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ST. ATHANASIUS
TO THE BISHOPS OF AFRICA
LETTER OF NINETY BISHOPS OF EGYPT AND LIBYA INCLUDING ATHANASIUS
1. Pre-eminence of the Council of Nicaea. Efforts to exalt that of Ariminum
at its expense.
The letters are sufficient which were written by our beloved fellow-minister
Damasus, bishop of the Great Rome, and the large number of bishops who assembled
along with him; and equally so are those of the other synods which were held,
both in Gaul and in Italy, concerning the sound Faith which Christ gave us,
the Apostles preached, and the Fathers, who met at Nicaea from all this world
of ours, have handed down. For so great a stir was made at that time about
the Arian heresy, in order that they who had fallen into it might be reclaimed,
while its inventors might be made manifest. To that council, accordingly, the
whole world has long ago agreed, and now, many synods having been held, all
men have been put in mind, both in Dalmatia and Dardania, Macedonia, Epirus
and Greece, Crete, and the other islands, Sicily, Cyprus, Pamphylia, Lycia,
and Isauria, all Egypt and the Libyas, and most of the Arabians have come to
know it, and marvelled at those who signed it, inasmuch as even if there were
left among them any bitterness springing up from the root of the Arians; we
mean Auxentius, Ursacius, Valens and their fellows, by these letters they have
been cut off and isolated. The confession arrived at Nicaea was, we say once
more, sufficient and enough by itself, for the subversion of all irreligious
heresy, and for the security and furtherance of the doctrine of the Church.
But since we have heard that certain wishing to oppose it are attempting to
cite a synod supposed to have been held at Ariminum, and are eagerly striving
that it should prevail rather than the other, we think it right to write and
put you in mind, not to endure anything of the sort: for this is nothing else
but a second growth of the Arian heresy. For what else do they wish for who
reject the synod held against it, namely the Nicene, if not that the cause
of Arius should prevail? What then do such men deserve, but to be called Arians,
and to share the punishment of the Arians? For they were not afraid of God,
who says, 'Remove not the eternal boundaries which thy fathers placed(1),'
and 'He that speaketh against father or mother, let him die the death(2):'
they were not in awe of their fathers, who enjoined that they who hold the
opposite of their confession should be anathema.
2. The Synod of Nicaea contrasted with the local Synods held since.
For this was why an ecumenical synod has been held at Nicaaea, 318 bishops
assembling to discuss the faith on account of the Arian heresy, namely, in
order that local synods should no more be held on the subject of the Faith,
but that, even if held, they should not hold good. For what does that Council
lack, that any one should seek to innovate? It is full of piety, beloved; and
has filled the whole world with it. Indians have acknowledged it, and all Christians
of other barbarous nations. Vain then is the labour of those who have often
made attempts against it. For already the men we refer to have held ten or
more synods, changing their ground at each, and while taking away some things
from earlier decisions, in later ones make changes and additions. And so far
they have gained nothing by writing, erasing, and using force, not knowing
that 'every plant that the Heavenly Father hath not planted shall be plucked
up(3).' But the word of the Lord which came through the ecumenical Synod at
Nicaea, abides for ever(3a). For if one compare number with number, these who
met at Nicaea are more than those at local synods, inasmuch as the whole is
greater than the part. But if a man wishes to discern the reason of the Synod
at Nicaea, and that of the large number subsequently held by these men, he
will find that while there was a reasonable cause for the former, the others
were got together by force, by reason of hatred and contention. For the former
council was summoned because of the Arian heresy, and because of Easter, in
that they of Syria, Cilicia and Mesopotamia differed from us, and kept the
feast at the same season as the Jews. But thanks to the Lord, harmony has resulted
not only as to the Faith, but also as to the Sacred Feast. And that was the
reason of the synod at Nicaea. But the subsequent ones were without number,
all however planned in opposition to the ecumenical.
3. The true nature of the proceedings at Ariminium.
This being pointed out, who will accept those who cite the synod of Ariminum,
or any other, against the Nicene? or who could help hating men who set at nought
their fathers' decisions, and put above them the newer ones, drawn up at Ariminum
with contention and violence? or who would wish to agree with these men, who
do not accept even their own? For in their own ten or more synods, as I said
above, they wrote now one thing, now another, and so came out clearly as themselves
the accusers of each one. Their case is not unlike that of the Jewish traitors
in old times. For just as they left the one well of the living water, and hewed
for themselves broken cisterns, which cannot hold water, as the prophet Jeremiah
has it(4), so these men, fighting against the one ecumenical synod, 'hewed
for themselves' many synods, and all appeared empty, like 'a sheaf without
strength(5).' Let us not then tolerate those who cite the Ariminion or any
other synod against that of Nicaea. For even they who cite that of Ariminum
appear not to know what was done there, for else they would have said nothing
about it. For ye know, beloved, from those who went from you to Ariminum, how
Ursacius and Valens, Eudoxius(5a) and Auxentius(5b)(and there Demophilus(5c)
also was with them), were deposed after wishing to write something to supersede
the Nicene decisions. For on being requested to anathematise the Arian heresy,
they refused, and preferred to be its ringleaders. So the bishops, like genuine
servants of the Lord and orthodox believers (and there were nearly 200 (6)
), wrote that they were satisfied with the Nicene alone, and desired and held
nothing more or less than that. This they also reported to Constantius, who
had ordered the assembling of the synod. But the men who had been deposed at
Ariminum went off to Constantius, and caused those who had reported against
them to be insulted, and threatened with not being allowed to return to their
dioceses, and to be treated with violence in Thrace that very winter, to compel
them to tolerate their innovations.
4. The Nicene formula in accordance with Scripture.
If then any cite the synod of Ariminum, firstly let them point out the deposition
of the above persons, and what the bishops wrote, namely that none should seek
anything beyond what had been agreed upon by the fathers at Nicaea, nor cite
any synod save that one. But this they suppress, but make much of what was
done by violence in Thrace(6a); thus shewing that they are dissemblers of the
Arian heresy, and aliens from the sound Faith. And again, if a man were to
examine and compare the great synod itself, and those held by these people,
he would discover the piety of the one and the folly of the others. They who
assembled at Nicaaea did so not after being deposed: and secondly, they confessed
that the Son was of the Essence of the Father. But the others, after being
deposed again and again, and once more at Ariminum itself, ventured to write
that it ought not to be said that the Son had Essence or Subsistence. This
enables us to see, brethren, that they of Nicaaea breathe the spirit of Scripture,
in that God says in Exodus(6b), 'I am that I am,' and through Jeremiah, 'Who
is in His substance(7) and hath seen His word;' and just below, 'if they had
stood in My subsistence(8) and heard My words:' now subsistence is essence,
and means nothing else but very being, which Jeremiah calls existence, in the
words, 'and they heard not the voice of existence(9).' For subsistence, and
essence, is existence: for it is, or in other words exists. This Paul also
perceiving wrote to the Hebrews, 'who being the brightness of his glory, and
the express Image of his subsistence(10).' But the others, who think they know
the Scriptures and call themselves wise, and do not choose to speak of subsistence
in God (for thus they wrote at Ariminum and at other synods of theirs), were
surely with justice deposed, saying as they did, like the fool did in his heart(1),
'God is not.' And again the fathers taught at Nicaea that the Son and Word
is not a creature, nor made having read 'all things were made through Him(2),'
and 'in Him were all things created, and consist(3);' while these men, Arians
rather than Christians, in their other synods have ventured to call Him a creature,
and one of the things that are made, things of which He Himseif is the Artificer
and Maker. For if 'through Him all things were made' and He too is a creature,
He would be the creator of Himself. And how can what is being created create?
or He that is creating be created?
5. How the test 'Coessential' came to be adopted at Nicaea.
But not
even thus are they ashamed, although they say such things as cause them to
be hated by
all; citing the
Synod of Ariminum, only to shew that there
also they were deposed. And as to the actual definition of Nicaea, that the
Son is coessential with the Father, on account of which they ostensibly oppose
the synod, and buzz around everywhere like gnats about the phrase, either they
stumble at it from ignorance, like those who stumble at the stone of stumbling
that was laid in Sion(4); or else they know, but for that very reason are constantly
opposing and murmuring, because it is an accurate declaration and full in the
face of their heresy. For it is not the phrases that vex them, but the condemnation
of themselves which the definition contains. And of this, once again, they
are themselves the cause, even if they wish to conceal the fact of which they
are perfectly aware, -- But we must now mention it, in order that hence also
the accuracy of the great synod may be shewn. For(5) the assembled bishops
wished to put away the impious phrases devised by the Arians, namely 'made
of nothing,' and that the Son was 'a thing made,' and a 'creature,' and that
'there was a time when He was not,' and that 'He is of mutable nature.' And
they wished to set down 'in writing the acknowledged language of Scripture,
namely that the Word is of God by nature Only-begotten, Power, Wisdom of the
Father, Very God, as John says, and as Paul wrote, brightness of the Father's
glory and express image of His person(1). But Eusebius and his fellows, drawn
on by their own error, kept conferring together as follows: 'Let us assent.
For we also are of God: for "there is one God of whom are all things(2)," and "old
things are passed away, behold all things are made new but all things are of
God(3)."' And they considered what is written in the Shepherd(4), 'Before
all things believe that God is one, who created and set all things in order,
and made them to exist out of nothing.' But the Bishops, beholding their craftiness,
and the cunning of their impiety, expressed more plainly the sense of the words
'of God,' by writing that the Son is of the Essence of God, so that whereas
the Creatures, since they do not exist of themselves without a cause, but have
a beginning of their existence, are said to be 'of God,' the Son alone might
be deemed proper to the Essence of the Father. For this is peculiar to one
who is Only-begotten and true Word in relation to a Father, and this was the
reason why the words 'of the essence' were adopted. Again(4a), upon the bishops
asking the dissembling minority if they agreed that the Son was not a Creature,
but the Power and only Wisdom of the Father, and the Eternal Image, in all
respects exact, of the Father, and true God, Eusebius and his fellows were
observed exchanging nods with one another, as much as to say 'this applies
to us men also, for we too are called "the image and glory of God(5)," and
of us it is said, "For we which live are alway(6)," and there are
many Powers, and "all the power(7) of the Lord went out of the land of
Egypt," while the caterpillar and the locust are called His "great
power(8)." And "the Lord of powers(9) is with us, the God of Jacob
is our help." For we hold that we are proper(1) to God, and not merely
so, but insomuch that He has even called us brethren. Nor does it vex us, even
if they call the Son Very God. For when made He exists in verity.'
6. The Nicene test not unscriptural in sense, nor a novelty.
Such was
the corrupt mind of the Arians. But here too the Bishops, beholding their
craftiness, collected
from
the Scriptures the figures of brightness,
of the river and the well, and of the relation of the express Image to the
Subsistence, and the texts, 'in thy light shall we see light(2),' and 'I and
the Father are one(3).' And lastly they wrote more plainly, and concisely,
that the Son was coessential with the Father; for all the above passages signify
this. And their murmuring, that the phrases are unscriptural, is exposed as
vain by themselves, for they have uttered their impieties in unscriptural terms:
(for such are 'of nothing' and 'there was a time when He was not'), while yet
they find fault because they were condemned by unscriptural terms pious in
meaning. While they, like men sprung from a dunghill, verily 'spoke of the
earth(4),' the Bishops, not having invented their phrases for themselves, but
having testimony from their Fathers, wrote as they did. For ancient bishops,
of the Great Rome and of our city, some 130 years ago, wrote(5) and censured
those who said that the Son was a creature and not coessential with the Father.
And Eusebius knew this, who was bishop of Caesarea, and at first an accomplice(6)
of the Arian heresy; but afterwards, having signed at the Council of Nicaea,
wrote to his own people affirming as follows: 'we know that certain eloquent
and distinguished bishops and writers even of ancient date used the word "coessential" with
reference to the Godhead of the Father and the Son.'
7. The position that the Son is a Creature inconsistent and untenable.
Why then do they go on citing the Synod of Ariminum, at which they were deposed?
Why do they reject that of Nicaea, at which their Fathers signed the confession
that the Son is of the Father's Essence and coessential with Him? Why do they
run about? For now they are at war not only with the bishops who met at Nicaea,
but with their own great bishops and their own friends. Whose heirs or successors
then are they? How can they call men fathers, whose confession, well and apostolically
drawn up, they will not accept? For if they think they can object to it, let
them speak, or rather answer, that they may be convicted of falling foul of
themselves, whether they believe the Son when He says, 'I and my Father are
one,' and 'he that hath seen Me hath seen the Father(6a)' 'Yes,' they must
answer, 'since it is written we believe it.' But if they are asked how they
are one, and how he that hath seen the Son hath seen the Father, of course,
we suppose they will say, 'by reason of resemblance,' unless they have quite
come to agree with those who hold the brother-opinion to theirs, and are called(7)
Anomoeans. But if once more they are asked, 'how is He like?' they brasen it
out and say, 'by perfect virtue and harmony, by having the Same will with the
Father, by not willing what the Father wills not.' But let them understand
that one assimilated to God by virtue and will is liable also to the purpose
of changing; but the Word is not thus, unless He is 'like' in part, and as
we are, because He is not like [God] in essence also. But these characteristics
belong to us, who are originate, and of a created nature. For we too, albeit
we cannot become like God in essence, yet by progress in virtue imitate God,
the Lord granting us this grace, in the words, 'Be ye merciful as your Father
is merciful:' 'be ye perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect(8).' But that
originate things are changeable, no one can deny, seeing that angels transgressed,
Adam disobeyed, and all stand in need of the grace of the Word. But a mutable
thing cannot be like God who is truly unchangeable, any more than what is created
can be like its creator. This is why, with regard to us, the holy man said,
'Lord, who shall be likened unto thee(9),' and 'who among the gods is like
unto thee, Lord(1);' meaning by gods those who, while created, had yet become
partakers of the Word, as He Himself said, 'If he called them gods to whom
the word of God came(2)' But things which partake cannot be identical with
or similar to that whereof they partake. For example, He said of Himself, 'I
and the Father are one(3),' implying that things originate are not so. For
we would ask those who allege the Ariminian Synod, whether a created essence
can say, 'what things I see my Father make, those I make also(4).' For things
originate are made and do not make; or else they made even themselves. Why,
if, as they say, the Son is a Creature and the Father is His Maker, surely
the Son would be His own maker, as He is able to make what the Father makes,
as He said. But such a supposition is absurd and utterly untenable, for none
can make himself.
8. The Son's relation to the Father essential, not merely ethical.
Once more, let them say whether things originate could says, 'oil things whatsoever
the Father hath are Mine.' Now, He has the prerogative of creating and making,
of Eternity, of omnipotence, of immutability. But things originate cannot have
the power of making, for they are creatures; nor eternity, for their existence
has a beginning; nor of omnipotence and immutabitity, for they are under sway,
and of changeable nature, as the Scriptures say. Well then, if these prerogatives
belong to the Son, they clearly do so, not on account of His virtue, as said
above, but essentially, even as the synod said, 'He is of no other essence'
but of the Father's, to whom these prerogatives are proper. But what can that
be which is proper to the Father's essence, and an offspring from it, or what
name can we give it, save 'coessential?' For that which a man sees in the Father,
that sees he also in the Son; and that not by participation, but essentially.
And this is [the meaning of] 'I and the Father are one,' and 'he that hath
seen Me hath seen the Father.' Here especially once more it is easy to shew
their folly. If it is from virtue, the antecedent of willing and not willing,
and of moral progress, that you hold the Son to be like the Father; while these
things fall under the category of quality; clearly you call God compound of
quality and essence. But who will tolerate you when you say this? For God,
who compounded all things to give them being, is not compound, nor of similar
nature to the things made by Him through the Word. Far be the thought. For
He is simple essence, in which quality is not, nor, as James says, 'any variableness
or shadow of turning(6).' Accordingly, if it is shewn that it is not from virtue
(for in God there is no quality, neither is there in the Son), then He must
be proper to God's essence. And this you will certainly admit if mental apprehension
is not utterly destroyed in you. But what is that which is proper to and identical
with the essence of God, and an Offspring from it by nature, if not by this
very fact coessential with Him that begot it? For this is the distinctive relation
of a Son to a Father, and he who denies this, does not hold that the Word is
Son in nature and in truth.
9. The honest repudiation of Arianism involves the acceptance of the Nicene
test.
This then the Fathers perceived when they wrote that the Son was coessential
with the Father, and anathematised those who say that the Son is of a different
Subsistence(7): not inventing phrases for themselves, but learning in their
turn, as we said, from the Fathers who had been before them. But after the
above proof, their Ariminian Synod is superfluous, as well as any(7a) other
synod cited by them as touching the Faith. For that of Nicaea is sufficient,
agreeing as it does with the ancient bishops also, in which too their fathers
signed, whom they ought to respect, on pain of being thought anything but Christians.
But if even after such proofs, and after the testimony of the ancient bishops,
and the signature of their own Fathers, they pretend as if in ignorance to
be alarmed at the phrase 'coessential,' then let them say and hold, in simpler
terms and truly, that the Son is Son by nature, and anathematise as the synod
enjoined those who say that the Son of God is a Creature or a thing made, or
of nothing, or that there was once a time when He was not, and that He is mutable
and liable to change, and of another Subsistence And so let them escape the
Arian heresy. And we are confident that in sincerely anathematising these views,
they ipso facto confess that the Son is of the Father's Essence, and coessential
with Him. For this is why the Fathers, having said that the Son was coessential,
straightway added, 'but those who say that He is a creature, or made, or of
nothing, or that there was once a time when He was not,' the Catholic Church
anathematises: namely in order that by this means they might make it known
that these things are meant by the word 'coessential.' And the meaning 'Co-essential'
is known from the Son not being a Creature or thing made: and because he that
says 'coessential' does not hold that the Word is a Creature: and he that anathematises
the above views, at the same time holds that the Son is coessential with the
Father; and he that calls Him 'coessential,' calls the Son of God genuinely
and truly so; and he that calls Him genuinely Son understands the texts, 'I
and the Father are one,' and 'he that hath seen Me hath seen the Father(8).'
10.Purpose of this Letter; warning against Auxentius of Milan.
Now it would be proper to write this at greater length. But since we write
to you who know, we have dictated it concisely, praying that among all the
bond of peace might be preserved, and that all in the Catholic Church should
say and hold the same thing. And we are not meaning to teach, but to put you
in mind. Nor is it only ourselves that write, but all the bishops of Egypt
and the Libyas, some ninety in number. For we all are of one mind in this,
and we always sign for one another if any chance not to be present. Such being
our state of mind, since we happened to be assembled, we wrote, both to our
beloved Damasus, bishop of the Great Rome, giving an account of Auxentius(9)
who has intruded upon the church at Milan; namely that he not only shares the
Arian heresy, but is also accused of many offences, which he committed with
Gregory(10), the sharer of his impiety; and while expressing our surprise that
so far he has not been deposed and expelled from the Church, we thanked [Damasus]
for his piety and that of those who assembled at the Great Rome, in that by
expelling Ursacius and Valens, and those who hold with them, they preserved
the harmony of the Catholic Church. Which we pray may be preserved also among
you, and therefore entreat you not to tolerate, as we said above, those who
put forward a host of synods held concerning the Faith, at Ariminum, at Sirmium,
in Isauria, in Thrace, those in Constantinople, and the many irregular ones
in Antioch. But let the Faith confessed by the Fathers at Nicaea alone hold
good among you, at which all the fathers, including those of the men who now
are fighting against it, were present, as we said above, and signed: in order
that of us too the Apostle may say, 'Now I praise you that ye remember me in
all things, and as I banded the traditions to you, so ye hold them fast
11. Godhead of the Spirit also involved in the Nicene Creed.
For this Synod of Nicaea is in truth a proscription of every heresy. It also
upsets those who blaspheme the Holy Spirit, and call Him a Creature. For the
Fathers, after speaking of the faith in the Son, straightway added, 'And we
believe in the Holy Ghost,' in order that by confessing perfectly and fully
the faith in the Holy Trinity they might make known the exact form of the Faith
of Christ, and the teaching of the Catholic Church. For it is made clear both
among you and among all, and no Christian can have a doubtful mind on the point,
that our faith is not in the Creature, but in one God, Father Almighty, maker
of all things visible and invisible: and in one Lord Jesus Christ His Only-begotten
Son, and in one Holy Ghost; one God. known in the holy and perfect Trinity,
baptized into which, and in it united to the Deity, we believe that we have
also inherited the kingdom of the heavens, in Christ Jesus our Lord, through
whom to the Father be the glory and the power for ever and ever. Amen.
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