Subscribe
to CF
Be
first to know
Read our AAA review
from Catholic Culture
Our Mission
To
bring Jesus Christ; the Way, the Truth and the Life; to all who will follow,
according to scripture and tradition, per the Magisterium
of the Roman Catholic Church.
While you visit!
Listen
to
Radio
For the Sacred
Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary. |
ST. ATHANASIUS
ENCYCLICAL EPISTLE TO THE BISHOPS
THROUGHOUT THE WORLD
CIRCULAR LETTER
To his fellow-ministers in every place, beloved lords, Athanasius sends health
in the Lord.
1. The whole Church affected by what has occurred.
Our sufferings
have been dreadful beyond endurance, and it is impossible to describe them
in suitable
terms;
but in order that the dreadful nature of the
events which have taken place may be more readily apprehended, I have thought
it good to remind you of a history out of the Scriptures. It happened that
a certain Levite[1] was injured in the person of his wife; and, when he considered
the exceeding greatness of the pollution (for the woman was a Hebrew, and of
the tribe of Judah), being astounded at the outrage which had been committed
against him, he divided his wife's body, as the Holy Scripture relates in the
Book of Judges, and sent a part of it to every tribe in Israel, in order that
it might be understood that an injury like this pertained not to himself only,
but extended to all alike; and that, if the people sympathised with him in
his sufferings, they might avenge him; or if they neglected to do so, might
bear the disgrace of being considered thenceforth as themselves guilty of the
wrong. The messengers whom he sent related what had happened; and they that
heard and saw it, declared that such things had never been done from the day
that the children of Israel came up out of Egypt. So every tribe of Israel
was moved, and all came together against the offenders, as though they had
themselves been the sufferers; and at last the perpetrators of this iniquity
were destroyed in war, and became a curse in the mouths of all: for the assembled
people considered not their kindred blood, but regarded only the crime they
had committed. You know the history, brethren, and the particular account of
the circumstances given in Scripture. I will not therefore describe them more
in detail, since I write to persons acquainted with them, and as I am anxious
to represent to your piety our present circumstances, which are even worse
than those to which I have referred. For my object in reminding you of this
history is this, that you may compare those ancient transactions with what
has happened to us now, and perceiving how much these last exceed the other
in cruelty, may be filled with greater indignation on account of them, than
were the people of old against those offenders. For the treatment we have undergone
surpasses the bitterness of any persecution; and the calamity of the Levite
was but small, when compared with the enormities which have now been committed
against the Church; or rather such deeds as these were never before heard of
in the whole world, or the like experienced by any one. For in that case it
was but a single woman that was injured, and one Levite who suffered wrong;
Now the whole Church is injured, the priesthood insulted, and worst of all,
piety[2] is persecuted by impiety. On that occasion the tribes were astounded,
each at the sight of part of the body of one woman; but now the members of
the whole Church are seen divided from one another, and are sent abroad some
to you, and some to others, bringing word of the insults and injustice which
they have suffered. Be ye therefore also moved, I beseech you, considering
that these wrongs are done unto you no less than unto us; and let every one
lend his aid, as feeling that he is himself a sufferer, lest shortly ecclesiastical
Canons, and the faith of the Church be corrupted. For both are in danger, unless
God shall speedily by your hands amend what has been done amiss, and the Church
be avenged on her enemies. For our Canons[3] and our forms were not given to
the Churches at the present day, but were wisely and safely transmitted to
us from our forefathers. Neither had our faith its beginning at this time,
but it came down to us from the Lord through His disciples[4]. That therefore
the ordinances which have been preserved in the Churches from old time until
now, may not be lost in our days, and the trust which has been committed to
us required at our hands; rouse yourselves, brethren, as being stewards of
the mysteries of God[5], and seeing them now seized upon by others. Further
particulars of our condition you will learn from the bearers of our letters;
but I was anxious myself to write you a brief account thereof, that you may
know for certain, that such things have never before been committed against
the Church, from the day that our Saviour when He was taken up, gave command
to His disciples, saying, 'Go ye and make disciples of all nations, baptizing
them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost[6].
2. Violent and uncanonical intrusion of Gregory.
Now the outrages which have been committed against us and against the Church
are these. While we were holding our assemblies in peace, as usual, and while
the people were rejoicing in them, and advancing in godly conversation, and
while our fellow-ministers in Egypt, and the Thebais, and Libya, were in love
and peace both with one another and with us; on a sudden the Prefect of Egypt
puts forth a public letter, bearing the form of an edict, and declaring that
one Gregory from Cappadocia was coming to be my successor from the court. This
announcement confounded every one, for such a proceeding was entirely novel,
and now heard of for the first time. The people however assembled still more
constantly in the churches[7], for they very well knew that neither they themselves,
nor any Bishop or Presbyter, nor in short any one had ever complained against
me; and they saw that Arians only were on his side, and were aware also that
he was himself an Arian, and was sent by Eusebius and his fellows to the Arian
party. For you know, brethren, that Eusebius and his fellows have always been
the supporters and associates of the impious heresy of the Arian madmen[8],
by whose means they have ever carded on their designs against me, and were
the authors of my banishment into Gaul.
The people, therefore, were justly indignant and exclaimed against the proceeding,
calling the rest of the magistrates and the whole city to witness, that this
novel and iniquitous attempt was now made against the Church, not on the ground
of any charge brought against me by ecclesiastical persons, but through the
wanton assault of the Arian heretics. For even if there had been any complaint
generally prevailing against me, it was not an Arian, or one professing Arian
doctrines, that ought to have been chosen to supersede me; but according to
the ecclesiastical Canons, and the direction of Paul, when the people were
'gathered together, and the spirit' of them that ordain, ' with the power of
our Lord Jesus Christ[9]' all things ought to have been enquired into and transacted
canonically, in the presence of those among the laity and clergy who demanded
the change; and not that a person brought from a distance by Arians, as if
making a traffic Of the title of Bishop, should with the patronage and strong
arm of heathen magistrates, thrust himself upon those who neither asked for
nor desired his presence, nor indeed knew anything of what had been done. Such
proceedings tend to the dissolution of all the ecclesiastical Canons, and compel
the heathen to blaspheme, and to suspect that our appointments are not made
according to a divine rule, but as a result of traffic and patronage[1].
3. Outrages which took place at the time of Gregory's arrival.
Thus was this notable appointment of Gregory brought about by the Arians,
and such was the beginning of it. And what outrages he committed on his entry
into Alexandria, and of what great evils that event has been the cause, you
may learn both from our letters, and by enquiry of those who are sojourning
among you. While the people were offended at such an unusual proceeding, and
in consequence assembled in the churches, in order to prevent the impiety of
the Arians from mingling itself with the faith of the Church, Philagrius, who
has long been a persecutor of the Church and her virgins, and is now Prefect[2]
of Egypt, an apostate already, and a fellow-countryman of Gregory, a man too
of no respectable character, and moreover supported by Eusebius and his fellows,
and therefore full of zeal against the Church; this person, by means of promises
which he afterwards fulfilled, succeeded in gaining over the heathen multitude,
with the Jews and disorderly persons, and having excited their passions, sent
them in a body with swords and clubs into the churches to attack the people.
What followed upon this[3] it is by no means easy to describe: indeed it is
not possible to set before you a just representation of the circumstances,
nor even could one recount a small part of them without tears and lamentations.
Have such deeds as these ever been made the subjects of tragedy among the ancients
? or has the like ever happened before in time of persecution or of war? The
church and the holy Baptistery were set on fire, and straightway groans, shrieks,
and lamentations, were heard through the city; while the citizens in their
indignation at these enormities, cried shame upon the governor, and protested
against the violence used to them. For holy and undefiled virgins[4] were being
stripped naked, and suffering treatment which is not to be named and if they
resisted, they were in danger of their lives. Monks were being trampled under
foot and perishing; some were being hurled headlong; others were being destroyed
with swords and clubs; others were being wounded and beaten. And oh ! what
deeds of impiety and iniquity have been committed upon the Holy Table! They
were offering birds and pine cones s in sacrifice, singing the praises of their
idols, and blaspheming even in the very churches our Lord and Saviour Jesus-Christ,
the Son of the living God. They were burning the books of Holy Scripture which
they found in the church; and the Jews, the murderers of our Lord, and the
godless heathen entering irreverently (O strange boldness !) the holy Baptistery,
were stripping themselves naked, and acting such a disgraceful part, both by
word and deed, as one is ashamed even to relate. Certain impious men also,
following the examples set them in the bitterest persecutions, were seizing
upon the virgins and ascetics by the hands and dragging them along, and as
they were haling them, endeavoured to make them blaspheme and deny the Lord;
and when they refused to do so, were beating them violently and trampling them
under foot.
4. Outrageson Good Friday and Easter day, 339.
In addition to all this, after such a notable and illustrious entry into the
city, the Arian Gregory, taking pleasure in these calamities, and as if desirous
to secure to the heathens and Jews, and those who had wrought these evils upon
us, a prize and price of their iniquitous success, gave up the church to be
plundered by them. Upon this license of iniquity and disorder, their deeds
were worse than in time of war, and more cruel than those of robbers. Some
of them were plundering whatever fell in their way; others dividing among themselves
the sums which some had laid up there[6]; the wine, of which there was a large
quantity, they either drank or emptied out or carried away; they plundered
the store of oil, and every one took as his spoil the doors and chancel rails;
the candlesticks they forthwith laid aside in the wall[7], and lighted the
candies of the Church before their idols: in a word, rapine and death pervaded
the Church. And the impious Arians, so far from feeling shame that such things
should be done, added yet further outrages and cruelty. Presbyters and laymen
had their flesh torn, virgins were stript of their veils[7a], and led away
to the tribunal of the governor, and then cast into prison; others had their
goods confiscated, and were scourged; the bread of the ministers and virgins
was intercepted. And these things were done even during the holy season of
Lent[8], about the time of Easter; a time when the brethren were keeping fast,
while this notable Gregory exhibited the disposition of a Caiaphas, and, together
with Pilate the Governor, furiously raged against the pious worshippers of
Christ. Going into one of the churches on the Preparation[9], in company with
the Governor and the heathen multitude, when he saw that the people regarded
with abhorrence his forcible entry among them, he caused that most cruel person,
the Governor, publicly to scourge in one hour, four and thirty virgins and
married women, and men of rank, and to cast them into prison. Among them there
was one virgin, who, being fond of study, had the Psalter in her hands, at
the time when be caused her to be publicly scourged: the book was torn in pieces
by the officers, and the virgin herself shut up in prison.
5. Retirement of Athanasius, and tyranny of Gregory and Philagrius.
When all this was done, they did not stop even here; but consulted how they
might act the same part in the other church[1], where I was mostly living during
those clays; and they were eager to extend their fury to this church also,
in order that they might hunt out and dispatch me. And this would have been
my fate, had not the grace of Christ assisted me, if it were only that I might
escape to relate these few particulars concerning their conduct. For seeing
that they were exceedingly mad against me, and being anxious that the church
should not be injured, nor the virgins that were in it suffer, nor additional
murders be committed, nor the people again outraged, I withdrew myself from
among them, remembering the words of our Saviour, 'If they persecute you in
this city, flee ye into another[2].' For I knew, from the evil they had done
against the first-named church, that they would for-hear no outrage against
the other also. And there in fact they reverenced not even the Lord's da[3]
of the holy Feast, but in that church also they imprisoned the persons who
belonged to it, at a time when the Lord delivered all from the bonds of death,
whereas Gregory and his associates, as if fighting against our Saviour, and
depending upon the patronage of the Governor, have turned into mourning this
day of liberty to the servants of Christ. The heathens were rejoicing to do
this, for they abhor that day; and Gregory perhaps did but fulfil the commands
of Eusebius and his fellows in forcing the Christians to mourn under the infliction
of bonds.
With these acts of violence has the Governor seized upon the churches, and
has given them up to Gregory and the Arian madmen. Thus, those persons who
were excommunicated by us for their impiety, now glory in the plunder of our
churches; while the people of God, and the Clergy of the Catholic Church are
compelled either to have communion with the impiety of the Arian heretics,
or else to forbear entering into them. Moreover, by means of the Governor,
Gregory has exercised no small violence towards the captains of ships and others
who pass over sea, torturing and scourging some, putting others in bonds, and
casting them into prison, in order to oblige them not to resist his iniquities,
and to take letters[4] from him. And not satisfied with all this, that he may
glut himself with our blood, he has caused his savage associate, the Governor,
to prefer an indictment against me, as in the name of the people, before the
most religious Emperor Constantius, which contains odious charges, from which
one may expect not only to be banished, but even ten thousand deaths. The person
who drew it up is an apostate from Christianity, and a shameless worshipper
of idols, and they who subscribed it are heathens, and keepers of idol temples,
and others of them Arians. In short, not to make my letter tedious to you,
a persecution rages here, and such a persecution as was never before raised
against the Church. For in former instances a man at least might pray while
he fled from his persecutors, and be baptized while he lay in concealment.
But now their extreme cruelty has imitated the godless conduct of the Babylonians.
For as they falsely accused Daniel[5], so does the notable Gregory now accuse
before the Governor those who pray in their houses, and watches every opportunity
to insult their ministers, so that through his violent conduct, many are endangered
from missing baptism, and many who are in sickness and sorrow have no one to
visit them, a calamity which they bitterly lament, accounting it worse than
their sickness. For while the ministers of the Church are under persecution,
the people who condemn the impiety of the Arian heretics choose rather thus
to be sick and to run the risk, than that a hand of the Arians should come
upon their heads.
6. All the above illegalities were carried or in the interest of Arianism.
Gregory then is an Arian, and has been sent to the Arian party; for none demanded
him, but they only; and accordingly as a hireling and a stranger, he makes
use of the Governor to inflict these dreadful and cruel deeds upon the people
of the Catholic Churches, as not being his own. For since Pistus, whom Eusebius
and his fellows formerly appointed over the Arians, was justly anathematized[6]
and excommunicated for his impiety by you the Bishops of the Catholic Church,
as you all know, on our writing to you concerning him, they have now, therefore,
in like manner sent this Gregory to them; and lest they should a second time
be put to shame, by our again writing against them, they have employed extraneous
force against me, in order that, having obtained possession of the Churches,
they may seem to have escaped all suspicion of being Arians. But in this too
they have been mistaken, for none of the people of the Church are with them,
except the heretics only, and those who have been excommunicated on divers
charges, and such as have been compelled by the Governor to dissemble. This
then is the drama of Eusebius and his fellows, which they have long been rehearsing
and composing; and now have succeeded in performing through the false charges
which they have made against me before the Emperors[7]. Notwithstanding, they
are not yet content to be quiet, but even now seek to kill me; and they make
themselves so formidable to our friends, that they are all driven into banishment,
and expect death at their hands. But you must not for this stand in awe of
their iniquity, but on the contrary avenge: and shew your indignation at this
their unprecedented conduct against us. For if when one member suffers all
the members suffer with it, and, according to the blessed Apostle, we ought
to weep with them that weep[8], let every one, now that so great a Church as
this is suffering, avenge its wrongs, as though he were himself a sufferer.
For we have a common Saviour, who is blasphemed by them, and Canons belonging
to us all, which they are transgressing. If while any of you bad been sitting
in your Church, and while the people were assembled with you, without any blame,
some one had suddenly come under plea of an edict as successor of one of you,
and had acted the same part towards you, would you not have been indignant?
would I you not have demanded to be righted ? If so, then it is right that
you should be indignant now, lest if these things be passed over unnoticed,
the same mischief shall by degrees extend itself to every Church, and so our
schools of religion be turned into a market-house and an exchange.
7. Appeal to the bishops of the whole Church to unite against Gregory.
You are acquainted with the history of the Arian madmen, beloved, for you
have often, both individually and in a body, condemned their impiety; and you
know also that Eusebius and his fellows, as I said before, are engaged in the
same heresy; for the sake of which they have long been carrying on a conspiracy
against me. And I have represented to you, what has now been done, both for
them and by them, with greater cruelty than is usual even in time of war, in
order that after the example set before you in the history which I related
at the beginning, you may entertain a zealous hatred of their wickedness, and
reject those who have committed such enormities against the Church. If the
brethren at Rome[9] [last year], before these things had happened, and on account
of their former misdeeds, wrote letters to call a Council, that these evils
might be set right (fearing which, Eusebius and his fellows took care previously
to throw the Church into confusion, and desired to destroy me, in order that
they might thenceforth be able to act as they pleased without fear, and might
have no one to call them to account), how much more ought you now to be indignant
at these outrages, and to condemn them, seeing they have added this to their
former misconduct.
I beseech you, overlook not such proceedings, nor suffer the famous Church
of the Alexandrians to be trodden down by heretics. In consequence of these
things the people and their ministers are separated from one another, as one
might expect, silenced by the violence of the Prefect, yet abhorring the impiety
of the Arian madmen. If therefore Gregory shall write unto you, or any other
in his behalf, receive not his letters, brethren, but tear them in pieces and
put the bearers of them to shame, as the ministers of impiety and wickedness.
And even if he presume to write to you after a friendly fashion, nevertheless
receive them not. Those who bring his letters convey them only from fear of
the Governor, and on account of his frequent acts of violence. And since it
is probable that Eusebius and his fellows will write to you concerning him,
I was anxious to admonish you beforehand, so that you may herein imitate God,
Who is no respecter of persons, and may drive out from before you those that
come from them; because for the sake of the Arian madmen they caused persecutions,
rape of virgins, murders, plunder of the Church's property, burnings, and blasphemies
in the Churches, to be committed by the heathens and Jews at such a season.
The impious and mad Gregory cannot deny that he is an Arian, being proved to
be so by the person who writes his letters. This is his secretary Ammon, who
was cast out of the Church long ago by my predecessor the blessed Alexander
for many misdeeds and for impiety.
For all these reasons, therefore, vouchsafe to send me a reply, and condemn
these impious men; so that even now the ministers and people of this place,
seeing your orthodoxy and hatred of wickedness, may rejoice in your concord
in the Christian faith, and that those who have been guilty of these lawless
deeds against the Church may be reformed by your letters, and brought at last,
though late, to repentance. Salute the brotherhood that is among you. All the
brethren that are with me salute you. Fare ye well, and remember me, and the
Lord preserve you continually, most truly beloved lords.
Return to Volume 27 Index