DEPOSITION OF ARIUS
DEPOSITION OF ARIUS
S. Alexander's Deposition of Arius and his companions, and Encyclical Letter
on the subject.
Alexander, being assembled with his beloved brethren, the Presbyters and
Deacons of Alexandria, and the Mareotis, greets them in the Lord.
Although you have already subscribed to the letter I addressed to Arius
and his fellows, exhorting them to renounce his impiety, and to submit themselves
to the sound Catholic Faith, and have shewn your right-mindedness and
agreement in the doctrines of the Catholic Church: yet forasmuch as I have written also
to our fellow-ministers in every place concerning Arius and his fellows, and
especially since some of you, as the Presbyters Chafes and Pistus [1], and the
Deacons Serapion, Parammon, Zosimus, and Irenaeus, have joined Arius and his
fellows, and been content to suffer deposition with them, I thought it needful to
assemble together you, the Clergy of the city, and to send for you the Clergy
of the Mareotis, in order that you may learn what I am now writing, and may
testify your agreement thereto, and give your concurrence in the deposition of
Arius, Pistus, and their fellows. For it is desirable that you should be made
acquainted with what I write, and that each of you should heartily embrace it, as
though he had written it himself.
A Copy.
To his dearly beloved and most honoured fellow-ministers of the Catholic
Church in every place. Alexander sends health in the Lord.
1. As there is one body [2] of the Catholic Church, and a command is given
us in the sacred Scriptures to preserve the bond of unity and peace, it is
agreeable thereto. that we should write and signify to one another whatever is
done by each of us individually; so that whether one member suffer or rejoice, we
may either suffer or rejoice with one another. Now there are gone forth in
this diocese, at this time, certain lawless [3] men, enemies of Christ, teaching
an apostasy, which one may justly suspect and designate as a forerunner [4] of
Antichrist. I was desirous [5] to pass such a matter by without notice, in the
hope that perhaps the evil would spend itself among its supporters, and not
extend to other places to defile [6] the ears [7] of the simple [8]. But seeing
that Eusebius, now of Nicomedia, who thinks that the government of the Church
rests with him, because retribution has not come upon him for his desertion of
Berytus, when he had cast an eye [9] of desire on the Church of the Nicomedians,
begins to support these apostates, and has taken upon him to write letters every
where in their behalf, if by any means he may draw in certain ignorant persons
to this most base and antichristian heresy; I am therefore constrained, knowing
what is written in the law, no longer to hold my peace, but to make it known
to you all; that you may understand who the apostates are, and the cavils [10]
which their heresy has adopted, and that, should Eusebius write to you, you may
pay no attention to him, for he now desires by means of these men to exhibit
anew his old malevolence [11], which has so long been concealed, pretending to
write in their favour, while in truth it clearly appears, that he does it to
forward his own interests.
2. Now those who became apostates are these, Arius, Achilles, Aeithales,
Carpones, another Arius, and Sarmates, sometime Presbyters: Euzoius, Lucius,
Julius, Menas, Helladius, and Gains, sometime Deacons: and with them Secundus and
Theonas, sometime called Bishops. And the novelties they have invented and put
forth contrary to the Scriptures are these following:--God was not always a
Father [12], but there was a time when God was not a Father. The Word of God was
not always, but originated from things that were not; for God that is, has made
him that was not, of that which was not; wherefore there was a time when He
was not; for the Son is a creature and a work. Neither is He like in essence to
the Father; neither is He the true and natural Word of the Father; neither is He
His true Wisdom ; but He is one of the things made and created, and is called
the Word and Wisdom by an abuse of terms, since He Himself originated by the
proper Word of God, and by the Wisdom that is in God, by which God has made not
only all other things but Him also. Wherefore He is by nature subject to change
and variation as are all rational creatures· And the Word is foreign from the
essence [13] of the Father, and is alien and separated therefrom. And the Father
cannot be described by the Son, for the Word does not know the Father
perfectly and accurately, neither can He see Him perfectly. Moreover, the Son knows not
His own essence as it really is; for He is made for us, that God might create
us by Him, as by an instrument; and He would not have existed, had not God
wished to create us. Accordingly, when some one asked them, whether the Word of God
can possibly change as the devil changed, they were not afraid to say that He
can; for being something made and created, His nature is subject to change.
3. Now when Arius and his fellows made these assertions, and shamelessly
avowed them, we being assembled with the Bishops of Egypt and Libya, nearly a
hundred in number, anathematized both them and their followers. But Eusebius and
his fellows admitted them to communion, being desirous to mingle falsehood with
the truth, and impiety with piety. But they will not be able to do so, for
the truth must prevail; neither is there any "communion of light with darkness,"
nor any "concord of Christ with Belial [14]." For who ever heard such
assertions before [15]? or who that hears them now is not astonished and does not stop
his ears lest they should be defiled with such language? Who that has heard the
words of John, "In the beginning was the Word [16]," will not denounce the
saying of these men, that "there was a time when He was not ?" Or who that has
heard in the Gospel, "the Only-begotten Son," and "by Him were all things made
[17]," will not detest their declaration that He is "one of the things that were
made." For how can He be one of those things which were made by Himself? or how
can He be the Only-begotten, when, according to them, He is counted as one among
the rest, since He is Himself a creature and a work? And how can He be "made
of things that were not," when the Father saith, "My heart hath uttered a good
Word," and "Out of the womb I have begotten Thee before the morning star [18]?''
Or again, how is He "unlike in substance to the Father," seeing He is the
perfect "image" and "brightness [19]" of the Father, and that He saith, "He that
hath seen Me hath seen the Father [20] ?" And if the Son is the "Word" and
"Wisdom" of God, how was there "a time when He was not?" It is the same as if they
should say that God was once without Word and without Wisdom [21]. And how is He
"subject to change and variation," Who says, by Himself, "I am in the Father,
and the Father in Me [20]," and "I and the Father are One [20];" and by the
Prophet, "Behold Me, for I am, and I change not [22] ?" For although one may refer
this expression to the Father, yet it may now be more aptly spoken of the Word,
viz., that though He has been made man, He has not changed; but as the Apostle
has said, "Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever." And who
can have persuaded them to say, that He was made for us, whereas Paul writes,
"for Whom are all things, and by Whom are all things [23]?"
4. As to their blasphemous position that "the Son knows not the Father
perfectly," we ought not to wonder at it; for having once set themselves to fight
against Christ, they contradict even His express words, since He says, "As the
Father knoweth Me, even so know I the Father [24]." Now if the Father knows the
Son but in part, then it is evident that the Son does not know the Father
perfectly; but if it is not lawful to say this, but the Father does know the Son
perfectly, then it is evident that as the Father knows His own Word, so also the
Word knows His own Father Whose Word He is.
5. By these arguments and references to the sacred Scriptures we
frequently overthrew them; but they changed like chameleons [25], and again shifted
their ground, striving to bring upon themselves that sentence, "when the wicked
falleth into the depth of evils, he despiseth [26].'' There have been many
heresies before them, which, venturing further than they ought, have fallen into folly
; but these men by endeavouring in all their cavils to overthrow the Divinity
of the Word, have justified the other in comparison of themselves, as
approaching nearer to Antichrist. Wherefore they have been excommunicated and
anathematized by the Church. We grieve for their destruction, and especially because,
having once been instructed in the doctrines of the Church, they have now sprung
away. Yet we are not greatly surprised, for Hymenaeus and Philetus [27] did the
same, and before them Judas, who followed the Saviour, but afterwards became a
traitor and an apostate. And concerning these same persons, we have not been
left without instruction; for our Lord has forewarned us; "Take heed lest any man
deceive you: for many shall come in My name, saying, I am Christ, and the time
draweth near, and they shall deceive many: go ye not after them [28] ;" While
Paul, who was taught these things by our Saviour, wrote that "in the latter
times some shall depart from the sound faith, giving heed to seducing spirits and
doctrines of devils, which reject the truth [29]."
6. Since then our Lord and Saviour Jesus, Christ has instructed us by His
own mouth, and also hath signified to us by the Apostle concerning such men, we
accordingly being personal witnesses of their impiety, have anathematized, as
we said, all such, and declared them to be alien from the Catholic Faith and
Church. And we have made this known to your piety, dearly beloved and most
honoured fellow-ministers, in order that should any of them have the boldness [30] to
come unto you, you may not receive them, nor comply with the desire of
Eusebius, or any other person writing in their behalf. For it becomes us who are
Christians to turn away from all who speak or think any thing against Christ, as
being enemies of God, and destroyers [31] of souls; and not even to "bid such God
speed [32]," lest we become partakers of their sins, as the blessed John hath
charged us. Salute the brethren that are with you. They that are with me salute
you.