THE ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY OF SALAMINIUS HERMIAS SOZOMENUS, BOOK VI
BOOK VI.
CHAP. I. -- EXPEDITION OF JULIAN INTO PERSIA; HE WAS WORSTED AND BROKE OFF HIS
LIFE MISERABLY. LETTER WRITTEN BY LIBANIUS, DESCRIBING HIS DEATH.
I HAVE narrated in the preceding book the occurrences which took place in
the Church, during the reign of Julian. (1) This emperor, having determined to
carry on the war with Persia, made a rapid transit across the Euphrates in the
beginning of spring, and, passing by Edessa from hatred to the inhabitants, who
had long professed Christianity, he went on to Carrae, where there was a
temple of Jupiter, in which he offered up sacrifice and prayer. He then selected
twenty thousand armed men from among his troops, and sent them towards the Tigris,
in order that they might guard those regions, and also be ready to join him,
in case he should require their assistance. He then wrote to Arsacius, king of
Armenia, one of the Roman allies, to bespeak his aid in the war. In this letter
Julian manifested the most unbounded arrogance; he boasted of the high
qualities which had, he said, rendered him worthy of the empire, and acceptable to the
gods for whom he cared; he reviled Constantius, his predecessor, as an
effeminate and impious emperor, and threatened Arsacius in a grossly insulting way; and
since he understood that he was a Christian, he intensified his in-suits, or
eagerly and largely uttered unlawful blasphemies against Christ, for he was wont
to dare this in every case. He told Arsacius that unless he acted according to
his directions, the God in whom he trusted would not be able to defend him
from his vengeance. When he considered that all his arrangements had been duly
made, he led his army through Assyria.
He took a great many towns and fortresses, either through treachery or by
battle, and thoughtlessly proceeded onwards, without re-fleeting that he would
have to return by the same route. He pillaged every place he approached, and
pulled down or burnt the granaries and storehouses. As he was journeying up the
Euphrates, he arrived at Ctesiphon, a very large city, whither the Persian
monarchs have now transferred their residence from Babylon. The Tigris flows near
this spot. As he was prevented from reaching the city with his ships, by a part
of the land which separated it from the river, he judged that either he must
pursue his journey by water, or quit his ships and go to Ctesiphon by land; and he
interrogated the prisoners on the subject. Having ascertained from them that
there was a canal which had been blocked up in the course of time, he caused it
to be cleared out, and, having thus effected a communication between the
Euphrates and the Tigris, he proceeded towards the city, his ships floating along by
the side of his army. But the Persians appeared on the banks of the Tigris with
a formidable display of horse and many armed troops, of elephants, and of
horses; and Julian became conscious that his army was besieged between two great
rivers, and was in danger of perishing, either by remaining in its present
position, or by retreating through the cities and villages which he had so utterly
devastated that no provisions were attainable; therefore he summoned the soldiers
to see horse-races, and proposed rewards to the fleetest racers. In the
meantime he commanded the officers of the ships to throw over the provisions and
baggage of the army, so that the soldiers, seeing themselves in danger by the want
of necessaries, might turn about boldly and fight their enemies more
desperately. After supper he sent for the generals and tribunes and commanded the
embarkation of the troops. They sailed along the Tigris during the night and came at
once to the opposite banks and disembarked; but their departure was perceived
by some of the Persians, who exhorted one another to oppose them, but those
still asleep the Romans readily overcame.
At daybreak, the two armies engaged in battle; and after much bloodshed on
both sides, the Romans returned by the river, and encamped near Ctesiphon. The
emperor, being no longer desirous of proceeding further, burnt his vessels, as
he considered that they required too many soldiers to guard them; and he then
commenced his retreat along the Tigris, which was to his left. The prisoners,
who acted as guides to the Romans, led them to a fertile country where they
found abundance of provisions. Soon after, an old man who had resolved to die for
the liberty of Persia, allowed himself to be taken prisoner, and was brought
before the emperor. On being questioned as to the route, and seeming to speak the
truth, he persuaded them to follow him as capable of transporting the army very
speedily to the Roman frontiers. He observed that for the space of three or
four days' journey this road would be difficult, and that it would be necessary
to carry provisions during that time, as the surrounding country was sterile.
The emperor was deceived by the discourse of this wise old man, and approved the
march by this route. On advancing further, after the lapse of three days, they
were cast upon an uncultivated region. The old prisoner was put to torture. He
confessed that he had exposed himself voluntarily to death for the sake of his
country, and was therefore prepared to endure any sufferings that could be
inflicted on him.
The Roman troops were now worn out by the length of the journey and the
scarcity of provisions, and the Persians chose this moment to attack them.
In the heat of the conflict which ensued, a violent wind arose; and the
sky and the sun were totally concealed by the clouds, while the air was at the
same time mixed with dust. During the darkness which was thus produced, a
horseman, riding at full gallop, directed his lance against the emperor, and wounded
him mortally. After throwing Julian from his horse, the unknown assailant
secretly went away. Some conjectured that he was a Persian; others, that he was a
Saracen. There are those who insist that he who struck the blow was a Roman
soldier, who was indignant at the imprudence and temerity which the emperor had
manifested in exposing his army to such peril. Libanius, (1) the sophist, a native
of Syria, the most intimate friend of Julian, expressed himself in the following
terms concerning the person who had committed the deed: "You desire to know by
whom the emperor was slain. I know not his name. We have a proof, however,
that the murderer was not one of the enemies; for no one came forward to claim the
reward, although the king of Persia caused proclamation to be made, by a
herald, of the honors to be awarded to him who had performed the deed. We are surely
beholden to the enemy for not arrogating to themselves the glory of the
action, but for leaving it to us to seek the slayer among ourselves.
"Those who sought his death were those who lived in habitual transgression
of the laws, and who had formerly conspired against him, and who therefore
perpetrated the deed as soon as they could find an opportunity. They were impelled
by the desire of obtaining a greater degree of freedom from all control than
they could enjoy under his government; and they were, perhaps, mainly stimulated
by their indignation at the attachment of the emperor to the service of the
gods, to which they were averse."
CHAP. II. -- HE PERISHED UNDER DIVINE WRATH. VISIONS OF THE EMPEROR'S DEATH
SEEN BY VARIOUS INDIVIDUALS. REPLY OF THE CARPENTER'S SON; JULIAN TOSSED HIS
BLOOD ALOFT TO CHRIST. CALAMITIES WHICH JULIAN ENTAILED UPON THE ROMANS.
IN the document above quoted, Libanius clearly states that the emperor
fell by the hand of a Christian; and this, probably, was the truth. (2) It is not
unlikely that some of the soldiers who then served in the Roman army might have
conceived the idea, since Greeks and all men until this day have praised
tyrannicides for exposing themselves to death in the cause of liberty, and
spiritedly standing by their country, their families, and their friends. Still less is
he deserving of blame, who, for the sake of God and of religion, performed so
bold a deed. Beyond this I know nothing accurately concerning the men who
committed this murder besides what I have narrated. All men, however, concur in
receiving the account which has been handed down to us, and which evidences his death
to have been the result of Divine wrath. A proof of this is the Divine vision
which one of his friends had, which I will now proceed to describe. He had, it
is related, traveled into Persia, with the intention of joining the emperor.
While on the road, he found himself so far from any habitation that he was
obliged, on one night, to sleep in a church. He saw, during that night, either in a
dream or a vision, all the apostles and prophets assembled together, and
complaining of the injuries which the emperor had inflicted on the Church, and
consulting concerning the best measures to be adopted. After much deliberation and
embarrassment two individuals arose in the midst of the assembly, desired the
others to be of good cheer, and left the company hastily, as if to deprive Julian
of the imperial power. He who was the spectator of this marvel did not attempt
to pursue his journey, but awaited, in horrible suspense, the conclusion of this
revelation. He laid himself down to sleep again, in the same place, and again,
he saw the same assembly; the two individuals who had appeared to depart the
preceding night to effect their purpose against Julian, suddenly returned and
announced his death to the others.
On the same day a vision was sent to Didymus, an ecclesiastical
philosopher, who dwelt at Alexandria; and, who, being deeply grieved at the errors of
Julian and his persecution of the churches, fasted and offered up supplications to
God continually on this account. From the effects of anxiety and want of food
during the previous night, he fell asleep while sitting in his chair. Then
being, as it were, in an ecstasy, he beheld white horses traversing the air, and
heard a voice saying to those who were riding thereon, "Go and tell Didymus that
Julian has been slain just at this hour; let him communicate this intelligence
to Athanasius, the bishop, and let him arise and eat." I have been credibly
informed that the friend of Julian and the philosopher beheld those things.
Results proved that neither of them were far from having witnessed the truth. But if
these instances do not suffice to prove that the death of Julian was the effect
of Divine wrath on account of his persecution of the Church, let the
prediction of one of the ecclesiastics be called to mind. (1) When Julian was preparing
to enter upon the war against the Persians, he threatened that on the
termination of the war he would treat the Christians with severity, and boasted that the
Son of the Carpenter would be unable to aid them; the ecclesiastic above
mentioned thereupon rejoined, that the Son of the Carpenter was then preparing him a
wooden coffin in view of his leath.
Julian himself was well aware whence the mortal stroke proceeded, and what
was the cause of its infliction; for, it is said, when he was wounded, he took
some of the blood that flowed from the wound, and threw it up into the air, as
if he had seen Jesus Christ appearing, and intended to throw it at him, in
order to reproach him with his slaughter. Others say that he was angry with the
sun because it had favored the Persians, and had not rescued him, although,
according to the doctrine of the astronomers, it had presided at his birth; and that
it was to express his indignation against this luminary that he took blood in
his hand and flung it upwards in the air. (2)
I know not whether, on the approach of death, as is wont to be the case
when the soul is in the act of being separated from the body and when it is
enabled to behold diviner spectacles than are allotted to men, and so Julian might
have beheld Christ. Few allusions have been made to this subject, and yet I dare
not reject this hypothesis as absolutely false; for God often suffers still
more improbable and astonishing events to take place in order to prove that the
religion named after Christ is not sustained by human energy. It is, however,
very obvious that, throughout the reign of this emperor, God gave manifest tokens
of His displeasure, and i permitted many calamities to befall several of the
provinces of the Roman Empire. He visited the earth with such fearful
earthquakes, that the buildings were shaken, and no more safety could be found within the
houses than in the open air. From what I have heard, I conjecture that it was
during the reign of this emperor, or, at least, when he occupied the second
place in the government, that a great calamity occurred near Alexandria in Egypt,
(3) when the sea receded and again passed beyond its boundaries from the
re-flux waves, and deluged a great deal of the land, so that on the retreat of the
waters, the sea-skiffs were found lodged on the roofs of the houses. The
anniversary of this inundation, which they call the birthday of an earthquake, is still
commemorated at Alexandria by a yearly festival; a general illumination is
made throughout the city; they offer thankful prayers to God, and celebrate the
day very brilliantly and piously. An excessive drought also occurred during this
reign; the plants perished and the air was corrupted; and for want of proper
sustenance, men were obliged to have recourse to the food usually eaten by other
animals.
The famine introduced peculiar diseases, by which many lives were lost.
Such was the state of the empire during the administration of Julian.
CHAP. IlI. -- THE REIGN OF JOVIAN; HE INTRODUCED MANY LAWS WHICH HE CARRIED
OUT IN HIS GOVERNMENT.
AFTER the decease of Julian, the government of the empire was, by the
unanimous consent of the troops, tendered to Jovian. (4) When the army was about to
proclaim him emperor, he announced himself to be a Christian and refused the
sovereignty, nor would he receive the symbols of empire; but when the soldiers
discovered the cause of his refusal, they loudly proclaimed that they were
themselves Christians.
The dangerous and disturbed condition in which affairs had been left by
Julian's strategy, and the sufferings of the army from famine in an enemy's
country, compelled Jovian to conclude a peace with the Persians, and to cede to them
some territories which had been formerly tributary to the Romans. Having
learned from experience that the impiety of his predecessor had excited the wrath of
God, and given rise to public calamities, he wrote without delay to the
governors of the provinces, directing that the people should assemble together
without fear in the churches, that they should serve God with reverence, and that
they should receive the Christian faith as the only true religion. He restored to
the churches and the clergy, to the widows and the virgins, the same immunities
and every former dotation for the advantage and honor of religion, which had
been granted by Constantine and his sons, and afterwards withdrawn by Julian. He
commanded Secundus, (1) who was then a praetorian prefect, to constitute it a
capital crime to marry any of the holy virgins, or even to regard them with
unchaste desires and to carry them off.
He enacted this law (2) on account of the wickedness which had prevailed
during the reign of Julian; for many had taken wives from among the holy
virgins, and, either by force or guile, had completely corrupted them; and thence had
proceeded that indulgence of disgraceful lusts with impunity, which always
occur when religion is abused.
CHAP. IV. -- TROUBLES AGAIN ARISE IN THE CHURCHES; SYNOD OF ANTIOCH, IN WHICH
THE NICENE FAITH IS CONFIRMED; THE POINTS WHICH THIS IMPORTANT SYNOD WROTE
ABOUT TO JOVIAN.
THE presidents of the churches now resumed the agitation of doctrinal
questions and discussions. (3) They had remained quiet during the reign of Julian
when Christianity itself was endangered, and had unanimously offered up their
supplications for the mercy of God. It is thus that men, when attacked by foreign
enemies, remain in accord among themselves; but, when external troubles are
removed, then internal dissensions creep in; this, however, is not a proper place
for the citation of the numerous examples in governments and nations which
history affords of this fact.
At this period Basil, bishop of Ancyra, Silvanus, bishop of Tarsus,
Sophronius, bishop of Pompeiopolis, and others of their party who regarded the heresy
of the Anomians, so-called, with the utmost aversion, and received the term
"similar as to substance," instead of the term "consubstantial," wrote a treatise
to the emperor; and after expressing their thankfulness to God for his
accession to the empire, besought him to confirm the decrees issued at Ariminum and
Seleucia, and to annul what had been established merely by the zeal and power of
certain individuals.
They also entreated that, if division, which existed on account of the
Synods, should still prevail in the churches, the bishops from every region might
be convened alone in some place indicated by the emperor, and not be permitted
to assemble elsewhere and issue decrees at variance with each other, as had
been done during the reign of Constantius. They added that they had not gone to
visit him at his camp, because they were fearful of being burdensome to him; but
that if he desired to see them, they would gladly repair to him, and defray all
the expenses attendant on the journey themselves. Such was the document
written to the Emperor Jovian.
At this juncture a council was convened at Antioch in Syria; the form of
belief established by the council of Nicaea was confirmed; and it was decided
that the Son is incontrovertibly of the same substance as the Father. Meletius,
who then governed the church of Antioch; Eusebius, bishop of Samosata; Pelagius,
bishop of Laodicea in Syria; Acacius, bishop of Caesarea in Palestine;
Irenius, bishop of Gaza; and Athanasius, bishop of Ancyra, took part in this council.
On the termination of the council they acquainted the emperor with the
transactions that had taken place, by dispatching the following letter: (4) --
"To the most religious and God-beloved Augustus, our Sovereign Jovian, the
Conqueror, from the bishops assembled from divers regions, at Antioch.
"We know, O emperor, well-beloved of God, that your piety is fully intent
upon maintaining peace and concord in the Church; neither are we ignorant that
you have well received the impress of the chief point of such unity, viz., the
true and orthodox faith.
"Lest, therefore, we should be reckoned among those who assail these
doctrines of truth, we attest to your piety that we receive and maintain the form of
belief which was anciently set forth by the holy council of Nicaea. Now,
although the term 'consubstantial' appears strange to some persons, yet it was
safely interpreted by the Fathers, and signifies that the Son was begotten of the
substance of the Father. This term does not convey the idea of unbroken
generation; neither does it coincide with the use which the Greeks make of the word
'substance,' but it is calculated to withstand the impious and rash allegation of
Arius, that the Son proceeded from what had had no previous existence. The
Anomians who have just sprung up have the shameless boldness to maintain this word
to the grief of the concord of the Church. We subjoin to this letter a copy of
the formulary of faith adopted by the bishops assembled at Nicaea, which we also
cherish."
Such were the decisions formed by the priests convened at Antioch; and
they appended to their letter a copy of the Nicene formulary of faith.
CHAP. V. --ATHANASIUS THE GREAT IS VERY HIGHLY ESTEEMED BY THE EMPEROR, AND
RULES OVER THE CHURCHES OF EGYPT. VISION OF ANTONY THE GREAT.
AT this period, (1) Athanasius, who governed the see of Alexandria, and
some of his friends, deemed it requisite, as the emperor was a Christian, to
repair to his court. (2) Accordingly Athanasius went to Antioch, and laid such
matters before the emperor as he deemed expedient. Others, however, say that the
emperor sent for him in order to consult him concerning the affairs relative to
religion and the right tenet. When the business of the Church had as far as
possible been transacted, Athanasius began to think of returning.
Euzoius, bishop of the Arian heresy in Antioch, endeavored to install
Probatius, a eunuch who held the same sentiments as himself, in Alexandria. The
whole party of Euzoius conspired with him to effect this design; and Lucius, a
citizen of Alexandria, who had been ordained presbyter by George, endeavored to
prejudice the emperor against Athanasius, by representing (3) that he had been
accused of divers crimes and had been condemned to perpetual banishment by
preceding emperors, as the author of the dissensions and troubles of the Church
concerning the Divine Being. Lucius likewise besought Jovian to appoint another
bishop over the church of Alexandria. The emperor, since he knew the plots which
had happened against Athanasius, attached no credit to the calumny, and with
threatening, commanded Lucius to retire quietly; he also ordered Probatius and the
other eunuchs belonging to his palace, whom he regarded as the originators of
these troubles, to act more advisedly. From that period Jovian manifested the
greatest friendship towards Athanasius, and sent him back to Egypt, with
directions to govern the churches and people of that country as he might think fit. It
is also said that he passed commendations on the virtue of the bishop, on his
life, his intellectual endowments, and his eloquence.
Thus, after having been exposed to opposition for a long while, as has
been narrated in the former books, was the Nicene faith fully re-established under
the present government; but further embarrassment awaited it within a very
short period. For, as it appeared afterwards, the whole of the prediction of
Antony the Monk was not fulfilled by the occurrences which befell the Church during
the reign of Constantius; part thereof was not accomplished until the reign of
Valens. It is said that before the Arians got control of the churches during
the reign of Constantius, Antony had a dream in which he saw mules kicking the
altar with their hoofs and overturning the holy table. On awakening, he
immediately predicted that the Church would be troubled by the introduction of spurious
and mixed doctrines, and by the rebellion of the heterodox. The truth of this
prediction was evidenced by the events which occurred before and after the
period now under review.
CHAP. VI. -- DEATH OF JOVIAN; THE LIFE OF VALENTINIAN, AND HIS CONFIDENCE IN
GOD; HOW HE WAS ADVANCED TO THE THRONE AND SELECTED HIS BROTHER VALENS TO REIGN
WITH HIM; THE DIFFERENCES OF BOTH.
AFTER Jovian had reigned about eight months, he died suddenly at
Dadastana, a town of Bithynia, while on his road to Constantinople. (4) Some say that
his death was occasioned by eating too plentiful a supper; others attribute it to
the dampness of the chamber in which he slept; for it had been recently
plastered with unslaked lime, and quantities of coals had been burnt in it during the
winter for a preventive; the walls had become damp and were exceedingly moist.
On the arrival of the troops at Nicaea in Bithynia, they proclaimed
Valentinian emperor. He was a good man and capable of holding the reins of the
empire. He had not long returned from banishment; for it is said that Julian,
immediately on his accession to the empire, erased the name of Valentinian from the
Jovian legions, as they were called, and condemned him to perpetual banishment,
under the pretext that he had failed in his duty of leading out the soldiers
under his command against the enemy. The true reason of his condemnation, however,
was the following: When Julian was in Gaul, he went one day to a temple to
offer incense. Valentinian (5) accompanied him, according to an ancient Roman law,
which still prevails, and which enacted that the leader of the Jovians and the
Herculeans (that is to say, the legions of soldiers who have received this
appellation in honor of Jupiter and of Hercules) should always attend the emperor
as his body-guard. When they were about to enter the temple, the priest, in
accordance with the pagan custom, sprinkled water upon them with the branch of a
tree. A drop fell upon the robe of Valentinian; he scarcely could restrain
himself, for he was a Christian, and he rebuked his asperser; it is even said that
he cut off, in view of the emperor, the portion of the garment on which the
water had fallen, and flung it from him. From that moment Julian entertained
inimical feelings against him, and soon after banished him to Melitine in Armenia,
under the plea of misconduct in military affairs; for he would not have religion
regarded as the cause of the decree, lest Valentinian should be accounted a
martyr or a confessor. Julian treated other Christians, as we have already stated,
in the same manner; for, as was said before, he perceived that to subject them
to hazards only added to their reputation, and tended to the consolidation of
their religion. As soon as Jovian succeeded to the throne, Valentinian was
recalled from banishment to Nicaea; but the death of the emperor in the meantime
took place, and Valentinian, by the unanimous consent of the troops and those who
held the chief positions in the government, was appointed his successor. When
he was invested with the symbols of imperial power, the soldiers cried out that
it was necessary to elect some one to share the burden of government. To this
proposition, Valentinian made the following reply: "It depended on you alone, O
soldiers to proclaim me emperor; but now that you have elected me, it depends
not upon you, but upon me, to perform what you demand. Remain quiet, as
subjects ought to do, and leave me to act as an emperor in attending to the public
affairs."
Not long after this refusal to comply with the demand of the soldiery, he
repaired to Constantinople, and proclaimed his brother emperor. He gave him the
East as his share of the empire, and reserved to himself the regions along the
Western Ocean, from Illyria to the furthest coasts of Libya. Both the brothers
were Christians, but they differed in opinion and disposition. For Valens,
when he was baptized, employed Eudoxius as his initiator, and was zealously
attached to the doctrines of Arius, and would readily have compelled all mankind by
force to yield to them. Valentinian, on the other hand, maintained the faith of
the council of Nicaea, and favored those who upheld the same sentiments,
without molesting those who entertained other opinions.
CHAP. VII. -- TROUBLES AGAIN ARISE IN THE CHURCHES, AND THE SYNOD OF LAMPSACUS
IS HELD. THE ARIANS WHO SUPPORTED EUDOXIUS PREVAIL AND EJECT THE ORTHODOX FROM
THE CHURCHES. AMONG THE EJECTED IS MELETIUS OF ANTIOCH.
WHEN Valentinian was journeying from Constantinople to Rome, (1) he had to
pass through Thrace; and the bishops of Hellespontus and of Bithynia, with
others, who maintained that the Son is consubstantial with the Father, dispatched
Hypatian, bishop of Heraclea in Perinthus, to meet him, and to request
permission to assemble themselves together for deliberation on questions of doctrine.
When Hypatian had delivered the message with which he was intrusted,
Valentinian made the following reply: "I am but one of the laity, and have therefore
no right to interfere in these transactions; let the priests, to whom such
matters appertain, assemble where they please." On receiving this answer through
Hypatian, their deputy, the bishops assembled at Lampsacus.
After having conferred together for the space of two months, they annulled
all that had been decreed at Constantinople, through the machinations of the
partisans of Eudoxius and Acacius. They likewise declared null and void the
formulary of faith which had been circulated under the false assertion that it was
the compilation of the Western bishops, and to which the signatures of many
bishops had been obtained, by the promise that the dogma of dissimilarity as to
substance should be condemned, -- a promise which had never been performed.
They decreed that the doctrine of the Son being in substance like unto the
Father, should have the ascendancy; for they said that it was necessary to
resort to the use of the term "like" as indicative of the hypostases of the
Godhead. They agreed that the form of belief which had been confessed at Seleucia,
and set forth at the dedication of the church of Antioch, should be maintained by
all the churches.
They directed that all the bishops who had been deposed by those who hold
that the Son is dissimilar from the Father, should forthwith be reinstated in
their sees, as having been unjustly ejected from their churches. They declared
that if any wished to bring accusations against them, they would be permitted to
do so, but under the penalty of incurring the same punishment as that due to
the alleged crime, should the accusation prove to be false. The orthodox bishops
of the province and of the neighboring countries were to preside as judges,
and to assemble in the church, with the witnesses who were to make the
depositions. After making these decisions, the bishops summoned the partisans of
Eudoxius, and exhorted them to repentance; but as they would give no heed to these
remonstrances, the decrees enacted by the council were sent to all the churches.
Judging that Eudoxius would be likely to endeavor to persuade the emperor to side
with him, and would calumniate them, they determined to be beforehand with
him, and to send an account of their proceedings in Lampsacus to the court.
Their deputies met the Emperor Valens as he was returning from Heraclea to
Thrace, where he had been traveling in company with his brother, who had gone
on to Old Rome.
Eudoxius, however, had previously gained over the emperor and his
courtiers to his own sentiments; so that when the deputies of the council of Lampsacus
presented themselves before Valens, he merely exhorted them not to be at
variance with Eudoxius. The deputies replied by reminding him of the artifices to
which Eudoxius had resorted at Constantinople, and of his machinations to annul
the decrees of the council of Seleucia; and these representations kindled the
wrath of Valens to such a pitch, that he condemned the deputies to banishment, and
made over the churches to the partisans of Eudoxius. He then passed over into
Syria, for he feared lest the Persians should break the truce which they had
concluded with Jovian for thirty years. On finding, however, that the Persians
were not disposed to insurrection, he fixed his residence at Antioch. He sent
Meletius, the bishop, into banishment, but spared Paul, because he admired the
sanctity of his life. Those who were not in communion with Euzoius were either
ejected from the churches, or maltreated and harassed in some other form.
CHAP. VIII.-- REVOLT AND EXTRAORDINARY DEATH OF PROCOPIUS. ELEUSIUS, BISHOP OF
CYZICUS, AND EUNOMIUS, THE HERETIC. EUNOMIUS SUCCEEDS ELEUSIUS.
IT is probable that a severe persecution might have ensued at this
juncture, had not Procopius commenced a civil war. (1) As he began to play the tyrant
at Constantinople, he soon collected a large army, and marched against Valens.
The latter quitted Syria, and met Procopius near Nacolia, a city of
Phrygia, and captured him alive through the treachery of Agelon and Gomarius, two of
his generals.
Valens put him and his betrayers to a cruel death; and although it is said
that he had sworn to show favor to the two generals, he caused them to be sawn
asunder.
He commanded Procopius to be fastened by the legs to two trees which had
been bent to the ground, and he allowed these to spring up; when the trees were
left to resume their natural position, the victim was torn in twain.
On the termination of this war, Valens retired to Nicaea, and finding
himself in possession of profound tranquillity, he again began to molest those who
differed from him in opinion concerning the Divine nature.
His anger was unbounded against the bishops of the council of Lampsacus,
because they had condemned the Arian bishops and the formulary of faith set
forth at Ariminum.
While under the influence of these resentful feelings, he summoned
Eleusius from Syria, and having called together a Synod of bishops who held his own
sentiments, he endeavored to compel him to assent to their doctrines. Eleusius
at first manfully refused compliance. But afterwards, from the dread of exile
and deprivation of his property, as was threatened by the emperor, he yielded to
the mandate. He soon repented of his weakness, and on his return to Cyzicus he
made a public confession of his fault in the church, and urged the people to
choose another bishop, for he said that he could not discharge the duties of a
priesthood after having been a traitor to his own doctrine. The citizens
respected his conduct and were especially well-disposed to him, so that they did not
choose to have another bishop. Eudoxius, president of the Arians in
Constantinople, however, ordained Eunomius as bishop of Cyzicus; for he expected that by his
great powers of eloquence Eunomius would easily draw the people of Cyzicus
over to his own sentiments. On his arrival at that city he expelled Eleusius, for
he was furnished with an imperial edict to that effect, and took possession of
the churches himself.
The followers of Eleusius built a house of prayer without the walls of the
city, and here they held their assemblies. I shall soon again have occasion to
revert to Eunomius and the heresy which bears his name.
CHAP.IX.-- SUFFERINGS OF THOSE WHO MAINTAINED THE NICENE FAITH. AGELIUS, THE
RULER OF THE NOVATIANS.
THE Christians who represented the Nicene doctrines and the followers of
the Novatian views (2) were treated with equal severity in the city of
Constantinople.
They were all ultimately expelled from the city; and the churches of the
Novatians were closed by order of the emperor. The other party had no churches
to be closed, having been deprived of them all during the reign of Constantius.
At this period, Agelius who, from the time of Constantius, had governed
the church of the Novatians at Constantinople, was condemned to banishment. It is
said that he was especially remarkable for his course of life according to the
ecclesiastical laws. With respect to his mode of life, he had attained to the
highest degree of philosophy, namely, freedom from worldly possessions; this
was evidenced by his daily conduct; he had but one tunic, and always walked
barefooted. Not long after his banishment, he was recalled, received the churches
under him, and boldly convened churches through the influence of Marcian, a man
of extraordinary virtue and eloquence, who had formerly been enrolled among the
troops of the palace, but at this period was a presbyter of the Novatian
heresy, and the teacher of grammar to Anastasia and Carosa, (1) the daughters of the
emperor. There are still baths at Constantinople which bear the names of these
princesses. It was for the sake of Marcian alone that the privilege
above-mentioned was conceded to the Novatians.
CHAP. X. -- CONCERNING VALENTINIAN THE YOUNGER AND GRATIAN.PERSECUTION UNDER
VALENS. THE HOMOOUSIANS, BEING OPPRESSED BY THE ARIANS AND MACEDONIANS, SEND AN
EMBASSY TO ROME?
ABOUT this period, a son was born to Valentinian in the West, to whom the
emperor gave his own name. Not long after, he proclaimed his son Gratian
emperor; this prince was born before his father held the government.
In the meantime, although hailstones of extraordinary magnitude fell in
various places, and although many cities, particularly Nicaea in Bithynia, were
shaken by earthquakes, yet Valens, the emperor, and Eudoxius, the bishop, paused
not in their career, but continued to persecute all Christians who differed
from them in opinion. They succeeded to the utmost of their expectations in their
machinations against those who adhered to the Nicene doctrines; for throughout
the greater time of Valens' rule, particularly in Thrace, Bithynia, and the
Hellespont, and still further beyond, these Christians had neither churches nor
priests. Valens and Eudoxius then directed their resentment against the
Macedonians, who were more in number than the Christians above mentioned in that
region, and persecuted them without measure.
The Macedonians, in, apprehension of further sufferings, sent deputies to
various cities, and finally agreed to have recourse to Valentinian and to the
bishop of Rome rather than share in the faith of Eudoxius and Valens and their
followers; and when this seemed favorable for execution, they selected three of
their own number, -- Eustathius, bishop of Sebaste; Silvanus, bishop of
Tarsus; and Theophilus, bishop of Castabalis, -- and sent them to the Emperor
Valentinian; they likewise intrusted them with a letter, addressed to Liberius, bishop
of Rome, and to the other priests of the West, in which they entreated them as
prelates who had adhered to the faith approved and confirmed by the apostles,
and who before others ought to watch over religion, to receive their deputies
with all confirmation, and to confer with them about what should be done in the
interval until the affairs of the Church could be approvedly set in order.
When the deputies arrived in Italy, they found that the emperor was in
Gaul, engaged in war against the barbarians. As they considered that it would be
perilous to visit the seat of war in Gaul, they delivered their letter to
Liberius. (3) After having conferred with him concerning the objects of their
embassy, they condemned Arius and those who held and taught his doctrines; they
renounced all heresies opposed to the faith established at Nicaea; and received the
term "consubstantial," as being a word that conveys the same signification as
the expression "like in substance." When they had presented a confession of
faith, analogous to the above, to Liberius, he received them into communion with
himself, and wrote to the bishops of the East, commending the orthodoxy of their
faith, and detailing what had passed in the conference he had held with them.
The confession of faith made by Eustathius and his companions was as follows: --
CHAP. XI.--THE CONFESSION OF EUSTATHIUS, SILVANUS, AND THEOPHILUS, THE
DEPUTIES OF THE MACEDONIANS, TO LIBERIUS, BISHOP OF ROME.
"TO Liberius, our Lord and Brother, and Fellow-minister--Eustathius,
Silvanus, and Theophilus send greeting in the Lord. (4)
"On account of the mad opinions of the heretics who do not cease to keep
on sowing scandals for the Catholic churches, we who nullify their every attack
confess the Synod which was held at Lampsacus, the one at Smyrna and the
councils held in other places, by the orthodox bishops. We have furnished letters and
sent on an embassy to your Goodness, as likewise to all the other bishops of
Italy and of the West, to confirm and preserve the Catholic faith, which was
established at the holy council of Nicaea, by the blessed Constantine and three
hundred and eighteen God-fearing fathers.
"This remains, by an unmixed and immovable settlement, until now, and will
remain perpetually in which the term 'consubstantial' is fixed in all holiness
and piety in testimony against the perverseness of Arius. We confess, each
with his own hand, that we with the aforesaid have always held this same faith,
that we still hold it, and that we shall adhere to it to the last. We condemn
Arius, his impious dogmas, and his disciples. We also condemn the heresies of
Patropasianus, (1) of Photinus, of Marcellus, of Paul of Samosata, and all who
maintain such doctrines themselves. We anathematize all heresies opposed to the
aforesaid faith established by the saintly fathers at Nicaea. We anathematize
Arius especially, and condemn all such decrees as were enacted at Ariminum, in
opposition to the aforesaid faith established by the holy council of Nicaea. We
were formerly deluded by the guile and perjury of certain parties, and subscribed
to these decrees when they were transmitted to Constantinople from Nicaea, a
city of Thrace."
After this confession they subjoined a copy of the entire formulary of
Nicaea to their own creed, and, having received from Liberius a written account of
all that they had transacted, they sailed to Sicily.
CHAP. XII. -- COUNCILS OF SICILY AND OF TYANA. THE SYNOD WHICH WAS EXPECTED TO
BE HELD IN CILICIA IS DISSOLVED BY VALENS. THE PERSECUTION AT THAT TIME.
ATHANASIUS THE GREAT FLEES AGAIN, AND IS IN CONCEALMENT; BY THE LETTER OF VALENS HE
REAPPEARS, AND GOVERNS THE CHURCHES IN EGYPT.
A Council was convened at Sicily; (2) and after the same doctrines had
been confirmed as those set forth in the confession of the deputies, the assembly
was dissolved.
At the same time, a council was held at Tyana; and Eusebius, bishop of
Caesarea in Cappadocia, Athanasius, bishop of Ancyra, Pelagius, bishop of
Laodicea, Zeno, bishop of Tyre, Paul, bishop of Emesa, Otreus, bishop of Melitene, and
Gregory, bishop of Nazianzen, were present with many others, who, during the
reign of Jovian, had assembled at Antioch, and determined to maintain the
doctrine of the Son being consubstantial with the Father. The letters of Liberius and
the Western bishops were read at this council. These letters afforded high
satisfiction to the members of the council; and they wrote to all the churches,
desiring them to peruse the decrees of the bishops in Asia, (2) and the documents
written by Liberius and the bishops of Italy, of Africa, of Gaul, and of
Sicily, which had been intrusted to the deputies of the council of Lampsacus. They
urged them to reflect on the great number of persons by whom these documents had
been drawn up, and who were far more in number than the members of the council
of Ariminum, and exhorted them to be of one mind, and to enter into communion
with them, to signify the same by writing, and finally to assemble together at
Tarsus in Cilicia before the end of the spring. On a fixed date which they
prescribed, they urged one another to convene. On the approach of the appointed day,
when the Synod was on the point of assembling at Tarsus, about thirty-four of
the Asiatic bishops came together in Curia, in the province of Asia, commended
the design of establishing uniformity of belief in the Church, but objected to
the term "consubstantial," and insisted that the formularies of faith set forth
by the councils of Antioch and Seleucia, and maintained by Lucian, the martyr,
and by many of their predecessors, with dangers and tensions, ought to obtain
the ascendancy over all others.
The emperor, at the instigation of Eudoxius, prevented by letter the
council from being convened in Cilicia, and even prohibited it under severe
penalties. He also wrote to the governors of the provinces, commanding them to eject
all bishops from their churches who had been banished by Constantine (3) and who
had again taken up their priesthood under the Emperor Julian. On account of
this order, those who were at the head of the government of Egypt were anxious to
deprive Athanasius of his bishopric and expel him from the city; for no light
punishment was inserted in the imperial letters; for unless the injunctions were
fulfilled, all the magistrates equally, and the soldiers under them, and
counselors were condemned to the payment of much money and also threatened with
bodily maltreatment. (4)
The majority of Christians of the city, however, assembled and besought
the governor not to banish Athanasius without further consideration of the terms
of the imperial letter, which merely specified all bishops who had been
banished by Constantius and recalled by Julian and it was manifest that Athanasius was
not of this number, inasmuch as he had been recalled by Constantius and had
resumed his bishopric; but Julian, at the very time that all the other bishops
had been recalled, persecuted him, and finally Jovian recalled him. The governor
was by no means convinced by these arguments; nevertheless, he restrained
himself and did not give way to the use of force. The people ran together from every
quarter; there was much commotion and perturbation throughout the city; an
insurrection was expected; he therefore advised the emperor of the facts and
allowed the bishop to remain in the city. Some days afterwards, when the popular
excitement had seemingly abated, Athanasius secretly quitted the city at dusk, and
concealed himself somewhere. The very same night, the governor of Egypt and
the military chief took possession of the church in which Athanasius generally
dwelt, and sought him in every part of the edifice, and even on the roof, but in
vain; for they had calculated upon seizing the moment when the popular
commotion had partially subsided and when the whole city was wrapt in sleep, to execute
the mandate of the emperor, and to transport Athanasius quietly from the city.
Not to have found Athanasius naturally excited universal astonishment.
Some attributed his escape to a special revelation from above; others to the
advice of some of his followers; both had the same result; but more than human
prudence seems to have been requisite to foresee and to avoid such a plot. Some say,
that as soon as the people gave indications of being disposed to sedition, he
concealed himself among the tombs of his ancestors, being apprehensive lest he
should be regarded as the cause of any disturbances that might ensue; and that
he afterwards retreated to some other place of concealment.
The Emperor Valens, soon after, wrote to grant permission for him to
return and hold his church. It is very doubtful, whether, in making this concession,
Valens acted according to his own inclination. I rather imagine that, on
reflecting on the esteem in which Athanasius was universally held, he feared to
excite the displeasure of the Emperor Valentinian, who was well-known to be
attached to the Nicene doctrines; or perhaps he was apprehensive of a commotion on the
part of the many admirers of the bishop, lest some innovation might injure the
public affairs.
I also believe that the Arian presidents did not, on this occasion, plead
very vehemently against Athanasius; for they considered that, if he were
ejected from the city, he would probably traduce them to the emperors and then would
have an occasion for conference with respect to them, and might possibly
succeed in persuading Valens to adopt his own sentiments, and in arousing the anger
of the like-minded Valentinian against themselves.
They were greatly troubled by the evidences of the virtue and courage of
Athanasius, which had been afforded by the events which had transpired during
the reign of Constantius. He had, in fact, so skilfully evaded the plots of his
enemies, that they had been constrained to consent to his reinstallation in the
government of the churches of Egypt; and yet he could scarcely be induced to
return from Italy, although letters had been dispatched by Constantius to that
effect.
I am convinced that it was solely from these reasons that Athanasius was
not expelled from his church like the other bishops, who were subjected to as
cruel a persecution as ever was inflicted by pagans.
Those who would not change their doctrinal tenets were banished; their
houses of prayer were taken from them, and placed in the possession of those who
held opposite sentiments. Egypt alone was, during the life of Athanasius,
exempted from this persecution.
CHAP. XIII. -- DEMOPHILUS, AN ARIAN, BECAME BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE AFTER
EUDOXIUS. THE PIOUS ELECT EVAGRIUS. ACCOUNT OF THE PERSECUTION WHICH ENSUED.
ABOUT this time the Emperor Valens went to Antioch on the Orontes; while
he was on his journey Eudoxius died, after having governed the churches of
Constantinople during the space of eleven years. (1) Demophilus was immediately
ordained as his successor by the Arian bishops. The followers of the Nicene
doctrines, believing that the course of events was in their power, elected Evagrius as
their bishop. He had been ordained by Eustathius, who had formerly governed
the church of Antioch in Syria, and who having been recalled from banishment by
Jovian, lived in a private manner at Constantinople, and devoted himself to the
instruction of those who held his sentiments, exhorting them to perseverance in
their view of the Divine Being. The Arian heretics were stirred to revolt, and
commenced a violent persecution against those who had participated in the
ordination of Evagrius. The Emperor Valens, who was then at Nicomedia, on being
apprised of the occurrences that had taken place in Constantinople since the death
of Eudoxius, was fearful lest any interest of the city should suffer by
sedition, and therefore sent thither as many troops as he thought requisite to
preserve tranquillity.
Eustathius was arrested by his command and banished to Bizya, a city of
Thrace, and Evagrius was exiled to some other region. And such was the manner of
this event.
CHAP. XIV. -- ACCOUNT OF THE EIGHTY PIOUS DELE- GATES IN NICOMEDIA, WHOM
VALENS BURNED WITH THE VESSEL IN MID-SEA.
THE Arians, as is customary with the prosperous, because more insolent,
(1) persecuted unmercifully all Christians whose religious sentiments were
opposed to their own.
These Christians being exposed to bodily injuries, and betrayed to
magistrates and prisons, and finding themselves moreover gradually impoverished by the
frequent fines, were at length compelled to appeal for redress to the emperor.
Although exceedingly angry, the emperor did not openly manifest any wrath, but
secretly commanded the prefect to seize and slay the whole deputation. But the
prefect, being apprehensive that a whole popular insurrection would be excited
if he were to put so many good and religious men to death without any of the
forms of justice, pretended that they were to be sent into exile, and under this
pretext compelled them to embark on board a ship, to which they assented with
the most perfect resignation. When they had sailed to about the center of the
bay, which was called Astacius, the sailors, according to the orders they had
received, set fire to the vessel and leaped into the tender. A wind arising, the
ship was blown along to Dacibiza, a place on the sea-coast of Bithynia; but no
sooner had it neared the shore, than it was utterly consumed with all the men
on board.
CHAP. XV. -- DISPUTES BETWEEN EUSEBIUS, BISHOP OF CAESAREA, AND BASIL THE
GREAT. HENCE THE ARIANS TOOK COURAGE AND CAME TO CAESAREA, AND WERE REPULSED.
WHEN Valens quitted Nicomedia, he went on to Antioch; (2) and in passing
through Cappadocia he did all in his power, according to custom, to injure the
orthodox and to deliver up the churches to the Arians. He thought to accomplish
his designs the more easily on account of a dispute (3) which was then pending
between Basil and Eusebius, who then governed the church of Caesarea. This
dissension had been the cause of Basil's departing from Pontus, where he lived
conjointly with some monks who pursued the philosophy. The people and some of the
most powerful and the wisest men in the city began to regard Eusebius with
suspicion, particularly as they considered him the cause of the withdrawal of one
who was equally celebrated for his piety and his eloquence; and they accordingly
began to plan a secession and the holding of separate church. In the meantime
Basil, fearing to be a source of further trouble to the Church, which was
already rent by the dissensions of heretics, remained in retirement in the
monasteries at Pontus. The emperor and the bishops of the Arian heresy, who were always
attached to his suite, were more inspirited in their designs by the absence of
Basil and the hatred of the people towards Eusebius. But the event was contrary
to their judgment. On the first intelligence of the intention of the emperor to
pass through Cappadocia, Basil quilted Pontus and returned to Caesarea, where
he effected a reconciliation with Eusebius, and by his eloquence he opportunely
aided the Church. The projects of Valens were thus defeated, and he returned
with his bishops without having accomplished any of his designs.
CHAP. XVI. -- BASIL BECOMES BISHOP OF CAESAREA AFTER EUSEBIUS; HIS BOLDNESS
TOWARDS THE EMPEROR AND THE PREFECT.
SOME time after, the emperor again visited Cappadocia, and found that
Basil was administering the churches there after the death of Eusebius. (4) He
thought of expelling him, but was unwillingly restrained from his intention. It is
said that the night after he had formed his plans his wife was disturbed by a
frightful dream, and that his only son Galates was cut off by a rapid disease.
The death of this son was universally attributed to the vengeance of God as a
punishment of his parents for the machinations that had been carried on against
Basil. Valens himself was of this opinion, and, after the death of his son,
offered no further molestation to the bishop.
When the prince was sinking under the disease, and at the point of death,
the emperor sent for Basil and requested him to pray to God for his son's
recovery. For as soon as Valens had arrived at Caesarea, the prefect had sent for
Basil and commanded him to embrace the religious sentiments of the emperor,
menacing him with death in case of non-compliance. Basil replied that it would be
great gain to him and the grant of the highest favor to be delivered as quickly
as possible from the bondage of the body. The prefect gave him the rest of the
day and the approaching night for deliberation, and advised him not to rush
imprudently into obvious danger, but that he should come on the day after and
declare his opinion. "I do not require to deliberate," replied Basil. "My
determination will be the same to-morrow as it is to-day; for since I am a creature I can
never be induced to worship that which is similar to myself and worship it as
God; neither will I conform to your religion, nor to that of the emperor.
Although your distinction may be great, and although you have the honor of ruling no
inconsiderable portion of the empire, yet I ought not on these accounts to
seek to please men, and, at the same time, belittle that Divine faith which
neither loss of goods, nor exile, nor condemnation to death would ever impel me to
betray. Inflictions of this nature have never excited in my mind one pang of
sorrow. I possess nothing but a cloak and a few books. I dwell on the earth as a
traveler. The body through its weakness would have the better of all sensation
and torture after the first blow."
The prefect admired the courage evinced in this bold reply, and
communicated the circumstance to the emperor. On the festival of the Epiphany, the
emperor repaired to the church with the rulers and his guards, presented gifts at the
holy table, and held a conference with Basil, whose wisdom and whose order and
arrangement in the conduct of the priesthood and the church elicited his
praise.
Not long after, however, the calumny of his enemies prevailed, and Basil
was condemned to banishment. The night for the execution of the edict was at
hand; the son of the emperor suddenly fell ill with a pressing and dangerous
fever. The father prostrated himself on the earth and wept over the son who was
still alive, and not knowing what other measures to take towards effecting the
recovery of his son, he dispatched some of his attendants to Basil to come and
visit the prostrate child; because he himself feared to summon the bishop, on
account of the injury just inflicted upon him. Immediately on the arrival of Basil,
the boy began to rally; so that many maintain that his recovery would have been
complete, had not some heretics been summoned to pray with Basil for the
restoration of the boy. It is said that the prefect, likewise, fell ill; but that on
his repentance, and on prayer being offered to God, he was restored to health.
The instances above adduced are quite inadequate to convey an idea of the
wonderful endowments of Basil; his extreme addiction to the philosophic life and
astonishing powers of eloquence attracted great celebrity.
CHAP. XVII. -- FRIENDSHIP OF BASIL AND OF GREGORY, THE THEOLOGIAN; BEING PEERS
IN WISDOM, THEY DEFEND THE NICENE DOCTRINES.
BASIL and Gregory were contemporaries, and they were recognized to be
equally intent, so to speak, upon the cultivation of the virtues. (1) They (2) had
both studied in their youth at Athens, under Himerius and Proaeresius, the most
ap-proved sophists of the age; and afterwards at Antioch, under Libanius, the
Syrian. But as they subsequently conceived a contempt for sophistry and the
study of the law, they determined to study philosophy according to the law of
the Church. After having spent some time in the pursuit of the sciences, taught
by pagan philosophers, they entered upon the study of the commentaries which
Origen and the best approved authors who lived before and after his time, have
written in explanation of the Sacred Scriptures.
They rendered great assistance to those who, like themselves, maintained
the Nicene doctrines, for they manfully opposed the dogmas of the Arians,
proving that these heretics did not rightly understand either the data upon which
they proceeded, nor the opinions of Origen, upon which they mainly depended. These
two holy men divided the perils of their undertaking, either by mutual
agreement, or, as I have been informed, by lot. The cities in the neighborhood of
Pontus fell to the lot of Basil; and here he founded numerous monasteries, and, by
teaching the people, he persuaded them to hold like views with himself. After
the death of his father, Gregory acted as bishop of the small city of Nazianzus,
(3) but resided on that account in a variety of places, and especially at
Constantinople. Not long after he was appointed by the vote of many priests to act
as president of the people there; for there was then neither bishop nor church
in Constantinople, and the doctrines of the council of Nicaea were almost
extinct.
CHAP. XVIII. -- THE PERSECUTION WHICH OCCURRED AT ANTIOCH, ON THE ORONTES. THE
PLACE OF PRAYER IN EDESSA, CALLED AFTER THE APOSTLE THOMAS; THE ASSEMBLY
THERE, AND CONFESSION OF THE INHABITANTS OF EDESSA.
THE emperor went to Antioch, and entirely ejected from the churches of
that city and of the neighboring cities all those who adhered to the Nicene
doctrines; (4) moreover, he oppressed them with manifold punishments; as some affirm,
he commanded many to be put to death in various ways, and caused others to be
cast into the river Orontes. Having heard that there was a magnificent oratory
at Edessa, named after the Apostle Thomas, he went to see it. He beheld the
members of the Catholic Church assembled for worship in the plain before the walls
of the city; for there, too, they had been deprived of their houses of prayer.
It is said that the emperor reproached the prefect thoroughly and struck him
on the jaw with his fist for having permitted these congregations contrary to
his edict. Modestus (for this was the name of the prefect), although he was
himself a heretic, secretly warned the people of Edessa not to meet for prayer on
the accustomed spot the next day; for he had received orders from the emperor to
punish all who should be seized. He uttered such threats with the forethought
that none, or at least but a few, would incur danger, and with the desire to
appease the wrath of the monarch. But the people of Edessa, totally disregarding
the threat, ran together with more than their customary zeal, and filled the
usual place of meeting.
Modestus, on being apprised of their proceedings, was undecided as to what
measures ought to be adopted, and repaired in embarrassment to the plain with
the throng. A woman, leading a child by the hand, and trailing her mantle in a
way unbefitting the decency of women, forced her way through the files of the
soldiers who were conducted by the prefect, as if bent upon some affair of
importance. Modestus remarked her conduct, ordered her to be arrested, and summoned
her into his presence, to inquire the cause of her running. She replied that
she was hastening to the plain where the members of the Catholic Church were
assembled. "Know you not," replied Modestus, "that the prefect is on his way
thither for the purpose of condemning to death all who are found on the spot?" "I
have heard so," replied she, "and this is the very reason of my haste; for I am
fearful of arriving too late, and thus losing the honor of martyrdom for God."
The governor having asked her why she took her child with her, she replied, "In
order that he may share in the common suffering, and participate in the same
reward." Modestus, struck with astonishment at the courage of this woman, went to
the emperor, and, acquainting him with what had occurred, persuaded him not to
carry out a design which he showed to be disgraceful and disastrous. Thus was
the Christian faith confessed by the whole city of Edessa.
CHAP. XIX. -- DEATH OF THE GREAT ATHANASIUS; THE ELEVATION OF LUCIUS, WHO WAS
ARIAN-MINDED, TO THE SEE; THE NUMEROUS CALAMITIES HE BROUGHT UPON THE CHURCHES
IN EGYPT; PETER, WHO SERVED AFTER ATHANASIUS, PASSED OVER TO ROME.
ATHANASIUS, bishop of the church of Alexandria, died about this period,
after having completed his high-priesthood in about forty-six years. (1) The
Arians having received early intelligence of his death, Euzoius, president of the
Arians at Antioch, and Magnus, the chief treasurer, were sent by the emperor,
and lost no time in seizing and imprisoning Peter, whom Athanasius had appointed
to succeed him in the bishopric; and they forthwith transferred the government
of the church to Lucius.
Hence those in Egypt suffered more grievously than those in other places,
and misfortunes piled upon misfortunes oppressed the members of the Catholic
Church; for as soon as Lucius settled in Alexandria, he attempted to take
possession of the churches; he met with opposition from the people, and the clergy and
holy virgins i were accused as originators of the sedition. Some made their
escape as if the city had fallen into the hands of an enemy; others were seized
and imprisoned. Some of the prisoners were afterwards dragged from the dungeons
to be torn with hooks and thongs, while others were burned by means of flaming
torches. It seemed wonderful how they could possibly survive the tortures to
which they were subjected. Banishment or even death itself would have been
preferable to such sufferings. Peter, the bishop, made his escape from prison; and
embarking on board a ship, proceeded to Rome, the bishop of which church held the
same sentiments as himself. Thus the Arians, although not many in number,
remained in possession of the churches. At the same time, an edict was issued by
the emperor, enacting that as many of the followers of the Nicene doctrines
should be ejected from Alexandria and the rest of Egypt, as might be directed by
Lucius. Euzoius, having thus accomplished all his designs, returned to Antioch.
CHAP. XX. -- PERSECUTION OF THE EGYPTIAN MONKS, AND OF THE DISCIPLES OF ST.
ANTONY. THEY WERE ENCLOSED IN A CERTAIN ISLAND ON ACCOUNT OF THEIR ORTHODOXY; THE
MIRACLES WHICH THEY WROUGHT.
LUCIUS went with the general of the soldiers in Egypt, against the monks
in the desert; (2) for he imagined that if he could overcome their opposition by
interrupting the tranquillity which they loved, he would meet with fewer
obstacles in drawing over to his party the Christians who inhabited the cities. The
monasteries of this country were governed by several individuals of eminent
sanctity, who were strenuously opposed to the heresy of Arius. The people, who
were neither willing nor competent to enter upon the investigation of doctrinal
questions, received their opinions from them, and thought with them; for they
were persuaded that men whose virtue was manifested by their deeds were in
possession of truth. We have heard that the leaders of these Egyptian ascetics were
two men of the name of Macarius, of whom mention has already been made, (1) Pambo
and Heraclides, and other disciples of Antony.
On reflecting that the Arians could never succeed in establishing an
ascendency over the Catholic Church, unless the monks could be drawn over to their
party, Lucius determined to have recourse to force to compel the monks to side
with him, since he was unable to persuade them. But here again his scheme
failed; for the monks were prepared to subject their necks to the sword rather than
to swerve from the Nicene doctrines. It is related that, at the very time that
the soldiers were about to attack them a man whose limbs were withered and who
was unable to stand on his feet was carried to them; and that when they had
anointed him with oil, and commanded him in the name of Christ, whom Lucius
persecuted, to arise and go to his house, he suddenly became whole. This miraculous
cure openly manifested the necessity of adopting the sentiments of those to whom
God himself had testified as possessing the truth, while Lucius was condemned,
in that God heard their prayers and had healed the sick.
But the plotters against the monks were not led to repentance by this
miracle; on the contrary, they arrested these holy men by night, and conveyed them
to an island of Egypt, concealed in the swamps. The inhabitants of this island
had never heard of the Christian faith, and were devoted to the service of
demons: the island contained a temple of great antiquity which was held in great
reverence. It is said that when the monks landed on the island, the daughter of
the priest, who was possessed of a devil, went to them. The girl ran screaming
towards them; and the people of the island, astonished at her sudden and strange
conduct, followed. When she drew near the ship in which were the holy
messengers, she flung herself pleadingly upon the ground, and exclaimed supplicatingly
in a loud voice, "Wherefore are you come to us, O servants of the great God?
for we have long dwelt in this island as our residence; we have troubled no one.
Unknown to men, we have concealed ourselves here, and are everywhere surrounded
by these marshes. If, however, it please you, accept our possessions, and fix
your abode here; we will quit the island."
Such were her utterances. Macarius and his companions rebuked the demon,
and the girl became sane. Her father and all her house, with the inhabitants of
the island, immediately embraced Christianity, and after demolishing their
temple, they transformed it into a church. On these occurrences being reported at
Alexandria, Lucius was overcome with immoderate grief; and, fearing lest he
should incur the hatred of his own partisans, and be accused of warring against
God, and not against man, he sent secret orders for Macarius and his companions to
be re-conveyed to their own dwellings in the wilderness. Thus did Lucius
occasion troubles and commotions in Egypt.
About the same period, Didymus the philosopher and several other
illustrious men acquired great renown. Struck by their virtue, and by that of the monks,
the people followed their doctrines and opposed those of the partisans of
Lucius.
The Arians, though not so strong in point of numbers as the other party,
grievously persecuted the church of Egypt.
CHAP. XXI. -- LIST OF THE PLACES IN WHICH THE NICENE DOCTRINES WERE
REPRESENTED; FAITH MANIFESTED BY THE SCYTHIANS; VETRANIO, THE LEADER OF THIS RACE.
ARIANISM met with similar opposition at the same period in Osroene; but in
the Cappadocias, Providence allotted such a divine and most educated pair of
men, -- Basil, the bishop of Caesarea in that country, and Gregory, bishop of
Nazianzen. (2) Syria and the neighboring provinces, and more especially the city
of Antioch, were plunged into confusion and disorder; for the Arians were very
numerous in these parts, and had possession of the churches. The members of the
Catholic Church were not, however, few in number. They were called Eustathians
and Paulinists, and were under the guidance of Paulinus and Meletius, as has
been before stated. It was through their instrumentality that the church of
Antioch was preserved from the encroach-merits of the Arians, and enabled to resist
the zeal of the emperor and of those in power about him. Indeed, it appears
that in all the churches which were governed by brave men, the people did not
deviate from their former opinions.
It is said that this was the cause of the firmness with which the
Scythians adhered to their faith. There are in this country a great number of cities,
villages, and fortresses. The metropolis is called Tomi; it is a large and
populous city, and lies on the sea-shore to the left of one sailing to the sea,
called the Euxine.
According to an ancient custom which still prevails, all the churches of
the whole country are under the sway of one bishop. (1)
Vetranio ruled over these churches at the period that the emperor visited
Tomi. Valens repaired to the church, and strove, according to his usual custom,
to gain over the bishop to the heresy of Arius; but this latter manfully
opposed his arguments, and after a courageous defense of the Nicene doctrines,
quitted the emperor and proceeded to another church, whither he was followed by the
people. Almost the entire city bad crowded to see the emperor, for they
expected that something extraordinary would result from this interview with the bishop.
Valens was extremely offended at being left alone in the church with his
attendants, and in resentment, condemned Vetranio to banishment. Not long after,
however, he recalled him, because, I believe, he apprehended an insurrection;
for the Scythians were offended at the absence of their bishop.
He well knew that the Scythians were a courageous nation, and that their
country, by the position of its places, possessed many natural advantages which
rendered it necessary to the Roman Empire, for it served as a barrier to ward
off the barbarians.
Thus was the intention of the ruler openly frustrated by Vetranio. The
Scythians themselves testify that he was good in all other respects and eminent
for the virtue of his life.
The resentment of the emperor was visited upon all the clergy except those
of the Western churches; for Valentinian, who reigned over the Western
regions, was an admirer of the Nicene doctrines, and was imbued with so much reverence
for religion, that he never imposed any commands upon the priests, nor ever
attempted to introduce any alteration for better or for worse in ecclesiastical
regulations. Although he had become one of the best of emperors, and had shown
his capacity to rule affairs, he considered that ecclesiastical matters were
beyond the range of his jurisdiction.
CHAP. XXII. -- AT THAT TIME, THE DOCTRINE OF THE HOLY GHOST WAS AGITATED, AND
IT WAS DECIDED THAT HE IS TO BE CONSIDERED CON-SUBSTANTIAL WITH THE FATHER AND
THE SON.
A QUESTION was renewed at this juncture which had previously excited much
inquiry and now more; namely, whether the Holy Ghost is or is not to be
considered consubstantial with the Father and the Son?
Many contentions and debates ensued on this subject, similar to those
which had been held concerning the nature of God the Word. Those who asserted that
the Son is dissimilar from the Father, and those who insisted that He is
similar in substance to the Father, came to one common opinion concerning the Holy
Ghost; for both parties maintained that the Holy Ghost differs in substance, and
that He is but the Minister and the third in point of order, honor, and
substance. Those, on the contrary, who believed that the Son is consubstantial with
the Father, held also the same view about the Spirit. This doctrine was nobly
maintained in Syria by Apolinarius, bishop of Laodicea; in Egypt by Athanasius,
(3) the bishop; and in Cappadocia and in the churches of Pontus by Basil (4) and
Gregory. (5) The bishop of Rome, on learning that this question was agitated
with great acrimony, and that it of course was augmented daily by controversies,
wrote to the churches of the East and urged them to receive the doctrine
upheld by the Western clergy; namely, that the three Persons of the Trinity are of
the same substance and of equal dignity. The question having been thus decided
by the Roman churches, peace was restored, and the inquiry appeared to have an
end.
CHAP. XXIII. -- DEATH OF LIBERIUS, BISHOP OF ROME. HE IS SUCCEEDED BY DAMASUS
AND SYRICIUS . (6) ORTHODOX DOCTRINES PREVAIL EVERYWHERE THROUGHOUT THE WEST,
EXCEPT AT MILAN, WHERE AUXENTIUS IS THE HIGH-PRIEST. SYNOD HELD AT ROME, BY
WHICH AUXENTIUS IS DEPOSED; THE DEFINITION WHICH IT SENT BY LETTER.
ABOUT this period Liberius died, (7) and Damasus succeeded to the see of
Rome. (8) A deacon named Ursicius, who had obtained some votes in his favor, but
could not endure the defeat, therefore caused himself to be clandestinely
ordained by some bishops of little note, and endeavored to create a division among
the people and to hold a separate church. He succeeded in effecting this
division, and some of the people respected him as bishop, while the rest adhered to
Damasus. This gave rise to much contention and revolt among the people, which
at length proceeded to the evil of wounds and murder. The prefect of Rome was
obliged to interfere, and to punish many of the people and of the clergy; and he
put an end to the attempt of Ursicius. (1)
With respect to doctrine, however, no dissension arose either at Rome or
in any other of the Western churches. The people unanimously adhered to the form
of belief established at Nicaea, and regarded the three persons of the Trinity
as equal in dignity and in power.
Auxentius and his followers differed from the others in opinion; he was
then president of the church in Milan, and, in conjunction with a few partisans,
was intent upon the introduction of innovations, and the maintenance of the
Arian dogma of the dissimilarity of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, according to
the inquiry which had last sprung up, in opposition to the unanimous agreement of
the Western priests. The bishops of Gaul and of Venetia having reported that
similar attempts to disturb the peace of the Church were being made by others
among them, the bishops of several provinces assembled not long after at Rome,
and decreed that Auxentius and those who held his sentiments should be aliens
from their communion. They confirmed the traditional faith established by the
council of Nicaea, and annulled all the decrees that had been issued at Ariminum
contrary to that faith, under the plea that these decrees had not received the
assent of the bishop of Rome, nor of other bishops who agreed with them, and that
many who had been present at the Synod, had disapproved of the enactments
there made by them. That such was the decision really formed by the Synod is
testified by the epistle (2) addressed by Damasus, the Roman bishop, and the rest of
the assembly, to the bishops of Illyria. It is as follows: (3) --
"Damasus, Valerius, (4) and the other bishops of the holy assembly
convened at Rome to the dearly beloved brethren settled in IIlyria, greeting in the
Lord.
"We believe that you uphold and teach to the people our holy faith, which
is rounded on the doctrine of the apostles. This faith differs in no respect
from that defined by the Fathers; neither is it allowable for the priests of God,
whose right it is to instruct the wise, to have any other thought. We have,
however, been informed by some of our brethren of Gaul and of Venice, that
certain individuals are bent upon the introduction of heresy.
"All bishops should diligently guard against this evil, lest some of their
flock should be led by inexperience, and others by simplicity, to oppose the
proper interpretations.
"Those who devise strange doctrines ought not to be followed; but the
opinions of our fathers ought to be retained, whatever may be the diversity of
judgment around us.
"Hence Auxentius, bishop of Milan, has been publicly declared to be
condemned pre-eminently in this matter. It is right, therefore, that all the teachers
of the Roman world should be of one mind, and not pollute the faith by divers
conflicting doctrines.
"For when the malice of the heretics first began to mature itself, as the
blasphemy of the Arians has even now done, -- may it be far from us, -- our
fathers to the number of three hundred and eighteen elect, after making an
investigation in Nicaea, erected the wall against the weapons of the devil, and
repelled the deadly poison by this antidote.
"This antidote consists in the belief, that the Father and the Son have
one Godhead, one virtue, and one substance (<greek>crhma</greek>). It is also
requisite to believe that the Holy Ghost is of the same hypostasis. We have
decreed that those who hold any other doctrines are to be aliens from our communion.
"Some have decreed to discolor this saving definition and adorable view;
but in the very beginning, some of the persons who made the innovation at the
council of Ariminum, or who were compelled to vote for the change, have since, in
some measure, made amends by confessing that they were deceived by certain
specious arguments, which did not appear to them to be contrary to the principles
laid down by our fathers at Nicaea. The number of individuals congregated at
the council of Ariminum proves nothing in prejudice of orthodox doctrines; for
the council was held without the sanction of the bishops at Rome, whose opinion,
before that of all others, ought to have been received, and without the assent
either of Vincentius, who during a very long series of years guarded the
episcopate without spot, or of many other bishops who agreed with those last
mentioned.
"Besides, as has been before stated, those very persons who seemed
inclined to something illusory, testified their disapprobation of their own
proceedings as soon as they made use of a better judgment. Therefore your purity must see
that this alone is the faith which was established at Nicaea upon the
authority of the apostles, and which must ever be retained inviolate, and that all
bishops, whether of the East, or of the West, who profess the Catholic religion,
ought to consider it an honor to be in communion with us. We believe that it will
not be long before those who maintain other sentiments will be excluded from
communion, and deprived of the name and dignity of bishop; so that the people
who are now oppressed by the yoke of those pernicious and deceitful principles,
may have liberty to breathe. For it is not in the power of these bishops to
rectify the error of the people, inasmuch as they are themselves held by error.
Let, therefore, the opinion of your honor also be in accord with all the priests
of God, in which we believe you to be holy and firm. That we ought so to believe
along with you will be proved by the exchange of letters with your love."
CHAP. XXIV.--CONCERNING ST. AMBROSE AND HIS ELEVATION TO THE HIGH PRIESTHOOD;
HOW HE PERSUADED THE PEOPLE TO PRACTICE PIETY. THE NOVATIANS OF PHRYGIA AND THE
PASSOVER.
THE clergy of the West having thus anticipated the designs of those who
sought to introduce innovations among them, (1) carefully continued to preserve
the inviolability of the faith which had from the beginning been handed down to
them. With the solitary exception of Auxentius and his partisans, there were no
individuals among them who entertained heterodox opinions. Auxentius, however,
did not live long after this period. At his death a sedition arose among the
people concerning the choice of a bishop for the church of Milan, and the city
was in danger. Those who had aspired to the bishopric, and been defeated in
their expectations, were loud in their menaces, as is usual in such commotions.
Ambrosius, who was then the governor of the province, being fearful of the
movement of the people, went to the church, and exhorted the people to cease
from contention, to remember the laws, and to re-establish concord and the
prosperity which springs from peace. Before he had ceased speaking, all his auditors
at once suppressed the angry feelings by which they had been mutually agitated
against each other, and directed the vote of the bishopric upon him, as a
fulfillment of his counsel to harmony. They exhorted him to be baptized, for he was
still uninitiated, and begged him to receive the priesthood. After he had
refused and declined, and unfeignedly fled the business, the people still insisted,
and declared that the contention would never be appeased unless he would
accede to their wishes; and at length intelligence of these transactions was
conveyed to the court. It is said that the Emperor Valentinian prayed, and returned
thanks to God that the very man whom he had appointed governor had been chosen to
fill a priestly office. When he was informed of the earnest desires of the
people and the refusal of Ambrosius, he inferred that events had been so ordered
by God for the purpose of restoring peace to the church of Milan, and commanded
that Ambrosius should be or-dained as quickly as possible. (2) He was initiated
and ordained at the same time, and forthwith proceeded to bring the church
under his sway to unanimity of opinion concerning the Divine nature; for, while
under the guidance of Auxen-tius, it had long been rent by dissensions on this
subject. We shall hereafter have occasion to speak of the conduct of Ambrosius
after his ordination, and of the courageous and holy manner in which he
discharged the functions of the priesthood.
About this period, the Novatians of Phrygia, contrary to their ancient
custom, began to celebrate the festival of the Passover on the same day as the
Jews. Novatius, the originator of their heresy, refused to receive those who
repented of their sins into communion, and it was in this respect alone that he
innovated upon the established doctrine. But he and those who succeeded him
celebrated the feast of the Passover after the vernal equinox, according to the custom
of the Roman church. Some Novatian bishops, however, assembled about this time
at Pazi, a town of Phrygia, near the source of the river Sangarus, and
agreeing not to follow, in this point of discipline, the practice of those who
differed in doctrine from them, established a new law; they determined upon keeping
the feast of unleavened bread, and upon celebrating the Passover on the same days
as the Jews. Agelius, the bishop of the Novatians at Constantinople, and the
bishops of the Novatians at Nicaea, Nicomedia, and Cotyaeum, a noted city of
Phrygia, did not take part in this Synod, although the Novatians consider them to
be lords and colophons, so to speak, of the transactions affecting their heresy
and their churches. How for this reason, these innovators advanced into
divergence, and having cut themselves off, formed a separate church, I will speak of
at the fight time.
CHAP. XXV.--CONCERNING APOLINARIUS: FATHER AND SON OF THAT NAME. VITALIANUS,
THE PRESBYTER. ON BEING DISLODGED FROM ONE KIND OF HERESY, THEY INCLINE TO
OTHERS.
ABOUT this period, Apolinarius openly devised a heresy, to which his name
has since been given. (3) He induced many persons to secede from the Church,
and formed separate assemblies. Vitalius, a presbyter of Antioch and one of the
priests of Meletius, concurred with him in the confirmation of his peculiar
opinion. In other respects, Vitalius was conspicuous in life and conduct, and was
zealous in watching over those committed to his pastoral superintendence; hence
he was greatly revered by the people. He seceded from communion with Meletius,
joined Apolinarius and presided over those at Antioch who had embraced the same
opinions; by the sanctity of his life he attracted a great number of
followers, who are still called Vitalians by the citizens of Antioch It is said he was
led to secede from the Church from resentment at the contempt that was
manifested towards him by Flavian, then one of his fellow-presbyters, but who was
afterwards raised to the bishopric of Antioch. Flavian having prevented him from
holding his customary interview with the bishop, he fancied himself despised and
entered into communion with Apolinarius, and held him as his friend. From that
period the members of this sect have formed separate churches in various cities,
under their own bishops, and have established laws differing from those of the
Catholic Church. Besides the customary sacred order, they sang some metrical
songs composed by Apolinarius; for, in addition to his other learning he was a
poet, and skilled in a great variety of meters, and by their sweetness he induced
many to cleave to him. Men sang his strains at convivial meetings and at their
daily labor, and women sang them while engaged at the loom. But, whether his
tender poems were adapted for holidays, festivals, or other occasions, they were
all alike to the praise and glory of God. Damasus, bishop of Rome, and Peter,
bishop of Alexandria, were the firsts to learn that the heresy was creeping
among the people, and at a council held at Rome (1) they voted it to be foreign to
the Catholic Church. It is said that it was as much from narrowness of mind as
from any other cause that Apolinarius made an innovation in doctrine. For when
Athanasius, who administered the church of Alexandria, was on his road back to
Egypt from the place whither he had been banished by Constantine, he had to
pass through Laodicea, and that while in that city he formed an intimacy with
Apolinarius, which terminated in the strictest friendship. As, however, the
heterodox considered it disgraceful to hold communion with Athanasius, George, the
bishop of the Arians in that city, ejected Apolinarius in a very insulting manner
from the church, under the plea that he had received Athanasius contrary to
the canons and holy laws. The bishop did not rest here, but reproached him with
crimes which he had cora- mitted and repented of at a remote period. For when
Theodotus, the predecessor of George, regulated the church of Laodicea,
Epiphanius, the sophist, recited a hymn which he had composed in honor of Dionysus.
Apolinarius, who was then a youth and a pupil of Epiphanius, went to hear the
recitation, accompanied by his father, whose name also was Apolinarius, and who was
a noted grammarian. After the exordium, Epiphanius, according to the custom
always observed at the public recitation of hymns, directed the uninitiated and
the profane to go out of doors. But neither Apolinarius the younger nor the
eider, nor, indeed, any of the Christians who were present, left the audience. When
Theodotus, the bishop, heard that they had been present during the recitation,
he was exceedingly displeased; he, however, pardoned the laymen who had
committed this error, after they had received a moderate reproof. With respect to
Apolinarius, father and son, he convicted them both publicly of their sin, and
ejected them from the church; for they both belonged to the clergy, the father
being a presbyter, and the son a reader of the Holy Scriptures. After some time
had elapsed, and when-the father and son had evinced by tears and fasting a
degree of repentance adequate to their transgression, Theodotus restored them to
their offices in the church. When George received the same bishopric, he
excommunicated Apolinarius, and treated him as alien to the Church on account of his
having, as before stated, received Athanasius into communion. It is said that
Apolinarius besought him repeatedly to restore him to communion, but that he was
inexorable. Apolinarius, overcome with grief, disturbed the Church, and by
innovations in doctrines introduced the aforesaid heresy; (2) and he thought by
means of his eloquence to revenge himself on his enemy by proving that George had
deposed one who was more deeply acquainted with the Sacred Scriptures than
himself. Thus do the private animosities of the clergy from time to time greatly
injure the Church, and divide religion into many heresies. And this is a proof;
for had George, like Theo-dotus, received Apolinarius on his repentance into
communion, I believe that we should never have heard of the heresy that bears his
name. Men are prone, when loaded with opprobrium and contempt, to resort to
rivalries and innovations; whereas when treated with justice, they become
moderate, and remain in the same position.
CHAP. XXVI.--EUNOMIUS AND HIS TEACHER AETIUS, THEIR AFFAIRS AND DOCTRINES.
THEY WERE THE FIRST WHO BROACHED ONE IMMERSION FOR THE BAPTISM.
ABOUT this time, Eunomius, (1) who had held the church in Cyzicus in
place of Eleusius, and who presided over the Arian heresy, devised another heresy
besides this, which some have called by his name, but which is sometimes
denominated the Anomian heresy. Some assert that Eunomius was the first who ventured
to maintain that divine baptism ought to be performed by one immersion, and to
corrupt, in this manner, the apos-tolical tradition which has been carefully
handed down to the present day. He invented, it is said, a mode of discipline
contrary to that of the Church, and disguised the innovation under gravity and
greater severity. He was an artist in words and contentions, and delighted in
arguments. The generality of those who entertain his sentiments have the same
predilections. They do not applaud a good course of life or manner or mercy towards
the needy, unless exhibited by persons of their own sect, so much as skill in
disputation and the power of triumphing in debates. Persons possessed of these
accomplishments are accounted pious above all others among them. Others assert,
I believe more truthfully, that Theophronius, a native of Cap-padocia, and
Eutychius, both zealous propagators of this heresy, seceded from communion with
Eunomius during the succeeding reign, and innovated about the other doctrines of
Eunomius and about the divine baptism. They asserted that baptism ought not to
be administered in the name of the Trinity, but in the name of the death of
Christ. It appears that Eunomius broached no new opinion on the subject, but was
from the beginning firmly attached to the sentiments of Arius, and remained so.
After his elevation to the bishopric of Cyzicus, he was accused by his own
clergy of introducing innovations in doctrine. Eudoxius, ruler of the Arian heresy
at Constantinople, summoned him and obliged him to give an account of his
doctrines to the people; finding, however, no fault in him, Eudoxius exhorted him to
return to Cyzicus. Eunomius, however, replied, that he could not remain with
people who regarded him with suspicion; and, it is said, seized the opportunity
for secession, although it seems that, in taking this step he was really
actuated by the resentment he felt at the refusal which Aetius, his teacher, had met
with, of being received into communion. Eunomius, it is added, dwelt with
Aetius, and never deviated from his original sentiments. Such are the conflicting
accounts of various individuals; some narrate the circumstances in one way, and
some in another. But whether it was Eunomius, or any other person, who first made
these innovations upon the tradition of baptism, it seems to me that such
innovators, whoever they may have been, were alone in danger, according to their
own representation, of quitting this life without having received the divine
baptism; for if, after they had been baptized according to the mode recommended
from the beginning, they found it impossible to rebaptize themselves, it must be
admitted that they introduced a practice to which they had not themselves sub
mitted, and thus undertook to administer to others what had never been
administered to them by themselves nor by others. Thus, after having laid down the dogma
by some non-existent principle and private assumption, they proceeded to bestow
upon others what they had not themselves received. The absurdity of this
assumption is manifest from their own confession; for they admit that the
uninitiated have not the power to baptize others. Now, according to their opinion, he who
has not been baptized in conformity with their tradition is unbaptized as one
not properly initiated, and they confirm this opinion by their practice,
inasmuch as they rebaptize all those who join their sect, although previously
initiated according to the tradition of the Catholic Church. These varying dogmas are
the sources of innumerable troubles to religion; and many are deterred from
embracing Christianity by the diversity of opinion which prevails in matters of
doctrine.
The disputes daily became stronger, and, as in the beginning of heresies,
they grew; for they had leaders who were not deficient in zeal or power of
words; indeed, it appears that the greater part of the Catholic Church would have
been subverted by this heresy, had it not found opponents in Basil and Gregory,
the Cappado-cians. The reign of Theodosius began a little while after; he
banished the founders of heretical sects from the populous parts of the empire to
the more desert regions.
But, lest those who read my history should be ignorant of the precise
nature of the two heresies to which I have more especially alluded, I think it
necessary to state that Aetius, the Syrian, was the originator of the heresy
usually attributed to Eunomius; and that, like Arius, he maintained that the Son is
dissimilar from the Father, that He is a created being, and was created out of
what had no previous existence. Those who held these views were formerly called
Aetians; but afterwards, during the reign of Constantius, when, as we have
stated, some parties maintained that the Son is consubstantial with the Father, and
others that He is like in substance to the Father, and when the council of
Ariminum had decreed that the Son is only to be considered like unto the Father,
Actius was condemned to banishment, as guilty of impiety and blasphemy against
God. For some time subsequently his heresy seemed to have been suppressed; for
neither any other man of note, nor even Eunomius, ventured openly upon
undertaking its defense. But when Eu-nomius was raised to the church of Cyzicus in place
of Eleusius, he could no longer quietly restrain himself, and in open debate
he brought forward again the tenets of Aetius. Hence, as it often happens that
the names of the original founders of heretical sects pass into oblivion, the
followers of Eunomius were designated by his own name, although he merely renewed
the heresy of Aetius, and promulgated it with greater boldness than was done
by him who first handed it down.
CHAP. XXVII.--ACCOUNT GIVEN, BY GREGORY THE THEOLOGIAN, OF APOLINARIUS AND
EUNOMIUS IN A LETTER TO NECTARIUS. THEIR HERESY WAS DISTINGUISHED BY THE
PHILOSOPHY OF THE MONKS WHO WERE THEN LIVING, FOR THE HERESY OF THESE TWO HELD NEARLY
THE ENTIRE EAST.
IT is obvious that Eunomius and Aetius held the same opinions. In several
passages of his writings, Eunomius boasts and frequently testifies that Aetius
was his instructor. Gregory, bishop of Nazianzen, speaks in the following terms
of Apolinarius in a letter addressed to Nectarius, the leader of the church in
Constantinople: (1) "Eunomius, who is a constant source of trouble among us,
is not content with being a burden to us himself, but would consider himself to
blame if he did not strive to drag every one with him to the destruction
whither he is hastening. Such conduct, however, may be tolerated in some degree. The
most grievous calamity against which the Church has now to struggle arises from
the audacity of the Apoli-narians. I know not how your Holiness could have
agreed that they should be as free to hold meetings as we ourselves. You have been
fully instructed by the grace of God, in the Divine mysteries, and not only
understand the defense of the Word of God, but also whatever innovations have
been made by heretics against the sound faith; yet it may not be amiss for your
revered Excellency to hear from our narrowness, that a book written by
Apolinarius has fallen into my hands, in which the proposition surpasses all forms of
heretical pravity. He affirms that the flesh assumed for the transformation of our
nature, under the dispensation of the only begotten Son of God was not
acquired for this end; but that this carnal nature existed in the Son from the
beginning. He substantiates this evil hypothesis by a misapplication of the following
words of Scripture: 'No man hath ascended up into heaven.' (2) He alleges from
this text, that Christ was the Son of man before He descended from heaven, and
that when He did descend, He brought with Him His own flesh which He had
already possessed in heaven which was before the ages and essentially united. He also
states another apostolic saying: 'The second man is from heaven.' (3) He,
moreover, maintains that the man who came down from heaven was destitute of
intellect (<greek>nous</greek>), but that the Deity of the only begotten Son fulfilled
the nature of intellect, and constituted the third part of the human compound.
The body and soul (<greek>yuch</greek>) formed two parts, as in other men, but
there was no intellect, but the Word of God filled the place of intellect. Nor
does this end the awful spectacle; for the most grievous point of the heresy
is, that he asserts that the only-begotten God, the Judge of all men, the Giver
of life, and the Destroyer of death, is Himself subject to death; that He
suffered in His own Godhead, and that in the resurrection of the body in the third
day, the Godhead also was raised from the dead with the body ; and that it was
raised again from the dead by the Father. It would take too long to recount all
the other extravagant doctrines propounded by these heretics." What I have said
may, I think, suffice to show the nature of the sentiments maintained by
Apolinarius and Eunomius. If any one desire more detailed information, I can only
refer him to the works on the subject written either by them or by others
concerning these men. I do not profess easily to understand or to expound these
matters, as it seems to me the fact that these dogmas did not prevail and make
further advance is to be attributed, in addition to the causes mentioned, especially
to the monks of that period; for all those philosophers in Syria, Cappadocia,
and the neighboring provinces, were sincerely attached to the Nicene faith. The
eastern regions, however, from Cili-cia to Phoenicia, were endangered by the
heresy of Apolinarius. The heresy of Eunomius was spread from Cilicia and the
mountains of Taurus as far as the Hellespont and Constantinople. These two
heretics found it easy to attract to their respective parties the persons among whom
they dwelt, and those of the neighborhood. But the same fate awaited them that
had been experienced by the Arians; for the people admired the monks who
manifested their virtue by works and believed that they held right opinions, while
they turned away from those who held other opinions, as impious and as holding
spurious doctrines. In the same way the Egyptians were led by the monks to oppose
the Arians.
CHAP. XXVIII.--OF THE HOLY MEN WHO FLOURISHED AT THIS PERIOD IN EGYPT. JOHN,
OR AMON, (2) BENUS, THEONAS, COPRES, HELLES, ELIAS, APELLES,ISIDORE, SERAPION,
DIOSCORUS AND EULOGIUS.
AS this periodwas distinguished by many holy men, (2) who devoted
themselves to a life of philosophy, it seems requisite to give some account of them,
for in that time there flourished a very great abundance of men beloved of God.
There was not, it appears, a more celebrated man in Egypt than John. He had
received from God the power of discerning the future and the most hidden things as
clearly as the ancient prophets, and he had, moreover, the gift of healing
those who suffered with incurable afflictions and diseases. Or was another eminent
man of this period; he had lived in solitude from his earliest youth, occupying
himself continually in singing the praises of God. He subsisted on herbs and
roots, and his drink was water, when he could find it. In his old age he went,
by the command of God, to Thebaeus, where he presided over several monasteries,
nor was he without part in divine works. By means of prayer alone he expelled
diseases and devils. He knew nothing of letters, nor did he need books to
support his memory; for whatever he received into his mind was never afterwards
forgotten.
Ammon, the leader of the monks called Tabennesiotians, dwelt in the same
region, and was followed by about three thousand disciples. genus and Theonas
likewise presided over monastic orders, and possessed the gift of foreknowledge
and of prophecy. It is said that though Theonas was versed in all the learning
of the Egyptians, the Greeks, and the Romans, he practiced silence for the space
of thirty years. Benus was never seen to manifest any signs of anger, and
never heard to swear, or to utter a false, a vain, a rash, or a useless word.
Copres, Helles, and Elias also flourished at this period. It is said that
Copres had received from God the power of healing sickness and divers diseases,
and of overcoming demons. Helles had from his youth upwards been trained in
the monastic life, and he wrought many wonderful works. He could carry fire in
his bosom without burning his clothes. He excited his fellow-monks to the
practice of virtue by representing that with a good conduct, the display of miracles
would follow. Elias, who practiced philosophy near the city of Antinouos, was at
this period about a hundred and ten years of age; before this he said he had
passed seventy years alone in the desert. Notwithstanding his advanced age, he
was unremitting in the practice of fasting and courageous discipline. Apelles
flourished at the same period, and performed numerous miracles in the Egyptian
monasteries, near the city of Acoris. He at one time worked as a smith, for this
was his trade; and one night the devil undertook to tempt him to incontinence,
by appearing before him in the form of a beautiful woman; Apelles, however,
seized the iron which was heating in the furnace, and burnt the face of the devil,
who screamed like a wild bird and ran away.
Isidore, Scrapion, and Dioscorus, at this period, were among the most
celebrated fathers of the monks. Isidore caused his monastery to be closed, so that
no one could obtain egress or ingress, and supplied the wants of those within
the walls. Serapion lived in the neighborhood of Arsenoites, and had about a
thousand monks under his guidance. He taught all to earn their provisions by
their labors and to provide for others who were poor. During harvest-time they
busied themselves in reaping for pay; they set aside sufficient corn for their own
use, and shared it with the rest of the monks. Dios-corus had not more than a
hundred disciples; he was a presbyter, and applied himself with great exactness
to the duties of his priesthood; he examined and carefully questioned those who
presented themselves as candidates for participation in the holy mysteries, so
that they might purify their minds and not be without a consciousness of any
evil they might have committed. The presbyter Eulogius was still more scrupulous
in the dispensation of the Divine mysteries. It is said that, when he was
officiating in the priestly office, he could discern what was in the minds of those
who came to him, so that he could clearly detect sin, and the secret thoughts
of each one of his audience. He excluded from the altar all who had perpetrated
crime or formed evil resolutions, and publicly convicted them of sin; but, on
their purifying themselves by repentance, he again received them into communion.
CHAP. XXIX.--CONCERNING THE MONKS OF THE-BAIS APOLLOS, DOROTHEUS; CONCERNING
PIAM-MON, JOHN, MARK, MACARIUS, APOLLODORUS, MOSES, PAUL, WHO WAS IN FERMA,
PACHO, STEPHEN, AND PIOR.
APOLLOS flourished about the same period in Thebais. He early devoted
himself to a life of philosophy; and after having passed forty years in the desert,
he shut himself up, by the command of God, in a cave formed at the foot of a
mountain, near a very populous district. By the multitude of his miracles, he
soon became distinguished, and was the head of many monks for he directed them
profitably by his instructions. Timothy, who conducted the church of Alexandria,
has given us a history of his method of discipline and of what divine and
marvelous deeds he was a worker; he also narrates the lives of other approved monks,
many of whom I have mentioned. (1)
In that time many good monks, to the number of about two thousand,
preached philosophy in the neighborhood of Alexandria; some in a district called the
Hermitage, and others more towards Mareotis and Libya. Dorotheus, a native of
Thebes, was among the most celebrated of these monks. He spent the day in
collecting stones upon the seashore, which he used in erecting cells to be given to
those who were unable to build them. During the night, he employed himself in
weaving baskets of palm leaves; and these he sold, to obtain the means of
subsistence. He ate six ounces of bread with a few vegetables daily, and drank nothing
but water. Having accustomed himself to this extreme abstinence from his youth,
he continued to observe it in old age. He was never seen to recline on a mat
or a bed, nor even to place his limbs in an easy attitude, or willingly to
surrender himself to sleep. Sometimes, from natural lassitude, his eyes would
involuntarily close when he was at his daily labor or his meals; and when nodding
during his eating, the food would fall from his mouth. One day, being utterly
overcome by drowsiness, he fell down on the mat; he was displeased at finding
himself in this position, and said, in an undertone of voice, "If angels are
persuaded to sleep, you will persuade also the zealous." Perhaps he might have said
this to himself, or perhaps to the demon who had become an impediment to his
zealous exercises. He was once asked by a person who came to him while he was
exhausting himself, why he destroyed his body. "Because it destroys me," was his
reply.
Piammon and John presided over two celebrated Egyptian monasteries near
Diolcus. They were presbyters who discharged their priesthood very carefully and
reverently. It is said that one day, when Piammon was officiating as priest, he
beheld an angel standing near the holy table and writing down in a book the
names of the monks who were present, while he erased the names of those who were
absent. John had received from God such power over sufferings and diseases,
that he healed the gouty and restored the paralytic.
A very old man, named Benjamin, was practicing philosophy very brilliantly
about this period, in the desert near Scetis. God had bestowed upon him the
power of relieving the sick of every disease without medicine, by the touch only
of his hand, or by means of a little oil consecrated by prayer. The story is,
that he was attacked by a dropsy, and his body was swollen to such a size that
it became necessary, in order to carry him from his cell, to enlarge the door.
As his malady would not admit of his lying in a recumbent posture, he remained,
during eight months, seated on a very large skin, and continued to heal the
sick, without regretting that his own recovery was not effected. He comforted
those who came to visit him, and requested them to pray for his soul; adding that
he cared little for his body, for it had been of no service to him when in
health, and could not, now that it was diseased, be of any injury to him.
About the same time the celebrated Mark, Marcarius the younger,
Apollonius, and Moses, an Egyptian, dwelt at Scetis. It is said that Mark was, from his
youth upwards, distinguished by extreme mildness and prudence; he committed the
Sacred Scriptures to memory, and manifested such eminent piety that Macarius
himself, the presbyter of Celliae, (2) declared that he had never given to him
what priests present to the initiated at the holy table, but that an angel
administered it to him whose hand up to the forearm he declares himself to have seen.
Macarius had received from God the power of dispelling demons. A murder
which be had unintentionally committed was the original cause of his embracing a
life of philosophy. He was a shepherd, and led his flock to graze on the banks
of Lake Mareotis, when in sport he slew one of his companions. Fearful of being
delivered up to justice, he fled to the desert. Here he concealed himself
during three years, and afterwards erected a small dwelling on the spot, in which
he dwelt twenty-five years. He was accustomed to say that he owed much to the
calamity that had befallen him in early life, and even called the unintentional
murder he had committed a salutary deed, inasmuch as it had been the cause of
his embracing philosophy and a blessed mode of life.
Apollonius, after passing his life in the pursuits of commerce, retired in
his old age to. Scetis. On reflecting that he was too old to learn writing or
any other art, he purchased with his own money a supply of every kind of drug,
and of food suited for the sick, some of which he carried until the ninth hour
to the door of every monastery, for the relief of those who were suffering from
disease. Finding this practice advantageous to himself, he adopted this mode
of life; and when he felt death approaching he delivered his drugs to one whom
he exhorted to go and do as he had done.
Moses was originally a slave, but was driven from his master's house on
account of his immorality. He joined some robbers, and became leader of the band.
After having perpetrated many evil deeds and dared some murders, by some
sudden conversion he embraced the monastic life, and attained the highest point of
philosophy. As the healthful and vigorous habit of body which had been induced
by his former avocations acted as a stimulus to his imagination and excited a
desire for pleasure, he resorted to every possible means of macerating his body;
thus, he subsisted on a little bread without cooked food, subjected himself to
severe labor, and prayed fifty times daily; he prayed standing, without bending
his knees or closing his eyes in sleep. He sometimes went during the night to
the cells of the monks and secretly filled their pitchers with water, and this
was very laborious, for he had sometimes to go ten, sometimes twenty, and
sometimes thirty and more, stadia in quest of water. Notwithstanding all his
efforts to macerate his body, it was long before he could subdue his natural vigor of
constitution. It is reported that robbers once broke into the dwelling where
he was practicing philosophy; he seized and bound them, threw the four men
across his shoulders, and bore them to the church, that the monks who were there
assembled might deal with them as they thought fit, for he did not consider
himself authorized to punish any one. For they say so sudden a conversion from vice
to virtue was never before witnessed, nor such rapid attainments in monastical
philosophy. Hence God rendered him an object of dread to the demons, and he was
ordained presbyter over the monks at Scetis. After a life spent in this manner,
he died at the age of seventy-five, leaving behind him numerous eminent
disciples.
Paul, Pachon, Stephen, and Moses, of whom the two latter were Libyans, and
Pior, who was an Egyptian, flourished during this reign. Paul dwelt at Ferme,
a mountain of Scetis, and presided over five hundred ascetics. He did not labor
with his hands, neither did he receive alms of any one, except such food as
was necessary for his subsistence. He did nothing but pray, and daily offered up
to God three hundred prayers. He placed three hundred pebbles in his bosom,
for fear of omitting any of these prayers; and, at the conclusion of each, he
took away one of the pebbles. When there were no pebbles remaining, he knew that
he had gone through the whole course of his prescribed prayers.
Pachon also flourished during this period at Scetis. He followed this
career from youth to extreme old age, without ever being found unmanly in
self-control by the appetites of the body, the passions of the soul, or a demon,-in
short, in all those things which the philosopher should conquer.
Stephen dwelt at Mareotis near Marmarica. During sixty years, through
exactness, he attained the perfection of asceticism, became very noted as a monk,
and was intimate with Antony the Great. He was very mild and prudent, and his
usual style of conversation was sweet and profitable, and well calculated to
comfort the souls of the afflicted, to transform them into good spirits, if even
they had previously been depressed by griefs which seemed necessary. He behaved
similarly about his own afflictions. He was troubled with a severe and incurable
ulcer, and surgeons were employed to operate upon the diseased members. During
the operation Stephen employed himself in weaving palm leaves, and exhorted
those who were around him not to concern themselves about his sufferings. He told
them to have no other thought than that God does nothing but for our good, and
that his affliction would tend to his real welfare, inasmuch as it would
perhaps atone for his sins, it being better to be judged in this life than in the
life to come.
Moses was celebrated for his meekness, his love, and his power of healing
of sufferings by prayer. Pior determined, from his youth, to devote himself to
a life of philosophy; and, with this view, quitted his father's house after
having made a vow that he would never again look upon any of his relations. After
fifty years had expired, one of his sisters heard that he was still alive, and
she was so transported with joy at this unexpected intelligence, that she could
not rest till she had seen him. The bishop of the place where she resided was
so affected by the groans and tears of the aged woman, that he wrote to the
leaders of the monks in the desert of Scetis, desiring them to send Pior to him.
The superiors accordingly directed him to repair to the city of his birth, and
he could not say nay, for disobedience was regarded as unlawful by the monks of
Egypt, and I think also by other monks. He went with another monk to the door
of his father's house, and caused himself to be announced. When he heard the
door being opened, he closed his eyes, and calling his sister by name, he said to
her, "I am Pior, your brother; look at me as much as you please."
His sister was delighted beyond measure at again beholding him, and
returned thanks to God. He prayed at the door where he stood, and then returned to
the place where he lived; there he dug a well, and found that the water was
bitter, but he persevered in the use of it till his death. Then the height to which
he had carried his self-denial was known; for after he died, several attempted
to practice philosophy in the place where he had dwelt, but found it impossible
to remain there. I am convinced that, had it not been for the principles of
philosophy which he had espoused, he could easily have changed the water to a
sweet taste by prayer; for he caused water to flow in a spot where none had
existed previously. It is said that some monks, under the guidance of Moses undertook
to dig a well, but the expected vein did not appear, nor did any depth yield
the water, and they were about to abandon the task, when, about midday, Pior
joined them; he first embraced them, and then rebuked their want of faith and
littleness of soul; he then descended into the pit they had excavated; and, after
engaging in prayer, struck the ground thrice with a rod. A spring of water soon
after rose to the surface, and filled the whole excavation. After prayer, Pior
departed; and though the monks urged him to break his fast with them, he
refused, alleging that he had not been sent to them for that purpose, but merely in
order to perform the act he had effected. (1)
CHAP. XXX. -- MONKS OF SCETIS: ORIGEN, DIDYMUS, CRONION, ORSISIUS, PUTUBATUS,
ARSION, SERA-PION, AMMON, EUSEBIUS, AND DIOSCORUS, THE BRETHREN-WHO ARE CALLED
LONG, AND EVAGRIUS THE PHILOSOPHER.
AT this period, Origen, one of the disciples of Antony the Great, was
still living at a great age, in the monasteries of Scetis. (2) Also, Didymus, and
Cronion, who was about one hundred and ten years of age, Arsisius the Great,
Putubatus, Arsion, and Serapion, all of whom had been contemporary with Antony the
Great. They had grown old in the exercise of philosophy, and were at this
period presiding over the monasteries. There were some holy men among them who were
young and middle aged, but who were celebrated for their excellent and good
qualities. Among these were Ammonius, Eusebias, and Dioscorus. They were
brothers, but on account of their height of stature were called the "Long Brothers."
(3) It is said that Ammon attained the summit of philosophy, and consequently
overcame the love of ease and pleasure. He was very studious, and had read the
works of Origen, of Didymus, and of other ecclesiastical writers. From his youth
to the day of his death he never tasted anything, with the exception of bread,
that had been prepared by means of fire. He was once chosen to be ordained
bishop; and after urging every argument that could be devised in rejection of the
honor, but in vain, he cut off one of his ears, and said to those who had come
for him, "Go away. Hence-forward the priestly law forbids my ordination, for
the person of a priest should be perfect." Those who had been sent for him
accordingly departed; but, on ascertaining that the Church does not observe the
Jewish law in requiring a priest to be perfect in all his members, but merely
requires him to be irreprehensible in point of morals, they returned to Ammon, and
endeavored to take him by force. He protested to them that, if they attempted any
violence against him, he would cut out his tongue; and, terrified at this
menace, they immediately took their departure. Ammon was ever after surnamed
Parotes. Some time afterwards, during the ensuing reign, the wise Evagrius formed an
intimacy with him. Evagrius (4) was a wise man, powerful in thought and in
word, and skillful in discerning the arguments which led to virtue and to vice, and
capable in urging others to imitate the one, and to eschew the other. His
eloquence is fully attested by the works he has left behind him. (5) With respect
to his moral character, it is said that he was totally free from all pride or
superciliousness, so that he was not elated when just commendations were awarded
him, nor displeased when unjust reproaches were brought against him. He was a
citizen of Iberia, near the Euxine. He had philosophized and studied the Sacred
Scriptures under Gregory, bishop of Nazianzen, and had filled the office of
archdeacon when Gregory administered the church in Constantinople. He was handsome
m person, and careful in his mode of attire; and hence an acquaintanceship he
had formed with a certain lady excited the jealousy of her husband, who plotted
his death. While the plot was about being carried forward into deed, God sent
him while sleeping, a fearful and saving vision in a dream. It appeared to him
that he had been arrested in the act of committing some crime, and that he was
bound hand and foot in irons. As he was being led before the magistrates to
receive the sentence of condemnation, a man who held in his hand the book of the
Holy Gospels addressed him, and promised to deliver him from his bonds, and
confirmed this with an oath, provided he would quit the city. Evagrius touched the
book, and made oath that he would do so. Immediately his chains appeared to
fall off, and he awoke. He was convinced by this divine dream, and fled the
danger. He resolved upon devoting himself to a life of asceticism, and proceeded from
Constantinople to Jerusalem. Some time after he went to visit the philosophers
of Scetis, and gladly determined to live there.
CHAP. XXXI.--CONCERNING THE MONKS OF NITRIA, AND THE MONASTERIES CALLED CELLS;
ABOUT THE ONE IN RHINOCORURA; ABOUT MELAS, DIONYSIUS, AND SOLON.
THEY call this place Nitria. It is inhabited by a great number of persons
devoted to a life of philosophy, and derives its name from its vicinity to a
village in which nitre is gathered. It contains about fifty monasteries, built
tolerably near to each other, some of which are inhabited by monks who live
together in society, and others by monks who have adopted a solitary mode of
existence. More in the interior of the desert, about seventy stadia from this
locality, is another place called Cellia, (1) throughout which numerous little
dwellings are dispersed hither and thither, and hence its name; but at such a distance
that those who dwell in them can neither see nor hear each other. They assemble
together on the first and last days of each week; and if any monk happen to be
absent, it is evident that he has been left behind involuntarily, having been
hindered by suffering some disease; they do not all go immediately to see and
nurse him, but each one in turn at different times, and bearing whatever each
has suitable for disease. Except for such a cause, they seldom converse together,
unless, indeed, there be one among them capable of communicating further
knowledge concerning God and the salvation of the soul. Those who dwell in the cells
are those who have attained the summit of philosophy, and who are therefore
able to regulate their own conduct, to live alone, and are separated from the
others for the sake of quietude. This is what I had briefly to state concerning
Scetis and its philosophers. Some one would probably censure my writing as
prolix, were I to enter into further details concerning their mode of life; for they
have · established individual courses of life, labors, customs, exercises,
abstinence, and time, divided naturally according to the age of the individual.
Rhinocorura was also celebrated at this period, an account of the holy
men, not from abroad, but who were natives of the place. I have heard (2) that the
most eminent philosophers among them were Melas, who then administered the
church of the country; Dionysius, who presided over a monastery situated to the
north of the city; and Solon, the brother and successor to the bishopric of
Melas. It is said that when the decree for the ejection of all priests opposed to
Arianism was issued, the officers appointed to apprehend Melas found him engaged
as the lowest servant, in trimming the lights of the church, with a girdle
soiled with oil on his cloak, and carrying the wicks. When they asked him for the
bishop, he replied that he was within, and that he would conduct them to him. As
they were fatigued with their journey, he led them to the episcopal dwelling,
made them sit down at table, and gave them to eat of such things as he had.
After the repast, he supplied them with water to wash their hands; for he served
the guests, and then told them who he was. Amazed at his conduct, they confessed
the mission on which they had arrived; but from respect to him, gave him full
liberty to go where-ever he would. He, however, replied that he would not
shrink from the sufferings to which the other bishops who maintained the same
sentiments as himself were exposed, and that he was willing to go into exile. Having
philosophized from his youth, he had exercised himself in all the monastic
virtues.
Solon quitted the pursuits of commerce to embrace a monastic life, a
measure which tended greatly to his welfare; for under the instruction of his
brother and other ascetics, he progressed rapidly in piety towards God, and in
goodness towards his neighbor. The church of Rhinocorura having been thus, from the
beginning, under the guidance of such exemplary bishops, never afterwards
swerved from their precepts, and produced good men. The clergy of this church dwell
in one house, sit at the same table, and have everything in common.
CHAP. XXXII. -- MONKS OF PALESTINE: HESYCAS, EPIPHANIUS, WHO WAS AFTERWARDS IN
CYPRUS, AMMONIUS, AND SILVANUS.
MANY monastical institutions flourished in Palestine, (3) Many of those
whom I enumerated under the reign of Constantius were still cultivating the
science. They and their associates attained the summit of philosophical perfection,
and added still greater reputation to their monasteries; and among them
Hesycas, (4) a companion of Hilarion, and Epiphanius, afterwards bishop of Salamis in
Cyprus, deserve to be particularly noticed. Hesycas devoted himself to a life
of philosophy in the same locality where his master had formerly resided; and
Epiphanius (1) fixed his abode near the village of Besauduc, which was his
birthplace, in the government of Eleutheropolis. Having been instructed from his
youth by the most celebrated ascetics, and having on this account passed the most
of his time in Egypt, Epiphanius became most celebrated in Egypt and Palestine
by his attainments in monastic philosophy, and was chosen by the inhabitants of
Cyprus to act as bishop of the metropolis of their island. Hence he is, I
think, the most revered man under the whole heaven, so to speak; for he fulfilled
his priesthood in the concourse of a large city and in a seaport; and when he
threw himself into civil affairs, he conducted them with so much virtue that he
became known in a little while to all citizens and every variety of foreigner; to
some, because they had seen the man himself, and had experience of his manner
of living; and to others, who had learned it from these spectators. Before he
went to Cyprus, he resided for some time, during the present reign, in Palestine.
At the same period in the monasteries, Salamines, Phuscon, Malachion, and
Crispion, four brethren, were highly distinguished: they practiced philosophy
near Bethelia, a village of Gaza; they were of a resident noble family, and had
been instructed in philosophy by Hilarion. It is related that the brothers were
once journeying homewards, when Malachion was suddenly snatched away and
became invisible; soon afterwards, however, he reappeared and continued the journey
with his brothers. He did not long survive this occurrence, but died in the
flower of his youth. He was not behind men of advanced age in the philosophy of
virtuous life and of piety.
Ammonius lived at a distance of ten stadia from those last mentioned; he
dwelt near Capharcobra, the place of his birth, a town of Gaza. He was very
exact and courageous in carrying through asceticism. I think that Silvanus, a
native of Palestine, to whom, on account of his high virtue, an angel was once seen
to minister, practiced philosophy about the same time in Egypt. Then he lived
at Mount Sinai, and afterwards founded at Gerari, in the wady, a very extensive
and most noted coenobium for many good men, over which the excellent Zacharias
subsequently presided.
CHAP. XXXIII. -- MONKS OF SYRIA AND PERSIA: BATTHEUS, EUSEBIUS, BARGES, HALAS,
ABBO, LAZARUS, ABDALEUS, ZENO, HELIODORUS, EUSEBIUS OF CARRAE, PROTOGENES, AND
AONES.
LET US pass thence to Syria and Persia, (2) the parts adjacent to Syria.
We shall find that the monks of these countries emulated those of Egypt in the
practice of philosophy. Battheus, Eusebius, Barges, Halas, Abbos, Lazarus, who
attained the episcopal dignity, Abdaleus, Zeno, and Heliodorus, flourished in
Nisibis, near the mountain called Sigoron. When they first entered upon the
philosophic career, they were denominated shepherds, because they had no houses, ate
neither bread nor meat, and drank no wine; but dwelt constantly on the
mountains, and passed their time in praising God by prayers and hymns, according to
the law of the Church. At the usual hours of meals, they each took a sickle, and
went to the mountain to cut some grass on the mountains, as though they were
flocks in pasture; and this served for their-repast. Such was their course of
philosophy. Eusebius voluntarily shut himself up in a cell to philosophize, near
Carrae. (3) Protogenes dwelt in the same locality, and ruled the church there
after Vitus who was then bishop. This is the celebrated Vitus of whom they say
that when the Emperor Constantine first saw him, he confessed that God had
frequently shown this man in appearances to him and enjoined him to obey implicitly
what he should say. Aones had a monastery in Phadana; this was the spot where
Jacob, the grandson of Abraham, on his journey from Palestine, met the damsel
whom he afterwards married, and where he rolled away the stone, that her flock
might drink of the water of the well. It is said that Aones was the first who
introduced the life apart from all men, and the severe philosophy into Syria, just
as it was first introduced by Antony into Egypt.
CHAP. XXXIV. -- MONKS OF EDESSA: JULIANUS, EPHRAIM SYRUS, BARUS, AND EULOGIUS;
FURTHER, THE MONKS OF COELE-SYRIA: VALENTINUS, THEODORE, MEROSAS, BASSUS,
BASSONIUS; AND THE HOLY MEN OF GALATIA AND CAPPADOCIA, AND ELSEWHERE; WHY THOSE
SAINTS UNTIL RECENTLY WERE LONG-LIVED.
GADDANAS and Azizus dwelt with Aones, and emulated his virtues. (4)
Ephraim the Syrian, who was an historian, and has been noticed (5) in our own recital
of events under the reign of Constantius, was the most renowned philosopher in
this time, together with Julian, in the neighborhood of Edessa and its
adjacent regions. Barses (6) and Eulogius were both, at a later period than that to
which we are referring, ordained bishops, but not of any city; for the title was
merely an honorary one, conferred on them as a compensation for their excellent
conduct; and they were ordained in their own monasteries. Lazarus, to whom we
have already alluded, was ordained bishop in the same manner. Such were the
most celebrated philosophers of asceticism who flourished in Syria, Persia, and
the neighboring countries, so far, at least, as I have been able to ascertain.
The course common to all, so to speak, consisted in diligent attention to the
state of the soul, which by means of fasting, prayer, and hymns to God, they kept
in constant preparation to quit the things of this world. They devoted the
greater part of their time to these holy exercises, and they wholly despised
worldly possessions, temporal affairs, and the ease and adornment of the body. Some
of the monks carried their self-denial to an extraordinary height. Battheus, for
instance, by excessive abstinence and fasting, had worms crawl from his teeth;
Halas, again, had not tasted bread for eighty years; and Heliodorus passed
many nights without yielding to sleep, and added thereto seven days of fasting.
Although Coele-Syria and Upper Syria, with the exception of the city of
Antioch, was slowly converted to Christianity, it was not lacking in
ecclesiastical philosophers, whose conduct appeared the more heroic from their having to
encounter the enmity and hatred of the inhabitants of the place. And they nobly
refrained from resistance, or resorting to the law, but spiritedly endured the
insults and blows inflicted by the pagans. Such, I found, was the course pursued
by Valentian, who, according to some accounts, was born at Emesa, but
according to others, at Arethusa. Another individual of the same name distinguished
himself by similar conduct, as likewise Theodore. Both were from Titti, which is
of the home of the Apameans; not less distinguished were Marosas, a native of
Nechilis, Bassus, Bassones, and Paul. This latter was from the village of
Telmison. He rounded many communities in many places, and introduced the method
essential to the knowledge of philosophy, and finally established the greatest and
most distinguished community of monks in a place called Jugatum. Here, after a
long and honorable life, he died, and was interred. Some of the monks who have
practiced philosophy in a distinguished and divine way have survived to our own
days; indeed, most of those to whom allusion has been made enjoyed a very long
term of existence; and I am convinced that God added to the length of their days
for the express purpose of further-ins the interests of religion. They were
instrumental in leading nearly the whole Syrian nation, and most of the Persians
and Saracens, to the proper religion, and caused them to cease from paganism.
After beginning the monastic philosophy there, they brought forward many like
themselves.
I suppose that Galatia, Cappadocia, and the neighboring provinces
contained many other ecclesiastical philosophers at that time, for these regions
formerly had zealously embraced our doctrine. These monks, for the most part, dwelt
in communities in cities and villages, for they did not habituate themselves to
the tradition of their predecessors. The severity of the winter, which is
always a natural feature of that country, would probably make a hermit life
impracticable. Leontius and Prapidius were, I understand, the most celebrated of these
monks. The former afterwards administered the church of Ancyra, and the latter,
a man of very advanced age, performed the episcopal functions in several
villages. He also presided over the Basileias, the most celebrated hospice for the
poor. It was established by Basil, bishop of Caesarea, from whom it received its
name in the beginning, and retains it until to-day.
CHAP. XXXV. -- THE WOODEN TRIPOD AND THE SUCCESSION OF THE EMPEROR, THROUGH A
KNOWLEDGE OF ITS LETTERS. DESTRUCTION OF THE PHILOSOPHERS; ASTRONOMY.
SUCH is the information which I have been enabled to collect concerning
the ecclesiastical philosophers of that time. As to the pagans, they were nearly
all exterminated about the period to which we have been referring. (1) Some
among them, who were reputed to excel in philosophy, and who viewed with extreme
displeasure the progress of the Christian religion, were devising who would be
the successor of Valens on the throne of the Roman Empire, and resorted to every
variety of mantic art for the purpose of attaining this insight into futurity.
After various incantations, they constructed a tripod of laurel wood, and they
wound up with the invocations and words to which they are accustomed; so that
the name of the emperor might be shown by the collection of letters which were
indicated, letter by letter, through the machinery of the tripod and the
prophecy. They were gaping with open mouth for Theodore, a man who held a
distinguished military appointment in the palace. He was a pagan and a learned man. The
disposition of the letters, coming as far as the delta of his name, deceived the
philosophers. They hence expected that Theodore would very soon be the emperor.
When their undertaking was informed upon, Valens was as unbearably incensed,
as if a conspiracy had been formed against his safety.
Therefore all were arrested; Theodore and the constructors of the tripod
were commanded to be put to death, some with fire, others with the sword.
Likewise for the same reason the most brilliant philosophers of the empire were
slain; since the wrath of the emperor was unchecked, the death penalty advanced even
to those who were not philosophers, but who wore garments similar to theirs;
hence those who applied themselves to other pursuits would not clothe themselves
with the crocotium or tribonium, on account of the suspicion and fear of
danger, so that they might not seem to be pursuing magic and sorcery. I do not in
the least think that the emperor will be more blamed by right-thinking people for
such wrath and cruelty than the philosophers, for their rashness and their
unphilosophical undertaking. The emperor, absurdly supposing that he could put his
successor to death, spared neither those who had prophesied nor the subject of
their prophecy, as they say he did not spare those who bore the same name
Theodore, -- and some were men of distinction, --whether they were precisely the
same or similar in beginning with (?) and ending with (?). The philosophers, on
the other hand, acted as if the deposition and restoration of emperors had
depended solely on them; for if the imperial succession was to be considered
dependent on the arrangement of the stars, what was requisite but to await the
accession of the future emperor, whoever he might be? or if the succession was
regarded as dependent on the will of God, what right had man to meddle? For it is not
the function of human foreknowledge or zeal to understand God's thought; nor
if it were right, would it be well for men, even if they be the wisest of all,
to think that they can plan better than God. If it were merely from rash
curiosity to discern the things of futurity that they showed such lack of judgment as
to be ready to be caught in danger, and to despise the laws anciently
established among the Romans, and at a time when it was not dangerous to conduct pagan
worship and to sacrifice; in this they thought differently from Socrates; for
when unjustly condemned to drink poison, he refused to save himself by violating
the laws in which he had been born and educated, nor would he escape from
prison, although it was in his power to do so.
CHAP. XXXVI. -- EXPEDITION AGAINST THE SARMATIANS; DEATH OF VALENTINIAN IN
ROME; VALENTINIAN THE YOUNGER PROCLAIMED; PERSECUTION OF THE PRIESTS; ORATION OF
THE PHILOSOPHER THEMISTIUS, ON ACCOUNT OF WHICH VALENS WAS DISPOSED TO TREAT
THOSE WHO DIFFERED FROM HIM MORE HUMANELY.
SUCH subjects as the above, however, are best left to the examination and
decision of individual judgment.
The Sarmatians (1) having invaded the western parts of the empire,
Valentinian levied an army to oppose them. As soon, however, as they heard of the
number and strength of the troops raised against them, they sent an embassy to
solicit peace. When the ambassadors were ushered into the presence of Valentinian,
he asked them whether all the Sarmatians were similar to them. On their
replying that the principal men of the nation had been selected to form the embassy,
the emperor exclaimed, in great fury, "A terrible thing do our subjects endure,
and a calamity is surrounding the Roman government, if the Sarmatians, a
barbarous race, of whom these are your best men, do not love to abide by themselves,
but are emboldened to invade my government, and presume to make war at all
against the Romans." He spoke in this strain for some time in a very high pitch of
voice, and his rage was so violent and so unbounded, that at length he burst
simultaneously a blood-vessel and an artery. He lost, in consequence, a great
quantity of blood, and expired soon after in a fortress of Gaul. (2) He was about
fifty-four years of age, and had, during thirteen years, guided the reins of
government with good results and much distinction. Six days after his death his
youngest son, who bore the same name as himself, was proclaimed emperor by the
soldiers; and soon afterwards Valens and Gratian, his brother, formally assented
to this election, although they were at first irritated at the soldiers having
transferred the symbols of government to him without their previous consent.
During this period Valens had fixed his residence at Antioch in Syria, and
became more hostile to those who differed from him in opinion concerning the
divine nature, and he vexed them more severely and persecuted them. The
philosopher Themistius pronounced an oration in his presence, in which he admonished
him that he ought not to wonder at the dissension concerning ecclesiastical
doctrines, for it was more moderate and less than among the pagans, for the opinions
among them are multiform; and that, in the number of dogmas leading to
perpetual disputes, necessarily the difference about them makes more contentions and
discussions; and accordingly it might probably be pleasing to God not to be so
easily known, and to have a divergence of opinion, so that each might fear Him
the rather, since an accurate knowledge of Him is so unattainable. And in the
attempt to summarize this vastness, one would tend to conclude how great He is
and how good He is. (3)
CHAP. XXXVII. --CONCERNING THE BARBARIANS BEYOND THE DANUBE, WHO WERE DRIVEN
OUT BY THE HUNS, AND ADVANCED TO THE ROMANS, AND THEIR CONVERSION TO
CHRISTIANITY; ULPHILAS AND ATHANARICHUS; OCCURRENCES BETWEEN THEM; WHENCE THE GOTHS
RECEIVED ARIANISM.
THIS remarkable oration of Themistius disposed the emperor to be somewhat
more humane, and the punishments became in consequence less severe than before.
He would not have wholly withdrawn his wrath from the priests unless the
anxieties of public affairs had supervened, and not permitted him to pursue them
further. (1) For the Goths, who inhabited the regions beyond the Ister, and had
conquered other barbarians, having been vanquished and driven from their country
by the-Huns, had passed over into the Roman boundaries. The Huns, it is said,
were unknown to the Thracians of the Ister and the Goths before this period; for
though they were dwelling secretly near to one another, a lake of vast extent
was between them, and the inhabitants on each side of the lake respectively
imagined that their own country was situated at the extremity of the earth, and
that there was nothing beyond them but the sea and water. It so happened,
however, that an ox, tormented by insects, plunged into the lake, and was pursued by
the herdsman; who, perceiving for the first time that the opposite bank was
inhabited, made known the circumstance to his fellow-tribesmen. Some, however,
relate that a stag was fleeing, and showed some of the hunters who were of the race
of the Hurts the way which was concealed superficially by the water. On
arriving at the opposite bank, the hunters were struck with the beauty of the
country, the serenity of the air, and the adaptedness for cultivation; and they
reported what they had seen to their king. The Hurts then made an attempt to attack
the Goths with a few soldiers; but they afterwards raised a powerful army,
conquered the Goths in battle, and took possession of their whole country. The
vanquished nation, being pursued by their enemies, crossed over into the Roman
territories. They passed over the river, and dispatched an embassy to the emperor,
assuring him of their co-operation in any warfare in which he might engage,
provided that he would assign a portion of land for them to inhabit. Ulphilas, the
bishop of the nation, was the chief of the embassy. The object of his embassy
was fully accomplished, and the Goths were permitted to take up their abode in
Thrace. Soon after contentions broke out among them, which led to their division
into two parts, one of which was headed by Athanaric, and the other by
Phritigernes. They took up arms against each other, and Phritigernes was vanquished,
and implored the assistance of the Romans. The emperor having commanded the
troops in Thrace to assist and to ally with him, a second battle was fought, and
Athanaric and his party were put to flight. In acknowledgment of the timely
succor afforded by Valens, and in proof of his fidelity to the Romans, Phritigernes
embraced the religion of the emperor, and persuaded the barbarians over whom he
ruled to follow his example. It does not, however, appear to me that this is
the only reason that can be advanced to account for the Goths having retained,
even to the present day, the tenets of Arianism. For Ulphilas, their bishop,
originally held no opinions at variance with those of the Catholic Church; for
during the reign of Constantius, though he took part, as I am convinced, from
thoughtlessness, at the council of Constantinople, in conjunction with Eudoxius and
Acacius, yet he did not swerve from the doctrines of the Nicaean council. He
afterwards, it appears, returned to Constantinople, and, it is said, entered
into disputations on doctrinal topics with the chiefs of the Arian faction; and
they promised to lay his requests before the emperor, and forward the object of
his embassy, if he would conform to their opinions. Compelled by the urgency of
the occasion, or, possibly, thinking that it was better to hold such views
concerning the Divine nature, Ulphilas entered into communion with the Arians, and
separated himself and his whole nation from all connection with the Catholic
Church. For as he had instructed the Goths in the elements of religion, and
through him they shared in a gentler mode of life, they placed the most implicit
confidence in his directions, and were firmly convinced that he could neither do
nor say anything that was evil. He had, in fact, given many signal proofs of the
greatness of his virtue. He had exposed himself to innumerable perils in
defense of the faith, during the period that the aforesaid barbarians were given to
pagan worship. He taught them the use of letters, and translated the Sacred
Scriptures into their own language. It was on this account, that the barbarians on
the banks of the Ister followed the tenets of Arius. At the same period, there
were many of the subjects of Phritigernes who testified to Christ, and were
martyred. Athanaric resented that his subjects had become Christian under the
persuasion of Ulphilas; and because they had abandoned the cult of their fathers,
he subjected many individuals to many punishments; some he put to death after
they had been dragged before tribunals and had nobly confessed the doctrine, and
others were slain without being permitted to utter a single word in their own
defense. It is said that the officers appointed by Athanaric to execute his
crul mandates, caused a statute to be constructed, which they placed chariot, and
had it conveyed to the tents of those who were suspected of having embraced
Christianity, and who were therefore commanded to worship the statue and offer
sacrifice; if they refused to do so, the men and the tents were burnt together.
But I have heard that an outrage of still greater atrocity was perpetrated at
this period. Many refused to obey those who were compelling them by force to
sacrifice. Among them were men and women; of the latter some were leading their
little children, others were nourishing their new-born infants at the breast; they
fled to their church, which was a tent. The pagans set fire to it, and all were
destroyed.
The Goths were not long in making peace among themselves; and in
unreasonable excitement, they then began to ravage Thrace and to pillage the cities and
villages. Valens, on inquiry, learned by experiment how great a mistake he had
made; for he had calculated that the Goths would always be useful to the empire
and formidable to its enemies, and had therefore neglected the reinforcement
of the Roman ranks. He had taken gold from the cities and villages under the
Romans, instead of the usual complement of men for the military service. On his
expectation being thus frustrated, he quilted Antioch and hastened to
Constantinople. Hence the persecution which he had been carrying on against Christians
differing in opinion from himself, had a truce. Euzoius, president of the Arians,
died, and Dorotheus was proposed for his government.
CHAP. XXXVIII. --CONCERNING MANIA, THE PHYLARCH OF THE SARACENS. WHEN THE
TREATY WITH THE ROMANS WAS DISSOLVED, MOSES, THEIR BISHOP, WHO HAD BEEN ORDAINED BY
THE CHRISTIANS, RENEWED IT. NARRATIVE CONCERNING THE ISHMAELITES AND THE
SARACENS, AND THEIR GOODS; AND HOW THEY BEGAN TO BE CHRISTIANIZED THROUGH ZOCOMUS,
THEIR PHYLARCH.
ABOUT this period the king of the Saracens died, (1) and the peace which
had previously existed between that nation and the Romans was dissolved. Mania,
(2) the widow of the late monarch, after attaining to the government of her
race, led her troops into Phoenicia and Palestine, as far as the regions of Egypt
lying to the left of those who sail towards the source of the Nile, and which
are generally denominated Arabia. This war was by no means a contemptible one,
although conducted by a woman. The Romans, it is said, considered it so arduous
and so perilous, that the general of the Phoenician troops applied for
assistance to the general of the entire cavalry and infantry of the East. This latter
ridiculed the summons, and undertook to give battle alone. He accordingly
attacked Mania, who commanded her own troops in person; and he was rescued with
difficulty by the general of the troops of Palestine and Phoenicia. Perceiving the
extremity of the danger, this general deemed it unnecessary to obey the orders
he had received to keep aloof from the combat; he therefore rushed upon the
barbarians, and furnished his superior an opportunity for safe retreat, while he
himself yielded ground and shot at those who fled, and beat off with his arrows
the enemies who were pressing upon him. This occurrence is still held in
remembrance among the people of the country, and is celebrated in songs by the
Saracens.
As the war was still pursued with vigor, the Romans found it necessary to
send an embassy to Mania to solicit peace. It is said that she refused to
comply with the request of the embassy, unless consent were given for the ordination
of a certain man named Moses, who practiced philosophy in a neighboring
desert, as bishop over her subjects. This Moses was a man of virtuous life, and noted
for performing the divine and miraculous signs. On these conditions being
announced to the emperor, the chiefs of the army were commanded to seize Moses, and
conduct him to Lucius. The monk exclaimed, in the presence of the rulers and
the assembled people, "I am not worthy of the honor of bearing the name and
dignity of chief priest; but if, notwithstanding my unworthiness God destines me to
this office, I take Him to witness who created the heavens and the earth, that
I will not be ordained by the imposition of the hands of Lucius, which are
defiled with the blood of holy men." Lucius immediately rejoined, "If you are
unacquainted with the nature of my creed, you do wrong in judging me before you are
in possession of all the circumstances of the case. If you have been
prejudiced by the calumnies that have been circulated against me, at least allow me to
declare to you what are my sentiments; and do you be the judge of them." "Your
creed is already well known to me," replied Moses; "and its nature is testified
by bishops, presbyters, and deacons, who are suffering grievously in exile, and
the mines. It is clear that your sentiments are opposed to the faith of
Christ, and to all orthodox doctrines concerning the Godhead." (1) Having again
protested, upon oath, that he would not receive ordination from them, he went to the
Saracens. He reconciled them to the Romans, and converted many to
Christianity, and passed his life among them as a priest, although he found few who shared
in his belief.
This is the tribe which took its origin and had its name from Ishmael, the
son of Abraham; and the ancients called them Ishmaelites after their
progenitor. As their mother Hagar was a slave, they afterwards, to conceal the
opprobrium of their origin, assumed the name of Saracens, as if they were descended from
Sara, the wife of Abraham. Such being their origin, they practice circumcision
like the Jews, refrain from the use of pork, and observe many other Jewish
rites and customs. If, indeed, they deviate in any respect from the observances of
that nation, it must be ascribed to the lapse of time, and to their
intercourse with the neighboring nations. Moses, who lived many centuries after Abraham,
only legislated for those whom he led out of Egypt. The inhabitants of the
neighboring countries, being strongly addicted to superstition, probably soon
corrupted the laws imposed upon them by their forefather Ishmael. The ancient
Hebrews had their community life under this law only, using therefore unwritten
customs, before the Mosaic legislation. These people certainly served the same gods
as the neighboring nations, honoring and naming them similarly, so that by this
likeness with their forefathers in religion, there is evidenced their
departure from the laws of their forefathers. As is usual, in the lapse of time, their
ancient customs fell into oblivion, and other practices gradually got the
precedence among them. Some of their tribe afterwards happening to come in contact
with the Jews, gathered from them the facts of their true origin, returned to
their kinsmen, and inclined to the Hebrew customs and laws. From that time on,
until now, many of them regulate their lives according to the Jewish precepts.
Some of the Saracens were converted to Christianity not long before the present
reign. They shared in the faith of Christ by intercourse with the priests and
monks who dwelt near them, and practiced philosophy in t the neighboring deserts,
and who were distinguished by the excellence of their life, and by their
miraculous works. It is said that a whole tribe, and Zocomus, their chief, were
converted to Christianity and baptized about this period, under the following
circumstances: Zocomus was childless, and went to a certain monk of great celebrity
to complain to him of this calamity; for among the Saracens, and I believe
other barbarian nations, it was accounted of great importance to have children.
The monk desired Zocomus to be of good cheer, engaged in prayer on his behalf,
and sent him away with the promise that if he would believe in Christ, he would
have a son. When this promise was confirmed by God, and when a son was born to
him, Zocomus was initiated, and all his subjects with him. From that period this
tribe was peculiarly fortunate, and became strong in point of number, and
formidable to the Persians as well as to the other Saracens. Such are the details
that I have been enabled to collect concerning the conversion of the Saracens
and their first bishop.
CHAP. XXXIX. -- PETER, HAVING RETURNED FROM ROME, REGAINS THE CHURCHES OF
EGYPT, AFTER LUCIUS HAD GIVEN WAY; EXPEDITION OF VALENS INTO THE WEST AGAINST THE
SCYTHIANS.
THOSE in every city who maintained the Nicene doctrine now began to take
courage, and more particularly the inhabitants of Alexandria in Egypt. Peter (2)
had returned thither from Rome with a letter from Damasus, confirmatory of the
tenets of Nicaea and of his own ordination; and he was installed in the
government of the churches in the place of Lucius, who sailed away to Constantinople
after his eviction. The Emperor Valens very naturally was so distracted by
other affairs, that he had no leisure to attend to these transactions. He had no
sooner arrived at Constantinople than he incurred the suspicion and hatred of the
people. The barbarians were pillaging Thrace, and were even advancing to the
very suburbs, and attempted to make an assault on the very walls, with no one to
hinder them. The city was indignant at this inertness; and the people even
charged the emperor with being a party to their attack, because he did not sally
forth, but delayed offering battle. At length, when he was present at the sports
of the Hippodrome, the people openly and loudly accused him of neglecting the
affairs of the state, and demanded arms that they might fight in their own
defense. Valens, offended at these reproaches, immediately undertook an expedition
against the barbarians; but he threatened to punish the insolence of the people
on his return, and also to take vengeance on them for having formerly
supported the tyrant Procopius.
CHAP. XL. -- SAINT ISAAC, THE MONK, PREDICTS THE DEATH OF VALENS. VALENS IN
HIS FLIGHT ENTERS A CHAFF-HOUSE,IS CONSUMED, AND SO YIELDS UP HIS LIFE.
WHEN Valens was on the point of departing from Constantinople, (1) Isaac,
a monk of great virtue, who feared no danger in the cause of God, presented
himself before him, and addressed him in the following words: "Give back, O
emperor, to the orthodox, and to those who maintain the Nicene doctrines, the
churches of which you have deprived them, and the victory will be yours." The emperor
was offended at this act of boldness, and commanded that Isaac should be
arrested and kept in chains until his return, when he meant to bring him to justice
for his temerity. Isaac, however, replied, "You will not return unless you
restore the churches." And so in fact it came to pass. For when Valens marched out
with his army, the Goths retreated while pursued. In his advances he passed by
Thrace, and came to Adrianople. When at not great distance from the barbarians,
he found them encamped in a secure position; and yet he had the rashness to
attack them before he had arranged his own legions in proper order. His cavalry
was dispersed, his infantry compelled to retreat; and, pursued by the enemy, he
dismounted from his horse, and with a few attendants entered into a small house
or tower, where he secreted himself. The barbarians were in full pursuit, and
went beyond the tower, not suspecting that he had selected it for his place of
concealment. As the last detachment of the barbarians was passing by the tower,
the attendants of the emperor let fly a volley of arrows from their covert,
which immediately led to the exclamation that Valens was concealed within the
building. Those who were a little in advance heard this exclamation, and made known
the news with a shout to those companions who were in advance of them; and
thus the news was conveyed till it reached the detachments which were foremost in
the pursuit. They returned, and encompassed the tower. They collected vast
quantities of wood from the country around, which they piled up against the tower,
and finally set fire to the mass. A wind which had happened to arise favored
the progress of the conflagration; and in a short period the tower, with all that
it contained, including the emperor and his attendants, was utterly destroyed.
Valens was fifty years of age. He had reigned thirteen years conjointly with
his brother, and three by himself.