that they may be in every way blameless, and not from the ranks of the senate
and army.
"We
have been unwilling to pen you a letter at length, because of the mission
of one representative
of all, our lord and fellow labourer Elpidius,
to make diligent enquiry about your preaching, if it really is such as we have
heard from our lord and fellow labourer Eustathius.
"In
conclusion, if at any time you have been in error, put off the old man and
put on the new.
The
same brother and fellow labourer Elpidius will
instruct you how to preach the true faith that the Holy Trinity, of one substance
with God the Father, together with the Son and Holy Ghost, is hallowed, glorified,
and made manifest, Father in Son, Son in Father, with the Holy Ghost for or
ever and ever. For since this has been made manifest, we shall manifestly be
able to confess the Holy Trinity to be of one substance according to the faith
set forth formerly at Nicaea which the Fathers confirmed. So long as this faith
is preached we shall be able to avoid the snares of the deadly devil. When
he is destroyed we shall be able to do homage to one another in letters of
peace while we live in peace.
"We
have therefore written to you in order that ye may know the deposition of
the Ariomaniacs,
who do
not confess that the Son is of the substance of
the Father nor the Holy Ghost. We subjoin their names,--Polychronius, Telemachus,
Faustus, Asclepiades, Amantius, Cleopater.
"This
we thus write to the glory of Father and Son and Holy Ghost for ever and
ever, amen. We
pray the
Father and the Son our Saviour Jesus Christ
with the Holy Ghost that you may fare well for many years."
CHAPTER IX.
Of the heresy of the Audiani.
THE illustrious
emperor thus took heed of the apostolic decrees, but Audaeus, a Syrian alike
in race
and in
speech, appeared at that time as an inventor
of new decrees. He had long ago begun to incubate iniquities and now appeared
in his true character. At first he understood in an absurd sense the passage "Let
us make man in our image, after our likeness."(1) From want of apprehension
of the meaning of the divine Scripture he understood the Divine Being to have
a human form, and conjectured it to be enveloped in bodily parts; for Holy
Scripture frequently describes the divine operations under the names of human
parts, since by these means the providence of God is made more easily intelligible
to minds incapable of perceiving any immaterial ideas. To this impiety Audaeus
added others of a similar kind. By an eclectic process he adopted some of the
doctrines of Manes(2) and denied that the God of the universe is creator of
either fire or darkness. But these and all similar errors are concealed by
the adherents of his faction.
They allege
that they are separated from the assemblies of the Church. But since some
of them exact
a cursed
usury, and some live unlawfully with women
without the bond of wedlock, while those who are innocent of these practices
live in free fellowship with the guilty, they hide the blasphemy of their doctrines
by accounting as they do for their living by themselves. The plea is however
an impudent one, and the natural result of Pharisaic teaching, for the Pharisees
accused the Physician of souls and bodies in their question to the holy Apostles "How
is it that your Master eateth with publicans and sinners?"(3) and through
the prophet, God of such men says "Which say, 'come not near me for I
am pure' this is smoke of my wrath."(4) But this is not a tithe to refute
their unreasonable error. I therefore pass on to the remainder of my narrative.(5)
CHAPTER X.
Of the heresy of the Messaliani.
AT this time also arose the heresy of the Messaliani. Those who translate
their name into Greek call them Euchitae.(1)
They have also another designation which arose naturally from their mode of
action. From their coming under the influence of a certain demon, which they
supposed to be the advent of the Holy Ghost, they are called enthusiasts.(2)
Men who
have become infected with this plague to its full extent shun manual labour
as iniquitous; and,
giving
themselves over to sloth, call the imaginations
of their dreams prophesyings. Of this heresy Dadoes, Sabbas, Adelphius, Hermas,
and Simeones were leaders, and others besides, who did not hold aloof from
the communion of the Church, alleging that neither good nor harm came of the
divine food of which Christ our Master said "Whoso eateth my flesh and
drinketh my blood shall live for ever."(3)
In their endeavor to hide their unsoundness they shamelessly deny it even
after conviction, and abjure men whose opinions are in harmony with their own
secret sentiments.
Under these circumstances Letoius, who was at the head of the church of Melitine,(4)
a man full of divine zeal, saw that many monasteries, or, shall I rather say,
brigands' caves, had drunk deep of this disease. He therefore burnt them, and
drove out the wolves from the flock.
In like manner the illustrious Amphilochius(9) to whom was committed the charge
of the metropolis of the Lycaonians and who ruled all the people, no sooner
learnt that this pestilence had invaded his diocese than he made it depart
from his borders and freed from its infection the flocks he fed.
Flavianus,(6)
also, the far famed high-priest of the Antiochenes, on learning that these
men were
living at
Edessa and attacking with their peculiar poison
all with whom they came in contact, sent a company of monks, brought them to
Antioch, and in the following manner convicted them in their denial of their
heresy. Their accusers, he said, were calumniating them, and the witnesses
giving false evidence; and Adelphius, who was a very old man, he accosted with
expressions of kindness, and ordered to take a seat at his side. Then he said "We,
O venerable sir, who have lived to an advanced age, have more accurate knowledge
of human nature, and of the tricks of the demons who oppose us, and have learnt
by experience the character of the gift of grace. But these younger men have
no clear knowledge of these matters, and cannot brook to listen to spiritual
teaching. Wherefore tell me in what sense you say that the opposing spirit
retreats, and the grace of the Holy Ghost supervenes." The old man was
won over by these words and gave vent to all his secret venom, for he said
that no benefit accrues to the recipients of Holy Baptism, and that it is only
by earnest prayer that the in-dwelling demon is driven out, for that every
one born into the world derives from his first father slavery to the demons
just as he does his nature; but that when these are driven away, then come
the Holy Ghost giving sensible and visible signs of His presence, at once freeing
the body from the impulse of the passions and wholly ridding the soul of its
inclination to the worse; with the result that there is no more need for fasting
that restrains the body, nor of teaching or training that bridles it and instructs
it how to walk aright. And not only is the recipient of this gift liberated
from the wanton motions of the body, but also clearly foresees things to come,
and with the eyes beholds the Holy Trinity.
In this
wise the divine Flavianus dug into the foul fountain-head and succeeded in
laying bare its
streams.
Then he thus addressed the wretched old man. "O
thou that hast grown old in evil days, thy own mouth convicts thee, not I,
and thou art testified against by thy own lips." After their unsoundness
had been thus exposed they were expelled from Syria, and withdrew to Pamphylia,
which they filled with their pestilential doctrine.
CHAPTER XI.
In what manner Valens fell into heresy.
I WILL now pursue the course of my narrative, and will describe the beginning
of the tempest which stirred up many and great billows to buflet the Church.
Valens, when he first received the imperial dignity, was distinguished by his
fidelity to apostolic doctrine. But when the Goths had crossed the Danube and
were ravaging Thrace, be determined to assemble an army and march against them;
and accordingly resolved not to take the field without the garb of divine grace,
but first to protect himself with the panoply of Holy Baptism.(1) In forming
this resolution he acted at once well and wisely, but his subsequent conduct
betrays very great feebleness of character, resulting in the abandonment of
the truth. His fate was the same as that of our first father, Adam; for he
too, won over by the arguments of his wife, lost his free estate and became
not merely a captive but an obedient listener to woman's wily words. His wife(2)
had already been entrapped in the Arian snare, and now she caught her husband,
and persuaded him to fall along with her into the pit of blasphemy. Their leader
and initiator was Eudoxius, who still held the tiller of Constantinople, with
the result that the ship was not steered onwards but sunk(3) to the bottom.
CHAPTER XII.
How Valens exiled the virtuous bishops.
AT the very time of the baptism of Valens Eudoxius bound the unhappy man by
an oath to abide in the impiety of his doctrine, and to expel from every see
the holders of contrary opinions. Thus Valens abandoned the apostolic teaching,
and went over to the opposite faction; nor was it long before he fulfilled
the rest of his oath; for from Antioch he expelled the great Meletius, from
Samosata the divine Eusebius, and deprived Laodicea of her admirable shepherd
Pelagius.(4) Pelagius had taken on him the yoke of wedlock when a very young
man, and in the very bridal chamber, on the first day of his nuptials, he persuaded
his bride to prefer chastity to conjugal intercourse, and taught her to accept
fraternal affection in the place of marriage union. Thus he gave all honour
to temperance, and possessed also within himself the sister virtues moving
in tune with her, and for these reasons he was unanimously chosen for the bishopric.
Nevertheless not even the bright beams of his life and conversation awed the
enemy of the truth. Him, too, Valens relegated to Arabia, the divine Meletius
to Armenia, and Eusebius, that unflagging labourer in apostolic work to Thrace.
Unflagging he was indeed, for when apprised that many churches were now deprived
of their shepherds, he travelled about Syria, Phoenicia and Palestine, wearing
the garb of war and covering his head with a tiara, ordaining presbyters and
deacons and filling up the other ranks of the Church; and if haply he lighted
on bishops with like sentiments with his own, he appointed them to empty churches.
CHAPTER XIII.
Of Eusebius, bishop of Samosata, and others.
OF the courage and prudence shewn by Eusebius after he had received the imperial
edict which commanded him to depart into Thrace, I think all who have been
hitherto ignorant should hear.(1)
The bearer
of this edict reached his destination in the evening, and was exhorted by
Eusebius to keep
silent
and conceal the cause of his coming. "For," said
the bishop, "the multitude has been nurtured in divine zeal, and should
they learn why you have come they will drown you, and I shall be held responsible
for your death." After thus speaking anti performing evening service,
as he was wont, the old man started out alone on foot, at nightfall. He confided
his intentions to one of his household servants who followed him carrying nothing
but a cushion and a book. When he had reached the bank of the river (for the
Euphrates runs along the very walls of the town) he embarked in a boat and
told the oarsmen to row to Zeugma.(2) When it was day the bishop had reached
Zeugma, and Samosata was full of weeping and wailing, for the above mentioned
domestic reported the orders given him to the friends of Eusebius, and told
them whom he wished to travel with him, and what books they were to convey.
Then all the congregation bewailed the removal of their shepherd, and the stream
of the river was crowded with voyagers.
When they came where he was, and saw their beloved pastor, with lamentations
and groanings they shed floods of tears, trod tried to persuade him to remain,
and not abandon the sheep to the wolves. But all was of no avail, and he read
them the apostolic law which clearly bids us be subjects to magistrates and
authorities.(1) When they had heard him some brought him gold, some silver,
some clothes, and others servants, as though he were starting for some strange
and distant land. The bishop refused to take anything but some slight gifts
from his more intimate friends, and then gave the whole company his instruction
and his prayers, and exhorted them to stand up boldly for the apostolic decrees.
Then he set out for the Danube, while his friends returned to their own town,
and encouraged one another as they waited for the assaults of the wolves.
In the belief that I should be wronging them were the warmth and sincerity
of their faith to lack commemoration in my history I shall now proceed to describe
it.
The Arian faction, after depriving the flock of their right excellent shepherd,
set up another bishop in his place; but not an inhabitant of the city, were
he herding in indigence or blazing in wealth, not a servant, not a handicraftsman,
not a hind, not a gardener, nor man nor woman, whether young or old, came,
as had been their wont, to gatherings in church. The new bishop lived all alone;
not a soul looked at him, or exchanged a word with him. Yet the report is that
he behaved with courteous moderation, of which the following instance is a
proof. On one occasion he had expressed a wish to bathe, so his servants shut
the doors of the bath, and kept out all who wished to come in. When he saw
the crowd before the doors he ordered them to be thrown open, and directed
that every one should freely use the bath. He exhibited the same conduct in
the balls within; for on observing certain men standing by him while he bathed
he begged them to share the hot water with him. They stood silent. Thinking
their hesitation was due to a respect for him, he quickly arose and made his
way out, but these persons had really been of opinion that even the water was
affected with the pollution of his heresy, and so sent it all down the sinks,
while they ordered a fresh supply to be provided for themselves. On being informed
of this the intruder departed from the city, for he judged that it was insensate
and absurd on his part to continue to reside in a city which detested him,
and treated him as a common foe. On the departure of Eunomius (for this was
his name) from Samosata, Lucius, an unmistakable wolf, and enemy of the sheep,
was appointed in his place. But the sheep, all shepherdless as they were, shepherded
themselves, and persistently preserved the apostolic doctrine in all its purity.
How the new intruder was detested the following relation will set forth.
Some lads were playing ball in the market place and enjoying the game, when
Lucius was passing by. It chanced that the ball was dropped and passed between
the feet of the ass. The boys raised an outcry because they thought that their
ball was polluted. On perceiving this Lucius told one of his suite to stop
and learn what was going on. The boys lit a fire and tossed the ball through
the flames with the idea that by so doing they purified it. I know indeed that
this was but a boyish act, and a survival of the ancient ways; but it is none
the less sufficient to prove in what hatred the town held the Arian faction.
Lucius however was no follower of the mildness of Eunomius, but persuaded
the authorities to exile many others of the clergy, and despatched the most
distinguished champions of the divine dogmas to the furthest confines of the
Roman Empire; Evolcius, a deacon, to Oasis, to an abandoned village; Antiochus,
who had the honour of being related to the great Eusebius, for he was his brother's
son, and further distinguished by his own honourable character, and of priestly
rank, to a distant part of Armenia. How boldly this Antiochus contended for
the divine decrees will be seen from the following facts. When the divine Eusebius
after his many conflicts, whereof each was a victory, had died a martyr's death,
the wonted synod of the people was held, and among others came Jovinus then
bishop of Perrha(1) who for some little time had held a communion with the
Arians. Antiochus was unanimously chosen as successor to his uncle. When brought
before the holy table and bidden there to bend the knee, he turned round and
saw that Jovinus had put his right hand on his head. Plucking the hand away
he bade him be gone from among the consecrators, saying that he could not endure
a right hand which bad received mysteries blasphemously celebrated.
These events happened somewhat later. At the time I am speaking of he was
removed to the interior of Armenia.
The divine Eusebius was living by the Danube where the Goths were ravaging
Thrace and besieging cities, as is described in his own works.
CHAPTER XIV.
Of the holy Barses, and of the exile of the bishop of Edessa and his companions.
BARSES, whose fame is now great not only in his own city of Edessa, and in
neighbouring towns, but in Phoenicia, in Egypt, and in the Thebaid, through
all which regions he had travelled with a high reputation won by his great
virtue, had been relegated by Valens to the island of Aradus,(1) but when the
emperor learnt that innumerable multitudes streamed thither, because Barses
was full of apostolic grace, and drove out sicknesses with a word, he sent
him to Oxyrynchus(2) in Egypt; but there too his fame drew all men to him,
and the old man, worthy of heaven, was led off to a remote castle neat the
country of the barbarians of that district, by name Pheno. It is said that
in Aradus his bed has been preserved to this day, where it is held in very
great honour, for many sick persons lie down upon it and by means of their
faith recover.
CHAPTER XV.
Of the persecution which took place at Edessa, and of Eulogius and Protogenes,
presbyters of Edessa.
NOW a
second time Valens, after depriving the flock of their shepherd, had set
over them in his stead
a wolf.
The whole population had abandoned the city,
and were assembled in front of the town, when he arrived at Edessa. He bad
given orders to the prefect, Modestus by name, to assemble the troops under
his orders who were accustomed to exact the tribute, to take all who were present
of the armed force, and by inflicting blows with sticks and clubs, and using
if need be their other weapons of war, to disperse the gathering multitude.
Early in the morning, while the prefect was executing this order, on his way
through the Forum he saw a woman holding an infant in her arms, and hurrying
along at great speed. She had made light of the troops, and forced her way
through their ranks: for a soul fired with divine zeal knows no fear of man,
and looks on terrors of this kind as ridiculous sport. When the prefect saw
her, and understood what had happened, he ordered her to be brought before
him, and enquired whither she was going. "I have heard," said she, "that
assaults are being planned against the servants of the Lord; I want to join
my friends in the faith that I may share with them the slaughter inflicted
by you." "But the baby," said the prefect, "what in the
world are you carrying that for?" "That it may share with me," said
she, "the death I long for."
When the
prefect had heard this from the woman and through her means discovered the
zeal which animated
all
the people, he made it known to the emperor, and
pointed out the uselessness of the intended massacre. "We shall only reap," said
he "a harvest of discredit from the deed, and shall fail to quench these
people's spirit." He then would not allow the multitude to undergo the
tortures which they had expected, and commanded their leaders, the priests,
I mean, and deacons, to be brought before him, and offered them a choice of
two alternatives, either to induce the flock to communicate with the wolf,
or be banished from the town to some remote region. Then he summoned the mass
of the people before him, and in gentle terms endeavoured to persuade them
to submit to the imperial decrees, urging that it was mere madness for a handful
of men who might soon be counted to withstand the sovereign of so vast an empire.
The crowd stood speechless. Then the prefect turned to their leader Eulogius,
an excellent man, and said, "Why do you make no answer to what you have
heard me say?" "I did not think," said Eulogius, "that
I must answer, when I had been asked no question." "But," said
the prefect, "I have used many arguments to urge you to a course advantageous
to yourselves." Eulogius rejoined that these pleas had been urged on all
the multitude and that he thought it absurd for him to push himself forward
and reply; "but," he went on, "should you ask me my individual
opinion I will give it you." "Well," said the prefect, "communicate
with the emperor. With pleasant irony Eulogius continued, "Has he then
received the priesthood as well as the empire?" The prefect then perceiving
that he was not speaking seriously took it ill, and after heaping reproaches
on the old man, added, "I did not say so, you fool; I exhorted you to
communicate with those with whom the Emperor communicates." To this the
old man replied that they had a shepherd and obeyed his directions, and so
eighty of them were arrested, and exiled to Thrace. On their way thither they
were everywhere received with the greatest possible distinction, cities and
villages coming out to meet them and honouring them as victorious athletes.
But envy armed their antagonists to report to the emperor that what had been
reckoned disgrace had really brought great honour on these men; thereupon Valens
ordered that they were to be separated into pairs and sent in different directions,
some to Thrace, some to the furthest regions of Arabia, and others to the towns
of the Thebaid; and the saying was that those whom nature had joined together
savage men had put asunder, and divided brother from brother. Eulogius their
leader with Protogenes the next in rank, were relegated to Antinone.(1)
Even of these men I will not suffer the virtue to fall into oblivion. They
found that the bishop of the city was of like mind with themselves, and so
took part in the gatherings of the Church; but when they saw very small congregations,
and on enquiry learnt that the inhabitants of the city were pagans, they were
grieved, as was natural, and deplored their unbelief. But they did not think
it enough to grieve, but to the best of their ability devoted themselves to
making these men whole. The divine Eulogius, shut up in a little chamber, spent
day and night in putting up petitions to the God of the universe; and the admirable
Protogenes, who had received a good education(2) and was practised in rapid
writing, pitched on a suitable spot which he made into a boys' school, and,
setting up for a schoolmaster, he instructed his pupils not only in the art
of swift penmanship, but also in the divine oracles. He taught them the psalms
of David and gave them to learn the most important articles of the apostolic
doctrine. One of the lads fell sick, and Protogenes went to his home, took
the sufferer by the hand and drove away the malady by prayer. When the parents
of the other boys heard this they brought him to their houses and entreated
him to succour the sick; but he refused to ask God for the expulsion of the
malady before the sick had received the gift of baptism; urged by their longing
for the children's health, the parents readily acceded, and won at last salvation
both for body and soul. In every instance where he persuaded any one in health
to receive the divine grace, he led him off to Eulogius, and knocking at the
door besought him to open, and put the seal of the Lord on the prey. When Eulogius
was annoyed at the interruption of his prayer, Protogenes used to say that
it was much more essential to rescue the wanderers. In this he was an object
of admiration to all who beheld his deeds, doing such wondrous works, imparting
to so many the light of divine knowledge and all the while yielding the first
place to another, and bringing his prizes to Eulogius. They rightly conjectured
that the virtue of Eulogius was by far the greater and higher.
On the quieting of the tempest and restoration of complete calm, they were
ordered to return home, and were escorted by all the people, wailing and weeping,
and specially by the bishop of the church, who was now deprived of their husbandry.
When they reached home, the great Barses had been removed to the life that
knows no pain, and the divine Eulogius was entrusted with the rudder of the
church which he had piloted;(1) and to the excellent Protogenes was assigned
the husbandry of Charrae,(2) a barren spot full of the thorns of heathendom
and needing abundant labour. But these events happened after peace was restored
to the churches.
CHAPTER XVI.
Of the holy Basilius, Bishop of Caesarea, and the measures taken against him
by Valens and the prefect Modestus.
VALENS, one might almost say, deprived every church of its shepherd, and set
out for the Cappadocian Caesarea,(3) at that time the see of the great Basil,
a light of the world. Now he had sent the prefect before him with orders either
to persuade Basil to embrace the communion of Eudoxius, or, in the event of
his refusal, to punish him by exile. Previously acquainted as he was with the
bishop's high reputation, he was at first unwilling to attack him, for he was
apprehensive lest the bishop, by boldly meeting and withstanding his assault,
should furnish an example of bravery to the rest. This artful stratagem was
as ineffective as a spider's web. For the stories told of old were quite enough
for the rest of the episcopate, and they kept the wall of the faith unmoved
like bastions in the circle of its walls.
The prefect,
however, on his arrival at Caesarea, sent for the great Basil. He treated
him with
respect, and,
addressing him with moderate and courteous
language, urged him to yield to the exigencies of the time, and not to forsake
so many churches on account of a petty nicety of doctrine. He moreover promised
him the friendship of the emperor, and pointed out that through it he might
be the means of conferring great advantages upon many. "This sort of talk," said
the divine man, "is fitted for little boys, for they and their like easily
swallow such inducements. But they who are nurtured by divine words will not
suffer so much as a syllable of the divine creeds to be let go, and for their
sake are ready, should need require, to embrace every kind of death. The emperor's
friendship I hold to be of great value if conjoined with true religion; otherwise
I doom it for a deadly thing."
Then the
prefect was moved to wrath, and declared that Basil was out of his senses. "But," said the divine man, "this madness I pray be
ever mine." The bishop was then ordered to retire, to deliberate on the
course to be pursued, and on the morrow to declare to what conclusion he had
come. Intimidation was moreover joined with argument. The reply of the illustrious
bishop is related to have been "I for my part shall come to you tomorrow
the same man that I am today; do not yourself change, but carry out your threats." After
these discussions the prefect met the emperor and reported the conversation,
pointing out the bishop's virtue, and the undaunted manliness of his character.
The emperor said nothing and passed in. In his palace he saw that plagues from
heaven had fallen, for his son(1) lay sick at the very gates of death and his
wife(2) Was beset by many ailments. Then he recognised the cause of these sorrows,
and entreated the divine man, whom he had threatened with chastisement, to
come to his house. His officers performed the imperial behests and then the
great Basil came to the palace.
After seeing the emperor's son on the point of death he promised him restoration
to life if he should receive holy baptism at the hands of the pious, and with
this pledge went his way. But the emperor, like the foolish Herod, remembered
his oath, and ordered some of the Arian faction who were present to baptize
the boy, who immediately died. Then Valens repented; he saw how fraught with
danger the keeping of his oath had been, and came to the divine temple and
received the teaching of the great Basil, and offered the customary gifts at
the altar. The bishop moreover ordered him to come within the divine curtains
where he sat and talked much with him about the divine decrees and in turn
listened to him.
Now there
was present a certain man of the name of Demosthenes,(1) superintendent of
the imperial
kitchen,
who in rudely chiding the man who instructed the world
was guilty of a solecism of speech. Basil smiled and said "we see here
an illiterate Demosthenes;" and on Demosthenes losing his temper and uttering
threats, he continued "your business is to attend to the seasoning of
soups; you cannot understand theology because your ears are stopped up." So
he said, and the emperor was so delighted that he gave him some fine lands
which he had there for the poor under his care, for they being in grievous
bodily affliction were specially in need of care and cure.
In this manner then the great Basil avoided the emperor's first attack, but
when he came a second time his better judgement was obstructed by counsellors
who deceived him; he forgot what had happened on the former occasion and ordered
Basil to go over to the hostile faction, and, failing to persuade him, commanded
the decree of exile to be enforced. But when he tried to affix his signature
to it he could not even form one tittle of a word,(2) for the pen broke, and
when the same thing happened to the second and to the third pen, and he still
strove to sign that wicked edict, his hand shook; he quaked, his soul was filled
with fright; he tore the paper with both his hands, and so proof was given
by the Ruler of the world that it was He Himself who had permitted these sufferings
to be undergone by the rest, but had made Basil stronger than the snares laid
against him, and, by all the incidents of Basil's case, had declared His own
almighty power, while on the other band He had proclaimed abroad the courage
of good men. Thus Valens was disappointed in his attack.
CHAPTER XVII.
Of the death of the great Athanasius and the election of Petrus.
AT Alexandria, Athanasius the victorious, after all his struggles, each rewarded
with a crown, received release from his labours and passed away to the life
which knows no toil. Then Peter, a right excellent man, received the see. His
blessed predecessor had first selected him, and every suffrage alike of the
clergy and of men of rank and office concurred, and all the people strove to
show their delight by their acclamations. He had shared the heavy labours of
Athanasius; at home and abroad he had been ever at his side, and with him had
undergone manifold perils. Wherefore the bishops of the neighbourhood hastened
to meet; and those who dwelt in schools of ascetic discipline left them and
joined the company, and all joined in begging that Peter might be chosen to
succeed to the patriarchal chair of Athanasius.(1)
CHAPTER XVIII.
On the overthrow of Petrus and the introduction of Lucius the Arian.
NO sooner had they seated him on the episcopal throne than the governor of
the province assembled a mob of Greeks and Jews, surrounded the walls of the
church, and bade Peter come forth, threatening him with exile if he refused.
He thus acted on the plea that he was fulfilling the emperor's good pleasure
by bringing those of opposite sentiments into trouble, but the truth was that
be was carried away by his impious passion. For be was addicted to the service
of the idols, and looked upon the storms which beset the Church as a season
of brilliant festivity. The admirable Peter, however, when he beheld the unforeseen
conflict, secretly withdrew, and embarked in a vessel bound for Rome.
After a few days Euzoius came from Antioch with Lucius, and handed over the
churches to him. This was he of whose impiety and lawlessness Samosata had
already had experience. But the people nurtured in the teaching of Athanasius,
when they now saw how different was the spiritual food offered them, held aloof
from the assemblies of the Church.
Lucius, who employed idolators as his attendants, went on scourging some,
imprisoning others; some he drove to take to flight, others' homes he rifled
in rude and cruel fashion. But all this is better set forth in the letter of
the admirable Peter. After recounting an instance of the impious conduct of
Lucius I shall insert the letter in this work.
Certain
men in Egypt, of angelic life and conversation, fled from the disquiet of
the state and
chose to live
in solitude in the wilderness. There they made
the sandy and barren soil bear fruit; for a fruit right sweet and fair to God
was the virtue by whose law they lived. Among many who took the lead in this
mode of life was the far-famed Antonius, most excellent master in the school
of mortification, who made the desert a training place of virtue for his hermits.
He after all his great and glorious labours had reached. the haven where the
winds of trouble blow no more, and then his followers were persecuted by the
wretched and unhappy Lucius. All the leaders of those divine companies, the
famous Macarius, his namesake, Isidorus, and the rest(1) were dragged out of
their caves and despatched to a certain island inhabited by impious men, and
never blessed with any teacher of piety. When the ship drew near to the shore
of the island the demon reverenced by its inhabitants departed from the image
which had been his time-old home, and filled with frenzy the daughter of the
priest. She was driven in her inspired fury to the shore where the towers were
bringing the ship to land. Making the tongue of the girl his instrument, the
demon shouted out through her the words uttered at Philippi by the woman possessed
with the spirit of Python,(2) and was heard by all, both men and women, saying, "Alas
for your power, ye servants of the Christ; everywhere we have been driven forth
by you from town and hamlet, from hill and height, from wastes where no men
dwell; in yon islet we had hoped to live out of the reach of your shafts, but
our hope was vain; hither you have been sent by your persecutors, not to be
harmed by them, but to drive us out. We are quitting the island, for we are
being wounded by the piercing rays of your virtue." With these words,
and words like these, they dashed the damsel to the ground, and themselves
all fled together. But that divine company prayed over the girl and raised
her up, and delivered her to her father made whole and in her right mind.
The spectators of the miracle flung themselves at the feet of the new comers
and implored to be allowed to participate in the means of salvation. They destroyed
the idol's grove, and, illuminated by the bright rays of instruction, received
the grace of holy baptism. On these events becoming known in Alexandria all
the people met together, reviling Lucius, and saying that wrath from God would
fall upon them, were not that divine company of saints to be set free. Then
Lucius, apprehensive of a tumult in the city, suffered the holy hermits to
go back to their dens. Let this suffice to give a specimen of his impious iniquity.
The sinful deeds he dared to do will be more clearly set forth by the letter
of the admirable Peter. I hesitate to insert it at full length, and so will
only quote some extracts from it.
CHAPTER XIX.
Narrative of events at Alexandria in the time of Lucius the Arian, taken from
a letter of Petrus, Bishop of Alexandria.
PALLADIUS
governor of the province, by sect a heathen,(1) and one who habitually prostrated
himself
before the
idols, had frequently entertained the thought
of waging war against Christ. After collecting the forces already enumerated
he set out against the Church, as though he were pressing forward to the subjugation
of a foreign foe. Then, as is well known, the most shocking deeds were done,
and at the bare thought of telling the story, its recollection fills me with
anguish. I have shed floods of tears, and I should have long remained thus
bitterly affected had I not assuaged my grief by divine meditation. The crowds
intruded into the church called Theonas(1) and there instead of holy words
were uttered the praises of idols; there where the Holy Scriptures had been
read might be heard unseemly clapping of hands with unmanly and indecent utterances;
there outrages were offered to the Virgins of Christ which the tongue refuses
to utter, for "it is a shame even to speak of them."(2) On only hearing
of these wrongs one of the well disposed stopped his ears and prayed that he
might rather become deaf than have to listen to their foul language. Would
that they had been content to sin in word alone, and had not surpassed the
wickedness of word by deed, for insult, however bad it be, can be borne by
them in whom dwells Christ's wisdom and His holy lessons. But these same villains,
vessels of wrath fitted for destruction,(3) screwed up their noses and poured
out, if I may so say, as from a well-head, foul noises through their nostrils,
and rent the raiment from Christ's holy virgins, whose conversation gave an
exact likeness of saints; they dragged them in triumph, naked as when they
were born, through all the town; they made indecent sport of them at their
pleasure; their deeds were barbarous and cruel. Did any one in pity interfere
and urge to mercy he was dismissed with wounds. Ah woe is me. Many a virgin
underwent brutal violation; many a maid beaten on the head, with clubs lay
dumb, and even their bodies were not allowed to be given up for burial, and
their grief-stricken parents cannot find their corpses to this day. But why
recount woes which seem small when compared with greater? Why linger over these
and not hurry on to events more urgent? When you hear them I know that you
will wonder and will stand with us long dumb, amazed at the kindness of the
Lord in not bringing all things utterly to an end. At the very altar the impious
perpetrated what, as it is written,(4) neither happened nor was heard of in
the days of our fathers.
A boy who had forsworn his sex and would pass for a girl, with eyes, as it
is written, smeared with antimony,(5) and face reddened with rouge like their
idols, in woman's dress, was set up to dance and wave his hands about and whirl
round as though he had been at the front of some disreputable stage, on the
holy altar itself where we call on the coming of the Holy Ghost, while the
by-standers laughed aloud and rudely raised unseemly shouts. But as this seemed
to them really rather decorous than improper, they went on to proceedings which
they reckoned in accordance with their indecency; they picked out a man who
was very famous for utter baseness, made him strip off at once all his clothes
and all his shame, and set him up as naked as he was born on the throne of
the church, and dubbed him a vile advocate against Christ. Then for divine
words he uttered shameless wickedness, for awful doctrines wanton lewdness,
for piety impiety, for continence fornication, adultery, foul lust, theft;
teaching that gluttony and drunkenness as well as all the rest were good for
man's life.(1) In this state of things when even I had withdrawn from the church(2)--for
how could I remain where troops were coming in--where a mob was bribed to violence--where
all were striving for gain--where mobs of heathen were making mighty promises?--forth,
forsooth, is sent a successor in my place. It was one named Lucius, who had
bought the bishopric as he might some dignity of this world, eager to maintain
the bad character and conduct of a wolf.(3) No synod of orthodox bishops had
chosen him;(4) no vote of genuine clergy; no laity had demanded him; as the
laws of the church enjoin.
Lucius could not make his entrance into the city without parade, and so he
was appropriately escorted not by bishops, not by presbyters, not by deacons,
not by multitudes of the laity; no monks preceded him chanting psalms from
the Scriptures; but there was Euzoius, once a deacon of our city of Alexandria,
and long since degraded along with Arius in the great and holy synod of Nicaea,
and more recently raised to rule and ravage the see of Antioch, and there,
too, was Magnus the treasurer,(5) notorious for every kind of impiety, leading
a vast body of troops. In the reign of Julian this Magnus had burnt the church
at Berytus,(6) the famous city of Phoenicia; and, in the reign of Jovian of
blessed memory, after barely escaping decapitation by numerous appeals to the
imperial compassion, had been compelled to build it up again at his own expense.
Now I
invoke your zeal to rise in our vindication. From what I write you ought
to be able to calculate
the
character and extent of the wrongs committed against
the Church of God by the starting up of this Lucius to oppose us. Often rejected
by your piety and by the orthodox bishops or every region, he seized on a city
which had just and righteous cause to regard and treat him as a foe. For he
does not merely say like the blasphemous fool in the psalms "Christ is
not true God."(1) But, corrupt himself, he corrupted others, rejoicing
in the blasphemies uttered continually against the Saviour by them who worshipped
the creature instead of the Creator. The scoundrel's opinions being quite on
a par with those of a heathen, why should he not venture to worship a new-made
God, for these were the phrases with which he was publicly greeted "Welcome,
bishop, because thou deniest the Son. Serapis loves thee and has brought thee
to us." So they named their native idol. Then without an interval of delay
the afore-named Magnus, inseparable associate in the villainy of Lucius, cruel
body-guard, savage lieutenant, collected together all the multitudes committed
to his care, and arrested presbyters and deacons to the number of nineteen,
some of whom were eighty years of age, on the charge of being concerned in
some foul violation of Roman law. He constituted a public tribunal, and, in
ignorance of the laws of Christians in defence of virtue, endeavoured to compel
them to give up the faith of their fathers which had been banded down from
the apostles through the fathers to us. He even went so far as to maintain
that this would be gratifying to the most merciful and clement Valens Augustus. "Wretched
man" he shouted "accept, accept the doctrine of the Arians; God will
pardon you even though you worship with a true worship, if you (to this not
of your own accord but because you are compelled. There is always a defence
for irresponsible compulsion, while free action is responsible and much followed
by accusation. Consider well these arguments; come willingly; away with all
delay; subscribe the doctrine of Arius preached now by Lucius," (so he
introduced him by name) "being well assured that if you obey you will
have wealth and honour from your prince, while if you refuse you will be punished
by chains, rack, torture, scourge and cruel torments; you will be deprived
of your property and possessions; you will be driven into exile and condemned
to dwell in savage regions."
Thus this
noble character mixed intimidation with deceit and so endeavoured to persuade
and compel
the people
to apostatise from true religion. They however
knew full well how true it is that the pain of treachery to right religion
is sharper than any torment; they refused to lower their virtue and noble spirit
to his trickery and threats, and were thus constrained to answer him. "Cease,
cease trying to frighten us with these words, utter no more vain words. We
worship no God of late arrival or of new invention. Foam at us if you will
in the vain tempest of your fury and dash yourselves against us like a furious
wind. We abide by the doctrines of true religion even unto death; we have never
regarded God as impotent, or as unwise, or untrue, as at one time a Father
and at another not a Father, as this impious Arian teaches, making the Son
a being of time and transitory. For if, as the Ariomaniacs say, the Son is
a creature, not being naturally of one substance with the Father, the Father
too will be reduced to non-existence by the nonexistence of the Son, not being
as they assert at one period a Father. But if He is ever a Father, his offspring
being truly of Him, and not by derivation, for God is impassible, how is not
he mad and foolish who says of the Son through whom all things came by grace
into existence, "there was a time when he was not."
These men have truly become fatherless by falling away from our fathers throughout
the world who assembled at Nicaea, and anathematized the false doctrine of
Arius, now defended by this later champion. They laid down that the Son was
not as you are now compelling us to say, of a different substance from the
Father, but of one and the same. This their pious intelligence clearly perceived,
and so from an adequate collation of divine terms they owned Him to be consubstantial.
Advancing these and other similar arguments, they were imprisoned for many
days in the hope that they might be induced to fall away from theft right mind,
but the rather, like the noblest of the athletes in a Stadium, they crushed
all fear, and from time to time as it were anointing themselves with the thought
of the bold deeds done by their fathers, through the help of holy thoughts
maintained a nobler constancy in piety, and treated the rack as a training
place for virtue. While they were thus struggling, and had become, as writes
the blessed Paul, a spectacle to angels and to men,(1) the whole city ran up
to gaze at Christ's athletes, vanquishing by stout endurance the scourges of
the judge who was torturing them, winning by patience trophies against impiety,
and exhibiting triumphs against Arians. So their savage enemy thought that
by threats and torments he could subdue and deliver them to the enemies of
Christ. Thus therefore the savage and inhuman tyrant evilly entreated them
by inflicting on them the tortures that his cruel ingenuity devised, while
all the people stood wailing and shewing their sorrow in various ways. Then
he once more mustered his troops, who were disciplined in disorder, and summoned
the martyrs to trial, or as it might rather be called, to a foregone condemnation,
by the seaport, while after their fashion hired cries were raised against them
by the idolaters and the Jews. On their refusal to yield to the manifest heresy
of the Ariomaniacs they were sentenced, while all the people stood in tears
before the tribunal, to be deported from Alexandria to the Phoenician Heliopolis,(2)
a place where none of the inhabitants, who are all given over to idols, can
endure so much as to hear the name of Christ.
After
giving them the order to embark, Magnus stationed himself at the port, for
be had delivered
his sentence
against them in the neighbourhood of the
public baths. He showed them his sword unsheathed, thinking that he court thus
strike terror into men who had again and again smitten hostile demons to the
ground with their two-edged blade. So he bade them put out to sea, though they
had got no provisions on board, and were starting without one single comfort
for their exile. Strange and almost incredible to relate, the sea was all afoam;
grieved, I think, and unwilling, if I may so say, to receive the good men upon
its surface, and so have part or lot in an unrighteous sentence. Now even to
the ignorant was made manifest the savage purpose of the judge and it may truly
be said "at this, the heavens stood astonished."(3)
The whole
city groaned, and is lamenting to this day. Some men beating on their breast
with one hand
after
another raised a mighty noise; others lifted
up at once their hands and eyes to heaven in testimony of the wrong inflicted
on them, and so saying in all but words, "Hear, O heavens, and give ear,
O earth,"(1) what unlawful deeds are being done. Now all was weeping and
wailing; singing and sighing sounded through all the town, and from every eye
flowed a river of tears which threatened to overwhelm the very sea with its
tide. There was the aforesaid Magnus on the port ordering the rowers to hoist
the sails, and up went a mingled cry of maids and matrons, old men anti young,
all sobbing and lamenting together, and the noise of the multitude overwhelmed
the roar raised by the waves on the foaming sea. So the martyrs sailed off
for Heliopolis, where every man is given over to superstition,(2) where flourish
the devil's ways of pleasure, and where the situation of the city, surrounded
on all sides by mountains that approach the sky, is fitted for the terrifying
lairs of wild beasts. All the friends they left behind now alike in public
in the middle of the town and each in private apart groaned and uttered words
of grief. and were even forbidden to weep, at the order of Palladius, prefect
of the city, who happened himself to be a man quite given over to superstition.
Many of the mourners were first arrested and thrown into prison, and then scourged,
torn with carding combs, tortured, and, champions as they were of the church
in their holy enthusiasm, were despatched to the mines of Phennesus(3) and
Proconnesus.(4)
Most of them were monks, devoted to a life of ascetic solitude, and were about
twenty-three in number. Not long afterwards the deacon who had been sent by
our beloved Damasus, bishop of Rome, to bring us letters of consolation and
communion, was led publicly through the town by executioners, with his hands
tied behind his back like some notorious criminal. After sharing the tortures
inflicted on murderers, he was terribly scourged with stones and bits of lead
about his very neck.(5) He went on board ship to sail, like the rest, with
the mark of the sacred cross upon his brow; with none to aid and none to tempt
him he was despatched to the copper mines of Phennesus. During the tortures
inflicted by the magistrate on the tender bodies of little boys, some have
been left lying on the spot deprived of holy rites of burial, though parents
and brothers and kinsfolk, and indeed the whole city, begged that this one
consolation might be given them. But alas for the inhumanity of the judge,
if indeed he can be called judge who only condemns! They who had contended
nobly for the true religion were assigned a worse fate than a murderer's, their
bodies lying, as they did, unburied. The glorious champions were thrown to
be devoured by beasts and birds of prey.(1) Those who were anxious for conscience'
sake to express sympathy with the parents were punished by decapitation, as
though they had broken some law. What Roman law, nay what foreign sentiment,
ever inflicted punishment for the expression of sympathy with parents? What
instance is there of the perpetration of so illegal a deed by any one of the
ancients? The male children of the Hebrews were indeed once ordered to be slain
by Pharaoh, but his edict was suggested by envy and by fear. How far greater
the inhumanity of our day than of his. How preferable, if there be a choice
in unrighteousness, their wrongs to ours. How much better; if what is illegal
can be called good or bad, though in truth iniquity is always iniquity.
I am writing
what is incredible, inhuman, awful, savage, barbarous, pitiless, cruel. But
in all this the votaries
of the Arian madness pranced, as it were,
with proud exultation, while the whole city was lamenting; for, as it is written
in Exodus, "there was not a house in which there was not one dead."(2)
The men whose appetite for iniquity was never satisfied planned new agitation.
Ever wreaking their evil will in evil deeds, they darted the peculiar venom
of their iniquity at the bishops of the province, using the aforesaid treasurer
Magnus as the instrument of their unrighteousness.
Some they delivered to the Senate, some they trapped at their good pleasure,
leaving no stone unturned in their anxiety to hunt in all from every quarter
to impiety, going about in all directions, and like the devil, the proper father
of heresy, they sought whom they might devour.(1)
In all, after many fruitless efforts, they drove into exile to Dio-Caesarea,(2)
a city inhabited by Jews, murderers of the Lord, eleven of the bishops of Egypt,
all of them men who from childhood to old age had lived an ascetic life in
the desert, had subdued their inclinations to pleasure by reason and by discipline,
had fearlessly preached the true faith of piety, had imbibed the pious doctrines,
had again and again won victory against demons, were ever putting the adversary
out of countenance by their virtue, and publicly posting the Arian heresy by
wisest argument. Yet like Hell,(3) not satisfied with the death of their brethren,
fools and madmen as they were, eager to win a reputation by their evil deeds,
they tried to leave memorials in all the world of their own cruelty. For lo
now they roused the imperial attention against certain clerics of the catholic
church who were living at Antioch, together with some excellent monks who came
forward to testify against their evil deeds. They got these men banished to
Neocaesarea(4) in Pontus, where they were soon deprived of life in consequence
of the sterility of the country. Such tragedies were enacted at this period,
fit indeed to be consigned to silence and oblivion, but given a place in history
for the condemnation of the men who wag their tongues against the Only begotten,
and infected as they were with the raving madness of blasphemy, strive not
only to aim their shafts at the Master of the universe, but further waged a
truceless war against His faithful servants.
CHAPTER XX.
Of Mavia,(5) Queen of the Saracens, and the ordination(6) of Moses the monk.
AT this
time(7) the Ishmaelites were devastating the country in the neighbourhood
of the Roman frontier.
They were led by Mavia, a princess who regarded not
the sex which nature had given her, and displayed the spirit and courage of
a man. After many engagements she made a truce, and, on receiving the light
of divine knowledge, begged that to the dignity of high priest of her tribe
might be advanced one, Moses by name, who dwelt on the confines of Egypt and
Palestine. This request Valens granted, and ordered the holy man to be conveyed
to Alexandria, and there, as the most convenient place in the neighbourhood,
to receive episcopal grace. When he had arrived and saw Lucius endeavouring
to lay hands on him--"God forbid" said he "that I should be
ordained by thine hand: the grace of the Spirit visits us not at thy calling." "Whence," said
Lucius, "are you led to conjecture this?" He rejoined "I am
not speaking of conjecture but of clear knowledge; for thou tightest against
the apostolic decrees, and speakest words against them, and for thy blasphemous
utterances thy lawless deeds are a match. For what impious man has not on thy
account mocked the meetings of the Church? What excellent man has not been
exiled? What barbarous savagery is not thrown into the shade by thy daily deeds?" So
the brave man said, and the murderer heard him and desired to slay him, but
was afraid of kindling once again the war which had come to an end. Wherefore
he ordered other bishops to be produced whom Moses had requested. After receiving
the episcopal grace of the right worthy faith Moses returned to the people
who had asked for him, and by his apostolic teaching and miracles led them
in the way that leads to truth.(1)
These then were the deeds done by Lucius in Alexandria under the dispensation
of the providence of God.
CHAPTER XXI.
AT Constantinople the Arians filled a boat with pious presbyters and drove
her without ballast out to sea, putting some of their own men on another craft
with orders to set the presbyters' boat on fire. So, fighting at the same time
against both sea and flames, at last they were delivered to the deep, and won
the martyrs' crown.
At Antioch Valens spent a considerable time, and gave complete license to
all who, under cover of the Christian name, pagans, Jews and the rest, preached
doctrines contrary to those of the gospel. The slaves of this error even went
so far as to perform pagan rites, and thus the deceitful fire which, after
Julian, had been quenched by Jovian, was now rekindled by permission of Valens.
The rites of Jews, of Dionysus, and of Demeter were now no longer performed
in a corner, as they would be in a pious reign, but by revellers running wild
in the forum. Valens was a foe to none but them that held the apostolic doctrine.
First he drove them from their churches, the illustrious Jovian having given
them also the new built church. And when they assembled close up to the mountain
cliff to honour their Master in hymns, and enjoy the word of God, putting up
with all the assaults of the weather, now of rain, now of snow and cold, and
now of violent heat, they were not even suffered this poor protection, and
troops were sent to scatter them far and wide.
CHAPTER XXII.
How Flavianus and Diodorus gathered the church of the orthodox in Antioch.
NOW Flavianus and Diodorus, like break-waters, broke the force of the advancing
waves. Meletius their shepherd had been constrained to sojourn far away. But
these looked after the flock, opposing their own courage and cunning to the
wolves, and bestowing due care upon the sheep. Now that they were driven away
from under the cliff they fed their flocks by the banks of the neighbouring
river. They could not brook, like the captives at Babylon, to hang their harps
upon the willows,(1) but they continued to hymn their maker and benefactor
in all places of his dominion.(2) But not even in this spot was the meeting
of the pious pastors of them that blessed the Lord suffered by the foe to be
assembled. So again this pair of excellent shepherds gathered their sheep in
the soldiers' training ground trod there tried to show them their spiritual
food in secret. Diodorus, in his wisdom and courage, like a clear and mighty
river, watered his own and drowned the blasphemies of his opponents, thinking
nothing of the splendour of his birth, and gladly undergoing the sufferings
of the faith.
The excellent Flavianus, who was also of the highest rank, thought piety the
only nobility,(3) and, like some trainer for the games, anointed the great
Diodorus(4) as though he had been an athlete for five contests.(5)
At that time he did riot himself preach at the services of the church, but
furnished an abundant supply of arguments and scriptural thoughts to preachers,
who were thus able to aim their shafts at the blasphemy of Arius, while he
as it were handed them the arrows of his intelligence from a quiver. Discoursing
alike at home and abroad he easily rent asunder the heretics' nets and showed
their defences to be mere spiders' webs. He was aided in these contests by
that Aphraates whose life I have written in my Religious History,(8) and who,
preferring the welfare of the sheep to his own rest, abandoned his cell of
discipline and retirement, and undertook the hard toil of a shepherd. Having
written on these matters in another work I deem it now superfluous to recount
the wealth of virtue which he amassed, but one specimen of his good deeds I
will proceed now to relate, as specially appropriate to this history.
CHAPTER XXIII.
Of the holy monk Aphraates.
ON the
north of the river Orontes lies the palace. On the South a vast two storied
portico is built
on the
city wall with lofty towers on either side.
Between the palace and the river lies a public way open to passengers from
the town, through the gate in this quarter, and leading to the country in the
suburbs. The godly Aphraates was once passing along this thoroughfare on his
way to the soldiers' training ground, in order to perform the duty of serving
his flock. The emperor happened to be looking down from a gallery in the palace,
and saw him going by wearing a cloak of undressed goat's skin,(1) and walking
rapidly, though of advanced age. On its being remarked that this was Aphraates
to whom all the town was then attached, the emperor cried out "Where are
you going? Tell us." Readily and cleverly he answered "To pray for
your empire." "You had better stop at home" said the emperor "and
pray alone like a monk." "Yes," said the divine man, "so
I was bound to do and so I always did till now, as long as the Saviour's sheep
were at peace; but now that they are grievously disturbed and in great peril
of being caught by beasts, I needs must leave no means untried to save the
nurslings. For tell me, sir, had I been a girl sitting in my chamber, and looking
after the house, anti had seen a flash of flame fall and my father's house
on fire, what ought I to do? Tell me; sit within and never mind the house being
on fire, and wait for the flame to approach? or bid my bower good bye and run
up and down and get water and try to quench the flame? Of course you will say
the latter, for so a quick and spirited girl would do. And that is what I am
doing now, sir. You have set fire to our Father's house and we are running
about in the endeavour to put it out." So said Aphraates, and the emperor
threatened him and said no more. One of the grooms of the imperial bedchamber,
who threatened the godly man somewhat more violently, met with the following
fate. He was entrusted with the charge of the bath, and immediately after this
conversation he came down to get it ready for the emperor. On entering he lost
his wits, stepped into the boiling water before it was mixed with the cold,
and so met his end. The emperor sat waiting for him to announce that the bath
was ready for him to enter, and after a considerable time had gone by he sent
other officers to report the cause of the delay. After they had gone in and
looked all about the room they discovered the chamberlain slain by the heat,
and lying dead in the. boiling water. On this becoming known to the emperor
they perceived the force of the prayers of Aphraates. Nevertheless they did
not depart from the impious doctrines but hardened their heart like Pharaoh,
and the infatuated emperor, though made aware of the miracle of the holy man,
persisted in his mad rage against piety.
CHAPTER XXIV.
Of the holy monk Julianus.
AT this time too the celebrated Julianus, whom I have already mentioned, was
forced to leave the desert and come to Antioch, for when the foster children
of lies, the facile framers of calumny, I mean of course the Arians, were maintaining
that this great man was of their faction, those lights of the truth Flavianus,
Diodorus, and Aphraates sent Acacius,(1) an athlete of virtue who afterwards
very wisely ruled the church at Beroea, to the famous Julianus(2) with the
entreaty that he would take pity on so many thousands of men, and at the same
time convict the enemy of lies and confirm the proclamation of the truth. The
miracles worked by Julianus on his way to and from Antioch and in that vast
city itself are described in my Religious History, which is easily accessible
to all who wish to become acquainted with them. But I am sure that no one who
has enquired into human nature will doubt that he attracted all the population
of the city to our assembly, for the extraordinary is generally sure to draw
all men after it. The fact of his having wrought great marvels is attested
even by the enemies of the truth.
Before this time in the reign of Constantius the great Antonius(3) had acted
in the same way in Alexandria, for he abandoned the desert and went up and
down that city, telling all men that Athanasius was the preacher of the true
doctrine and that the Arian faction were enemies of the truth. So those godly
men knew how to adapt themselves to each particular opportunity, when to remain
inactive, and at rest, and when to leave the deserts for towns.
CHAPTER XXV.
Of what other monks were distinguished at this period.
THERE were also other then at this period who emitted the bright rays of the
philosophy of solitary life. In the Chalcidian(1) desert Avitus, Marcianus(2)
and Abraames,(3) and more besides whom I cannot easily enumerate, strove in
their bodies of sense to live a life superior to sense. In the district of
Apamea,(4) Agapetus,(5) Simeon,(6) Paulus and others reaped the fruits of the
highest wisdom.
In the district of the Zeugmatenses(7) were Publius(8) and Paulus. In the
Cyrestian(9) the famous Acepsemas had been shut up in a cell for sixty years
without being either seen or spoken to. The admirable Zeumatius, though bereft
of sight, used to go about confirming the sheep, and fighting with the wolves;
so they burnt his cell, but the right faithful general Trajanus got another
built for him, and paid him besides other attentions. In the neighbourhood
of Antioch, Marianus,(10) Eusebius,(11) Ammianus,(12) Palladius,(13) Simeon,(14)
Abraames,(15) and others, preserved the divine image unimpaired; but of all
these the lives have been recorded by us. But the mountain which is in the
neighbourhood of the great city was decked like a meadow, for in it shone Petrus,
the Galatian, his namesake the Egyptian, Romanus Severus,(1) Zeno,(2) Moses,
and Malchus,(3) and many others of whom the world is ignorant, but who are
known to God.
CHAPTER XXVI.
Of Didymus of Alexandria and Ephraim the Syrian.
AT that period at Edessa flourished the admirable Ephraim, and at Alexandria
Didymus,(4)both writers against the doctrines that are at variance with the
truth. Ephraim, employing the Syrian language, shed beams of spiritual grace.
Totally untainted as he was by heathen education(5) he was able to expose the
niceties of heathen error, and lay bare the weakness of all heretical artifices.
Harmonius(6) the son of Bardesanes(7) had once composed certain songs and by
mixing sweetness of melody with his impiety beguiled the hearers, and led them
to their destruction. Ephraim adopted the music of the songs, but set them
to piety, and so gave the hearers at once great delight and a healing medicine.
These songs are still used to enliven the festivals of our victorious martyrs.
Didymus, however, who from a child had been deprived of the sense of sight,
had been educated in poetry, rhetoric, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, the
logic of Aristotle, and the eloquence of Plato. Instruction in all these subjects
he received by the sense of hearing alone,--not indeed as conveying the truth,
but as likely to be weapons for the truth against falsehood. Of holy scriptures
he learnt not only the sonnet but the sense. So among livers of ascetic lives
and students of virtue, these men at that time Were conspicuous.
CHAPTER XXVII.
Of what bishops were at this time distinguished in Asia and Pontus.
AMONG the bishops were the two Gregorii, the one of Nazianzus(1) and the other
of Nyssa,(2) the latter the brother and the former the friend and fellow worker
of the great Basilius. These were foremost champions of piety in Cappadocia;
and in front rank with them was Peter, born of the same parents with Basilius
and Gregorius, who though not having received like them a foreign education,
like them lived a life of brilliant distinction.
In Pisidia Optimus,(3) in Lycaonia Amphilochius,(4) fought in the front rank
on behalf of their fathers' faith, and repelled tim enemies' assaults.
In the West Damasus,(5) Bishop of Rome, and Ambrosius, entrusted with the
govern-meat of Milan, smote those who attacked them from afar. In conjunction
with these, bishops forced to dwell in remote regions, confirmed their friends
and undid their foes by writings--thus pilots able to cope with the greatness
of the storm were granted by the governor of the universe. Against the violence
of the foe He set in battle array the virtue of His captains, and provided
means meet to ward off the troubles of these difficult times, and not only
were the churches granted this kind of protection by their loving Lord, but
deemed worthy of yet another kind of guidance.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
Of the letter written by Valens to the great Valentinianus about the war,
and how he replied.
THE Lord roused the Goths to war, and drew on to the Bosphorus him who knew
only how to fight against the pious. Then for the first time the vain than
became aware of his own weakness, and sent to his brother to ask for troops.
But Valentinian replied that it were impious to help one fighting against God,
and right rather to check his rashness. By this the unhappy man was filled
with yet greater infatuation, yet he did not withdraw from his rash undertaking,
and persisted in ranging himself against the truth.(1)
CHAPTER XXIX.
Of the piety of Count Terentius.
TERENTIUS,
an excellent general, distinguished for his piety, had set up trophies of
victory and
returned
from Armenia. On being ordered by Valens to choose
a boon, he mentioned one which it was becoming in a man nurtured in piety to
choose, for he asked not gold nor yet silver, not land, not dignity, not a
house, but that one church might be granted to them that were risking their
all for the Apostolic doctrine. Valens received the petition, but on becoming
acquainted with its contents he tore it up in a rage, and bade Terentius beg
some other boon. The count, however, picked up the pieces of his petition,
and said, "I have my reward, sir, and I will not ask another. The Judge
of all things is Judge of my intention."
CHAPTER XXX.
Of the bold utterance of Trajanus the general.
AFTER
Valens had crossed the Bosphorus and come into Thrace he first spent a considerable
time at
Constantinople,
in alarm as to the issue of the war.
He had sent Trajanus in command of troops against the barbarians. When the
general came back beaten, the emperor reviled him sadly, and charged him with
infirmity and cowardice. Boldly, as became a brave man, Trajanus replied: "I
have not been beaten, sir, it is thou who hast abandoned the victory by fighting
against God and transferring His support to the barbarians. Attacked by thee
He is taking their side, for victory is on God's side and comes to them whom
God leads. Dost thou not know," he went on, "whom thou hast expelled
from their churches and to whose government these churches have been delivered
by thee?" Arintheus and Victor,? generals like Trajanus, confirmed the
truth of what he said, and implored the emperor not to be angered by reproaches
which were founded upon fact.(3)
CHAPTER XXXI.
Of Isaac(1) the monk of Constantinople and Bretanio the Scythian Bishop.
IT is
related that Isaac, who lived as a solitary at Constantinople, when he saw
Valens marching out
with his
troops, cried aloud, "Whither goest
thou, O emperor? To fight against God, instead of having Him as thy ally? 'Tis
God himself who has roused the barbarians against thee, because thou hast stirred
many tongues to blasphemy against Him and hast driven His worshippers from
their sacred abodes. Cease then thy campaigning and stop the war. Give back
to the flocks their excellent shepherds and thou shalt win victory without
trouble, but if thou tightest without so doing thou shalt learn by experience
how hard it is to kick against the pricks.(2) Thou shalt never come back and
shalt destroy thy army." Then in a passion the emperor rejoined, "I
shall come back; and I will kill thee, and so exact punishment for thy lying
prophecy." But Isaac undismayed by the threat exclaimed, "If what
I say be proved false, kill me."
Bretanio,
a man distinguished by various virtues, and entrusted with the episcopal
gove