LETTERS CCV TO CCXXVI
LETTER CCV.[1]
To Elpidius the bishop.[2]
Once again I have started the well-beloved presbyter Meletius to carry my
greeting to you. I had positively determined to spare him, on account of the
weakness which he has voluntarily brought upon himself, by bringing his body into
subjection for the sake of the gospel of Christ. But I have judged it fitting
to salute you by the ministry of such men as he is, able to supply of
themselves all the shortcomings of my letter, and to become, alike to writer and
recipient, a kind of living epistle. I am also carrying out the very strong wish,
which he has always had, to see your excellency, ever since he has had experience
of the high qualities you possess. So now I have besought him to travel to you,
and through him I discharge the debt of the visit I owe you, and beseech you to
pray for me and for the Church of God, that the Lord may grant me deliverance
from the injuries of the enemies of the Gospel, and to pass my life in peace
and quiet. Nevertheless. if you in your wisdom, think it needful that we should
travel to the same spot, and meet the rest of oar fight honourable brother
bishops of the sea board regions, do you yourself point out a suitable place and
time where and when this meeting may take place. Write to our brethren to the end
that each and all may, at the appointed time, leave the business they may have
in hand, and may be able to effect something for the edification of the
Churches of God, do away with the pain which we now suffer from our mutual suspicions,
and establish love, without which the Lord Himself has ordained that obedience
to every commandment must be of none effect.
LETTER CCVI.[1]
To Elpidius the bishop. Consolatory.
Now, most of all, do I feel my bodily infirmity, when I see how it stands
in the way of my soul's good. Had matters gone as I hoped, I should not now be
speaking to you by letter or by messenger, but should in my own person have
been paying the debt of affection and enjoying spiritual advantage face to face.
Now, however, I am so situated that I am only too glad if I am able even to move
about in my own country in the necessary visitation of parishes in my
district. But may the Lord grant to you both strength and a ready will, and to me, in
addition to my eager desire, ability to enjoy your society when I am in the
country of Comana. I am afraid lest your domestic trouble may be some hindrance to
you. For I have learnt of your affliction in the loss of your little boy. To a
grandfather his death cannot but be grievous. On the other hand to a man who
has attained to so high a degree of virtue, and alike from his experience of this
world and his spiritual training knows what human nature is, it is natural
that the removal of those who are near and dear should not he wholly intolerable.
The Lord requires from us what He does not require from every one. The common
mass of mankind lives by habit, but the Christian's rule of life is the
commandment of the Lord, and the example of holy men of old, whose greatness of soul
was, above all, exhibited in adversity. To the end, then, that you may yourself
leave to them that come after you an example of fortitude and of genuine trust
in what we hope for, show that you are not vanquished by your grief, but are
rising above your sorrows, patient in affliction, and rejoicing in hope. Pray let
none of these things be a hindrance to our hoped for meeting. Children, indeed,
are held blameless on account of their tender age; but you and I are under the
responsibility of serving the Lord, as He commands us, and in all things to be
ready for the administration of the affairs of the Churches. For the due
discharge of that duty the Lord has reserved great rewards for faithful and wise
stewards.
LETTER CCVII.[1]
To the clergy of Neocaesarea.
You all concur in hating me. To a man you have followed the leader of the
war against me.[2] I was therefore minded to say not a word to any one. I
determined that I would write no friendly letter; that I would start no
communication, but keep my sorrow ill silence to myself. Yet it is wrong to keep silence in
the face of calumny; not that by contradiction we may vindicate ourselves, but
that we may not allow a lie to travel further and its victims to be harmed. I
have therefore thought it necessary to put this matter also before you all, and
to write a letter to you, although, when I recently wrote to all the
presbyterate in common, you did not do me the honour to send me a reply. Do not, my
brethren, gratify the vanity of those who are filling your minds with pernicious
opinions. Do not consent to look lightly on, when, to your knowledge, God's
people are being subverted by impious teaching. None but Sabellius the Libyan[3] and
Marcellus the Galatian[4] have dared to teach and write what the leaders of
your people are attempting to bring forward among you as their own private
discovery. They are making a great talk about it, but they are perfectly powerless to
give their sophisms anti fallacies even any colour of truth. In their
harangues against me they shrink from no wickedness, and persistently refuse to meet
me. Why? Is it not because they are afraid of being convicted for their own
wicked opinions? Yes; and in their attacks upon me they have become so lost to all
sense of shame as to invent certain dreams to my discredit while they falsely
accuse my teaching of being pernicious. Let them take upon their own heads all
the visions of the autumn months; they can fix no blasphemy on me, for in every
Church there are many to testify to the truth.
2. When they are asked the reason for this furious and truceless war, they
allege psalms and a kind of music varying from the custom which has obtained
among you, and similar pretexts of which they ought to be ashamed. We are,
moreover, accused because we maintain men in the practice of true religion who have
renounced the world and all those cares of this life, which the Lord likens to
thorns that do not allow the word to bring forth fruit. Men of this kind carry
about in the body the deadness of Jesus; they have taken up their own cross,
and are followers of God. I would gladly give my life if these really were my
faults, and if I had men with me owning me as teacher who had chosen this ascetic
life. I hear that virtue of this kind is to be fount now in Egypt, and there
are, peradventure some men in Palestine whose conversation follows the precepts
of the Gospel. I am told too that some perfect and blessed men are to be found
in Mesopotamia. We, in comparison with the perfect, are children. But if women
also have chosen to live the Gospel life, preferring virginity to wedlock.
leading captive the lust of the flesh, and living in the mourning which is called
blessed, they are blessed in their profession wherever they are to be found. We,
however, have few instances of this to show, for with us people are still in an
elementary stage and are being gradually brought. to piety. If any charges of
disorder are brought against the life of our women I do not undertake to defend
them. One thing, however, I do say and that is, that these bold hearts, these
unbridled mouths are ever fearlessly uttering what Satan, the father of lies,
has hitherto I been unable to say. I wish you to know that we rejoice to have
assemblies of both men and women, whose conversation is in heaven and who have
crucified the flesh with, the affections and lusts thereof; they take no
thought for food and raiment, but remain undisturbed beside their Lord, continuing
night and day in prayer. Their lips speak not of the deeds of men: they sing
hymns to God continually, working with their own hands that they may have to
distribute to them that need.
3. Now as to the charge relating to the singing of psalms, whereby my
calumniators specially scare the simpler folk, my reply is this. The customs
which now obtain are agreeable to those of all the Churches of God. Among us the
people go at night to the house of prayer, and, in distress, affliction, and
continual tears, making confession to God, at last rise from their prayers and
begin to sing psalms. And now, divided into two parts, they sing antiphonally with
one another, thus at once confirming their study of the Gospels,[1] and at the
same time producing for themselves a heedful temper and a heart free from
distraction. Afterwards they again commit the prelude of the strain to one, and the
rest take it up; and so after passing the night in various psalmody, praying at
intervals as the day begins to dawn, all together, as with one voice and one
heart, raise the psalm of confession to the Lord, each forming for himself his
own expressions of penitence. If it is for these reasons that you renounce me,
you will renounce the Egyptians; you will renounce both Libyans, Thebans,
Palestinians, Arabians, Phoenicians, Syrians, the dwellers by the Euphrates; in a
word all those among whom vigils, prayers, and common psalmody have been held in
honour.
4. But, it is alleged, these practices were not observed in the time of
the great Gregory. My rejoinder is that even the Litanies[2] which you now use
were not used in his time. I do not say this to find fault with you; for my
prayer would be that every one of you should live in tears and continual penitence.
We, for our part, are always offering supplication for our sins, but we
propitiate our God not as you do, in the words of mere man, but in the oracles of the
Spirit. And what evidence have you that this custom was not followed in the
time of the great Gregory? You have kept none of his customs up to the present
time.[3] Gregory did not cover his head at prayer. How could he? He was a true
disciple of the Apostle who says, "Every man praying or prophesying, having his
head covered, dishonoureth Iris head."[1] And "a man indeed ought not to cover
his bead forasmuch as he is the image of God."[2] Oaths were shunned by Gregory,
that pure soul, worthy of the fellowship of the Holy Ghost, content with yea
and nay, in accordance with the commandment of the Lord Who said, "I say unto you
swear not at all?" [3] Gregory could not bear to call his brother a fool,[4]
for he stood in awe of the threat of the Lord. Passion, wrath, and bitterness
never proceeded out of his mouth. Railing he hated, because it leads not to the
kingdom of heaven. Envy and arrogance had been shut out of that guiltless sold.
He would never have stood at the altar before being reconciled to his brother.
A lie, or any word designed to slander any one, he abominated, as one who knew
that lies come from the devil, and that the Lord will destroy all that utter a
lie.[5] If you have none of these things, and are clear of all, then are you
verily disciples of the disciple of the Lord. if not, beware lest, in your
disputes about the mode of singing psalms, you are straining at the gnat and setting
at naught the greatest of the commandments.
I have been driven to use these expressions by the urgency of my defence,
that you may be taught to cast the beam out of your own eyes before you try to
remove other men's motes. Nevertheless, I am conceding all, although there is
nothing that is not searched into before God. Only let great matters prevail,
and do not allow innovations in the fifth to make themselves heard. Do not
disregard the hypostases. Do not deny the name of Christ. Do not put a wrong meaning
on the words of Gregory. If you do so, as long as I breathe and have the power
of utterance, I cannot keep silence, when I see souls being thus destroyed.
LETTER CCVIII.[6]
To Eulancius.
You have been long silent, though you have very great power of speech, and
are well trained in the art of conversation and of exhibiting yourself by your
eloquence. Possibly it is Neocaesarea which is the cause of your not writing
to me. I suppose I must take it as a kindness if those who are there do not
remember me, for, as I am informed by those who report what they hear, the mention
made of me is not kind. You, however, used to be one of those who were disliked
for my sake, not one of those who dislike me for the sake of others. I hope
this description will continue to fit you, that wherever you are you will write
to me, and will have kindly thoughts of me, if you care at all for what is fair
and right. It is certainly fair that those who have been first to show
affection should be paid in their own coin.
LETTER CCIX.[1]
Without address.
IT is your lot to share my distress, and to do battle on my behalf. Herein
is proof of your manliness. God, who ordains our lives, grants to those who
are capable of sustaining great fights greater opportunity of winning renown. You
truly have risked your own life as a test of your valour in your friend's
behalf, like gold in the furnace. I pray God that other men may be made better;
that you may remain what you are, and that you will not cease to find fault with
me, as you do, anti to charge me with not writing often to you, as a wrong on my
part which does you very great injury. This is an accusation only made by a
friend. Persist in demanding the payment of such debts. I am not so very
unreasonable in paying the claims of affection.
LETTER CCX.[2]
To the notables of Neocaesarea.
I am really under no obligation to publish my own mind to you, or to state
the reasons for my present sojourn where I am; it is not my custom to indulge
in self advertisement, nor is the matter worth publicity. I am not, I think,
following my own inclinations; I am answering the challenge of your leaders. I
have always striven to be ignored more earnestly than popularity hunters strive
after notoriety. But, I am told, the ears of everybody in your town are set a
thrilling, while certain tale-mongers, creators of lies, hired for this very
work, are giving you a history of me and my doings. I therefore do not think that I
ought to overlook your being exposed to the teaching of vile intention and
foul tongue; I think that I am bound to tell you myself in what position I am
placed. From my childhood I have been familiar with this spot, for here I was
brought up by my grandmother;(1) hither I have often retreated, and here I have
spent many years, when endeavouring to escape from the hubbub of public affairs,
for experience has taught me that the quiet and solitude of the spot are
favourable to serious thought. Moreover as my brothers(2) are now living here, I have
gladly retired to this retreat, and have taken a brief breathing time from the
press of the labours that beset me, not as a centre from which I might give
trouble to others, but to indulge my own longing.
2. Where then is the need of having recourse to dreams and of hiring their
interpreters, and making me matter for talk over the cups at public
entertainments? Had slander been launched against me in any other quarter, I should have
called you to witness to prove what I think, and now I ask every one of you to
remember those old days when I was invited by your city to take charge of the
education of the young, and a deputation of the first men among you came to see
me.(3) Afterwards, when you all crowded round me, what were you not ready to
give? what not to promise? Nevertheless you were not able to keep me. How then
could I, who at that time would not listen when you invited me, now attempt to
thrust myself on you uninvited? How could I, who when you complimented and
admired me, avoided you, have been intending to court you now that you calumniate me?
Nothing of the kind, sirs; I am not quite so cheap. No man in his senses would
go on board a boat. without a steersman, or get alongside a Church where the
men siring at the helm are themselves stirring up tempest and storm. Whose fault
was it that the town was all full of tumult, when some were running away with
no one after them, and others stealing off when no invader was near, and all
the wizards and dream-tellers were flourishing their bogeys? Whose fault was it
else? Does not every child know that it was the mob-leaders'? The reasons of
their hatred to me it would be bad taste on my part to recount; but they are quite
easy for you to apprehend. When bitterness and division have come to the last
pitch of savagery, and the explanation of the cause is altogether groundless
and ridiculous, then the mental disease is plain, dangerous indeed to other
people's comfort, but greatly and personally calamitous to the patient. And there
is one charming point about them. Torn and racked with inward agony as they are,
they cannot yet for very shame speak out about it. The state they are in may
be known not only from their behaviour to me, but from the rest of their
conduct. If it were unknown, it would not much matter. But the veritable cause of
their shunning communication with me may be unperceived by the majority among you.
Listen; and I will tell you.
3. There is going on among you a movement ruinous to the faith, disloyal
to the apostolical and evangelical dogmas, disloyal too to the tradition of
Gregory the truly great,(1) and of his successors up to the blessed Musonius, whose
teaching is still ringing in your ears.(2) For those men, who, from fear of
confutation, are forging figments against me, are endeavouring to renew the old
mischief of Sabellius, started long ago, and extinguished by the tradition of
the great Gregory. But do you bid goodbye to those wine-laden heads, bemuddled by
the swelling fumes that mount from their debauch, and from me who am wide
awake and from fear of God cannot keep silence. hear what plague is rife among you.
Sabellianism is Judaism(3) imported into the preaching of the Gospel under the
guise of Christianity. For if a man calls Father Son and Holy Ghost one thing
of many faces,(4) and makes the hypostasis of the three one,(5) what is this
but to deny the everlasting pre-existence of the Only begotten? He denies too the
Lord's sojourn among men in the incarnation,(6) the going down into hell, the
resurrection, the judgment; he denies also the proper operations of the Spirit.
And I hear that even rasher innovations than those of the foolish Sabellius
are now ventured on among you. It is said, and that on the evidence of ear
witnesses, that your clever men go to such an extreme as to say that there is no
tradition of the name of the Only-begotten, while of the name of the adversary
there is; and at this they are highly delighted and elated, as though it were a
discovery of their own. For it is said, "I came in my Father's name and ye
received me not; if another shall come in his own name, him ye will receive."(1) And
because it is said, " Go ye and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of
the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost,"(2) it is obvious, they
urge, that the name is one, for it is not " in the names," but " in the name."
4. I blush so to write to you, for the men thus guilty are of my own
blood;(3) and I groan for my own soul, in that, like boxers fighting two men at
once, I can only give the truth its proper force by hitting with my proofs, and
knocking down, the errors of doctrine on the right and on the left. On one side I
am attacked by the Anomoean: on the other by the Sabellian. Do not, I implore
you, pay any attention to these abominable and impotent sophisms. Know that the
name of Christ which is above every name is His being called Son of God, as
Peter says, "There is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we
must be saved."(4) And as to the words "I came in my Father's name," it is to be
understood that He so says describing His Father as origin and cause of
Himself.(5) And if it is said "Go and baptize in the name of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Ghost," we must not suppose that here one name is delivered to
us. For just as he who said Paul and Silvanus and Timothy mentioned three
names, and coupled them one to the other by the word "and," so He who spoke of
the name of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost," mentioned three, and united them by the
conjunction, teaching that with each name must be understood its own proper
meaning; for the names mean things. And no one gifted with even the smallest
particle of it intelligence doubts that the existence belonging to the things is
peculiar and complete in itself. For of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost there is the
same nature and one Godhead; but these are different names, setting forth to a
us the circumscription and exactitude of the meanings. For unless the meaning
of the distinctive qualities of each be unconfounded, it is impossible for the
doxology to be adequately offered to Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.
If, however, they deny that they so say, and so teach, my object is
attained. Yet I see that this denial is no easy matter, because of our having many
witnesses who heard these things said. But let bygones be bygones; let them only
be sound now. If they persist in the same old error I must proclaim your
calamity even to other Churches, and get letters written to you froth more bishops.
In my efforts to break down this huge mass of impiety now gradually and secretly
growing, I shall either effect something towards the object I have in view; or
at least my present testimony will clear me of guilt in the judgment day.
5. They have already inserted these expressions in their own writings.
They sent them first to the man of God, Meletius,(1) bishop, and after receiving
from him a suitable reply, like mothers of monsters, ashamed of their natural
deformities, these men themselves brought forth and bring up their disgusting
offspring in appropriate darkness. They made an attempt too by letter on my dear
friend Anthimus, bishop of Tyana,(2) on the ground that Gregory had said in his
exposition of the faith(3) that Father and Son are in thought two, but in
hypostasis one.(4) The men who congratulate themselves on the subtilty of their
intelligence could not perceive that this is said not in reference to dogmatic
opinion, but in controversy with AElian. And in this dispute there are not a few
copyists' blunders, as, please God, I shall shew in the case of the actual
expressions used. But in his endeavour to convince the heathen, he deemed it
needless to be nice about the words he employed; he judged it wiser sometimes to make
concessions to the character of the subject who was being persuaded, so as not
to run counter to the opportunity given him. This explains how it is that you
may find there many expressions which now give great support to the heretics, as
for instance "creature"(1) and "thing made"(2) and the like. But those who
ignorantly criticise these writings refer to the question of the Godhead much that
is said in reference to the conjunction with man; as is the case with this
passage which they are hawking about. For it is indispensable to have clear
understanding that, as he who fails to confess the community of the essence or
substance falls into polytheism, so he who refuses to grant the distinction of the
hypostases is carried away into Judaism. For we must keep oar mind stayed, so to
say, on certain underlying subject matter, and, by forming a clear impression
of its distinguishing lines, so arrive at the end desired. For suppose we do not
bethink us of the Fatherhood, nor bear in mind Him of whom this distinctive
quality is marked off, how can we take in the idea of God the Father? For merely
to enumerate the differences of Persons(3) is insufficient; we must confess
each Person(4) to have a natural existence in real hypostasis. Now Sabellius did
not even deprecate the formation of the persons without hypostasis, saying as he
did that the same God, being one in matter,(5) was metamorphosed as the need
of the moment required, and spoken of now as Father, now as Son, and now as Holy
Ghost. The inventors of this unnamed heresy are renewing the old long
extinguished error; those, I mean, who are repudiating the hypostases, and denying the
name of the Son of God. They must give over uttering iniquity against God,(6)
or they will have to wail with them that deny the Christ.
6. I have felt compelled to write to you in these terms, that you, may be
on your guard against the mischief arising from bad teaching. If we may indeed
liken pernicious teachings to poisonous drugs, as your dream-tellers have it.
these doctrines are hemlock and monkshood, or any other deadly to man. It is
these that destroy souls; not my words, as this shrieking drunken scum, full of
the fancies of their condition, make out. If they bad any sense they ought to
know that in souls, pure and cleansed from all defilement, the prophetic gift
shines clear. In a foul mirror you cannot see what the reflexion is, neither can a
soul preoccupied with cares of this life, and darkened with the passions of the
lust of the flesh, receive the rays of the Holy Ghost. Every dream is not a
prophecy, as says Zechariah. " The Lord shall make bright clouds, and give them
showers of rain, ... for the idols have spoken vanity and the diviners have told
false dreams."(1) Those who, as Isaiah says, dream and love to sleep in their
bed(2) forget that an operation of error is sent to " the children of
disobedience."(3) And there is a lying spirit, which arose in false prophecies, and
deceived Ahab.(4) Knowing this they ought not to have been so lifted up as to
ascribe the gift of prophecy to themselves. They are shewn to fall far short even of
the case of the seer Balaam; for Balaam when invited by the king of Moab with
mighty bribes brooked not to utter a word beyond the will of God, nor to curse
Israel whom the Lord cursed not.(5) If then their sleep-fancies do not tally
with the commandments of the Lord, let them be content with the Gospels. The
Gospels need no dreams to add to their credit. The Lord has sent His peace to us,
and left us a new commandment, to love one another, but dreams bring strife and
division and destruction of love. Let them therefore not give occasion to the
devil to attack their souls in sleep; nor make their imaginations of more
authority than the instruction of salvation.
LETTER CCXI.(6)
To Olympius.(7)
TRULY when I read your excellency's letter I felt unwonted pleasure and
cheerfulness; and when I met your well-beloved sons, I seemed to behold yourself.
They found me in the deepest affliction, but they so behaved as to make me
forget the hemlock, which your dreamers and dream mongers are carrying about to my
hurt, to please the people who have hired them. Some letters I have already
sent; others, if you like, shall follow. I only hope that they may be of some
advantage to the recipients.
LETTER CCXII.(1)
To Hilarius.(2)
1. You can imagine what I felt, and in what state of mind I was, when I
came to Dazimon and found that you had left a few days before my arrival. From my
boyhood I have held you in admiration, and, therefore, ever since our old
school days, have placed a high value on intercourse with you. But another reason
for my doing so is that nothing is so precious now as a soul that loves the,
truth, and is gifted with a sound judgment in practical affairs. This, I think, is
to be found m you. I see most men, as in the hippodrome, divided into
factions, some for one side and some for another, and shouting with their parties. But
you are above fear, flattery, and every ignoble sentiment, and so naturally
look at truth with an unprejudiced eye. And I see that you are deeply interested
in the affairs of the Churches, about which you have sent me a letter, as you
have said in your last. I should like to know who took charge of the conveyance
of this earlier epistle, that I may know who has wronged me by its loss. No
letter from you on this subject has yet reached me.
2. How much, then, would I not have given to meet you, that I might tell
you all my troubles? When one is in pain it is, as you know, some alleviation,
even to describe it. How gladly would I have answered your questions, not
trusting to lifeless letters, but in my own person, narrating each particular. The
persuasive force of living words is more efficient and they are not so
susceptible as letters to attack and to misrepresentation. For now no one has left
anything untried, and the very men in whom I put the greatest confidence, men, who
when I saw them among others, I used to think something more than human, have
received documents written by some one, and have sent them on, whatever they are,
as mine, and on their account are calumniating me to the brethren as though
there is nothing now that pious and faithful men ought to hold in greater
abhorrence than my name. From the beginning it has been my object to live unknown, to a
degree not reached by any one who has considered human infirmity; but now,
just as though on the other hand it had been my purpose to make myself notorious
to the world, I have been talked about all over the earth, and I may add all
over the sea too. For men, who go to the last limit of impiety, and are
introducing into the Churches the godless opinion of Unlikeness,(1) are waging war
against me. Those too who hold the via media.(2) as they think, and, though they
start from the same principles, do not follow out their logical consequences,
because they are so opposed to the view of the majority, are equally hostile to me,
overwhelming me to the utmost of their ability with their reproaches, and
abstaining from no insidious attacks against me. But the Lord has made their
endeavours vain.
Is not this a grievous state of things? Must it not make my life painful?
I have at all events one consolation in my troubles, my bodily infirmity. This
I am sure will not suffer me to remain much longer in this miserable life. No
more on this point. You too I exhort, in your bodily infirmity. to bear yourself
bravely and worthy of the God Who has called us. If He sees us accepting our
present circumstances with thanksgiving, He will either put away our troubles as
He did Job's, or will requite us with the glorious crowns of patience in the
life to come.
LETTER CCXIII.(3)
Without address.
1. MAY the Lord, Who has brought me prompt help in my afflictions, grant
you the help of the refreshment wherewith you have refreshed me by writing to
me, rewarding you for your consolation of my humble self with the real and great
gladness of the Spirit. For I was indeed downcast in soul when I saw in a great
multitude the almost brutish and unreasonable insensibility of the people, and
the inveterate and ineradicable unsatisfactoriness of their leaders. But I saw
your letter; I saw the treasure of love which it contained; then I knew that
He Who ordains all our lives had made some sweet consolation shine on me in the
bitterness of my life. I therefore salute your holiness in return, and exhort
you, as is my wont, not to cease to pray for my unhappy life, that I may never,
drowned in the unrealities of this world, forget God, "who raiseth up the poor
out of the dust;"(1) that I may never be lifted up with pride and fall into the
condemnation of the devil;(2) that I may never be found by the Lord neglectful
of my stewardship and asleep; never discharging it amiss, and wounding the
conscience of my fellow-servants;(3) and, never companying with the drunken,
suffer the pains threatened in God's just judgment against wicked stewards. I
beseech you, therefore, in all your prayers to pray God that I may be watchful in all
things; that I may be no shame or disgrace to the name of Christ, in the
revelation of the secrets of my heart, in the great day of the appearing of our
Saviour Jesus Christ.
2. Know then that I am expecting to be summoned by the wickedness of the
heretics to the court, in the name of peace. Learn too that on being so
informed, this bishop(4) wrote to me to hasten to Mesopotamia, and, after assembling
together those who in that country are of like sentiments with us, and are
strengthening the state of the Church, to travel in their company to the emperor. But
perhaps my health will not be good enough to allow me to undertake a journey
in the winter. Indeed, hitherto I have not thought the matter pressing, unless
yon advise it. I shall therefore await your counsel that my mind may be made up.
Lose no time then, I beg you, in making known to me, by means of one of our
trusty brethren, what course seems best to the divinely guided intelligence of
your excellency.
LETTER CCXIV.(5)
To Count Terentius.(6)
1. WHEN I heard that your excellency had again been compelled to take part
in public affairs, I was straightway distressed (for the truth must be told)
at the thought of how contrary to your mind it must be that you after once
giving up the anxieties of official life, and allowing yourself leisure for the care
of your sold, should again be forced back into your old career. But then I
bethought me that peradventure the Lord has ordained that your lordship should
again appear in public from this wish to grant the boon of one alleviation for
the countless pains which now beset the Church in our part of the world. I am,
moreover, cheered by the thought that I am about to meet your excellency once
again before I depart this life.
2. But a further rumour has reached me that you are in Antioch, and are
transacting the business in hand with the chief authorities. And, besides this, I
have heard that the brethren who are of the party of Paulinus are entering on
some discussion with your excellency on the subject of union with us; and by
"us" I mean those who are supporters of the blessed man of God, Meletius.(1) I
hear, moreover, that the Paulinians are carrying about a letter of the
Westerns,(2) assigning to them the episcopate of the Church in Antioch, but speaking
under a false impression of Meletius, the admirable bishop of the true Church of
God. I am not astonished at this. They(3) are totally ignorant of what is going
on here; the others, though they might be supposed to know, give an account to
them in which party is put before truth; and it is only what one might expect
that they should either be ignorant of the truth, or should even endeavour to
conceal the reasons which led the blessed Bishop Athanasius to write to Paulinus.
But your excellency has on the spot those who are able to tell you accurately
what passed between the bishops in the reign of Jovian, and from them I beseech
you to get information.(4) I accuse no one; I pray that I may have love to all,
and " especially unto them who are of the household of faith;"(5) and
therefore I congratulate those who have received the letter from Rome. And, although it
is a grand testimony in their favour, I only hope it is true and confirmed by
facts. But I shall never be able to persuade myself on these grounds to ignore
Meletius, or to forget the Church which is under him, or to treat as small, and
of little importance to the true religion, the questions which originated the
division. I shall never consent to give in, merely because somebody is very
much elated at receiving a letter fromment.(1) Even if it had come down from
heaven itself, but he does not agree with the sound doctrine of the faith, I cannot
look upon him as in communion with the saints.
3. Consider well, my excellent friend, that the falsifiers of the truth,
who have introduced the Arian schism as an innovation on the sound faith of the
Fathers, advance no other reason for refusing to accept the pious opinion of
the Fathers than the meaning of the homoousion which they hold in their
wickedness, and to the slander of the whole faith, alleging our contention to be that
the Son is consubstantial in hypostasis. If we give them any opportunity by our
being carried away by men who propound these sentiments and their like, rather
from simplicity than from malevolence, there is nothing to prevent oar giving
them an unanswerable ground of argument against ourselves and confirming the
heresy of those whose one end is in all their utterances about the Church, not so
much to establish their own position as to calumniate mine. What more serious
calumny could there be? What better calculated to disturb the faith of the
majority than that some of us could be shewn to assert that there is one hypostasis
of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost? We distinctly lay down that there is a
difference of Persons; but this statement was anticipated by Sabellius, who affirms that
God is one by hypostasis, but is described by Scripture in different Persons,
according to the requirements of each individual case; sometimes under the name
of Father, when there is occasion for this Person; sometimes under the name of
Son when there is a descent to human interests or any of the operations of the
oeconomy;(2) and sometimes under the Person of Spirit when the occasion
demands such phraseology. If, then, any among us are shewn to assert that Father, Son
and Holy Ghost are one in substance,(3) while we maintain the three perfect
Persons, how shall we escape giving clear and incontrovertible proof of the truth
of what is being asserted about us?
4. The non-identity of hypostasis and ousia is, I take it, suggested even
by our western brethren, where, from a suspicion of tile inadequacy of their
own language, they have given the word ousia in the Greek, to the end that any
possible difference of meaning might be preserved in the clear and unconfounded
distinction of terms. If you ask me to state shortly my own view, I shall state
that ousia has the same relation to hypostasis as the common has to the
particular. Every one of us both shares in existence by the common term of essence
(ousia) and by his own properties is such an one and such an one. In the same
manner, in the matter in question, the term ousia is common, like goodness, or
Godhead, or any similar attribute; while hypostasis is contemplated in the special
property of Fatherhood, Sonship, or the power to sanctify. If then they
describe the Persons as being without hypostasis,(1) the statement is per se absurd;
but if they concede that the Persons exist in real hypostasis, as they
acknowledge, let them so reckon them that the principle of the homoousion may be
preserved in the unity of the Godhead, and that the doctrine preached may be the
recognition of true religion, of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, in the perfect and
complete hypostasis of each of the Persons named. Nevertheless, there is one point
which I should like to have pressed on your excellency, that you and all who
like you care for the truth, and honour the combatant in the cause of true
religion, ought to wait for the lead to be taken in bringing about this union and
peace by the foremost authorities in the Church, whom I count as pillars and
foundations of the truth and of the Church, and reverence all the more because they
have been sent away for punishment, and have been exiled far from home. Keep
yourself, I implore you, clear of prejudice, that in you, whom God has given me
as a staff and support in all things, I may be able to find rest.(2)
LETTER CCXV.(3)
To the Presbyter Dorotheus.
I TOOK the earliest opportunity of writing to the most admirable Count
Terentius, thinking it better to write to him on the subject in hand by means of
strangers, and being anxious that oar very dear brother Acacius shall not be
inconvenienced by any delay. I have therefore given my letter to the government
treasurer, who is travelling by the imperial post, and I have charged him to shew
the letter to you first. I cannot understand how it is that no one has told
you that the road to Rome is wholly impracticable in winter, the country between
Constantinople and out' own regions being full of enemies. If the route by sea
must be taken, the season will be favourable; if indeed my God-beloved brother
Gregory(1) consents to the voyage and to the commission concerning these
matters. For my own part, I do not know who can go with him, and am aware that he is
quite inexperienced in ecclesiastical affairs. With a man of kindly character
he may get on very well, and be treated with respect, but what possible good
could accrue to the cause by communication between a man proud and exalted, and
therefore quite unable to hear those who preach the truth to him from a lower
standpoint, and a man like my brother, to whom anything like mean servility is
unknown ?
LETTER CCXVI.(2)
To Meletius, bishop of Antioch.
MANY other(3) journeys have taken me from home. I have been as far as
Pisidia to settle the matters concerning the brethren in Isauria in concert with
the Pisidian bishops. Thence I journeyed into Pontus, for Eustathius had caused
no small disturbance at Dazimon, and had caused there a considerable secession
from our church. I even went as far as the home of my brother Peter,(4) and, as
this is not far from Neocaesarea, there was occasion of considerable trouble
to the Neocaesareans, and of much rudeness to myself. Some men fled when no one
was in pursuit. And I was supposed to be intruding uninvited, simply to get
compliments from the folk there. As soon as I got home, after contracting a severe
illness from the bad weather and my anxieties. I straightway received a letter
from the East to tell me that Paulinus had had certain letters from the West
addressed to him, in acknowledgement of a sort of higher claim; and that the
Antiochene rebels were vastly elated by them, and were next preparing a form of
creed. and offering to make its terms a condition of union with our Church.
Besides all this it was reported to me that they had seduced to their faction that
most excellent man Terentius. t wrote to him at once as forcibly as I could. to
induce him to pause; and I tried to point po out their disingenuousness.
LETTER CCXVII.
To Amphilochius, the Canons.(1)
ON my return from a long journey (for I have been into Pontus on
ecclesiastical business, and to visit my relations) with my body weak and ill, and my
spirits considerably broken, I took your reverence's letter into my hand. No
sooner did I receive the tokens of that voice which to me is of all voices the
sweetest, and of that hand that I love so well, than I forgot all my troubles. And
if I was made so much more cheerful by the receipt of your letter, you ought to
be able to conjecture at what value I price your actual presence. May this be
granted me by the Holy One, whenever it may be convenient to you and you
yourself send me an invitation. And if you were to come to the house at Euphemias it
would indeed be pleasant for me to meet you, escaping from my vexations here,
and hastening to your unfeigned affection. Possibly also for other reasons I may
be compelled to go as far as Nazianzus by the sudden departure of the very
God-beloved bishop Gregory. How or why this has come to pass, so far I have no
information.(2) The man about whom I had spoken to your excellency, and whom you
expected to be ready by this time, has, you must know, fallen ill of a lingering
disease, and is moreover now suffering from an affection of the eyes, arising
from his old complaint and from the illness which has now befallen him, and he
is quite unfit to do any work. I have no one else with me. It is consequently
better, although the matter was left by them to me, for some one to be put
forward by them. And indeed one cannot but think that the expressions were used
merely as a necessary form, and that what they really wished was what they
originally requested, that the person selected for the leadership should be one of
themselves. If there is any one of the lately baptized,(3) whether Macedonius
approve or not, let him be appointed. You will instruct him in his duties, the Lord,
Who in all things cooperates with you, granting you His grace for this work
also.
LI. As to the clergy, the Canons have enjoined without making any
distinction that one penalty is assigned for the lapsed,--ejection from the ministry,
whether they be in orders(1) or remain ill the ministry which is conferred
without imposition of hands.
LII. The woman who has given birth to a child and abandoned it in the
road, if she was able to save it and neglected it, or thought by this means to hide
her sin, or was moved by some brutal and inhuman motive, is to be judged as in
a case of murder. If, on the other hand, she was unable to provide for it. and
the child perish from exposure and want of the necessities of life, the mother
is to be pardoned.
LIII. The widowed slave is not guilty of a serious fall if she adopts a
second marriage under colour of rape. She is not on tiffs ground open to
accusation. It is rather the object than the pretext which mast be taken into account,
but it is clear that she is exposed to the punishment of digamy.(2)
LIV. I know that I have already written to your reverence, so far as I
can, on the distinctions to be observed in cases of involuntary homicide,(3) and
on this point I can say no more. It rests with your intelligence to increase or
lessen the severity of the punishment as each individual case may require.
LV. Assailants of robbers, if they are outside, are prohibited from the
communion of the good thing.(4) If they are clerics they are degraded from their
orders. For, it is said. "All they that take the sword shall perish with the
sword."
LVI. The intentional homicide, who has afterwards repented, will be
excommunicated from the sacrament(6) for twenty years. The twenty years will be
appointed for him as follows: for four he ought to weep, standing outside the door
of the house of prayer, beseeching the faithful as they enter in to offer prayer
in his behalf, and confessing his own sin. After four years he will be
admitted among the hearers, and during five years will go out with them. During seven
years he will go out with the kneelers,(1) praying. During four years he will
only stand with the faithful, and will not take part in the oblation. On the
completion of this period he will be admitted to participation of the sacrament.
LVII. The unintentional homicide will be excluded for ten years from the
sacrament. The ten years will be arranged as follows: For two years he will
weep, for three years he will continue among the hearers; for four he will be a
kneeler; and for one he will only stand. Then he will be admitted to the holy
rites.
LVIII. The adulterer will be excluded from the sacrament for fifteen
years. During four he will be a weeper, and during five a hearer, during four a
kneeler, and for two a slander without communion.
LIX. The fornicator will not be admitted to participation in the sacrament
for seven years;(2) weeping two hearing two kneeling two, and standing one: in
the eighth he will be received into communion.
LX. The woman who has professed virginity and broken her promise will
complete the time appointed in the case of adultery in her continence.(1) The same
rule will be observed in the case of men who have professed a solitary life and
who lapse.
LXI. The thief, if he have repented of his own accord and charged himself,
shall only be prohibited from partaking of the sacrament for a year; if he be
convicted, for two years. The period shall be divided between kneeling and
standing. Then let him be held worthy of communion.
LXII. He who is guilty of unseemliness with males will be under discipline
for the same time as adulterers.
LXIII. He who confesses his iniquity in the case of brutes shall observe
the same time in penance.
LXIV. Perjurers shall be excommunicated for ten years; weeping for two,
hearing for three, kneeling for four, and standing only during one year; then
they shall be held worthy of communion.
LXV. He who confesses-magic or sorcery shall do penance for the time of
murder, and shall be treated in the same manner as he who convicts himself of
this sin.
LXVI. The tomb breaker shall be ex-communicated for ten years, weeping for
two, hearing for three, kneeling for four, standing for one, then he shall be
admitted.
LXVII. Incest with a sister shall incur penance for the same time as
murder.
LXVIII.The union of kindred within the prohibited degrees of marriage, if
detected as having taken place in acts of sin, shall receive the punishment of
adultery.(2)
LXIX. The Reader who has intercourse with his betrothed before marriage,
shall be allowed to read after a year's suspension, remaining without
advancement. If he has had secret intercourse without betrothal, he shall be deposed from
his ministry. So too the minister.(3)
LXX. The deacon who has been polluted in lips, and has confessed his
commission of this sin, shall be removed from his ministry. But he shall be
permitted to partake of the sacrament together with the deacons. The same holds good in
the case of a priest. If any one be detected in a more serious sin, whatever
be his degree, he shall be deposed.(1)
LXXI. Whoever is aware of the commission of any one of the aforementioned
sins, and is convicted without having confessed, shall be under punishment for
the same space of time as the actual perpetrator.
LXXII. He who has entrusted himself(2) to soothsayers, or any such
persons, shall be under discipline for the same time as the homicide.
LXXIII. He who has denied Christ, and sinned against the mystery of
salvation, ought to weep all his life long, and is bound to remain in penitence,
being deemed worthy of the sacrament in the hour of death, through faith in the
mercy of God.
LXXIV. If, however, each man who has committed the former sins is made
good, through penitence.(3) he to whom is committed by the loving-kindness of God
the power of loosing and binding(1) will not be deserving of condemnation, if
he become less severe, as he beholds the exceeding greatness of the penitence of
the sinner, so as to lessen the period of punishment, for the history in the
Scriptures informs us that all who exercise penitence(2) with greater zeal
quickly receive the loving-kindness of God.(3)
LXXV. The man who has been polluted with Iris own sister, either on the
father's or the mother's side, must not be allowed to enter the house of prayer,
until he has given up his iniquitous and unlawful conduct. And, after he has
come to a sense of that fearful sin, let him weep for three years standing at the
door of the house of prayer, and entreating the people as they go in to prayer
that each and all will mercifully offer on his behalf their prayers with
earnestness to the Lord. After this let him be received for another period of three
years to hearing alone, and while hearing the Scriptures and the instruction,
let him be expelled and not be admitted to prayer. Afterwards, if he has asked
it with tears and has fallen before the Lord with contrition of heart and great
humiliation, let kneeling be accorded to him during other three years. Thus,
when he shall have worthily shown the fruits of repentance, let him be received
in the tenth year to the prayer of the faithful without oblation; and after
standing with the faithful in prayer for two years, then, and not till then, let
him be held worthy of the communion of the good thing.
LXXVI. The same rule applies to those who take their own daughters in law.
LXXVII. He who abandons the wife, lawfully trailed to him, is subject by
the sentence of the Lord to the penalty of adultery. But it has been laid down
as a canon by our Fathers that such sinners should weep for a year, be hearers
for two years, in kneeling for three years, stand with the faithful in the
seventh; and thus be deemed worthy of the oblation, if they have repented with
tears.(1)
LXXVIII. Let the same rule hold good in the case of those who marry two
sisters, although at different times.(2)
LXXIX. Men who rage after their stepmothers are subject to the same canon
as those who rage after their sisters.(3)
LXXX. On polygamy the Fathers are silent, as being brutish and altogether
inhuman. The sin seems to me worse than fornication. It is therefore reasonable
that such sinners should be subject to the canons; namely a year's weeping,
three years kneeling and then reception.(4)
LXXXI. During the invasion of the barbarians many men have sworn heathen
oaths, tasted things unlawfully offered them in magic temples and so have broken
their faith in God. Let regulations be made in the case of these men in
accordance with the canons laid down by our Fathers.(5) Those who have endured
grievous tortures and have been forced to denial, through inability to sustain the
anguish, may be excluded for three years, hearers for two, kneelers for three,
and so be received into communion. Those who have abandoned their faith in God,
laying hands on the tables of the demons and swearing heathen oaths, without
under going great violence, should be excluded for three years, hearers for two.
When they have prayed for three years as kneelers, and have stood other three
with the faithful in supplication, then let them be received into the communion
of the good thing.
LXXXII. As to perjurers, if they have broken their oaths under violent
compulsion, they are under lighter penalties and may therefore be received after
six years. If they break their faith without compulsion, let them be weepers for
two years, hearers for three, pray as kneelers for five, during two be
received into the communion of prayer, without oblation, and so at last, after giving
proof of due repentance, they shall be restored to the communion of the body of
Christ.
LXXXIII. Consulters of soothsayers and they who follow heathen customs, or
bring persons into their houses to discover remedies and to effect
purification, should fall under the canon of six years. After Weeping a year, hearing a
year, kneeling for three years and standing with the faithful for a year so let
them be received.
LXXXIV. I write all this with a view to testing the fruits of
repentance.(1) I do not decide such matters absolutely by time, but I give heed to the
manner of penance. If men are in a state in which they find it hard to be weaned
from their own ways and choose rather to serve the pleasures of the flesh than to
serve the Lord, and refuse to accept the Gospel life, there is no common
ground between me and them. In the midst of a disobedient and gainsaying people I
have been taught to hear the words " Save thy own soul."(2) Do not then let us
consent to perish together with such sinners. Let us fear the awful judgment. Let
us keep before our eyes the terrible day of the retribution of the Lord. Let
us not consent to perish in other men's sins, for if the terrors of the Lord
have not taught us, if so great calamities have not brought us to feel that it is
A because of our iniquity that the Lord has abandoned us, and given us into the
hands of barbarians, that the people have been led, captive before our foes
and given over to dispersion, because the bearers of Christ's name have dared
such deeds; if they have not known nor understood that it is for these reasons
that the wrath of God has come upon us, what common ground of argument have I with
them?
But we ought to testify to them day and night, alike in public and in
private. Let us not consent to be drawn away with them in their wickedness. Let us
above all pray that we may do them good, and rescue them from the snare of the
evil one. If we cannot do this, let us at all events do our best to save our
own souls from everlasting damnation.
LETTER CCXVIII.(1)
To Amphilochius, bishop of Iconium.
BROTHER AELIANUS has himself completed the business concerning which he
came. and has stood in neeed of no aid from me. l owe him, however, double
thanks, both for bringing me a letter from your reverence and tot affording me an
opportunity of writing to you. By him, therefore, I salute your true and
unfeigned love, and beseech you to pray for me more than ever now, when I stand in such
need of the aid of your prayers. My health has suffered terribly from the
journey to Pontus and my sickness is unendurable. One thing I have long been
anxious to make known to you. I do not mean to say that I have been so affected by
any other cause as to forget it, but now I wish to put you in mind to send some
good man into Lycia, to enquire who are of the right faith, for peradventure
they ought not to be neglected, if indeed the report is true, which has been
brought to me by a pious traveller from thence, that they have become altogether
alienated from the opinion of the Asiani(2) and wish to embrace communions with
us. If any one is to go let him enquire at Corydala(3) for Alexander, the late
monk, the bishop; at Limyra(4) for Diotimus, and at Myra(5) for Tatianus,
Polemo,(6) and Macarius presbyters; at Patara(7) for Eudemus,(8) the bishop; at
Telmessus(9) for Hilarius, the bishop: at Phelus for Lallianus, the bishop. Of these
and of more besides I have been informed that they are sound in the faith, and
I have been grateful to God that even any in the Asian region should be clear
of the heretic's pest. If, then, it be possible, let us in the meanwhile make
personal enquiry about them. When we have obtained information I am for writing a
letter, and am anxious to invite one of them to meet me. God grant that all
may go well with that Church at Iconium, which is so dear to me. Through you I
salute all the honourable clergy and all who are associated with your reverence.
LETTER CCXIX.(1)
To the clergy of Samosata.
THE Lord ordereth "all things in measure and weight,"(2) and brings on us
the temptations which do not exceed our power to endure them,(3) but tests all
that fight in the cause of true religion by affliction, not suffering them to
be tempted above that they are able to bear.(4) He gives tears to drink in
great measure(5) to all who ought to show whether in their affections they are
preserving their gratitude to Him. Especially in His dispensation concerning you
has He shown His loving-kindness, not suffering such a persecution to be brought
on you by your enemies as might turn some of you aside, or cause you to swerve
from the faith of Christ. He has matched you with adversaries who are of small
importance and easy to be repelled, and has prepared the prize for your
patience in your victory over them. But the common enemy of our life, who, in his
wiles, strives against the goodness of God, because he has seen that, like a
strong wall, you are despising attack from without. has devised, as I hear, that
there should arise among yourselves mutual offences and quarrels. These indeed, at
the outset, are insignificant and easy of cure; as time goes on, however, they
are increased by contention and are wont to result in irremediable
mischief.(6) I have, therefore, undertaken to exhort you by this letter. Had it been
possible, I would have come myself and supplicated you in person. Butt this is
prevented by present circumstances, and so, in lieu of supplication, I hold out this
letter to you, that you may respect my entreaty, may put a stop to your mutual
rivalries, and may soon send me the good news that all cause of offence among
you is at an end.
2. I am very anxious that you should know that be is great before God who
humbly submits to his neighbour and submits to charges against himself, without
having cause for shame, even though they are not true, that he may bring the
great blessing of peace upon God's Church.
I hope that there will arise among you a friendly rivalry, as to who shall
first be worthy of being called God's son, after winning this rank for himself
because of his being a peacemaker. A letter has also been written to you by
your very God-beloved bishop as to the course which you ought to pursue. He will
write again what it belongs to him to say. But I too, because of its having
been already allowed me to be near you, cannot disregard your position. So on the
arrival of the very devout brother Theodorus the sub-deacon, and his report
that your Church is in distress and disturbance, being deeply grieved and much
pained at heart, I could not endure to keep silence. I implore you to fling away
all controversy with one another, and to make peace, that you may avoid giving
pleasure to you opponents and destroying the boast of the Church, which is now
noised abroad throughout the world, that you all, as you are ruled by one soul
and heart, so live in one body. Through your reverences I salute all the people
of God, both those in rank and office and the rest of the clergy. I exhort you
to keep your old character. I can ask for nothing more than this because by the
exhibition of your good works you have anticipated and made impossible any
improvement on them.
LETTER CCXX.(1)
To the Beraeans.(2)
THE Lord has given great consolation to all who are deprived of personal
intercourse in allowing them to communicate by letter. By this means, it is
true, we cannot learn the express image of the body, but we can learn the
disposition of the very soul. Thus on the present occasion, when I had received the
letter of your reverences, I at the same moment recognised you, and took your love
towards me into my heart, and needed no long time to create intimacy with you.
The disposition shewn in your' letter was quite enough to enkindle in me
affection for the beauty of your soul. And, besides your letter, excellent as it was,
I had a yet plainer proof of how things are with you from the amiability of
the brethren who have been the means of communication between us. The
well-beloved and reverend presbyter Acacius, has told me much in addition to what you have
written, and has brought before my eyes the conflict you have to keep up day
by day, and the stoutness of the stand you are making for the true religion. He
has thus so moved my admiration, and roused in me so earnest a desire of
enjoying the good qualities in you, that I do pray the Lord that a time may come when
I may know you and yours by personal experience. He has told me of the
exactitude of those of you who are entrusted with the ministry of the altar, and
moreover of the harmonious agreement of all the people, and the generous character
and genuine love towards God of the magistrates and chief men of your city. I
consequently congratulate the Church on consisting of such members, and pray that
spiritual peace may be given to you in yet greater abundance, to the end (hat
in quieter times you may derive enjoyment from your labours in the day of
affliction. For sufferings that are painful while they are being experienced are
naturally often remembered with pleasure. For the present I beseech you not to
faint. Do not despair because your troubles follow so closely one upon another.
Your crowns are near: the help of the Lord is near. Do not let all you have
hitherto undergone go l for nothing; do not nullify a struggle which has been famous
over all the world. Human life is but of brief duration. " All flesh is grass,
and all the goodliness thereof is as the flower of the field. ... The grass
withereth, tile flower fadeth; but the word of our God shall stand for ever."(1)
Let us hold fast to the commandment that abideth, and despise the unreality
that passeth away. Many Churches have been cheered by your example. In calling new
champions into the field you have won for yourselves a great reward, though
you knew it not. The Giver of the prize is rich. and is able to reward you not
unworthily for your brave deeds.
LETTER CCXXI.(2)
To the Beraeans.
You were previously known to me, my dear friends, by your far-famed piety,
and by the crown won by your confession in Christ. Peradventure one of you may
ask in reply who can have carried these tidings of us so far? The Lord
Himself; for He puts His worshippers like a lamp on a lamp-stand, and makes them shine
throughout tile whole world. Are not winners in the games wont to be made
famous by the prize of victory, and craftsmen by the skilful design of their work?
Shall the memory of these and others like them abide for ever unforgotten, and
shall not Christ's worshippers concerning whom the Lord says Himself, Them that
honour me I will honour, be made famous and glorious by Him before all? Shall
He not display the brightness of their radiant splendour as He does the beams
of the sun? But I have been moved to greater longing for you by the letter which
you have been good enough to send me, a letter in which, above and beyond your
former efforts on behalf of the truth, yon have been yet more lavish of your
abounding and vigorous zeal for the true faith. In all this I rejoice with you,
and I pray with you that the God of the universe, Whose is the struggle and the
arena, .and Who gives the crown, may fill you with enthusiasm, may make your
souls strong, and make your work such as to meet with His divine approval.
LETTER CCXXII.(1)
To the people of Chalcis.(2)
THE letter of your reverences came upon me in an hour affliction like
water poured into the mouths of racehorses, inhaling dust with each eager breath at
high noontide in the middle of the course. Beset by trial after trial, I
breathed again, at once cheered by your words and invigorated by the thought of your
struggles to meet that which is before me with unflinching courage. For the
conflagration which has devoured a great part of the East is already advancing by
slow degrees into our own neighbourhood, and after burning everything round
about us is trying to reach even the Churches in Cappadocia, already moved to
tears by the smoke that rises from the ruins of our neighbours' homes.(3) The
flames have almost reached me. May the Lord divert them by the breath of His mouth,
and stay this wicked fire. Who is such a coward, so unmanly, so untried in the
athlete's struggles, as not to be nerved to the fight by your cheers, and pray
to be hailed victor at your side? You have been the first to step into the
arena of true religion; you have beaten off many an attack in bouts with the
heretics; you have borne the strong hot wind(1) of trial, both you who are leaders
of the Church, to whom has been the ministry of the altar, and every individual
of the laity, including those of higher rank. For this in you is specially
admirable and worthy of all praise, that you are all one in the Lord. some of you
leaders in the march to what is good, others willingly following. It is for this
reason that you are too strong for the attack of your assailants, and allow no
hold to your antagonists in any one of your members, wherefore day and night I
pray the King of the ages to preserve the people in the integrity of their
faith, and for them to preserve the clergy, like a head unharmed at the top,
exercising its own watchful forethought for every portion of the body underneath.
For while the eyes discharge their functions, the hands can do their work as they
ought, the feet can move without tripping, and no part of the body is deprived
of due care. I beseech you, then, to cling to one another, as you are doing
and as you will do. I beseech you who are entrusted with the care of souls to
keep each and all together, and to cherish them like beloved children. I beseech
the people to continue to show you the respect and honour due to fathers, that
in the goodly order of your Church you may keep your strength and the foundation
of your faith in Christ; that God's name may be glorified and the good gift of
love increase and abound. May I, as I hear of you, rejoice in your progress in
God. If I am still bidden to sojourn in the flesh in this world, may I one day
see you in the peace of God. If I be now summoned to depart this life, may I
see you in the radiant glory of the saints, together with all them who are
accounted worthy through patience and showing forth of good works, with crowns upon
your heads.
LETTER CCXXIII.(2)
Against Eustathius of Sebasteia.(3)
1. THERE is a time to keep silence and a time to speak, (4) is the saying
of the Preacher. Time enough has been given to silence, and now the time has
come to open my mouth for the publication of the truth concerning matters that
are, up to now, unknown. The illustrious Job bore his calamities for a long time
in silence, and ever showed his courage by holding out under the most
intolerable sufferings, but when he had struggled long enough in silence, and had
persisted in covering his anguish in the bottom of his heart, at last he opened his
mouth and uttered his well-known words.(1) In my own case this is now the third
year of my silence, and my boast has become like that of the Psalmist "I was as
a man that heareth not and in whose mouth are no reproofs."(2) Thus I shut up
in the bottom of my heart the pangs which I suffered on account of the
calumnies directed against me, for calumny humbles a man, and calumny makes a poor man
giddy.(3) If, therefore, the mischief of calumny is so great as to cast down
even the perfect man from his height, for this is what Scripture indicates by the
word man, and by the poor man is meant he who lacks the great doctrines, as is
the view also of the prophet when he says, "These are poor, therefore they
shall not hear; ... I will get me unto the great men,"(4) he means by poor those
who are lacking in understanding; and here, too, he plainly means those who are
not yet furnished in the inner man, and have not even come to the full measure
of their age; it is.these who are said by the proverb to be made giddy and
tossed about. Nevertheless I thought that I ought to bear my troubles in silence,
waiting for some indication to come out of them. I did not even think that what
was said against me proceeded from ill will; I thought it was the result of
ignorance of the truth. But now I see that hostility increases with time, and
that my slanderers are not sorry for what they said at the beginning, and do not
take any trouble to make amends for the past, but go on and on and rally
themselves together to attain their original object. This was to make my life
miserable and to devise means for sullying my reputation among the brethren. I,
therefore, no longer see safety in silence. I have bethought me of the words of
Isaiah: " I have long time holden my peace, shall I always be still and refrain
myself? I have been patient like a travailing woman."(5) God grant that I may both
receive the reward of silence, and gain some strength to confute my opponents,
and that thus, by confuting them, I may dry up the bitter torrent of falsehood
that has gushed out against me. So might I say, "My soul bus passed over the
torrent;"[1] and, "If it had not been the Lord who was on our side when men rose
up against us, ... then they had swallowed us up quick, the water had drowned
us."[2]
2. Much time had I spent in vanity, and had wasted nearly all my youth in
the vain labour which I underwent in acquiring the wisdom made foolish by God.
Then once upon a time, like a man roused from deep sleep, I turned my eyes to
the marvellous light of the truth of the Gospel, and I perceived the uselessness
of "the wisdom of the princes of this world, that come to naught." I wept many
tears over my miserable life and I prayed that guidance might be vouchsafed me
to admit me to the doctrines of true religion. First of all was I minded to
make some mending of my ways, long perverted as they were by my intimacy with
wicked men. Then I read the Gospel, and I saw there that a great means of reaching
perfection was the selling of one's goods, the sharing them with the poor, the
giving up of all care for this life, and the refusal to allow the soul to be
turned by any sympathy to things of earth. And I prayed that I might find some
one of the brethren who had chosen this way of life, that with him I might cross
life's short[4] and troubled strait. And many did I find in Alexandria, and
many in the rest of Egypt, and others in Palestine, and in Coele Syria, and in
Mesopotamia. I admired their continence in living, and their endurance in toil; I
was amazed at their persistency in prayer, and at their triumphing over sleep;
subdued by no natural necessity, ever keeping their souls' purpose high and
free, in hunger, in thirst, in cold, in nakedness,[5] they never yielded to the
body; they were never willing to waste attention on it; always, as though living
in a flesh that was not theirs, they shewed in very deed what it is to sojourn
for a while in this life,[6] and what to have one's citizenship and home in
heaven.[7] All this moved my admiration. I called these men's lives blessed, in
that they did in deed shew that they "bear about in their body the dying of
Jesus."[8] And I prayed that I, too, as far as in me lay, might imitate them.
3. So when I beheld certain men in my own country striving to copy their
ways, I felt that I had found a help to my own salvation, and I took the things
seen for proof of things unseen. And since the secrets in the hearts of each of
us are unknown, I held lowliness of dress to be a sufficient indication of
lowliness of spirit; and there was enough to convince me in the coarse cloak, the
girdle, and the shoes of untanned hide.[1] And though many were for withdrawing
me from their society, I would not allow it, because I saw that they put a
life of endurance before a life of pleasure; and, because of the extraordinary
excellence of their lives, I became an eager supporter of them. And so it came
about that I would not hear of any fault being found with their doctrines,
although many maintained that their conceptions about God were erroneous, and that
they bad become disciples of the champion of the present heresy, and were secretly
propagating his teaching. But, as I had never at any time heard these things
with my own ears, I concluded that those who reported them were calumniators.
Then I was called to preside over the Church. Of the watchmen and spies, who were
given me under the pretence of assistance and loving communion, I say nothing,
lest I seem to injure my own cause by telling an incredible tale, or give
believers an occasion for hating their fellows, if I am believed. This had almost
been my own case, had I not been prevented by the mercy of God. For almost every
one became an object of suspicion to me, and smitten at heart as I was by
wounds treacherously inflicted, I seemed to find nothing in any man that I could
trust. But so far there was, nevertheless, a kind of intimacy kept up between us.
Once and again we held discussions on doctrinal points. and apparently we
seemed to agree and keep together. But they began to find out that I made the same
statements concerning my faith in God which they had always heard from me. For,
if other things in me may move a sigh, this one boast at least I dare make in
the Lord, that never for one moment have I held erroneous conceptions about
God, or entertained heterodox opinions, which I have learnt later to change. The
teaching about God which I had received as a boy from my blessed mother and my
grandmother Macrina, I have ever held with increased conviction. On my coming to
ripe years of reason I did not shift my opinions from one to another, but
carried out the principles delivered to me by my parents. Just as the seed when it
grows is first tiny and then gets bigger but always preserves its identity, not
changed in kind though gradually perfected in growth, so I reckon the same
doctrine to have grown in my case through gradually advancing stages. What t hold
now has not replaced what I held at the beginning. Let them search their own
consciences. Let these men who have now made me the common talk on the charge of
false doctrine, and deafened all men's ears with the defamatory letters which
they have written against me, so that I am compelled thus to defend myself, ask
themselves if they have ever heard anything from me, differing from what I now
say, and let them remember the judgment seat of Christ.
4. I am charged with blasphemy against God. Yet it is impossible for me to
be convicted on the ground of any treatise concerning the Faith, which they
urge against me, nor can I be charged on the ground of the utterances which I
have from thee to thee delivered by word of mouth, without their being committed
to writing, in the churches of God. Not a single witness has been found to say
that he has ever heard from me, when speaking in private, anything contrary to
true religion. If then I am not an unorthodox writer, if no fault can be found
with my preaching, if I do not lead astray those who converse with me in my own
homer on what ground am I being judged? But there is a new invention!
Somebody,[1] runs the charge, in Syria has written something inconsistent with true
religion; and twenty years or more ago you wrote him a letter: so you are an
accomplice of the fellow, and what is urged against him is urged against you. O
truth-loving sir, I reply, you who have been taught that lies are the offspring of
the devil; what has proved to you that I wrote that letter? You never sent; you
never asked; you were never informed by me, who might have told you the truth.
But if the letter was mine, how do you know that the document that has come
into your hands now is of the same date as my letter? Who told you that it is
twenty years old? How do you know that it is a composition of the man to whom my
letter was sent? And if he was the composer, and I wrote to him, and my letter
and his composition belong to the same date, what proof is there that I accepted
it in my judgment, and that I hold those views?
5. Ask yourself. How often did you visit me in my monastery on the Iris,
when my very God-beloved brother Gregory was with me, following the same course
of life as myself? Did you ever hear anything of the kind? Was there any
appearance of such a thing, small or great? How many days did we spend in the
opposite village, at my mother's, living as friend with friend, and discoursing
together night and day? Did you ever find me holding any opinion of the kind? And
when we went together to visit the blessed Silvanus,[1] did we not talk of these
things on the way? And at Eusinoe,[2] when you were about to set out with other
bishops for Lampsacus,[3] was not our discourse about the faith? Were not your
shorthand writers at my side the whole thee while I was dictating my
objections to the heresy? Were not your most faithful disciples there too? When I was
visiting the brotherhood, and passing the night with them in their prayers,
continually speaking and hearing of the things pertaining to God without dispute,
was not the evidence which I gave of my sentiments exact and definite? How came
you then to reckon this rotten and slender suspicion as of more importance than
the experience of such a length of time? What evidence of my frame of mind
ought you to have preferred to your own? Has there been the slightest want of
harmony in my utterances about the faith at Chalcedon, again and again at Heraclea,
and at an earlier period in the suburb of Caesarea? Are they not all mutually
consistent? I only except the increase in force of which I spoke just now,
resulting from advance, and which is not to be regarded as a change from worse to
better, but rather as a filling up of what was wanting in the addition of
knowledge. How can you fail to bear in mind that the father shall not bear the
iniquity of the son, nor the son bear the iniquity of the father, but each shall die
in his own sin?[4] I have neither father nor son slandered by you; I have had
neither teacher nor disciple. But if the sins of the parents must be made charges
against their children, it is far fairer for the sins of Arius to be charged
against his disciples; and, whoever begat the heretic Aetius,[5] for the charges
against the son to be applied to the father. If on the other hand it is unjust
for any one to be accused for their sakes, it is far more unjust that I should
be held responsible for the sake of men with whom I have nothing to do, even
if they were in every respect sinners, and something worthy of condemnation has
been written by them. I must be pardoned if I do not believe all that is urged
against them. since my own experience shows me how very easy it is for accusers
to slip into slander.
6. Even if they did come forward to accuse me, because they had been
deceived, and thought that I was associated with the writers of those words of
Sabellius which they are carrying about, they were guilty of unpardonable conduct in
straightway attacking and wounding me, when I had done them no wrong, before
they had obtained plain proof. I do not like to speak of myself as bound to them
in the closest intimacy; or of them as being evidently not led by the Holy
Spirit, because of their cherishing false suspicions. Much anxious thought must be
taken, and many sleepless nights must be passed, and with many tears must the
truth be sought from God, by him who is on the point of cutting himself off
from a brother's friendship. Even the riders of this world, when they are on the
point of sentencing some evil doer to death, draw the veil aside,[1] and call in
experts for the examination of the case, and consume considerable thee in
weighing the severity of the law against the common fault of humanity, and with
many a sigh and many a lament for then stern necessity of the case, proclaim
before all the people that they are obeying the law from necessity, and not passing
sentence to gratify, their own wishes.[2] How much greater care and diligence,
how ranch more counsel, ought to be taken by one who is on the point of
breaking off from long established friendship with a brother! In this case there is
only a single letter and that of doubtful genuineness. It would be quite
impossible to argue that it is known by the signature, for they possess not the
original, but only a copy. They depend on one single document and that an old one. It
is now twenty years since anything has been written to that person.[1] Of my
opinions and conduct in the intervening thee I can adduce no better witnesses
than the very men who attack and accuse me.
7. But the real reason of separation is not this letter. There is another
cause of alienation. I am ashamed to mention it; and I would have been for ever
silent about it had not recent events compelled me to publish all their mind
for the sake of the good of the mass of the people. Good men have thought that
communion with me was a bar to the recovery of their authority. Some have been
influenced by the signature of a certain creed which I proposed to them, not
that I distrusted their sentiments, I confess, but because I wished to do away
with the suspicions which the more part of the brethren who agree with me
entertained of them. Accordingly, to avoid anything arising from that confession to
prevent their being accepted by the present authorities,[2] they have renounced
communion with me. This letter was devised by an after-thought as a pretext for
the separation. A very plain proof of what I say is, that after they had
denounced me, and composed such complaints against me as suited them, they sent round
their letters in all directions before communicating with me. Their letter was
in the possession of others who had received it in the course of transmission
and who were on the point of sending it on seven days before it had reached my
hands. The idea was that it would be handed from one to another and so would be
quickly distributed over the whole country. This was reported to me at the thee
by those who were giving me clear information of all their proceedings. But I
determined to hold my tongue until the Revealer of all secrets should publish
their doings by plain and incontrovertible demonstration.
LETTER CCXXIV.[3]
To the presbyter Genethlius.
1. I have received your reverence's letter and I am delighted at the title
which you have felicitously applied to the writing which they have composed in
calling it "a writing of divorcement,"[4] What defence the writers will be
able to make before the tribunal of Christ, where no excuse will avail, I am quite
unable to conceive. After accusing me, violently running me down, and telling
tales in accordance not with the truth but with what they wished to be true,
they have assumed a great show of humility, and have accused me of haughtiness
for refusing to receive their envoys. They have written, as they have, what is
all--or nearly all--for I do not wish to exaggerate,--lies, in the endeavour to
persuade men rather than God, and to please men rather than God, with Whom
nothing is more precious than truth. Moreover into the letter written against me
they have introduced heretical expressions, and have concealed the author of the
impiety, in order that most of the more unsophisticated might be deceived by the
calumny got up against me, and suppose the portion introduced to be mine. For
nothing is said by my ingenious slanderers as to the name of the author of
these vile doctrines, and it is left for the simple to suspect that these
inventions, if not their expression in writing. is due to me. Now that you know all
this, I exhort you not to be perturbed yourselves, and to calm the excitement of
those who are agitated. I say this although I know that it will not be easy for
my defence to be received, because I have been anticipated by the vile calumnies
uttered against me by persons of influence.
2. Now as to the point that the writings going the round as mine are not
mine at all, the angry feeling felt against me so confuses their reason that
they cannot see what is profitable. Nevertheless, if the question were put to them
by yourselves, I do think that they would not reach such a pitch of obstinate
perversity as to dare to utter the lie with their own lips, and allege the
document in question to be mine. And if it is not mine, why am I being judged for
other men's writings? But they will urge that I am in communion with
Apollinarius, and cherish in my heart perverse doctrines of this kind. Let them be asked
for proof. If they are able to search into a man's heart, let them say so; and
do you admit the truth of all that they say about everything. If on the other
hand, they are trying to prove my being in communion on plain and open grounds,
let them produce either a canonical letter written by me to him, or by him to
me. Let them shew that I have held intercourse with his clergy, or have ever
received any one of them into the communion of prayer. If they adduce the letter
written now five and twenty years ago, written by layman to layman, and not even
this as I wrote it, but altered (God knows by whom), then recognise their
unfairness. No bishop is accused if, while he was a layman, he wrote something
somewhat incautiously on an indifferent matter; not anything concerning the Faith,
but a mere word of friendly greeting. Possibly even my opponents are known to
have written to Jews and to Pagans, without incurring any blame. Hitherto no one
has ever been judged for any such conduct as that on which I am being condemned
by these strainers-out of gnats.[1] God, who knows men's hearts, knows that I
never wrote these things, nor sanctioned them, but that I anathematize all who
hold the vile opinion of the confusion of the hypostases, on which point the
most impious heresy of Sabellius has been revived. And all the brethren who have
been personally acquainted with my insignificant self know it equally well. Let
those very men who now vehemently accuse me, search their own consciences, and
they will own that from my boyhood I have been far removed from any doctrine
of the kind.
3. If any one enquires what my opinion is, he will learn it froth the
actual little document, to which is appended their own autograph signature. This
they wish to destroy, and they are anxious to conceal their own change of
position in slandering me. For they do not like to own that they have repented of
their subscription to the tract I gave them; while they charge me with impiety from
the idea that no one perceives that their disruption from me is only a
pretext, while in reality they have departed from that faith which they have over and
over again owned in writing, before many witnesses, and have lastly received
and subscribed when delivered to them by me. It is open to any one to read the
signatures and to learn the truth from the document itself. Their intention will
be obvious, if, after reading the subscription which they gave me, any one
reads the creed which they gave Gelasius,[2] and observes what a vast difference
there is between the two confessions. It would be better for men who so easily
shift their own position, not to examine other men's motes but to cast out the
beam in their own eye.[3] I am making a more complete defence on every point in
another letter;[4] this will satisfy readers who want fuller assurance. Do you,
now that you have received this letter, put away all despondency, and confirm
the love to me,[5] which makes me eagerly long for union with you. Verily it is
a great sorrow to me, and a pain in my heart that cannot be assuaged, if the
slanders uttered against me so far prevail as to chill your love and to alienate
us from one another. Farewell.
LETTER CCXXV.[1]
To Demosthenes,[2] as from the synod of bishops.
I am always very thankful to God and to the emperor, under whose rule we
live. when I see the government of my country put Into the hands of one who is
not only a Christian, but is moreover correct in life and a careful guardian of
the laws according to which our life in this world is ordered. I have had
special reason for offering this gratitude to God and to our God-beloved emperor on
the occasion of your coming among us. I have been aware that some of the
enemies of peace have been about to stir your august tribunal against me, and have
been waiting to be summoned by your excellency that you might learn the truth
from me; if indeed your high wisdom condescends to consider the examination of
ecclesiastical matters to be within your province.[3] The, tribunal overlooked me,
but your excellency, moved by the reproaches of Philochares, ordered my
brother and fellow-minister Gregory to be haled before your judgment seat. He obeyed
your summons; how could he do otherwise? But he was attacked by pain in the
side, and at the same time, in consequence of a chill, was attacked by his old
kidney complaint. He has therefore been compelled, forcibly detained by your
soldiers as he was, to be conveyed to some quiet spot, where he could have his
maladies attended to, and get some comfort in his intolerable agony. Under these
circumstances we have combined to approach your lordship with the entreaty that
you will feel no anger at the postponement of the trial. The public interests
have not in any way suffered through our delay, nor have those of the Church been
injured. If there is any question of the wasteful expenditure of money, the
treasurers of the Church funds are there, ready to give an account to any one who
likes, and to exhibit the injustice of the charges advanced by men who have
braved the careful hearing of the case before you. For they can have no
difficulty in making the truth clear to any one who seeks it from the actual writings of
the blessed bishop himself. If there is any other point of canonical order
which requires investigation, and your excellency deigns to undertake to hear and
to judge it, it will be necessary for us all to be present, because, if there
has been a failure in any point of canonical order, the responsibility lies with
the consecrators and not with him who is forcibly compelled to undertake the
ministry. We therefore petition you to reserve the hearing of the case for us in
our own country, and not to compel us to travel beyond its borders, nor force
us to a meeting with bishops with whom we have not yet come to agreement on
ecclesiastical questions.[1] I beg you also to be merciful to my own old age and
ill health. You will learn by actual investigation, if it please God, that no
canonical rule be it small or great was omitted in the appointment of the bishop.
I pray that under your administration unity and peace may be brought about
with my brethren ; but so long as this does not exist it is difficult for us even
to meet, because ninny of our simpler brethren suffer from our mutual disputes.
LETTER CCXXVI.[2]
To the ascetics under him.
IT may be that the holy God will grant me the joy of a meeting with you,
for I am ever longing to see yon and bear about you, because in no other thing
do I find rest for my soul than in your progress and perfection in the
commandments of Christ. But so long as this hope remains unrealized I feel bound to
visit you through the instrumentality of our dear and God-fearing brethren, and to
address you, my beloved friends, by letter. Wherefore I have sent my reverend
and dear brother and fellow-worker in the Gospel, Meletius the presbyter. He
will tell you my yearning affection for you. and the anxiety of my soul, in that.
night and day, I beseech the Lord in your behalf, that I may have boldness in
the day of our Lord Jesus Christ through your salvation, and that when your work
is tried by the just judgment of God you may shine forth in the brightness of
the saints. At the same thee the difficulties of the day cause me deep anxiety,
for all Churches have been tossed to and fro, and all souls are being sifted.
Some have even opened their mouths without any reserve against their fellow
servants. Lies are boldly uttered, and the truth has been hidden. The accused are
being condemned without a trial, and the accusers are believed without
evidence. I had heard that many letters are being carried about against myself,
stinging, gibbeting, and attacking me for matters about which I have my defence ready
for the tribunal of truth; and I had intended to keep Silence, as indeed I have
done; for now for three years I have been bearing the blows of calumny and the
whips of accusation, content to think that I have the Lord, Who knows all
secrets, as witness of its falsehood. But I see now that many men have silence as a
corroboration of these slanders, and have formed the idea that my silence was
due, not to my longsuffering, but to my inability to open my lips in opposition
to the truth. For these reasons I have attempted to write to you, beseeching
your love in Christ not to accept these partial calumnies as true. because, as
it is written, the law judges no man unless it have heard and known his
actions.[1]
2. Nevertheless before a fair judge the facts themselves are a sufficient
demonstration of the truth. Wherefore, even if I be, silent, you can look at
events. The very men who are now indicting me for heterodoxy have been seen
openly numbered with the heretical faction. The very accusers who condemn the for
other men's writings, are plainly contravening their own confessions, given to me
by them in writing. Look at the conduct of the exhibitors of this audacity. It
is their invariable custom to go over to the party in power, to trample on
their weaker friends, and to court the strong. The writers of those famous letters
against Eudoxius and all his t faction, the senders of them to all the
brotherhood, the protesters that they shun their communion as fatal to souls, and
would not accept the votes given for their deposition, because they were given by
heretics, as they persuaded me then,--these very men, completely forgetful of
all this, have joined their faction.[1] No room for denial is left them. They
laid their mind bare when they embraced private communion with them at Ancyra,
when they had not yet been publicly received by them. Ask them, then, if
Basilides, who gave communion to Ecdicius, is now orthodox, why when returning from
Dardania, did they overthrow his altars in the territory of Gangra, and set up
their own tables?[2] Why have they comparatively recently[3] attacked the churches
of Amasea and Zela and appointed presbyters and deacons there themselves? If
they communicate with them as orthodox, why do they attack them as heretical? If
they hold them to be heretical, how is it that they do not shun communion with
them? Is it not, my honourable brethren, plain even to he intelligence of a
child, that it is always with a view to some personal advantage that they
endeavour to calumniate or to give support? So they have stood off from me, not
because I did not write in reply (which is alleged to be the main ground of offence),
nor because I did not receive the chorepiscopi whom they assert they sent.
Those who are trumping up the tale will render an account to the Lord. One man,
Eustathius,[4] was sent and gave a letter to the court of the vicar, and spent
three days in the city. When he was on the point of going home, it is said that
he came to my house late in the evening, when I was asleep. On hearing that I
was asleep, he went away; he did not come near me on the next day, and after thus
going through the mere form of discharging his duty to me, departed. This is
the charge under which I am guilty. This is the sin against which these
long-suffering people have neglected to weigh the previous service wherein I served
them in love. For this error they have made their wrath against me so severe that
they have caused me to be denounced in all the Churches throughout the
world--at least, that is, wherever they could.
3. But of course this is not the real cause of our separation. It was when
they found that they would recommend themselves to Euzoius(1) if they were
alienated from me, that they devised these pretences. The object was to find some
ground of recommendation with the authorities for their attack upon me. Now
they are beginning to run down even the Nicene Creed, and nickname me Homoousiast,
because in that creed the Only begotten Son is said to be homoousios with God
the Father. Not that one essence is divided into two kindred parts; God forbid!
This was not the meaning of that holy and God-beloved synod; their meaning was
that what the Father is in essence, such is the Son. And thus they themselves
have explained it to us, in the phrase Light of Light. Now it is the Nicene
Creed, brought by themselves from the west, which they presented to the Synod at
Tyana, by which they were received.(2) But they have an ingenious theory as to
changes of this kind; they use the words of the creed as physicians use a remedy
for the particular moment, and substitute now one and now another to suit
particular diseases. The unsoundness of such a sophism it is rather for you to
consider than for me to prove. For "the Lord will give you understanding"(3) to
know what is the right doctrine, and what the crooked and perverse. If indeed we
are to subscribe one creed to-day and another tomorrow, and shift with the
seasons, then is the declaration false of him who said, " One Lord, one faith, one
baptism."(4) But if it is true, then "Let no man deceive you with [these] vain
words." They falsely accuse me of introducing novelties about the Holy Spirit.
Ask what the novelty is. I confess what I have received, that the Paraclete is
ranked with Father and Son, and not numbered with created beings. We have made
profession of our faith in Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, and we are baptized in
the name of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. Wherefore we never separate the Spirit
from conjunction(5) with the Father and the Son. For our mind, enlightened by
the Spirit, looks at the Son, and in Him, as in an image, beholds the Father.
And I do not invent names of myself, but call the Holy Ghost Paraclete; nor do I
consent to destroy His due glory. These are truly my doctrines. If any one
wishes to accuse me for them, let him accuse me; let my persecutor persecute me.
Let him who believes in the slanders against me be ready for the judgment. "The
Lord is at hand." "I am careful for nothing,"(11)
4. If any one in Syria is writing, this is nothing to me. For it is said
"By thy words thou shall be justified, and by thy words thou shall be
condemned."(2) Let my own words judge me. Let no one condemn me for other men's errors
nor adduce letters written twenty years ago in proof that I would allow communion
to the writers of such things. Before these things were written, and before
any suspicion of this kind had been stirred against them, I did write as layman
to layman. I wrote nothing about the faith in any way like that which they are
now carrying about to calumniate me. I sent nothing but a mere greeting to
return a friendly communication, for I shun and anathematize as impious alike all
who are affected with the unsoundness of Sabellius, and all who maintain the
opinions of Arius. If any one says that Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are the same,
and supposes one thing under several names, and one hypostasis described by
three persons, I rank such an one as belonging to the faction of the Jews.(3)
Similarly, if any one says that the Son is in essence unlike the Father, or degrades
the Holy Ghost into a creature, I anathematize him, and say that he is coming
near to the heathen error. But it is impossible for the mouths of my accusers
to be restrained by my letter; rather is it likely that they are being
irritated at my defence, and are getting up new and more violent attacks against me.
But it is not difficult for your ears to be guarded. Wherefore, as far as in you
lies, do as I bid you. Keep your heart clear and unprejudiced by their
calumnies; and insist on my rendering an account to meet the charges laid against me.
If you find that truth is on my side do not yield to lies; if on the other hand
you feel that I am feeble in defending myself, then believe my accusers as
being worthy of credit. They pass sleepless nights to do me mischief. I do not ask
this of you. They are taking to a commercial career, and turning their slanders
against me into a means of profit. I implore you on the other hand to stop at
home, and to lead a decorous life, quietly doing Christ's work.(4) I advise you
to avoid communication with them, for it always tends to the perversion of
their hearers. I say this that you may keep your affection for the uncontaminated,
may preserve the faith of the Fathers in its integrity. and may appear
approved before the Lord as friends of the truth.