THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF THE BLESSED THEODORETUS, BISHOP OF CYRUS
PROLEGOMENA
THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF THE BLESSED THEODORETUS, BISHOP OF CYRUS.
I. -- PARENTAGE, BIRTH, AND EDUCATION.
At Antioch at the close of the fourth century there were living a husband
and wife, opulent and happy in the enjoyment of all the good things of this
life, one thing only excepted. They were childless. Married at seventeen, the
young bride lived for several years in the enjoyment of such pleasures as wealth
and society could give. At the age of twenty-three she was attacked by a painful
disease in one of her eyes, for which neither the books of older authorities
nor later physiological discoveries could suggest a remedy. One of her domestic
servants, compassionating her distress, informed her that the wife of Pergamius,
at that time in authority in the East, had been healed of a similar ailment by
Petrus, a famous Galatian solitary who was then living in the upper story of a
tomb in the neighbourhood, to which access could only be obtained by climbing
a ladder. The afflicted lady, says the story which her son himself repeats, (1)
hastened to climb to the recluse's latticed cell, arrayed in all her customary
elaborate costume, with earrings, necklaces, and the rest of her ornaments of
gold, her silk robe blazing with embroidery, her face smeared with red and
white cosmetics, and her eyebrows and eyelids artificially darkened. "Tell me,"
said the hermit, on beholding his brilliant visitor, "tell me, my child, if some
skilful painter were to paint a portrait according to his art's strict rules and
offer it for exhibition, and then up were to come some dauber dashing off his
pictures on the spur of the moment, who should find fault with the artistic
picture, lengthen the lines of brows and lids, make the face whiter and heighten
the red of the cheeks, what would you say? Do you not think the original painter
would be hurt at this insult to his art and these needless additions of an
unskilled hand." These arguments, we learn, led eventually to the improvement of
the young Antiochene gentlewoman both in piety and good taste and her eye is
said to have been restored to health by the imposition of the sign of the cross.
Not impossibly the discontinuance of the use of cosmetics may have helped, if
not caused, the cure.
Six years longer the husband and wife lived together a more religious
life, but still unblessed with children. Among the ascetic solitaries whom the
disappointed husband begged to aid him in his prayers was one Macedonius,
distinguished, from the simplicity of his diet, as "the barley eater." In answer to his
prayers, it was believed, a son was at last granted to the pious pair. (2) The
condition of the boon being that the boy should be devoted to the divine
service, he was appropriately named at his birth "Theodoretus," or "Given by God."
(3) Of the exact date of this birth, productive of such important consequences to
the history and literature of the Church, no precise knowledge is attainable.
The less probable year is 386 as given by Garnerius, (4) the more probable and
now generally accepted year 393 follows the computation of Tillemont. (5)
While yet in his swaddling bands the little Theodoret began to receive
training appropriate to his high career, (1) and, as he himself tells us, with the
pardonable exaggeration of enthusiasm, was no sooner weaned than he began to
learn the apostolic teaching. Among his earliest impressions were the lessons
and exhortations of Peter of Galatia, to whom his mother owed so much, and of
Macedonius "the barley eaters" who had helped to save the Antiochenes in the
troubles that arose about the statues. (2) Of the latter (3) Theodoret quotes the
earnest charges to a holy life, and in his modesty expresses his sorrow that he
had not profiled better by the solitary's solemn entreaties. If however
Macedonius was indeed quite ignorant of the Scriptures, (4) it may have been well for
the boy's education to have been not wholly in his hands. It is not impossible
that he may have had a childish recollection of Chrysostom, who left Antioch in
398. To Peter he used to pay a weekly visit, and records (5) how the holy man
would take him on his knees and feed him with bread and raisins. A treasure long
preserved in the household of Theodoret's parents was half Peter's girdle,
woven of coarse linen, which the old man had one day wound round the loins of the
boy. Frequently proved an unfailing remedy in various cases of family ailment,
its very reputation led to its loss, for all the neighbours used to borrow it
to cure their own complaints, and at last an unkind or careless friend omitted
to return it. (6)
When a stripling Theodoret was blessed by the right hand of Aphraates the
monk, of whom he relates an anecdote in his Ecclesiastical History, (7) and
when his beard was just beginning to grow was also blessed by the ascetic Zeno.
(8) At this period he was already a lector (9) and was therefore probably past
the age of eighteen. By this time his general education would be regarded as more
or less complete, and to these earlier years may be traced the acquaintance
which he shows with the writings of Homer, Thucydides, Plato, Euripides, and
other Greek classics. Lighter literature, too, will not have been excluded from his
reading, if we accept the genuineness of the famous letter on the death of
Cyril, (10) and may infer that the dialogues of Lucian are more likely to have
amused the leisure hours of a lad at school and college than have intruded on the
genuine piety and marvellous industry of the Bishop of Cyrus.
Theodoret was familiar with Greek, Syriac, and Hebrew, but is said to have
been unacquainted with Latin. (11) Such I presume to be an inference froth a
passage in one of his works (12) in which he tells us "The Romans indeed had
poets, orators, and historians, and we are informed by those who are skilled in
both languages that their reasonings are closer than the Greeks' and their
sentences more concise. In saying this I have not the least intention of disparaging
the Greek language which is in a sense mine, (13) or of making an ungrateful
return to it for my education, but I speak that I may to some extent close the
lips and lower the brows of those who make too big a boasting about it, and may
teach them not to ridicule a language which is illuminated by the truth." But it
is not clear from these words that Theodoret had no acquaintance with Latin.
His admiration for orthodox Western theology as well as his natural literary and
social curiosity would lead him to learn it. In the Ecclesiastical History
(III. 16) there is a possible reference to Horace.
Theodoret's chief instructor in Theology was the great light of the school
of Antioch, Theodorus, known from the name of the see to which he was
appointed in 392, "Mopsuestia," or "the hearth of Mopsus," in Cilicia Secunda. He also
refers to his obligations to Diodorus of Tarsus. (1) Accepting 393 as the date
of his birth and 392 as that of Theodore's appointment to his see, it would
seem that the younger theologian must have been rather a reader than a hearer as
well of Theodore as of Diodore. But Theodore expounded Scripture in many
churches of the East. (2) The friendship of Theodoret for Nestorius may have begun
when the latter was a monk in the convent of St. Euprepius at the gates of
Antioch. It is recorded (3) that on one occasion Theodore gave offence while preaching
at Antioch by refusing to give to the blessed Virgin the title
<greek>qeotkos</greek>. He afterwards retracted this refusal for the sake of peace. The
original objection and subsequent consent have a curious significance in view of the
subsequent careers of his two famous pupils. Of the school of Antioch as
distinguished from that of Alexandria it may be said broadly that while the latter
shewed a tendency to syntheticism and to unity of conception, the former, under
the influence of the Aristotelian philosophy, favoured analytic processes. (4)
And while the general bent of the school of thinkers among whom Theodoret was
brought up inclined to a recognition of a distinction between the two natures in
the Person of Christ, there was much in the special teaching of its great
living authority which was not unlikely to lead to such division of the Person as
was afterwards attributed to Nestorins. (3) Such were the influences under which
Theodoret grew up.
On the death of his parents he at once distributed all the property that
he inherited from them, and embraced a life of poverty, (6) retiring, at about
the age of three and twenty, to Nicerte, a village three miles from Apamea, and
seventy-five from Antioch, in the monastery of which he passed seven calm and
happy years, occasionally visiting neighbouring monasteries and perhaps during
this period paying the visit to Jerusalem which left an indelible impression on
his memory."With my own eyes," he writes, (7) "I have seen that desolation. The
prediction rang in my ears when I saw the fulfillment before my eyes and I
lauded and worshipped the truth." Of the peace of Theodoret's earlier manhood Dr.
Newman s says in a sentence less open to criticism than another which shall be
quoted further on, "There he laid deep within him that foundation of faith and
devotion, and obtained that vivid apprehension of the world unseen and future
which lasted him as a secret spring of spiritual strength all through the
conflict and sufferings of the years that followed.''
II. -- EPISCOPATE AT CYRUS.
Cyrus or Cyrrhus was a town of the district of Syria called after it
Cyrestica. The capital of Cyrestica was Gindarus, which Strabo describes (9) as
being in his time a natural nest of robbers. Cyrus lies on a branch of the river
OEnoparas, now Aphreen, and the site is still known as Koros. A tradition has
long obtained that it received the name of Cyrus from the Jews in honour of their
great benefactor, but this is more than doubtful. The form Cyrus may have
arisen from a confusion with a Cyrus in Susiana. (10) The Cyrestica is a fertile
plain lying between the spurs of the Alma Dagh and the Euphrates, irrigated by
three streams and blessed with a rich soil. The diocese, which was subject to the
Metropolitan of Hierapolis, contained some sixteen hundred square miles n and
eight hundred distinct parishes each with its church. (12) But Cyrus itself was
a wretched little place (13) scantily inhabited. Before it was beautified by
the munificence of Theodoret it contained no buildings of any dignity or grace.
The people of the town as well as of the diocese seem to have been poor in
orthodoxy as well as in pocket, and the rich soil of the district grew a plentiful
crop of the tares of Arianism, Marcionism, Eunomianism and Judaism. (14) Such
was the diocese to which Theodoret, in spite of his honest nolo episcopari, (15)
was consecrated at about the age of thirty, A.D. 423. Of the circumstances of
this consecration we have no evidence. Garnerius conjectures that he must have
been ordained deacon by Alexander who succeeded Porphyrius at Antioch. He was
probably appointed, if not consecrated, to succeed Isidorus at Cyrus, by
Theodotus the successor of Alexander on the patriarchal throne of Antioch. In this
diocese certainly for five and twenty years, perhaps for five and thirty, with
occasional intervals he worked night and day with unflagging patience and
perseverance for the good of the people committed to his care, and in the cause of his
Master and of the truth. The ecclesiastic of these early times is sometimes
imagined to have been a morose and ungenial ascetic, wasting his energies in
unprofitable hair-splitting, and taking little or no interest in the every day needs
of his contemporaries. In marked contrast with this imaginary bishop stands out
the kindly figure of the real bishop of Cyrus, as the modest statements and
hints supplied by his own letters enable us to recall him. As an administrator
and man of business he was munificent and efficient. Stripped, as we have already
learnt, of his family property by his own act and will, he must have been
dependent in his diocese on the revenues of his see. From these, which cannot have
been small, he was able to spend large sums on public works. Cyrus was adorned
with porticoes, with two great bridges, with baths, and with an aqueduct, all
at Theodoret's expense. (1) On assuming the administration of his diocese he
took measures, he tells us, (2) to secure for Cyrus "the necessary arts," and from
these three words we need not hesitate to infer that architects, engineers,
masons, sculptors, and carpenters, would be attracted "from all quarters" to the
bishop's important works. And for this increased population it is interesting
to note that Theodoret provided competent practitioners in medicine and surgery,
in which it would seem he was not himself unskilled. (3) His keen interest in
the temporal needs of his people is shown by the efforts he made to obtain
relief for them from the cruel pressure of exorbitant taxation. (4) So unendurable
was the tale of imposts under which they groaned that in many cases they were
deserting their farms and the country, and he earnestly appeals to the empress
Pulcheria and to his friend Anatolius to help them. (5) The tender sympathy felt
by him for all those afflicted in body and estate, as well as in mind, is
shown in his letters on behalf of Celestinianus, or Celestiacus, a gentleman of
position at Carthage, who had suffered cruelly during the attack of the Vandals,
(6) and in the admirable and touching letters of consolation addressed to
survivors on the deaths of relatives. That these should have been religiously
preserved need excite no surprise. (7) Of the terms on which he lived with his
neighbours we can form some idea from the justifiable boast contained in his letter to
Nomus. In the quarter of a century of his episcopate, he writes, he never
appeared in court either as prosecutor or defendant; his clergy followed his
admirable example; he never took an obol or a garment from any one; not one of his
household ever received so much as a loaf or an egg; he could not bear to think
that he had any property beyond his few poor clothes. (8) Yet he was always
ready to give where he would not receive, and in addition to all the diocesan and
literary work which he conscientiously performed, he spent more time than he
could well afford in all sorts of extra diocesan business which his position
thrust in his way.
As a shepherd of souls he was unceasing in his efforts to win heathen,
heretics and Jews to the true faith. His diocese, when he assumed its government,
was a very hotbed of heresy. (9) Nevertheless in the famous letter to Leo (10)
he could boast that not a tare was left to spoil the crop. His fame as a
preacher was great and wide, and makes us the more regret that of the discourses
which in turn roused, cheered, and blamed, so little should survive. The eloquence,
so to say, of his extant writings, gives indications of the force of spoken
utterances not less marked by learning and literary skill. Two of his letters
give vivid pictures of the enthusiasm of oriental auditories in Antioch, once so
populous and so keen in theological interest, where now, amid a people numbering
only about a fiftieth part of their predecessors of the fifth century, there
is not a single church. We see the patriarch John in a frenzy of gladness at
Theodoret's sermons, clapping his hands and springing again and again from his
chair; (11) we see the heads of the congregation receiving the bishop of Cyrus
with frantic delight as he came down from the pulpit, flinging their arms round
him, kissing now his head, now his breast, now his hands, now his knees, and hear
them exclaiming, "This is the Voice of the Apostle!" (12) But Theodoret had to
encounter sometimes the fury of opposition. Again and again in his campaign
against heretics and unbelievers he was stoned, wounded, and brought nigh unto
death. (13) "He from whom no secrets are hid knows all the bruises my body has
received, aimed at me by ill-named heretics, and what fights I have fought in
most of the cities of the East against Jews, heretics, and heathen." (14)
III. -- RELATIONS WITH NESTORIUS AND TO NESTORIANISM.
Nestorius, patriarch of Constantinople, was bound by ties of close
friendship both to Theodoret and to John, patriarch of Antioch. In August, 430, the
western bishops, under the presidency of the Pope Celestine, assembled in council
at Rome, condemned Nestorius, and threatened him with excommunication. Shortly
afterwards a council of Orientals at Alexandria, summoned by Cyril, endorsed
this condemnation and despatched it to Constantinople. Then John received from
Celestine and Cyril letters announcing their common action. When the couriers
conveying these communications reached Antioch they found John surrounded by
Theodoret and other bishops who were assembled possibly for the ordination of
Macarius, the new bishop of Laodicea. John took counsel with his brother bishops,
and a letter was despatched in their common name to Nestorius, exhorting him to
accept the term <greek>qeotokos</greek>, round which the whole war waged;
pointing out the sense in which it could not but be accepted by every loyal
Christian, and imploring him not to embroil Christendom for a word. This letter has been
generally attributed to Theodoret. But while the conciliatory sage of Cyrus
was endeavouring to formulate an Eirenicon, the ardent Egyptian made peace almost
impossible by the publication of his famous anathematisms. John and his
friends were distressed at the apparent unorthodoxy of Cyril's condemnation of
Nestorius, and asked Theodoret to refute Cyril. (1) The strong language employed in
Letter CL. conveys an idea of the heat of the enthusiasm with which Theodoret
cutered on the task, and his profound conviction that Cyril, in blind zeal
against imaginary error on the part of Nestorius, was himself falling headlong into
the Apollinarian pit. An eager war of words now waged over Nestorius between
Cyril and Theodoret, each denouncing the other for supposed heresy on the subject
of the incarnation; and, with deep respect for the learning and motives of
Theodoret, we may probably find a solution of much that he said and did in the fact
that he misunderstood Nestorius as completely as he did Cyril. (2) Cyril,
nursed in the synthetic principles of the Alexandrian school, could see only the
unity of the two natures in the one Person. To him, to distinguish, as the
analysis of Theodoret distinguished, between God the Word and Christ the Man, was to
come perilously near a recognition of two Christs, keeping up as it were a
mutual dialogue of speech and action. But Cyril's unqualified assertion that there
is one Christ, and that Christ is God, really gave no ground for the accusation
that to him the manhood was an unreality. Yet he and Theodoret were
substantially at one. Theodoret's failure to apprehend Cyril's drift was no doubt due
less to any want of intelligence on the part of the Syrian than to the overbearing
bitterness of the fierce Egyptian.
On the other hand Theodoret's loyal love for Nestorius led him to give his
friend credit for meaning what he himself meant. While he was driven to
contemplate the doctrines of Cyril in their most dangerous exaggeration, he shrank
from seeing how the Nestorian counter statement might be dangerously exaggerated.
Theodoret, as Dr. Bright remarks, (3) "uses a good deal of language which ism
prima facie Nestorian; his objections are pervaded by an ignoratio clenchi, and
his language is repeatedly illogical and inconsistent; but he and Cyril were
essentially nearer to each other in belief than at the time they would have
admitted, for Theodoret virtually owns the personal oneness and explains the phrase
'God assumed man' by 'He assumed manhood.'" Cyril "in his letter to Euoptius
earnestly disclaims both forms of Apollinarianism -- the notion of a mindless
manhood in Christ and the notion of a body formed out of Godhead. In his reply
(on Art iv.) he admits the language appropriate to each nature."
Probably both the Egyptian and the Syrian would have found no difficulty
in subscribing the language of out own judicious divine; "a kind of mutual
commutation there is whereby those concrete names, God and Man, when we speak of
Christ, do take interchangeably one another's room, so that for truth of speech it
skilleth not whether we say that the Son of God hath created the world and the
Son of Man by his death hath saved it or else that the Son of Man did create,
and the Son of God died to save the world. Howbeit, as oft as we attribute to
God what the manhood of Christ claimeth, or to man what his Deity hath right
unto, we understand by the name of God and the name of Man neither the one nor the
other nature, but the whole person of Christ, in whom both natures are. When
the Apostle saith of the Jews that they crucified the Lord of Glory, and when
the Son of Man being on earth affirmeth that the Son of Man was in heaven at the
same instant, there is in these two speeches that mutual circulation before
mentioned. In the one there is attributed to God or the Lord of Glory death,
whereof divine nature is not capable; in the other ubiquity unto man, which human
nature admitteth not. Therefore by the Lord of Glory we must needs understand the
whole person of Christ, who being Lord of Glory, was indeed crucified, but not
in that nature for which he is termed the Lord of Glory. In like manner by the
Son of Man the whole person of Christ must necessarily be meant, who being man
upon earth, filled heaven with his glorious presence, but not according to
that nature for which the title of Man is given him. Without this caution the
Fathers whose belief was divine and their meaning most sound, shall seem in their
writing one to deny what another constantly doth affirm. Theodoret disputeth
with great earnestness that God cannot be said to suffer. But he thereby meaneth
Christ's divine nature against Apollinarius, which held even Deity. itself
passible. Cyril on the other side against Nestorius as much contendeth that
whosoever will deny very God to have suffered death doth forsake the faith. Which
notwithstanding to hold were heresy, if the name of God in this assertion did not
import as it doth the person of Christ, who being verily God suffered death, but
in the flesh, and not in that substance for which the name of God is given
him." (1)
As to the part played by Theodoret throughout the whole controversy we may
conclude that though he had to own himself beaten intellectually, yet the
honours of the moral victory remain with him rather than with his illustrious
opponent. Not for the last time in the history of the Church a great duel of
dialectic issued in a conclusion wherein of the champion who was driven to say, "I was
wrong," the congregation of the faithful has yet perforce felt that he was
right.
The end is well known. Theodosius summoned the bishops to Ephesus at the
Pentecost of 431. There arrived Cyril with fifty supporters early in June; there
arrived Theodoret with his Metropolitan Alexander of Hierapolis, in advance of
the rest of the Orientals. The Cyrillians were vainly entreated to wait for
John of Antioch and his party, and opened the Council without them. When they
arrived they would not join the Council, and set up their own "Conciliabulum"
apart. Under the hot Levantine sun of July and August the two parties denounced one
another on the one side for not accepting the condemnation of Nestorius, which
the Cyrillians had passed in the beginning of their proceedings, on the other
for the informality and injustice of the condemnation. Then deputies from the
Orientals, of whom Theodoret was one, hurried to Constantinople, but were
allowed to proceed no further than Chalcedon. The letters written by Theodoret at
this time to his friends among the bishops and at the court, and his petitions to
the Emperor, (2) leave a vivid impression of the zeal, pigour and industry of
the writer, as well as of the extraordinary literary readiness which could pour
out letter after letter, memorial after memorial, amid all the excitement of
controversy, the weariness of travel, the sojourning in strange and uncomfortable
quarters, and the tension of anxiety as to an uncertain future.
Though Nestorius was deposed his friends protested that they would
continue true to him, and Theodoret was one of the synod held at Tarsus, and of
another at Antioch, in which the protest against Cyril's action was renewed. But the
oriental bishops were now themselves undergoing a process of scission, (3) John
of Antioch and Acacius of Beroea heading the peacemakers who were anxious to
come to terms with Cyril, while Alexander of Hierapolis led the irreconcilables.
Intellectually Theodoret shrank from concession, but his moral instincts were
all in favour of peace. He himself drew up a declaration of faith which was
presented by Paul of Emesa to Cyril, which Cyril accepted. But still true to his
friend, Theodoret refused to accept the deposition of Nestorius and his
individual condemnation, and it was not till several years had elapsed that, moved less
by the threat of exile and forfeiture, as the imperial penalty for refusing to
accept the position, than by the en-treaties of his beloved flock and of his
favourite ascetic solitaries that he would not leave them, Theodoret found means
of attaching a meaning to the current anathemas on Nestorianism, not, as he
said, on Nestorius, which allowed him to submit. He even entered into friendly
correspondence with Cyril. (4) But the truce was hollow. Cyril was indignant to
find that Theodoret still maintained his old opinions. At last the protracted
quarrel was ended by Cyril s death m June, 444. On the famous letter over which
so many battles of criticism have been fought we have already spoken. If it was
really written by Theodoret, to which opinion my own view inclines, (1) there
is no reason why we should damn it as "a coarse and ferocious invective." If
genuine, it was clearly a piece of grim pleasantry dashed off in a moment of
excitement to a personal friend, and never intended for the publicity which has
drawn such severe blame upon its writer.
But though the death of Cyril might appear to bring relief to the Church
and Empire as well as to his individual opponents, it was by no means a ground
of unmixed gratification to Theodoret. (2) Dioscorus, who succeeded to the
Patriarchate of Alexandria, however Theodoret in the language of conventional
courtesy may speak of the new bishop's humble mindedness, (3) inherited none of the
good qualities of Cyril and most of his faults. Theod-oret, naturally viewed
with suspicion and dislike as the friend and supporter of Nestorius, gave
additional ground for ill-will and hostility by action which brought him into
individual conflict with Dioscorus. He accepted the synodical letters issued at
Constantinople at the time of Proclus, and so seemed to lower the dignity of the
apostolic sees of Antioch and Alexandria; (4) he also warmly resented the tyrannical
treatment of his friend Irenaeus, bishop of Tyre. (5) Irenaeus had indeed in
the earlier days of his banishment to Petra after his first condemnation in 435
attacked Theodoret for not being thoroughly Nestorian, but Theodoret was able to
claim Irenaeus as not objecting to the crucial term <greek>qeotokos</greek>,
(6) reasonably understood, and accepted him as unquestionably orthodox. When
therefore Dioscorus, the Archimandrite Eutyches, and his godson the eunuch
Chrysaphius attacked Domnus for consecrating Irenaeus to the Metropolitan see of Tyre,
Theodoret indignantly protested and counselled Domnus as to how he had best
reply. (7) But Dioscorus and his party had now the ear, and guided the fingers,
of the imperial weakling at Constantinople, and the deposition of Irenaeus (Feb.
17, 448) was followed after a year's successful intrigues by the autograph
edict of Theodosius confining Theodoret within the limits of his own diocese as a
vexatious and turbulent busybody.
IV. -- UNDER THE BAN OF THEODOSIUS AND OF THE LATROCINIUM.
Theodoret was at Antioch when Count Rufus brought him the edict. His
friends would have detained him, but he hurried away." On reaching Cyrus he wrote to
his friend Anatolius warmly protesting against the cruel and unjust action
taken against him, and informing the patrician that Euphronius, a military
officer, had travelled hard on the track of Rufus to ask for a written acknowledgment
of the receipt of the edict of relega-tion. (9) The letters written at this
crisis by the indignant pen of the maligned scholar and saint (10) have a peculiar
value, at once biographical, literary, and theological. To Euse-bius bishop of
Ancyra he sends an important catalogue of his works. To Dioscorus, the chief
of the cabal against him, he sends a summary of his views on the incarnation and
the nature of our Lord, couched in such terms as might perhaps in earlier days
have shortened his great controversy with Cyril. But the opponents of
Theodoret were not in a mood to be moved by any formulation of the terms of his faith.
Dioscorus received the letter with insult, and publicly joined in the shout of
anathema which he permitted to be raised against his hated brother. (11) The
condemnation of Eutyches by Flavian's Constan-tinopolian Synod had roused the
Eutychian party to leave no stone unturned to secure its reversal and crush it and
all who upheld it. Of the latter Theodoret was the most prominent, the ablest
and perhaps the holiest. Hence he was the natural representative and
personification of the doctrines that Dioscorus sought to decry and degrade. (12) The
sixth Council of Ephesus of evil fame met in the Church of St. Mary the Virgin on
August 8,449. Eutyches was acquitted. Flavian was condemned. Ibas of Edessa,
Domnus of Antioch, and Theodoret of Cyrus were deprived of their sees. The
disgraceful scenes of violence which marked every stage of this shameful
ecclesiastical gathering have been described again and again with the vivid detail (13)
rendered possible by the exactitude of contemporary narrative, but, inasmuch as
Theodoret was condemned in his absence we are concerned here less with the manner
in which his condemnation was brought about than with the steps he took to
protest against and to reverse it.
To the prisoner of Cyrus courier after courier would bring intelligence of
the riots and tricks of the council. At last came news of the crowning wrong.
On the indictment of an Antiochene presbyter named Pelagius, Theodoret was
condemned as an enemy of God, a disseminator of poison, a false teacher deserving
to be burnt. In support of the accusation was quoted the careful theological
statement addressed by Theodoret to the monks in the Euphratensis and the Osrhoene
which appears as Letter CLI., as well as citations from his works at large.
Dioscorus described the absent defendant as a blasphemous enemy of God and the
Emperor whose life had been spent in damning souls. The-odoret was sentenced not
merely to deposition from his see but to degradation from the priesthood and to
excommunication, and his books were ordered to be burnt. (1) So the great
council ended with the deposition of Flavian of Constantinople, Eusebius of
Dorylaeum, Daniel of Carrae, Irenaeus of Tyre, Aquilinus of Biblus, and Domnus of
Antioch as well as of Theodoret. (2) Eutyches the heretic Archimandrite was
restored and the brutal Dioscorus seemed master of Christendom. One word of manly
Latin had broken in on the supple suffrages of the servile orientals, the
"Contradicitur" of Hilarius the representative of the Church of Rome.
To that church, and to its illustrious bishop, Theodoret naturally turned
in his hour of need. He implored his friend Anatolius to get him permission to
plead his own cause in person in the West, or if not to let him retire to his
old home at Nicerte. (3) The latter alternative was conceded. In this retreat he
received many proofs of the affectionate regard of his friends and offers of
more practical help than his modest necessities demanded. (4) Thence products of
his facile pen travelled far and wide. The whole series of letters written at
this period gives touching testimony to the gentle and forgiving spirit of the
sorely tried bishop. There is nothing of the bitterness and fierce anger which
appear sometimes in the earlier controversy with Cyril. He is refined, not
soured, by adversity, and, though he never approached nearer to canonization than
the acquisition of the inferior title of Blessed, he appears in these dark days
as no unworthy specimen of the suffering saint. (5) The chief interest of these
letters is in truth moral spiritual and theological. This, however, has been
obscured by the ecclesiastical interest which has been given them by the
unwarranted attempt to represent Theodoret's letter to Leo as an "appeal" to the see
of Rome in the later and technical sense of the word. Whether St. Hilary of
Arles ever did or did not give the lie to his short life of strennous protest
against the growing aggrandizement of the see of Rome, there is no doubt that before
his death at the age of 41 in 449 his suffragans had been released by Leo from
allegiance to a Metropolitan disobedient to the Roman chair, and that
Valentinian had issued an edict confirming Leo's claims and making the authority of the
Bishop of Rome supreme in the West. (1) It would be useful to maintainers of
the Roman supremacy if they could adduce instances of any assertion or
acceptance of similar authority in the East. So it has been said that Theodoret appealed
to the Pope. (2) In a sense this is of course perfectly true. Theodoret did
appeal to the Pope. But the whole superstructure of papal supremacy, so far as
Theodoret is concerned, is really based upon a poor paronomasia. The bishop of
Cyrus "appealed" to the bishop of Rome as any bishop believing himself to lie
under an unjust sentence might appeal to any other bishop, and as Theodoret did
appeal to other bishops. It is quite true that the church of Rome had many claims
to honour and regard, as Theodoret himself felicitously and opportunely points
out, and that the present occupant of its throne was a man of unblemished
orthodoxy and of commanding personal dignity. But to recognise these facts is a
long way from admitting that this very dignified see had either de facto or de
jure any coercive jurisdiction over the Metropolitans of Alexandria or of
Hierapolis, to the latter of whom Cyrus was subordinate. Theodoret himself quotes the
crucial passage in St. Matthew's gospel (3) apparently without any idea that the
"Petra" means all the successors of the "Petrus." (4) What Theodoret asked
from Leo was not the sentence of a superior but the sympathy and support of an
influential brother. What made it so peculiarly important that he should gain the
ear and the approval of Leo was that Rome had been wholly unconcerned in the
intrigue which condemned him. He could have had no more idea of papal authority
in the later ultramontane sense than he could of the decrees of the Vatican
Council. Bound as he was to do his utmost to vindicate not so much his own position
and doctrinal soundness, as the truth now trampled on by the combined factions
of Alexandria and the court, he naturally turned to Leo as alike the most
respected and most independent bishop of his age. (5)
Leo, however, could do little or nothing to help him. Theodosius,
completely under the influence of Chrysaphius and Dioscorus, was quite satisfied as to
the proper constitution and equity of the Latrocinium.
V. -- THEODORET AND CHALCEDON.
NOW, not for the last time in history, an important part was played by a
horse. In July, 450, Theodosius, while hunting in the neighbourhood of his
capital, was thrown from the saddle into a stream, hurt his spine, and a few days
afterwards died. (6) With him died the cause of Eutyches and of Chrysaphius. The
eunuch was promptly executed, and at last a Council was conceded to reconsider
and rectify the crimes and blunders of the Latrocinium. (7) But the Empress and
her venerable husband did not wait for the Council to undo some of the wrong
done to Theodoret, and the large place he filled in the eyes and estimation of
the oriental world is shewn by the interest shewn at Constantinople in his
behalf. (8) The decree of relegation appears to have been rescinded, and he was free
to present himself at the synod. On the first assembling of the five hundred
bishops, (9) under the presidency of the imperial Commissioners, (1) the minutes
of the Latrocinium were read; the presence of Dioscorus was protested against
by the Roman representation as having dared to hold a synod unauthorized by
Rome; and the claim of Theodoret to sit and vote, allowed both by the imperial
Commissioners and by the westerns, since Leo (2) had accepted him as an orthodox
bishop, was vehemently resisted by the Eutychians. He entered, but at first did
not vote, and his enemies at last succeeded in wringing from him a personal
anathema not only of Nestorianism, but of Nestorius. The scenes reported in detail
are too characteristic alike of the earlier Councils and of Theodoret to be
omitted.
"The illustrious Presidents and the honorable Assessors ordered that the
most religious bishop Theodoret should enter, that he might be a partaker of the
Council, because the holy Archbishop Leo had restored the bishopric to him;
and the most sacred and pious Emperor determined that he was to be present at the
Holy Council. And on the entrance of the most religious Theodoret, the most
religious bishops of Egypt, Illyricum and Palestine called out: 'Have mercy upon
us! The faith is destroyed. The Canons cast him out. Cast out the teacher of
Nestorius.' The most religious bishops of the East and those of Pontus, Asia, and
Thrace shouted out: 'We had to sign a blank paper; we were scourged, and so we
signed. Cast out the Manichaeans; cast out the enemies of Flavian; cast out
the enemies of the faith.' Dioscorus, the most religious bishop of Alexandria
said: 'Why is Cyril being cast out, who is anathematized by Theodoret?' The
Eastern and Pontic and Asian and Thracian most religions bishops shouted out: 'Cast
out Dioscorus the murderer. Who does not know the deeds of Dioscorus?' The
Egyptian and the Illyrian and the Palestinian most religious bishops shouted out:
'Long years to the Empress!' The Eastern and the most religious bishops with them
shouted out: 'Cast out the murderers!' The Egyptians and the most religious
bishops with them shouted out: 'The Empress has cast out Nestorius. Long years to
the orthodox Empress! The Council will not receive Theodoret.' Theodoret, the
most religious bishop, came up into the midst and said: 'I have offered
petitions to the most godlike, most religious and Christ-loving masters of the world,
and I have related the disasters which have befallen me, and I claim that they
shall be read.' The most illustrious Presidents and the most honourable
Assessors said: 'Theodoret, the most religious bishop, having received his proper
place from the holy Archbishop of the renowned Rome, now occupies the place of an
accuser. Wherefore, that there be no confusion in our proceedings, allow the
things which have had a beginning to be finished. No prejudice will accrue to
anyone from the appearance of the most religious Theodoret. Every argument for you
and for him, if you desire to make one on one side or the other is of course
reserved.' And after Theodoret, the most religious bishop, had sat down in the
midst, the Eastern, and the most religious bishops who were with them, shouted
out: 'He is worthy! He is worthy!' The Egyptians and the most religious bishops
who were with them shouted out: 'Do not call him a bishop! He is not a bishop!
Cast out the fighter against God! Cast out the Jew!' The Easterns and the most
religious bishops who were with them shouted out: 'The ortbodox for the Council!
Cast out the rebels! Cast out the murderers!' The Egyptians and the most
religious bishops who were with them shouted out: 'Cast out the fighter against
God! Cast out the insulter of Christ! Long years to the Empress! Long years to the
Emperor! Long years to the orthodox Emperor! Theodoret has anathematized
Cyril.' The Easterns and the most religious bishops who were with them shouted out:
'Cast out the murderer Dioscorus!' The Egyptians and the most religious bishops
with them shouted out: 'Long years to the Assessors! He has not the right of
speech. He is expelled from the whole Synod!' Basil, the most religious bishop
of Trajanopolis, in the province of Rhodope, rose up and said: 'Theodoret has
been condemned by us.' The Egyptians and the most religious bishops with them
shouted out: 'Theodoret has accused Cyril: We cast out Cyril if we receive
Theodoret. The Canons cast out Theodoret. God has turned away from him.' The most
illustrious Presidents and the most honourable Assessors said: 'The vulgar cries
are not worthy of bishops, nor will they assist either side. Suffer, therefore,
the reading of alI the documents.' The Egyptians and the most religious bishops
with them shouted out: 'Cast out one man, and we will all hear. We shout out in
the cause of Religion. We say these things for the sake of the orthodox
Faith.' The most illustrious Presidents and the honourable Assessors said: 'Rather
acquiesce, in God's name, that the hearing of the documents should take place,
and concede that all shall be read in proper order.' And at last they were
silent, and Constantine, the most holy Secretary and Magistrate of the Divine Synod,
read these documents." (1)
One more sad incident must be given -- the demand made at the eighth
session that Theodoret should pronounce a curse on his ancient friend. "The most
reverend bishops all stood before the rails of the most holy altar, and shouted
"Theodoret must now anathematize Nestorius." Theodoret, the most reverend bishop,
passed into the midst, andsaid: "I have made my petition to the most divine
and religious Emperor, and I have laid documentsbefore the most reverend bishops
occupying the place of the most sacredArchbishop Leo;and if you think fit, they
shall be read to you, andyou will knowwhat I think.' The most reverend
bishops shouted 'We want nothing to be read -- onlya nathematize Nestori-us.'
Theodoret, the most reverend bishop, said: 'I was brought up by the orthodox, I was
taught by the orthodox, I have preached orthodoxy, and not only Nestorius and
Eutyches, but any man who thinks not rightly, I avoid and count him an alien.' The
most reverend bishops shouted out: 'Speak plainly; anathema to Nestorius and
his doctrine -- anathema to Nestorius and to those who defend him.' Theodoret,
the most reverend bishop said: 'Of a truth I say nothing except so far as I know
it to be pleasing to God. First I will convince you that I am here, not
because I care for my city, not because I covet rank. Because I have been falsely
accused, I come to satisfy you that I am orthodox, and that I anathematize
Nestorius and Eutyches, and every one who says that there are two Sons.' Whilst he was
speaking, the most reverend bishops shouted out: 'Speak plainly; anathematize
Nestorius and those who think with him.' Theodoret, the most reverend bishop,
said: 'Unless I set forth at length my faith I cannot speak. I believe' -- And
whilst he spoke the most reverend bishops shouted: 'He is a heretic! He is a
Nestorian! Away with the heretic! Anathema to Nestorius and to any one who does
not confess that the Holy Virgin Mary is the Parent of God, and who divides the
only begotten Son to two Sons.' Theodoret, the most reverend bishop, said,
'Anathema to Nestorius and to whoever denies that the Holy Virgin Mary is the Parent
of God, and who divides the only begotten Son into two Sons. I have subscribed
the definition of faith, and the epistle of the most holy Archbishop Leo.'" (2)
VI. --RETIREMENT AFTER CHALCEDON, AND DEATH.
Some doubt hangs over the question whether after his vindication at
Chalcedon Theodoret resumed his labours at Cyrus, or occupied himself with literary
work in the congenial seclusion of Nicerte. Garnerius makes it about the time of
his quitting Chal-cedon that Sporacius charged him with the duty of writing on
the Heresies, (3) and if so his five books on this subject would seem to have
constituted the first fruit of his comparative leisure. Sporacius (4) he styles
his "Christ-loving Son," and no doubt owed something to the aid of the
influential ''Comes domesticorum," who was present at Chalcedon, when the question of
his admission to the Council was being agitated. To this period has also been
referred his commentary on the Octateuch. (3) On Dr. Newman's statement that
Theodoret made over the charge of his diocese to Hypatius (one of his
chorepiscopi, who had been entrusted with his appeal to Pope Leo) and retired into his
monastery, and there regaining the peace which he had enjoyed in youth, passed from
the peace of the Church to the peace of eternity, Canon Venables (6) remarks
that there is no authority for so pleasing a picture, and that Tillemont (7)
contradicts it altogether. Garnerius quotes his congratulation to Sabinianus (8)
on leaving Perrha as suggestive of what conduct he might have preferred. It is
at least certain that during this period he received a long and sympathetic
letter from Leo, from which it is clear that the Roman bishop reposed great
confidence in him. (1) It is characteristic of one in whom the mere man was merged in
the theologian and ecclesiastic that, as of the year of his birth, so of the
year of his death, we have no specific information, and are compelled to form our
conclusions on evidence which though valuable, is not overwhelming. Theodorus
Lector, the composer of the Historia Tripartita, in the 6th century, states (2)
that Theodoret prepared a sepulchral urn for the burial of the famous ascetic
Jacobus; that he predeceased Jacobus; but that Jacobus was buried in it. (3)
Evagrius (4) mentions Jacobus Syrus as still living when the Emperor Leo sent his
Circular Letter to the bishops in 458, though then he must have been in
extreme old age. And Gennadius, who lived not long after Theodoret, says that he died
in the reign of Leo. The evidence is not strong. Theodoret may have died some
years before Jacob. But Gennadius probably knew. On the whole we may conclude
that there is some probability that Theodoret survived till 458; none that he
lived longer. Like Lucius Cary, Viscount Folkland, to whom, in his isolation,
Dean Stanley (5) compares him, Theodoret must have expired with the cry of "Peace,
Peace," in his heart, if not on his lips. Garnerius is careful to prove that
he died in "the peace of the Church," and appeals in support of this contention
to the laudatory testimony of Popes Vigilius, Pelagius I., Pelagius II., and
Gregory the Great. The peace of the Church, in the narrower sense, has not always
been accorded to holy men and women who have assuredly departed this life in
the faith and fear of their Lord. In its truer and holier connotation it
coincides with a state in which we trust we may contemplate the godly old man of
Cyrus, forgetting the storms that had beaten now and again on the life he was
leaving behind him, and stepping quietly into the calm of the windless haven of
souls, -- the Peace not of man, but of God.
VII. --THE CONDEMNATION OF "THE THREE CHAPTERS."
A sketch of the life of Theodoret might well be supposed to terminate with
his death. But it can hardly be regarded as complete without a brief
supplementary notice of the posthumous controversy which has contributed to his fame in
ecclesiastical history. The Council of Chalcedon was designed to give rest to
the Church, and to undo a great wrong, and catholic common sense has since
vindicated its decisions. But it was not to be supposed that the opinions and
passions which had achieved a combined triumph at Ephesus in 449 would die away and
disappear in consequence of the imperial and synodical action of 451. The face
of the world was changing. The vandal Genseric captured and pil-laged Rome. The
Teutonic races were pushing to a foremost place, and accepting first of all an
Arian Christianity. Clovis represented orthodoxy almost alone. Theodoric, the
Arian Ostrogoth, mastered Italy. Then the turning tide saw Rome once again a
city of sole empire, but not the chief city. The victories of Belisarius made of
Rome a suburb of Constantinople, and empire and theology swayed and were swayed
by the policy of Justinian and the palace plots of Theodora. All through
monophysitism had had its friends and defenders. Metropolitans, monks, and mobs had
anathematized one another for nearly a century. At Alexandria Dioscorus had won
almost a local canonization, and the patriarch Timotheus, nicknamed "the Cat,"
had left a strong monophysite party, consolidated under Peter the Stutterer as
the "acephali." (6) At Antioch Peter the Fuller had anathematized all who
refused to accept the Shibboleth he appended to the Trisagion, "who wast crucified
on our account." Leo, Marcian's successor on the Eastern throne, had followed
Marcian's theology, and Zeno, Leo; but the usurper Basiliscus had seen elements
of strength in a bold bid for monophysite support. Zeno, on the fall of
Basiliscus, had attempted to atone the disunited sections of Christendom by the
henoticon, or edict of unity, but the henoticon had been for years a watchword of
division. Anastasius had favoured the Eutychians. And in his reign Theodoret had
been twice condemned, at the synods of Constantinople and Sidon, in 499 and 512.
(7) Justin I., the unlettered barbarian, supported the Chalcedonians, but in
544 Belisarius had made the Eutychian Vigilius bishop of Rome. When Justinian
aspired to become a second Constantine, and give theological as well as civil law
to the world, it was proposed to condemn in a fifth oecumenical council certain
so-called Nestorian writings, on the plea that such a condemnation might
reconcile the opponents of Chalcedon. The writings in question were the Letter of
lbas of Edessa to Maris, praising Theodore of Mopsnestia; the works of Theodore
himself, and the writings of Theodoret against Cyril. These three literary
monuments were known as "the Three Chapters." (1) Of the controversy of the Three
Chapters it has been said that it "filled more volumes than it was worth lines."
(2) The Council satisfied nobody. Pope Vigilius, detained at Constantinople and
Marmora with something of the same violence with which Napoleon I. detained
Pius VI. at Valence, declined to preside over a gathering so exclusively
oriental. The West was outraged by the constitution of the synod, irrespective of its
decisions. The Monophysites were disappointed that the credit of Chalcedon
should be even nominally saved by the nice distinction which damaged the writings,
but professed complete agreement with the council which had refused to damn the
writers. The orthodox wanted no slur cast upon Chalcedon, and, however fenced,
the condemnation of the Three Chapters indubitably involved such a slur.
Practically, the decrees of the fourth and fifth councils are mutually inconsistent,
and it is impossible to accept both. Theodoret was reinstated at Chalcedon in
spite of what he had written, and what he had written was anathematized at
Constantinople in spite of his reinstatement.
The xiii Canon of the fifth Council runs as follows, "if any one defends
the impious writings of Theodoret which he published against the true faith,
against the first holy synod of Ephesus and against the holy Cyril and his twelve
chapters; and all that he wrote in defence of the impious Theodorus and
Nestorius, and others who held the same opinions as the aforesaid Theodorus and
Nestorins. defending them and their impiety, and accordingly calling impious the
doctors of the church who confess the union according to hypostasis of God the Word
in the flesh; and does not anathematize these writings and those who have held
or do hold similar opinions, above all those who have written against the true
faith and the holy Cyril and his twelve chapters, anti have remained to the
day of their death in such impiety; let him be anathema."
In this condemnation the works certainly included are Theodoret's
"Objections to Cyril's Chapters," some of his letters, and, among his lost works, the
"Pentalogium," namely five books on the Incarnation written against Cyril and
his supporters at Ephesus, of which fragments are preserved, and two allocutions
against Cyril delivered at Chalcedon in 431, of which portions exist in the
acts of the fifth Council, and do not exhibit Theedoret at his best.
The Council has at least preserved to us an interesting little record of
the survival at Cyrus of the memory of her great bishop, for it appears that at
the seventh collation, held at the end of May, notice was taken of an enquiry
ordered by Justinian respecting a statue or portrait of Theodoret which was said
to have been carried in procession into his cathedral town, by Andronicus a
presbyter and George a deacon. (1) A more important tribute to his memory is the
fact that, though it officially anathematized writings some of which, composed
in the thick of the fight, and soiled with its indecorous dust, Theedeter
himself may well have regretted and condemned, the Council advisedly abstained from
directly condemning a bishop whose character and person were protected by the
notorious iniquity of the robber council that had deposed him, the friendship of
the illustrious Leo, and the solemn vindication of the church in Synod at
Chalcedon, as well as by his own confession of the faith, his repudiation of the
errors of Nestorius, and the stainless beauty and pious close of his long life.
No better reconciliation between Chalcedon and Constantinople can be
proffered than that which Garnerius quotes from the letter said to have been written
by Gregory the Great, though sent in the name of Pelagius II, to the Illyrians
on the fifth council, "It is the part of unwarrantable rashness to defend
those writings of Theodoret which it is noterious that Theodoret himself condemned
in his subsequent profession of the right faith. So long as we at once accept
himself and repudiate the erroneous writings which have long remained unknown we
do not depart in any way from the decision of the sacred synod, because so
long as we only reject his heretical writings, we, with the synod, attack
Nestorius, and with the synod express our veneration for Theodoret in his right
confession. His other writings we not only accept, but use against our foes." (1)
VIII. -- THE WORKS OF THEODORET.
Of authorities for the works of Theodoret we may first cite himself. In
four of his letters he mentions his own writings; viz.: in lxxxii, to Eusebius of
Ancyra; in cxiii, to Leo of Rome; in cxvi, to the Presbyter Renatus; and in
cxlv, to the monks at Constantinople. Of these the first was written in 445 and
the last three in 449 and a reference to them will show the works mentioned. It
is to be noticed (3) that no allusion is made to the refutation of the twelve
chapters; to the defence of Diodorus of Tarsus and Theodorus of Mopsuestia, nor
to the Dialogues, though all are held to have been written before the
Latrocinium. It may have been, as Garnerius conjectures, that Theodoret did not judge it
politic at this time to call attention to these particular works, but the
assumption is not based on strong grounds, and Theodoret never appears as one
unwilling to avow his convictions, which indeed, were perfectly well known.
Gennadius, presbyter of Marseilles, who died in 496, writes "Theodoretus,
bishop of Cyrus, is said to have written many works: those, however, which have
come to my knowledge are the following; of the Incarnation of the Lord,
against the presbyter Eutyches, and Dioscorus, bishop of Alexandria, who deny that
there was in Christ human flesh, -- powerful writings wherein he proves, as well
by argument as by scriptural evidence, that Christ had very flesh of the
substance of His mother, which He took from the Virgin, and very Godhead, which by
eternal generation He received, in being generated, from God the father begetting
Him. There exist also his books of Ecclesiastical History, which he wrote in
imitation of Eusebius of Csarea, beginning from the end of the books of Eusebius
down to his own time, viz.: from the twentieth year of Constantine down to the
reign of Leo I, in whose reign he died." (4)
Photius, in the ninth century, says that he has read the Ecclesiastical
History; twenty-seven books against Heresies, among which he reckons the
"Eranistes;" five books "Hreticarum Fabularum;" Daniel, the Octateuch, King, ive in
praise of Chrysostom; with Commentarles on Chronicles, and the Twelve Minor
Prophets.
Nicephorus Callistus Xanthopulus in the fourteenth century, Hist. Ecc.
xiv. 54, writes: "Theodoretus, Syrian by birth, was a follower of the great
Chrysostom, whom he set before him as a model of style. His own was flowing and
copious, eloquent and easy, and not destitute of Attic grace." He mentions
expositions of difficult passages of the Old Testament; Commentaries on the Prophets and
the Psalms; the "de Providentia;" a volume "On the Apostles;" the Confutation
of heresies, called "the battle between truth and falsehood;" the refutation of
Cyril's "Twelve Chapters;" the Ecclesiastical History; the "Philotheus," a
History of the Lovers of God; three books on the divine doctrines, and five
hundred (?) letters.
The following is the catalogue of extant works as given by Sirmondus and
followed by Garnerius.
(i.) Exegetical. Questions on the Octateuch, the Books of Kings and
Chronicles; the Interpretation of the Psalms, Canticles, the Four Greater, and the
Twelve Lesser Prophets; an exposition of all the Epistles of St. Paul, including
the Hebrews.
(ii.) Historical. The Ecclesiastical History, and the "Philotheus," or
Religious History.
(iii.) Controversial. The Eranistes, or Dialogues, and the Hreticarum
Fabularum Compendium.
(iv.) Theological. The Grcarum Affectionum Curatio, the Discourse on
Charity, and the De Providentia.
(v.) Epistolary. The Letters.
(vi.) To these may be added the Refutation of the Twelve Chapters, and the
following given in the Auctarium of Garnerius.
(1.)Prolegomena and extracts from Commentaries on the Psalms.
(2.)Part of a Commentary on St. Luke.
(3.)Sermon on the Nativity of St. John the Baptist.
(4.)Portions of Sermons on St. Chrysostom.
(5.)Homily preached at Chalcedon in 431.
(6.)Fragments of the Pentalogium, extracted from Marius Mercator, (1) who
attributed the work to the instigation of the devil.
Lost works. (2)
(1.) The Pentalogium, of which fragments are preserved in the Auctarium.
(2.) Opus mysticurn, sive mysteriorum fidei expositiones, lib. xii.
(3.) Works "de theologia et Incarnatione," identified by Garnier with three
Dialogues against the Macedonians, and two against the Apollinarians, erroneously
attributed to Athanasius.
(4.)Adversus Marcionem.
(5.)Adversus Judos (? the Commentary on Daniel).
(6.)Responsiones ad qusitus magorum Persarum.
(7.)Five sermons on St. Chrysostom.
(8.)Two allocutions spoken at Chalcedon against Cyril in 431.
(9.) Sermon preached at Antioch on the death of Cyril.
(10.) Works on Sabellius and the Trinity, of which portions are given by
Baluz. Misc. iv.
IX. -- CONTENTS AND CHARACTER OF THE EXTANT WORKS.
(a) The character of the Commentary on the Octateuch and the Books of Kings
and Chronicles is indicated by the Title "<greek>eis</greek> <greek>ta</greek>
'<greek>apora</greek> <greek>ths</greek> <greek>qeias</greek> <greek>GraFhs</greek>
<greek>kat</greek>' '<greek>ekloUhn</greek>," or "On selected difficulties in Holy
Scripture." These questions are treated, with occasional deflexions into allegory,
from the historico-exegetical point of view of the Syrian School, (3) of which
Diodorus of Tarsus and Theodore of Mopsuestia were distinguished
representatives. On Diodorus Socrates (4) remarks, "he composed many works, relying on the
bare letter of Scripture, and avoiding their speculative aspect." This might be
said of Diodorus' great pupil too. Nevertheless, though generally following a
line of interpretation in broad contrast with that of Origen, Theodoret quotes
Origen as well as Diodore and Theodore of Mopsuestia as authorities.
Of the 182 "questions" on Genesis and Exodus the following may be taken as
specimens.
Question viii. "What spirit moved upon the waters?" Theodoret's conclusion
is that the wind is indicated.
Question x. "Why did the author add, 'And God saw that it was good'?" To
persuade the thankless not to find fault with what the divine judgment
pronounces good.
Question xix. "To whom did God say 'let us make man in our image and
likeness'?" The reply, carefully elaborated, is that here is an indication of the
Trinity. Question xx. "What is meant by 'mage'?" Here long extracts from
Diodorus, Theodorus, and Origen are given.
Question xxiv. "Why did God plant paradise, when He intended straightway
to drive out Adam thence?"
God condemns none of foreknowledge. And besides, He wished to shew the
saints the Kingdom prepared for them from the foundation of the world. (5)
Question xl. "What is the meaning of the statement 'The man is become as
one of us'?" Theodoret thinks this is said ironically. God had forbidden Adam to
take of the fruit of the tree of life, not because he grudged man immortal
life, but to check the course of sin. So death is a means of cure, not a
punishment.
Question xlvii. "Whom did Moses call sons of God?" A long argument
replies, the sons of Seth.
Question lxxxi suggests an ingenious excuse for Jacob. "Did not Jacob lie
when he said, I am Esau thy firstborn?" He had bought the precedence of
primogeniture, and therefore spoke the truth when he called himself firstborn.
Exodus. "Question xii. What is the meaning of the phrase 'I will harden
Pharaoh's heart'?" This is answered at great length.
The information given in these notes, as we might call them, is
theological, exegetic, and explanatory of peculiar terms, and is often of interest and
value. On the fourteen Books of Questions and Answers Canon Venables, (1) quoting
Ceillier, remarks that the whole form a literary and historical commentary of
great service for the right comprehen sion of the text, characterized by
honesty and common sense, and seldom straining or evading the meaning to avoid
dangerous conclusions.
(b) On the Psalms and the rest of the Books of the Old Testament the Commentary is no longer in the catechetical form, but is styled
Interpretation. (2)
The Psalmist, Theodoret observes, (3) in many places predicts the passion
and resurrection of our Lord, and to attentive readers causes real delight by
the variety of his prophesying. In view of some recent discussions concerning
the authorship of certain Psalms it is interesting to find the enthusiast for
orthodoxy in the 5th century writing "It has been contended by some critics that
the Psalms are not all the work of David, but are to be ascribed in some cases
to other writers. Accordingly, from the titles, some have been attributed to
Idithum, some to Etham, some to the sons of Core, some to Asaph, by men who have
learned from the Chronicles that these writers were prophets. (4) On this point
I make no positive statement. What difference indeed does it make to me whether
all the Psalms are David's, or some were the composition of others, when it is
clear that all were written by the active operation of the Holy Spirit?"
The importance of the commentary on the Psalms may be estimated by the
fact that it is longer than all the catechetical commentary on the preceding Books
combined.
The interpretation on the Canticles follows spiritual, as distinguished
from literal, lines. The lover is Jesus Christ;--the bride, the Church. From the
prologue it appears that Theodoret held all the Old Testament to have been
rewritten, under divine inspiration, by Ezra. This is regarded as the earliest of
the exegetical works.
The original commentary on Isaiah has been lost. The only existing
portions are passages collected from the Greek caten by Sirmond and edited in his
edition, but the opinion has been entertained (5) that these passages should be
referred to Theodore of Mopsuestia who also commented on Isaiah, and who is
sometimes confused with Theodoret by the compilers of the Greek caten. The commentary
on Jeremiah includes Baruch and the Lamentations. (6)
(c) The epistles of St. Paul, among which Theodoret reckons the Epistle to the Hebrews, are the only
portions of the New Testament on which we possess our author's commentaries. On them
the late Bishop Lightfoot writes, "Theodoret's commentaries on St. Paul are
superior to his other exegetical writings, and have been assigned the palm over
all patristic expositions of Scripture. See Schrockh xviii. p. 398. sqq., Simon,
p. 314 sqq. Rosenmuller iv. p. 93 sqq., and the monograph of Richter, de
Theodoreto Epist. Paulin, interprete (Lips. 1822.) For appreciation, terseness of
expression and good sense, they are perhaps unsurpassed, and, if the absence of
faults were a just standard of merit, they would deserve the first place; but
they have little claim to originality, and he who has read Chrysostom and
Theodore of Mopsuestia will find scarcely anything in Theodoret which he has not seen
before. It is right to add however that Theodoret modestly disclaims any such
merit. In his preface he apologises for attempting to interpret St. Paul after
two such men who are 'luminaries of the world:' and he professes nothing more
than to gather his stores 'from the blessed fathers.' In these expressions he
alludes doubtless to Chrysostom and Theodore." (7)
As a specimen of the mode of treatment of a crucial passage, of interest
in view of the writer's relations to the Nestorian and Eutychian controversies,
the notes on I. Cor. xv. 27, 28 may be quoted. "This is a passage which Arians
and Eunomians have been wont to be constantly adducing with the notion that
they are thereby belittling the dignity of the only-begotten. They ought to have
perceived that the divine apostle has written nothing in this passage about the
Godhead of the only-begotten. He is exhorting us to believe in the resurrection
of the flesh, and endeavours to prove the resurrection of the flesh by the
resurrection of the Lord. It is obvious that like is conformed to like. On this
account he calls Him 'the first fruits of them that have fallen asleep,' and
styles Him 'Man,' and by comparison with Adam proves that by Him the general
resurrection will come to pass, with the object of persuading objectors, by shewing
the resurrection of one of like nature, to believe that all mankind will share
His resurrection. It must therefore be recognised that the natures of the Lord
are two: and that divine Scripture names Him sometimes from the human, and
sometimes from the divine. If it speaks of God, it does not deny the manhood: if it
mentions man it at the same time confesses the Godhead. It is impossible always
to speak of Him in terms of sublimity, on account of the nature which He
received from us, for if even when lowly terms are employed some men deny the
assumption of the flesh, clearly still more would have been found infected with this
unsoundness, had no lowly terms been used. What then is the meaning of 'then is
subjected'? This expression is applicable to sovereigns exercising sovereignty
now, for if He then is subjected He is not yet subjected. So they are all in
error who blaspheme and try to make subject Him who has not yet submitted to the
limits of subjection. We must wait, and learn the mode of the subjection. But
we have gone through long discussions on these points in our contests with
them. It is enough now to indicate briefly the Apostle's aim. He is writing to the
Corinthians who have only just been set free from the fables of heathendom.
Their fables are full of violence and iniquity. Not to name others, and pollute my
lips, they worship parricide gods, and say that sons revolted against their
fathers, drove them from their realm, and seized their sovereignty. So after
saying great things of Christ, in that He shall destroy all rule and authority and
power, and shall put an end to death, and hath subdued all things under his
feet; lest starting from those fables of theirs they should expect Him to treat
His father like the Dmons whom they adore; after mentioning, as was necessary,
the subjugation of all things the apostle adds 'The Son Himself shall be subject
to Him that did put all things under Him.' For not only shall He not subject
the Father to Himself, but shall Himself accept the subjection becoming to a son.
So the divine apostle, suspecting the mischief arising from the pagan
mythology, uses expressions of lowliness because such terms are helpful. But let
objectors tell us the form of that subjection. If they are willing to consider the
truth, He shewed obedience when He was made man, and wrought out our salvation.
How then shall He then be subjected, and how shall He then deliver the kingdom
to God the Father? If the case be viewed in this way, it will appear that God
the Father does not hold the kingdom now. So full of absurdity are their
arguments. But He makes what is ours His own, since we are called His body, and He is
called our Head. 'He took our iniquities and bore our diseases.' (1) So He says
in the Psalm 'my God, my God, look upon me, why hast Thou forsaken me. The
words of my transgressions are far from my health.' (2) And yet He did no sin,
neither was guile found in His mouth. But a mouth is made of our nature, in that He
was made the first fruits of the nature. So He appropriates our frequent
disobedience and the then subjection, and, when we are subjected after our delivery
from corruption He is said to be subjected. What follows leads us on to this
sense. For after the words 'then shall the son be subject to Him that did put all
things under Him,' the Apostle adds 'that God may be all in all.' He is
everywhere now in accordance with His essence, for His nature is uncircumscribed, as
says the divine apostle, 'in Him we live and move and have our being.' (3) But,
as regards His good pleasure, He is not in all, for 'the Lord taketh pleasure
in them that fear Him, in those that hope in his mercy.' (4) But in these He is
not wholly. For no one is pure of uncleanness, (5) and In thy sight shall no
man living be justified (6) and 'If thou Lord shouldst mark iniquities O Lord
who shall stand?' Therefore the Lord taketh pleasure wherein they do right and
taketh not pleasure wherein they err. But in the life to come where corruption
ceases and immortality is given passions have no place; and after these have been
quite driven out no kind of sin is committed for the future. Thus hereafter
God shall be all in all, when all have been released from sin and turned to Him
and are incapable of any inclination to the worse. And what in this place the
divine Apostle has said of God in another passage he has laid down of Christ. His
words are these. 'Where there is neither Jew nor Greek, circumcision nor
uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian . . . but Christ is all and in all.' (7) He
would not have applied to the Son what is attributable to the Father had he not of
divine grace learnt that He is of equal honour with Him." (8) On the meaning of
the passage about them that are baptized for the dead it is curious to find
only one interpretation curtly proffered in apparent unconsciousness of any other
being known or possible. Theodoret's words are "He, says the apostle, who is
baptized is buried with the Lord, that as he has been sharer in the death so he
may be sharer in the resurrection. But if the body is dead and does not rise
why then is he baptized?" The dead for which a man is baptized seems to be
regarded as his own dead body i.e., dead in trespasses and sin and subject to
corruption.
(d) Of the historical works, (i) the Ecclesiastical History needs less description, in that a translation in extenso is given in the
text. Its style and spirit speak for themselves. Photius (2) well describes it as
"clear, lofty, and concise."
Gibbon, (3) referring to the three ecclesiastical historians of this
period speaks of "Socrates, the more curious Sozomen, and the learned Theodoret." Of
learning, industry, and veracity the proofs are patent in the book itself. The
chief fault of the work is its want of chronological arrangement. (4) A minor
shortcoming is what may be called a lack of perspective; a fulness of detail is
sometimes conceded to mere episode and parenthesis, while characters and
events of high and crucial importance would scarcely be known to be so, were we
dependent for our estimation of them on Theodoret alone. Valesius inclines to the
opinion that his opening words about supplying things omitted (6) refer to
Socrates and Sozomen, and compares him in his composition of a history after those
writers (there is just a possibility that he might have completed the parallel
by referring to a third predecessor -- Rufinus) to St. John filling up the gaps
left by the synoptists. (6) But this view is open to question. Theodoret names
no previous writers but Eusebius. A special importance attaches to his account
of such events and persons as his local knowledge enables him to give with
completeness of detail, as for instance, all that relates to Antioch and its
bishops. Garnerius is of opinion that the work might with propriety be entitled A
History of the Arian Heresy; all other matter introduced he views as merely
episodic. (7) He also quotes the letter (8) of Gregory the great in which the Roman
bishop states that "the apostolic see refuses to receive the History of
'Sozomenus' (sic) inasmuch as it abounds with lies, and praises Theodore of Mopsuestia,
maintaining that he was up to the day of his death, a great Doctor." "Sozomen"
is supposed to be a slip of the pen, or of the memory, for "Theodoret." But,
if this be so, "multa mentitur" is an unfair description of the errors of the
historian. Fallible he was, and exhibits failure in accuracy, especially in
chronology, but his truthfulness of aim is plain. (9)
(ii) The Religious History, several times referred to in the Ecclesiastical
History, and therefore an earlier composition, contains the lives of thirty-three
famous ascetics, of whom three were women. The "curious intellectual problem" (10)
of the readiness with which Theodoret, a disciple of the "prosaic and
critical" school of Antioch, accepts and repeats marvellous tales of the miracles of
his contemporary hermits, has been invested with fresh interest in our own time
by the apparent sympathy and similar belief of Dr. Newman, who asks "What made
him drink in with such relish what we reject with such disgust? Was it that, at
least, some miracles were brought home so absolutely to his sensible experience
that he had no reason for doubting the others which came to him second-hand?
This certainly will explain what to most of us is sure to seem the stupid
credulity of so well-read, so intellectual an author." (11) Cardinal Newman evidently
implies that the evidence was irresistible, even to a keen and trained
intelligence. Probably in many cases the explanation is to be found, as has been
already suggested in the remarks on Theodoret's birth, in the ready acceptance of
the current views of the age and place as to cause and effect. Theodoret believed
in the marvels of his monks. Matthew Hale believed in witchcraft. Neither,
that is, was some centuries removed from his own age. Neither need be accused of
stupid credulity. The enthusiasm which led him to reckon on finding the noble
army of martyrs a very present help in time of trouble because he had a little
bottle of their oil, probably that burned at their graves, slung over his bed;
and his assurance that the old, cloak of Jacobus, folded for his pillow, was a
more than adamantine bulwark against the wiles of the devil, indicate no more
than an exaggerated reliance on the power of material memorials to affect the
imagination. (1) And it is curious to remark that with all this acceptance of the
cures effected by ascetics, Theodoret made a provision of medical skill for his
flock at Cyrus. (2)
(e) The works reckoned as theological, as distinct from the controversial, are three:
(i) The twelve discourses entitled <greek>Sllhnikwn</greek> <greek>qerapentikh</greek>
<greek>paqhatwn</greek> or "Grcarum affectionum curatio, seu evangelic veritatis ex gentilium
philospohia cognitio.' They contain an elaborate apology for Christian
philosophy, with a refutation of the attacks of paganism against the doctrines of the
gospel, and may have been designed, as Garnerius conjectures, to serve as an
antidote against whatever might still survive of the influence of Julian and his
writings. Here we see at once our author's "genius and erudition" (Mosheim). In
these orations he exhibits a wide acquaintance with Greek literature, and we
find cited, or referred to, among other writers, Homer, Hesiod, Alcman, Theognis,
Xenophanes, Pindar, Heraclitus, Zeno, Parmenides, Empedocles, Euripides,
Herodotus, Xenophon, Plato, Aristotle, Demosthenes, Diodorus Siculus, Plutarch, and
Porphyry. Homer and Plato are largely quoted. Basnage, (3) indeed, contested
their genuineness, but without weakening their position among Theodoret's accepted
works. They have seemed to some to encourage undue honour to and invocation of
saints and martyrs (4) but their author seems to anticipate later exaggeration
of their reverence by the distinction, "We ascribe Godhead to nothing visible.
Them that have been distinguished in virtue we honour as excellent men, but we
worship none but the God and Father of all, His Word, and the Holy Spirit." (5)
(ii). The Discourses against paganism were followed by ten on Divine Providence, a work justly eulogized as exhibiting Theodoret's literary power in its
highest form. Of it Garnerius, who is by no means disposed to bestow indiscriminate
laudation on the writer, remarks that nothing was ever published on this
subject more eloquent or more admirable, either by Theodoret, or by any other. (6)
The discourses may not improbably have been delivered in public at Antioch, and
have been the occasion of the enthusiastic admiration described as shewn by the
patriarch John. (7) In them he presses the argument of the divine guidance of
the world from the constitution of the visible creation, and specially of the
body of man. The preacher draws many illustrations from the animal world and
shews himself to be an intelligent observer. The pursuit of righteousness is
proved not to be vain, even though the achieved result is not seen until the
resurrection, and it is argued that from the beginning God has not cared for one
chosen race alone but for all mankind. The crowning evidence of divine providence is
in the incarnation. "I have taught you" -- so the great orations
conclude--"the universal providence of God. You behold His unfathomable loving kindness; --
His boundless mercy; cease then to strive against Him that made you; learn to
do honour to your benefactor, and requite his mighty benefits with grateful
utterance. Offer to God the sacrifice of praise; defile not your tongue with
blasphemy, but make it the instrument of worship for which it was designed. Such
divine dispensations as are plain, reverence; about such as are hidden make no ado,
but wait for knowledge in the time to come. When we shall put off the senses,
then we shall win perfect knowledge. Imitate not Adam who dared to pluck the
forbidden fruit; lay not hold of hidden things, but leave the knowledge of them
to their own fit season. Obey the words of the wise man -- say not What is this?
For what purpose is this! 'For all things were made for good.' (8) Gathering
then from every source occasion for praise, and mingling one melody, offer it
with me to the Creator, the giver of good, and Christ the Saviour, our very God.
To them be glory and worship and honour for endless age on age. Amen."
(iii) The Discourse on Divine Love. This love, says Theodoret, is the source of the holy life of the ascetics.
For his own part he would not accept the kingdom of heaven without it, or with
it, were such a thing possible, shrink from the pains of hell. It was really
love, he says, which led to Peter's denial; he need not have denied if he could
have borne to keep aloof, but love goaded him to be near his Lord.
(f) The controversial works are--
(i.) The "Eranistes," or Dialogues, of which the translation is included in the text. They contain a complete
refutation of the Entychian position, and the quotations in them are in several
cases valuable as giving portions of the writing of Fathers not elsewhere
preserved. They are supposed to have been written shortly after the death of Cyril in
444, and are intended at once to vindicate Theodoret's own orthodoxy, and to
expose the errors of the party protected by Dioscorus.
(ii.) The Haereticarum Fabularum Compendium, (A<greek>iretikhz</greek> <greek>kakomnoiaz</greek> <greek>epitomh</greek> )
was composed at the request of Sporacius, one of the representatives of
Martian at Chalcedon, and is, as its title indicates, an account of past or present
heresies. It is divided into five. Books, which treat of the following heretics.
I. Simon Magus, Menander, Saturnilus, (1) Basilides, Isidorus,
Carpocrates, Epiphanes, Prodicus, Valentinus, Secundus, Marcus the Wizard, the Ascodruti,
(2) the Colorbasii, the Barbelioti, (3) the Ophites, the Cainites, the
Antitacti, the Perati, Monoimus, Hermogenes, Tatianus, Severus, Bardesanes, Harmoniu
Florinus, Cerdo, Marcion, Apelles, Potitus, Prepo, and Manes.
II. The Ebionites, the Nazarenes, Cerinthus, Artemon, Theodotus, the
Melchise-deciani, the Elkesites, Paul of Samosata, Sabellius, MarcelIus, Photinus.
III. The Nicolaitans, the Montanists, Noetus of Smyrna, the
Tessarescdecatites (i.e. Quartodecimani) Novatus, Nepos.
IV. Arius, Eudoxius, Etmomius, Aetius, the Psathyriani, the Macedoniani,
the Donatists, the Meletians, Appollinarius, the Audiani, the Messaliani,
Nestorius, Eutyches. V. The last book is an "Epitome of the Divine Decrees."
This catalogue, it has been remarked, does not include Origenism and
Pelagianism. (4) But though Theodoret did not sympathize with Origen's school of
scriptural interpretation, there was no reason why he should damn him as unsound
in the faith. And the controversy between Jerome and Rufinus as to Origen was a
distinctively western controversy. So was Pelagianism a western heresy, with
which Theodoret was not brought into immediate contact.
The fourth book is obviously the most important, as treating of heresies
of which the writer would have contemporary knowledge. And special interest has
attached to the chapter on Nestorius, who is condemned not merely for erroneous
opinion on the incarnation and person of Christ, but as a timeserver and
pretender, seeking rather to be thought, than to be, a Christian. Garnerius indeed
doubts the genuineness of the chapter, and Schulze, in defending it, points out
the similarity of its line of argument to that employed in the treatise
"against Nestorius," which is very generally regarded as spurious. It may have been
added after Chalcedon, when the writer had been forced into the denunciation of
his old friend. But the expressions used alike of the incarnation and of
Nestorius seem somewhat in contrast with other writings of Theodoret. Schrockh (5)
inclines to the view in which Ceillier concurs, that this damning account of
Nestorius was really written by his old champion, and accounts for the harshness of
condemnation by the influence of the clamours of Chalcedon and the induration
which old age sometimes brings on tender spirits. It can only be said that if
this is Theodoret, it is Theodoret at his worst.
The heads of the Epitome of Divine Decrees are the following twenty-nine:
Of the Father; of the Son; of the Holy Ghost; of Creation; of Matter; of ons;
of Angels; of AEmons; of Man; of Providence; of the Incarnation of the Saviour;
that the Lord took a body; that He took a soul as well as His body; that the
human nature which He took was perfect; that He raised the nature which He took;
that He is good and just; that He gave the Old and the New Testament; of
Baptism; of Resurrection; of Judgment; of Promises; of the Second Advent
('E<greek>pifaneia</greek>) of the Saviour; of Antichrist; of Virginity; of Marriage; of
Second Marriage; of Fornication; of Repentance; of Abstinence.
The short chapter on the Incarnation has a special value in view of the
author's connection with the Nestorian Controversy. "It is worth while," he
writes in it, "to exhibit what we hold concerning the Incarnation, for this
exposition proclaims more clearly the providence of the God of all. In his forged
fables Valentinus maintained a distinction between the only-begotten and the Word,
and further between the Christ within the pleroma and Jesus, and also the Christ
who is without. He said that Jesus became man, by putting on the Christ that
is without, and assuming a body of the substance of the soul; and that He made a
passage only through the Virgin, having assumed nothing of the nature of man.
Basilides in like manner distinguished between the only-begotten, the Word and
the Wisdom. Cerdon, on the other hand, Marcion, and Manes, said that the Christ
appeared as man, though he had nothing human. Cerinthus maintained that Jesus
was generated of Joseph and Mary after the common manner of men, but that the
Christ came down from on high on Jesus. The Ebionites, the Theodotians, the
Artemonians, and Photinians said that the Christ was bare man born of the Virgin.
Arius and Eunomius taught that He assumed a body, but that the Godhead
discharged the function of the soul. Apollinarius held that the body of the Saviour had
a soul, (1) but had not the reasonable soul; for, according to his views,
intelligence was superfluous, God the Word being present. I have stated the opinions
taught by the majority of heresies with the wish of making plain the truth
taught by the church. Now the church makes no distinction between
(<greek>ton</greek> <greek>anton</greek> <greek>onomazei</greek>) the Son, the only begotten,
God the Word, the Lord the Saviour, and Jesus Christ. 'Son,' 'only begotten,'
'God the Word,' and 'Lord,' He was called before the Incarnation; and is so
called also after the Incarnation; but after the Incarnation the same (Lord) was
called Jesus Christ, deriving the titles from the facts. 'Jesus' is interpreted to
mean the Saviour, whereof Gabriel is witness in his words to the Virgin 'Thou
shalt call His name Jesus, for He shall save His people from their sins.' (2)
But He was styled 'Christ' on account of the unction of the Spirit. So the
Psalmist David says 'Therefore God, thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of
gladness above thy fellows.' (3) And through the Prophet Isaiah the Lord Himself
says 'The spirit of the Lord is upon me, because the Lord hath anointed me.' (4)
Thus the Lord Himself taught us to understand the prophecy, for when He had
come into the synagogue, and opened the book of the Prophets, He read the passage
quoted, and said to those present 'This day is the Scripture fulfilled in your
ears.' (5)
The great Peter, too, preached in terms harmonious with the prophets, for
in his explanation of the mystery to Cornelius he said 'That word ye know which
was published throughout all Juda, and began from Galilee after the Baptism
which John preached; how God anointed Jesus Christ with the Holy Ghost and with
power.' (6) Hence it is clear that He is called Christ on account of the unction
of the spirit. But he was anointed not as God, but as man. And as in His human
nature He was anointed, after the Incarnation He was called also 'Christ.' But
yet there is no distinction between God the Word and the Christ, for God the
Word incarnate was named Christ Jesus. And He was incarnate that He might renew
the nature corrupted by sin. The reason of His taking all the nature which had
sinned was that He might heal all. For He did not take the nature of the body
using it as a veil of His Godhead, according to the wild teaching of Arias and
Eunomius; for it had been easy for Him even without a body to be made visible as
He was seen of old by Abraham, Jacob and the rest of the saints. But he wished
the very nature that had been worsted to beat down the enemy and win the
victory. For this reason He took both a body and a reasonable soul. For Holy
Scripture does not divide man in a threefold division, but states that this living.
Being consists of a body and a soul. (7) For God after forming the body out of
the dust breathed into it the soul and shewed it to be two natures not three. And
the same Lord in the Gospels says, 'Fear not them which kill the body but are
not able to kill the soul,' (8) and many similar passages may be found in
divine Scripture. And that He did not assume man's nature in its perfection,
contriving it as a veil for His Godhead, according to the heretics' fables, but
achieving victory by means of the first fruits for the whole race, is truly witnessed
and accurately taught by the divine apostle, for in His Epistle to the Romans,
when unveiling the mystery of the Incarnation, he writes 'Wherefore as by one
man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all
men, for that all have sinned: for until the law sin was in the world: but sin
is not imputed when there is no law. Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to
Moses, even over them who had not sinned after the similitude of Adam's
transgression, who is the figure of Him that is to come.' (9)
(iii.) Therefutations of the Twelve Chapters of Cyril are translated in the Prolegomena. (1)
In the Epistle of Cyril to Celestinus and the Commonitorium datum
Posidonio (2) Cyril shows what sense he wishes to fix on the utterances of Nestorius.
"The faith, or rather the 'cacodoxy' of Nestorius, has this force; he says that
God the Word, prescient that he who was to be born of the Holy Virgin would be
holy and great, therefore chose him and arranged that he should be generated of
the Virgin without a husband and conferred on him the privilege of being
called by His own names, and raised him so that even though after the incarnation he
is called the only begotten Word of God, he is said to have been made man
because He was always with him as with a holy man born of the Virgin. And as He was
with the prophets so, says Nestorius, was He by a greater conjunction
(<greek>snnafeia</greek>). On this account Nestorius always shrinks from using the word
union (<greek>enwsis</greek>) and speaks of 'conjunction,' as of some one
without, and, as He says to Joshua 'as I was with Moses so will I be with thee.'
(3) But, to conceal his impiety, Nestorius says that He was with him from the
womb. Wherefore he does not say that Christ was very God, but that Christ was so
called of God's good pleasure; and, if he was called Lord, so again Nestorius
understands him to be Lord because the divine Word conceded him the boon of being
so named. Nor does he say as we do that the Son of God died and rose again on
our behalf, The man died and the man rose, and this has nothing to do with God
the Word. And in the mysteries what lies (i.e. on the Holy Table)
(<greek>to</greek> <greek>prokeimenon</greek>) is a man's body; but we believe that it is
flesh of the Word, having power to quicken because it is made flesh and blood of
the Word that quickeneth all things."
Nestorius was not unnaturally indignant at this misrepresentation of his
words. and complains of Cyril for leaving out important clauses and introducing
additions of his own. (4) Cyril succeeded in pressing upon Celestinus the idea
that Nestorius. who had vigorously opposed the Pelagians, was really in
sympathy with them. and so secured the condemnation of his opponent at Rome and at
Alexandria, an I published twelve anathemas to complete his own vindication. These
were answered by Theodoret on behalf of the eastern church in 431. In 433
formal peace was made, so far as the theological, as apart from the personal,
dispute was concerned, by the acceptance by both John of Antioch and Cyril of the
formula, slightly modified, which Theodoret himself had drawn up at Ephesus two
years before. (5) It is as follows: "We confess our Lord Jesus Christ, the Son
of God, the only begotten, to be perfect God and perfect man, of a reasonable
soul and body, begotten before the ages of the Father, as touching His godhead,
and in the last days on account of us and our salvation (born) of the Virgin
Mary as touching His manhood; that He is of one substance with the Father as
touching His godhead, of one substance with us as touching His manhood; for there is
made an union of two natures; wherefore we confess one Christ, one Son, one
Lord. According to this meaning of the unconfounded union we confess the holy
Virgin to be '<greek>qeotokos</greek>' on account of God the Word being made flesh
and becoming man, and of this conception uniting to Himself the temple taken
of her. We acknowledge that theologians use the words of evangelists and
apostles about the Lord some in common, as of one person, and some distinctively, as
of two natures, and deliver the divine as touch-ins the Godhead of the Christ,
and the lowly as touching His manhood." (6)
This is substantially what Theodoret says again and again. This satisfied
Cyril. This would probably have been accepted by Nestorus too. (7) What then
was it, apart from tire odium theologicum, which kept Nestorius and Cyril apart?
Below the apparent special pleading and word-jugglery on the surface of the
controversy lay the principle that in the Christ God and man were one; the essence
of the atonement or reconciliation lying in the complete union of the human
and the divine in the one Person; the "I" in the "I am" of the Temple and the "I
thirst" of tire Cross being really the same. "God and man is one Christ." The
position which the Cyrillians viewed with alarm was a reduction of this unity to
a mere partnership or alliance; -- God dwelling in Jesus of Nazareth as He
dwells in all good men, only to a greater degree;--the eternal Word being in close
contact with the son of Mary (<greek>snnafeia</greek>). So, whatever may have
been the unhappy faction-fights with which the main issue was confused there
was in truth a great crisis, a great question for decision; was Jesus of Nazareth
an unique personality, or only one more in the goodly fellowship of prophets?
Was He God, or was He not? There can be little doubt as to the answer Nestorius
would have given. There can be none as to that of Theodoret. But on the part
of Cyril there was the quite mistaken conviction that Theodoret was practically
contending for two Christs. On the other hand Theodoret erroneously identified
Cyril with the confusion of the substance and practical patripassianism which
he scathes in the "Eranistes," and which the common sense of Christendom has
condemned in Eutyches. (g) To Nicephorus Callistus in the 15th century five
hundred of Theodoret's letters were known, (1) and he is eloquent in their praise.
Now, the collection, including several by other writers, comprises only one
hundred and eighty one. The value of their contributions to the history of the times
as well as of their writer will be evident on their study. The order in which
they are published is preserved in the translation for the sake of reference. A
chronological order would have obvious advantages, but this in many cases
could only be conjectural. Where the indications of time are fairly plain the
probable date is suggested in a note. The letters are divided into (a) dogmatic, (b)
consolatory, (c) festal, (d) commendatory, (e) congratulatory, (f) commenting
on passing events. Of them Schulze writes "Nihil eo in genere scribendi
perfectius; nam qu strut epistolarum virtutes, brevitas, perspicuitas, elegantia,
urbanitas, modestia, observantia decori, et ingen-iosa prudensque ac erudita
simplicitas, in epistolis Theodoreti admirabiliter ita elucent ut scribentibus
exempla esse possint." "They not only" says Schrockh, (2) "vindicate the admiration
of Nicephorus, but are specially attractive on account of their exhibition of
the writer's simplicity, modesty, and love of peace."
From the study of these letters "we rise," writes Canon Venables, (3)
"with a heightened estimate of Theodoret himself, his intellectual power, his
theological precision, his warm-hearted affection for his friends, and the Christian
virtues with which, notwithstanding some weaknesses and an occasional
bitterness for which, however distressing, his persecutions offered some palliation,
his character was adorned."
The reputation of Theodoret in the Church is a growing reputation, and the
practical canonization which he has won in the heart of Christendom is a
testimony tO the power and worth of character and conduct. Though never officially
dignified by a higher ecclesiastical title than " Beatus" he is yet to
Marcellinus "Episcopus sanctus Cyri" (4) and to Photius (5) "divinus vir." His earnest,
sometimes bitter, conflict with the great intellect and strong will of Cyril,
and apparent discomfiture in the war which raged, often with dire confusion, up
and down the long lines of definition, have not succeeded in robbing him of one
of the highest places among the Fathers of whom the Church is proudest. He
exhibits, each in a lofty and conspicuous form, all the qualities which mark a
great and good churchman. His theological writings would have won high fame in a
recluse. His administration of his diocese, as we learn it from his modest
letters, would have gained him the character of an excellent bishop, even had he
been no scholar. His temper in controversy, though occasionally breaking out into
the fiery heat of the oriental, is for the most part in happy contrast with
that of his opponents. His devotion to his duty is undeniable, and his industry
astonishing. It is impossible not to feel as we read his writings that he is no
self-seeker arguing for victory. He believes that the fate of the Church rests
on the fidelity of Christians to the Nicene Confession, and in his championship
of this creed, and his opposition to all that seems to him to threaten its
adulteration or defeat, he knows no awe of prince or court. Owing but one Lord, he
is true through evil and good report to Him, and his figure stands out large,
bright, and gracious across the centuries, against a background of intrigue and
controversy sometimes very dark, as of a patient and faithful soldier and
servant of Christ. (6) If his shortcomings were those of his own age, -- and in an
age of virulent strife and of denial of all mercy to opponents his memory rises
as a comparative monument of moderation, -- his graces were the graces of all
the ages. (7) Were it customary, or even possible, in our own church and time to
maintain the ancient custom of reciting before the Holy Table the names
approved as of good men and true in the past history of the Holy Society, in the long
catalogue of the faithful departed for whom worshippers bless the name of
their common Lord, a place must indubitably be kept for Theodoretus, bishop of
Cyrus.
MANUSCRIPTS AND EDITIONS OF SEPARATE WORKS.
The editions of the Ecclesiastical History are the most numerous, though
of several others there are many. Of the collected works the following are the
principal.
(i)Editio princeps, of Paulus Manutius, Latin Version only. Rome 1556.
(ii)J. Birckman, fol. 2 voll. Latin only Cologne 1573·
(iii)J. Sirmond, 4 voll. fol. Greek and Latin, Paris 1642.
To this the Auctarium of J. Garnier, with his dissertations was added in 1684.
(iv) John Lewis Schulze, Greek and Latin, based upon the preceding, in 5 voll.
Halle, 1774.
(v) Migne's edition of the foregoing. Paris 1860.
(The last-named is the Edition used for the translation in this work.)
The MSS. authority for the works of Theodoret is strong. The afore-named
editions are based on MS. in the libraries of Augsburg, Florence, Rome and
Naples. To works on Theodoret mentioned in the notes may be added: --S. Kupper,
Ausgew, Schriften des sel. Theodoret aus dem Urtext fibers. E. Binder, Etudes sur
Theodoret. Geneva, 1844.
Specht, Theodor yon Mopsuestia, und Theodoret von Cyrus. Munich, 1871.
THE ANATHEMAS OF CYRIL IN OPPOSITION TO NESTORIUS.
(Mansi T. IV. p. 1067-1082, Migne Cat. 76, col. 391. The anathemas of
Nestorius against Cyril are to be found in Hardouin i. 1297.)
I. If any one refuses to confess that the Emmanuel is in truth God, and
therefore that the holy Virgin is Mother of God
(<greek>qeotok</greek><ss228><greek>s</greek>), for she gave birth after a fleshly manner to the Word of God
made flesh; let him be anathema.
II. If any one refuses to confess that the Word of God the Father is
united in hypos-tasis to flesh, and is one Christ with His own flesh, the same being
at once both God and man, let him be anathema.
III. If any one in the case of the one Christ divides the hypostases after
the union, conjoining them by the conjunction alone which is according to
dignity, independence, or prerogative, and not rather by the concurrence which is
according to natural union, let him be anathema.
IV. If any one divides between two persons or hypostases the expressions
used in the writings of evangelists and apostles, whether spoken by the saints
of Christ or by Him about Himself, and applies the one as to a man considered
properly apart from the Word of God, and the others as appropriate to the divine
and the Word of God the Father alone, let him be anathema.
V. If any one dares to maintain that the Christ is man bearing God, and
not rather that He is God in truth, and one Son, and by nature, according as the
Word was made flesh, and shared blood and flesh in like manner with ourselves,
let him be anathema.
VI. If any one dares to maintain that the Word of God the Father was God
or Lord Of the Christ, and does not rather confess that the same was at once
both God and man, the Word being made flesh according to the Scriptures, let him
be anathema.
VII. If any one says that Jesus was energized as man by God the Word, and
that He was invested with the glory of the only begotten as being another
beside Him, let him be anathema.
VIII. If any one dares to maintain that the ascended man ought to be
worshipped together with the divine Word, and be glorified with Him, and with Him be
called God as one with another (in that the continual rise of the preposition
"with" in composition makes this sense compulsory), and does not rather in one
act of worship honour the Emmanuel and praise Him in one doxology, in that He
is the Word made flesh, let him be anathema.
IX. If any one says that the one Lord Jesus Christ is glorified by the
Spirit, using the power that works through Him as a foreign power, and receiving
from Him the ability to operate against unclean spirits, and to complete His
miracles among men; and does not rather say that the Spirit is His own, whereby
also He wrought His miracles, let him be anathema.
X. Holy Scripture states that Christ is High Priest and Apostle of our
confession, (1) and offered Himself on our behalf for a sweet-smelling savour to
God and our Father. (2) If, then, any one says that He, the Word of God, was not
made our High Priest and Apostle when He was made flesh and man after our
manner; but as being another, other than Himself, properly man made of a woman; or
if any one says that He offered the offering on His own behalf, and not rather
on our behaIf alone; for He that knew no sin would not have needed an offering,
let him be anathema.
XI. If any one confesses not that the Lord's flesh is giver of life, (3)
and proper to the Word of God Himself, but (states) that it is of another than
Him, united indeed to Him in dignity, yet as only possessing a divine
indwelling; and not rather, as we said, giver of life, because it is proper to the Word
of Him who hath might to engender all things alive, let him be anathema.
XII. If any one confesses not that the Word of God suffered in flesh, and
was crucified in flesh, and tasted death in flesh, and was made firstborn of
the dead, in so far as He is life and giver of life, as God; let him be anathema.
COUNTER-STATEMENTS OF THEODORET.
(Opp. Ed. Schulze. V. I. seq. Migne, Lat. 76. col. 391.)
Against I. -- But all we who follow the words of the evangelists state that God the Word
was not made flesh by nature, nor yet was changed into flesh; for the Divine
is immutable and invariable. Wherefore also the prophet David says, "Thou art
the same, and thy years shall not fail." (1) And this the great Paul, the herald
of the truth, in his Epistle to the Hebrews, states to have been spoken of the
Son. (2) And in another place God says through the Prophet, "I am the Lord: I
change not." (3) If then the Divine is immutable and invariable, it is incapable
of change or alteration. And if the immutable cannot be changed, then God the
Word was not made flesh by mutation, but took flesh and tabernacled in us,
according to the word of the evangelist. This the divine Paul expresses clearly in
his Epistle to the Philippians in the words, "Let this mind be in you which was
also in Christ Jesus: who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to
be equal with God: but made Himself of no reputation and took upon Him the
form of a servant." (4) Now it is plain from these words that the form of God was
not changed into the form of a servant, but, remaining what it was, took the
form of the servant. So God the Word was not made flesh, but assumed living and
reasonable flesh. He Himself is not naturally conceived of the Virgin,
fashioned, formed, and deriving beginning of existence from her; He who is before the
ages, God, and with God, being with the Father and with the Father both known and
worshipped; but He fashioned for Himself a temple in the Virgin's womb, and
was with that which was formed and begotten. Wherefore also we style that holy
Virgin <greek>qeotokos</greek>, not because she gave birth in natural manner to
God, but to man united to the God that had fashioned Him. Moreover if He that
was fashioned in the Virgin's womb was not man but God the Word Who is before the
ages, then God the Word is a creature of the Holy Ghost. For that which was
conceived in her, says Gabriel, is of the Holy Ghost.(5) But if the only begotten
Word of God is uncreate and of one substance and co-eternal with the Father it
is no longer a formation or creation of the Spirit. And if the Holy Ghost did
not fashion God the Word in the Virgin's womb, it follows that we understand
the form of the servant to have been fashioned, formed, conceived, and generated.
But since the form was not stripped of the form of God, but was a Temple
containing God the Word dwelling in it, according to the words of Paul "For it
pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell" "bodily," (6) we call the
Virgin not mother of man (<greek>anqrwpotokos</greek>) but mother of God
(<greek>qeotokos</greek>), applying the former title to the fashioning and conception,
but the latter to the union. For this cause the child who was born is called
Emmanuel, neither God separated from human nature nor man stripped of Godhead.
For Emmanuel is interpreted to mean "God with us ", according to the words of
the Gospels; and the expression "God with us" at once manifests Him Who for our
sakes was assumed out of us, and proclaims God the Word Who assumed. Therefore
the child is called Emmanuel on account of God Who assumed, and the Virgin
<greek>qeotokos</greek> on account of the union of the form of God with the
conceived form of a servant. For God the Word was not changed into flesh, but the form
of God took the form of a servant.
Against II. -- We, in obedience to the divine teaching of the apostles, confess one
Christ; and, on account of the union, we name the same both God and man. But we are
wholly ignorant of the union according to hypostasis (7) as being strange and
foreign to the divine Scriptures and the Fathers who have interpreted them. And
if the author of these statements means by the union according to hypostasis
that there was a mixture of flesh and Godhead, we shall oppose his statement with
all our might, and shall confute his blasphemy, for the mixture is of
necessity followed by confusion; and the admission of confusion destroys the
individuality of each nature. Things that are undergoing mixture do not remain what they
were, and to assert this in the case of God the Word and of the seed of David
would be most absurd. We must obey the Lord when He exhibits the two natures and
says to the Jews, "Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up."
(1) But if there had been mixture then God had not remained God, neither was
the temple recog-nised as a temple; then the temple was God and God was temple.
This is involved in the theory of the mixture. And it was quite superfluous for
the Lord to say to the Jews, "Destroy this temple and in three days I will
raise it up." He ought to have said, Destroy me and in three days I shall be
raised, if there had really been any mixture and confusion. As it is, He exhibits the
temple undergoing destruction and God raising it up. Therefore the union
according to hypostasis, which in my opinion they put before us instead of mixture,
is superfluous. It is quite sufficient to mention the union, which both
exhibits the properties of the natures and teaches us to worship the one Christ.
Against III. -- The sense of the terms used is misty and obscure. Who needs to be told
that there is no difference between conjunction and concurrence? The concurrence
is a concurrence of the separated parts; and the conjunction is a conjunction of
the distinguished parts. The very clever author of the phrases has laid down
things that agree as though they disagreed. It is wrong, he says, to conjoin the
hypostases by conjunction; they ought to be conjoined by concurrence, and that
a natural concurrence. Possibly he states this not knowing what he says; if he
knows, he blasphemes. Nature has a compulsory force and is involuntary; as for
instance, if I say we are naturally hungry, we do not feel hunger of free-will
but of necessity; and assuredly paupers would have left off begging if the
power of ceasing to be hungry had lain in their own will; we are naturally
thirsty; we naturally sleep; we naturally breathe; and all these actions, I repeat,
belong to the category of the involuntary, and he who is no longer capable of
them necessarily ceases to exist. If then the concurrence in union of the form of
God and the form of a servant was natural, then God the Word was trotted to the
form of the servant under the compulsion of necessity, and not because He put
in force His loving kindness, and the Lawgiver of the Universe will be found to
be a follower of the laws of necessity. Not thus have we been taught by the
blessed Paul; on the contrary, we have been taught that He took the form of a
servant and "emptied Himself;" (2) and the expression "emptied Himself" indicates
the voluntary act. If then He was united by purpose and will to the nature
assumed from us, the addition of the term natural is superfluous. It suffices to
confess the union, and union is understood of things distinguished, for if there
were no division an union could never be apprehended. The apprehension then of
the union implies previous apprehension of the division. How then can he say
that the hypostases or natures ought not to be divided? He knows all the while
that the hypostasis of God the Word was perfect before the ages; and that the
form of the servant which was assumed by It was perfect; and this is the reason
why he said hypostases and not hypostasis. If therefore either nature is perfect,
and both came together, it is obvious that after the form of God had taken the
form of a servant, piety compels us to confess one son and Christ; while to
speak of the trotted hypos-tases or natures as two, so far from being absurd,
follows the necessity of the case. For if in the case of the one man we divide the
natures, and call the mortal nature body, but the immortal nature soul, and
both man, much more consonant is it with right reason to re-cognise the
properties alike of the God who took and of the man who was taken. We find the blessed
Paul dividing the one man into two where he says in one passage, "Though our
outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed," (3) and in another "For I
delight in the law of God after the inward man." (4) And again "that Christ may
dwell in the inner man." (5) Now if the apostle divides the natural conjunction of
the synchronous natures, with what reason can the man who describes the mixture
to us by means of other terms indite us as impious when we divide the
properties of the natures of the everlasting God and of the man assumed at the end of
days?
Against IV. -- These statements, too, are akin to the preceding. On the assumption that
there has been a mixture, he means that there is a distinction of terms as used
both in the holy Gospels and in the apostolic writings. And he uses this
language while glorifying himself that he is at war at once with Arius and Eunomius
and the rest of the heresiarchs. Let then this exact professor of theology tells
us how he would confute the blasphemy of the heretics, while applying to God
the Word what is uttered humbly and appropriately by the form of the servant.
They indeed while thus doing lay down that the Son of God is inferior, a
creature, made, and a servant. To whom then are we, holding as we do the opposite
opinion to theirs, and confessing the Son to be of one substance and co-eternal with
God the Father, Creator of the Universe, Maker, Beautifier, Ruler, and
Governor, All-wise, Almighty, or rather Himself, Power, Life and Wisdom, to refer the
words "My God, my God why hast thou forsaken me;" (1) or "Father if it be
possible let this cup pass from me;" (2) or "Father save me from this hour;" (3) or
"That hour no man knoweth, not even the Son of Man;" (4) and all the other
passages spoken and written in lowliness by Him and by the holy apostles about Him?
To whom shall we apply the weariness and the sleep? To whom the ignorance and
the fear? Who was it who stood in need of angelic succour? If these belong to
God the Word, how was wisdom ignorant? How could it be called wisdom when
affected by the sense of ignorance? How could He speak the truth in saying that He
had all that the Father hath, (5) when not having the knowledge of the Father?
For He says, "The Father alone knoweth that day." (6) How could He be the
unchanged image of Him that begat Him if He has not all that the Begetter hath? If
then He speaks the truth when saying that He is ignorant, any one might suppose
this of Him. But if He knoweth the day, but says that He is ignorant with the
wish to hide it, you see in what a blasphemy the conclusion issues. For the truth
lies and could not properly be called truth if it has any quality opposed to
truth. But if the truth does not lie, neither is God the Word ignorant of the day
which He Himself made, and which He Himself fixed, wherein He purposes to
judge the world, but has the knowledge of the Father as being unchanged image. Not
then to God the Word does the ignorance belong, but to the form of the servant
who at that time knew as much as the indwelling Godhead revealed. The same
position may be maintained about other similar cases. How for instance could it be
reasonable for God the Word to say to the Father, "Father if it be possible let
this cup pass from me, nevertheless not as I will but as Thou wilt"? (7) The
absurdities which necessarily thence follow are not a few. First it follows that
the Father and the Son are not of the same mind, and that the Father wishes
one thing and the Son another, for He said, "Nevertheless not as I will but as
Thou wilt." Secondly we shall have to contemplate great ignorance in the Son, for
He will be found ignorant whether the cup can or cannot pass from Him; but to
say this of God the Word is utter impiety and blasphemy. For exactly did He
know the end of the mystery of the oeconomy Who for this very reason came among
us, Who of His own accord took our nature, Who emptied Himself. For this cause
too He foretold to the Holy Apostles, "Behold we go up to Jerusalem; and the Son
of Man shall be betrayed . . . into the hands of the Gentiles to mock and to
scourge and to crucify Him, and the third day He shall rise again." (8) How then
can He Who foretold these things, and, when Peter deprecated their coming to
pass, rebuked him, Himself deprecate their coming to pass, when He clearly knows
all that is to be? Is it not absurd that Abraham many generations ago should
have seen His day and have been glad, (9) and that Isaiah in like manner, and
Jeremiah, and Daniel, and Zechariah, and all the fellowship of the prophets,
should have foretold His saving passion, and He Himself be ignorant, and beg release
from and deprecate it, though it was destined to come to pass for the
salvation of the world? Therefore these words are not the words of God the Word, but of
the form of the servant, afraid of death because death was not yet destroyed.
(10) Surely God the Word permitted the utterance of these expressions allowing
room for fear, that the nature of Him that had to be born may be plain, and to
prevent our supposing the Son of Abraham and David to be an unreality or
appearance. The crew of the impious heretics has given birth to this blasphemy
through entertaining these sentiments. We shall therefore apply what is divinely
spoken and acted to God the Word; on the other hand what is said and done in
humility we shall connect with the form of a servant, lest we be tainted with the
blasphemy of Arius and Eunomius.
Against V. -- We assert that God the Word shared like ourselves in flesh and blood, and
in immortal soul, on account of the union relating to them; but that God the
WOrd was made flesh by any change we not only refuse to say, but accuse of
impiety those who do, and it may be seen that this is contrary to the very terms laid
down. For if the Word was changed into flesh He did not share with us in flesh
and blood: but if He shared in flesh and blood He shared as being another
besides them: and if the flesh is anything other besides Him, then He was not
changed into flesh. While therefore we use the term sharing (1) we worship both Him
that took and that which was taken as one Son. But we reckon the distinction of
the natures. We do not object to the term man bearing God, as employed by many
of the holy Fathers, one of whom is the great Basil, who uses this term in his
argument to Amphilochius about the Holy Ghost, and in his interpretation of
the fifty-ninth psalm. But we call Him man bearing God, not because He received
some particular divine grace, but as possessing all the Godhead of the Son
united. For thus says the blessed Paul in his interpretation, "Beware lest any man
spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after
the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ. For in Him dwelleth all the
fulness of the Godhead bodily." (2)
Against VI. -- The blessed Paul calls that which was assumed by God the Word "form of a
servant," (3) but since the assumption was prior to the union, and the blessed
Paul was discoursing about the assumption when be called the nature which was
assumed "form of a servant," after the making of the union the name of
"servitude" has no longer place. For seeing that the Apostle when writing to them that
believed in Him said, "So thou art not a servant but a son" (4) and the Lord said
to His disciples, "Henceforth I will not call you servants but friends;" (5)
much more the first fruits of our nature, through whom even we were guerdoned
with the boon of adoption, would be released from the title of servant. We
therefore confess even "the form of the servant" to be God on account of the form of
God united to it; and we bow to the authority of the prophet when he calls the
babe also Emmanuel, and the child which was born, "Angel of great counsel,
wonderful Counsellor, mighty God, powerful, Prince of peace, and Father of the age
to come." (6) Yet the same prophet, even after the union, when proclaiming the
nature of that which was assumed, calls him who is of the seed of Abraham
"servant" in the words "Thou art my servant O Israel and in thee will I be
glorified;" (7) and again, "Thus says the Lord that formed me from the womb to be his
servant;" (8) and a little further on, "Lo I have given thee for a covenant of
the people, for a light to the Gentiles, that thou mayest be my salvation unto
the end of the earth." (9) But what was formed from the womb was not God the Word
but the form of the servant. For God the Word was not made flesh by being
changed, but He assumed flesh with a rational soul.
Against VII. -- If the nature of man is mortal, and God the Word is life and giver of
life, and raised up the temple which had been destroyed by the Jews, and carried it
into heaven, how is not the form of the servant glorified through the form of
God? For if being originally and by nature mortal it was made immortal through
its union with God the Word, it therefore received what it had not; and after
receiving what it had not, and being glorified, it is glorified by Him who gave.
Wherefore also the Apostle exclaims, "According to the working of His mighty
power which he wrought in Christ when He raised Him from the dead." (10)
Against VIII. -- As I have often said, the doxology which we offer to the Lord Christ is
one, and we confess the same to be at once God and man, as the method of the
union has taught us; but we shall not shrink from speaking of the properties of the
natures. For God the Word did not undergo change into flesh, nor yet again did
the man lose what he was and undergo transmutation into the nature of God.
Therefore we worship the Lord Christ, while we maintain the properties of either
nature.
Against IX. -- Here he has plainly had the hardihood to anathematize not only those who
at the present time hold pious opinions, but also those who were in former days
heralds of truth; aye even the writers of the divine gospels, the band of the
holy Apostles, and, in addition to these, Gabriel the archangel. For he indeed
it was who first, even before the conception, announced the birth of the Christ
according to the flesh; saying in reply to Mary when she asked, "How shall this
be, seeing I know not a man?" "The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee and the
power of the Highest shall overshadow thee; therefore also that holy thing that
shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God." (11) And to Joseph he
said, "Fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife, for that which is conceived in her
is of the Holy Ghost.'' (12) And the Evangelist says, "When as his mother Mary
was espoused to Joseph she was found with child of the Holy Ghost." (1) And
the Lord Himself when He had come into the synagogue of the Jews and had taken
the prophet Isaiah, after reading the passage in which he says, "The spirit of
the Lord is upon me because He hath anointed me" and so on, added, "This day is
this scripture ful-filled in your ears.'' (1) And the blessed Peter in his
sermon to the Jews said, "God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost." (3)
And Isaiah many ages before had predicted, "There shall come forth a rod out of
the stem of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots; and the spirit of
the Lord shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the
spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord;"
(3) and again, "Behold my servant whom I uphold, my beloved in whom my soul
delighteth. I will put my spirit upon him: he shall bring forth judgment to the
Gentiles." (4) This testimony the Evangelist too has inserted in his own writings.
And the Lord Himself in the Gospels says to the Jews, "If I with the spirit of
God cast out devils, no doubt the kingdom of God is come ripen you." (5) And
John says, "He that sent me to baptize with water, the same said unto me, Upon
whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending and remaining on Him, the same is He
which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost." (6) So this exact examiner of the divine
decrees has not only anathematized prophets, apostles, and even the archangel
Gabriel, but has suffered his blasphemy to reach even the Saviour of the world
Himself. For we have shewn that the Lord Himself after reading the passage "The
spirit of the Lord is upon me because He hath anointed me," said to the Jews,
"This day is this scripture fulfilled in your ears." And to those who said that
He was casting out devils by Beelzebub He replied that He was casting them out
by the Spirit of God. But we maintain that it was not God the Word, of one
substance and co-eternal with the Father, that was formed by the Holy Ghost and
anointed, but the human nature which was assumed by Him at the end of days. We
shall confess that the Spirit of the Son was His own if he spoke of it as of the
same nature and proceeding from the Father, and shall accept the expression as
consistent with true piety. But if he speaks of the Spirit as being of the Son,
or as having its origin through the Son we shall reject this statement as
blasphemous and impious. For we believe the Lord when He says, "The spirit which
proceedeth from the Father;" (2) and likewise the very divine Paul saying, "We have
received not the spirit of the world, but the spirit which is of God." (8)
Against X. -- The unchangeable nature was not changed into nature of flesh, but assumed
human nature and set it over the common high priests, as the blessed Paul
teaches in the words, "For every high priest taken from among men is ordained for
men in things pertaining to God, that he may offer both gifts and sacrifices for
sins: who can have compassion on the ignorant and on them that are out of the
way; for that he himself also is encompassed with infirmity. And by reason
hereof he ought, as for the people so also for himself." (9) And a little further on
interpreting this he says, "As was Aaron so also was the Christ." (10), Then
pointing out the infirmity of the assumed nature he says, "Who in the days of
His flesh, when He had offered up prayers and supplication with strong crying and
tears unto Him that was able to save Him from death, and was heard for His
godly fear, though He was a son yet learned obedience by the things that He
suffered: and having been made perfect He became unto all that obey Him the author of
eternal salvation; named of God a high priest of the order of Melchisedec."
(11) Who then is He who was perfected by toils of virtue and who was not perfect
by nature? Who is He who learnt obedience by experience, and before his
experience was ignorant of it? Who is it that lived with godly fear and offered
supplication with strong crying and tears,not able to save Himself but appealing to
Him that is able to save Him and asking for release from death? Not God the
Word, the impassible, the immortal, the incorporeal, whose memory is joy and
release from tears, "For he has wiped away tears from off all faces,'' (12) and again
the prophet says, "I remembered God and was glad," (12) Who crowneth them that
live in godly fear, "Who knoweth all things before they be," (14) "Who hath
all things that the Father hath;" (15) Who is the unchangeable image of the
Father," (16) "Who sheweth the Father in himself." (17) It is on the contrary that
which was assumed by Him of the seed of David, mortal, passible, and afraid of
death; although this itself afterwards destroyed the power of death through
union with the God who had assumed it; (18) which walked through all righteousness
and said to John, "Suffer it to be so now for thus it becometh us to fulfil all
righteousness." (19)