SELECT LETTERS OF SAINT GREGORY NAZIANZEN, ARCHBISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE,
DIVISION II
DIVISION II.
CORRESPONDENCE WITH SAINT BASIL THE GREAT, ARCHBISHOP OF CAESAREA.
EP. I.
(Perhaps about A.D. 357 or 358; in answer to a letter which is not now
extant.)
TO BASIL HIS COMRADE.
I have failed, I confess, to keep my promise. I had engaged even at Athens,
at the time of our friendship and intimate connection there (for I can find no
better word for it), to join you in a life of philosophy. But I failed to keep
my promise, not of my own will, but because one law prevailed against another;
I mean the law which bids us honour our parents overpowered the law of our
friendship and intercourse. Yet I will not fail you altogether, if you will accept
this offer. I shall be with you half the time, and half of it you will be with
me, that we may have the whole in common, and that our friendship may be on
equal terms; and so it will be arranged in such a way that my parents will not be
grieved, and yet I shall gain you.
EP. II.
(Written about the same time, in reply to another letter now lost.)
I do not like being joked about Tiberina and its mud and its winters, O my
friend, who are so free from mud, and who walk on tiptoe, and trample on the
plains. You who have wings and are borne aloft, and fly like the arrows of Abaris,
in order that, Cappadocian though you are, you may flee from Cappadocia. Have
we done you an injury, because while you are pale and breathing hard and
measuring the sun, we are sleek and well fed and not pressed for room? Yet this is
your condition. You are luxurious and rich, and go to market. I do not approve of
this. Either then cease to reproach us with our mud (for you did not build
your city, nor we make our winter), or else for our mud we will bring against you
your hucksters, and the rest of the crop of nuisances which infest cities.
EP. IV.
(In answer to Ep. XIV., of Basil, about 361.)
You may mock and pull to pieces my affairs, whether in jest or in earnest.
This is a matter of no consequence; only laugh, and take your fill of culture,
and enjoy my friendship. Everything that comes from you is pleasant to me, no
matter what it may be, and how it may look. For I think you are chaffing about
things here, not for the sake of chaffing, but that you may draw me to yourself,
if I understand you at all; just like people who block up streams in order to
draw them into another channel.That is how your sayings always seem to me.
For my part I will admire your Pontus and your Pontic darkness, and your
dwelling place so worthy of exile, and the hills over your head, and the wild
beasts which test your faith, and your sequestered spot that lies under them ... or
as I should say your mousehole with the stately names of Abode of Thought,
Monastery, School; and your thickets of wild bushes, and crown of precipitous
mountains, by which may you be, not crowned but, cloistered; and your limited air;
and the sun, for which you long, and can only see as through a chimney, O
sunless Cimmerians of Pontus, who are condemned not only to a six months' night, as
some are said to be, but who have not even a part of your life out of the
shadow, but all your life is one long night, and a real shadow of death, to use a
Scripture phrase. And admire your strait and narrow road, leading ... I know not
if it be to the Kingdom, or to Hades, but for your sake I hope it is the
Kingdom ... And as for the intervening country, what is your wish? Am falsely to call
it Eden, and the fountain divided into four heads, by which the world is
watered, or the dry and waterless wilderness (only what Moses will come to tame it,
bringing water out of the rock with his staff)? For all of it which has escaped
the rocks is full of gullies; and that which is not a gully is a thicket of
thorns; and whatever is above the thorns is a precipice; and the road above that
is precipitous, and slopes both ways, exercising the mind of travellers, and
calling for gymnastic exercises for safety. And the river rushes roaring down,
which to you is a Strymon of Amphipolis for quietness, and there are not so many
fishes in it as stones, nor does it flow · into a lake, but it dashes into
abysses, O my grandiloquent friend and inventor of new names. For it is great and
terrible, and overwhelms the psalmody of those who live above it; like the
Cataracts and Catadoupa of the Nile, so does it roar you down day and night. It is
rough and fordless; and it has only this morsel of kindness about it, that it
does not sweep away your dwelling when the torrents and winter storms make it
mad. This then is what I think of those Fortunate Islands and of you happy people.
And you are not to admire the crescent-shaped curves which strangle rather
than cut off the accessible parts of your Highlands, and the strip of mountain
ridge that hangs over your heads, and makes your life like that of Tantalus; and
the draughty breezes, and the vent-holes of the earth, which refresh your
courage when it fails; and your musical birds that sing (but only of famine), and fly
about (but only about the desert). No one visits it, you say, except for
hunting; you might add, and except to look upon your dead bodies. This is perhaps
too long for a letter, but it is too short for a comedy. If you can take my jokes
kindly you will do well, but if not, I will send you some more.
EP. V.
(CIRCA A. D. 361.)
Since you do take my jokes kindly, I send you the rest. My prelude is from
Homer.
"Come now and change thy theme,
And sing of the inner adornment."
-- OD. viii. 492.
Your roofless and doorless hut, your fireless and smokeless hearth, your walls
dried by fire, that we may not be hit by the drops of the mud, condemned like
Tantalus thirsting in the midst of waters, and that pitiable feast with nothing
to eat, to which we were invited from Cappadocia, not as to a Lotus-eater's
poverty, but to a table of Alcinous--we young and miserable survivors of a wreck.
For I remember those loaves and the broth (so it was called), yes, and I shall
remember them too, and my poor teeth that slipped on your hunks of bread, and
then braced themselves up, and pulled themselves as it were out of mud. You
yourself will raise these things to a higher strain of tragedy, having learnt to
talk big through your own sufferings ... for if we had not been quickly
delivered by that great supporter of the poor--I mean your mother--who appeared
opportunely like a harbour to men tossed by a storm, we should long ago have been
dead, rather pitied than admired for our faith in Pontus. How shall I pass over
that garden which was no garden and had no vegetables, and the Augean dunghill
which we cleared out of the house, and with which we filled it up (sc. the
garden), when we drew that mountainous wagon, I the vintager, and you the valiant,
with our necks and hands, which still bear the traces of our labours. ''O earth
and sun, O air and virtue" (for I will indulge a little in tragic tones), not
that we might bridge the Hellespont, but that we might level a precipice. If you
are not put out by the mention of the circumstances, no more am I; but if you
are, how much more was I by the reality. I pass by the rest, through respect for
the others from whom I received much enjoyment.
EP. VI.
(Written about the same time, in a more serious vein.)
What I wrote before about our stay in Pontus was in joke, not in earnest;
what I write now is very much in earnest. O that one would place me as in the
month of those former days,(<greek>a</greek>) in which I luxuriated with you in
hard living; since voluntary pain is more valuable than involuntary delight. O
that one would give me back those psalmodies and vigils and those sojournings
with God in prayer, and that immaterial, so to speak, and unbodied life. O for the
intimacy and one-souledness of the brethren who were by you divinized and
exalted: O for the contest and incitement of virtue which we secured by written
Rules and Canons; O for the loving labour in the Divine Oracles, and the light we
found in them by the guidance of the Holy Ghost. Or, if I may speak of lesser
and slighter matters, O for the daily courses and experiences; O for the
gatherings of wood, and the cutting of stone; O for the golden plane-tree, more
precious than that of Xerxes, under which sat, not a King enfeebled by luxury, but a
Monk worn out by hard life, which I planted and Apollos (I mean your honourable
self) watered;(<greek>a</greek>) but God gave the increase to our honour, that
a memorial might remain among you of my diligence, as in the Ark we read and
believe, did Aaron's rod that budded.(<greek>b</greek>) To long for all this is
very easy, but it is not easy to attain it. But do you come to me, and conspire
with me in virtue, and co-operate with me, and aid me by your prayers to keep
the profit which we used to get together, that I may not perish by little and
little, like a shadow as the day draws to its close. I would rather breathe you
than the air, and only live while I am with you, either actually in your
presence, or virtually by your likeness in your absence.
EP. VIII.
(Written to S. Basil shortly after his Ordination as Priest, probably toward
the end of A.D. 362.)
I approve the beginning of your letter; but what is there of yours that I do
not approve? And you are convicted of having written just like
me;(<greek>g</greek>) for I, too, was forced into the rank of the Priesthood, for indeed I
never was eager for it. We are to one another, if ever any men were, trustworthy
witnesses of our love for a humble and lowly philosophy. But perhaps it would
have been better that this had not happened, or I know not what to say, as long
as I am in ignorance of the purpose of the Holy Ghost. But since it has come
about, we must bear it, at least so it seems clear to me; and especially when we
take the times into consideration, which are bringing in upon us so many
heretical tongues, and must not put to shame either the hopes of those who have
trusted us thus, or our own lives.
EP. XIX.
(This Epistle should be read in connection with the three addressed to
Eusebius of Caesarea, to which it refers. For the circumstances see General
Prolegomena, 1, p. 194.)
It is a time for prudence and endurance, and that we should not let anyone
appear to be of higher courage than ourselves, or let all our labours and toils
be in an instant brought to nothing. Why do I write this, and wherefore? Our
Bishop Eusebius, very dear to God (for so we must for the future both think and
write of him), is very much disposed to agreement and friendship with us; and as
fire softens iron, so has time softened him; and I think a letter of appeal
and invitation will come to you from him, as he intimated to me, and as many
persons who are well acquainted with his affairs assure me. Let us be beforehand
with him then, either by going to him, or by writing to him; or rather by first
writing and then going; in order that we may not by and by be put to shame by
being defeated when it was in our power to secure a victory by being honourably
and philosophically beaten, which so many are asking from us. Be persuaded by me
then, and come; both on this account and on account of the bad times; for a
conspiracy of heretics is assailing the Church; some of them are here now, and
are troubling us; and others, rumour says, are coming; and there is reason to
fear lest the Word of Truth should be swept away, unless there be stirred up very
soon the spirit of a Bezaleel, the wise Master builder of such arguments and
dogmas. If you think I ought to go too, to stay with you and travel with you, I
will not refuse to do even this.
(We insert here the three letters to Eusebius, which are so closely
connected with the above as not to seem out of place. )
EP. XVI.
TO EUSEBIUS, BISHOP OF CAESAREA.
Since I am addressing a man who does not love falsehood, and who is the
keenest man I know at detecting it in another, however it may be twined in skilful
and varied labyrinths; and, moreover, on my own part I will say it, though
against the grain I do not like artifice, either, both from my natural
constitution, and because God's Word has formed me so. Therefore I write what presents
itself to my mind; and I beg you to excuse my plain speaking, or you will wrong the
truth by depriving me of my liberty, and forcing me to restrain within myself
the pain of my grief, like some secret and malignant disease. I rejoice that I
have your respect (for I am a man, as some one has said before), and that I am
summoned to Synods and spiritual conferences. But I am troubled at the slight
which has been inflicted on my most Reverend brother Basil, and is still
inflicted on him by Your Reverence; for I chose him as the companion of my life and
words and highest philosophy, and he is so still; and I never had reason to
regret my judgment of him. It is more temperate to speak thus of him, that I may not
seem to be praising myself in admiring him. You, however, I think, by
honouring me and dishonouring him, seem to be acting like a man who should with one
hand stroke a man's head, and with the other hand strike him on the face; or while
tearing up the foundations of a house should paint the walls and decorate the
exterior. If then you will listen to me, this is what you will do, and I claim
to be listened to, for this is justice. If you will pay due attention to him,
he will do the like by you. And I will follow him as a shadow does the body,
being of little worth and inclined to peace. For I am not so mean as to be willing
in other respects to philosophize, and to be of the better part, but to
overlook a matter which is the end of all our teaching, namely love; especially in
regard to a Priest, and one of so high a character, and one whom I know of all my
acquaintances to be the best both in life and doctrine and conduct. For my
pain shall not obscure the truth.
EP. XVII.
TO EUSEBIUS, ARCHBISHOP OF CAESAREA.
I did not write in an insolent spirit, as you complain of my letter, but
rather in a spiritual and philosophical one, and as was fitting, unless this too
wrongs "your most eloquent Gregory." For though you are my Superior in rank, yet
you will grant me something of liberty and just freedom of speech. Therefore
be kinder to me. But if you regard my letter as coming from a servant, and from
one who has not the right even to look you in the face, I will in this instance
accept your stripes and not even shed a tear. Will you blame me for this also?
That would befit anyone rather than your Reverence. For it is the part of a
high-souled man to accept more readily the freedom of a friend than the flattery
of an enemy.
EP. XVIII.
TO EUSEBIUS OF CAESAREA.
I was never meanly disposed towards your Reverence; do not find me guilty.
But after allowing myself a little liberty and boldness, just to relieve and
heal my grief, I at once bowed and submitted, and willingly subjected myself to
the Canon. What else could I have done, knowing both you and the Law of the
Spirit? But if I had been ever so mean and ignoble in my sentiments, yet the present
time would not allow such feelings, nor the wild beasts which are rushing on
the Church, nor your own courage and manliness, so purely and genuinely fighting
for the Church. I will come then, if you wish it, and take part with you in
prayers and in conflict, and will serve you, and like cheering boys will stir up
the noble athlete by my exhortations.
EP. XL.
TO THE GREAT BASIL.
(About the middle of the year 370. On the death of Eusebius Basil seems to
have formed a desire that his friend Gregory should succeed to the vacant
Metropolitanate; and so he wrote to him, without mentioning the death of the
Archbishop, to come to him at Caesarea, representing himself as dangerously ill.
Gregory, deeply grieved at the news, set off at once, but had not proceeded far on
his way when he learned that Basil was in his usual health, and that the Bishops
of the Province were assembling at Caesarea for the Election of a Metropolitan.
He saw through the artifice at once; and thinking that Basil had wished to
secure his presence at the Metropolis in order that his influence might bring
about his own (Basil's) Election, he wrote him the following indignant letter.
Nevertheless both he and his father felt that no one was so well fitted to succeed
to the vacant throne; and so Gregory wrote in his father's name the three
letters which we have placed next, addressed respectively to the people of Caesarea,
to the Bishops attending the Synod, and to Eusebius Bishop of Samosata.)
Do not be surprized if I say something strange, which has not been said
before by anyone. I think you have the reputation of being a steady safe and
strong-minded man, but also of being more simple than safe in much that you plan and
do. For that which is free from evil is also in proportion slow to suspect
evil, as is shewn by what has just occurred. You have summoned me to the Metropolis
at the moment when a council has been called for the election of a Bishop, and
your pretext is very seemly and plausible. You pretend to be very ill, indeed
at your last breath, and to long to see me and to bid me a last farewell; I do
not know with what object, even what my presence can effect in the matter. I
started in great grief at what had happened; for what could be of higher value to
me than your life, or more distressing than your departure? And I shed a
fountain of tears; and I wailed aloud; and I felt myself now for the first time
unphilosophically disposed. What did I leave unperformed of all that befits a
funeral? But as soon as I found that the Bishops were assembling at the City, at
once I stopped short in my course; and I wondered first that you had not perceived
what was proper, or guarded against people's tongues, which are so given to
slander the guileless; and secondly that you did not think the same course to be
fitting for me as for yourself, though our life and our rule and everything is
common to us both, who have been so closely associated by God from the first.
Thirdly, for I must say this also, I wondered whether you remembered that such
nominations are worthy of the more religious, not of the more powerful, nor of
those most in favour with the multitude. For these reasons then I backed water,
and held back. Now, if you think as I do, come to this determination, to avoid
these public turmoils and evil suspicions. I shall see your Reverence when the
matters are settled and time allows, and I shall have more and graver
reproaches to address to you.
EP. XLI.
TO THE PEOPLE OF CAESAREA, IN HIS FATHER'S NAME.
I am a little shepherd, and preside over a tiny flock, and I am among the
least of the servants of the Spirit. But Grace is not narrow, or circumscribed by
place. Wherefore let freedom of speech be given even to the small,--especially
when the subject matter is of such great importance, and one in which all are
interested--even to deliberate with men of hoary hairs, who speak with perhaps
greater wisdom than the ordinary run of men. You are deliberating on no
ordinary or unimportant matter, but on one by which the common interest must
necessarily be promoted or injured according to the decision at which you arrive. For
our subject matter is the Church, for which Christ died, and the guide who is to
present it and lead it to God. For the light of the body is the
eye,(<greek>a</greek>) as we have heard; not only the bodily eye which sees and is seen, but
that which contemplates and is contemplated spiritually. But the light of the
Church is the Bishop, as is evident to you even without our writing it. As then
the straightness or crookedness of the course of the body depends upon the
clearness or dulness of the eye, so must the Church necessarily share the peril or
safety incurred by the conduct of its Chief. You must then take thought for the
whole Church as the Body of Christ, but more especially for your own, which was
from the beginning and is now the Mother of almost all the Churches, to which
all the Commonwealth looks, like a circle described round a centre, not only
because of its orthodoxy proclaimed of old to all, but also because of the grace
of unanimity so evidently bestowed upon it by God. You then have summoned us
also to your discussion of this matter, and so are acting rightly and
canonically. But we are oppressed by age and infirmity, and if we by the strength given us
by the Holy Ghost could be present (nothing is incredible to them that
believe), this would be best for the common welfare and most pleasant to ourselves,
that we might confer something on you, and ourselves have a part of the blessing;
but if I should be kept away through weakness, I will give at any rate
whatever can be given by one who is absent.
I believe that there are others among you worthy of the Primacy, both
because of the greatness of your city, and because it has been governed in times past
so excellently and by such great men; but there is one man among you to whom I
cannot prefer any, our son well beloved of God, Basil the Priest (I speak
before God as my witness); a man of pure life and word, and alone, or almost alone,
of all qualified in both respects to stand against the present times, and the
prevailing wordiness of the heretics. I write this to men of the priestly and
monastic Orders, and also to the dignitaries and councillors, and to the whole
people. If you should approve it, and my vote should prevail, being so just and
right, and given with God's aid, I am and will be with you in spirit; or rather
I have already set my hand to the work and am bold in the Spirit. But if you
should not agree with me, but determine something else, and if the matter is to
be settled by cliques and relationships, and if the hand of the mob is again to
disturb the sincerity of your vote, do what pleases you--I shall stay at home.
EP. XLIII.
(The comprovincial Bishops had notified the elder Gregory of their Synod,
but without mentioning its date or purpose or inviting him to take part in
it--probably because they knew how strongly he would support the election of Basil,
to which they were unfavourable. S. Gregory therefore wrote the following letter
in his father's name.)
TO THE BISHOPS.
How sweet and kind you are, and how full of love. You have invited me to the
Metropolis, because, as I imagine, you are going to take some counsel about a
Bishop. So much I learn from you, though you have not told me either that I am
to be present, or why, or when, but have merely announced to me suddenly that
you were setting out, as though resolved not to respect me, and as not desirous
that I should share your counsels, but rather putting a hindrance in the way of
my coming, that you may not meet me even against my will. This is your way of
action, and I will put up with the insult, but I will set before you my view
and how I feel. Various people will put forward various candidates, each
according to his own inclinations and interests, as is usually the case at such times.
But I cannot prefer anyone, for my conscience would not allow it, to my dear
son and fellow priest Basil. For whom of all my acquaintance do I find more
approved in his life, or more powerful in his word, or more furnished altogether
with the beauty of virtue? But if you allege weak health against him, I reply that
we are choosing not an athlete but a teacher. And at the same time is seen in
this case the power of Him that strengthens and supports the weak, if such they
be. If you accept this vote I will come and take part, either in spirit or in
body. But if you are marching to a foregone conclusion, and faction is to
overrule justice, I shall rejoice to have been overlooked.The work must be yours;
but pray for me.(<greek>a</greek>)
EP. XLII.
(There still seemed a probability that intrigues and party spirit would
carry the day, and so the two Gregories determined to call in the aid of Eusebius
of Samosata, though he did not belong to the Province. He had been a conspicuous
champion of orthodoxy against the Arian Emperor Valens, and the Gregories
hoped much from his presence at the Synod. He responded to their appeal, and
undertook the three hundred miles of very difficult travelling to throw in his
influence with the cause which they had at heart. He saw, however, that it was
necessary that the aged Bishop of Nazianzus, notwithstanding his years and
infirmities, should make the effort, and he persuaded him to go. The result was all that
could be desired; for Basil was elected by a unanimous vote. The letter, which
S. Gregory wrote in his own name to thank him, will be found later on.)
TO EUSEBIUS, BISHOP OF SAMOSATA.
O that I had the wings of a dove, or that my old age could be renewed, that
I might be able to go to your charity, and to satisfy the longings that I have
to see you, and to tell you the troubles of my soul, and in you to find some
comfort for my afflictions. For since the death of the blessed Bishop Eusebius I
am not a little afraid lest they who on a former occasion set traps for our
Metropolis, and wanted to fill it with heretical tares, should now seize the
opportunity, and uproot by their evil teaching the piety which has with so much
labour been sown in the hearts of men, and should tear asunder its unity, as they
have done in many Churches. As soon as I received letters from the Clergy asking
me not to forget them in their present circumstances, I looked round about me,
and remembered your love and your right faith and the zeal with which you are
ever possessed for the Churches of God; and therefore I sent my beloved
Eustathius, my Deacon and helper, to warn your Reverence, and to entreat you, in
addition to all your toils for the Churches, to meet me, and both to refresh my old
age by your coming, and to establish in the Orthodox Church that piety which is
so famous, by giving her with us (if we may be deemed worthy to have a share
with you in the good work) a Shepherd according to the will of the Lord, who
shall be able to rule His people. For we have a man before our eyes, and you are
not unacquainted with him; and if we are permitted to obtain him I know that we
shall acquire great boldness towards God, and shall confer a very great benefit
upon the people who have called upon our aid. I beg you again and again to put
away all delay, and to come to us before the bad weather of the winter sets in.
EP. XLV.
(After the Consecration every one thought that Gregory would at once join
his friend; and Basil himself much wished for his assistance. But Gregory thought
it better to restrain his desire to see his friend until jealousies had time
to calm down. So he wrote the following letter to explain the reasons for his
staying away at this juncture.)
TO BASIL.
When I learnt that you had been placed on the lofty throne, and that the
Spirit had prevailed to publish the candle upon the candlestick, which even before
shone with no dim light, I was glad, I confess. Why should I not be, seeing as
I did that the commonwealth of the Church was in sorry plight, and needed such
a guiding hand ? Yet I did not run to you off hand, nor shall I run to you,
not even if you ask me yourself. First, in order that I may be careful of your
dignity, and that you may not seem to be collecting partisans under the influence
of bad taste and hot temper, as your calumniators would say; and secondly that
I may make for myself a reputation for stability, and above illwill. When then
will you come, perhaps you will ask, and how long will you put it off? As long
as God shall bid me, and until the shadow of the present enmity and slander
shall have passed away. For the lepers, I well know, will not hold out very long
to keep our David out of Jerusalem.
EP. XLVI.
(The new Archbishop seems not to have been satisfied with the reasons given
in Gregory's last letter; so the latter writes again.)
TO BASIL.
How can any affairs of yours be mere grape-gleanings to me, O dear and
sacred friend?
"What a word has escaped the fence of your teeth," or how could you dare to
say such a thing, if I too may be somewhat daring? How could your mind set it
going, or your ink write it, or your paper receive it, O lectures and Athens and
virtues and literary labours! You almost make me write a tragedy by what you
have written. Do you not know me or yourself, you eye of the world, and great
voice and trumpet and palace of learning? Your affairs trifles to Gregory? What
then on earth could any one admire, if Gregory admire not you? There is one
spring among the seasons, one sun among the stars, and one heaven that embraces all
things; and so your voice is unique among all things, if I am capable of
judging such things, and not deceived by my affection--and this I do not think to be
the case. But if it is because I do not value you according to your worth that
you blame me, you must also blame all mankind; for no one else has or will
sufficiently admire you, unless it be yourself, and your own eloquence, at least
if it were possible to praise oneself, and if such were the custom of our
speech. But if you are accusing me of despising you, why not rather of being mad? Or
are you vexed because I am acting like a philosopher? Give me leave to say that
this and this alone is higher than even your conversation.
EP. XLVII.
(The division of the civil Province of Cappadocia into two Provinces in the
year 372 was followed by ecclesiastical troubles. Anthimus, the Bishop of
Tyana, the civil metropolis of the new division of Cappadocia Secunda, maintained
that the Ecclesiastical divisions must necessarily follow the civil, and by
consequence claimed for himself that the purely civil action of the State had ipso
facto elevated him to the dignity of Metropolitan of the new Province; and this
pretension was supported by the Bishops of that district, who were as a rule
not well disposed towards the great Archbishop. The next three letters are
connected with this dispute.)
TO BASIL.
I hear that you are being troubled by this fresh innovation, and are being
worried by some sophistical and not unusual officiousness on the part of those
in power; and it is not to be wondered at. For I was not ignorant of their envy,
or of the fact that many of those around you are making use of you to further
their own interests, and are kindling the spark of meanness. I have no fear of
seeing you un-philosophically affected by your troubles, or in any way unworthy
of yourself and me. Nay, I think that it is now above all that my Basil will
be known, and that the philosophy which all your life you have been collecting
will shew itself, and will overcome the abuse as with a high wave; and that you
will remain unshaken while others are being troubled. If you think it well, I
will come myself and perhaps shall be able to give you some assistance by my
counsel (if the sea needs water, you do counsel!); but in any case I shall derive
benefit, and shall learn philosophy by beating my part of the abuse.
EP. XLVIII.
(Shortly after the events described above, Basil determined to strengthen
his own hands by creating a number of new Bishoprics in the disputed Province, to
one of which, Sasima, he consecrated Gregory, very much against the will of
the latter, who felt that he had been hardly Used, and did not attempt to
disguise his reluctance. See Gen. Prolegg. p. 195.)
TO BASIL.
Do leave off speaking of me as an ill-educated and uncouth and unfriendly
man, not even worthy to live, because I have ventured to be conscious of the way
in which I have been treated. You yourself would admit that I have not done
wrong in any other respect, and my own conscience does not reproach me with having
been unkind to you in either great or small matters; and I hope it never may.
I only know that I saw that I had been deceived--too late indeed, but I saw
it--and I throw the blame on your throne, as having on a sudden lifted you above
yourself; and I am weary of being blamed for faults of yours, and of having to
make excuses for them to people who know both our former and our present
relations. For of all that I have to endure this is the most ridiculous or most
pitiable thing, that the same person should have both to suffer the wrong and to bear
the blame, and this is my present case. Different people blame me for
different things according to the tastes of each, or each man's disposition, or the
measure of their ill feeling on my account; but the kindest reproach me with
contempt and disdain, and they throw me on one side after making use of me, like the
most valueless vessels, or those frames upon which arches are built, which
after the building is complete are taken down and cast aside. We will let them be
and say what they please; no one shall curb their freedom of speech. And do
you, as my reward, pay off those blessed and empty hopes, which you devised
against the evil speakers, who accused you of insulting me on pretence of honouring
me, as though I were lightminded and easily taken in by such treatment. Now I
will plainly speak out the state of my mind, and you must not be angry with me.
For I will tell you just what I said at the moment of the suffering, not in a
fit of anger or so much in the sense of astonishment at what had happened as to
lose my reason or not to know what I said. I will not take up arms, nor will I
learn tactics which I did not learn in former times, when the occasion seemed
more suitable, as every one was arming and in frenzy (you know the illness of the
weak), nor will I face the martial Anthimus, though he be an untimely warrior,
being myself unarmed and unwarlike, and thus the more exposed to wounds. Fight
with him yourself if you wish (for necessity often makes warriors even of the
weak), or look out for some one to fight when he seizes your mules, keeping
guard over a defile, and like Amalek of old, barring the way against Israel. Give
me before all things quiet. Why should I fight for sucking pigs and fowls, and
those not my own, as though for souls and canons? Why should I deprive the
Metropolis of the celebrated Sasima, or lay bare and unveil the secret of your
mind, when I ought to join in concealing it? Do you then play the man and be strong
and draw all parties to your own conclusion, as the rivers do the winter
torrents, without regard for friendship or intimacy in good, or for the reputation
which such a course will bring you. Give yourself up to the Spirit alone. I
shall gain this only from your friendship, that I shall learn not to trust in
friends, or to esteem anything more valuable than God.
EP. XLIX.
(The Praises of Quiet.)
TO BASIL.
You accuse me of laziness and idleness, because I did not accept your
Sasima, and because I have not bestirred myself like a Bishop, and do not arm you
against each other like a bone thrown into the midst of dogs. My greatest business
always is to keep free from business. And to give you an idea of one of my
good points, so much do I value freedom from business, that I think I might even
be a standard to all men of this kind of magnanimity, and if only all men would
imitate me the Churches would have no troubles; nor would the faith, which
every one uses as a weapon in his private quarrels, be pulled in pieces.
EP. L.
(At the request of Anthimus it would appear that S. Gregory wrote to S.
Basil a letter, not now extant, proposing a conference between the rival
Metropolitans. Basil took umbrage at the well-meant proposal, and wrote a stiff letter to
S. Gregory, to which the following is the reply.)
TO BASIL.
How hotly and like a colt you skip in your letters. Nor do I wonder that
when you have just become the property of glory you should wish to shew me what
you find glory to be, so that you may make yourself more majestic, like those
painters who picture the seasons. But, to explain the whole matter about the
Bishops, and the letter by which you were annoyed; what was my starting point, and
how far I went, and where I stopped, appears to me to be too long a matter for a
letter, and to be a subject not so much for an apology as for a history. To
explain it to you concisely:--the most noble Anthimus came to us with certain
Bishops, whether to visit my Father (this at least was the pretext), or to act as
he did act. He sounded me in many ways and on many subjects; dioceses, the
marshes of Sasima, my ordination, ... flattering, questioning, threatening,
pleading, blaming, praising, drawing circles round himself, as though I ought only to
look at him and his new Metropolis, as being the greater. Why, I said, do you
draw your line to include our city, for we too deem our Church to be really a
Mother of Churches, and that too from ancient times? In the end he went away
without having gained his object, much out of breath, and reproaching me with
Basilism, as if it were a kind of Philipism. Do you think I did you wrong in this?
And now look at the letter from me, who, you say, insulted you. They fashioned a
Synodal summons to me; and when I declined it and said that the thing was an
insult, they then asked as an alternative that through me you should be invited
to deliberate upon these matters. This I promised, in order to prevent their
first plan being carried out; placing the whole matter in your hands, if you
choose to call them together, and where and when. And if I have not injured you in
this, tell me where there is room for injury. If you have to learn this from
me, I will read you the letter which Anthimus sent me, after invading the
marshes, notwithstanding my prohibitions and threats, insulting and reviling me, and
as it were singing a song of triumph over my defeat. And what reason is there
that I should offend him for your sake and at the same time displease you, as
though I were currying favour with him? You ought to have learnt this first, my
dear friend; and even if it had been so, you should not have insulted me,--if
only because I am a Priest. But if you are very much disposed to ostentation and
quarrelsomeness, and speak as my Superior--as the Metropolitan to an
insignificant Suffragan, or even as to a Bishop without a See--I too have a little pride
to set against yours. That is very easy to anybody, and is perhaps the most
suitable course.
EP. LVIII.
(An attack had been made in Gregory's presence on the orthodoxy of Basil in
respect of the Deity of God the Holy Ghost; and in this letter he gives his
friend an account of the way in which he had defended him. Unfortunately Basil was
not pleased with the letter, taking it as intended to convey reproach under
the guise of friendly sympathy.)
TO BASIL.
From the first I have taken you, and I take you still, for my guide of life
and my teacher of the faith, and for every thing honourable that can be said;
and if any one else praises your merits, he is altogether with me, or even
behind me, so far am I surpassed by your piety, and so thoroughly am I yours. And no
wonder; for the longer the intimacy the greater the experience; and where the
experience is more abundant the testimony is more perfect. And if I get any
profit in life it is from your friendship and company. This is my disposition in
regard to these matters, and I hope always will be. What I now write I write
unwillingly, but still I write it. Do not be angry with me, or I shall be very
angry myself, if you do not give me credit for both saying and writing it out of
goodwill to you.
Many people have condemned us as not firm in our faith; those, I mean, who
think and think rightly that we thoroughly agree. Some openly charge us with
heresy, others with cowardice; with heresy, those who believe that our language is
not sound; with cowardice, they who blame our reserve. I need not report what
other people say; I will tell you what has recently happened.
There was a party here at which a great many distinguished friends of ours
were present, and amongst them was a man who wore the name and dress which
betoken piety (i.e. a Monk). They had not yet begun to drink, but were talking about
us, as often happens at such parties, and made us rather than anything else
the subject of their conversation. They admired everything connected with you,
and they brought me in as professing the same philosophy; and they spoke of our
friendship, and of Athens, and of our conformity of views and feelings on all
points. Our Philosopher was annoyed by this. "What is this, gentlemen?" he said,
with a very mighty shout, "what liars and flatterers you are. You may praise
these men for other reasons if you like, and I will not contradict you; but I
cannot concede to you the most important point, their orthodoxy. Basil and Gregory
are falsely praised; the former, because his words are a betrayal of the
faith, the latter, because his toleration aids the treason."
What is this, said I, O vain man and new Dathan and Abiram in folly? Where
do you come from to lay down the law for us? How do you set yourself up as a
judge of such great matters? "I have just come," he replied, "from the festival of
the Martyr Eupsychius(<greek>a</greek>), (and so it really was), and there I
heard the great Basil speak most beautifully and perfectly upon the Godhead of
the Father and the Son, as hardly anyone else could speak; but he slurred over
the Spirit." And he added a sort of illustration from rivers, which pass by
rocks and hollow out sand. "As for you my good sir," he said, looking at me, "you
do now express yourself openly on the Godhead of the Spirit," and he referred to
some remarks of mine in speaking of God at a largely attended Synod, as having
added in respect of the Spirit that expression which has made a noise, (how
long shall we hide the candle under the bushel?) "but the other man hints
obscurely, and as it were, merely suggests the doctrine, but does not openly speak out
the truth; flooding people's ears with more policy than piety, and hiding his
duplicity by the power of his eloquence."
"It is," I said, "because I (living as I do in a corner, and unknown to most
men who do not know what I say, and hardly that I speak at all) can
philosophize without danger; but his word is of greater weight, because he is better
known, both on his own account and on that of his Church. And everything that he
says is public, and the war around him is great, as the heretics try to snatch
every naked word from Basil's lips, to get him expelled from the Church; because
he is almost the only spark of truth left and the vital force, all else around
having been destroyed; so that evil may be rooted in the city, and may spread
over the whole world as from a centre in that Church. Surely then it is better
to use some reserve in the truth, and ourselves to give way a little to
circumstances as to a cloud, rather than by the openness of the proclamation to risk
its destruction. For no ham will come to us if we recognize the Spirit as God
from other phrases which lead to this conclusion (for the truth consists not so
much in sound as in sense), but a very great injury would be done to the Church
if the truth were driven away in the person of one man." The company present
would not receive my economy, as out of date and mocking them; but they shouted me
down as practising it rather from cowardice than for reason. It would be much
better, they said, to protect our own people by the truth, than by your
so-called Economy to weaken them while failing to win over the others. It would be a
long business and perhaps unnecessary to tell you all the details of what I
said, and of what I heard, and how vexed I was with the opponents, perhaps
immoderately and contrary to my own usual temper. But, in fine, I sent them away in the
same fashion. But do you 0 divine and sacred head, instruct me how far I ought
to go in setting forth the Deity of the Spirit; and what words I ought to use,
and how far to use reserve; that I may be furnished against opponents. For if
I, who more than any one else know both you and your opinions, and have often
both given and received assurance on this point, still need to be taught the
truth of this matter, I shall be of all men the most ignorant and miserable.
EP. LIX.
(The reply to Basil's somewhat angry answer to the last.)
TO BASIL.
This was a case which any wiser man would have foreseen; but I who am very
simple and foolish did not fear it in writing to you. My letter grieved you; but
in my opinion neither rightly nor justly, but quite unreasonably. And whilst
you did not acknowledge that you were hurt, neither did you conceal it, or if
you did it was with great skill, as with a mask, hiding your vexation under an
appearance of respect. But as to myself if I acted in this deceitfully or
maliciously, I shall be punished not more by your vexation than by the truth itself;
but if in simplicity and with my accustomed goodwill, I will lay the blame on my
own sins rather than on your temper. But it would have been better to have set
this matter straight, rather than to be angry with those who offer you
counsel. But you must see to your own affairs, inasmuch as you are quite capable of
giving the same advice to others. You may look upon me as very ready, if God
will, both to come to you, and to join you in the conflict, and to contribute all
that I can. For who would flinch, who would not rather take courage in speaking
and contending for the truth under you and by your side?
EP. LX.
(Gregory was not able, owing to the serious illness of his Mother, to carry
out the promise at the end of Ep. LIX.; so he writes to explain and excuse
himself.)
TO BASIL.
The Carrying Out of your bidding depends partly on me; but partly, and I
venture to think principally, on your Reverence. What depends on me is the good
will and eagerness, for I never yet avoided meeting you, but have always sought
opportunities, and at the present moment am even more desirous of doing so. What
depends on your Holiness is that my affairs be set straight. For I am sitting
by my lady Mother, who has for a long time been suffering from illness. And if
I could leave her out of danger you might be well assured that I would not
deprive myself of the pleasure of going to you. So give me the help of your prayers
for her restoration to health, and for my journey to you.