THE CHURCH HISTORY OF EUSEBIUS, BOOK X & SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES AND TABLES
BOOK X.
CHAPTER I.
The Peace granted us by God.
- THANKS for all things be given unto God the Omnipotent Ruler and King of
the universe, and the greatest thanks to Jesus Christ the Saviour and Redeemer of
our souls, through whom we pray that peace may be always preserved for us firm
and undisturbed by external troubles and by troubles of the mind. Since in
accordance with thy wishes, my most holy Paulinus, (1) we have added the tenth
book of the Church History to those which have preceded, (2) we will inscribe it
to thee, proclaiming thee as the seal of the whole work; and we will fitly add
in a perfect number the perfect panegyric upon the restoration of the churches,
(3) obeying the Divine. Spirit which exhorts us in the following words: "Sing
unto the Lord a new song, for he hath done marvelous things. His right hand and
his holy arm hath saved him. The Lord hath made known his salvation, his
righteousness hath he revealed in the presence of the nations." (4) And in accordance
with the utterance which 4 commands us to sing the new song, let us proceed to
show that, after those terrible and gloomy spectacles which we have described,
(5) we are now permitted to see and celebrate such things as many truly
righteous men and martyrs of God before us desired to see upon earth and did not see,
and to hear and did not hear. (6) But they, hastening on, obtained far better
things, (7) being carried to heaven and the paradise of divine pleasure. But,
acknowledging that even these things are greater than we deserve, we have been
astonished at the grace manifested by the author of the great gifts, and rightly
do we admire him, worshiping him with the whole power of our souls, and
testifying to the truth of those recorded utterances, in which it is said, "Come and
see the works of the Lord, the wonders which he hath done upon the earth; he
removeth wars to the ends of the world, he shall break the bow and snap the spear
in sunder, and shall burn the shields with fire." (8) Rejoicing in these
things which have been clearly fulfilled in our day, let us proceed with our account.
The whole race of God's enemies was destroyed in the manner indicated, (9)
and was thus suddenly swept from the sight of men. So that again a divine
utterance had its fulfillment: "I have seen the impious highly exalted and raising
himself like the cedars of Lebanon and I have passed by, and behold, he was not
and I have sought his place, and it could not be found." (10) And finally a
bright and splendid day, overshadowed by no cloud, illuminated with beams of
heavenly light the churches of Christ throughout the entire world. And not even
those without our communion were prevented from sharing in the same blessings, or
at least from coming under their influence and enjoying a part of the benefits
bestowed upon us by God. (12)
CHAPTER II.
The Restoration of the Churches.
- All men, then, were freed from the oppression of the tyrants, and being
released from the former ills, one in one way and another in another acknowledged
the defender of the pious to be the only true God. And we especially who placed
our hopes in the Christ of God had unspeakable gladness, and a certain
inspired joy bloomed for all of us, when we saw every place which shortly before had
been desolated by the impieties of the tyrants reviving as if from a long and
death-fraught pestilence, and temples again rising from their foundations to an
immense height, and receiving a splendor far greater than that of the old ones
which had been destroyed. But the supreme rulers also confirmed to us still more
extensively the munificence of God by repeated ordinances in behalf of the
Christians; and personal letters of the emperor were sent to the bishops, with
honors and gifts of money. It may not be unfitting to insert these documents,
translated from the Roman into the Greek tongue, at the proper place in this book,
(1) as in a sacred tablet, that they may remain as a memorial to all who shall
come after us.
CHAPTER III.
The Dedications in Every Place.
- After this was seen the sight which had been desired and prayed for by us
all; feasts of dedication in the cities and consecrations of the newly built
houses of prayer took place, bishops assembled, foreigners came together from
abroad, mutual love was exhibited between people and people, the members of
Christ's body were united in complete harmony. Then was fulfilled the prophetic
utterance which mystically foretold what was to take place: "Bone to bone and joint
to joint," (1) and whatever was truly announced in enigmatic expressions in the
inspired pas-3 sage. And there was one energy of the Divine Spirit pervading
all the members, and one soul in all, and the same eagerness of faith, and one
hymn from all in praise of the Deity. Yea, and perfect services were conducted by
the prelates, the sacred rites being solemnized, and the majestic institutions
of the Church observed,2 here with the singing of psalms and with the reading
of the words committed to us by God, and there with the performance of divine
and mystic services; and the mysterious symbols of the Saviour's passion were
dispensed. At the same time people of every 4 age, both male and female, with all
the power of the mind gave honor unto God, the author of their benefits, in
prayers and thanksgiving, with a joyful mind and soul. And every one of the
bishops present, each to the best of his ability, delivered panegyric orations,
adding luster to the assembly.
CHAPTER IV.
Panegyric on the Splendor of Affairs.
A Certain one of those of moderate talent, (1) who had composed a
discourse, stepped forward in the presence of many pastors who were assembled as if for
a church gathering, and while they attended quietly and decently, he addressed
himself as follows to one who was in all things a most excellent bishop and
beloved of God, (2) through whose zeal the temple in Tyre, which was the most
splendid in Phoenicia, had been erected.
Panegyric upon the building of the churches, 2 addressed to Paulinus,
Bishop of Tyre.
"Friends and priests of God who are clothed in the sacred gown and adorned
with the heavenly crown of glory, the inspired unction and the sacerdotal
garment of the Holy Spirit; and thou? oh pride of God's new holy temple, endowed by
him with the wisdom of age, and yet exhibiting costly works and deeds of
youthful and flourishing virtue, to whom God himself, who embraces the entire world,
has granted the distinguished honor of building and renewing this earthly
house to Christ, his only begotten and first-born Word, and to his holy and divine
bride; (4) -- one might call thee a new Beseleel, (5) 3 the architect of a
divine tabernacle, or Solomon, king of a new and much better Jerusalem, or also a
new Zerubabel, who added a much greater glory than the former to the temple 4 of
God; (6)--and you also, oh nurslings of the sacred flock of Christ, habitation
of good words, school of wisdom, and august 5 and pious auditory of religion:
(7) It was long ago permitted us to raise hymns and songs to God, when we
learned from hearing the Divine Scriptures read the marvelous signs of God and the
benefits conferred upon men by the Lord's wondrous deeds, being taught to say
'Oh God! we have heard with our ears, our fathers have told us the work which
thou didst in their days, in days of old.' (8) s But now as we no longer perceive
the lofty arm (9) and the celestial right hand of our all-gracious God and
universal King by hearsay merely or report, but observe so to speak in very deed
and with our own eyes that the declarations recorded long ago are faithful and
true, it is permitted us to raise a second hymn of triumph and to sing with loud
voice, and say, 'AS we have heard, so have we seen; in the city of the Lord of
hosts, in the city of our God.' (10) And in what city but in this newly built
and God-constructed one, which is a 'church of the living God, a pillar and
foundation of the truth,' (11) concerning which also another divine oracle thus
proclaims, 'Glorious things have been spoken of thee, oh city of God.' (12) Since
the all-gracious God has brought us together to it, through the grace of his
Only-Begotten, let every one of those who have been summoned sing with loud voice
and say, ' I was glad when they said unto me, we shall go unto the house of
the Lord,' (13) and 'Lord, I have loved the beauty of thy house and the place 8
where thy glory dwelleth.' (14) And let us not only one by one, but all
together, with one spirit and one soul, honor him and cry aloud, saying, ' Great is the
Lord and greatly to be praised in the city of our God, in his holy mountain.'
(15) For he is truly great, and great is his house, lofty and spacious and @
comely in beauty above the sons of men.' (16) 'Great is the Lord who alone doeth
wonderful things'; (17) 'great is he who doeth great things and things past
finding out, glorious and marvelous things which cannot be numbered'; (18) is
great is he ' who changeth times and seasons, who exalteth and debaseth kings ';19
, who raiseth up the poor from the earth and lifteth up the needy from the
dunghill.' (20) He hath put clown princes from their thrones and hath exalted them
of low degree from the earth. The hungry he hath filled with good things and
the arms of the proud he hath broken.' (21) Not only to 9 the faithful, but also
to unbelievers, has he confirmed the record of ancient events; he that worketh
miracles, he that doeth great things, the Master of all, the Creator of the
whole world, the omnipotent, the all-merciful, the one and only God. To him let us
sing the new song, (22) supplying in thought, (23) ' To him who alone doeth
great wonders: for his mercy endureth forever'; 24, To him which smote great
kings, and slew famous kings: for his mercy endureth forever'; (25) 'For the Lord
remembered us in our low estate and delivered us from our adversaries.' (26)
And let us never cease to 10 cry aloud in these words to the Father of the
universe. And let us always honor him with our mouth who is the second cause of our
benefits, the instructor in divine knowledge, the teacher of the true religion,
the destroyer of the impious, the slayer of tyrants, the reformer of life,
Jesus, the Saviour of us who were in despair. For he alone, as the only all- 11
gracious Son of an all-gracious Father, in accordance with the purpose of his
Father's benevolence, has willingly put on the nature of us who lay prostrate in
corruption, and like some excellent physician, who for the sake of saving them
that are ill, examines their sufferings, handles their foul sores, and reaps pain
for himself from the miseries of another, (27) so us who were not only
diseased and afflicted with terrible ulcers and wounds already mortified, but were
even lying among the dead, he hath saved for himself from the very jaws of death.
For none other of those in heaven had such power as without harm (28) to
minister to the salvation of so many. But he alone having reached our deep
corruption, he alone having taken upon himself our labors, he alone having suffered the
punishments due for our impieties, having recovered us who were not half dead
merely, but were already in tombs and sepulchers, and altogether foul and
offensive, saves us, both anciently and now, by his beneficent zeal, beyond the
expectation of any one, even of ourselves, and imparts liberally of the Father's
benefits,- he who is the giver of life and light, our great Physician and King and
Lord, the 13 Christ of God. For then when the whole human race lay buried in
gloomy night and in depths of darkness through the deceitful arts of guilty
demons and the power of God-hating spirits, by his simple appearing he loosed once
for all the fast-bound cords of our impieties by the rays of his light, even as
wax is melted.
14 But when malignant envy and the evil-loving demon wellnigh burst with
anger at such grace and kindness, and turned against us all his death-dealing
forces, and when, at first, like a dog gone mad which gnashes his teeth at the
stones thrown at him, and pours out his rage against his assailants upon the
inanimate missiles, he leveled his ferocious madness at the stones of the
sanctuaries and at the lifeless material of the houses, and desolated the churches, --at
least as he supposed,--and then emitted terrible hissings and snake-like
sounds, now by the threats of impious tyrants, and again by the blasphemous edicts of
profane rulers, vomiting forth death, moreover, and infecting with his
deleterious and soul-destroying poisons the souls captured by him, and almost slaying
them by his death-fraught sacrifices of dead idols, and causing every beast in
the form of man and every kind of savage to assault us 15 --then, indeed, the
'Angel of the great Council,' (29) the great Captain (30) of God after the
mightiest soldiers of his kingdom had displayed sufficient exercise through patience
and endurance in everything, suddenly appeared anew, and blotted out and
annihilated his enemies and foes, so that they seemed never to have had even a name.
But his friends and relatives he raised to the highest glory, in the presence
not only of all men, but also of celestial powers, of sun and moon and stars,
16 and of the whole heaven and earth, so that now, as has never happened before,
the supreme rulers, conscious of the honor which they have received from him,
spit upon the faces of dead idols, trample upon the unhallowed rites of demons,
make sport of the ancient delusion handed down from their fathers, and
acknowledge only one God, the common benefactor of all, themselves included. And they
confess Christ, the Son of God, universal King of all, and proclaim him Saviour
on monuments, (31) imperishably recording in imperial letters, in the midst of
the city which rules over the earth, his righteous deeds and his victories
over the impious. Thus Jesus Christ our Saviour is the only one from all eternity
who has been acknowledged, even by those highest in the earth, not as a common
king among men, but as a trite son of the universal God, and who has been
worshiped as very God, (32) and that rightly. For what 17 king that ever lived
attained such virtue as to fill the ears and tongues of all men upon earth with his
own name? What king, after ordaining such pious and wise laws, has extended
them from one end of the earth to the other, so that they are perpetually read in
the hearing of all men? Who has abrogated barbarous 18 and savage customs of
uncivilized nations by his gentle and most philanthropic laws? Who, being
attacked for entire ages by all, has shown such superhuman virtue as to flourish
daily, and remain young throughout his life? Who has founded a nation which of 19
old was not even heard of, but which now is not concealed in some comer of the
earth, but is spread abroad everywhere under the sun? Who has so fortified his
soldiers with the arms of piety that their souls, being firmer than adamant,
shine brilliantly in the contests with their opponents? What king prevails to 20
such an extent, and even after death leads on his soldiers, and sets up trophies
over his enemies, and fills every place, country and city, Greek and barbarian,
with his royal dwellings, even divine temples with their consecrated
oblations, like this very temple with its superb adornments and votive offerings, which
are themselves so truly great and majestic, worthy of wonder and admiration,
and clear signs of the sovereignty of our Saviour? For now, too, 'he spake, and
they were made; he commanded, and they were created.' (33) For what was there to
resist the nod of the universal King and Governor and Word of God himself? (34)
"A special discourse would be needed accurately to survey and explain all
this; and also to describe how great the zeal of the Iaborers is regarded by
him who is celebrated as divine, (35) who looks upon the living temple which we
all constitute, and surveys the house, composed of living and moving stones,
which is well and surely built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets,
the chief cornerstone being Jesus Christ himself, who has been rejected not only
by the builders of that ancient building which no longer stands, but also by
the builders -- evil architects of evil works -- of the structure, which is
composed of the mass of men and still endures (36) But the Father has approved him
both then and now, and has made him the head of the corner of this our common
church. Who that beholds this living temple of the living God formed of
ourselves--this greatest and truly divine sanctuary, I say, whose inmost shrines are
invisible to the multitude and are truly holy and a holy of holies -- would
venture to declare it? Who is able even to look within the sacred enclosure, except
the great High Priest of all, to whom alone it is permitted to fathom 23 the
mysteries of every rational soul? But perhaps it is granted to another, to one
only, to be second after him in the same work, namely, to the commander of this
army whom the first and great High Priest himself has honored with the second
place in this sanctuary, the shepherd of your divine flock who has obtained your
people by the allotment and the judgment of the Father, as if he had appointed
him his own servant and interpreter, a new Aaron or Melchizedec, made like the
Son of God, remaining and continually preserved by him in accordance with the
united prayers of all of you. To him therefore alone let 24 it be granted, if
not in the first place, at least in the second after the first and greatest High
Priest, to observe and supervise the inmost state of your souls,--to him who by
experience and length of time has accurately proved each one, and who by his
zeal and care has disposed you all in pious conduct and doctrine, and is better
able than any one else to give an account, adequate to the facts, of those
things which he himself has accomplished with the Divine assistance. As to our
first and great 25 High Priest, it is said, (37) 'Whatsoever he seeth the Father
doing those things likewise the Son also doeth.' (38) So also this one, (39)
looking up to him as to the first teacher, with pure eyes of the mind, using as
archetypes whatsoever things he seeth him doing, produceth images of them, making
them so far as is possible in the same likeness, in nothing inferior to that
Beseleel, whom God himself 'filled with the spirit of wisdom and understanding'
(40) and with other technical and scientific knowledge, and called to be the
maker of the temple constructed after heavenly types given in symbols. Thus this
28 one also bearing in his own soul the image of the whole Christ, the Word,
the Wisdom, the Light, has formed this magnificent temple of the highest God,
corresponding to the pattern of the greater as a visible to an invisible, it is
impossible to say with what greatness of soul, with what wealth and liberality of
mind, and with what emulation on the part of all of you, shown in the
magnanimity of the contributors who have ambitiously striven in no way to be left
behind by him in the execution of the same purpose. And this place,--for this
deserves to be mentioned first of all, -- which had been covered with all sorts of
rubbish by the artifices of our enemies he did not overlook, nor did he yield to
the wickedness of those who had brought about that condition of things,
although he might have chosen some other place, for many other sites were available in
the city, where he would have had less labor, and been free from trouble. But
having first aroused himself 27 to the work, and then strengthened the whole
people with zeal, and formed them all into one great body, he fought the first
contest. For he thought that this church, which had been especially besieged by
the enemy, which had first suffered and endured the same persecutions with us
and for us, like a mother bereft of her children, should rejoice with us in the
signal favor of the all-merciful God. For when the Great Shepherd had driven
away the wild animals and wolves and every cruel and savage beast, and, as the
divine oracles say, 'had broken the jaws of the lions,' (41), he thought good to
collect again her children in the same place, and in the most righteous manner
he set up the fold of her flock, 'to put to shame the enemy and avenger,' (42)
and to refute the impious daring of the enemies of God. (43)
29 And now they are not,--the haters of God,--for they never were. After
they had troubled and been troubled for a little time, they suffered the fitting
punishment, and brought themselves and their friends and their relatives to
total destruction, so that the declarations inscribed of old in sacred records
have been proved true by facts. In these declarations the divine word truly says
among other things 30 the following concerning them: 'The wicked have drawn out
the sword, they have bent their bow, to slay the righteous in heart; let their
sword enter into their own heart and their bows be broken.' (44) And again:
'Their memorial is perished with a sound' (45) and 'their name hast thou blotted
out forever and ever'; (46) for when they also were in trouble they 'cried out
and there was none to save: unto the Lord, and he heard them not. (47) But
'their feet were bound together, and they fell, but we have arisen and stand
upright.' (48) And that which was announced beforehand in these words,-'O Lord, in thy
city thou shalt set at naught their image,' (49)--has been shown to be true 31
to the eyes of all. But having waged war like the giants against God, (50)
they died in this way. But she that was desolate and rejected by men received the
consummation which we behold in consequence of her patience toward God, so that
the prophecy of Isaiah was spoken of her: 'Rejoice, thirsty desert, let the
desert rejoice and blossom as the lily, and the desert places shall blossom and
be glad.' (51) 'Be strengthened, ye weak hands and feeble knees. Be of good
courage, ye feeble-hearted, in your minds; be strong, fear not. Behold our God
recompenseth judgment and will recompense, he will come and save us.' (52) 'For,'
he says, 'in the wilderness water has broken out, and a pool in thirsty ground,
and the dry land shall be watered meadows, and in the thirsty ground there
shall be springs of water.' (53) These things which were 33 prophesied long ago
have been recorded in sacred books; but no longer are they transmitted to us by
hearsay merely, but in facts. This desert, this dry land, this widowed and
deserted one, 'whose gates they cut down with axes like wood in a forest, whom they
broke down with hatchet and hammer,' (54) whose books also they destroyed, (55)
'burning with fire the sanctuary of God, and profaning unto the ground the
habitation of his name,' (56) 'whom all that passed by upon the way plucked, and
whose fences they broke down, whom the boar out of the wood ravaged, and on which
the savage wild beast fed,' (57) now by the wonderful power of Christ, when he
wills it, has become like a lily. For at that time also she was chastened at
his nod as by a careful father; 'for whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and
scourgeth every son whom he receiveth.' (58) Then after 34 being chastened in a
measure, according to the necessities of the case, she is commanded to rejoice
anew; and she blossoms as a lily and exhales her divine odor among all men.
'For,' it is said, 'water hath broken out in the wilderness,' (59) the fountain of
the saving bath of divine regeneration. (60) And now she, who a little before
was a desert, 'has become watered meadows. and springs of water have gushed forth
in a thirsty land.' (61) The hands which before were 'weak' have become 'truly
strong'; (62) and these works are great and convincing proofs of strong hands.
The knees, also, which before were 'feeble and infirm,' recovering their
wonted strength, are moving straight forward in the path of divine knowledge, and
hastening to the kindred flock (63) of the all-gracious Shepherd. And if there
are any whose souls have been 35 stupefied by the threats of the tyrants, not
even they are passed by as incurable by the saving Word; but he heals them also
and urges them on to receive divine comfort, saying, 'Be ye comforted, ye who are
faint-hearted; be ye strengthened, fear not.' (64) This our new 36 and
excellent Zerubabel, having heard the word which announced beforehand, that she who
had been made a desert on account of God should enjoy these things, after the
bitter captivity and the abomination of desolation, did not overlook the dead
body; but first of all with prayers and supplications propitiated the Father with
the common consent of all of you, and invoking the only one that giveth life to
the dead as his ally and fellow-worker, raised her that was fallen, after
purifying and freeing her from her ills. And he clothed her not with the ancient
garment, but with such an one as he had again learned from the sacred oracles,
which say clearly, 'And the latter glory of this house shall be greater than the
former.' (65) Thus, enclosing a much larger space, he fortified the outer court
with a wall surrounding the whole, which should serve as a most secure 38
bulwark for the entire edifice. (66) And he raised and spread out a great and lofty
vestibule toward the rays of the rising sun, (67) and furnished those standing
far without the sacred enclosure a full view of those within, almost turning
the eyes of those who were strangers to the faith, to the entrances, so that no
one could pass by without being impressed by the memory of the former desolation
and of the present incredible transformation. His hope was that such an one
being impressed by this might be attracted and be induced to enter by the very
sight. But when one comes within the gates he does not permit him to enter the
sanctuary immediately, with impure and unwashed feet; but leaving as large a
space as possible between the temple and the outer entrance, he has surrounded and
adorned it with four transverse cloisters, making a quadrangular space with
pillars rising on every side, which he has joined with lattice-work screens of
wood, rising to a suitable height; and he has left an open space (68) in the
middle, so that the sky can be seen, and the free air bright in the rays 40 of the
sun. Here he has placed symbols of sacred purifications, setting up fountains
opposite the temple which furnish an abundance of water wherewith those who come
within the sanctuary may purify themselves. This is the first halting-place of
those who enter; and it furnishes at the same time a beautiful and splendid
scene to every one, and to those who still need elementary instruction a fitting
station. But passing by this spectacle, he has 41 made open entrances to the
temple with many other vestibules within, placing three doors on one side,
likewise facing the rays of the sun. The one in the middle, adorned with plates of
bronze, iron bound, and beautifully embossed, he has made much higher and broader
than the others, as if he were making them guards for it as for a queen. In the
same way, arranging the number of vestibules for the corridors on each side of
the whole temple, he has made above them various openings into the building,
for the purpose of admitting more light, adorning them with very fine
wood-carving. But the royal house he has furnished with more beautiful and splendid
materials, using unstinted liberality in his disbursements. It seems 43 to me
superfluous to describe here in detail the length and breadth of the building, its
splendor and its majesty surpassing description, and the brilliant appearance of
the work, its lofty pinnacles reaching to the heavens, and the costly cedars of
Lebanon above them, which the divine oracle has not omitted to mention,
saying, 'The trees of the Lord shall rejoice and the cedars of Lebanon which he hath
planted.' (69) Why need I now describe the 44 skillful architectural
arrangement and the surpassing beauty of each part, when the testimony of the eye renders
instruction through the ear superfluous? For when he had thus completed the
temple, he provided it with lofty thrones in honor of those who preside, and in
addition with seats arranged in proper order throughout the whole building, and
finally placed in the middle (70) the holy of holies, the altar, and, that it
might be inaccessible to the multitude, enclosed it with wooden lattice-work,
accurately wrought with artistic carving, presenting a wonderful sight to the
beholders. And not 45 even the pavement was neglected by him; for this too he
adorned with beautiful marble of every variety. Then finally he passed on to the
parts without the temple, providing spacious exedrae and buildings (71) on each
side, which were joined to the basilica, and communicated with the entrances to
the interior of the structure. These were erected by our most peaceful (72)
Solomon, the maker of the temple of God, for those who still needed purification
and sprinkling by water and the Holy Spirit, so that the prophecy quoted above
is no longer a word merely, but a fact; for now it has also come 46 to pass that
in truth 'the biter glory of this house is greater than the former.' (73) For
it was necessary and fitting that as her shepherd and Lord had once tasted
death for her, and after his suffering had changed that vile body which he assumed
in her behalf into a splendid and glorious body, leading the very flesh which
had been delivered (74) from corruption to incorruption, she too should enjoy
the dispensations of the Saviour. For having received from him the promise of
much greater things than these, she desires to share uninterruptedly throughout
eternity with the choir of the angels of light, in the far greater glory of
regeneration, (75) in the resurrection of an incorruptible body, in the palace of
God beyond the heavens, with Christ Jesus himself, the universal Benefactor and
Saviour. But for the present, she that was formerly widowed and desolate is
clothed by the grace of God with these flowers, and is become truly like a lily, as
the prophecy says, (76) and having received the bridal garment and the crown
of beauty, she is taught by Isaiah to dance, and to present her thank-offerings
unto God the King in reverent words. Let us hear her saying, 'My soul shall
rejoice in the Lord; for he hath clothed me with a garment of salvation and with a
robe of gladness; he hath bedecked me like a bridegroom with a garland, and he
hath adorned me like a bride with jewels; and like the earth which bringeth
forth her bud, and like a garden which causeth the things that are sown in it to
spring forth, thus the Lord God hath caused righteousness and praise to 49
spring forth before all the nations.' (77) In these words she exults. And in
similar words the heavenly bridegroom, the Word Jesus Christ himself, answers her.
Hear the Lord saying, 'Fear not because thou hast been put to shame, neither be
thou confounded because thou hast been rebuked; for thou shalt forget the former
shame, and the reproach of thy widowhood shalt thou remember no more.' (78)
'Not (79) as a woman deserted and faint-hearted I hath the Lord called thee, nor
as a woman hated from her youth, saith thy God. For a small moment have I
forsaken thee, but i with great mercy will I have mercy upon thee; in a little wrath
I hid my face from thee, but with everlasting mercy will I have mercy upon
thee, saith the Lord that hath redeemed thee.' (80) 'Awake, awake, thou who hast
drunk at the hand of the Lord the cup of his fury; for thou hast drunk the cup
of ruin, the vessel of my wrath, and hast drained it. And there was none to
console thee of all thy sons whom thou didst bring forth, and there was none to
take thee by the hand.' (81) 'Behold, I have taken out of thine hand the cup of
ruin, the vessel of my fury, and thou shalt no longer drink it. And I will put
it into the hands of them that have treated thee unjustly and have humbled
thee.' (82) 'Awake, awake, put on thy strength, put on thy glory. Shake off the dust
and arise. Sit thee down, loose the bands of thy neck.' 83 'Lift up thine eyes
round about and behold thy children gathered together; behold they are
gathered together and are come to thee. As I live, saith the Lord, thou shalt clothe
thee with them all as with an ornament, and gird thyself with them as with the
ornaments of a bride. For thy waste and corrupted and ruined places shall now be
too narrow by reason of those that inhabit thee, and they that swallow thee up
shall be far from thee. For thy sons whom thou hast lost shall say in thine
ears, The place is too narrow for me, give place to me that I may dwell. Then
shalt thou say in thine heart, Who hath begotten me these? I am childless and a
widow, and who hath brought up these for me? I was left alone, and these, where
were they for me?' (84)
"These are the things which Isaiah foretold; and which were anciently
recorded concerning us in sacred books S and it was necessary that we should
sometime learn their truthfulness by their fulfillment. For when 54 the bridegroom,
the Word, addressed such language to his own bride, the sacred and holy Church,
this bridesman, 85 -- when she was desolate and lying like a corpse, bereft of
hope in the eyes of men, -- in accordance with the united prayers of all of
you, as was proper, stretched out your hands and aroused and raised her up at the
command of God, the universal King, and at the manifestation of the power of
Jesus Christ; and having raised her he established her as he had learned from the
description given in the sacred oracles. This is indeed a very great wonder,
passing all admiration, especially to those who attend only to the outward
appearance; but more wonderful than wonders are the archetypes and their mental
prototypes and divine models; I mean the reproductions of the inspired and rational
56 building in our souls. This the Divine Son himself created after his own
image, imparting to it everywhere and in all respects the likeness of God, an
incorruptible nature, incorporeal, rational, free from all earthly matter, a being
endowed with its own intelligence; and when he had once called her forth from
non-existence into existence, he made her a holy spouse, an all-sacred temple
for himself and for the Father. This also he clearly declares and confesses in
the following words: 'I will dwell in them and will walk in them; and I will be
their God, and they shall be my people.' (86) Such is the perfect and purified
soul, so made from the beginning as to bear the image of the celestial Word.
57 But when by the envy and zeal of the malignant demon she became, of her
own voluntary choice, sensual and a lover of evil, the Deity left her; and as
if bereft of a protector, she became an easy prey and readily accessible to
those who had long envied her; and being assailed by the batteries and machines of
her invisible enemies and spiritual foes, she suffered a terrible fall, so that
not one stone of virtue remained upon another in her, but she lay completely
dead upon the ground, entirely divested of her natural ideas of God.
58 "But as she, who had been made in the image of God, thus lay prostrate,
it was not that wild boar from the forest which we see that despoiled her, but
a certain destroying demon and spiritual wild beasts who deceived her with
their passions as with the fiery darts of their own wickedness, and burned the
truly divine sanctuary of God with fire, and profaned to the ground the tabernacle
of his name. Then burying the miserable one with heaps of earth, they destroyed
every hope of deliverance.
59 But that divinely bright and saving Word, her protector, after she had
suffered the merited punishment for her sins, again restored her, securing the
favor of the all-merciful 60 Father. Having won over first the souls of the
highest rulers, he purified, through the agency of those most divinely favored
princes, the whole earth from all the impious destroyers, and from the terrible and
God-hating tyrants themselves. Then bringing out into the light those who were
his friends, who had long before been consecrated to him for life, but in the
midst, as it were, of a storm of evils, had been concealed under his shelter,
he honored them worthily with the great gifts of the Spirit. And again, by means
of them, he cleared out and cleaned with spades and mattocks--the admonitory
words of doctrine (87) -- the souls which a little while before had been covered
with filth and burdened with every kind of matter and rubbish of impious
ordinances. And when he had 61 made the ground of all your minds clean and clear, he
finally committed it to this all-wise and God-beloved Ruler, who, being
endowed with judgment and prudence, as well as with other gifts, and being able to
examine and discriminate accurately the minds of those committed to his charge,
from the first day, so to speak, down to the present, has not ceased to build.
Now he has supplied the brilliant gold, again the refined and unalloyed silver,
and the i precious and costly stones in all of you, so that again is fulfilled
for you in facts a sacred and mystic prophecy, which says, 'Behold 62 I make
thy stone a carbuncle, and thy foundations of sapphire, and thy battlements of
jasper, and thy gates of crystals, and thy wall of chosen stones; and all thy
sons shall be taught of God, and thy children shall enjoy complete peace; and in
righteousness shall thou be built.' 88 Building therefore in righteousness, 63
he divided the whole people according to their strength. With some he fortified
only the outer enclosure, walling it up with unfeigned faith; such were the
great mass of the people who were incapable of bearing a greater structure. Others
he permitted to enter the building, commanding them to stand at the door and
act as guides for those who should come in; these may be not unfitly compared to
the vestibules of the temple. Others he supported by the first pillars which
are placed without about the quadrangular hall, initiating them into the first
elements of the letter of the four Gospels. Still others he joined together
about the basilica on both sides; these are the catechumens who are still advancing
and progressing, and are not far separated from the inmost view of divine
things granted to the faithful. Taking from 64 among these the pure souls that have
been cleansed like gold by divine washing, (89) he then supports them by
pillars, much better than those without, made from the inner and mystic teachings of
the Scripture, and illumines them (90) by windows. Adorning the whole temple
65 with a great vestibule of the glory of the one universal King and only God,
and placing on either side of the authority of the Father Christ, and the Holy
Spirit as second lights, he exhibits abundantly and gloriously throughout the
entire building the clearness and splendor of the truth of the rest in all its
details. And having selected from every quarter the living and moving and
well-prepared stones of the souls, he constructs out of them all the great and royal
house, splendid and full of light both within and without; for not only soul and
understanding, but their body also is made glorious by the blooming ornament
of purity and modesty.
66 And in this temple there are also thrones, and a great number of seats
and benches, in all those souls in which sit the Holy Spirit's gifts, such as
were anciently seen by the sacred apostles, and those who were with them, when
there 'appeared unto them tongues parting asunder, like as of fire, and sat upon
each one 67 of them.' (91) But in the leader of all it is reasonable to suppose
(92) that Christ himself dwells in his fullness, (93) and in those that occupy
the second rank after him, in proportion as each is able to contain the power
of Christ and of the Holy Spirit. (94) And the souls of some m of those,
namely, who are committed to each of them for instruction and care -- may be 68 seats
for angels. But the great and august and unique altar, what else could this be
than the pure holy of holies of the soul of the common priest of all? Standing
at the right of it, Jesus himself, the great High Priest of the universe, the
Only Begotten of God, receives with bright eye and extended hand the sweet
incense from all, and the bloodless and immaterial sacrifices offered in their
prayers, and bears them to the heavenly Father and God of the universe. And he
himself first worships him, and alone gives to the Father the reverence which is
his due, beseeching him also to continue always kind and propitious to us all.
69 "Such is the great temple which the great Creator of the universe, the
Word, has built throughout the entire world, making it an intellectual image
upon earth of those things which lie above the vault of heaven, so that throughout
the whole creation, including rational beings on earth, his Father might be
honored and adored.
70 But the region above the heavens, with the models of earthly things
which are there, and the so-called Jerusalem above, (95) and the heavenly Mount of
Zion, and the supramundane city of the living God, in which innumerable choirs
of angels and the Church of the first born, whose names are written in heaven,
(96) praise their Maker and the Supreme Ruler of the universe with hymns of
praise unutterable and incomprehensible to us,--who that is mortal is able
worthily to celebrate this? ' For eye hath not seen nor ear heard, neither have
entered into the heart of men those things which God hath prepared for them that love
him.' (97) Since we, men, children, and women, small 71 and great, are already
in part partakers of these things, let us not cease all together, with one
spirit and one soul, to confess and praise the author of such great benefits to
us, 'Who for-giveth all our iniquities, who healeth all our diseases, who
redeemeth our life from destruction, who crowneth us with mercy and compassion, who
satisfieth our desires with good things.' 98 'For he hath not dealt with us
according to our sins, nor rewarded us according to our iniquities;' (99) 'for as
far as the east is from the west, so far hath he removed our iniquities from us.
Like as a father pitieth his own children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear
him.' (100) Rekindling these thoughts in our memories, 72 both now and during
all time to come, and contemplating in our mind night and day, in every hour and
with every breath, so to speak, the Author and Ruler of the present festival,
and of this bright and most splendid day, let us love and adore him with every
power of the soul. And now rising, let us beseech him with loud voice to shelter
and preserve us to the end in his fold, granting his unbroken and unshaken
peace forever, in Christ Jesus our Saviour; through whom be the glory unto him
forever and ever. 101 Amen."
CHAPTER V.
Copies of Imperial Laws. (1)
Let us finally subjoin the translations from the Roman tongue of the
imperial decrees of Constantine and Licinius.
- Copy of imperial decrees translated from the Roman tongue." (2)
"Perceiving long ago that religious liberty ought not to be denied, but
that it ought to be granted to the judgment and desire of each individual to
perform his religious duties according to his own choice, we had given orders that
every man, Christians as well as others, should preserve the faith of his own
sect and religion. (3) But since in that rescript, in which such liberty was
granted them, many and various conditions (4) seemed clearly added, some of them,
it may be, after a little retired from such 4 observance. When I, Constantine
Augustus, and I, Licinius Augustus, came under favorable auspices to Milan and
took under consideration everything which pertained to the common weal and
prosperity, we resolved among other things, or rather first of all, to make such
decrees as seemed in many respects for the benefit of every one; namely, such as
should preserve reverence and piety toward the deity. We resolved, that is, to
grant both to the Christians and to all men freedom to follow the religion which
they choose, that whatever heavenly divinity exists (5) may be propitious to
us and to all that live under our government.
5 We have, therefore, determined, with sound and upright purpose, that
liberty is to be denied to no one, to choose and to follow the religious
observances of the Christians, but that to each one freedom is to be given to devote his
mind to that religion which he may think adapted to himself, (6) in order that
the Deity may exhibit to us in all things his accustomed care and favor. It was
fitting that 6 we should write that this is our pleasure, that those
conditions (7) being entirely left out which were contained in our former letter
concerning the Christians which was sent to your devotedness, everything that seemed
very severe and foreign to our mildness may be annulled, and that now every one
who has the same desire to observe the religion of the Christians may do so
without molestation. We have resolved to communicate this 7 most fully to thy
care, in order that thou mayest know that we have granted to these same Christians
freedom and full liberty to observe their own religion. Since this has 8 been
granted freely by us to them, thy devotedness perceives that liberty is granted
to others also who may wish to follow their own religious observances; it
being clearly in accordance with the tranquillity of our times, that each one
should have the liberty of choosing and worshiping whatever deity he pleases. This
has been done by us in order that we might not seem in any way to discriminate
against any rank or religion.s And we decree still 9 further in regard to the
Christians, that their places, in which they were formerly accustomed to
assemble, and concerning which in the former letter sent to thy devotedness a different
command was given (9) if it appear that any have bought them either from our
treasury or from any other person, shall be restored to the said Christians,
without demanding money or any other equivalent, with no delay or hesitation. If
any happen to have received the said places as a gift, they shall restore them
as quickly as possible to these same Christians: with the understanding that if
those who have bought these places, or those who have received them as a gift,
demand anything from our bounty, they may go to the judge of the district, that
provision may be made for them by our clemency. All these things are to be
granted to the society of Christians by your care immediately and 11 without any
delay. And since the said Christians are known to have possessed not only those
places in which they were accustomed to assemble, but also other places,
belonging not to individuals among them, but to the society (10) as a whole, that is,
to the society of Christians, you will command that all these, in virtue of
the law which we have above stated, be restored, without any hesitation, to these
same Christians; that is, to their society and congregation: the
above-mentioned provision being of course observed, that those who restore them without
price, as we have before said, may 12. expect indemnification from our bounty. In
all these things, for the behoof of the aforesaid society of Christians, you are
to use the utmost diligence, to the end that our command may be speedily
fulfilled, and that in this also, by our clemency, provision may be made for 13 the
common and public tranquillity. (11) For by this means, (12) as we have said
before, the divine favor toward us which we have already experienced in many
matters will continue 14 sure through all time. And that the terms of this our
gracious ordinance may be known to all, it is expected that this which we have
written will be published everywhere by you and brought to the knowledge of all, in
order that this gracious ordinance of ours may remain unknown to no one."
15 Copy of another imperial decree which they issued, (13) indicating that
the grant was made to the Catholic Church alone.
"Greeting to thee, our most esteemed Anulinus. It is the custom of our
benevolence, most esteemed Anulinus, to will that those things which belong of
right to another should not only be left unmolested, but should also be restored.
(14) Wherefore it is our will that (16) when thou receivest this letter, if any
such things belonged to the Catholic Church of the-Christians, in any city or
other place, but are now held by citizens (15) or by any others, thou shalt
cause them to be restored immediately to the said churches. For we have already
determined that those things which these same. churches formerly possessed shall
be restored to them. Since therefore thy devotedness perceives that this
command of ours is most explicit, do thou make haste to restore to them, as quickly
as possible, everything which formerly belonged to the said churches,-whether
gardens or buildings or whatever they may be, -- that we may learn that thou hast
obeyed this decree of ours most carefully. Farewell, our most esteemed and
beloved Anulinus."
Copy of an epistle in which the Emperor 18 commands that a synod of
bishops be held at Rome in behalf of the unity and can-card of the churches . (16)
"Constantine Augustus to Miltiades, (17) bishop of Rome, and to Marcus.
(18) Since many such communications have been sent to me by Anu-linus, (19) the
most illustrious proconsul of Africa, in which it is said that Caecilianus, (20)
bishop of the city of Carthage, has been accused by some of his colleagues in
Africa, in many matters; (21) and since it seems to me a very serious thing
that in those provinces which Divine Providence has freely entrusted to my
devotedness, and in which there is a great population, the multitude are found
following the baser course, and dividing, as it were, into two parties, and the
bishops are at variance, -- it has seemed good to me that Caecilianus himself, with
ten of the bishops that appear to accuse him, and with ten others whom he may
consider necessary for his defense, should sail to Rome, that there, in the
presence of yourselves and of Retecius (22) and Maternus (23) and Marinus, (24) your
colleagues, whom I have commanded to hasten to Rome for this purpose, (25) he
may be heard, as you may understand to be in accordance with the most holy law.
But in order that 20 you may be enabled to have most perfect knowledge of all
these things, I have subjoined to my letter copies of the documents sent to me
by Anulinus, and have sent them to your above-mentioned colleagues. When your
firmness has read these, you will consider in what way the above-mentioned case
may be most accurately investigated and justly decided. For it does not escape
your diligence that I have such reverence for the legitimate (26) Catholic
Church that I do not wish you to leave schism or division in any place. May the
divinity of the great God preserve you, most honored sirs, for many years."
Copy of an epistle in which the emperor 21 commands another synod to be
held for the purpose of removing all dissensions among the bishops.
"Constantine Augustus to Chrestus, (27) bishop of Syracuse. When some
began wickedly and perversely to disagree (28) among themselves in regard to the
holy worship and celestial power and Catholic doctrine, (29) wishing to put an
end to such disputes among them, I formerly gave command that certain bishops
should be sent from Gaul, and that the opposing parties who were contending
persistently and incessantly with each other, should be summoned from Africa; that in
their presence, and in the presence of the bishop of Rome, the matter which
appeared to be causing the disturbance might be examined and decided with all
care. (30) But since, as it happens, some, forgetful both of their own salvation
and of the reverence due to the most holy religion, do not even yet bring
hostilities to an end, and are unwilling to conform to the judgment already passed,
and assert that those who expressed their opinions and decisions were few, or
that they had been too hasty and precipitate in giving judgment, before all the
things which ought to have been accurately investigated had been examined,-- on
account of all this it has happened that those very ones who ought to hold
brotherly and harmonious relations toward each other, are shamefully, or rather
abominably, (31) divided among themselves, and give occasion for ridicule to those
men whose souls are aliens to this most holy religion. Wherefore it has seemed
necessary to me to provide that this dissension, which ought to have ceased
after the judgment had been already given by their own voluntary agreement,
should now, if possible, be brought to an end by the presence of 23 many. Since,
therefore, we have commanded a number of bishops from a great many different
places (32) to assemble in the city of Arles, (33) before the kalends of August, we
have thought proper to write to thee also that thou shouldst secure from the
most illustrious La-tronianus, (34) corrector of Sicily, (35) a public vehicle,
and that thou shouldst take with thee two others of the second rank (36) whom
thou thyself shalt choose, together with three servants who may serve you on the
way, and betake thyself to the above-mentioned place before the appointed day;
that by thy firmness, and 24 by the wise unanimity and harmony of the others
present, this dispute, which has disgracefully continued until the present time,
in consequence of certain shameful strifes, after all has been heard which
those have to say who are now at variance with one another, and whom we have
likewise commanded to be present, may be settled in accordance with the proper faith,
and that brotherly harmony, though it be but gradually, may be restored. May
the Almighty God preserve thee in health for many years."
CHAPTER VI. (1)
Copy of an Imperial Epistle in which Money is granted to the Churches. (2)
"CONSTANTINE AUGUSTUS to Caecilianus, (3) 1 bishop of Carthage. Since it
is our pleasure that something should be granted in all the provinces of Africa
and Numidia and Mauritania to certain ministers of the legitimate (4) and most
holy catholic religion, to defray their expenses, I have written to Ursus, (5)
the illustrious finance minister (6) of Africa, and have directed him to make
provision to pay to thy firmness three thousand folles. (7) Do thou there- 2
fore, when thou hast received the above sum of money, command that it be
distributed among all those mentioned above, according 3 to the briefs sent to thee by
Hosius. (9) But if thou shouldst find that anything is wanting for the
fulfillment of this purpose of mine in regard to all of them, thou shalt demand
without hesitation from Heracleides, (10) our treasurer, (11) whatever thou findest
to be necessary. For I commanded him when he was present that if thy firmness
should ask him for any money, he should see to it that it be paid without de- 4
lay. And since I have learned that some men of unsettled mind wish to turn the
people from the most holy and catholic Church by a certain method of shameful
corruption, (12) do thou know that I gave command to Anulinus, the proconsul, and
also to Patricius, (13) vicar of the prefects, (14) when they were present,
that they should give proper attention not only to other matters but also above
all to this, and that they should not overlook such a thing when 5 it happened.
Wherefore if thou shouldst see any such men continuing in this madness, do
thou without delay go to the above-mentioned judges and report the matter to them;
that they may correct them as I commanded them when they were present. (15)
The divinity of the great God preserve thee for many years."
CHAPTER VII.
The Exemption of the Clergy.
Copy of an epistle in which the emperor 1 commands that the rulers of the
churches be exempted from all political duties. (1)
"Greeting to thee, our most esteemed Anulinus. Since it appears from many
circumstances that when that religion is despised, in which is preserved the
chief reverence for the most holy celestial Power, great dangers are brought upon
public affairs; but that when legally adopted and observed (2) it affords the
most signal prosperity to the Roman name and remarkable felicity to all the
affairs of men, through the divine beneficence,-- it has seemed good to me, most
esteemed Anulinus, that those men who give their services with due sanctity and
with constant observance of this law, to the worship of the divine religion,
should receive recompense for their labors. Wherefore it 2 is my will that those
within the province entrusted to thee, (3) in the catholic Church, over which
Caecilianus presides, (4) who give their services to this holy religion, and
who are commonly called clergymen, be entirely exempted from all public duties,
that they may not by any error or sacrilegious negligence be drawn away from the
service due to the Deity, but may devote themselves without any hindrance to
their own law. For it seems that when they show greatest reverence to the Deity,
the greatest benefits accrue to the state. Farewell, our most esteemed and
beloved Anulinus."
CHAPTER VIII.
The Subsequent Wickedness of Licinius, and his Death.
- Such blessings did divine and heavenly grace confer upon us through the
appearance of our Saviour, and such was the abundance of benefits which prevailed
among all men in consequence of the peace which we enjoyed. And thus were our
affairs crowned with rejoicings and festivities. But malignant envy, and the
demon who loves that which is evil, were not able to bear the sight of these
things; and moreover the events that befell the tyrants whom we have already
mentioned were not sufficient to bring Licinius 3 to sound reason. For the latter,
although his government was prosperous and he was honored with the second rank
after the great Emperor Constantine, and was connected with him by the closest
ties of marriage, abandoned the imitation of good deeds, and emulated the
wickedness of the impious tyrants whose end he had seen with his own eyes, and chose
rather to follow their principles than to continue in friendly relations with him
who was better than they. Being envious of the common benefactor he waged an
impious and most terrible war against him, paying regard neither to laws of
nature, nor treaties, nor blood, and giving 4 no thought to covenants. (1) For
Constantine, like an all-gracious emperor, giving him evidences of true favor, did
not refuse alliance with him, and did not refuse him the illustrious marriage
with his sister, but honored him by making him a partaker of the ancestral
nobility and the ancient imperial blood, (1a) and granted him the right of sharing
in the dominion over all as a brother-in-law and co-regent, conferring upon him
the government and administration of no less a portion of the Roman provinces
than he himself possessed. (2) But Licinius, 5 on the contrary, pursued a course
directly opposite to this; forming daily all kinds of plots against his
superior, and devising all sorts of mischief, that he might repay his benefactor with
evils. At first he attempted to conceal his preparations, and pretended to be
a friend, and practiced frequently fraud and deceit, in the hope that he might
easily accomplish the desired end. (3) But God was the friend, pro- 6 tector,
and guardian of Constantine, and bringing the plots which had been formed in
secrecy and darkness to the light, he foiled them. So much virtue does the great
armor of piety possess for the warding off of enemies and for the preservation
of our own safety. Protected by this, our most divinely favored emperor escaped
the multitudinous plots of the abominable man. But when Licinius perceived 7
that his secret preparations by no means progressed according to his mind, -- for
God revealed every plot and wickedness to the God-favored emperor, -- being no
longer able to conceal himself, he undertook an open war. (4) And at the same
time that he determined 8 to wage war with Constantine, he also proceeded to
join battle with the God of the universe, whom he knew that Constantine
worshiped, and began, gently for a time and quietly, to attack his pious subjects, who
had never done his government any harm. (5) This he did under the compulsion of
his innate wickedness 9 which drove him into terrible blindness. He did not
therefore keep before his eyes the memory of those who had persecuted the
Christians before him, nor of those whose destroyer and executioner he had been
appointed, on account of the impieties which they had committed. But departing from
sound reason, being seized, in a word, with insanity, he determined to war
against God himself as the ally of Constantine, instead of against the one who was
10 assisted by him. And in the first place, he drove from his house every
Christian, thus depriving himself, wretched man, of the prayers which they offered to
God in his behalf, which they are accustomed, according to the teaching of
their fathers, to offer for all men. Then he commanded that the soldiers in the
cities should be cashiered and stripped of their rank unless they chose to
sacrifice to the demons. And yet these were small matters when compared 11 with the
greater things that followed. Why is it necessary to relate minutely and in
detail all that was done by the hater of God, and to recount how this most lawless
man invented unlawful laws? (6) He passed an ordinance that no one should
exercise humanity toward the sufferers in prison by giving them food, and that none
should show mercy to those that were perishing of hunger in bonds; that no one
should in any way be kind, or do any good act, even though moved by Nature
herself to sympathize with one's neighbors. And this was indeed an openly shameful
and most cruel law, calculated to expel all natural kindliness. And in addition
to this it was also decreed, as a punishment, that those who showed compassion
should suffer the same things with those whom they compassionated; and that
those who kindly ministered to the suffering should be thrown into bonds and into
prison, and should endure the same punishment with the sufferers.Such were the
decrees of Licinius. Why should we recount his innovations 12 in regard to
marriage or in regard to the dying -- innovations by which he ventured to annul
the ancient laws of the Romans which had been well and wisely formed, and to
introduce certain barbarous and cruel laws, which were truly unlawful and lawless?
(7) He invented, to the detriment of the provinces which were subject to him,
innumerable prosecutions, (8) and all sorts of methods of extorting gold and
silver. new measurements of land (9) and injurious exactions from men in the
country, who were no longer living, but long since dead. Why is it necessary to
speak at length of the banishments which, in addition to these things, this enemy
of mankind inflicted upon those who had done no wrong, the expatriations of men
of noble birth and high reputation whose young wives he snatched from them and
consigned to certain baser fellows of his own, to be shamefully abused by them,
and the many married women and virgins upon whom he gratified his passions,
although he was in advanced age --why, I say, is it necessary to speak at length
of these things, when the excessive wickedness of his last deeds makes the
first appear small and of no account? For, finally, he 14 reached such a pitch of
madness that he attacked the bishops, supposing that they--as servants of the
God over all -- would be hostile to his measures. He did not yet proceed against
them openly, on account of his fear of his superior, but as before, secretly
and craftily, employing the treachery of the governors for the destruction of the
most distinguished of them. And the manner of their murder was strange, and
such as had never before been heard of. The deeds which he performed 15 at
Amaseia (11) and in the other cities of Pontus surpassed every excess of cruelty.
Some of the churches of God were again razed to the ground, others were closed, so
that none of those accustomed to frequent them could enter them and render the
worship due to God.
16 For his evil conscience led him to suppose that prayers were not offered
in his behalf; but he was persuaded that we did everything in the interest of
the God-beloved emperor, and that we supplicated God for him. (12) Therefore he
hastened to turn his fury against us.
17 And then those among the governors who wished to flatter him, perceiving
that in doing such things they pleased the impious tyrant, (13) made some of
the bishops suffer the penalties customarily inflicted upon criminals, and led
away and without any pretext punished like murderers those who had done no
wrong. Some now endured a new form of death: having their bodies cut into many
pieces with the sword, and after this savage and most horrible spectacle, being
thrown into the depths of 18 the sea as food for fishes. Thereupon the worshipers
of God again fled, and fields and deserts, forests and mountains, again received
the servants of Christ. And when the impious tyrant had thus met with success
in these measures, he finally planned to renew the per- 19 secution against
all. And he would have succeeded in his design, and there would have been nothing
to hinder him in the work, had not God, the defender of the lives of his own
people, most quickly anticipated that which was about to happen, and caused a
great light to shine forth as in the midst of a dark and gloomy night, and raised
up a deliverer for leading into those regions with a lofty arm, his servant,
Constantine.
CHAPTER IX.
The Victory of Constantine, and the Blessings which under him accrued to the
Subjects of the Roman Empire.
- To him, therefore, God granted, from heaven above, the deserved fruit of
piety, the trophies of victory over the impious, and he cast the guilty one with
all his counselors and friends prostrate at the feet of Constantine. For when
Licinius carried his 2 madness to the last extreme, the emperor, the friend of
God, thinking that he ought no longer to be tolerated, acting upon the basis of
sound judgment, and mingling the firm principles of justice with humanity,
gladly determined to come to the protection of those who were oppressed by the
tyrant, and undertook, by putting a few destroyers out of the way, to save the
greater part of the human race. (1) For 3 when he had formerly exercised humanity
alone and had shown mercy to him who was not worthy of sympathy, nothing was
accomplished; for Licinius did not renounce his wickedness, but rather increased
his fury against the peoples that were subject to him, and there was left to
the afflicted no hope of salvation, oppressed as they were by a savage beast.
Wherefore, 4 the protector of the virtuous, mingling hatred for evil with love for
good, went forth with his son Crispus, a most beneficent prince, (2) and
extended a saving right hand to all that were perishing. Both of them, father and
son, under the protection, as it were, of God, the universal King, with the Son
of God, the Saviour of all, as their leader and ally, drew up their forces on
all sides against the enemies of the Deity and won an easy victory; (3) God
having prospered them in the battle in all respects according to their wish. Thus,
suddenly, and sooner 5 than can be told, those who yesterday and the day before
breathed death and threatening were no more, and not even their names were
remembered, but their inscriptions and their honors suffered the merited disgrace.
And the things which Licinius with his own eyes had seen come upon the former
impious tyrants he himself likewise suffered, because he did not receive
instruction nor learn wisdom from the chastisements of his neighbors, but followed
the same path of impiety which they had trod, and was justly hurled over the same
precipice.
Thus he lay prostrate. 6 But Constantine, the mightiest victor, adorned
with every virtue of piety, together with his son Crispus, a most God-beloved
prince, and in all respects like his father, recovered the East which belonged to
them; (4) and they formed one united Roman empire as of old, bringing under
their peaceful sway the whole world from the rising of the sun to the opposite
quarter, both north and south, even to the extremities 7 of the declining day.
All fear therefore of those who had formerly afflicted them was taken away from
men, and they celebrated splendid and festive days. Everything was filled with
light, and those who before were downcast beheld each other with smiling faces
and beaming eyes. With dances and hymns, in city and country, they glorified
first of all God the universal King, because they had been thus taught, and then
the pious emperor 8 with his God-beloved children. There was oblivion of past
evils and forgetfulness of every deed of impiety; there was enjoyment of present
benefits and expectation of those yet to come. Edicts full of clemency and
laws containing tokens of benevolence and true piety were issued in every place by
the victorious emperor. (5) Thus after all tyranny had been 9 purged away,
the empire which belonged to them was preserved firm and without a rival for
Constantine and his sons alone. (6) And having obliterated the godlessness of their
predecessors, recognizing the benefits conferred upon them by God, they
exhibited their love of virtue and their love of God, and their piety and gratitude
to the Deity, by the deeds which they performed in the sight of all men.
SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES AND TABLES.
ON Bk. III. chap. 3, § 5 (note 17, continued).
Since this note was in type Dr. Gardiner's admirable and exhaustive essay
on the authorship of the Epistle to the Hebrews (in the Nicene and Past-Nicene
Fathers, First Series, Vol. XIV. p. 341 sq.) has come to hand, and I have been
much pleased to see that the theory that Barnabas wrote the epistle is accepted
and defended with vigor.
On Bk. III. chap. 3, § 6 (note 22, continued).
Upon the last chapter of Romans and its relation to the remainder of the
epistle, see especially Farrar's Life and Work of St. Paul, p. 450 sq., Weiss'
Einleitung in das N. T. p. 245 sq., Pfleiderer's Urchristenthum, p. 145, Renan's
Saint Paul, p. 461 sq. (maintaining that an editor has combined four copies of
the one encyclical letter of Paul, addressed severally to as many different
churches), Lightfoot's Commentary an Philippians, p. 172 sq., and Schaff, Ch.
History, I. p. 765.
On Bk. III. chap. 24, § 17 (note 18, continued).
In three places in the Church History (Bk. III. chap. 24, § 17, chap. 25,
in the Church History (Bk. III. chap. 24, , p. 172 sq., an§ 2, and chap. 39, §
16) John's "former" epistle is referred to, as if he had written only two. In
the last passage the use of <greek>p</greek> <greek>r</greek> <greek>o</greek>
<greek>t</greek> <greek>e</greek> <greek>r</greek> <greek>a</greek> instead of
<greek>p</greek> <greek>r</greek> <greek>p</greek> <greek>t</greek>
<greek>h</greek> might be explained as Westcott suggests (Canon of the New Testament, p.
77, note 2), by supposing Eusebius to be reproducing the words of Papias; but in
the other passages this explanation will not do, for the words are certainly
Eusebius' own. In the Muratorian Canon only two epistles of John are mentioned,
and in Irenaeus the second epistle is quoted as if it were the first (see
Westcott, ibid. p. 384, note 1). These facts lead Westtort to ask: "Is it possible
that the second epistle was looked upon as an appendix to the first? and may we
thus explain the references to two epistles of John?" He continues: "The first
epistle, as is well known, was called ad Parthos by Augustine and some other
Latin authorities; and the same title <greek>p</greek> <greek>r</greek>
<greek>o</greek> <greek>d</greek> II<greek>a</greek> <greek>r</greek> <greek>q</greek>
<greek>o</greek> <greek>u</greek> <greek>d</greek> is given to the second epistle
in one Greek manuscript (62 Scholz). The Latin translation of Clement's
Outlines (IV. 66) says: Secunda Johannis epistola quoe ad virgines (<greek>p</greek>
<greek>a</greek> <greek>r</greek> <greek>q</greek> <greek>e</greek>
<greek>n</greek> <greek>o</greek> <s236 <greek>d</greek>) scripta simplissima est. Jerome,
it may be added, quotes names from the third epistle as from the second (De
nom. Hebr.)." On the other hand, in Bk. V. chap. 8, § 7, Eusebius speaks of the
"first" (<greek>p</greek> <greek>r</greek> <greek>p</greek> <greek>t</greek>
<greek>h</greek>) epistle of John, and in Bk. III. chap. 25, § 3, he expressly
mentions a second and third epistle of John. It is evident, therefore, that
whatever the use of <greek>p</greek> <greek>a</greek> <greek>r</greek>
<greek>q</greek> <greek>e</greek> <greek>n</greek> <greek>o</greek> <greek>u</greek>
<greek>d</greek>instead of <greek>P</greek> <greek>r</greek> <greek>p</greek>
<greek>t</greek> <greek>h</greek> in connection with John's first epistle may mean as
used by others, it does not indicate a knowledge of only a first and second as
used by him. It is by no means impossible, however, that Westcott's suggestion
may be correct, and that the first and second epistles were sometimes looked upon
as but one, and it is possible that such use of them by some of his
predecessors may account for Eusebius' employment of the word <s229 <greek>r</greek>
<greek>t</greek> <greek>e</greek> <greek>r</greek> <greek>a</greek> in three
separate passages.
On Bk. III. chap. 25, § 4 (note 18, continued).
The words <greek>b</greek> <greek>f</greek> <greek>e</greek>
<greek>r</greek> <greek>o</greek> <greek>m</greek> <greek>e</greek> <greek>n</greek>
<greek>h</greek> <greek>a</greek> <greek>r</greek> <greek>n</greek> <greek>a</greek>
<greek>b</greek> <greek>a</greek> <greek>e</greek> <greek>p</greek>
<greek>i</greek> <greek>s</greek> <greek>t</greek> <greek>o</greek> <greek>l</greek>
<greek>h</greek> have been commonly translated "the so-called Epistle of Barnabas,"
or "the Epistle ascribed to Barnabas," implying a doubt in Eusebius' mind as to
the authenticity of the work. This translation, however, is, in my opinion,
quite unwarranted. There are passages in Eusebius where .the word <greek>f</greek>
<greek>e</greek> <greek>r</greek> <greek>o</greek> <greek>m</greek>
<greek>a</greek> <greek>i</greek> used in connection with writings cannot by any
possibility be made to bear this meaning; cases in which it can be interpreted only "to
be extant" or "in circulation." Compare, for instance, Bk. II. chap. 15, § 1,
M<greek>a</greek> <greek>r</greek> <greek>k</greek> <greek>o</greek>
<greek>n</greek> <greek>o</greek> <greek>u</greek> <greek>U</greek> <greek>o</greek>
<greek>e</greek> <greek>u</greek> <greek>a</greek> <greek>g</greek>
<greek>g</greek> <greek>e</greek> <greek>i</greek> <greek>o</greek> <greek>u</greek>
<greek>F</greek> <greek>e</greek> <greek>r</greek> <greek>e</greek> <greek>t</greek>
<greek>a</greek> <greek>i</greek>; II. 18. 6, <greek>m</greek> <greek>o</greek>
<greek>n</greek> <greek>o</greek> <s20<s2 <greek>i</greek> <greek>b</greek>
<greek>l</greek> <greek>a</greek> <greek>a</greek> <greek>u</greek> <greek>t</greek>
<greek>o</greek> <greek>u</greek> <greek>F</greek> <greek>e</greek>
<greek>f</greek> <greek>t</greek> <greek>a</greek> <greek>i</greek>; III. 9. 4; III. 16;
III. 25. 3, <greek>h</greek> <greek>l</greek> <greek>e</greek>
<greek>g</greek> <greek>o</greek>