FROM THE LIBRARY OF REV. LOUIS FITZGERALD BENSON. D. D. BEQUEATHED BY HIM TO THE LIBRARY OF PRINCETON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY IXirUdQIli Section '/GO II a EARLY HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH / EARLY HISTORY OF ^-^ THE CHRISTIAN CHUR< FROM ITS FOUNDATION TO THE END OF THE FIFTH CENTURY BY MONSIGNOR LOUIS DUCHESNE HON. D.LITT. OXFORD, AND LITT.D. CAMBRIDGE MKMBRE DB L'INSTITUT DE FRANCE RENDERED INTO ENGLISH FROM THE FOURTH EDITION VOLUME II NEW YORK LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO. FOURTH AVENUE AND 30th STREET 1920 PREFACE I PREFACED my first volume with the mention of Eusebius. And it is again under the patronage of the Bishop of Caesarea that the present one begins. The last three books of his Ecclesiastical History , and the four books of his Life of Constantine^ deal with nearly the whole of the subject-matter of my first five chapters. Faithful to his custom of reproducing his authorities, Eusebius has preserved to us, for the time in which he himself lived, a great number of official documents. We should have been glad if he had more often given expression to his own recollections and impressions ; but unfortunately, the nearer the events which he relates approach to his own time, the more afraid he seems to be of seeing them clearly, and above all of relating them. With the exception of the general glorification of the Church, and the special eulogy of Constantine, everything else in his pages is enveloped in so much reserve, with so many oratorical safeguards, and so many things hinted at rather than affirmed, that we have often a difficulty in finding out what he really means. After Eusebius, the history of the Church remained for a long time neglected, Rufinus of Aquileia was the first to give himself anew to the task. To his translation of the Ecclesiastical History^ executed at the time when Alaric was devastating Italy, he added two supplementary books, in which the narrative was continued to the death of Theodosius (a.d. 395). His work is a sufficiently mediocre production, hastily put together and devoid of interest save for the last pages, where the author relates events of which he had himself been witness. viii PREFACE The subject was again taken up at Constantinople, shortly before the middle of the 5th century,^ by two men of the world, Socrates and Sozomen. The first of these, at least, availed himself of the account of Rufinus, which a certain Gelasius had translated into Greek. About the same time, Theodoret, Bishop of Cyrrhos, in the province of Euphratesia, also undertook the task of continuing Eusebius. And finally, Philostorgius, an Arian of the most advanced type, a Eunomian, or Anomoean, applied himself to the same work, in the spirit of his own sect. His book has not been preserved : we have only extracts from it — very copious ones, it is true — in the Bibliotheca of Photius. Philostorgius is interesting in one respect — namely, that he allows us to hear the voice of a party conquered and thereby reduced to a silence deeper than history could have wished. Theodoret preserves to us traditions, anecdotes, and legends of Antioch ; Socrates and Sozomen render us the same service for Constanti- nople and its neighbourhood. Socrates had had much communication with the Novatians of the capital, and they had given him many curious details respecting their Church. But the most important point is that the three orthodox historians have worked over collec- tions of official documents, that they often reproduce original sources, and that, even when they do not reproduce or quote them, they betray the use they have made of such documents by the details of their narrative. The result of this is, that although when they speak for themselves, or as simply following oral traditions, their authority is weak, they afford serious guarantees for their statements when we are able to recover underlying their text the testimony of contemporary documents. This distinction must always be made ; it has guided me, it is hardly necessary to say, in the use I have made of these I The priest Philip of Side had published, about the year 430, under the title of Christian History^ an immense compilation, destitute of order or method. It is now lost ; but what Socrates {Hist vii. 27) and Photius (cod. 35) say of it is not of a character to make us regret its loss very keenly. PREFACE ix authors ; it must never be lost sight of in estimating the references which I make to their works. If a great many original documents were within the reach of these authors, it was because various collections of them had been made, in which it was easy to find them. St Athanasius compiled one of these, about the year 350, in his Apology against the Avians, a pleading pro dovio, in which — reinstalled, in fact, in his see of i^lexan- dria, but deposed in law, in the eyes of his adversaries — he set himself to show the baselessness of his sentence of deposition, and to establish the fact that it had been annulled by more authoritative decisions. Other docu- ments had been added by him to his treatise The Decrees of the Council of Niccea, which is of rather later date than his Apology} His History of the Arians, addressed to the Monks, also contains more than one document which is both authentic and interesting. Finally, in the year 367, when he was in the fortieth year of his episcopate, he caused to be made a kind of history of the vicissitudes through which the Church of Alexandria had passed since the Great Persecution. Documents of great interest were included in this. The collection has not been preserved in Greek ; but, in a collection of canons, known by the name of The Collection of the Deacon Theodosius, important fragments of a Latin translation remain to us.- Moreover, Athanasius had not been the first, nor was he the only person who in this way gathered together documents. Even before the Council of Nicaea, Arius and Alexander had brought together the letters of their respective adherents, and had made use of them in their polemics. Towards the end of the 4th century, Sabinus, Bishop of Heraclea for the " Macedonian " party, had also compiled a collection (Swaywy?/) of various documents relating to Councils of the Church, from quite another point of view from that of Athanasius. ' Cf. G. Loeschcke, in the Rheinisches Museum, vol. lix., p. 45 1, who thinks that he is able to identify this collection with the enigmatical Synodicon of Athanasius ; E. Schwartz, in the Gottingen Nachrichten, 1904, p. 391. '^ Cf. page 132, infra. II «2 X PREFACE Socrates was acquainted with this collection and also with the others. He openly quotes Sabinus. Sozomen, who re-edited Socrates and at the same time completed his work, did not confine himself to reproducing his quotations. He studied the documents for himself, and made a larger and more judicious use of them, but without quoting the collection — a characteristic method of procedure. We know that although he follows Socrates he gives the reader no sort of notice of this, so that we cannot spare him the reproach of plagiarism. It was not only in the East that controversy was carried on by means of historical dossiers and collections of official documents. In the West also the same method was observed. About the time when the long career of Eusebius of Caesarea was drawing to its close, the Catholics of Africa, harassed by the Donatists, and ill defended against them by the imperial authorities, con- ceived the idea of influencing public opinion by making known, through a series of indisputable documents, the conditions which had given rise to that lamentable schism. With this end in view was drawn up the collection called Gesta pnrgatio7iis Caeciliani et Felicis, which long served as a text-book for the anti-Donatist polemics, and was made use of afterwards by St Optatus and St Augustine. As in the Greek collections, a brief commentary bound the pieces together, and formed a kind of historical thread of connection.^ It was a collection of the same kind that St Hilary of Poitiers formed in 360, at Constantinople, at the moment when the Nicene orthodoxy appeared to have become obscured in the unfaithfulness, more or less enforced, alike of the Latin and the Greek episcopates. Hilary relates once more, in opposition to the partisans of the Council of Rimini (Ariminum), the series of events which had happened since the Council of Sardica in 343. In the fragments of his compilation' which have come down to ' Sylloge Optatiana, following St Optatus in the Vienna edition, vol. xxvi., p. 206 ; cf. my memoir, " Le dossier du Donatisme," in the Melanges de PEcole de Rome^ vol. x. (1890). PREFACE xi us are to be found documents of later date than the original edition, which proves that it must have been retouched after 360, no doubt by others than the author himself. Besides these collections of documents, upon which rest, though with gaps, the statements of later his- torians, the latter had at their disposal, as we ourselves have, often in a larger measure, a considerable body of literature on these subjects. Hilary, Athanasius, Basil, the two Gregorys, Epiphanius, Ambrose, and Jerome, only to mention the most celebrated, have left us an entire library on which historical learning has drawn for centuries. It is upon this whole corpus of texts that my own account rests. I refer to them with moderation, confining myself, as in the first volume, to indicating, here and there, the authorities to be consulted upon certain debatable questions. If I had gone more deeply into bibliography and critical discussions, the notes would have taken up so much room that I do not see what would have been left for the text. And yet this includes the whole period which corresponds to the six volumes of the late Duke Albert de Broglie, LEglise et Pevipire romain au /V^^'^ Sz^c/e, a book which I have not cited, since I cite only first-hand authorities or special treatises ; but one which I could scarcely omit to mention here, were it only to beg of charitable readers not to remember his book too much while they are reading mine. Rome, March 25, 1907. CONTENTS PAGE Preface, ........ vii CHAPTER I THE GREAT PERSECUTION Accession of Diocletian : the Tetrarchy. Persecution decided upon : the four edicts. Crisis of the Tetrarchy : Con- stantine and Maxentius. AppHcation of the first edict in Africa, The Terror of 304. The canons of Peter of Alexandria. The beginning of Maximin's reign. Death of Galerius: his edict of toleration. The religious policy of Maximin. His end. Licinius at Nicomedia : edicts of pacification. The martyrs of Palestine, of Egypt, and of Africa. Literary controversies : Arnobius, Hierocles, Lactantius, ....... CHAPTER II CONSTANTINE, THE CHRISTIAN EMPEROR Conversion of Constantine. Religious measures in the West. The Pagans tolerated and the Christians favoured. Licinius and his attitude towards the Christians. The war of 323 : Constantine sole Emperor. Development of his religious policy. Measures against the temples and the sacrifices. Foundation of Churches : the Holy Places of Palestine. Foundation of Constantinople. Death of Constantine, . 45 xiv CONTENTS CHAPTER III THE SCHISMS RESULTING FROM THE PERSECUTION PAGE Pope Marcellinus and his memory. Disturbances at Rome with regard to apostates : Marcellus, Eusebius. Egyptian quarrels : rupture between Bishops Peter and Meletius. The Meletian schism. Origins of the Donatis-t schism. Council of Cirta. Mensurius and Cascilian, Bishops of Carthage. Schism against Cascilian : Majorinus. Inter- vention of the Emperor. Councils of Rome and of Aries. Imperial arbitration. Resistance of the Donatists : organ- ization of the schism, ...... 72 CHAPTER IV ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NIC^EA The parishes of Alexandria. Arius of Baucalis : his doctrine. Conflict with traditional teaching. The deposition of Arius and his followers. Arius is supported in Syria and at Nicomedia. His return to Alexandria : his Thalia. Intervention of Constantine. Debate on the Paschal question. The Council of Niceea. Presence of the Emperor. Arius again condemned. Settlement of the Meletian affair, and of the Paschal question. Compilation of the Creed. Disciplinary canons. The Hofiioousios. First attempts at reaction, . . . . .98 CHAPTER V EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS Eusebius of Caesarea : his learning, his relations with Con- stantine. The Homoousios after the Council of Nicaea. Deposition of Eustathius of Antioch. Reaction against the Creed of Nicaea. Athanasius, Bishop of Alexandria. First conflicts with the supporters of Meletius and of Arius. Submission of Arius : his recall from exile. New intrigues against Athanasius. Council of Tyre. Deposition of Athanasius. His first exile. Death of Arius. Marcellus of Ancyra : his doctrine, his deposition. Writings of Eusebius of Caesarea against Marcellus, . . ,125 CONTENTS XV CHAPTER VI THE EMPEROR CONSTANS PAGE The heirs of Constantine. Return of Athanasius. Intrigues of Eusebius ; the rivalry of Pistus. The Pope is made cog- nizant of the Alexandrian affair. The intrusion of Gregory. Athanasius in Rome. The Easterns and Pope Julius. Roman Council in 340. Cancelling of the sentences pro- nounced in the East against Athanasius and Marcellus. Constans sole Emperor in the West. Dedication Council at Antioch in 341. Death of Eusebius of Nicomedia. Paul of Constantinople. Council of Sardica : the Eastern schism. Negotiations. Condemnation of Photinus. Athanasius recalled to Alexandria. African affairs. The Circumcellians. Mission of Paul and Macarius. Unity restored : Council under Gratus, . . . -153 CHAPTER VH THE TROSCRIPTION OF ATHANASIUS Assassination of Constans. The usurper Magnentius. Con- stantius makes himself master of the West. The two Caesars, Gallus and Julian. Deposition of Photinus. New intrigues against Athanasius. The Council of Aries. Pope Liberius. Councils of Milan and of Beziers. Exile of Lucifer, Eusebius, Hilary, Liberius, and Hosius. Police riots at Alexandria. Assault on the Church of Theonas : disappearance of Athanasius. Intrusion of George. Athanasius in retirement, .... 196 CHAPTER Vni THE DEFEAT OF ORTHODOXY The Church of Antioch in the time of Bishop Leontius. Paulinus : Flavian, and Diodore : Aetius and Theophilus. State of parties in 357. The falling away of Liberius. The formulary of Sirmium accepted by Hosius. Anomoeans and Homoiousians. Western protests. Eudoxius at Antioch : triumph of Aetius. Basil of Ancyra and the homoiousian reaction. Return of Pope Liberius. Success and violence xvi CONTENTS PAGE of Basil: his defeat by the advanced party. Formula of 359. Councils of Ariminum and of Seleucia. Acacius of Cassarea. Development of events at Constantinople : general prevarication. Despair of Hilary. The Council of 360. Eudoxius, Bishop of Constantinople. Meletius and Euzoius at Antioch. Julian proclaimed Augustus. Death of Constantius, ..... 218 CHAPTER IX JULIAN AND THE PAGAN REACTION Paganism under the princes of the house of Constantine. The sacrifices forbidden. Decline of the ancient religions. Julian's youth. His religious development. On becoming Emperor, he declares himself a Pagan. Retaliation of the conquered religion. Murder of George of Alexandria. Writings of Julian : his piety, his attempt to reform Pagan- ism. His attitude towards the Christians. Recall of the exiled bishops. Withdrawal of privileges : teaching pro- hibited. Conflicts and acts of violence. Rebuilding of the temple at Jerusalem. Julian and the people of Antioch. His death, ....... 250 CHAPTER X AFTER ARIMINUM The Councils of Paris and of Alexandria. Restoration of the lapsed. Lucifer, Eusebius, and ApoUinaris. Schism at Antioch : Meletius and Paulinus. Athanasius exiled in Julian's reign. His relations with Jovian. The " Acacians " accept the Creed of Nicasa. Valentinian and Valens. The religious policy of Valentinian. Opposition of the Right wing : Lucifer and his friends. Opposition of the Left : Auxentius of Milan, and the Danubian bishops. Valens and the formula of Ariminum. Negotiations between the Homoiousians and Pope Liberius. The question of the Holy Spirit : the party of Macedonius. The Anomoeans : Aetius and Eunomius. Conflicts between them and official Arianism. The historian Philostorgius, . 269 CONTENTS xvii CHAPTER XI BASIL OF C/ESAREA PAQB State of parties in the east of Asia Minor. The youth of Basil and of Gregory of Nazianzus. Eustathius, master in asceticism, afterwards Bishop of Sebaste. Basil, a soli- tary, afterwards priest, and Bishop of Caesarea. The religious policy of Valens. Death of Athanasius : Peter and Lucius. Valens at Caesarea. Basil and Eustathius. Basil negotiates with Rome. His rupture with Eustathius. Arian intrigues. Dorotheus at Rome. Affairs at Antioch. Paulinus recognized by Rome. Vitalis. The heresy of Apollinaris. Eustathius goes over to the Pneumatomachi. Dorotheus returns to Rome. Evolution of the Marcellians. The Goths. Death of the Emperor Valens, , . 301 CHAPTER XII GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS Gratian and Theodosius. Return of the exiled bishops. Death of Basil. The Easterns accept the conditions of Rome. Attitude of Theodosius. Situation at Constantinople. Gregory of Nazianzus and his church, the "Anastasis." Conflicts with the Arians. Alexandrian opposition : Maximus the Cynic. Gregory at St Sophia. The Second CEcumenical Council (381). Obstinacy of the Mace- donians. Installation of Gregory. Death of Meletius : difficulties with regard to his successor. Resignation of Gregory. Nectarius. The canons. Hostility against Alexandria. Flavian elected at Antioch. Protests of St Ambrose. Roman Council in 382. Letter from the Easterns, . . ..... 333 CHAPTER XIII POPE DAMASUS The West and the Roman Church before the Emperor Con- stantius. Exile of bishops. Intrusion of Felix. The Pontifical election of 366 : Damasus and Ursinus. Riots in Rome. Rancour of Ursinus against Damasus. The sects at Rome. Damasus and the secular arm. Councils against xviii CONTENTS PAGE the Arians. Ambrose, Bishop of Milan. Fresh intrigues against Damasus ; Isaac institutes a criminal prosecution against him. Roman Council of 378. Gratian's Rescript to Aquilinus. Council of Aquileia. Roman Council of 382. Jerome and his early career : his sojourn in the Syrian desert. His relations with Pope Damasus. His success in Rome : Paula and Marcella. The inscriptions of Damasus, and the cult of the martyrs. Siricius succeeds Damasus. Departure of Jerome for Palestine, . . 355 CHAPTER XIV THE MONKS OF THE EAST Egypt, the fatherland of the monks. Antony and the Anchorites. The monks of Nitria. PacomiusandCenobitism, Schnoudi. Monastic virtues. Pilgrimages to the Egyptian solitaries. The monks of Palestine : Hilarion and Epiphanius, Sinai and Jerusalem. Monks of Syria and of Mesopotamia. Monasticism in Asia Minor : Eustathius and St Basil. Attitude of the Church and of the Government, . . 385 CHAPTER XV THE WEST IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE St Hilary and his writings. St Martin of Tours. Council of Valence. Priscillian and his asceticism. Spanish dis- putes : Council of Saragossa. Attitude of Damasus, of Ambrose, and of Gratian. Maximus in Gaul ; the trial at Treves. The Ithacians. Reaction under Valentinian II. : the schism of Fehx ; the rhetorician Pacatus. Pris- cillianism in Galicia. Council of Toledo : dissensions in the Spanish episcopate. The Priscillianist doctrine. St Ambrose and the Court of Justina. Ambrose and Theodosius. Pope Siricius. Jovinian and St Jerome, . 414 CHAPTER XVI CHRISTIANITY IN THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS Christian settlements north of the Danube. Ulfilas and the conversion of the Goths. The sects. The assembly in 383. Divisions amongst the Arians and Eunomians. The CONTENTS xix PAGE Novatians. Fanatical sects : the Massalians. Amphi- lochius, Bishop of Iconium. Gregory of Nyssa. Gregory ofNazianzus. Epiphanius and the heretics. Apollinaris : his teaching and his propaganda. Diodore of Tarsus. Flavian and Chrysostom. The schism at Antioch : Council of CcEsarea. Eusebius of Samosata. Edessa and its legends : St Ephrem. Palestine. Cyril of Jerusalem. Pilgrimages : visit of Gregory of Nyssa. Rufinus and Jerome. Arabia : the cult of Mary. Titus of Bostra and his successors. The Council of 394, . . . 448 CHAPTER XVII CHRISTIANITY, THE STATE RELICION Paganism after Julian. Attitude of Valentinian and of Valens. Gratian. The Altar of Victory. Pagan reaction in Rome under Eugenius. Theodosius : the temples closed. The temple of Serapis at Alexandria. Popular disturbances. Position of the Christian sects at the accession of Con- stantine. Laws of repression. The Novatians. The Catholic Church alone recognized. Alliance of the Church with the State. Liberty, right of property, privileges. Intervention of the State in religious disputes, in the nomination or the deprivation of bishops. Episcopal elections. Civil jurisdiction of the bishops, . . 496 Index, ........ 5^7 EARLY HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH CHAPTER I THE GREx\T PERSECUTION Accession of Diocletian : the Tetrarchy. Persecution decided upon : the four edicts. Crisis of the Tetrarchy : Constantine and Maxentius. Application of the first edict in Africa. The Terror of 304. The canons of Peter of Alexandria. The beginning of Maximin's reign. Death of Galerius : his edict of toleration. The religious policy of Maximin : his end. Licinius at Nicomedia : edicts of pacification. The martyrs of Palestine, of Egypt, and of Africa. Literary controversies : Arnobius, Hierocles, Lactantius. I. The Emperor Diocletian. When Gallienus was assassinated (March 22, 268), the Empire, invaded and torn in pieces, was at its lowest. A two-fold task was imposed upon the heirs of the son of Valerian — the reconstruction of the frontier, and the restoration of unity. The upright princes who succeeded one another during the following sixteen years, Claudius II., Aurelian, Tacitus, Probus, and Carus, laboured at this task conscientiously and not without success. Aurelian recovered Gaul from the native princes whom it had chosen, and deprived the Queen of Palmyra of the govern- ment of the eastern provinces. As to the frontier, its re- establishment was without doubt achieved, but only by drawing it farther back. The Empire was lopped of II A 2 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [cir. i. everything beyond the Rhine and the Danube : it lost, in Upper Germany, the Agri Decumates (Swabia and the Black Forest), and in the region of the Carpathians the entire province of Dacia, with the parts of the two Mcesias which lay beyond the Danube. And even after these readjustments had been made, a feeling of perfect security did not exist in the interior of the Empire. The towns surrounded themselves with walls raised in haste ; and it was necessary to fortify Rome itself The enclosure which protected it during the whole of the middle ages preserves the name of Aurelian.^ In the East, war with the Persians was almost in- cessant. The Emperor Carus perished in it in 284, leaving two sons, one of whom, Carinus, entrusted with the government of the West, had remained in Italy. The other, Numerian, had followed his father beyond the Euphrates. He was bringing home the army, when, in the neighbourhood of Byzantium, he was found dead in his tent. The generals, without troubling themselves about Carinus, elected one of their own number in the place of Numerian, and it was in this way that Diocletian, com- mander of the imperial guard {comes doniesticorunt)^ was raised to the throne (September 17, 284). Carinus marched against the usurper, came up with him in Moesia, and inflicted a few defeats upon him ; but in the end he was abandoned by his troops, who passed over to Diocletian. Diocletian had long dreamed of the sovereign power. Trained in the school of Aurelian and his officers, he was a real soldier and, better still, a clever organizer. When he had the Empire in his hands, it was not of enjoying it that he thought, but rather of restoring it. Before all things, stability was necessary. Diocletian deemed that the revolutions and rivalries for power were caused by the impossibility of a single man governing a territory of such vast extent, and above all directing the operations of armies, separated by such great distances from one an- ^ Homo, Essai sur le rcgne de I'einpereur Aurclien^ p. 214 et seq. V. 3] THE TETUARCHY 3 other. In order to avoid rivals, he gave himself colleagues. In the year 285, one of his companions-in-arms, Maximian, was adopted by him, invested with the title of Caesar, and sent to Gaul to repress the insurrection of the Bagauda;. In the following year, he made him Augustus and entrusted to him the government of the West. In 293 the system was perfected : each of the two Augusti was provided with an auxiliary emperor, who had the title of Caesar and a definite jurisdiction : Constantius the Pale (Chlorus) in this way governed Gaul and Britain, with Maximian ; while Galerius relieved Diocletian of the care of watching over the Danube frontier. All these princes were natives of Illyricum, and of low origin. Maximian and Galerius remained under the imperial purple the men they had always been, coarse soldiers, cruel on occasion, without education and without morals ; Constantius seems to have been more civilized. Diocletian was not anxious that his colleagues should have too many recommendations. He had given to Maximian the title of Herculms, and assumed for himself that of Jovius, thus indicating plainly his own part in the imperial Olympus, and the kind of service he expected from his assistants. It is assuredly to him that we must refer the whole policy of the Dyarchy and the Tetrarchy, especially the whole of the reforming legislation, by which he endeavoured to restore order in the finances, in the army, and in the general management of public affairs. The leading idea of his system was an absolute central- ization, the suppression of all local political life, of every vestige of ancient liberties : in one word. Autocracy. Dio- cletian is the founder of the Byzantine regime. It was indeed no very considerable change. The reformer did but consecrate by appropriate institutions the tendencies of the situation and usages which were already established. Such a system had the same results that it always has: the centralizing organ was developed at the expense of the body which it was supposed to direct ; the fiscal system at the expense of general prosperity ; and management at the expense of energy. The Empire was soon a prey to 4 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [ch. i. the malady of its government ; the time was to come when it died of it. The supreme head of this immense hierarchy of functionaries, all ornamented with the most high-sounding titles, was necessarily obliged to rise entirely above the ordinary conditions of humanity. The person of the Emperor was sacred, divine, eternal ; his house was also divine {donms divina). Therein reigned a pomp worthy of Susa and of Babylon ; the Joviiis of Nicomedia was scarcely more accessible than his celestial patron. Things had travelled far from the simple life and familiar manners which Augustus had maintained in his house on the Palatine. And it was not in Rome itself that this Asiatic pomp was displayed. The ancient mistress of the world was nothing now. Her senate, deprived of political power and closed, since the time of Gallienus, to veteran warriors, was now only a great town council. For the crowd which still thronged in the enclosure of Aurelian, games continued to be given and baths to be opened ; but they no longer saw their emperor. Diocletian reigned at Nicomedia ; his lieutenants had their official residences at Milan, at Treves, at Sirmium. No doubt it was well that the emperors should not be too far away from the frontiers ; but there were other reasons. These soldiers of fortune, born in the least cultured provinces, and brought up in the camps on the Danube, cared nothing at all for Rome. Her traditions were tiresome, her populace always ready for seditious movements ; her senate might remember that it had once been supreme, and might still wish to be of some consequence. On the death of Aurelian, it had come to life for a brief moment, and had tried to take part in public affairs. It was far better to keep at a distance from this uncomfortable city of Rome, and, since the Empire had become an Oriental monarchy, to instal its capital in the Orient. Diocletian well understood this, and so did Constantine after him. Amongst the reforms introduced at this time, it is fitting to mention here the new distribution of the p. 5] ORGANIZATION OF THE PROVINCES 5 provinces. Diocletian increased their number. Before his time, there were already sixty of them : he left ninety-six. It is true that this partition was compensated for by the creation oi dioceses^ more comprehensive divisions, in each of which several provinces were included. Each diocese was governed by a vicariiis — that is to say, by a representative of the prefect of the imperial praetorium. This organiza- tion was in many places appropriated for the ecclesiastical use. In the East, from the time of the Council of Nicjea, the groupings of bishops corresponded almost every- where with the new provincial divisions : the bishop of the city in which the governor resided, of the metropolis, as it was called, was the head of the episcopate of the province. It was he who presided over the elections, when a see became vacant, who convened his colleagues in council and presided over their meetings. This system was adopted later on in a great part of the West. These imperial dioceses also served, in a certain measure, to settle the boundaries of the ecclesiastical jurisdictions. It was in this way that Diocletian appears as of some importance in the organization of the Church. But he has claims of a very different character to figure in its history. 2. TJie Edicts of Persecution. During the long peace which followed the persecu- tion of Valerian, the Christian propaganda had made enormous progress. Not to speak of Edessa and the kingdom of Armenia, where Christianity was already the dominant religion, there were regions in the Empire in which it was not far from representing the half, or even the majority, of the population. This was the case, for instance,^ in Asia Minor. In northern Syria, in Egypt, and in Africa, the Christians were also very numerous. At the councils of the time of St Cyprian we find as many as ninety bishops mentioned, which ^ Dr Harnack, Die Mission imd Ausbrcifung des Christentufiis^ p. 539 et seq. (2nd ed., vol. ii., p. 276 et seq.\ gives more precise estimates, including a certain amount of conjecture, but of a very probable kind. 6 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [ch. t. presupposes a much greater number of churches at that time, and in the forty or fifty years which followed many more must have been organized. The sixty Italian bishops assembled in 251 by Pope Cornelius allow of a similar estimate with regard to the Italian peninsula. In the south of Spain and of Gaul, in Greece, and in Macedonia, the spread of the Gospel, without perhaps having made so much progress, must nevertheless have obtained important results. In other countries, such as central and southern Syria, the north of Italy, the north, centre, and west of Gaul, in the island of Britain, in the mountains of the Alps, the Pyrenees, and the Hemus, the situation was quite different. The ancient cults were still in favour, and groups of Christians were only to be found by way of exceptions. This is a general account of the state of things, but in each country the situation varied according to local circumstances. Not far from Edessa, notable for its Christianity, Harran adhered obstinately to its old Semitic religion, which it preserved until the advent of Islam. Certain towns of the Lebanon, such as Heliopolis, or of the seaboard of Syria, such as Gaza, contained either a very small number of the faithful, or none at all. In Phrygia were to be found small towns, where everyone, including the magistrates, professed Christianity, Christian duumvirs and curators were not rare ; there were even Christian flauiens} The bishops were in frequent com- munication with the governors and the financial officials ; they were treated with respect; much favour was shown them. And further, they had no longer any difficulty in rebuilding the old churches, in laying the foundation of new ones, and in holding largely attended meetings on festivals. And there was something more significant still, from the point of view of the progress of Christianity and the liberty of action which it enjoyed, in the fact that not only municipal functions, but even the government of ^ See vol. i., p. 378. p. 8] DIOCLETIAN AND RELIGION 7 provinces was often entrusted to Christians. The palace itself, the divine dwelling of the imperial Jupiter, was full of Christians ; they occupied there the superior positions of the central administration. Several of them — Peter, Dorotheus, and Gorgonius — figure in the number of the persons most highly placed in the favour of the emperor. The government offices, and the employments attached to the personal service of the sovereign, were, to a large extent, occupied by Christians. The Empress Prisca herself and her daughter Valeria seem to have had very close relations with Christianity. But it was not so with Diocletian himself. Whatever may have been his toleration for the opinions of his subjects, his officials, and his family, he, for his part, preserved his attachment to the old customs of the Roman worship. He frequented the temples and sacrificed to the gods, without any mystic ideas, without ostentation, but with a deep devotion, deeming, no doubt, that he was thus fulfilling his duty as a man and, above all, as a sovereign. Such a state of mind could not make him really favourable to rival religions. " The immortal gods," he says in his rescript against the Manicheans, " have condescended, in their providence, to entrust to the enlightenment of wise and good men the responsi- bility of deciding as to that which is good and true. No one is allowed to resist their authority : the old religion must not be criticized by a new one. It is a great crime to go back on anything which, having been established by our forefathers, is now in possession and in use." It was comparatively easy to apply these principles to Manicheism, which had been quite recently imported from abroad. But with regard to the Christian beliefs the same might already be said as of the old Roman cults : statum et cursnni tencnt ac possident. Besides, they were already too extensively propagated to allow any reasonable hope of extirpating them. Decius and Valerian had tried to do so ; and it was known how unsuccessful their efforts had proved. Since then the 8 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [ch. i. position of Christians had grown and had been reinforced : a new attack upon them could only meet with still greater obstacles. For a long time the good sense of the emperor led him to avoid any kind of persecution. At length, how- ever, his ideas underwent a change. It is possible that, like so many other reformers, he was led astray by the chimera of religious unity, a baleful and lusty chimera, which still claims its victims. However, the details which have remained to us with regard to his attitude do not indicate any such point of view. Diocletian seems to have discovered, from a certain definite point of time, that there were too many Christians in his palace and in his army. To remedy this inconvenience, there was really no necessity to declare a war of extermination on Christianity. A few personal measures, a few dis- missals, would have settled everything. Even among the Christians themselves such a course would have found supporters. There were not wanting among the faithful those who disapproved of military service,^ and who did not look at all favourably upon those of their brethren who were engaged in public offices. The matter might well have ended here. But Diocletian was old : his power of resistance to external influence was enfeebled, and he was surrounded by a powerful party which clamoured for radical measures. Its head, the ferocious Caesar of Illyricum, found means of bending the aged Augustus to his ends, and of making him commit the enormity to which his name remains attached. 1 It is to holders of this view that there belong several African martyrs of this time, in regard to whom we possess authentic docu- ments. Maximilian, a conscript, was executed for refusing military service, at Theveste, on March 12, 295. The proconsul Dion in vain adduced in opposition to him the Christians who served in the imperial army. " They know what they ought to do," replied Maximilian. " I am a Christian, and I cannot do what is wrong." At Tangier, the centurion Marcellus who refused to continue his military service, and the clerk of the court, Cassian, who refused to write the sentence rendered against Marcellus, also sufifered (October 30 and December 3 : the year is uncertain). p. 10] THE BEGINNING OF PERSECUTION 9 Lactantius ^ gives as the origin of the persecution an event which is said to have happened in the eastern provinces. Diocletian was about to sacrifice, and to consult the entrails of the victims, when some Christians among his attendants made the sign of the Cross. The haruspex, whose operations that day had led to no result, observed the gesture, and informed the emperor of it, complaining of the profane persons who thus disturbed his ceremonies. Diocletian was furious, and at once com- manded that not only the actual offenders, but all the officers of his palace should be compelled to sacrifice, and that, in case of refusal, they should be beaten with rods. Letters were immediately despatched to the various military commanders, to the effect that all soldiers were to sacrifice, under pain of being excluded from the army. Whatever influence the fact just related may have had upon the emperor's decision, it is certain that measures were taken to eliminate from the army the Christian element which it contained.- A magister militum, named Veturius, was specially appointed to carry out this order. A very large number of Christians were thus forced to renounce the profession of arms and accepted the situation. There was no other penalty attached ; only in one or two cases, Eusebius tells us,'was death inflicted as a punishment, no doubt on account of special circumstances. This was in the year 302, On his return from the East, Diocletian passed the whole winter at Nicomedia. Galerius rejoined him there, and devoted himself with all his energies to inducing the emperor to sanction more severe measures. It is said that he was incited to this by his mother, an aged and very devout Pagan with an implacable hatred of Christians.^ Diocletian resisted. " What is the use," he ^ De vwrtibus persecutorum^ 10. 2 Jbid.^ 10 ; Eusebius, H. E. viii. 1,4; C/trofiicon, ad ann. 2317. ^ Lactantius does not say, but we may suspect, that there was here a conflict of feminine influences. The princesses of Nicomedia were Christians or favourable to the Christians ; this was quite 10 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [ch. i. said, " of causing trouble everywhere, and shedding torrents of blood? The Christians have no fear of death. It is quite sufificient to prevent the soldiers and the people about the palace from following their religion." Galerius persevered, and returned incessantly to the subject. At last the emperor made up his mind to summon a council of friends, military officers and civil functionaries. Opinions were divided. As usual, those who were urgent in the matter — behind whom might be detected the influence of Galerius, the Caesar of to-day, the Augustus of to-morrow — drew over those who hesitated to their side. Yet the wise old emperor still refused to yield. It was at last agreed to consult the oracle at Miletus, the Didymean Apollo. The priestess,^ as can easily be imagined, did not fail to unite her inspiration to the wishes of Galerius and his party. And the conflict was decided upon. If Galerius could have had his own way entirely, extreme measures would have been taken at the outset, and the stakes would have been lighted everywhere. But Diocletian did not wish for bloodshed ; and, for the moment, his will prevailed. An edict was prepared in accordance with his views. On the day before its proclamation (February 23, 303), police officers proceeded at daybreak to the church of Nicomedia, a large edifice in full view of the imperial palace. The sacred books were seized and thrown into the fire, the furniture was given up to pillage, and the church itself demolished from top to bottom.^ On the next day (February 24) the edict was published. It commanded that throughout the whole Empire the churches should be demolished, and the sacred books destroyed by fire. All Christians in enough to make the ladies of the rival imperial establishment wish for the condemnation of Christians to death. 1 It is, I think, to this consultation that the recollections of Constantine refer, as we have them in Eusebius, Vita Cotjsiantini, ii. 50,51. ^ Lactantius, De mort. pers., 13 ; Eusebius, H. E. viii. 2 ; Martyr. Pal., preface^ ]•. 13] DIOCLETIAN'S FIRST EDICT 11 possession of public offices, dignities, or privileges, were deprived of them ; they lost also the right of appearing in a court of justice to accuse anyone of injuries, or adultery, or theft. Christian slaves might no longer be set free.^ No sooner was the edict posted up than it was torn in pieces by a Christian of Nicomedia, whose name has not been preserved, but who paid for his daring by dying at the stake. A few days afterwards a fire broke out in the palace. Galerius at once accused the Christians of having kindled it ; they repudiated the accusation, saying that he wished in this way to excite Diocletian's anger against them. While the emperor was making enquiries to obtain light on the affair, a second fire broke out. Galerius, although it was winter-time, made haste to leave Nicomedia, declaring that he did not wish to stay there to be burnt alive. Convinced at last, Diocletian determined to re- commence the horrors of Nero's reign. The whole of the palace suffered in consequence. His wife and daughter were forced to sacrifice ; Adauctus, the head of the fiscal administration ; the eunuchs most in favour, Peter, Dorotheus,and Gorgonius ; the Bishop of Nicomedia, Anthimus ; priests, deacons. Christians of every age, even women, were burnt or drowned wholesale. Thus was expiated the crime, clearly a faked one, of having set fire to the sacred palace and attempted to destroy two emperors at once. But measures did not stop with this local repression. Seditious movements having occurred in the direction of Melitene and in Syria, they were declared to be the work of Christians. Other general edicts followed the first-: they began by commanding the arrest of all the heads of the Churches, bishops, priests, and other clerics ; and then that they should be compelled to sacrifice by every means available. ' This first edict reached Palestine towards the end of March, just when the Feast of Easter was being celebrated (Eusebius, H. E. viii. 2). ^ Eusebius, Martyr. Pal., preface. 12 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [ch. i. On September 17, 303, began the twentieth year of the reign of Diocletian. On this occasion an amnesty was granted to condemned criminals^; but we have no reason to think that it included the imprisoned confessors, who, in the eyes of the law, were neither prisoners awaiting trial nor condemned criminals, but rebels. The aged emperor resolved to celebrate at Rome the feast of his vicennalia. It took place on November 20. The construction of his celebrated baths was not sufficiently advanced for the ceremony of their dedication to be possible ; it was therefore postponed. Besides, Diocletian was never happy on the banks of the Tiber. His Oriental magnificence, his austere and melancholy manners, made no impression on the turbulent Roman populace : they wearied him so much with their familiarities and pleasantries, that he did not even stay in Rome till January i, the day on which he was to inaugurate his ninth consulate, but set out, in the depth of winter, for Ravenna. In the course of this unseasonable journey, he contracted an illness which lasted a long time, and became more severe on his return to Nicomedia. In this condition of affairs, he himself, the East, and in some ways the whole Empire, were in the hands of Galerius. The war against Christians was waged with still more fury. A fourth edict appeared. This time, there was no longer any question of special classes of persons : all Christians, without distinction, were commanded to sacrifice. After following Nero, a return had been made to the policy of Valerian ; now it was the work of Decius that was resumed. 3. TJie Dislocatiofi of the Tetrarchy. It was a terrible year, not only for the Christians, but also for the emperor. His health went from bad to worse. In the middle of December, it was reported that he was dead ; he was not dead, but when he showed himself again in public, on March i, 305, he could scarcely be recognized. Weakened in body and spirit, he allowed himself to be ^ Eusebius, Mai-tyi'. Pal. 1. i>. 15] GALERIUS AS EMPEROR 13 persuaded by Galerius, that the time had come for him to resign. Galerius had suggested the same idea to Maximian Herculius, at the same time threatening him with civil war. This double abdication entailed the elevation of Constantius and Galerius to the position of Augusti. Galerius appointed the two new Caesars — Severus, a drunken soldier, and Daia, a rough-hewn barbarian, who was called Maximinus to disguise him as a Roman. With two such colleagues as these, the new Augustus of the East hoped to be almost the sole head of the Empire ; for Constantius, far away and pacific in character, and besides of enfeebled health, would be no obstacle. Maximin Daia was set over the diocese of the Orient — that is to say, over Syria and Egypt. Galerius united to his own Illyricum the dioceses of Thrace, Asia, and Pontus; Spain was added to the jurisdiction of Constantius ; Italy and Africa fell to the lot of Severus. This satisfactory arrangement was disturbed by the revolt of the natural heirs. If Diocletian and Galerius had no male children, it was not so with Constantius and Maximian, and their natural heirs did not at all relish the new system of succession, Constantine, the son of Constantius, was at Nicomedia when the change was made ; he was a hostage given by Constantius.^ The latter, now become Augustus, demanded the return of his son, and Galerius was obliged to let him go, though he did it with much reluctance. What he feared, actually happened. The Emperor Constantius died soon after at York ; in his last moments, he commended his son to the soldiers as his successor, and these, as soon as he had breathed his last, acclaimed the young prince as emperor (July 25, 306). It was a serious annoyance to Galerius ; but as York was a long way from Nicomedia, and as Con- stantine was not without adherents, he was obliged to re- cognize him. At the same time, the title of Augustus was not conceded ; Galerius proclaimed Severus as Augustus in the place of Constantius Chlorus, and Constantine as ^ Eusebius ( V. C. i. 19) had seen him journeying through Palestine in the train of the Emperor Diocletian. 14 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [ch. i. Cctsar in the place of Severus. The Tetrarchy was re- constituted with the two Augusti, Galerius and Severus, and the two Caesars, Maximin and Constantine. At the same time as Constantine succeeded his father, Maxentius, the son of Maximian, profiting by the state of abandonment in which the emperors had left Old Rome, seized upon the government there, without troubling himself at all about the Tetrarchy. Notwithstanding his dissolute morals, which recalled the days of Commodus, this young man knew how to please the Romans. As a protest against the new capitals, he reinstated the old forms of worship and the ancient legends in their former position of honour ; he restored the Forum and the Sacred Way, and near the latter he raised a magnificent basilica. Severus tried in vain to dispute the position with him ; his soldiers deserted him. They were soldiers of the old Maximian, and rallied all the more readily round his son because Maximian himself, issuing from his retreat, had just reassumed the purple, with the title of" Augustus for the second time" {bis Augustus). This reappearance of Maximian put the last touch to the disorder. Severus had been driven to suicide ; Galerius hastened to avenge him ; but, as he drew near to Rome, the attitude of his soldiers decided him to return home. Maxentius, now feeling his hands free, proclaimed himself Augustus (October 27, 307). However, the old Maximian, having now quarrelled with his son, betook himself to Gaul and joined Constantine. There he tried, by making use of his support, still to play a part ; then abandoned his protector, returned to him again, betrayed him, and finally was either put to death, or forced to be his own executioner by the advice of his host (310). Galerius, in search of a second Augustus, had thought (November 11, 308) of giving this title to Licinius, one of his old companions-in-arms. Maximin at once pro- tested : from his distant diocese, he saw with jealousy this newcomer attaining supreme honours at one stroke. Constantine might well have raised the same objections. Galerius, to pacify them, gave them both the new title of V. 18] CONSTANTINE AND HIS AMBITION 15 " son of the Augusti " ; some months later, he went the whole way and made them full Augusti. There were thus four emperors of the first rank. When Galerius died, in May 311, Licinius and Maximin hastened to claim his inheritance ; however, an arrangement was concluded, by virtue of which the Bosphorus became their common boundary. In this way the empire of Maximin comprehended Asia Minor, with Syria and Egypt ; that of Licinius stretched from the Bosphorus to the Alps : theoretically, it extended also to Italy and Africa ; but, as a matter of fact, these countries obeyed Maxentius, an illegitimate emperor from the point of view of the law of the Tetrarchy, but in reality firmly established in his power. Constantine, meanwhile, kept his position in Gaul, manoeuvring skilfully in the midst of all these conflicts, and no doubt meditating the design which he soon accomplished — that of annihilating all his rivals, by making use of some in order to rid himself of the others. It was with Maxentius that the process of simplification began. After making sure of the moral support of Licinius, to whom Maximin was causing some useful feelings of alarm, Constantine invaded Italy, inflicted several defeats upon the partisans of the " tyrant," and finally met him in the ever-famous battle near the Milvian Bridge (October 28, 312). Maxentius perished in the waters of the Tiber ; Constantine entered Rome, and was at once recognized throughout the whole of Italy and in Africa. The following year, the hands of Licinius were free to attack Maximin. The infamous Daia, defeated in Thrace on April 30, recrossed the Bosphorus, and then the Taurus, and finally poisoned himself at Tarsus. There remained now only two emperors, Constantine and Licinius, the one at Rome, the other at Nicomedia. 4. T/ie Persecutioti dozvn to the Edict of Galerius. We must now return to the enactments of persecution. The first edict, besides the degradations and disqualifica- 16 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [CH. i. tions which it pronounced against certain classes of Christians, commanded the demolition of the churches and the burning of the sacred books. Such are, at any rate, the proceedings which are known to us directly ; but we know also that the real property of the Christian communities was confiscated, and that, ere the religious edifices were destroyed, the furniture of them was seized. These operations were carried out according to regular forms ; in certain places, authentic inventories were made ; some of these were preserved for a very considerable period. It was thus that the Donatists were able, in 411, to produce the formal records of the seizure of the churches of Rome.^ These have been lost since then ; but we are still able to read those which were drawn up at Cirta in Numidia. More summary accounts remain to us with regard to the application of the edict in other localities, in Africa and elsewhere. It would have been very difficult to resist the seizure of the Church properties. But at least the clergy did everything in their power to save the furniture, and especially to save the Holy Scriptures. Some women of Thessalonica fled to the mountains with a quantity of books and papers.- The Bishop of Carthage, Mensurius, had succeeded in concealing the sacred books ; in their place, he left in one of his churches a collection of heretical books, which were seized and destroyed by the unheeding police. The officials, indeed, were not always very observant. Some decurions of Carthage, having obtained knowledge of Mensurius' deception, denounced him to the proconsul : the latter took no notice of their disclosures. If this was the case in the large towns, we can imagine what would happen in the smaller localities. There were places where the Christians were in bad repute, and where the municipal government was in the hands of their adversaries ; but in other places they had to deal ^ Augustine, Breviculus Collationis cum DonatisHs, 34-36. Several members of the clergy, among others a deacon Strato, are there mentioned as giving up to the magistrates the ecclesiastical furniture ; the prefect speaks of them as hortatores vanissimae supersiiiionis. 2 The Passion of SS. Agape, Chionia, and Irene (April i) — an important document. p. 21] THE SACRED BOOKS 17 with magistrates who were Christians themselves, or who, at least, were sympathetic. Ways out of the difficulty were often fouhd. As in Carthage, other books were seized in the church instead of those of the Bible,^ and if the search was extended even to the bishop's house, there were still means of evading it. Sometimes, instead of entirely destroying the churches, the police contented themselves with burning the doors. Moreover, the bishops and clergy often showed themselves accommodating, and gave up their holy books, thinking, doubtless, that it would be easy later on to obtain new copies. But this com- plaisance was not accepted by general opinion, especially, as can readily be understood, when the persecution was over, and when one could be unyielding without risk. It was then that the heroism of certain bishops was remembered, e.g., of Bishop Felix of Thibiuca, who had paid with his head for his refusal to give up the Scriptures.- Miracles also, were reported, like that which occurred at Abitina, where, as the sacred books, which had been given up by the Bishop Fundanus, were thrown into the fire, a terrible storm burst over the flames and inundated the whole country. In those provinces which were governed by the Caesar Constantius, the destruction did not extend beyond the edifices themselves. The churches were seized and destroyed; but the same treatment was not enforced in regard to the Scriptures. If destruction thus befell the churches in which the Christians assembled under the eye of the authorities, there was, of course, far more reason for forbidding clandestine meetings. This was a necessary consequence of the first edict, and we are justified in believing that such ' At Aptonga (for the orthography of the name of this town, see the texts collected in the Latin Thesaurus), some epistolae salutato- riae (?) were seized in this way ; at Calaiiia, some books on medicine ; at Aquae Tibilitanae, papers of some sort. ^ The Passion of this Saint, authentic on the whole, was provided, later on, with additions, which transferred its denouement to Italy. See Analecta Bollandiana, vol. xvi., p. 25. II B 18 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [ch. i. a prohibition was expressly formulated in it. This follows also from an African document, in which figure some fifty Christians of the little town of Abitina, who are accused of having met for service ("collect") under the presidency of a priest called Saturninus. The second edict, which ordered the imprisonment of the clergy, was aimed indirectly at the meetings for worship; for how could they be held without religious leaders? Up to this time, for those who obeyed the edicts, who accepted their legal disqualifications, who allowed their Scriptures to be burnt and their churches to be seized, who abstained from taking part in the assemblies for worship henceforth forbidden, there was still some measure of safety. In Nicomedia, it is true, recourse was had at once to the most extreme measures ; but that was on account of special circumstances. The more sanguinary form of persecution had not yet attacked the simple profession of Christianity. It was different when the government renewed, for the clergy first and then for all the faithful, the obligation of taking part in the ceremonies of the official form of worship ; when they no longer confined themselves to proscribing, but endeavoured to convert. At this stage the same state of things was repeated as had been already experienced in previous persecutions. Excited enthusiasts rushed to martyrdom, denounced them- selves, made an uproar before the tribunals, and insulted the police. Wise and strong characters waited quietly until they were arrested, and then met the commands of authority with a calm and persevering resistance, which, in many cases, triumphed over imprisonment and torture, and was maintained unto death. There were also many apostates, most of them in a great hurry to do whatever they were told to do, in order to escape from danger ; others resisting at first, and then weakening, overcome by the horror of the dungeons and the anguish of the torture. Many fled, or hid themselves, at the sacrifice of all their possessions. There was a great difference between p. 23] ATTITUDE OF THE AUTHORITIES 19 various kinds of Christians. We can study them in the penitential letter of Bishop Peter of Alexandria, written in 306, in the canons of the Council of Ancyra (314), in the acounts given by Eusebius, and in certain fragments of hagiography. Many deceived the police, sent their slaves or their pagan friends to sacrifice in their stead, and thus obtained their certificate of sacrifice. Others followed a simpler method still, and bought this certificate, if they could find anyone disposed to sell it to them. Among the stout hearted there were some who could not get their confession of faith accepted. Some of the magistrates cared far less for executions than for apostasies. There were even some who, when the term of their office had expired, boasted of not having put a single Christian to death. ^ In the matter of the pagan actions required, the authorities were very easily satisfied ; sometimes they registered people against their will as having complied with the law. Sometimes it happened that inconsiderate friends, Christians or pagans, absolutely determined to save from death a believer whom they knew to be resolute, dragged him to the altars, with his hands and feet bound, gagged him to stop him from crying out, and forced him, even at the cost of burning his hands if necessary, to throw a few grains of incense upon the sacred fire. Lactantius complains,^ and with reason, of other judges, more to be feared on account of their pretended clemency, who did not wish to kill their victims, but invented tortures so exquisite that they often overcame the most intrepid resistance. He prefers those judges who were openly cruel, either from natural ferocity, or that they might stand well with the superior authorities. There were some of them who did not hesitate to go beyond their instructions, like the judge in a little town of Phrygia, the inhabitants of which were all Christians, who set fire to the church in which the whole population was assembled, and burnt it to the ground with those in 1 Lactantius, Instititiioncs^ v. ir. - Loc. cit. 20 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [ch. i. it, including the town council and the magistrates of the place.^ The change of emperors, brought about by the abdica- tion of Diocletian and Maximian, had the effect of extend- ing, in the West, the field of action of Constantius Chlorus. Spain, annexed to his immediate jurisdiction, shared from that time in the relative peace which Christians had hitherto enjoyed in Gaul and in Britain. His lieutenant Severus does not seem to have been distinguished in Italy and Africa by a special zeal for the edicts of persecu- tion. After the death of Constantius, Constantine showed himself even more favourable to the Christians than his father had been ^ ; Maxentius also was tolerant. We may say, then, that rigorous persecution lasted scarcely more than two years (303-305) in the western provinces. It was quite otherwise in Illyricum, in Thrace,^ Asia-Minor, and the Orient, where nothing was opposed to the will of Galerius and of Maximin, his creature. In these men natural ferocity was at the service of a kind of religious conviction : Galerius was devout, Maximin a fanatic. The latter combined an unbridled, brutal, and despotic licentiousness with an extraordinary zeal for the worship of the gods. At the beginning of his reign, as the persecution seemed to him to have somewhat abated, 1 Lactantius, loc. cit.; cf. Eusebius, H. E. viii. 11. Eusebius says that the town itself (ttoX^x"'?'') was burnt, with the curator^ the duumvir, and the other magistrates ; Lactantius speaks only of the church, but he also relates that the whole population perished : universuin populum cum ipso pariter conventiculo concremavit, 2 Suscepto imperio Constantimis aug. nihil egit prius quavi chrisiiaTWs cultui ac Deo suo redderet. — Lactantius, De mort. persec. 24. 3 With regard to the victims of the persecution in the dominions of Galerius we possess several important and trustworthy traditions, contained in documents sufficiently near the date of the events them- selves. They allow us to determine the current application of the edicts, but they cannot be used to define the special action of the prince who presided over their execution in these countries. I am speaking here of the accounts relating to St Philip of Heraclea, with the priest Severus and the deacon Hermes (October 22) ; to the three holy women of Thessalonica, Agape, Chionia, and p. 26] MITIGATION OF PENALTIES 21 he took care to revive it at once, and imposed afresh the obligation to sacrifice.^ The police, armed with lists of names, went from street to street calling upon the inhabitants to appear, and forcing everyone, even women and children, to repair to the temple, and there perform the prescribed ceremonies. However, after the lapse of a certain time, dating from the year 307, a more lenient state of things was introduced. The penalty of death, in ordinary cases, was replaced by that of hard labour in the mines, with this aggravation, that the confessors were previously deprived of the sight of the right eye, and maimed in the left leg by cauterizing the tendon. A little later, in 308, after a short respite, the provincial and municipal authorities were again set to work. The Caesar ordered the old temples to be rebuilt everywhere, and everyone, even the little children, was obliged to take part in the sacrifices ; the wine of the libations was to be poured over the victuals in the market ; and at the doors of the public baths altars were erected upon which all those who entered were compelled to throw incense. There were still many evil days to come and go. Irene (April i) ; to the martyrs of Dorostorum, Pasicrates, Valention (May 25), Marcian, Nicander (June 17), Julius (May 27), Hesychius (June 15); to the priest Montanus of Singidunum (March 26) ; to the Bishop of Sirmium, Irenseus (April 6) ; to the hermit Syneros, belonging to the same town (February 22) ; to Pollio, chief of the lectors of Cibales (April 28) ; to the Bishop of Siscia, Quirinus (June 5 ; cf. Jerome, Chrofticon, a. Abr. 2324) ; to the Bishop of Poetovio, Victorinus (November 2 ; cf. Jerome, De viris illusiribus, 74) ; to St Florian, of Lauriacum in Noricum (May 4), etc. This enumeration must not be taken as exhaustive ; I have only selected some names among those of the martyrs of these countries which can be safely referred to the persecution of Diocletian rather than to any other. The Hieronymian Martyrology contains many other names under the heading of the Danubian provinces, especially of the Lower Danube, from Sirmium onwards ; it is very probable that the greater part of these were victims of the last persecution rather than of the preceding ones. ^ Eusebius, Martyr. Pal. iv. 8. If we were to believe Maximin himself (Eusebius, H. E. ix. 9, 13), he was never a persecutor. 22 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [ch. i. However, the first author of the persecution was already struggling with the terrible malady which was to overcome his ferocity. It began almost with the open- ing of the year 310; and for some eighteen months the wretched Galerius fought against it, wearying his physicians with his complaints, and the gods with his fruitless supplications. At last there came to him an idea — surely of all the strangest — of interesting in his health the Christians, whom for years he had hunted down, and the God whose worship he had sworn to exterminate. From Sardica, no doubt, where he then was with Licinius, a proclamation was sent through all the provinces in the name of the four sovereigns.^ It declared that the emperors, with the general intention of reform, had wished to bring back the Christians to the religious institutions of their ancestors,^ but that they had not been able to succeed, the Christians having persisted, in spite of the severities of which they had been the victims, in obeying the laws which they had made for themselves. Under these conditions, as they would not honour the gods of the empire, and since they could not practise their own form of religion, it was necessary to make provision by indulgence for their situation. In consequence, they were allowed to exist once more, and to reconstitute their assemblies, on condition, however, that they did nothing contrary to discipline.^ The magistrates were informed that another imperial letter would explain to them what they were to do. " In return for our indulgence," the edict con- ^ Lactantius {De inorL perscc. 34) has preserved the original text, but without the title ; this is only known to us through the version of Eusebius {H. E. viii. 17). It only mentions Galerius, Constantine, and Licinius ; the name of Maximin is omitted, either because his memory was officially abolished, or from the fault of the copyists. - These recitals have a singular resemblance to those of the edict with regard to the Manicheans. 3 Ut denuo sint christiani et conventicula sua componatit, iia ut ne quid contra disciplinam agant. We must observe that the term conventiculum signifies, like the word ecclesia, both the assembly itself and the place where it is held. p. 27-8] RESULTS OF THE EDICT 23 eluded, " the Christians are to pray to their God for our health, for the State, and for themselves, that the commonwealth may enjoy perfect prosperity, and that they may be enabled to live at home in security." What a change ! The emperor and the empire recommended to the prayers of the Christians, and this by the very man who was responsible for all the calamities which they had endured for eight years ! 5. The Persecution of Maxhnin. The edict was published at Nicomedia^ and in all the provinces belonging to Galerius, Licinius, and Constantine. In the empire of Constantine it was really only an official consecration of a liberty already re-established as a matter of fact. Maxentius restored to the bishops the places of worship which had hitherto remained in the hands of the treasury. Maximin showed himself less prompt. He did not publish the edict ; but, by his orders, his praetorian prefect, Sabinus, communicated it to the governors of the provinces, commanding them to let the municipal magis- trates know that the emperors had given up the idea of converting the Christians to the State religion, and that they were no longer to be punished for their resistance. This was sufficient in the eastern provinces, as in Asia- Minor ; the gaols were opened ; the mines yielded up their prisoners ; the Christians who had disguised their religion, took courage and showed themselves as they were. The confessors were welcomed with enthusiasm, the penitent apostates were received back to the fold. Upon the high roads resounded the joyous canticles of the liberated prisoners and the exiles returning to their homes. The religious assemblies, after an interval of eight years, were held again as of old. The Christians were specially attached to those which took place in the cemeteries, over the graves of the martyrs. But these joys of religious peace were not of long ^ The publication of the edict at Nicomedia took place on April 30, 3"- 24 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [ch. l. duration. No sooner was Galerius dead than Maximin transported to Nicomedia the seat of his tyranny and the scandal of his debaucheries, and along with them his fanatical zeal for the service of the gods. In the preced- ing years, he had caused all their temples in the Orient to be restored; now he reorganized the priestly colleges. Taking a hint from the Christian hierarchy, he established in each city a chief priest, and in each province a high priest, giving them authority over their colleagues, and loading them with honours and dignities. These pagan bishops and archbishops^ were designated, of course, to take care that the gods should have no cause to complain of the liberty granted to the Christians. Spurious Acts of Pilate were fabricated, filled with blasphemies against Christ. An official having procured, by infamous means, pretended revelations with regard to the morals of Christians and the horrors of their assemblies, the greatest publicity was given to all these documents ; they were placarded in all the cities and villages, and were imposed as text-books in the elementary schools.'^ The curator oi Antioch, a certain Theotecnus, conceived the idea of procuring an oracle against the Christians, by means of the god Zeus Philios, whose worship he had restored. The god demanded that the impious persons should be driven from the city and its surrounding territory. This demand, when brought to the knowledge of Maximin, pleased him greatly. At Nicomedia a similar request was presented to him by the magistrates of the town. The people of Tyre were unwilling to be behind-hand ; to the petition which they sent him, the emperor replied by a letter full of unction and of gratitude. We still possess it, for Eusebius procured a copy of it, and inserted it in Greek in his History? ^ This organization had nothing to do with that of the cult of Rome and of Augustus. In the latter, the municipal priest of Rome and Augustus had no authority over his colleagues of the other cults, any more than he was himself under the authority of the provincial priest. Here, we are dealing with a general grouping of all the priestly colleges : such an attempt had never before been made. -' Eusebius, H, E. ix. 5. ■^ Ibid. ix. 7. p. 30-1] PROGRESS OF THE PERSECUTION 25 The movement spread : the municipal councils and the provincial assemblies hastened to follow an example thus encouraged in high quarters. The officials, besides, were on the spot, to stir up zeal. We still possess,^ in part at least, the text, inscribed on stone, of the petition addressed to Maximin by the provincial assembly of Lycia and Pamphylia, and also of the emperor's reply. We see in the reply, as in the letter to the people of Tyre, that the petitioners were regarded with high approval, and that the greatest rewards were promised to them. Thus strengthened by imperial approbation, the municipal magistrates could give themselves up with an easy mind to hunting the Christians. Soon troops of wretched beings were to be found wandering upon the public roads in search of a refuge. Yet still the edict of toleration had not been officially recalled. The magistrates confined themselves to forbidding meetings in the cemeteries, and the rebuilding of churches.- The Govern- ment did not acknowledge that anyone was punished for the simple fact of being a Christian. Constantine, more- over, intervened by means of letters, and set himself to restrain the frenzied zeal of his eastern colleague. But in the state of mind in which Maximin was, we can well imagine how easily he found pretexts for getting rid of the troublesome Christians. It was in this way that the Bishop of Emesa, Silvanus, was put to death, being thrown to the beasts with two companions ; Peter, Bishop of Alexandria, was beheaded, without even the pretence of a trial ; and several Egyptian bishops were treated in the same fashion. Lucian, the celebrated priest of Antioch, who had retired to Nicomedia, was arrested there, and, in * Corpus Inscripiiofiiim Latinarum^ vol. iii. No. 12 132, found at Arycanda in Lycia. The petition is addressed, according to the opening, to the three legitimate emperors, Maximin, Constantine, and Licinius. Yet the name of Constantine has not been reproduced on the marble : the place for it is left blank. - Upon this point, the instructions of Maximin to the praetorian prefect, Sabinus, went beyond the edict, for the edict allowed the Christians coinpotiere convcnticula sua. 26 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [ch. i. spite of the eloquent speech which he made in his own defence, was executed in prison. These are examples of the kind of treatment to which the Churches of Asia-Minor, of the Orient, and of Egypt had to submit, during the two years that the tyranny of Maximin lay heavy upon them. To these miseries was added also, in Syria at least, the scourge of famine and that of contagious disease. Eusebius has left us^ affecting details on this subject. The Christians around him dis- tinguished themselves at this time by their charity to the sick and starving, without any distinction of religion, as well as by their assiduous care in burying the dead. They thus disarmed the hostility of many of their enemies. During this time, Maximin attempted to interfere in the religious affairs of the Armenians, who were friends and allies of the Empire,- and to force them to " sacrifice to idols." The Armenians rose in revolt, and war once more drenched the eastern frontiers with blood. But the days of Maximin were numbered. At the beginning of the year 312, he heard that the war between Constantine and Maxentius, a war foreseen and expected ever since the death of Maximian,^ had at last broken out ; that Constantine was in Italy, marching from one success to another ; that he had betrothed his sister to Licinius, and concluded an alliance with him. The Nicomedian Emperor then understood the danger which threatened him. He, the legitimate prince, consecrated by the choice of Galerius, and invested with the imperial insignia by Diocletian, entered into a secret treaty with the "tyrant," against whom had fulminated, for six years, all the 1 H. E. ix. 8. - In these Armenians (Eusebius, H. E. ix. 8) we must recognize, I think, the inhabitants of the five satrapies beyond the Tigris, annexed to the empire by the treaty of 297 (Mommsen, Romische Geschichte^ vol. v. p. 445). They had not been reduced to provinces ; they remained under the authority of their national chiefs. These were Christians, on account of the change of religion which had for some time been in process in the kingdom of Armenia. •^ Constantine had pronounced against Maximian the damnatio memoriae ; on the contrary, Maxentius had declared him divus. p. 33] PANIC OF MAXIMIN 27 thunders of the Tetrarchy. When the news reached him of the battle of the Milvian Bridge, he felt that it was he himself who was defeated. Constantine had found in Rome statues of Maximin placed side by side with those of Maxentius, and — a more serious matter still — he found letters which confirmed the alliance and the treason. However, he did not at once take up a hostile attitude, but he assumed for himself, or allowed the senate to give him, the first place in the imperial triumvirate, a place which had, until then, been accorded to Maximin, It was an evil omen for the latter. He was officially informed of the defeat of ]\Iaxentius, and at the same time he was invited to leave the Christians in peace. He made a pretence of compliance. In a new letter,^ addressed to his praetorian prefect, Sabinus, he reminded him that ever since his accession to power (305) he had endeavoured to mitigate, in the provinces of the Orient subject to his authority, the severities enjoined by Diocletian and Maximian against the followers of the Christian religion ; that, when he became emperor at Nicomedia (in 311), he had, it was true, received favourably the requests presented to him against the Christians by the inhabitants of that town and of many others ; that, nevertheless, he had not intended that anyone should be ill-treated on account of his religion, and that it was necessary to write to that effect to the officials of the provinces. This document was lacking in precision. The Christians mistrusted it ; they abstained from holding assemblies in public, and from rebuilding their churches. The new edict did not specify that they were authorized to do so. The whole thing did not amount to more than a purely formal satisfaction given to Constantine.- In reality, things remained in the condition in which Maximin had maintained them for the past two years. ^ Eusebius, H. E. ix. 9. ^ So far as Constantine was concerned, Maximin had not ceased to be a regular emperor. On April 15, 313, fifteen days before the battle of Adrianople, a letter from the proconsul of Africa to Constantine still bears at the head the names of the three emperors (St Augustine, Ep. 88). 28 THE GREAT PERSECUTION [ch. i. 6. The End of the Evil Days. This was the position in the spring of 313, when Maximin opened his campaign against Licinius. Being defeated on April 30, near Adrianople, he recrossed the Bosphorus, disguised in borrowed clothes, passed through Nicomedia, and did not stop until he reached the Taurus. There, in Cilicia, he was again in his former empire. But Licinius was following him closely ; he forced the passes, and at last Maximin, in despair, poisoned himself at Tarsus. He died in frightful suffering. Before killing himself, he had thought for a moment that resistance was still possible, and, to conciliate the Christians whom he had so eagerly persecuted, he had an idea of issuing a fresh edict, giving them full and complete toleration.^ But with him cruelty never lost its sway. At the same time as he granted liberty to the Christians, he ordered the execution of a number of pagan priests and diviners, whose oracles had induced him to engage in this disastrous war. His edict, as regards its practical part, was absolutely similar to that which Licinius had hastened to publish at Nicomedia,- of which the following is the text : — " Inasmuch as we have long considered that liberty of religion could not be refused, and that everyone ought to have granted to him, according to his opinions and wishes, power to act as he pleases in the practice of divine things, we had already given orders that every person, including the Christians,-^ may remain faithful to his religious principles.^ But since different provisions 1 Eusebius, H. E. ix. 10. - The Latin text is in Lactantius, De inort. persec. 48, but without the prologue ; a complete translation in Greek is in Eusebius, H. E. X. 5. ^ Greek, eKaarov KeKeXevKiifiev, rots re xP'-'^Tiavoh, rrjs alp^aews /cat ttjs dpri]s {V. C. ii. 24 et seq.). ^ Eusebius, V. C. ii. 48-59, has translated it from the Latin copy addressed "to the Easterns." * Letter to Eusebius, V. C. ii. 46 ; this is only a specimen. Eusebius says that he was the first person to receive such a letter. 58 CONSTANTINE, CHRISTIAN EMPEROR [ch. ii. the bishops to rebuild their ruined churches, and to con- struct larger ones ; he gave orders to his financial agents to make them large grants from the public funds. Public officials were, from that time, principally chosen from among Christians ; if they were pagans, they were not allowed to take part officially in the ceremonies of their religion.^ These were the immediate measures. Constantine lived for nearly fourteen years longer. Nothing remained now of the Tetrarchy. He was henceforth sole master of the whole empire. His religious policy showed the effects of this. The idea of a certain equilibrium between the two religions is often attributed to him ; he maintained them both, it is said, holding them in mutual respect for each other, and dominating both ; being supreme pontiff of paganism by the very fact of being emperor, he extended his cognizance to Christianity, and thus presided over the whole religious system of his empire. This way of looking at things does not appear to me to have any foundation. Even over the pagan cults the emperor had no direct authority : his title of Pontifex Maxiinus corresponds to certain defined prerogatives, sufficiently limited, as a matter of fact, and in no way capable, in any case, of being extended to the government of the Church. But, apart from his sacerdotal titles and his religious sphere, the emperor was, for Christians as for pagans, the supreme lawgiver, the defender of public order, the distributor of favours. It was not an unimportant matter whether this enormous power leant towards one side or the other, or maintained its equilibrium. There may have been equilibrium at the beginning. It was a great advantage for the Christians to find them- selves in the same position as before the persecution, to be certain of their liberty, and even of indemnities for the losses they had sustained. At first they had no idea of claiming any more. This was already one guarantee for the pagans, and another was furnished them by their numbers, which in many of the western provinces greatly exceeded ^ Eusebius, V. C. ii. 44. p. 74] CONSTANTINE'S DREAM OF UNITY 59 those of the Christians. Finally, Licinius, who had never made any adhesion to Christianity, represented, as joint- emperor, the followers of the old religious traditions. From this resulted a certain parity between the two parties, independent of any political design and even of the private inclinations of the two imperial rulers. I do not know what were the real convictions of Licinius, We have not a single writing of his which can throw any light upon his religious feelings. The case is otherwise with his colleague. Constantine was a con- vinced Christian, a somewhat lax one, perhaps, and holding a rough-and-ready theology. The Supreme Being, the suiiunus Dens, the Emperor of Heaven, the antithesis to the pagan pantheon, complicated and confused as it was, appealed to him far more than speculations with regard to the Incarnate Word. But his monotheism was not simply a philosophical matter : it was essentially a religious monotheism, and religious in a Christian way — a monotheism revealed and manifested in Jesus Christ, a monotheism of salvation, the benefits resulting from which the Church preserved and propagated by its teaching, its discipline, and its worship. Penetrated by this belief, Constantine could see no reason why it should not be accessible to and accepted by everyone. Like Diocletian and so many others, he dreamed of religious unity. But, unlike his predecessors, he no longer deemed it possible with paganism, while he thought that it could be realized with the religion of Christ. Hence arose the decided and declared favour for the latter, which was manifested at once and steadily increased, and which was, no doubt, the cause of many conversions, thus modifying the numerical proportion of the conflicting parties. Hence arose also, to a certain extent, the pagan reaction under Licinius in the eastern provinces, in spite of the fact that it would have been to his interest in every way to conciliate the Christians. Victorious in the final struggle, Constantine had no longer any rival to fear ; in Nicomedia he found himself supported by a Christian opinion far more powerful than 60 CONSTANTINE, CHRISTIAN EMPEROR [ch. ii. that of the Latin countries, and this opinion, alienated by memories of Galerius and Maximin, and recently exasperated by the brutalities of Licinius, was quite ready to support the Christian emperor in measures of retalia- tion. Many at that time must have thought and said that it was necessary to make an end of these sacrifices, so often insisted upon with violence, of these altars which had witnessed so many enforced apostasies, of these temples of idols, which were no longer taken seriously by anyone, and were now only frequented by persons who engaged in questionable conferences or unhallowed orgies. Cessct superstitio ! It is true that Constantine promised liberty to the pagans, but in what terms ! " As to those who hold themselves aloof from us, let them keep their lying temples, if they wish. . . . There are some, it is said, who pretend that the use of the temples is forbidden them. . . . Such would have been my wish ; but, to the detriment of the public welfare, this lamentable error still resists too strongly in certain persons."^ The liberty thus reluctantly granted was evidently, in the mind of Constantine, only a precarious and temporary liberty. During the years which followed, various partial measures were adopted. Certain temples, notorious for the immorality of their worship, were prohibited and demolished ; such were those of Aphaca, in the Lebanon, of Aegae in Cilicia, of Heliopolis (Baalbek) in Phoenicia. Others, notably that at Delphi, were deprived of their beautiful statues in bronze and marble, and of their other artistic treasures ; all of these were transported to Constantinople, and served for the embellishment of the new capital.- It appears that still further measures were taken. Eusebius^ speaks of a law which forbade the erection of idols, the practice of divination, and finally all sacrifices.* 1 Eusebius, V. C. ii. 56, 60. ^ V. C. iii. 54-58 ; cf. the Chronicle of St Jerome, a. Abr. 2346 (332) : Dedicatur Constatitinopolis omnium paene urbium ?iuditate. ^ V. C. i. 45 ; cf, iv. 23, 25. ^ /J-y'ire pAjv Oveiv Kad6\ov p.rjSeva. p. 77] THE FATE OF THE TE:\rPLES Gl In 341, a rescript of the Emperor Constans/ addressed to the vicarius of Italy, refers to a law of Constantine against those who dared " to offer sacrifices." As we have not the text of Constantine's law, it would be difficult to affirm that it forbade sacrifices without reserve or distinc- tion. Perhaps it was a question, as with regard to aruspicy, of ceremonies forbidden in private houses, and tolerated only in the temples. Moreover, in many places, there was no occasion for the government to take any steps : the populace, con- verted en viasse to Christianity, themselves broke their idols and destroyed their temples. This is what took place at Antaradus (Tortosa) on the coast of Phoenicia; the emperor strongly approved of this resolution, and rebuilt the town, giving it his own name.- The port (Maiouma) of Gaza did the same; Constantine gave it the name of his sister Constantia, and raised it to the rank of city.^ To renounce the ancient gods was the surest way to win the favours of the sovereign.* We can easily imagine how many conversions, individual or in masses, were the natural result of this. Yet there were some who resisted. In spite of the example of Maiouma, Gaza preserved its temples and remained pagan. At Heliopolis, after having destroyed the temple of Venus, the emperor set to work to convert the population. But it was in vain that he multiplied his letters of exhortation, erected a great church, sent a whole staff of clergy, and organized large distributions of charity ; it was labour lost : no one was converted to Christianity. Among the various manifestations of imperial favour, one of the most striking was the official honour paid to the Holy Places mentioned in the Gospels and the Old Testament. Pious curiosity had long been directed ' Cod. Theod. xvi. 10, i. Cf. St Jerome, Chron.^s.. Abr. 2347 (333) : Edicto Constantini tenipla eversa sunt. ^ Eusebius, V. C. iv. 39 ; cf. Theophanes, p. 38 (De Boor). 3 V. C. iv. 38. * It was exactly the same situation as in the last years of Maximin, save that the imperial favour was reserved for Christians instead of for pagans. 62 CONSTANTINE, CHRISTIAN EMPEROR [en. ii. towards the places mentioned in the Holy Scriptures. Revolutions, wars, vicissitudes of every kind, had never succeeded in effacing the memory of the Temple of Israel ; notwithstanding all the transformations of Jerusalem, the Christians still knew where Jesus had been crucified and laid in the tomb. The church of ^lia, the edifice in which Narcissus, Alexander, and the bishops who suc- ceeded them, were wont to assemble the faithful, marked, so it was believed, the site of the house where the Lord had celebrated the Last Supper, and where the disciples had assembled during the early days of Christianity. Other traditions were localized around the city, and throughout the whole of Palestine. In the 2nd century, Bishop Melito came from Asia into the land of the Gospel ^ ; later on, Alexander of Cappadocia and his successor, Firmilian, were also attracted by veneration for the Holy Places.^ Julius Africanus, a native of yElia,^ displayed an extraordinary zeal in seeking out Biblical memories in Palestine and elsewhere.^ It was the same with Origen : among other monuments of the Gospel, he mentions, at Bethlehem, the grotto of the Nativity.^ At the instigation of his friend, Paulinus of Tyre, Eusebius devoted a whole series of works to Biblical geography — a translation in Greek of the names of peoples mentioned in the Hebrew Bible ; a description of Ancient Palestine, with its distri- bution into tribes ; a plan of Jerusalem and of the Temple ; an explanation of the names of places mentioned in Holy Scripture.^ 1 There is a letter from him in Eusebius, H. E. iv. 26. 2 H. E. vi. 1 1 ; Jerome, De viris, 54. ^ Grenfell and Hunt, Oxyrhynchus Papyri^ n. 412. "^ Vol. I., p. 333. ^ In Johannem^ vi. 24 ; Contra Celsum, i. 51. ^ This last part only has been preserved, in Greek as well as in a Latin recension executed by St Jerome (See the edition of Kloster- mann in the third volume of the " Eusebius " published by the Berlin Academy). The vi^orks of Eusebius must have served as a basis for the curious map of Palestine, with a plan of Jerusalem, which was discovered on a mosaic pavement at Medaba, beyond Jordan {Si&venson, Niiovo Biillctino, 1897, p. 45 ; Schulten, " Die Mosaikkarte von Madaba," in the Abhandlungen of the Society of Sciences at Gottingen, Phil. -hist., new series, vol. iv. (1900). p. 79-SO] THE BORDEAUX PILGRIM G3 The appearance of such works had already shown the interest awakened by the Holy Places. Pilgrimages, which had, no doubt, begun before the Great Persecution,^ were resumed as soon as peace was restored. About the year 333j 3. pilgrim from far-off Gaul compiled, from his notes of his journey, a complete itinerary, outward and homeward, from Bordeaux to Jerusalem, one of the most precious documents of Roman geography. When he arrived in Palestine, he took note there of all the sacred memories pointed out to him in the different localities. He is the most ancient witness of the magnificent buildings by which the piety of Constantine and his family had enriched the Holy Places at that time. The colony of .^lia Capitolina, founded by Hadrian on the site of the ancient Jerusalem, consisted of- two distinct parts, separated by a valley. On the east, upon enormous foundations, extended an oblong, rectangular platform, surrounded by porticoes ; this comprised the site of the ancient Temple, upon which now stood the Capitol (rpiKajuapov) dedicated, as all the provincial Capitols were, to the three Roman divinities, Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva. On the other side of the valley, upon the western hill, the town, properly-so-called, underwent a development almost exactly parallel to the buildings of the Temple. Accord- ing to custom, a wide street, bordered by colonnades, traversed it from one end to the other ; at its extremities were the public buildings. About the middle, on the western side, this colonnade was broken to give access to a platform upon which was erected the temple of Venus. According to tradition, this platform had been constructed immediately over the place consecrated by the Crucifixion of the Saviour and by His tomb. The Bishop of yElia, Macarius, who was present at the Council of Nic^a, ^ Observe that Eusebius, in his Demonstratio Evangelica (vi. i8), written before Constantine came to the East, speaks of Christian pilgrims, who came from all parts of the world to pray at the cave on the Mount of Olives, near which had taken place the Ascension of the Saviour. 2 With regard to the topography of Jerusalem, I refer to the excellent articles of P. Germer-Durand in the Echos cfOrient, 1903-4. 64 CONSTANTINE, CHRISTIAN EMPEROR [ch. it. obtained from the emperor the necessary authorization to make excavations. The buildings of the temple were demolished, as well as the platform which supported them ; the earth, which had been used to level the ground, was removed ; and finally, a tomb hollowed in the rock was brought to light again : it was recognized as that which they were seeking.^ The exact spot of the Crucifixion and even the Saviour's Cross were also identified." The emperor, informed of these discoveries, gave orders for the erection of a monument in this place, which should be worthy of such memories. Upon the enlarged site of the temple of Venus arose first an immense basilica, in front of which was a vestibule ; its fagade looked towards the East.^ Behind this came a ^ In the time of Jesus, Golgotha and the tomb were outside the city ; shortly afterwards, the boundaries of the city having been re- arranged by Herod Agrippa, they were included in it ; they were also inside the new enclosure of ^lia, which, on this side, appears to have coincided to a considerable extent with that of Herod Agrippa. With regard to questions of topography and history relating to these sacred sites, see, amongst others, the work of Major-General Sir C. Wilson, Golgotha and the Holy Sepulchre, London, 1906. I am less doubtful than he is about the value of the tradition. 2 Eusebius, who in his Lije of Constantine describes minutely the excavations of Macarius, says not a word of the True Cross. Yet the oratory of the Cross was then already in existence ; he had himself mentioned it in his discourse of the Tricennalia {De laudibns Con- stantini, c. 9, p. 221, Schwartz), as well as the two other parts of the monument : oIkov evKr-qpiov Trafj-fieyeOri (the basilica), vewv T€ ayiou t^ auTrjpiqj a-r)jxeli{) (the oratory of the Cross), ixvrjud re (the Holy Sepulchre). Observe that even here he speaks of the Cross as a sign, not as a relic, (TTifxe'iu) not ^vKif. Perhaps he had some doubt upon the identity of the object. But whatever may have been his scruples, the wood of the Cross was soon publicly venerated in Jerusalem, and fragments of it were detached and dispersed by devotion throughout the whole world. This is attested about 347, twenty years after the discovery, by the Catecheses of St Cyril, delivered upon the very spot (iv. 10 ; X. 19 ; xiii. 4) ; an inscription of the year 359 found at Tixter, in the neighbourhood of Setif in Mauritania, mentions, in an enumeration of relics, a fragment de ligno cruets {Melanges de VEcole de Rotne, vol. X., p. 441). Thenceforward, similar testimonies abound. •^ With regard to this orientation, see Clermont-Ganneau, in the Compte-rendus de PAcadcmie des Inscriptions, 1897, p. 552. p. 82] SITES AT JERUSALEM AND HEBRON 65 great square court, ornamented with porticoes, where, in a special shrine, the relic of the Cross was preserved ; beyond this court, towards the west, was the holy tomb, contained in a building of circular form {Anastasis). In spite of her great age, the Empress Helena, attracted by a pious curiosity, undertook the pilgrimage to Palestine. We can imagine her interest in her son's buildings. She herself began to search for other holy places. The grotto at Bethlehem, and another grotto upon the Mount of Olives, where, it was said, the Lord had often conversed with His disciples ^ and had taken leave of them just before His Ascension, were also enclosed in splendid basilicas. Following the example of the emperor's mother, his mother-in-law also, Eutropia,- widow of Maximian Her- culius, and mother of Maxentius and Fausta, was distinguished by her devotion to the Holy Places. She was especially interested in the monuments of Hebron. There were to be found the mysterious tombs of the patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, with their wives, Sarah, Rebecca, and Leah. At some distance from the town, on the road to Jerusalem, was shown the well, dug by the Father of the Faithful, and also an enormous terebinth, so old that it was deemed to go back to the creation of the world.^ It was, according to the legend, the famous oak of Mamre, under which Abraham had received the visit of the three heavenly messengers, one of whom was none other than the Divine Word. This old tree was the object of universal veneration. Every summer festivals were celebrated there, and a great fair was held : Jews, Christians, and pagans also, came thither in crowds. It was at this fair that, in the reign of Hadrian, the greater part of the prisoners after the Jewish insurrection were sold,* a bitter remembrance, which did not, however, over- ^ Supra, page 63, note i. - Eutropia was mother-in-law of Constantius Chlorus, as well as of Constantine. To the first, she had given her daughter Theodora, the issue of a former marriage ; to the second, Fausta, daughter of Maximian. ^ Josephus, Bell. Jiid. iv. 9, 7 ; Chronicon Paschale, Olymp. 224, 3. * St Jerome, in Jeretn. xxxi. 15 ; in Zachar. xi. 5. II E 66 CONSTANTINE, CHRISTIAN EMPEROR [cii. ii. shadow that of the great patriarch. Eutropia discovered that near the sacred terebinth were idols and a heathen altar ; she informed Constantine of this, and he gave the necessary orders to the bishops of Palestine and Phoenicia, that these relics of paganism should be replaced by a church.^ At Antioch also, at Nicomedia, and in many other towns, new churches were erected — imposing monuments of imperial favour. At Antioch, the principal Christian place of worship was in the old part of the city ^ ; it was believed that this old church^ dated from the time of the Apostles. Constantine constructed another, octagonal in form, with a high cupola dominating an immense court surrounded by porticoes.'* But of all the foundations of Constantine, the most important, alike in itself and in its consequences, was that of Constantinople. A thousand years before, some Greek colonists, coming, it was said, from Megara, had discovered, near the opening of the Bosphorus into the Propontis, the place where the deep cleft opens which has ever since been called the Golden Horn. Upon the actual spot where the Seraglio now stands, they traced out the place for a settlement, which they called Byzantium, from the name of a Thracian hero, no doubt honoured in that locality. It was an admirable situation, on a promontory easily fortified, surrounded on all sides by the 'deep sea, at the mouth of the Euxine, upon one of the most important commercial highways of the ancient world ! ^ Then began a long history of negotia- 1 Eusebius, V. C. iii. 51-53. '■^ TTjv a.iroCToKiK7}v €KK\7]v dWui' a-rraauiv /j,ei^ova Stroi tt}? 'Vib/J.i]S eXaTTOvffdaL ooku. p. 90] DEATPI OF CONSTANTINE 71 He removed to the imperial villa of Achyron, near Nicomedia, and, as he had not yet received Baptism, he asked the bishops to give it to him. The ceremony was presided over by the bishop of the place, Eusebius, a personage of somewhat grievous notoriety, as we shall soon see.^ Constantine died on May 22. His three surviving sons were all absent; the one nearest to him, Constantius, came to superintend his funeral, and carried his body to the Apostoleion at Constantinople. The succession was not decided without some difficulty ; affairs of State were still conducted in the name of the deceased emperor until September 9, 337, on which day his three sons were proclaimed Augusti. Constantine has been, and still is, the subject of various estimates. The main fact of his reign, the conversion of the emperor and the empire to Christianity, has procured for him the enthusiasm of some, and the severity of others ; for it is in the nature of men that their present passions display their fierceness even in their manner of represent- ing ancient times. Unfortunately for Constantine, there was too much bloodshed in his history. We might pass over the death of Maximian and of Licinius, who were restless and inconvenient rivals ; but his son Crispus, and the son of Licinius, and his wife Fausta ! We have very little information with regard to these horrible affairs. Constantine wished that the details of them should be unknown ; perhaps, by this imposed silence, he may have suppressed extenuating explanations. But, whatever may be the truth with regard to these domestic tragedies, it is not only the Church which has reason to rejoice in the first Christian emperor : the Empire also benefited under his government. So long as he lived, he secured to it religious peace, a wise administration, the safety of the frontiers, and the respect of neighbouring nations. It was no inconsiderable achievement. 1 Eusebius, V. C. iv. 60-64. Cf. Jerome, C/iron., a. Abr. 2353. CHAPTER III THE SCHISMS RESULTING FROM THE PERSECUTION Pope Marcellinus and his memory. Disturbances at Rome with regard to apostates : Marcellus, Eusebius. Egyptian quarrels : rupture between Bishops Peter and Meletius. The Meletian schism. Origins of the Donatist schism. Council of Cirta. Mensurius and Cascilian, Bishops of Carthage. Schism against Cascilian : Majorinus. Intervention of the Emperor. Councils of Rome and of Aries. Imperial arbitration. Resistance of the Donatists : organization of the schism. I. The Roman Schism. At the time when the persecution broke out, the Roman Church had had at its head, for nearly seven years, Bishop Marcellinus.^ The edict of confiscation of ecclesi- astical property, whether real or personal, was applied without difficulty in Rome. The Christian community there was so considerable, and so well known, that any kind of disguise would have been not only dangerous but impossible. The formal records regarding this seizure were preserved for a long time, thanks to the belief of the Donatists that they could find weapons in them against their adversaries. Certain clerics were called upon to make the surrender of the things confiscated — there is no mention of the Holy Scriptures — and, when this case of conscience presented itself in Africa, great stress was laid upon their share in the transaction. Then came the order to arrest the members of the clergy : it appears ' His name is mentioned in an inscription of the cemetery of Callistus, anterior to the persecution. (De Rossi, Inscriptiones christiafiae, vol. i., p. cxv.) 72 p. 93] THE CASE OF POPE MARCELLINUS 73 that they must have evaded a too severe application of this order. Only one priest, Marcellinus, and one exorcist, Peter, are mentioned as having died at this time. The bishop escaped the first measures of severity, as did those of Carthage, Alexandria, and Antioch ; but he died on October 24, 304, at the moment when Diocletian arrived in Rome, and when the persecution was everywhere raging in its full severity. For a person of such importance, it was sufficiently unfortunate, at such a time, to die in his bed. The memory of Marcellinus was much ill-treated by the Donatists during the course of the 4th century. They included him in the number of the traditores without bringing forward any very clear proofs. Several of them ^ went farther, and charged him with a much more serious offence : that he had offered incense upon pagan altars. This last accusation seems to have been admitted in Rome, at least by the general public, towards the end of the 5th century. We have no other documents respecting it than two apocryphal ones : the spurious Council of Sinuessa, a composition a little later than the year 501, and the Life of Marcellinus in the Liber Pontificals. These two docu- ments agree in representing Marcellinus as having reha- bilitated himself According to the council, a numerous assemblage of bishops had established his fault and his repentance, but had refused to condemn the sovereign bishop; according to the legend of the Liber Pontificalis, the erring Pope, being once more arrested by his perse- cutors, showed more courage, and shed his blood for the Faith. Taken by themselves and reduced to their real value, such testimonies would not be very compromising. There was in Rome, during the 4th century, a colony of Donatists, who may well have spread abroad among the people the idea of a Pope unfaithful to his duties at a time of persecution, an idea which may have fructified, later on, in the hands of those fabricators of false legends and false councils, who were so active at the beginning ' Aug., Contra littcras Petiliani, ii. 202 ; De unico baptismo, 27. 74 THE SCHISMS [ch. hi. of the 6th century. But we must take account of a fact, serious in another way because it throws light, not upon popular rumours, but upon the opinions of the superior clergy in Rome, and that immediately after the persecution. The Roman Church in the time of Constantine possessed a calendar in which were marked the anniversaries of the Popes and of the principal martyrs. From the time of Fabian (250) until that of Mark (335), all the Popes appear there, with only one exception, that of Marcellinus. Such an omission,^ which cannot be accounted for by any errors in copying or other excuses of the same kind, cannot have been without reasons. In his Ecclesiastical History Eusebius confines himself to saying that, when the persecution began, Marcellinus was bishop ; it is a simple chronological note. He is, otherwise, very little informed of what was taking place in Rome in his own time. In fact, something unpleasant must have happened ; but we do not know exactly what it was. Disorganized by the persecution, and saddened by the death of its bishop, the Roman Church passed through a crisis of considerable danger, less, perhaps, on account of the persecution than of the internal dissensions which followed it. The violence of the persecution appears to have diminished greatly after the abdication of Diocletian ; when Maxentius was proclaimed emperor, it must have ceased altogether.'^ Yet the Christians in Rome were in no hurry to elect a new bishop. Maxentius was a usurper, a rebel. His good-will did not guarantee that of Galerius, who was then in open hostility against him and might at any moment become once more master of the situation. Nevertheless, when, after the death of Severus, Galerius had been driven back from Rome, and when Maxentius, ^ Marcellinus is only omitted in the calendar ; the Philocalian collection, which has preserved the calendar for us, contains a catalogue of the Popes, in which Marcellinus appears in his proper place. 2 Eusebius, H. E. viii. 14, goes so far as to say that at the outset he pretended to be a Christian "to please the Roman people"; he adds, what is more probable, that Maxentius commanded his subjects to moderate the persecution : Toe /lOTct Xpiortavcoi' a.viiva.i irpoaTaTTei OMyixov. i>. 95 n] rOl'E MARCEIJATS 75 then on fairly good terms with Constantinc, appeared to have established his power, it was decided to incur the risk of the election. Towards the end of June 308, Marcellus was enthroned as Pope, after a vacancy of nearly four years. He found that the question of the apostates had already come to the front, and was being discussed.^ The danger over, the apostates were returning to the Church, and claiming even to enter it without conditions ; while the authorities, the new Pope at their head, faithful to traditional principles, insisted that they should submit to penitential expiation. The number of apostates was legion, and the conflict which they let loose degenerated into a kind of sedition. From the temporary edifices where Christian assemblies were held, the churches not having as yet been given back, the dispute soon spread into the street, and public order was endangered. The govern- ment of Maxentius intervened, and, on the accusation of an apostate,'- Marcellus was adjudged responsible for the disorder and banished from Rome. He was succeeded, either in the same year (309), or in the year following (310), by Eusebius. This time, the election was not unanimous. Another candidate, Heraclius, was acclaimed by the party opposed to the infliction of penance. The schism was complete : troubles began once more. At the end of four months, the police again inter- fered, arrested the two leaders, and drove them out of Rome. Eusebius, banished to Sicily, died there shortly afterwards. The edict of Galerius must have been known in Rome by the month of May, 311. Although Maxentius did not show himself unfavourable to the Christians, he had * As to what follows, we have no other documents than the epitaphs of Popes Marcellus and Eusebius, composed long after- wards by their successor Damasus. The description they give of the state of things in Rome agrees very well with what we know to have happened at Carthage and at Alexandria. '^ Damasus does not give his name, but says he had denied Christ in time of perfect peace [in pace) — that is to say, before the persecu- tion. He was an apostate before the lime. 76 THE SCHISMS [ch. in. maintained the confiscations carried out in 303. It seems that he did not wish to be behindhand with Galerius in the matter of toleration, and that his favourable attitude towards Christianity was increased in consequence. The Roman Church, after a vacancy of one or two years, again gave itself a bishop, in the person of Miltiades (July 2, 311), and he obtained from Maxentius the restitution of the confiscated places. The " tyrant " and his praetorian prefect issued letters, with which the deacons of Miltiades presented themselves before the prefect of Rome : the churches were officially restored to them, and a formal record of this proceeding was drawn up.^ This time, persecution was really over ; the Roman Church enjoyed external peace. It seemed further as though internal peace were also successfully established, for we hear no more, after that time, of the schism with regard to penance. Other Churches were agitated by it for a longer period, 2, The Meletian Schism? In Egypt, as elsewhere, the question of the apostates gave rise to various opinions, and thereby, having regard to the ecclesiastical usages of the time, to quarrels. Religious peace was still very far off, when, in the spring of 306, the Bishop of Alexandria issued a formal ruling upon the matter, inspired by sentiments of mercy, 1 This formal record, as well as that regarding the confiscation, was brought forward by the Donatists at the conference of 411. {Coll. 499-514 ; Aug. Brev. iii. 34-36 ; Ad Don. 17.) - Upon the Meletian schism, see— (i) The canons in the letter of St Peter of Alexandria, with the additions in the Syriac text, edited by Lagarde in his Reliquiae iuris ecclcsiastici antiquissimae, and retrans- lated into Greek by E. Schwartz, "Zur Geschichte des Athanasius," in the Gottingen Nachfichien, 1905, p. 166 ctseq. ; (2) Several extracts at the end of the Historia acephala of St Athanasius contained in the collection attributed to the deacon Theodosius (MS. at Verona, No. LX.) : (P. Batififol, Byzantinische Zeitschrift, 1901, has carefully republished them, and shown the link which connects them with the Historia acephala) ; (3) Epiphanius Hacr. 68, in which the original history is already slightly illustrated with legends ; (4) Athanasius, Apol. contra Arianos, 11, 59 ; Ad episcopos Aegypti et Libyae, 22, 23. p. 98] ST PETER OF ALEXANDRIA 77 He had not the slightest idea of receiving apostates to communion without penitence ; but in his judgment on particular cases, and in his estimate of the amends to be made, he gave evidence of a certain compassion for the sinners, as well as a certain eagerness to fill up the ranks of his Church, considerably thinned by so many apostasies. The opposition which he foresaw,^ when publishing his tariff of penance, was not slow in manifesting itself. A bishop of Upper Egypt, Meletius of Lycopolis, well known for his uncompromising severity, protested with consider- able vigour, declaring that such a course was inopportune, that, before holding out a welcoming hand to the apostates, the end of the persecution should be waited for, and that then severe conditions should be imposed upon them. He did not go so far, as Novatian had done half a century earlier, as to deny to the fallen any hope of being restored to the communion of the Church. Between him and Bishop Peter there were only questions of degrees and of the proper amount of penance. But they were sufficient to lead to extremities. After the short respite, which the Bishop of Alexandria had wrongly imagined to be the dawn of real peace, persecution was revived in the East. Peter concealed himself again, and his representatives in the "great city" did the same. Meletius travelled through Egypt, went from church to church, stirring up agitation upon the question of penance, and intruding himself to perform ordinations, in place of the Pastors whom the persecution kept in separation from their flocks, and of those whom they had chosen to fulfil their duties. He even ordained bishops, without any respect for the rights of the metro- politan, Peter, who alone had authority in such matters. He thus drew down upon himself a severe letter from four of his colleagues, Hesychius, Pacomius, Theodore, and Phileas, then imprisoned together in Alexandria.^ The Bishop of Thmuis and his three companions died soon after. Nevertheless, the unmanageable Bishop of 1 Nachrichfcn, 1905, p. 168. ^ Migne, Patrologia Graeca, vol. x., p. 1565. 78 THE SCHISMS [ch. hi. Lycopolis persisted in his attitude. He came to Alex- andria, where he held communication with two ambitious teachers, Isidore and Arius ^ — the latter an ascetic, the other of more easy morals ^ — who disclosed to him the place of concealment of the bishop's vicars. Meletius had the audacity to replace them ; and chose, for that purpose, two confessors, one of whom was in prison, and the other at the mines, circumstances calculated to win for them respect but not to facilitate the exercise of their ministry. Peter, being soon informed of these vagaries, pro- nounced an excommunication against the Bishop of Lycopolis, which was to last until a fuller examination of the circumstances could be made. However, Meletius was arrested and sent to the mines of Phseno, where he found various persons of his own way of thinking, among them another Egyptian bishop, called Peleus. They sowed discord among the Christians of their own country who were working in this prison. These unfortunate beings, after labouring all day long, spent their nights in anathematizing one another. When they were released, in 31 1, their quarrels were not made up. They returned to Egypt, with their hearts embittered, less against their persecutors than against their brethren who did not share their opinions. The martyrdom of Bishop Peter did not extinguish these angry feelings.^ His successors were restored in the possession of the churches ; an opposition to them was started in conventicles, which were called " churches of the martyrs " — a strange title, for, after all, Phileas and his companions, and Bishop Peter himself, credited with being the patrons of apostates, had laid down their lives for the faith ; while Meletius, on his return from the mines, ended by dying in his bed. ^ Perhaps the celebrated heretic. - Moribus turbulentus, according to the Latin version. ^ Athanasius, Apol. adv. Ar. 59, says that Meletius was condemned in synod by Peter of Alexandria, for various misdeeds and for having sacrificed, kirX dvaia. This last imputation is very improbable. It was not brought forward, or at least was not proved, before the Council of Nic^a, which, if this had been the case, would not have extended to Meletius such lenient conditions. r. i()()-i] THE DONATISTS 79 The schism continued ; it ended in the establishment of an opposition hierarchy, which spread throughout the whole of Egypt, and lasted for one or two generations. We shall soon meet with it again. 3. The Donatist Schism. Africa also was sorely troubled by schism ; things even went considerably farther there than in Egypt.^ As a consequence of the abdication of Maximian in 305, the African provinces came under the imperial jurisdiction of the Caesar Severus. It was not without difficulty that Maxentius succeeded in obtaining recognition in that country. The vicarius of Africa, Alexander, vacillated between the " tyrant " of Rome and the other emperors, legitimate but remote. He ended by quarrelling with Maxentius; and, to extricate himself from the difficulties of his position, proclaimed himself emperor in 308. This African reign lasted three years ; Maxentius put an end to it in 311, before engaging in his own war against Constantine. His preetorian prefect, Rufius Volusianus, sailed from Italy and overcame Alexander, who was taken prisoner and executed. The persecution seems to have been quickly over in Africa. When the churches had been destroyed, and the Scriptures burnt {dies traditionis^ 303), when, for more than a year (304), Christians had been hunted out to compel them to offer incense {dies tJmrificationis)^ the government began to leave them comparatively in peace. It was possible for them to assemble in secret without incurring very much danger, and even to provide for the replacing of their bishops who had disappeared. This is what took place at Cirta, in the spring of the year 305 : about ten bishops - met together there in a private house, ' Upon the documents with regard to this affair, see my memoir, " Le dossier du Donatisme," in the Melanges of the School of Rome, vol. X., 1890. 2 Council of Cirta, formal record read at the conference of 411 (»'• 351-355 ; 387-400; 408-432 ; 452-470; Aug. Brev. ill. 27, 31-33). St Augustine gives a long fragment of it {Adv. Cresc. ill. 30) ; cf. Ep. 80 THE SCHISMS [ch. hi. to give a successor to Bishop Paul. The latter, as we learn from the formal record of the seizure of his church, drawn up in 303, had not been a hero. And this was the case with the majority of the persons present. The president of the assembly, Secundus of Tigisi, the senior of the Numidian bishops, conceived the idea, quite praise- worthy in itself, of making enquiries as to the conduct of his colleagues. One of them had refused to burn incense, but, the year before, he had been a traditor ; another had thrown the Four Gospels into the fire ; others had given up various books to the police, but not the Scriptures. With regard to Purpurius, Bishop of Limata, many damaging rumours were in circulation ; he was accused of having killed two of his sister's children. He was certainly not at all an estimable person, and his temper was very violent. He was in a great rage with Secundus, who became frightened, cut short his investigations, and passed a general condemnation upon the sins of his brother bishops. He was not himself above suspicion. It was known that he had been called upon by the curator and the municipality to give up the sacred books ; but how he got out of it was less clear. Purpurius, quick of tongue, did not hesitate to tell him so to his face. As for Secundus, he had his own version of the occurrence.^ To the messengers of the curator^ he had replied majestically : " I am a Christian and a Bishop ; I am not a traditor." When still pressed to give up at least something, however small its value, he had equally refused. It was in this way that he explained the matter to Mensurius of Carthage,- about the time of the meeting at Cirta. Mensurius had written to him — it is not known to what effect — perhaps to consult with him as to the measures 43, 3 ; Contra litt. Petiliani, I. 23 ; De unico bapt. 31 ; Ad Donatisias^ 18 ; Contra Gaudentium, i, 47, etc. ; Optatus, De schism, i. 14. ' Aug. Brev. Coll. iii. 25. ^ The letters of Mensurius and Secundus, read at the conference of 41 1 (iii. 334-343 ; Brev. iii. 25, 27), are also quoted by St Augustine, Ad Don. 18 ; De unico bapt. 29 ; Contra Gaud. i. 47. p. 103] MENSURIUS OF CARTHAGE 81 to be taken after the persecution. The Bishop of Carthage related in his letter how cleverly he had evaded the search and substituted heretical works for the Holy Scriptures.^ He spoke also of certain enthusiasts, whom no one asked to give up the Scriptures, but who went to the police, of their own accord, boasting that they possessed the sacred books, and proclaiming that they would never give them up. The ill-treatment they thus drew upon themselves did not at all recommend them to the bishop, who forbade any honour to be paid them. He was not less severe with regard to certain Christians of evil repute, notorious criminals or public debtors, who found during the persecution a respectable way of putting themselves right, gaining an honourable reputation, and even living com- fortably in prison, where the generosity of the faithful enabled them to amass a little fortune for themselves. We know from other documents that Mensurius, whose clever evasions could scarcely have been known to the public, passed at Carthage as a traditor, and that, if the opinion of lax Christians ignored this, he was severely condemned in the prisons, where the confessors were suffering pain and misery while awaiting the last penalty. Mensurius had thought it necessary to interfere actively in restraining the zeal of the faithful. His deacon Caecilian, who was charged with this office, necessary perhaps according to the bishop's ideas, but in any case odious, was accustomed to lay wait for persons at the approaches to the prisons and to intercept the food which was being carried thither. The martyrs retaliated to these harsh measures by the excommunication : " He who is in communion with traditores, shall have no part with us in the Kingdom of Heaven." - We see, then, that in Carthage the situation was some- what strained. Once more, as in the time of Decius, the ' Supra, p. 1 6. 2 Passion of SS. Safurnimis, Dativus, etc. (Migne, P. L. vol. viii., p. 700, 701). This is a Donatist document, written after the beginning of the schism. It is possible that some features in it may be exaggerated. I do not accept it entirely. II F 82 THE SCHISMS [ch. hi. confessors were in conflict with their bishop ; and Mensurius was not Cyprian. The senior bishop of Numidia, who was well acquainted with the position of affairs, replied to his colleague by extolling the grand examples given in his own province, the severity of the persecution, the resistance it had met with, the courage of the martyrs who had refused to give up the Holy Scriptures and, on that account, had suffered death. They had a worthy claim to the honour they received. He also spoke of his own conduct, in the terms quoted above. This letter strongly reminds us of the one which Cyprian received from the Roman clergy, after the first days of persecution.^ The result was that a certain agreement of view was very soon arrived at between the Numidian episcopate and the most zealous Christians of Carthage, especially with regard to their estimate of Bishop Mensurius and his attitude. The consequences were not slow to disclose themselves. Among the persons compromised in the " usurpa- tion " of Alexander, and diligently sought for, when the Maxentian reaction ensued, was a certain deacon, Felix, accused of having written a pamphlet against Maxentius ; he took refuge with the bishop. Being called upon to give him up, Mensurius refused.^ His position in Carthage must have been an important one, for the proconsul did not feel competent to proceed on his own authority. He sent a report to the emperor, who ordered that, if Mensurius persisted, he was to be sent to Rome. The bishop was actually put on board, pleaded his own cause, and gained it. Obtaining permission to return home, he died before arriving at Carthage. As soon as the death of Mensurius became known, immediate steps were taken to proceed to the election of his successor. The deacon Caecilian was elected. Three bishops from the neighbourhood of Carthage,^ Felix of ^ Vol. I., p. 291. 2 This circumstance is honourable to Mensurius, and proves that he was not deficient in character. ^ This was already the custom in the time of Cyprian : Quod apud p. 106] CONSECRATION OF C^CILIAN 83 Aptonga and two others, took part in his ordination. Nothing could have been more regular. But, unfortun- ately, Ca^cilian was seriously compromised in the eyes of the fanatics. Like the deceased bishop, he was to them a traditor, an enemy of the saints, an ecclesiastical persecutor. An opposition party was formed at once. Two priests, Botrus and Celestius, were ostensibly at the head of it. It was afterwards related that, before his departure for Italy, Mensurius, anxious about the treasures of his Church, had entrusted a large number of valuable things to two old men, and that, without informing them of the fact, he had also given to an old woman a document mentioning this deposit, with an inventory of the treasures. If any misfortune were to happen to the bishop, she was to wait until his successor was installed, and then to hand over the document to him. She did so, and this greatly annoyed the trustees, who had made up their minds to be unfaithful, and transformed them into enemies of Caecilian. But his most formidable adversary was Lucilla, a lady of high rank, very devout, rich, and influential, of a quarrelsome disposition,^ and an old enemy of the archdeacon, who, even before the persecution, had opposed her practices of devotion.^ She seized the opportunity of doing him an ill turn. We know what people of this kind are capable of The opposition party organized itself, refused to recognize Caecilian, and invoked the support of the Numidian bishops, with whom they had long been on friendly terms. One of these prelates, Donatus of Casae NigraCy had been staying for some time in Carthage ; even nos quoqtie et per provincias universas tenetiir ut ad ordinatiotics rite celcbrandas ad ea7ii pkbcm cui praeposifus ordinaiur episcopi ejusdevi provinciac proxuni quique conveniant {Ep. Ixvii. 5). In Rome also, it was the Bishop of Ostia, assisted^ by several neighbouring prelates, who consecrated the Pope. ' Potens et factiosa fonina. '^ She was accustomed, at communion, before drinking from the chalice, to kiss a bone which, she said, had belonged to a martyr — who in any case had not been recognized as such {vindicatiis) by the Church of Carthage. 84 THE SCHISMS [ch. iii. before Caecilian's ordination, he had openly professed the greatest dislike for him, and had already held aloof. In these early days of the struggle he played an important part. As to the senior bishop, Secundus, he assembled his forces, and hastened to Carthage, to meddle with what was certainly no concern of his. Seventy bishops were thus assembled to wage war against Caecilian. Although he had been regularly installed, they pretended not to consider him a legitimate pastor, and held their meetings outside the ecclesiastical precincts which Maxentius first, and afterwards Constantine, had restored to him. Lucilla and her friends joined them, with all the fanatics and enemies of the acting clergy in Carthage. Caecilian was summoned to appear before them. Naturally, he refused,^ not being in any way subject to the jurisdiction of this irregular assembly, whose first duty should have been to recognize him as its head. His case was judged by default. It was decided that Felix of Aptonga, who consecrated him, having been a traditor, his ordination was null and void ; he was also condemned for his attitude, as deacon to Mensurius, with regard to the imprisoned confessors. As at the council of 256, each of the bishops present gave a vote with reasons assigned. Several bishops from the neighbour- hood of Carthage were condemned with Caecilian ; and first and foremost, Felix of Aptonga ; all on the ground that they were guilty of being traditores. Without adjourning, the bishops then elected and ordained, in place of Caecilian, a reader called Majorinus, who belonged to the house of Lucilla. The latter, now finally revenged upon her bishop, did not fail to reward those who ' Optatus relates {De schism, i. 19) that Caecilian, learning that the power of his consecrators to ordain him was disputed, exclaimed : " Very well ! Let them ordain me themselves, then, if they think I am not a bishop." Purpurius had then thought of allowing him to come, and of laying his hands upon him, not as a bishop, but as a penitent, which would have meant excluding him from the clergy altogether. These ideas, or that of Purpurius at least, are sufficiently probable. 1'. lu.s-9] SCHISjM at CARTHAGE 85 had helped her, and sent considerable sums to Numidia.^ To anyone who really understood the circumstances, this council must have presented a singular spectacle. From authentic documents it is clear that several, and those the most influential, of its members were traditores whose guilt was established ; and that upon others, and upon Secundus himself, rested very grave suspicions in that respect. This did not prevent them from posing as defenders of the saints, full of righteous indignation at the position of Caecilian's consecrator. But their sins were ngt known in Carthage ; some ten years had still to elapse before they came to the knowledge of the public. In the eyes of many people at the time, they had the appearance of being upright and zealous judges ; Majorinus was soon surrounded by a powerful party. However, the churches were in the power of Csecilian. It was he whom the government consulted in all the negotiations relating to the settlement of the last crisis.-^ In a letter, addressed to him by the emperor,^ Constantine, already acquainted with the divisions in the African Church, invited Caecilian to seek the support of the pro- consul Anulinus and the Vicarius Patricius, against those who were the cause of disturbances. It was then the month of April, 313. One day the proconsul was accosted in the street by a large crowd of persons, the leaders of whom presented him with two documents, one sealed, the other open. The first bore the inscription : " Plaints of the Catholic Church against Caicilian, presented by the party of Majorinus." The other was a brief petition, in the following terms : " We appeal to you, our good Emperor Constantine, for you come of a just race ; your father, unlike the other emperors, never practised persecution, and Gaul remained free from that crime. In Africa, quarrels have arisen between us and the other bishops. We implore your ' Four hundred /c//i?j ; nearly sixty thousand francs (^2,400). - Letters in Eusebius, H. E. x. 5, 6, 7. •^ Eusebius, //. E. x. 6. 86 THE SCHISMS [ch. in. Piety to send us judges from Gaul. Given by Lucian, Dignus, Nasutius, Capito, Fidentius, and other bishops of the party of Majorinus." ^ The proconsul received these documents, and forwarded them. Constantine thus found himself in the same situation as Aurelian at Antioch, forty years before, that of being made cognizant of a dispute between two Christian parties, and interested by his regard for public order that it should be cut short as effectually as possible. But Constantine was personally influenced in this affair by sympathies quite different from those of Aurelian. Besides, he was not requested to pronounce judgment himself upon the dispute, but/ to submit it to the consideration of bishops in a specified country. The dissenting Africans obtained the judges they asked for. The emperor selected Rheticius, Bishop of Autun, Maternus of Cologne, and Marinus of Aries. At the same time, he thought it his duty to send them to Rome, and entrust Pope Miltiades with the office of presiding over and controlling the debates. To this end he communicated to the Pope- the act of accusation received by Anulinus, and took measures to arrange that Ceecilian should come to Rome, with ten African bishops of his own party and ten of the adverse party. The tribunal assembled in the house of Fausta, at the Lateran,^ on October 2, 313; there were three sittings.* By agreement with the emperor, the Pope had added to the bishops from Gaul fifteen Italian prelates^; so that ^ . . . ^/ caeteris episcopis partis Dottafi, runs the transcription of this document in Optatus i. 22. But here, the ending has been retouched. ^ Letter from Constantine to Pope Miltiades in Eusebius, H. E. x. 5, ^ This is the first time that the Lateran is mentioned in ecclesi- astical documents. Perhaps the house of Fausta had already been ceded to the Roman Church, either as a gracious gift or in compensa- tion for some confiscated property. * The formal record of the first sitting was read at the conference of 411 (iii. 320-336, 403, 540 ; Brev. iii. 24, 31). A large fragment in Optatus, Dc schism, i. 23, 24 ; cf. Aug. Contra cp. Parnien. i. 10 ; Ep. 43, 5, 14 ; Ad Donat. 56, etc. " The Bishops of Milan, Pisa, Florence, Sienna, Rimini, Faenza, Capua, Beneventum, Quintiana {Labicuiii), Preneste, Tres Tabernae, p. Ill] ROMAN COUNCIL IN 313 87 there were nineteen bishops in all. Donatus of Casae Nigrae led the chorus of the opposition. Requested to state what was their cause of complaint against Caecilian, they declared that they had no personal objection to him, and postponed to another sitting the statement and the proof of the objections which they raised to his ordina- tion.^ Donatus, however, formulated some causes of complaint which he could not substantiate. This led to his being accused himself It was shown that, even before the ordination of Caecilian, he had been a fomenter of schism in Carthage ; he admitted that he had performed rebaptism, no doubt upon apostates,- and that he had laid hands on bishops who were lapsi^ both of them things contrary to the rules of the Church. No more was done on the first day. At the second sitting the adversaries of Caecilian refrained from putting in an appearance : the third day was given up to the votes, which the judges pronounced one after the other, first against Donatus, and then in favour of Cscilian. We still possess that of Pope Miltiades, who spoke last: "Whereas Caecilian has not been accused by those who came with Donatus, as they had announced,^ and as he has not been upon any point convicted by Donatus, I think it is right to support him entirely in his ecclesiastical communion." ^ The schismatics were thus condemned and by the very Ostia, For^in Claiidii^ Terracina, Ursinum ij) ; this last name may perhaps represent Bolsena {Vulsinii), perhaps Urbino {Urvinunt). ^ It is thus that we may reconcile two points in St Augustine's summary : ubi accusatores Caeciliani qui inissi fuerant negaverunt se habere quod in eutn dicerent . . . ubi etiam promiserunt iidetn ad- versarii Caeciliani alio die se repraesetttaturos quos causae necessaries subtraxissc argucbantur. I think they intended to direct the debate upon the consecrator, Felix of Aptonga. 2 The rebaptism of heretics was still practised by everyone in Africa. There was no reason to complain of Donatus on that account. As to his laying hands on the bishops, we cannot quite see whether it was a case of reordination or readmission of penitents ; both were inadmissible, according to received custom. ^ Juxta profcssionem siuwi ; these words are not very clear. •* That is to say, in his position with regard to communion with them, such as he had before the schism. 88 THE SCHISMS [ch. hi. judges whom they themselves had demanded. They set out on their return to Africa, but did not consider them- selves beaten, and soon appeared again to assail the emperor with their protestations. The affair, they said, had not been examined properly, and in detail. From that time, Constantine had very little respect for these disturbers of the peace ; he had willingly concurred in the judgment of the Roman council. But the accounts which his officials sent him from Africa were not reassur- ing. A little spark had kindled a great fire. Division was raging everywhere. Some of the bishops recognized Majorinus, others Csecilian ; often, in the same town, two parties organized themselves, one against the other. There were two bishops at Carthage ; and the same state of things reproduced itself elsewhere. The minds of men were excited to an extreme degree : the followers of Majorinus called themselves the Church of the Martyrs, as the Meletians of Egypt had done, and described the others as the party of " the traitors." In such an over-heated atmosphere as this, the Church quarrels soon degenerated into acts of violence and street fights. The government was therefore justified in interfering in this unfortunate affair, however paltry it might seem, and in endeavouring to settle it. Constantine decided to have the case tried over again. To this end he convoked a great council in Gaul, at Aries, to meet on August i, 314.^ It actually took place.- The schismatics supported their cause there ^ We still have the letter of summons, addressed to the Bishop of Syracuse, Chrestus (Eusebius, fl. E. x. 5), and the order given to the Vicariiis of Africa, yElafius, to send to Aries a certain number of African bishops of both parties (Migne, P. L. vol, viii., p. 483). 2 With reference to this council, we possess a letter addressed to Pope Silvester, of which several recensions exist. That of the Sylloge Optattana (Vienna Corpus scriptorum eccl. latinorum, vol. xxvi,, p. 206) gives the convening letter in full, and an abridgment of the canons of the council ; it is otherwise in the recension of the collections of canons which also contains the signatures of the members of the assembly. The following Churches were represented p. 114] COUNCIL OF ARLES, 314 89 with their usual insolence, which produced a most un- favourable impression. The bishops could scarcely recognize such enraged fanatics as Christians.^ Not only did they refuse to listen to their accusations, but they condemned the accusers themselves. They also laid down the principles which ought to decide the matter : " Whoever shall have given up the Holy Scriptures or the sacred vessels, or betrayed the names of his brethren, ought to be removed from the ranks of the clergy ; always provided that the facts against him be confirmed by official documents {cictis publicis)^ and not by mere rumours. If any such person has conferred ordination, and there is no cause of complaint against those he has ordained, the ordination so conferred cannot prejudice him who has received it. And, as there are some people who, against ecclesiastical rule, claim the right of being admitted as accusers, while supported by suborned witnesses, such persons must not be admitted, unless, as we said before, they can produce official documents." '-^ Nothing could be wiser. It was necessary to put a stop to the accusations, by which, almost everywhere, the clergy were threatened by the discontented, to punish those who were really guilty, to secure peace to the innocent, and to pass condemnation in doubtful cases. The Council of Aries profited by this opportunity to regulate various points of discipline. We may note here the understanding which was then established, at the Council of Aries either by their bishops or by other clerics. Italy : Rome, Portus, Centumcellae, Ostia, Capua, Arpi, Syracuse, Cagliari, Milan, Aquileia ; Dalniatia : a bishop, whose name is lost; Gaul: Aries, Vienne, Marseille, Vaison, Orange, Apt, Nice, Bordeaux, Gabales, Eauze, Lyon, Autun, Rouen, Reims, Treves, Cologne ; Britain : London, York, Lincoln, and perhaps a fourth Church ; Spain : Emerita, Tarragona, Saragossa, Basti, Ursona, and another Church of Bastica ; Africa : Carthage, Cassarea in Mauritania, Utina, Utica, Thuburbo, Beneventum (?), Pocofeltis (.?), Legisvolumini (?), Vera (.''). ' Graves ac perniciosos Icgi nostrac atqiie traditioni cffrotatacqiie metitis homines pertuliiniis. Letter to Silvester. " Can. I s. 90 THE SCHISMS [ch. hi. upon the question of the baptism of heretics, between the Church on the continent of Europe and the Africans, those of them, at least, who followed Caecilian. The African Church renounced the custom, for which Cyprian had fought so ardently sixty years before, and promised to conform to the rule observed at Rome and in the other Churches of the West.^ The decision at Aries was not without effect ; a certain number of the dissidents joined themselves to Caecilian - ; but the leaders remained obstinate. As little satisfied with the Council of Aries as they had been with the Council of Rome, they again hastened to appeal to the prince who had given them this twofold opportunity of justifying their position. Constantine was extremely irritated at their obstinacy. Nevertheless, he was willing to exhaust all means of conciliation, and accepted their appeal.^ Either before or after the Council of Aries,'* it had been decided by both parties to investigate the affair of Felix of Aptonga and his " surrender." The Donatists ^ had conceived the idea of going to the fountain-head, and obtaining a certificate from the municipal magistrates of Aptonga to the effect that Bishop Felix had really surrendered the Holy Scriptures in 303. The duumvir who had then been in office, Alfius Caecilianus, was still alive. To him was sent a certain Ingentius, with instruc- tions to get the necessary document from him. Alfius was a respectable pagan, sufficiently astute to guess at 1 Can. 8. - Aug. Brcv. Coll. iii. 37. 3 Letter of Constantine to the bishops of the Council of Aries, Actema, religiosa (Migne, P. L. vol. viii., p. 487). * The date is not so exact as we could wish. We know that the Council of Aries was convened for August i, 314; but there is nothing to prove that it assembled exactly at that time, and we do not know how long the bishops remained assembled. However, it was certainly held in 314. {Melanges de I'Ecole de Ro/ne,vo\. x., p. 644)- ^ We may now employ that term, because the celebrated Donatus, from whom the party took its name, must by that time have succeeded Majorinus. p. 116] THE CASE OF FELIX OF APTONGA 91 once that they desired to take advantage of him, and he refused to speak. However, one of his friends, Augentius, who had influence over him, was induced to intervene, and he was told that Bishop Felix, having received in trust several precious books which he did not wish to give up, desired a certificate that they had been burnt during the persecution. The honest Alfius was scandalized at this disclosure : — " Here is a sample," he said, "of the good faith of Christians!" But he consented to write to Felix a letter in which he recalled to him what had happened in 303 ; how he had, in the absence of the bishop, seized the church, taken away the bishop's throne, burnt the doors and the correspondence {epistolas salutatorias). The Donatist agent was obliged to be content with this not very compromising document. When he returned home, he made haste to complete it by a post-script of quite a different meaning. This letter, however, did not constitute an official document. To give it that character, it was planned to obtain its authentication by the curia of Carthage. Tak- ing advantage of a journey which the dwunvir Alfius had taken to the capital, they summoned him to appear — at the request of a certain Maximus, another Donatist agent — before " Aurelius Didymus Speretius, priest of Jupiter Optimus Maximus, duumvir of the illustrious colony of Carthage," in order to certify the notorious letter. It was increased by the post-script ; but whether because he was not allowed to read the whole, or from some other cause, Alfius declared himself to be the author of the document. This formal appearance took place on August 19, 314.^ The government also instituted enquiries of its own. By command of the emperor, the vicariiis .^lius Paulinus summoned the ^^-duuvivir Alfius and his recorder from Aptonga. They had to wait a long time at Carthage,- for yElius Paulinus had just then been replaced, and his ' " Gesta purgationis Felicis " {P. L. vol. viii., p. 718 et seq. ; Corpus scriptorum ecclesiasticortini latinoruvi, vol. xxvi., p. 197 et seq.). '^ It was perhaps during this stay that Alfius Ctecilianus appeared before the duumvir of Carthage. 92 THE SCHISMS [ch. iii. successor, Verus, fell ill, so that the proconsul yElianus was obliged to take charge of the matter. He summoned before him, not only Alfius, but also a centurion named Superius ; a former curator, Saturninus ; the curator then in office, Calibius ; and a public slave, Solon. These were all carefully interrogated at the proconsular audience on February 15, 315. Alfius, being summoned to identify his letter, examined it more closely, and declared that the clauses compromising Bishop Felix had been added later, and had not been dictated by him. The forger, Ingentius, also appeared ; he was not put on the rack, because he happened to be dccurion of a small town ; but he confessed, without torture, that he had added the post-script to Alfius' letter to revenge himself upon Bishop Felix, against whom he had some grudge. The report was despatched to the emperor, who summoned Ingentius to appear before him.^ Constantino was much embarrassed by this affair, for he saw quite plainly that there was no way of inducing such fanatics to submit with a good grace. At first he thought of sending some trustworthy persons to Africa, after sending back there - the Donatist bishops who were prosecuting the interests of their own party at his court. Some days after, he changed his mind, kept them with him,^ and summoned both parties to Rome, where he spent the summer. The Donatists came, but Caecilian, we do not know why, did not appear. The emperor was very angry at this. He threatened to go himself to Africa, and teach both parties "how the Divinity ought to be worshipped."^ Another year passed by. Constantine succeeded in bringing together the two leaders, Caecilian and his rival Donatus, the successor of Majorinus as head of the opposi- 1 Letter of Constantine to the proconsul Probianus, successor of ^lianus, P. L. vol. viii., p. 489. 2 Before April 28, 315, the date of the document " Quoniam Lucianum," P. L. vol. viii., p. 749 ; Corpus, p. 202. ^ Letter "Ante paucos," ibid., p. 489 ; Corpus, p. 210. ^ Letter " Perseverare Menalium," ibid. ; Corpus, p. 211. p. 119] CONSTANTINE AND DONATISM 93 tion Church. A formal debate took place, at the end of which the emperor declared himself in favour of Caecilian. A communication of his decision was at once made to the vicarius of Africa, Eumelius.^ Nevertheless, the emperor wished to see if, in the absence of the two bishops, it would not be possible to reunite the two Churches. To this end, he kept Donatus and Caecilian in Italy, and sent two commissioners to Carthage, the Bishops Eunomius and Olympius.'- These spent forty days there, trying their utmost to bring about an under- standing ; but their mission of peace was opposed by the violence of the rebels. The bishops ended by declaring that those alone were Catholics who were in agreement with the Church spread throughout the whole world, and in consequence entered into communion with Caecilian's clergy. The wiser spirits of the opposing party also came over to their side ; but the majority remained inflexible. Donatus managed to elude the watch set over him, and returned to Carthage ; Caecilian did the same : and the religious war continued as fiercely as ever. Constantine tried rude measures. The Donatists had possession of a certain number of churches in Carthage. He gave orders that these churches should be taken from them,^ and, as they resisted, proceedings manic militari were resorted to. Nothing could have suited the enthusiasts of the party better : the champions of the martyrs could now look forward to becoming martyrs themselves. With regard to the impression made upon them by the execution of the law, we still possess a curious document relating to their eviction from three churches in Carthage.^ During the first eviction, no blood was spilt, but the soldiers ' Letter of November lo, 316, produced at the conference of 411 (iii. 456, 460, 494, 515-517, 520-530, 532, 535 ; Brev. iii. 37, 38, 41). Cf. Aug. Contra Cresc. iii. 16, 67, 82 ; iv. 9 ; Ad Don. ig, 33, 56 ; De imitate eccl. 46 ; Ep. 43, 20 ; 53, 5 ; 76, 2 ; 88, 3 ; 89, 3 ; 105, 8. - Upon this mission, see Optatus, i. 26. ^ A law mentioned by St Augustine, Ep. 88, 3 ; 105, 2, 9 ; Contra lift. Petiliani, ii. 205 ; cf. Cod. Thcod,., xvi. 6, 2. ' " Sermo de passione SS. Donati et Advocati," P. L. vol. viii., p. 752. 94 THE SCHISMS [ch. hi. installed themselves in the church, and gave themselves to riot and debauchery ; in the second, the Donatists were attacked and beaten ; one of them, the Bishop of Sicilibba, was wounded ; in the third, there was a veritable massacre ; several persons were killed, notably the Bishop of Advocata.^ Summary executions of this kind took place, no doubt, in many places ; a certain number of people were exiled, either by way of precaution, or for having resisted eviction.^ But all proved ineffectual. The schism spread from one end of Roman Africa to the other, in spite of all the decisions, and in spite of the futility of the original strife. People made up their minds to being unsupported in their opinions ; as to the decisions of emperor or bishop, no notice was taken of them ; communion with the Churches over the sea counted for nothing. The Church no longer existed save in Africa, and in the party over which Donatus presided. Donatus was not an ordinary man. He was intelligent and well educated,^ and of ascetic morality ; he ruled with a very high hand the strange following whose chief he was, and among whom we are a little astonished to find him. But, like Tertullian, Donatus was very domineering, and in his own world, such as it was, he reigned supreme. His followers, who were very proud of him, treated him as a being of a higher order than themselves. If the schism flourished at Carthage, and in the pro- consular province, this was nothing in comparison with 1 If strictly pressed, all these things may have happened in the same church ; the account is more eloquent than lucid. Cf. the conjectures of M. Gauckler {Comptes rendus de P Academic des In- scriptions, 1 898, p. 499), and of M. Gsell {Melanges de VEcole de Rome, 1899, p. 60) upon the name Advocata and of the bishop killed in this affair. ^ The comes Leontius and the dti.v Ursacius, who were concerned in these reprisals, left a memory odious to the Donatists. Upon these personages, see Pallu de Lessert, Pastes des provinces africaines, vol. ii., pp. 174, 233. 3 No writing of his has been preserved. St Jerome {De viris, 93) knew of Donatus' many writings pertaining to his heresy {multa ad suam haeresim pertinentia), and also a treatise on the Holy Spirit, in conformity with Arian doctrine. p. 121] DONATISM IN NUMIDIA 95 its success in Numidia. There, almost everyone was Donatist. The Catholics in those parts had a very hard life. They were forced to realize the emptiness of official protection. No one wished to have anything to do with them, not only from a religious point of view, but even in ordinary life. No one spoke to them, no one answered their letters ; everyone sought occasions for insulting them, and at a pinch for murdering them : " What communication can there be between the sons of the martyrs and the followers of traitors ? " The " sons of the martyrs " had a severe trial in 320. In that year, a conflict arose between the Bishop of Cirta (called at this time Constantina) and one of his deacons. This bishop was Silvanus, one of the original supporters and leaders of Donatism. The deacon Nundinarius had been excommunicated by him — we do not know for what reason ; he claimed even to have been pelted to some extent with stones. He went to complain to various bishops in the district, threatening, if reparation were not given him in Constantina, to reveal dangerous secrets. The prelates, to whom he appealed, tried to intervene ; some of them were interested in securing the deacon's silence. But they could not succeed in closing his mouth, and the dispute ended in an official enquiry, over which the consularis of Numidia, Zenophilus, presided in due form. The government was not at all sorry to take the great Donatist leaders red-handed in this way, and to discredit them in the public opinion. The matter was examined at a public hearing, at the request of Nundinarius, on December 13, 320. The formal record respecting the seizure of the church at Cirta, in 303, was produced, and it appeared from this that Silvanus, then a sub-deacon, had assisted his bishop in giving up to the magistrates the sacred vessels of his church. This enemy of traditores, who for years was engaged in railing against them, had been himself a traditor. The fact was established by evidence, that Silvanus and Purpurius, the notorious and violent Bishop of Limata, were thieves ; that they had appropriated jars 96 THE SCHISMS [ch. hi. of vinegar belonging to the fiscal authorities and deposited in a temple, one taking possession of the contents, and the other of the jars ; that Lucilla, the great patroness of the schism, had rewarded the services of the Numidian bishops, or (and this was a still more serious matter) that some of them had appropriated the alms which she had entrusted to them for distribution among the poor ; also, that Silvanus had received money for the ordination of a priest. Nundinarius also brought forward evidence with regard to the election of Silvanus, which proved the strong dislike with which it had been regarded by a section of the people, and in addition a strange record, in which the consecrators of that bishop confessed to having been guilty of various acts of traditio} As a result of this, a circumstantial account of the whole affair was drawn up, of which only a portion remains to us. Silvanus was exiled, it would be hard to say exactly for what reason ; the misdeeds with which Nundinarius reproached him were, after all, mostly of an ecclesiastical character,^ and did not fall under the operation of legal penalties ; we are led to conclude that he was considered as an instigator of disorder, and that therefore, like several others, he was banished in the interests of public tranquillity. The Donatists in the time of St Augustine said that, during the " persecution " of Ursacius and Zenophilus, Silvanus was exiled for not having wished to unite with the rest of the Church {coimnunicare)? It was not long before he returned, and with him the other exiles. Constantine, finding it impossible to subdue them by severe measures, soon decided, on their request, to let them alone. The letter of May 5, 321, in which he notifies this decision to the vicarins Verinus,^ is as severe ' A document already made use of above, p, 80. 2 However, the theft of jars of vinegar was a crime according to common law. ^ Aug. Contra Cresc. iii. 30. ■* Petition of the Donatists, and letter to the vkatius : Coll. iii. 541-552 ; Brev. iii. 39, 40, 42 ; Aug. Ep. 141, 9 ; Ad Don. 56. p. 124] ATTITUDE OF CONST ANTINE 97 as it could possibly be to the Donatists. It is the same with another letter which he wrote, a little later, to the Catholic bishops, enjoining them to bear patiently with the insults of their liberated enemies.^ The emperor loved to persuade himself that the agitators were but few in number, and could easily be gained by methods of kindness. A fond illusion in administrative affairs ! He discovered only too soon upon what kind of gratitude he could rely. At Constantina, the episcopal city of the notorious Silvanus, he had constructed, at his own cost, a basilica for the use of Catholics. As soon as the building was finished, the Donatists took possession of it, and no official summons, no judicial decisions, no imperial letters, could induce them to give it up. Constantine found himself obliged to build another church. The best proof we have of the supremacy of the Donatist party in Numidia is, that they had succeeded in depriving the Catholic clergy of their immunity from the duties of the curia, and other similar offices, a privilege which had already been granted to them by the State. For this purpose also the emperor was obliged to interfere. We must add that, while he thus left the African Catholics to their fate, he carefully preached to them, in the most edifying terms, the forgiveness of injuries ! - This must have been small comfort in tribulations which were only too real. 1 Migne, P. L. vol. viii., p. 491 : Quod fides. 2 Letter " Cum summi Dei," Sardica, February 5, 330 {P. L. vol. viii., p. 531) ; law of the same day in the Theodosian Code, xvi. 2, 7. 11 CHAPTER IV ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NIC^A The parishes of Alexandria. Arius of Baucalis : his doctrine. Conflict with traditional teaching. The deposition of Arius and his followers. Arius is supported in Syria and at Nicomedia. His return to Alexandria : his Thalia. Intervention of Con- stantine. Debate on the Paschal question. The Council of Nicaea. Presence of the Emperor. Arius again condemned. Settlement of the Meletian affair, and of the Paschal question. Compilation of the Creed. Disciplinary canons. Tht Homoousios. First attempts at reaction. After the martyrdom of Peter (t3i2), the Church of Alexandria had for a short time at its head Achillas, one of the former masters of the Catechetical School. His tenure of office lasted but a few months, and he was succeeded by Alexander. Both of them had cause of complaint against Meletius and his schism ; but Alexander had besides trouble with Arius, one of his priests, and this difficulty was a great event in the history of the Church. The city of Alexandria contained at that time, and subsequently, several churches controlled with a certain measure of independence by special priests. St Epiphanius ^ mentions several of these churches — e.g., those of Dionysius, of Theonas, of Pierius, of Serapion, of Perscxa, of Dizya, of Mendidion, of Annianus, and of Baucalis, which, perhaps, do not all date back to the time of which we are now speaking. Over all the members of these churches, both clergy and laity, the bishop had superior authority. To 1 Haer. Ixix. 3. p. 126] THE CLERGY OF ALEXANDRIA 99 ensure the maintenance of this, and to preserve the unity of the flock, regular meetings assembled the priests and deacons together around the supreme head of the local Church. But there were decentralizing influences at work. The Alexandrian priests remembered the time when they themselves ordained their bishop.^ During the episcopate of Alexander, one of them, named Kolluthus, asserted once more this power of ordination, and began to hallow priests and deacons, without any reference to his ecclesi- astical superior. But quite another matter presented itself. About the year 318,- the priest of Baucalis, Arius, began to excite much discussion. He had already been talked about with regard to the Meletian schism, with which he seems to have been mixed up for some time. After somewhat wavering as to his course, during the episcopate of Peter and Achillas, he ended by regaining his balance under Alexander. He was an elderly man, tall and thin, of melancholy looks, and an aspect which showed traces of his austerities. He was known to be an ascetic, as could be seen from his costume, which consisted of a short tunic without sleeves, over which he threw a sort of scarf, by way of a cloak. His manner of speaking was gentle : his addresses were persuasive. The conse- crated virgins, who were very numerous in Alexandria, held him in great esteem ; among the higher clergy he counted many staunch supporters.^ ^ See Vol. I., p. 69. Some traces of this custom must have remained, for it is still mentioned in the 5th century. {Apopht/ieg?nata Patrum, ii. 78 ; Migne, P. G. vol. Ixv,, p. 341). ^ This is all we can say, for the chronology of these early times is very inexact. As it is impossible to place all the events between the victory of Constantine over Licinius and the Council of Nicaea, we have to go back to a period before the persecution of Licinius. ^ With regard to the beginnings of the affair of Arius, apart from the official documents, vv'hich will be quoted later, we have hardly any serviceable information. The historical accounts are generally of late date, hasty, and confused. Yet some details can be gleaned from St Epiphanius {Hacr. Ixix,), and especially from Sozomen, i. 15, 100 ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NIC^A [ch. iv. Indeed, he had a party and a doctrine of his own. In Alexandria, it was not at all an exceptional thing to have a doctrine of one's own. We have seen before what could be taught, in the days when Clement and Origen ruled over the Catechetical School. That school was still in existence, and had abandoned neither the ideas nor the methods of its former masters. But still it was only a school ; the teaching of Arius was given in the name of the Church. And the Church recognized at once that it raised difficulties. Later on, the Meletians claimed to have had their part in the recognition of this, and said that it was they who had awakened the bishop's attention. It seems more probable that the opposition against Arius originated with KoUuthus, one of his colleagues, perhaps the same man with whom we have just been concerned. But however that may be, Arius was called upon for an explanation. During his youth, he had attended, in Antioch, the school of the celebrated Lucian. It was from this quarter that he had derived his system, which can be summarized in a few words. "God is One, eternal, and unbegotten.^ Other beings are His creatures, the Logos first of all. Like the other creatures, the Logos was taken out of nothingness (e^ ovK ovTODv) and not from the Divine Substance ; there was a time when He was not (»)i/ ore ovk tjv) ; He was created, not necessarily, but voluntarily. Himself a creature of God, He is the Creator of all other beings, and this relationship justifies the title of God, which is improperly given to Him. God adopted Him as Son in prevision of His merits, for He is free, susceptible of change (rpeTrrog), and it is by His own will that He who had before him documents which we do not possess in their entirety. According to him, Arius belonged at first to the party of Meletius ; having then joined Bishop Peter and been ordained deacon, he again quarrelled with his superior. Under Achillas, he may have resumed his functions, and may even have been promoted to the dignity of the priesthood. Cf. supra, p. 78. 1 In those days scarcely any difference was recognized between yei>rjT6? (become) and ■yewijTos (begotten), any more than between their contraries dy^i/rjTos and ayiwy^To^. p. 128] THE LOGOS-DOCTRINE AND ARIANISM 101 determined Himself on the side of good. From this sonship by adoption results no real participation in the Divinity, no true likeness to It. God can have no like. The Holy Spirit is the first of the creatures of the Logos ; He is still less God than the Logos. The Logos was made flesh, in the sense that He fulfilled in Jesus Christ the functions of a soul." This idea of the Word as a creature, however remote from received tradition, was yet not without connection with certain theological systems professed at an earlier date. From the time of Philo to that of Origen and Plotinus, leaving, of course. Gnosticism out of account, all religious thinkers formulated the idea of the Word with cosmo- logical prepossessions in their minds. Their abstract God, their Being in Itself, ineffable and inaccessible, was so absolutely opposed to the world of sense, that there was no means of passing from one to the other, except through an intermediary who should participate in both. The Word proceeded from God, from the Divine Essence; but as He contained in Himself, in addition to the creative power, the idea, the pattern of the creation. He fell, in certain respects, within the category of the created. How- ever like the Father He might be represented as being, there were none the less between them differences of capacities. Under such conditions, the problem was not resolved, but merely changed from one point to another. The two ideas of Infinite and Finite were confronted with each other, and in conflict, in the intermediate Person, The Word was linked to God by a mysterious procession, upon which there were many discussions with much use of figurative language, but which no one could clearly define. It could not easily be reconciled either with pure Monotheism or with the idea of a distinct Person, two essential data furnished by tradition, and based upon Scripture. At the time of which we are now speaking, it is remarkable that everyone seemed to be in agreement to escape from this impasse. The followers of Lucian 102 ARIUS AND THE COUxNCIL OF NIC^A [ch. iv. resolutely sacrificed the obscure idea, in favour of a clearer one ; they no longer affirmed any Procession from the Substance. The whole Divinity was contained in the Father; He alone was truly God. The Word was the First of creatures, but a creature. He was no longer God, He was essentially distinct from God. It was thus that they thought to save Monotheism, and also the personality of the pre-existing Christ. The philosophical difficulty was eliminated, but with it had disappeared the very essence of Christianity. In complete contradiction to Arius, Alexander and Athanasius held firmly to the absolute Divinity of the Word. At the risk of appearing to agree with the Modalists, they cut short all idea of procession from without, paid no heed to the asserted necessities of cosmology, maintained, as best they could, the distinction of Persons, but preserved first and foremost the identity of the Word with God. The religious aspect of the question dominated everything. The heavenly Being, incarnate in Jesus Christ, must be God without qualification, and not approximately so, or as a way of speaking. Otherwise, He would not be the Saviour. That such ideas were difficult to translate into the philosophical language of that day, is a matter which they perhaps took into consideration, but they scarcely troubled themselves on that account ; they were not concerned with cosmology, but with religion ; not with scientific pro- prieties, but with tradition.^ Besides, in treating of these Divine matters, is one called upon to explain everything ? Generatiojieni eius quis enarrabit ? This state of mind was not peculiar to the Bishop of Alexandria. We have seen instances of it elsewhere, and for a long time past. Side by side with scholastic theories, there had always been, even among highly cultivated persons, an opinion which respected these mysteries of 1 Alexander was still influenced, more or less, by his Origenist training. We see traces of this in his two letters. He was like Eusebius of Caesarea, an Origenist who had sacrificed one of the two halves of the system ; but he had kept the good half— that which was commended by its agreement with tradition. p. 131] ARIANISM AT ALEXANDRIA 103 religion, which held fast to the essential doctrines, and distrusted persons who threatened to compromise these under pretence of reconciling them with other notions, or throwing more light upon them. Bishop Peter had already given an example of this state of mind, on the throne of Alexandria. After Alexander, it was very clearly maintained by Athanasius, who was already, at the time when our present narrative begins, a deacon and adviser of his bishop. The doctrines of Arius were discussed first in the assemblies of the Alexandrian clergy, under the presidency of Alexander, who appears to have directed the debates with much moderation and kindness. The teaching given in certain churches of the city was brought forward, and it was shown to be contrary to tradition. The incriminated priests, being first entreated, and then commanded, to renounce their innovations, obstinately refused. The situation became grave. Upon one point of principal im- portance, the superior clergy of Alexandria were divided ; some, with their bishop, taught the absolute Divinity of Christ ; others, with Arius at their head, would only accord him a divinity which was relative and secondary. Such a state of things could not continue. From the moment that Arius and his followers refused to accept the teaching of their bishop, they ought to have resigned their functions. They did nothing of the kind, imagining no doubt that, in view of the independent position of the Alexandrian priests, they were rulers of the Church, quite as much as their bishop was, and had no need of his instructions. And as their number was comparatively large, Alexander thought it his duty to reinforce the authority of his decision, by summoning the whole of the Egyptian episcopate to his assistance. These indeed were beginning to be excited ; Arius had supporters amongst them. The affair was not exclusively an Alexandrian affair : it was beginning to interest all within the metro- politan jurisdiction. Nearly a hundred bishops rallied round Alexander : two of them, Secundus of Ptolemais in Cyrenaica, and Theonas of Marmarica, deserted, and 104 ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NIC.EA [ch. iv. ranged themselves on the side of Arius. They were deposed, and with them six priests and six deacons of Alexandria : the priests Arius, Achillas, Aeithales, Carpones, another Arius, and Sarmatas ; and Euzoi'us, Lucius, Julius, Menas, Helladius, and Gaius, the deacons. Mareotis also, a rural district surrounding Lake Mareotis, was represented in the list of the proscribed : either at the council, or shortly afterwards, two priests from that district. Chares and Pistus, and four deacons, Serapion, Parammon, Zosimus, and Irenaeus, openly professed their sympathy with Arius, and were deposed, as he was.^ There were not many defections in the Egyptian episcopate as a body ; but the Alexandrian clergy were very considerably affected. Arius and his followers, like Origen in bygone days, decided to leave Egypt, passed over to Palestine and settled at Ca;sarea. And, still like Origen, they met there with a warm welcome. For several years the learned Eusebius had presided over that Church. His reputation was great : his historical works and his apologies had had time to make their way. In theology, his Origenism had not remained unyielding. In particular, he had sacrificed the eternity of creation, and, therefore, Origen's reason for maintaining the eternity of the Word. At bottom, he thought like Arius ; but in proportion as the latter was clear and precise in his explanations, so did the Bishop of Caesarea excel in cloth- ing his ideas in a diffuse and flowing style, and in using many words to say nothing. We can form an idea of this from the elaborations with regard to the generation of the Word, which figure at the beginning of his Ecclesiastical History? Other bishops in Palestine, Phoenicia, and Syria held the same opinions.^ ^ See Alexander's encyclical letter, 'Yivh% cnhiiaTos, and the document annexed, Kara^ecns 'Apeiov (Migne, P. G. vol. xviii., pp. 573, 581). The encyclical was signed by seventeen priests and twenty-four deacons of Alexandria, nineteen priests and twenty deacons of Mareotis. At the head of the priests of Alexandria signs a certain Kolluthus, who may well have been the person of whom mention has already been made. - H. E. i. 2. ^ In his letter to Eusebius of Nicomedia, Arius mentions, besides V. 133-4] EUSEBIUS AT NICOMEDIA 105 The Bishop of Caesarea was not at that time, as he became afterwards, a personage in favour at court, and of assured position. This part was filled by another Eusebius, an aged prelate well versed in intrigue, who had succeeded in transferring himself from Berytus, where he had first exercised his episcopal functions, to the more important see of Nicomedia. There, in close proximity to the court, in high favour with the Empress Constantia, the sister of Constantine and the wife of Licinius, he had made for himself a position, the strength of which was soon felt. He was besides a theologian, and a disciple of Lucian of Antioch. He shared all the ideas of Arius, and for a long time had been on the coldest of terms with his colleague of Alexandria. The party could never have dreamed of more powerful patronage. Arius wrote to Eusebius from Palestine,^ and lost no time in joining him. The Bishop of Nicomedia set himself at once to work : he inundated the Orient and Asia-Minor with letters addressed to the bishops," in order to persuade them to range themselves on the side of Arius, and to support him against his own bishop,by demanding of the latter a reversal of his decision. Arius drew up an explanation of his doctrine, in the form of a letter addressed to Alex- ander^; and this was circulated in the hope of gaining many adhesions. Eusebius of Caesarea interposed several times on his behalf with the Bishop of Alexandria.* the Bishop of Cresarea, those of Lydda (Aetius), of Tyre (Paulinus), of Berytus (Gregory), of Laodicea(Theodotus), of Anazarba (Athanasius), "and'all the Easterns." Yet he himself admits that the bishops of Antioch (Philogonius), of Jerusalem (Macarius), and of Tripoli (Hellanicus) were opposed to him. There were others also. ' Epiphanius, Ixix. 6 ; Theodoret, i. 5. It is in this letter that he gives Eusebius of Nicomedia the name oi colhicianist {uvWovKiaviffra). '^ One of these letters, addressed to Paulinus of Tyre, has been preserved in Theodoret, //. E. i. 5. Paulinus seems to have had some difficulty in taking a side. ■^ Athanasius, Dc sy?wdis, 16 ; Epiphanius, Ixix. 7, 8. * Letter mentioned by Eusebius of Nicomedia, in the document quoted above, note i ; another letter, of which some fragments appear in the Acts of the Vllth CEanncnical Council^ Mansi Concilia^ vol. xiii., p. 317. Cf. Sozomcn, i. 15 ad fin. 106 ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NIC.EA [en. iv. Alexander, meanwhile, had not been idle. He wrote to all the bishops, protesting against the interference of Eusebius of Nicomedia, "who deems himself entrusted with the care of the whole Church, ever since, abandoning Berytus, he cast his spell over the Church of Nicomedia, without anyone daring to punish him for so doing," and poses as the protector of Arius and his party. Alexander then gave the names of the condemned persons, and summarized, in a brief outline, the principal features of their teaching, " more pernicious than the heresies of the past, the fore-runner of Antichrist." To this letter were added the signatures of all the clergy who had remained faithful, both in Alexandria and Mareotis.^ A copy was sent to Pope Silvester ^ ; others to the Bishop of Antioch,^ Philogonius, to Eustathius, Bishop of Berea, and to many besides. Just as Arius was collecting signatures for his profession of faith, so in the same way the messengers of Alexander were obtaining signatures everywhere for his protest against it. He gained many adherents from Syria, Lycia, Pamphylia, Asia, Cappadocia, and the neighbouring countries. He wrote * a little later to another Alexander, Bishop of Byzantium, to obtain his support also. In this letter he complains of the disturbances which the followers of Arius are causing him in Alexandria. Women were mixing themselves up with the affair ; I have already said that Arius was in high favour with the virgins. These obstinate and argumentative ladies raised one quibble after ^ It is this letter ('E;'6s crd>p.aTos) {P. G. vol. xviii., p. 572) which is called the Tome of Alexander. Dr E. Schwartz {Nachrtchteft, 1905, p. 265) wishes to reserve this title for a document preserved in a Syriac MS. in the British Museum {Add. 12, 156, copied in 562), and published by P. Martin (Pitra, Analecta Sacra., vol. iv., p. 196 ; Schwartz gives a Greek translation of it). This document seems to be derived from a copy of the Tome, addressed to a Bishop Meletius (he can hardly be the person spoken of by Eusebius, H. E. vii. 32, who speaks of him as if he were dead ; see rather Athanasius, Ep. ad episcopos Aegyptios, 8) ; topographical references of a very doubt- ful character have been added to it, as well as the signature, also suspect, of the Bishop of Antioch, Philogonius. 2 Quoted in a letter of Liberius, in 354 (Jaffe, 212). ^ Theodoret, //. E. i. 3. * P. G. vol. xviii., p. 548. p. 130] THE THALIA 107 another against their bishop. They held schismatical meetings. In short, the general disorder, which the exodus of the condemned persons had not appeased, became every day more extreme.^ The return of Arius brought matters to a crisis. A synod, assembled in Bithynia by the efforts of Eusebius of Nicomedia, had pronounced that the dissenting party ought to be admitted to communion, and that Alexander should be entreated to receive them. As he still refused, the supporters of Arius in Phoenicia and in Palestine, Eusebius of Caesarea, Paulinus of Tyre, Patrophilus of Scythopolis, and several others, in their turn assembled in council, and authorized Arius and his adherents to resume their functions, while remaining, however, at the same time under obedience to their bishop.- This latter condition was difficult to fulfil. Arius and his friends returned, counting apparently upon the number and energy of their supporters to force the hand of their ecclesiastical superior. Nothing was neglected which could excite the populace and secure their support for the opposition party. Pamphlets were circulated, and even songs. Arius had composed a long rhapsody, in which the beauties of his metaphysics were extolled. This is what is known as his Thalia, and several fragments of it have been preserved. It begins as follows : — According to the faith of God's elect. Who comprehend God, Of the holy children, The orthodox, Who have received the Holy Spirit of God, This is what I have learnt From those who possess wisdom, Well-educated people, Instructed by God, Skilled in all knowledge. It is in their footsteps, that I walk, even I, That I walk as they do, ' Arius had perhaps already returned, when the letter was written. - Sozomen, i. 15, summariEes here synodical documents which have not come down to us. 108 ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NIC^A [ch. iv. I, who am so much spoken of, I, who have suffered so much For the glory of God, I, who have received from God The wisdom and knowledge which I possess. The dock-labourers, the sailors, all the idle and the rabble in the streets, knew these songs, and shouted them into the ears of Alexander's faithful followers. Hence ensued brawls without end. Outwardly, the episcopate was greatly divided. Each of the two parties boasted of adhesions received. Letters in favour of Arius were formed into a collection ^ ; the same was done with those in support of the Bishop of Alexandria." A rhetorician of Cappadocia, called Asterius, who had apostatized during the persecution, and could not enter the ranks of the clergy on that account, spent his time travelling through the East, giving lectures to explain and defend the new theology. The public began to take interest in these questions, even the pagan public, who, of course, took advantage of this opportunity to amuse themselves at the expense of the Christians and of their beliefs. The quarrels of Arius and Alexander were even echoed in the theatres.^ It was in this state of disturbance that Constantine found the Eastern Church, when his victory over Licinius brought him into close relations with it. On his arrival at Nicomedia, he had at first intended to visit the " Orient " * immediately ; and among the reasons which prevented him, these ecclesiastical disputes held an important place. The accounts given him with regard to that at Alexandria astonished and distressed him. He had counted upon the assistance of the Greek episcopate to help him in reducing the African schism, ^ Athanasius, De synodis^ ij. '^ I cannot accept as authentic the Council of Antioch in 324, of which Dr E. Schwartz {Nachrichten, 1905, p. 171 et seq.) publishes a supposed synodical letter addressed to Alexander of Byzantium (N^as 'Fw/xrjs) from a Syriac MS. at Paris, No. 62. 3 Eusebius, V. C. i. 61. ^ By which is meant here, Syria and Egypt. p. 138] ATTITUDE OF CONSTANTINE 109 which was a grievous anxiety in his religious policy, and lo ! the Greek bishops were themselves divided. And why? For a mere nothing. Alexander had been im- prudent enough to puzzle his priests with idle questions respecting a text from the Bible ^ upon subjects of no religious importance ; and Arius, instead of keeping his own opinions to himself, had expressed and defended them with extreme obstinacy. Was this of all others the time to devote oneself to such disputations ? Could they not let such irritating and insoluble questions sleep, and live at peace in Christian brotherhood ? The emperor wrote a letter in this sense, addressed jointly to Alexander and to Arius. It was carried to them by the hand of his faithful adviser in matters ecclesiastical, Hosius, Bishop of Cordova, who had fol- lowed him to the East. Constantine implored them both, in moving terms, to be reconciled with each other, and so to restore peace to the Church, and tranquillity to their sovereign. In Constantine's method of dealing with this affair, we recognize at once the ruler and administrator favour- able towards the Christian religion, desirous even that the whole world should accept it, and that in this way a moral unity (he expressly says so) might be established, but at the same time quite incapable of interesting him- self in metaphysical questions. The kind of Christianity which the government wanted at the time was the religion of the Supreme Being {siiinnia dhnnitas), crystal- lized in the faith in Christ as Revealer and Saviour, and in the observance of the religious and moral precepts inculcated by the Church in His name. As for puzzling one's brains with regard to the smnma divinitas, and its intimate relationship with Christ, it might be all very well as a subject of study for private individuals ; different opinions might be held on such a subject ; but what was the use of producing them in public, and especially with such persistence as to provoke opposition and to ' Proverbs viii. 22. 110 ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NIC^A [ch. iv. give rise to quarrels ? ^ The State could be interested in such matters only in so far as they affected the public welfare. Hosius, who was a practical man, may have been, at bottom, of the same opinion as the emperor. Neverthe- less, when he arrived at his destination, he at once perceived that the imperial exhortation was not sufficient to calm the troubled spirits. It might perhaps have succeeded with Westerns, whose theological needs were limited. But with Greeks, who were born thinkers, talkers, and wranglers, it was quite another matter. The question could not be suppressed ; it was necessary to decide it. However, advantage was taken of the visit of Hosius, to settle certain local affairs. It was undoubtedly at that time that Kolluthus was condemned and his ordina- tions declared invalid. At all events, among them was annulled that of a certain Ischyras, who came to the surface again later and made some stir.^ On his return to Nicomedia, Hosius informed the emperor of the state of affairs, and Constantine decided to summon a great council, which, as they both thought, would succeed in restoring peace. The affair of Arius was not the only one which excited trouble. There were also the schism of Meletius in Egypt and the dispute on the calculation of Easter. The substance of the latter question may be stated as follows 3 : — The dispute in Pope Victor's time between the Church of Rome and the Churches of Asia had ended in 1 We may note, in the imperial letter, this curious comparison : " Philosophers themselves (of a school) are all in agreement as to their way of looking at things idoy/j.a') ; if sometimes they are divided with regard to some proof, this difference of opinion does not prevent them from agreeing as to essentials" (Eusebius, V. C. ii. 71). 2 Athanasius, AJ>oL contra Ar. 74. According to Socrates, iii. 7, Hosius was consulted then upon the questions of essence and of hypostasis, with regard to the Sabellians and their dogma. 3 See my memoir, "La question de la Paque au concile de Nicee," in the Revue des questions historiqtics^ vol. xxviii. (1880), p. i. p. 141] THE DATE OF EASTER 111 favour of the Roman use. Everybody agreed that the Feast of the Resurrection of Christ should take place on the Sunday after the Jewish Passover. At Antioch they allowed the Jews to fix the time of the 14th of Nisan — that is, of the full moon at which the feast was celebrated. The month of Nisan being the first lunar month, it might be placed differently, according as the preceding year had consisted of twelve or thirteen months. This latter point was decided by the Jewish authorities according to their own methods. At Alex- andria they did not trouble themselves about the Jews ; they made their own calculations for Easter, and the fluctuation of the first lunar month was put an end to by the special regulation that the feast celebrated after the full moon must be celebrated also after the vernal equinox, fixed at March 21. As the Jews — at that time, at least — took no account of the vernal equinox, the result of this was that their 14th of Nisan might occur a month before that of the Alexandrians, and that the Church of Antioch, which was accustomed to adopt it, might also find itself a month in advance of the great metropolis of Egypt. Both of the rival methods of calculating had their adherents, and, strange as it may appear to us, even passionate adherents. Great councils were no novelties to the Eastern episcopate.^ They had seen many of them in the middle ^ The formal records of the Council of Nicaea, if any were drawn up, have not been preserved. The account given by Eusebius ( V. C. iii. 22), is the only one emanating from a witness who was present ; Eustathius of Antioch (Theodoret, i. 7), and Athanasius (especially the De decretis Nicaenis and the epistle Ad Afros), who had also been present at the council, report but few details regarding it. Under the Emperor Zeno (476-491), a certain Gelasius, a native of Cyzicus, compiled in Bithynia a history of the council, in which he inserted a number of official documents. The narrative part of his collection is borrowed from Eusebius, from Rufinus (a Greek Rufinus translated by another Gelasius), from Socrates, and from Theodoret. These authors (with the exception of Rufinus) have supplied him with many documents ; he has also borrowed a certain number from a previous collection, made by a priest named John, but otherwise unknown. He had, besides, at his disposal, extracts 112 ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NIC^A [ch. iv. of the 3rd century, and since then, at which the bishops of Eastern Asia-Minor and of the Syrian provinces had assembled at Antioch or elsewhere. Alexandria itself had also v/itnessed from time to time assemblies of the Egyptian and Libyan episcopate ; one of these local councils had been summoned specially with regard to Arius. These two groups, however, had never been united ; the " Eastern " bishops had never deliberated with those of Egypt. On the present occasion, the assemblage was much larger. To the Egyptians and to the Easterns were added bishops from the whole of Asia-Minor, alike from the ancient province (now a diocese) of Asia, and from Cappadocia, Pontus, and Galatia. The provinces beyond the Bosphorus were also represented, although in a smaller proportion. Still less numerous was the representation of the Latin countries : one Pannonian bishop ; one from Gaul, the Bishop of Die ; one bishop from Calabria ; the Bishop of Carthage ; and finally, made by himself during his life at Cyzicus, from a book which had belonged to Dalmatius, the Bishop of that city, and a member of the Council of Ephesus in 431 ; this book was an artificial composi- tion, claiming to be an exact reproduction of conversations between various philosophers and the members of the council. See, on this subject, Gerhard Loeschcke, Das Syntagma dcs Gelasius Cyziccnus, a study which appeared in the Rhewisches Museum, 1905, 1906 ; the author is much too favourable to Gelasius and to the book of Dalmatius. The text of Gelasius was divided into three books ; the first two are in Migne's Patrologia gracca, vol. Ixxxv., pp. 1 192-1344 ; for the third, of which Mai {Spic. Rom. vol. vi., p. 603) has only given the table of contents, with some insignificant fragments, we must have recourse to Ceriani, Motmmenta sacra et profana, vol. i., p. 129. That which Migne gives as Book III. consists of three letters of Constantine, the first of which is really an extract from this book, as Mai's index describes it and as Ceriani has published it. It seems to have been longer {cf. Photius, cod. 88), and may have comprised the two others. As to the signatures of Nicasa, of which recensions exist in various languages {Patrum Nicacnorum tiomina, ed. Teubner [Gelzer, Hilgenfeld, Cuntz], 1898), they come to us, when completely analyzed, not from an official record simply recopied, but from an arrangement in which the names have been distributed in their geographical order. This arrangement appears to belong to the end of the 4th century. p. 143] NUMBERS AT THE COUNCIL 113 Hosius of Cordova, whom we may consider as the representative of the Spanish episcopate, and two Roman priests, sent by Pope Silvester. Even from countries situated on the extreme frontiers, from the Black Sea and from Persia, came several bishops. Thus there were to be seen at Nicaea the Bishop of Pityus, in the Caucasus, the bishop from the kingdom of Bosphorus,'- two from Armenia Magna, and lastly, one from the kingdom of Persia. The exact number of the members of the Council of Nicaea was not fixed at the outset by official documents. Eusebius of Ca^sarea,'^ who took part in this assembly, says that there were more than 250; another member of the council, Eustathius of Antioch,^ speaks of 270, Constantine of more than 300.^ This last figure is that of St Athanasius, of Pope Julius, and of Lucifer of Caliaris. In the course of time it was increased a little, to arrive at the symbolic number of 318, which was that of the servants of Abraham in his struggle against the confederate kings,^ and tradition has so fixed it. The lists which have come down to us only mention 220 names, fourteen of which are the names of diorepiscopi. It is possible that these lists may be incomplete, and, in particular, that the names of episcopal sees, the occupants of which were only represented by simple priests or other clerics,'' were not preserved at all, except in the case of the Church of Rome. ^ This is no doubt the Scythia of which Eusebius speaks, V. C. iii. 7. - V. C. iii. 8. •■' In Prov. viii. 22 (Theodoret, i. 7). ■* Letter to the Church of Alexandria, Socrates, i. 6. ^ Genesis, xiv. 14. ^ The great authority of the First CEcumenical Council caused it soon to become a theme for legends. By the end of the 4th century, various things, more or less doubtful, were related with regard to it ; and these again, in the following century, already found a place in books of history. The private legislators, to whom we owe so many apocryphal collections of canon law, at first sheltered themselves under the pretended authority of the apostles {cf. Vol. I., p. 388) ; now, we shall see them also claim authority from the three hundred and eighteen Fathers. II H 114 ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NIC.EA [ch. iv. In the spring of the year 325, all this multitude was making its way, either in the carriages of the imperial post, or on horses supplied by the emperor, towards the appointed meeting-place, which was the town of Nic^a, in Bithynia, close to the imperial residence at Nicomedia. These prelates were of widely different degrees of education. The most learned was undoubtedly Eusebius of Csesarea. Several others, such as Alexander, Eustathius of Antioch, and Marcellus of Ancyra, are known to us from writings in the anti-Arian controversy ; these questions, which had already been discussed for several years, must have been familiar to the greater part of them. Some of the number, like Leontius of Csesarea in Cappadocia, and James of Nisibis, were celebrated for their virtues. But those who were looked for most eagerly were the confessors during the Great Persecution, Paul of Neocaesarea in Syria, with his burnt hands, Amphion of Epiphania, and the Egyptians Paphnutius and Potamon, both blinded in one eye and lame from their sufferings in the mines. If this great convocation excited the curiosity of the faithful, and even of the pagans, it could not have produced a slighter impression upon those who composed it. Never before had the Church seen such a review of its official rulers. But, although he was an actual witness and actor in this scene, Eusebius scarcely gives us any information as to the details of it. What seems to have struck him most of all was the appearance of the emperor at the first meeting, and the State banquet at which he entertained the members of the council. In a great hall of the palace, seats were placed to right and left ; the bishops took their places there, and waited. Soon appeared several Christian officers, and then the emperor, clothed in the purple and in the magnificent costume which was then in fashion. It was indeed a solemn moment — this meeting between the head of the Roman State and the representatives of the Christian communities, who had been so long and so severely persecuted. Now the evil days were over : Galerius, p. 146] THE OPENING OF THE COUNCIL 115 Maximin, Licinius, all the enemies of Christ, were dead. But of the blows which they had struck the recollection was still vivid, and of those present more than one bore the marks of them. The emperor of to-day, the puissant prince who for twenty years had defended the frontiers and kept the barbarians at a distance, who had but just now restored the unity of the empire, and was holding it complete and undivided in his hand, was also the restorer of religious liberty — nay more, he was the protector and the friend of the Christians. Constantine took his place at the head of the hall. The bishop nearest to him, on his right hand,^ perhaps Eusebius of Ca^sarea, perhaps the Bishop of Antioch, better entitled to it by the superiority of his See, then spoke, and expressed to him the feelings of the assembl)% The emperor replied in Latin, and his speech was immediately translated into Greek.- After this the debates began. The emperor followed them carefully, and sometimes joined in them. In the intervals, the members of the council were his guests at the festivities by which he celebrated the twentieth year of his reign. On this occasion, Eusebius of Ca^sarea pronounced an eloquent panegyric. The emperor gave a great banquet to the bishops. On their way to it, the guard presented arms ; the confessors saw, as they had seen in other days, the glint of steel, but now there was no longer cause for fear. Many of ^ Eusebius does not specify the name. The author of the index of the chapters of his Life of Constantine (iii. ii) thought that it was the Bishop of Citsarea himself; Theodoret (i. 6) mentions Eustathius of Antioch. Hosius, as one of the immediate attendants on the emperor, was scarcely marked out for this honour. The Bishop of Antioch had already presided over the Councils of Ancyra and Neoceesarea ; it was natural that he should preside over that of Niccca. There were not yet any fixed rules of precedence ; later on, Alexandria, in these meetings, took precedence of Antioch. At the time we are now speaking of, Antioch was the residence of the Conies of the Onens, a sort of viceroy to whom Egypt was subject as well as Syria. ^ Eusebius, V. C. iii. 12, has preserved the emperor's speech. 116 ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NICE A [ch. iv. them asked themselves if it were all a dream, or if they were already in the kingdom of Christ. Apart from these celebrations, the council was busy at work. The affair of Arius came first. The question at issue was to know whether the sentence already passed upon him by his own bishop would be confirmed. Being called upon to justify himself, Arius and his followers explained their position very frankly, so much so that Alexander had no difficulty in proving how well-founded his decision was. The support which the Bishop of Nicomedia and his other partisans gave to the priest of Alexandria proved no help to him. Few persons in that assembly were disposed to listen calmly to such proposi- tions as these : " There was a time when the Son of God was not ; He was taken out of nothing ; He is a creature, a being susceptible of change," etc. The sentence of Alexander was not only sustained, but confirmed. The condemned ecclesiastics held firm ; it was not possible to reclaim one of them. Another Egyptian affair, that of Meletius and his schism, was then examined. The council recognized that Meletius was most seriously in the wrong. Nevertheless, in its desire for peace — a desire which was certainly favoured by the emperor — an arrangement was adopted, by which the Meletian clergy might still be allowed to exercise their functions, and to work with Alexander's clergy, but in subordination to him. At the same time, if the bishop appointed by Alexander were to die, the bishop set up by Meletius might replace him, provided always that he were elected according to rule, and with the approbation of the Metropolitan of Alexandria. As to Meletius himself, having regard to his special culpability, he was only allowed to retain the title of bishop, but was absolutely forbidden to exercise any pastoral functions. It was not by the advice of Athanasius that the Meletians were treated so mercifully. He knew well the kind of people with whom they were dealing, and foresaw that there would be trouble on their account in the future. The event justified his opinion. p. 148] THE CREED OF NIC.^A 117 As to the reckoning of Easter, the Bishop of Antioch and his Eastern colleagues consented to conform to the use of Alexandria, and to celebrate Easter at the same time as the other Churches. These decisions were communicated to all the Churches interested in the matter, not only by the council, but also by the emperor,^ who had made it his special duty to exercise pressure upon the dissenting party in order to bring them back to Catholic unity. It also appeared to be necessary, in view of the divisions which the affair of Arius had introduced amongst the bishops, to come to some mutual agreement upon a formula which, being admitted by everyone, might pre- vent a repetition of the theological movements of which there had been reason to complain. The only doctrinal synthesis which the Church recognized at that time was the baptismal creed, which had its origin in Rome, but which had been modified here and there, in various ways, since the very early times when it had begun to be current. Eusebius of Caesarea thought the opportunity a good one for avenging here the defeat sustained by his Egyptian friends ; he presented to the council the text of the creed in use in his own Church. It was accepted, he says, in principle : it con- tained nothing that could startle anyone. But since in regard to the special points which had been matter of dispute it remained absolutely indefinite, it was modified by introducing into it certain additions, and suppressing certain useless words. It was thus- that the celebrated Creed of Nicaea was drawn up : — * Letter of the council to the Church of Alexandria, 'E-rreiSi] t^s toD Qfov, Socrates, i. 9 ; Theodoret, i. 8 ; Gelasius, ii. 34. Letter of Constantine to the Church of Alexandria, Xaipere dyav-qTol, Socrates, i. 9 ; Gelasius, ii. 37. Letter of Constantine to the Easterns, Uecpav Xa/3wc, Eusebius, V, C. iii. 17-20; Socrates, i. 9 ; Theodoret, i. 9. 2 According to St Basil, Ep. 81 (cf. 244, 9), the drawing up of this creed was entrusted to Hermogenes, who became later Bishop of Caesarea in Cappadocia. He was undoubtedly a priest or deacon of that Church, who had, like Athanasius, accompanied his bishop to the council. 118 ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NICE A [cii. iv. " We believe in one God, Father, Almighty, author of all things, visible and invisible ; and in one Lord, Jesus Christ, the Son of God, the only begotten ^ of the Father — i.c.y of the essence of the Father, God of God, Light of Light, Very God of Very God ; begotten and not made, consubstantial with the Father, by whom all has been made ; Who for us men, and for our salvation came down, was incarnate, was made Man, suffered, was raised to life the third day, ascended into heaven, and will come to judge the living and the dead ; and in the Holy Ghost. " As to those who say : There was a time when He was not ; Before He was begotten, He was not ; He was made of nothing, or of another substance or essence - ; the Son of God is a created being, subject to change, mutable ; to such persons, the Catholic Church says Anathema." In addition to this creed, the council also drew up a certain number of ecclesiastical regulations, which it formulated in twenty canons. The internal crises of the preceding century had left in the East traces which the council endeavoured to remove. The Novatians were to be met with, more or less, through- out Asia Minor ; at Antioch, and perhaps elsewhere, Paulianists were to be found, followers of the doctrines of Paul of Samosata. With regard to the Novatians, the council {c. 8) showed itself very conciliatory. It enjoined that they should be admitted to communion, on the simple promise to accept Catholic dogmas and to hold communion with persons who had been twice married ^ and apostates who had repented. Their clergy might perform their duties in places where there were no Catholic clergy, and were merged in the latter when there were any. As to the Paulianists (r. 19), their baptism was declared invalid; they were obliged to submit to rebaptism. Their clergy also, if they wished to continue their functions, which the council admitted as a possibility, were obliged to be reordained. ^ yevvTjd^vra /xovoyevi]. ^ €| eripas inroaTdaeus 7) ovalas. ^ Of course, it is here a question of two marriages in succession — of second marriage, and not of simultaneous bigamy. p. 151] DISCIPLINARY CANONS 119 The persecution of Licinius was still of recent date ; several canons {cc. 11-14) were devoted to legislation with regard to cases of penance arising from it. With regard to clerical discipline, the council forbade the ordination of voluntary eunuchs {c. i), of neophytes {c. 2), or of penitents {cc. 9, 10) ; it forbade priests and bishops to transfer themselves from one Church to another 1 {cc. 15, 16); it forbade the clergy in general to practise usury {c. 17), and to keep under their roof any women who might give cause for suspicion {c. 3), Bishops, in each province, were to be installed by all their colleagues ; and if any of these were unable to be present, their approval was at least necessary ; the installation was to be confirmed by the bishop of the principal city, the metropolitan {c. 4). No bishop was allowed to receive, and certainly not to promote, clerics who had deserted their own Church (r. 16), or to reinstate persons who had been excommunicated by his colleagues. As there might be occasion, with regard to this point, to revise the episcopal sentences, the bishops of each province were invited to assemble twice a year in council to deliver judgment in cases of appeal {c. 5). In thus laying down its rules for the provincial relations of bishops, the council had no intention of diminishing the dignity of positions consecrated by long custom, notably that of the Bishop of Alexandria- with regard to the Churches of the whole of Egypt, of Libya and the Pentapolis ; for all these Churches the Bishop of Alexandria was the immediate superior of the local ' This decision affected the Bishops of Nicomedia and Antioch, transferred, one from Berytus, the other from Berea ; but the law had not a retrospective effect. "^ Here, the council brings forward the custom of Rome : eVfiS;; koI rw iv rrj "Pufxri ^TrtiT/viTrw tovto ffvvr)6h iariv. Actually, the Pope exercised at that time the authority of a metropolitan over the bishops of the whole of Italy. In certain Latin versions of this canon a closer definition has been attempted by restricting the metropolitical juris- diction of the Pope to the stiburbicaria loca — that is to say, to those Churches not included in the jurisdictions of Milan and Aquileia, established after the Council of Nica^a. 120 ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NIC.EA [ch. iv. bishop : there was no other metropolitan but himself. The ancient customs of Antioch and elsewhere were also to be maintained ; the Bishop of JEVia, also, was to preserve his traditional prerogatives— without prejudice, however, to the metropolitical rights of Csesarea (cc. 6, 7). Such is the ecclesiastical legislation of Nica^a,^ legislation without synthetic character, entirely determined by circum- stances, as was always the case with the legislation of the councils. It represented certainly not the general regula- tion of ecclesiastical relations, but simply the solution of a certain number of cases, to which the attention of the assembled members happened to have been called. Up to that time the Church had existed either upon un- written traditions, or upon collections of rules claiming the authority of the apostles or their disciples, but without any title which could be verified. The Councils of Elvira and of Aries were never acknowledged in the East ; those of Ancyra and Neocaesarea waited a long time before they were recognized in the West : the canons of Nicaea were accepted everywhere, from the first, and were every- where placed at the head of the authentic records of ecclesiastical law. The canons relating to discipline do not appear to have met with much opposition. It was quite otherwise with the creed. The precision of the negative formulae with which it concluded, and such expressions as " begotten of the Essence of the Father, Very God, begotten and not made, consubstantial with the Father," absolutely excluded Arianism in doctrine. The supporters of Arius, whether they came from the Lucianic school, like Eusebius of Nicomedia, or from among the Origenists who had joined their forces, like Eusebius of Caesarea, could not sign such a profession of faith without detracting from their principles. They raised great objection, in particular, to the word consubstantial, finding fault with it as not taken 1 For the sake of completeness, we may mention further two other canons, one against the encroachments of deacons {c. 18), the other against the custom of kneeling at prayers on Sunday and during the Paschal season {c. 20). p. 153] THE HOMOOUSIOS 121 from Scripture, and as having been repudiated by the Council of Antioch, in the time of Paul of Samosata. To this the orthodox party replied, that several ancient and weighty authors, Theognostus, Origen, and especially the two Dionysii, the one of Alexandria and the other of Rome, had all made use of the word in dispute, which was not, it is true, scriptural, but which clearly expressed what it was desired to teach. This last point was open to dispute, for, in itself, the word " consubstantial " was not so very clear, and, as a matter of fact, it has not always been taken in the same sense.^ But, in the creed, the truth which it was meant to express was that the Son of God belongs in no wise to the category of created beings, and that, whatever may be the mystery of His generation. His Essence is truly divine. This is the meaning of the formula, " begotten of the Essence of the Father," e/c r^? Tov Jlarpo?? tov Harpo? ovaim is very familiar, does not often use, for his own part, the word consubsta7itial. It was certainly not he nor his bishop who suggested it to the council. It appears rather as if the suggestion came from the Roman legates. For in Rome, as a matter of fact, the word was in current and official use ; sixty years before the Council of Nicaea, Dionysius of Alexandria had been reproved for his hesitation in employing it.- Since the days of Zephyrinus and Callistus, the Roman Church had always been more concerned to maintain the doctrine of absolute Monotheism and the absolute Divinity of Jesus Christ than to develop methods of reconciling these two data. This primary concern was shared by the Modalists ; and those minds with a tendency towards Sabellianism among the members of the council were attached to it in advance, notably Marcellus, the Bishop of Ancyra, of * For instance, when it is said that Christ, consubstantial with God by His divine nature, is consubstantial with us by His human nature, ^ See Vol. I., p. 352, 122 ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NIC.EA [en. iy. whom we shall soon hear more. Such supporters of the hojnoousios were not very likely, it must certainly be admitted, to recommend it to the minds of people who, ever since the time of Origen, had waged incessant war against Modalism. Indeed, the hovwoiisios only won acceptance with considerable difficulty ; it was imposed rather than received. Hosius patronized it with much energy ; and so did the Bishops of Alexandria and Antioch. The emperor made no secret of his agreement with it ; and this, for many, was a supreme argument. Opposition grew weaker ; even that of Eusebius of Cssarea, even that of the Bishops of Nicomedia and Nicsea, as well as of the whole Lucianic party. Everyone signed, except the two Libyans, Theonas and Secundus, who refused to separate themselves from their party. And, by the action of the government, they were confined in Illyricum, with Arius and his Alexandrian followers.^ How their former protectors explained their complete change of front, we can form some idea from reading the pitiful and insincere letter which the Bishop of Ca^sarea wrote without a moment's delay to his own Church. Athanasius, who was no friend of his, and with reason, took care to transmit this document to posterity, by annexing it to the work which he afterwards published on the decrees of Nica^a. It must have weighed heavily upon the conscience of its author. However, he dared not rebel openly, and waited for the hour of retaliation. Eusebius of Nicomedia and Theognis of Nicaea showed themselves less prudent. At the actual time of the council they had had a narrow escape, for the emperor, knowing their responsibility in the disturbances, wished to treat them like Arius and the others. However, nothing more was done than to force them to sign. But their opinions were unchanged ; and this was soon evident. The decisions of the council resulted at Alexandria in executive action which gave rise to many protests. " The Egyptians alone," says Eusebius, " continued, in the ^ Philostorgius, Supp. (Migne, P. G, vol. Ixv., p. 623), r. ir.fj] CONSTANTINE AND DISSENTIENTS 123 midst of the universal peace, to wage war upon each other." ^ Like the Donatists, after the Council of Aries, those who were condemned, whether Arian or Meletians, began afresh to importune the emperor. Constantine again assumed the role of arbitrator, summoned the party leaders before him, and tried to reconcile them. Eusebius and Theognis profited by this opportunity, welcomed the dissentients, as they had welcomed Arius, and vigorously undertook their defence. This was too much. The emperor could not allow a controversy scarcely extin- guished to be fanned again into flame ; and, besides, he had a grudge against Eusebius, who was regarded as having shown but a short while before too strong an attachment to Licinius. He seized the two bishops and sent them to Gaul. Then he wrote to their Churches, proposing that new bishops should be chosen - ; and this was done. The Bishop of Laodicea in Syria, Theodotus, a notorious Arian, apparently held anti-Nicene opinions. The emperor wrote also to him to explain from the example of Eusebius and Theognis what would be the consequences of his attitude. The emperor had fully made up his mind to admit no compromise in regard to the council. It was his very own council : he had been present at it ; he had even in some measure directed it ; he held resolutely to its decisions. It seemed then that everything was finished, and as if there still remained only a small group of opponents, upon whom the imperial police had their eye and their hand. But it was not so in reality ; the real struggle ' Eusebius mentions this affair, V. C. iii. 23 ; the general terms of which he makes use hardly allow us to discover whether it was a question of Arians or Meletians, or of both parties together. The same indefiniteness is displayed in the letter of Constantine mentioned below. There has been much exaggeration, in our own times, in assuming from this incident a second session of the Council of Nica^a. Eusebius in no way speaks of a new convocation of the whole episcopate, but merely of an invitation addressed to the "Egyptians." - The letter to the Church of Nicomedia is preserved in Theodoret, i. 20, and in Gelasius of Cyzicus, i. 10. 124 ARIUS AND THE COUNCIL OF NIC.EA [cii. iv. was only beginning. In the 2nd century, after various alarms, the Gnostic crisis had ended by subsiding of itself. Christianity had eliminated the morbid germs by the mere reaction of a vigorous organism. Later on, the Modalist movement, after having agitated the Churches everywhere to a certain extent, in Asia, at Rome, in Africa, Cyrenaica, and Arabia, had gradually been extin- guished or confined to a few adherents. There had been no necessity for council, or emperor, or creeds, or signatures. The dispute between Origen and his bishop, vigorous enough at the outset, had ended by settling itself without external interference. But in this affair with Arius the strongest measures were called into requisition ; and the only result was a truce of very short duration, followed by an abominable and fratricidal war, which divided the whole of Christendom, from Arabia to Spain, and only ceased at last, after sixty years of scandal, by bequeathing as a legacy for generations to come the germs of schisms, the effects of which the Church still feels. CHAPTER V EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS Eusebius of Caesarea : his learning, his relations with Constantine, The homoousios after the Council of Nicasa. Deposition of Eustathius of Antioch. Reaction against the Creed of Niceea. Athanasius, Bishop of Alexandria. First conflicts with the supporters of Meletius and of Arius. Submission of Arius : his recall from exile. New intrigues against Athanasius. Council of Tyre. Deposition of Athanasius. His first exile. Death of Arius. Marcellus of Ancyra : his doctrine, his deposi- tion. Writings of Eusebius of Caesarea against Marcellus. Constantine, in coming into contact with the episcopate of the East, had been able to form a judgment of their divisions, of the bitterness with which their disputes were maintained, and yet at the same time of the great respect which was felt among them for his own person and authority. Of this feeling of respect he did not fail to take advantage to calm troubled spirits, to waive aside inopportune complaints, and in everything to show himself favourable to peace and unity. The bishops at Nica:;a were not dismissed without many exhortations, for Constantine was the greatest preacher of sermons in his empire. He strongly recommended them not to tear each other to pieces, and especially to support those of their colleagues who were distinguished by their learning and wisdom, and to consider this great gift of some of their number as an advantage to them all. It is not without cause that Eusebius ^ has selected for ' Eusebius, V. C. iii. 21. 125 126 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [gh. v. notice this detail, which concerned himself so nearly. The emperor had immediately singled out this great scholar, regarding him with justice as an ornament to Christianity and to the episcopate. He could not disguise from himself that the Bishop of Csesarea's reputation had suffered from his defeat at the council, and, no doubt, the easy witticisms which were current with regard to him, in consequence, had come to the emperor's ears. Constantine covered him with unchanging marks of favour. Eusebius was a man of elaborate learning. He knew everything : history, biblical and profane, ancient literature, philosophy, geography, mathematical computation, and exegesis. In his great works, the Praeparatio Evangelica and the Denwnstratio Evangelica, he had explained Christianity to the educated public ; by his Chronicle and his Ecclesiastical History, he had drawn up its Annals ; he had defended Christianity against Porphyry and Hierocles. And, although already advanced in years, he continued to write. He commented upon Isaiah, the Psalter, and other books also. Was anyone in need of explanations upon the difficult question of Easter, in which exegesis, ritual, and astronomy were inextricably involved ? He was there to give them. Public attention was then beginning to be attracted towards the Holy Places. Eusebius, who knew Palestine and the Bible thoroughly, explained the names of the places and of the peoples who figure in Holy Scripture, described Judaea, and reconstructed the ancient topography of the Holy City. He excelled in formal discourses. He was the orator marked out for great ceremonial occasions, for solemn dedications, or imperial panegyrics. It was to him that the emperor had recourse, whenever he needed copies of the Bible well copied and perfectly correct. Once he asked him for fifty of these at one time, for the churches of Constantinople.^ Thus highly esteemed by his sovereign, Eusebius was in no way behindhand on his side, and took little pains to conceal his enthusiastic admiration for Constantine. 1 V. C. iv. 36. i>. 160] CONSTANTINE AND EUSEBIU8 127 He has been reproached severely for this, but most unjustly, for it was a sincere and disinterested enthusiasm. His position had been an assured one before he came in contact with Constantine, and the emperor could only add his personal favour. Constantine never set foot in Palestine. We have no knowledge of Eusebius having been near him on any other occasions but those of the Council of Nicaea (325), and the Tricennalia (335). Caesarea was a long way from Nicomedia, and the bishop was no longer of an age to take long journeys without a special reason. The years following the Council of Nicaea were sad enough for him. He could ill stomach his discomfiture, and, to speak candidly, he was not the only person who looked with a very moderate approval upon the new creed. The homooiisios insisted upon by the Romans had but few adherents in the East, unless it were in the ranks of theSabellians, or those suspected of an inclination towards their doctrines. In Egypt, the term had a very clear meaning : it signified that the Arians were heretics ; but, beyond that, the explanations of it which were given did not shine by their lucidity. In the East, properly so-called, it had also an independent signification, w'o-., that the seventy or eighty bishops who, in 268, had condemned Paul of Samosata, had made a mistake on an important point. The result was that, notwithstand- ing the promises of mutual agreement and discretion made to the emperor from various quarters, the quarrels soon recommenced. Eusebius of Caesarea and his colleague, Eustathius of Antioch, exchanged bitter letters,^ which threw little light upon the debate, and soon made it still more venomous, Eustathius was a great enemy of Origen, and an enemy of a very mili- tant kind. This was no recommendation to him at ^ Socrates, i. 23, says that he had seen episcopal letters on this subject : 'fis 5^ r^/xfij iK Sia(p6puv iiriaroKQi' evprjKafxev, as /xero. ttju avvoSov oi eniffKOTTOL Trpbs aXKrjXovs eypacpov, rj rov 6/j.oovaiov Xe'^tj rivas dierdpaTre k. t. e, St Jerome, De vtn's, 85, was also acquainted with letters of Eustathius in great numbers, itifinitae epistolae. 128 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [ch. v. Caesarea.^ At Antioch the clergy were greatly divided. Down to that time, the episcopal throne had been occupied by prelates unfavourable to the Arians ; but Antioch was the real home of Arianism : it was there that Lucian had held his school. His spiritual posterity was not entirely dispersed in other dioceses ; some had remained on the spot. This was clearly to be seen when Bishop Eustathius, quick enough himself in retort,"- began to be a subject for discussion. The quarrel grew fiercer, and ended by producing between Eustathians and anti-Eustathians a conflict of the most savage kind. Accusations of Sabellian- ism and of Polytheism were freely flung at each other's heads. Eustathius reproached the Bishop of Caesarea with betraying the faith of Nicaea ; Eusebius protested that it was not so at all, and that if Eustathius asserted it, it was because he was himself a Sabellian. Things came to such a point that a synod appeared necessary. We do not know by whom it was convoked. It was held at Antioch, and, as in the time of Paul of Samosata, the decision was given against the bishop of that great city. We do not possess its Acts; the authorities give different accounts of it.^ According to the opponents whom Eustathius had upon the spot, it was for his teaching that he was condemned, Cyrus, his successor in the see of Berea, having laid against him an accusation of Sabellianism.^ Theodoret, who wrote a century after the event, speaks of a woman who is represented as falsely accusing the bishop of ^ See the treatise of Eustathius upon the Pythian priestess and Origen's explanations with regard to that story. Cf. Bulletin critique, vol. viii., p. 5. 2 Besides the treatise on the Pythian priestess, a fragment relating to the Council of Nicsea, preserved by Theodoret, i. 7, enables us to form an idea of his style. 2 Socrates here complains of the bishops, who, he says, deposed people as impious, without stating in what their impiety consisted. * Socrates, i. 24, gets this from George of Laodicea, a notorious Arianizer who seems to reproduce a remark of Eusebius of Emesa. Cyrus himself might have been deposed upon the same doctrinal pretext. p. 162] EUSTATHIUS OF ANTIOCH 129 having seduced her.^ Athanasius gives another reason : Eustathius, it is alleged, was accused to the emperor of having insulted his mother. In this there may well have been a foundation of truth. Helena visited the East in the time of Eustathius. We know that she had a great devotion to St Lucian, the celebrated priest of Antioch, whose body, being thrown into the sea off Nicomedia, had been carried by the currents — according to the legend, by a dolphin — to the exact spot on the shore at Drepanum, where the empress was born, and where, no doubt, she had a residence. Lucian was her own special martyr ; she built a magnificent basilica in his honour. He had left a memory in Antioch which was the subject of controversy : the Arians held him in great veneration ; their adversaries were less enthusi- astic. It is quite possible that on this subject Eustathius may have let fall some indiscreet words. Later on, as we shall see, St Ambrose does not hesitate to say that Helena had been a servant girl at an inn, stabularia, which, considering the customs of that age in matters of hospitality, implied a great many things. In the days of Constantine it was not wise to push one's enquiries into early history of this kind. I should not like to affirm that the council considered this a reason for deposition, and I would rather accept, as the ground for the ecclesiastical condemnation, the motive suggested by George of Laodicea, viz., Sabellianism. But the measures taken by Constantine lead us to believe that he saw in this affair something other than a theo- logical question, and that he took note of the remarks made about his mother. Helena was empress (^Augusta) ; it was a case of lese-tnajeste. Eustathius was arrested and brought before the emperor, who, after having listened to his defence,- exiled him to Trajanopolis, in ^ Theodoret, i. 20, 21. The council seems to have admitted this assertion without any other guarantee but the woman's oath ; and she confessed later that her child was indeed the son of a Eustathius, but a blacksmith and not the bishop. All this is very doubtful, and reads like legend. 2 y^ q jji ^9. II I 130 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [ch. v Thrace, and then to PhiHppi, with a certain number of priests and deacons. He died shortly afterwards.^ It was not easy to find his successor.'^ Eustathius had many supporters ; he had also bitter enemies, for he had been very severe to the opponents, more or less avowed, of the condemnation of Arius. Antioch was in a state of effervescence ; the curia and the magistrates were divided in their opinions. A little more, and they would have come to blows in the matter. Paulinus, the unattached Bishop of Tyre,^ who was a native of Antioch, was for some time at the head of the Church there, perhaps as provisional administrator. He died at the end of six months ; then a certain Eulalius was elected bishop ; but his tenure of the see was also short, and the agitation began again. Constantine sent a cojues of his personal suite to Antioch, and a comparative calm succeeded ; a great many votes were collected in favour of Eusebius of Caesarea. Eusebius was not at all anxious to leave for the ^ St Jerome, in his De viris, says that Eustathius was exiled to Trajanopolis, and that his tomb was still to be seen there. It was, however, from Philippi (see the chronicles of Victor and Theophanes) that the remains of Eustathius were brought back to Antioch about the year 482. Socrates (i v. 14), followed by Sozomen (vi. 13), represents him as living till the time of Valens ; but there must be a confusion in this. Eustathius is never mentioned again in the documents of the time of Constantine and Constantius, in which appear the names of so many bishops in a similar situation ; besides, we know, from Theodoret (iii. 2), that Eustathius was dead when Meletius was elected Bishop of Antioch in 360. - For this, see especially Eusebius, V. C. iii. 59-62. ^ Paulinus had been, we know not why, replaced by another as Bishop of Tyre ; it was Zeno who signed in that capacity at the Council of Nicaea. Eusebius dedicated to him (shortly afterwards, it would seem) his Onomasticon. In his work against Marcellus (i. 4), Eusebius says that the Church of Antioch had claimed him as a possession of its own ; the lists of bishops of Antioch agree in placing, either before or after Eustathius, a certain Paul or Paulinus to whom they assign an episcopate of five years ; St Jerome, in his Chronicle, also mentions a Paulinus, and places him before Eustathius. Theodoret (i. 24) does not speak of him. Philostorgius (iii. 15) is very precise : he places Paulinus immediately before Eulalius, and says that he died after six months of authority. I'. K'.o] THE CHURCH OF ANTIOCH 131 inferno of Antioch his peaceful bishopric and his comfort- able library. He protested that the canons of Nica^a, in conformity with sound ecclesiastical usage, forbade the translation of bishops. The emperor commended him much for his modesty and his respect for rules ; he signified to the Syrian bishops that they must choose another candidate.^ He himself indicated to them two such candidates — Euphronius, a priest of Caesarea in Cappadocia, and George, who was at that time a priest of Arethusa, but who had formerly been ordained, and then deposed, by Alexander of Alexandria.'- They decided upon Euphronius. He was a man of the same opinions as Eulalius and Eusebius. The see of Antioch was, therefore, secured for a long time to the adversaries of Council of Nicita — secret adversaries, of course, for Con- stantine would never allow it to be attacked openly. The organizer of this concealed reaction was Eusebius of Nicomedia. His exile had only lasted three years,^ and there is no doubt that he and his friend Theognis had already returned at the time when Eustathius was deposed {c. 330). The causes of this return, so big with conse- quences, are not easily discernible.^ A complete change was really brought about in the inclinations of Constantine, with whom, henceforth, Eusebius of Nicomedia appears to have possessed considerable influence.^ Not only were ' Letters to the people of Antioch, to Eusebius, to the bishops (Theodotus, Theodore, Narcissus, Aetius, Alphius, and others), ibid. - It was he who afterwards became Bishop of Laodicea. ' This is the number given by Philostorgius. ^ I should be inclined to suspect that the account of Rufinus (i. II, vide infra), as to the recall of Arius, really refers to that of Eusebius. Constantia had no special reason for being interested in Arius. On the contrary, Eusebius, as bishop of the city in which the emperor lived, must have been known to her for a long time ; he was also distantly connected with the imperial family. We can easily understand that the widow of Licinius was distressed at the exile of Eusebius, her spiritual father and her friend. " Following Tillemont and many others, I feel myself obliged to reject the letter, which Socrates (i. 14) gives us as having been written by Eusebius and Theognis to the most important bishops (joh Kopixpalois T^v iwiaKuwwf') to Stir them up to demand their recall 132 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [ch. v. the two prelates recalled from exile, but they were also reinstated in their bishoprics, and their temporary suc- cessors were ousted. In Egypt, the aged Bishop Alexander died on April i8, 328.^ His deacon, Athanasius,- already a very prominent person, both on account of the confidence placed in him by Alexander and the part he had played at Nicasa, was immediately acclaimed as bishop, and consecrated on from exile. See the discussion in Tillemont, vol. vi., p. 810. On the other hand, it is not easy to explain the origin of this document. Perhaps Socrates may have been deceived with regard to its authors, It would suit well enough Bishops Secundus and Theonas ; in any case, it assumes Arius as rehabilitated by the bishops, an event which only took place in 335. 1 A passage of St Athanasius {Apol. coritra. Ar. 59), in which it is said that Alexander died scarcely five months after the Nicene Council, seems to contradict this date, which is furnished by the Paschal Letters and their Chronicle. On close examination, it seems to me that this interval is indicated as starting, not from the Council of NiciEa, but from the reception of the Meletians. Between the decision of Nicsea and the end of the schism in Egypt a certain time may have elapsed, and there is every appearance {vide supra^ p. 123), that after the council there were renewed discussions upon this subject. Matters of this kind are always very delicate to arrange. I should allow, then, that the schism may have dragged on until towards the end of 327. Cf. Eusebius, V. C. iii. 23. On the objections made to this date, see Gerhard LcEschcke, Rheinischcs Museum^ 1906, pp. 45-49. '^ Upon the history of St Athanasius, apart from his Apologies and his History to the Monks, we possess two chronological documents of great importance : the Chronicle of the Festal {Paschal) Letters, and what has been called the Historia acephala. The collection of the Paschal letters of Athanasius has come down to us, in an incomplete form, in a Syriac manuscript. On this text two versions have been made : one in Latin (Mai. Nova Patrum Bibliotheca, vol. vi., p. i ; Migne, P. G. vol. xxvi., p. 1351)) the other in German (Larsow, Die Festbriefe des Jieil. Athanasius, 1852) ; they leave much to be desired. At the head of each letter, various chronological indications are given, as well as the Paschal date ; then, all these chronological prefaces are repeated in another recension, and united at the head of the collection of letters. In this other recension, which has come down to us entire, appear, here and there, historical notes. The Historia acephala was first published by Maffei, from a Latin collec- tion of canons preserved at \ erona. {Veronensis 60), the collection p. 107-8] THE CHURCH OF ALEXANDRIA 133 June j} " He is an upright man and a virtuous, a good Christian, an ascetic, a real bishop ! " Such were the cries of the multitude. We must notice his description as ascetic. It secured for Athanasius, destined as he was for so much strife, the support of the Egyptian solitaries, who now began to be a religious power in that country. But his greatest source of strength lay in his own character. In addition to his gifts as an experienced pastor, God had endowed him with a clear intellect, and a wide vision of Christian tradition, of current events, and of men ; and with all this, he possessed a character of absolutel}- undaunted courage, tempered by perfect sweetness of manner, but incapable of weakening before anything or anybody. The orthodoxy of Nicaea had found its repre- sentative. Already threatened at this time, it was soon to pass through many terrible crises. At certain times, it seemed to have no other support but Athanasius. But that was enough. Athanasius had against him the empire, its police, the councils, and the episcopate : the parties were still equally balanced, while such a man stood firm. He was neither an unlettered man, nor a professional scholar. At the time when he was elected bishop, he had known as that of the deacon Theodosius (Migne, P. G. vol. xxvi., p. 1443 ; there is a much better edition by Batiffol, in the M/langes Cabricres, vol. i., "1899, p. 100). It is clear, and Mgr. Batiffol has established the fact {Byzantinischc Zcitschnft, vol. x,, 190 1, p. 130 et seq.\ that other parts of the Theodosian collection join on to the fragment of Maffei, and, like that, are derived from a sort of apologetic dossier, drawn up at the instigation of Athanasius, in 367, and then continued until his death. Mgr. Batiffol has proposed {Bys. Zeitsc/tr., I. c.) to identify this dossier wxih the Synodicon of Athanasius, mentioned by Socrates (i. 13); this is very disputable. Upon these two documents, see E, Schwartz, Ziir Geschichte des Athanasius, in the Gottingen Nachrichten, 1904, p. 333 et seq. ' His enemies dared, later on, to raise difficulties with regard to his election. They are refuted by the Egyptian Council of 340 (Athan. Apol. contra. Ar. 6), which quoted a letter addressed to the emperors by the opposition party ; doubtless the same letter which Sozomen saw (ii. 17). It was a matter of course that Athanasius did not have the votes of the supporters of Arius, of Meletius, and other schismatics. 134 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [cii. v. already published two books of apologetics/ remarkably well put together and admirably clear. But he willingly left to others the task of unravelling philosophical enigmas, or exploring the secrets of learning. It was enough for him to know how to write, and not to lose the documents which interested him. From this talent and this care his enemies fared ill. The struggle soon commenced. By the beginning of the year 330, Athanasius found himself already at variance with his flock, an estrangement due to the ill-will of the " heretics." He complains of this in his Paschal charge, but without specifying the particular intrigues which were troubling him. The little Meletian Church had joined forces with Bishop Alexander, on the conditions laid down by the Nicene Council. But on Alexander's death ^ it did not come to terms with Athanasius, and disagree- ments made themselves felt. The head of the party, after the death of Meletius, was a certain John Arkaph, Bishop of Memphis. The supporters whom Arius had left in Alexandria also began to agitate. At the beginning of 331, when Athanasius had to write the pastoral letter,^ by which the Bishops of Alexandria were accustomed to announce the Feast of Easter, he again found himself estranged from his flock and once more on account of the " heretics." "* Athanasius imposed conditions for their return to the Church which seemed to them extreme. Eusebius ' The two treatises, Ka^' 'EW^i'w;' and Tlepl ivavdpuTrrjcreus. In the first, he shows the emptiness of paganism ; in the other, he presents the justification of Christianity ; the authenticity of these books has only been disputed on worthless grounds. ' Five months after the reconcihation, according to Athanasius {Apol. contra Ar. 59), which must, therefore, have taken place towards the end of the year 327. Between the close of the Nicene Council and the reunion of the Meletians there was an interval of about two years. ^ Letter No. 3. The chronicle at the head of these letters says that Athanasius sent this letter during his journey from the court {comitaius) to Alexandria ; but there must be some confusion, on this subject, between the letter of 331 and that of 332. * Toi's wepi " kpnov, says St Athanasius {Joe. cit.) ; the reference here cannot be to Arius himself and his companions in exile. p. 169-170] ATHANASIUS AND THE MET.ETIANS 135 of Nicomedia encouraged them from his distant diocese, and sent to the young bishop written remonstrances and verbal threats. He contrived to induce Constantine to order Athanasius to readmit to communion all those who desired it, under penalty of being himself banished from Alexandria.^ Whether these threats were beginning to be executed, or some outbreak warned him to withdraw himself for a short time, it is certain that he was obliged to leave his episcopal city. He wrote to the emperor in justification of his attitude ; but the Meletians at once entered the lists. Three of their bishops, Ision, Eudaemon, and Callinicus,'- set out for the court to complain of Athanasius. He had, they said, imposed upon the Egyptians, a tribute of linen shirts. Two of his own priests. Apis and Macarius, who happened to be at court, refuted this accusation ; but the emperor commanded the bishop to appear before him. Two other accusations were then brought forward. The priest Macarius, acting upon the responsibility of his bishop, had broken a chalice during a pastoral visitation in Mareotis. And Athanasius himself had sent a large sum of money to a certain Philomenus, a person suspected of evil intentions towards the emperor's person. This last accusation was specially grave. Athanasius had in Nicomedia one powerful and faithful friend, the praetorian prefect, Ablavius. He was able to justify himself: his accusers were driven from court, and he himself, after suffering from the inclement winter, was able to return to Alexandria before the Easter of 332.2 1 Athanasius {Apol. contra Ar. 59) has preserved for us a fragment of this imperial letter ; he says that it was brought to him by the " palatines," Syncletius and Gaudentius. If this is not a lapsus memoriae^ we must allow that these officers took the same journey twice, for later on we shall find them the bearers of other imperial letters. - Apol. contra Ar. 60. Cf. Festal Letter No. 4 ; in this document, he adds to the three other accusers "the ridiculous Hieracammon, who, ashamed of his name, calls himself Eulogius." ^ The Chronicle of the Festal Letters, which advances this journey by a year, mentions a very singular cause for it ; the enemies of Athanasius had accused him of having been made a bishop when too young. That is all that it knows of in the way of accusations. Our best plan is to trust to the Apology against the Arians. 136 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [ch. v. He brought with him a letter from the emperor, in which, after a long homily on concord, were to be found a few words of commendation in reference to the bishop, while no definite censure was inflicted on his accusers.^ Athanasius reassumed the government of his Church and the usual course of his visitations as metropolitan.- During all this time, Constantine still maintained, not only his fidelity to the Nicene Council, but also his absolute repudiation of Arius, his adherents, and his sympathizers. What he wanted in the East was a Christianity at once peaceful and uniform. Shortly after the deposition of Eustathius, he published an edict ^ commanding severe measures to be taken against the dissenters of long standing, Novatians, Valentinians, Marcionites, Paulianists, Montanists, and in general against all heretics, forbidding their assemblies and confiscating their places of worship. In 332 or 333, Syncletius and Gaudentius, officials of the imperial secretariat {jiiagistriani), brought to Alexandria two letters from the emperor, addressed, one to the bishops and the faithful,* the other to Arius and the Arians.^ The latter, that to the Arians, which was of consider- able length, was officially read at the palace of the prefect, whose name at that time was Paterius. It is a very strange document ; if its authenticity were not guaranteed by so many outward indications, we should scarcely believe that so violent an invective against an unhappy exile could ever have been written by any sovereign, or in his name. But there is no room for doubt. We learn, in consequence, that at this time Constantine was still as hostile as possible to all those who had caused trouble in the Church of Alexandria, and throughout the Eastern empire. However, at the end, after threatening the heretics with certain penalties of a pecuniary character in ^ Apol. contra Ar. 61, 62. ^ In 329-330, he visited the Thebaid j in 331-332, the Libyan provinces (Pentapolis, the oasis of Amnion) ; in 333-334, Lower Egypt {Chronicle of the Festal Letters). 3 V. C. iii. 64, 65. * Toi'S irov-qpovs ... * Ka^■6s ip/J.rjVfv^ . . . p. 172] CONST ANTINE AND ARIUS 137 case they obstinately continued to support Arius, he addressed himself directly to the latter, inviting him to come and explain his position to the " man of God," as he styled himself. Arius required pressing before he would comply. He had sources of information at court. The ex-Empress Constantia,^ widow of Licinius, was well disposed to the protig^s of her old friend, Eusebius of Nicomedia. She died about this time ; but before her death she recom- mended to her brother, the emperor, a priest who was in her confidence.- This priest speedily suggested that Arius was not so far from accepting the doctrines of Nicaea as was generally believed. The emperor allowed himself to be convinced, and repeated his invitation in less hostile terms. Arius came, with Euzoius, one of his companions in exile. He had an interview with Constantine, and at last succeeded in satisfying him by giving him a profession of faith, which, though vague, was comparatively orthodox, and capable of being reconciled with the Creed of Nica^a.^ The emperor declared himself satisfied with it. He imagined that, henceforth, everyone being in agreement, nothing more remained to be done than to restore Arius and his followers to communion with the Bishop of Alexandria, But this Athanasius refused,^ a refusal which could not fail to be displeasing in high places. ^ Here we are reduced to a narrative by Rufinus, i. ii, repro- duced by Socrates, i. 25, and Sozomen, ii. 27. Cf. p. 131 of this volume, note 4. - Gelasius of Cyzicus (iii. 12) has preserved his name ; he was called Eutocius. ^ This was the beginning of it: "We believe in one God, Father, Almighty, and in the Lord Jesus Christ, His Son, born (yeyevTjiJ.ivov') of Him before all ages, God the Word, by Whom every- thing has been made. . . ." The phrase e't avroO yeyevrjfx^vov, taking account of the synonymy which still prevailed between yevriTos and y€vv7]T6s^ might be considered as equivalent to (k t7^s tov Uurpbs oiV/oy. It certainly excluded creation e.v nihilo. The Nicene homoousios is not pronounced, but Arianism is practically excluded. ^ Apol. co7itra Ar. 59. We are tempted to regret this refusal, when we think of what followed. 138 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [ch. v The intrigues began again. The story of the broken chalice was revived. This chaHce, it was alleged, belonged to a priest, one Ischyras, who had a church in Mareotis. There was actually in those parts a certain Ischyras who had been ordained in former days by Kolluthus, but whose ordination had not been recognized as valid, so that the people of Mareotis would not allow him to exercise his ministry, and he confined himself to oflficiating in his own family. It was alleged that Athanasius had caused his altar to be overturned, and had broken his chalice. The truth of the matter was that, when the representatives of the bishop went to visit Ischyras, they found him ill and confined to his bed ; there could have been no opportunity for disturbing any form of Divine Service. When Ischyras returned to a better state of mind, he certified in writing that he knew nothing of the whole story. Athanasius was also accused of having put to death a Meletian bishop, Arsenius of Hypsele, after having caused his hand to be cut off. This Arsenius was afterwards found alive and in possession of both his hands. The Meletians had hidden him in a monastery, but Athanasius managed to discover his hiding-place. Arsenius, like Ischyras, asked pardon in writing. It was time, for Constantine had already instructed his half- brother, the censor Delmatius, to hold a criminal investi- gation in the matter. The trial was abandoned ; a synod which had been summoned in this connection, and had already assembled at Caesarea in Palestine, was also counter- manded, after a long delay. The Bishop of Alexandria received a fresh letter from the emperor, couched in more explicit terms, against the intriguers who had tried un- successfully to ruin him. It was now the year 334.^ 1 Documents relating to this affair are to be found in the Apol. contra Ar: (i) Retractation oflschyras (<:. 64), presented to Athanasius in the presence of six priests and seven deacons ; (2) Letter of Pinnes, a priest of the monastery of Ptemencyris, in the Anteopolitan nome, to John Arkaph {c. 67) ; (3) Letter of Arsenius to Athanasius {c. 69) ; (4) Letter of Constantine to Athanasius, To?s -wapa. ttjs o-^s . . . {c. 68) ; (5) Letter of Alexander of Thessalonica to Athanasius {c. 66) ; Letter of Constantine to John Arkaph {c. 70). p. 174 r.] CONSTANTINE^S TRICENNALIA i:59 Jolm Arkaph, the archbishop of the Meletians, had become temporarily reconciled to Athanasius, and was congratu- lated upon the fact by the emperor, who invited him to court. It was a fatal inspiration. The Meletian chief fell into bad company at court. In the following year (335), the whole business was on the point of beginning again. The Meletians were once more at variance with Athanasius, and leagued in their opposition to him with the Arians and their protectors. The time was drawing near when the emperor would enter upon the thirtieth year of his reign. He resolved to celebrate this event by a great religious festival, the dedication of the basilica of the Holy Sepulchre, which was at last completed. A great number of bishops were summoned to assist at the ceremony. It was suggested to Constantine that this would be a good opportunity for finally putting an end to the Egyptian dissensions, so continually renewed, and for settling them by an episcopal decision. This had already been contemplated in the preceding year; since the emperor's solution of these affairs had not succeeded in restoring peace, it was quite natural that the idea of a council should again be taken up. Was it not much to be desired that, before celebrating this festival at Jerusalem, the ministers of the Lord should first be reconciled with one another ? The emperor adopted this idea, and the city of Tyre was proposed as a meeting-place. All the enemies of Athanasius in the whole empire arranged to be present, hoping to obtain at Tyre their revenge for the abortive Council of Csesarea, and to find means of getting rid of the troublesome Bishop of Alexandria. An imperial letter ^ exhorted the council to fulfil its task of peace- maker, assuring it that the resources of the government would ensure that all those whose presence would be useful should appear before it. This assurance referred especially to Athanasius. He was invited to be present, and threatened with compulsion if he refused. The priest Macarius was brought to Tyre, loaded with chains. A ' Eusebius, V. C. iv. 42. 140 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [ch. v. high official, Count Dionysius, was sent on a special mission to the council. Athanasius submitted.^ Knowing well that he was going to appear before a meeting of his enemies, he took with him about fifty Egyptian bishops. But, as these had not been summoned, their names did not appear amongst the judges.- These had been chosen with care. Not one of the enemies of Athanasius was absent. Even two young Pannonian bishops were there, Ursacius of Singidunum (Belgrade) and Valens of Mursa (Eszeg), two disciples of Arius himself, who had taken advantage of his exile to recruit adherents in those distant countries. The Bishop of Antioch, Flaccillus, was present, and also Eusebius of Csesarea, very much irritated at the failure of the council the year before. Several other prelates, either neutral or even fairly well disposed towards Athanasius, such as Alexander of Thessalonica, had also been invited. But the majority and the management of the whole affair were secured for the adversaries of the BishojD of Alexandria. No question of doctrine was raised.^ The Arians and their party did not take part in the proceedings, as such : the whole issue was between Athanasius and the Meletians. The Meletians had a cause of complaint against him which dated back to the time of his election : the bishops who took part in it had agreed not to ordain anyone before their differences had been arranged.'* The ordination took ^ His departure for Tyre took place on July lo, 335. ■' According to Socrates, the council comprised (apart from the Egyptians) about sixty members. ^ Sozomen (i. 25) had before him the "acts" of this council; and what he derives from them is very important. Athanasius' version of the facts is given in the Apol, contra Ar., in which we find first an account of some length, contained in a letter from the Council of Alexandria in 340 {cc. 3-19), then another account by Athanasius himself {cc. 71-87), which contains several contemporary documents. We must not neglect the version of the other side, which we know through the synodal epistle of the Council of the Easterns at Sardica (Hilary, Frag. hist. iii. 6, 7) in 343. This document agrees fairly well with the summary of the "acts" given by Sozomen. ^ At the time of the election, the Meletians were reconciled to the r. 177] COUNCIL OF TYRE, 335 141 place without any regard being paid to this agreement ; and therefore they had separated themselves from com- munion with the newly-consecrated bishop. To force their return, he had employed violent measures, and in particular imprisonment. Five Meletian bishops, Euplus, Pacomius, Achillas, Isaac, and Hermaeon, accused him of having caused them to be beaten with rods ; Ischyras, again changing sides, had joined the Meletians ; he complained that his chalice had been broken, and his chair over- thrown ; Athanasius had cast him into prison several times, and had calumniated him to the prefect Hyginus, alleging that he had thrown stones at the emperor's statues. Callinicus, the (Meletian) Bishop of Pelusium, having renounced communion with him on account of Ischyras' chalice, Athanasius had deposed him and replaced him by another. Arsenius was again spoken of And finally, a memorandum was read of the popular out- cries raised by persons at Alexandria, who refused to enter the churches on account of the bishop. In fine, what he was reproached for, was the strong measures he had considered himself obliged to take against those of the Meletian party who had relapsed. Athanasius succeeded in justifying himself with regard to certain points ; as to others, he asked for delay. Arsenius was still living, and owing to this fact the worst of the accusations fell to the ground. The council fixed upon the affair of Ischyras, the interrupted religious service and the broken chalice. An enquiry was decided upon. Athanasius offered no opposition to this, but he objected to his most notorious enemies being entrusted with the investigations. These were exactly the persons who were chosen, not during a general meeting, but in a private conference. Moreover, as Ischyras claimed to be the head of a Meletian Church in Mareotis, and as everyone knew that Mareotis did not contain a single Meletian, the chiefs of this sect sent recruiters throughout Egypt to collect a group of 'Great Church.' It can only be a question here of secondary quarrels, proceeding, however, from the previous separation. 142 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [cii. v. parishioners for him. All these intrigues awakened a protest, not only on the part of the Egyptian prelates, who rallied faithfully around their Pope,^ but also from the Bishop of Thessalonica, a highly-respected old man, and from Count Dionysius himself, who held a similar position in this council to that which Constantine had held at the Council of Nicaea. But all protest proved useless ; the high commissioner had his hand forced, and the com- mission set out for Egypt. The enquiry was concerned with the evidence of only one side. Not only was the priest Macarius, who was directly implicated, detained at Tyre, but not a single member of the Athanasian clergy, whether belonging to Alexandria or to Mareotis, was allowed to take part in it. On the other hand, the prefect of Egypt, Philagrius, lent his assistance to the commis- sioners sent by the council, and conducted matters with so high a hand that they succeeded in obtaining the depositions they wished. The commission of enquiry returned to Tyre with an overwhelming mass of evidence.^ As to the affair of Arsenius, which appeared at first to be going contrary to the accusers of Athanasius, they explained it by saying that a certain Plusianus, a bishop of the party of Athanasius, had, by his orders, burnt the house of Arsenius, caused him to be tied to a pillar and beaten, and then shut him up in a small hovel. Arsenius had escaped through a window, and had succeeded in concealing himself so well that the bishops of John Arkaph's party, regretting the disappearance of a man so distinguished and also a former confessor of the faith, had ' This term was at that time, and long remained, employed to denote bishops, whoever they might be. Later on, it was reserved for the Bishop of Rome in the West, and the Bishop of Alexandria in the East. He still takes the title of Pope in his ofificial style. ^ At the same time, the records of this enquiry were so little to the honour of the commissioners that the anti-Athanasian party tried to conceal them as much as possible ; but it was known that they were drawn up by a certain Rufus, who afterwards became speculator to the Augustal prefecture. Athanasius was able to invoke his testimony. Pope Julius also, to whom the documents were sent, himself communicated them to Athanasius {Apol. contra Ar. 83). p. 179-80] DEPOSITION OF ATHANASIUS 143 believed him to be dead, and had caused a search to be made for him by the authorities.^ It was therefore quite excusable that they should have been mistaken. The proceedings were taking an unfavourable turn for Athanasius. His enemies cried out upon him as a sorcerer, a brutal ruffian, and declared him unfit to be a bishop. Such a tumult arose against the accused at the hearing that the officials present were obliged to get him away secretly. He himself understood that no good could be expected from such judges, and he embarked for Constantinople. The council pronounced sentence of deposition against him in his absence, and forbade him to remain in Egypt. On the other hand, it admitted John Arkaph and his followers to communion, considering them as victims of an unjust persecution, and reinstated them in their ecclesiastical positions. Formal intimation of these decisions was sent to the emperor, to the Church of Alexandria, and to the episcopate in general. The bishops were entreated to have nothing more to do with Athanasius ; he had been convicted upon every point which the council had been able to discuss ; as to the others, his flight proved that he did not feel himself in a position to make any defence. Already, during the preceding year, he had refused to appear before the Council of Caesarea ; this time, he had come, but surrounded by a numerous and turbulent escort. Some- times he had refused to defend himself, sometimes he insulted the other bishops, refused to appear before them, and challenged their decision. His guilt in the affair of Mareotis had been established. When this judgment had been pronounced, the council proceeded to Jerusalem, and the dedication of the Holy Sepulchre was celebrated, on September 14, with every imaginable pomp of worship and eloquence. Eusebius, ^ In the letter of Arsenius, mentioned before (p. 138, note i), Bishop Plusianus is named, but no allusion is made to the story of the dis- appearance of Arsenius himself. If Athanasius {c. 69) did not expressly say so, we should not believe the letter to have been written after his adventure. 144 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [ch. v. the Metropolitan of Csesarea, as was to be expected, particularly distinguished himself. A further session of the council was held, at Jerusalem itself, to adjudicate upon the affair of Arius and his supporters. The profession of faith presented to the emperor by Arius and Euzoius, the one which Constantine had considered sufficient, had been sent by him to the council : it satisfied the council also. The Arians were admitted to communion; the emperor was informed of the fact, and it was also notified both to the Church of Alexandria and the bishops of Egypt.^ Yet, on his arrival in Constantinople, Athanasius succeeded in obtaining an audience. And, impressed by his complaints, Constantine summoned the Council of Tyre to his presence.- But no one obeyed the summons except the most determined opponents of Athanasius — prominent among them being Eusebius of Caesarea, who had to pronounce a set oration on the occasion of the Tricennalia. Constantine heard them. According to Athanasius, they were very careful not to enter on a new investigation of the stories discussed during the council, and no mention was made of the chalice or of Arsenius : they had found something much better. Athanasius, they told the emperor, was determined to hinder the transport of Egyptian corn to Constantinople. What ! To starve his own foundation, his beloved New Rome ! The emperor made no further enquiries. Without waiting for any new defence, he actually banished the Bishop of Alexandria to a distant part of Gaul. Athanasius was imprisoned at Treves.^ When Athanasius was once more taken into favour, people were very ready to say that, if he was exiled, it was only to protect him from the fury of his enemies. It is not at all probable that Constantine would accept without verification the imputation regarding the transport of ^ Fragment of the synodal letter in Apol. contra Ar. 84. 2 Letter of Constantine, 'E7W ixlv d7cow {Apol. contra Ar. 86). ^ This is Athanasius' account of this last sudden change of front {Apol. contra Ar. 87 ; cf. c,) ; and he adduces the testimony of five Egyptian bishops, who heard the assertion of his adversaries. p. 182] FIRST EXILE OF ATHANASIUS 145 corn. The best plan is to see the facts as the public saw them at that time, and as Constantine himself explained them in very weighty documents.^ The Bishop of Alexandria had been judged and condemned by a great assembly of his colleagues. The Council of Tyre had deposed him from his episcopal office, and forbidden him to remain in Egypt. Following up this sentence, the civil government took the measures which were in its province : it exiled Athanasius. So ends the first act of the Athanasian tragedy. We may be tempted to think, at some points in it, that things might have taken, both then and afterwards, a better turn, if the young Bishop of Alexandria had treated the Meletians with less severity, and if he had made it easier for the party defeated at the Council of Nicaia to return to the bosom of the Church. Without sacrificing any essential principle, he might then have avoided exasperat- ing the opposing parties ; it would not have been so easy for his enemies to represent him to the emperor as a man impossible to deal with and an instigator of troubles. Later on, Athanasius became a man of peace and a peace-maker ; but at the time we have now reached he was, above all things, a fighter. He was right ; but, by the very fact that he was right, too many people found themselves put in the wrong. Arius remained at court. The imperial favour had recalled him from exile ; the decision of the Council of Tyre had again opened to him the doors of the Church. It only remained for him to make his official re-entrance. According to later accounts,^ he did return to Alexandria, and then, because of the commotion caused by his presence, was recalled to Constantinople. It was more in conformity with Constantine's usual ways to remove all quarrelsome persons for the time being from Alexandria, Arius as well as Athanasius. However, as he ' See, below, the letters to St Antony. 2 Rufinus, i. II, 12 ; Socrates, i. 37 ; Sozomen, ii. 29. Athanasius, even in his letter to Serapion on the death of Arius, does not speak of this journey. II K 146 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [ch. v. considered the declarations of Arius to be sincere and sufficient, he exerted his influence to persuade the Bishop of Constantinople/ Alexander, to admit him. Alexander did not look upon him with favour. But Arius died suddenly ; and Alexander was thus spared the mortifica- tion of receiving him in his Church. Athanasius had already gone to his place of exile ; but Macarius, one of his priests, was at Constantinople at the time. It is from his account that, twenty-five years later, Athanasius related the mournful end of his adversary.^ At Alexandria the bishop's throne remained unoccupied. No attempt was even made, for the time being, to appoint a successor to the exiled bishop ; either because the emperor did not wish it, or more probably because the Christian population did not appear disposed to agree to it. There were disturbances.^ The faithful continued to demand the restoration of their bishop, both by public manifestations and in the churches, Antony, the famous hermit of the desert, was called upon to intervene, and he wrote several times to the emperor. But all was in 1 A letter of Constantine to Alexander, relating to this affair, has been preserved in the collection of Gelasius of Cyzicus (iii. 15, in Ceriani, Monumenta sacra., vol. i., p. 145), not entire, but only in extracts : EiVep ovv rrjs ei> ^iKaiq. iKTedelcrrjs dpO^s Kai elaael ^di(Tt]S airoaToXiKrjs wiffreu^ avmroiovfxivovs aiiTovs evprjTe — tovto yap Kal i(p' i]p.u)v (ppovelv dia^e^aiujcravTO — Trpovorjaare iravTuv, irapaKoKu). In the title, the document is represented as addressed to Alexander, Bishop of Alexandria. Ceriani, for this reason, pronounces it apocryphal ; Loeschcke {Rheinisches Musemn, 1906, p. 44 et seg.) accepts it as authentic, and tries to reconcile it with the facts known regarding the episcopate of Alexander. But this is difficult, especially in view of the fact that Arius and Euzoius are mentioned together in this letter, just as they appear together in the proceedings of the year 333. The best course, as it seems to me, is to remove the Gelasian rubric, or to conjecture that, in its original form, it read only 7r/)6s 'AXe^avBpop iwlaKoirov, without 'AXe^avdpeias. Neither the fragments of the text, nor the place it occupies in the collection of Gelasius, give any indication that it was addressed to Athanasius' predecessor, 2 Arius is said to have died in a privy. Upon this event, see £p. ad Serapionem de morte Arii and Ep. ad episcopos Aeg. et Libyae, c, 19. ^ Upon this, see Sozomen, ii. 31 ; cf. Athan. Apol. coni?-a Ar. 17, p. 184 J THE MELETIANS 147 vain. Four priests were arrested and exiled. Constantine wrote to the people of Alexandria, and especially to the clergy and the consecrated virgins, advising them to keep quiet, and declaring that he would not go back upon his decision or recall an instigator of disturbance, who had been condemned in proper form by an ecclesi- astical tribunal. To St Antony he explained that un- doubtedly some of the judges might have been influenced in their decision by hatred or partiality, but that he could not believe that so numerous an assembly of wise and enlightened bishops could all have been so far mistaken as to condemn an innocent man. Athanasius was a presumptuous and over-bearing fellow, a man of strife. The Meletians, restored to their position by the Council of Tyre, lost no time in seeking to reap the fruits of their success. They certainly did this with little restraint, for their leader, John Arkaph, was exiled like his opponents. The Egyptians, to whatever party they belonged, were certainly very difficult people to deal with. Ischyras alone had any reason to congratulate him- self upon all these changes ; for, as a reward for his labours, the Meletian party promoted him to the episcopate. In his own village,^ so small that hitherto it had never even possessed a priest, they built him, at the expense of the State, a cathedral in which he could play the 7'dle of a bishop. It was not in Egypt only that the victorious party followed up the advantage they had gained, assisted here and there by the excesses of zeal and the mistakes of their adversaries. Since the end of the Great Persecution, the Church of Ancyra had had as its bishop a certain Marcellus, a good man with some knowledge of theology. At the Council of Nicsea, he had attracted notice by the vigour of his opposition to the opinions of Arius, and so successfully that he had made a very favourable im- pression upon the legates from Rome. During the years ' 'Ei' TbiTi^ 'Elp-qfTis ^eKovrapovpov. Letter from the Rationalis of Egypt to the tax-collector of Mareotis (Athan., Apol. contra Ar. 85). 148 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [ch. y. which followed, he continued to assail by his speeches the two Eusebii, PauHnus, and other more or less declared upholders of the defeated heresy. At that time, people did not run the risk involved in expressing their opinions in writing. The theology of the Arian party was only represented to the public by the addresses of Asterius,^ which finally appeared in the form of a small book. As no one else seemed inclined to do so, Marcellus took the lecturer in hand and, to refute him, compiled a work of considerable proportions, in which he vigorously assailed the principal leaders of the opposite party, both living and dead, Paulinus, Narcissus, Eusebius of Csesarea, Eusebius of Nicomedia, and the rest. Even Origen him- self was not spared. Marcellus was present at the Council of Tyre, but refused to join in the condemnation of Athanasius and the restoration of Arius ; he even refused to take part in the celebrations at the dedication of the Holy Sepulchre.^ On the other hand, his book being finished, he went to present it to the emperor, with a dedication full of compliments. Constantine perhaps looked upon this gift with some suspicion ; at all events, he commissioned the bishops who had assembled in Constantinople, after the ceremonies at Jerusalem, to examine the book and to make him a report upon it. This was to deliver Marcellus into the hands of his enemies. They discovered in his work lamentable traces of the Sabellian heresy. A sentence of deposition was pronounced against him, and then communicated to the emperor, to the Eastern bishops, and to the Church of Ancyra ; Marcellus, after an episcopate of more than twenty years, was given a successor in the person of a certain Basil. The latter, as we shall see, will himself play a part of some importance in the future. However, as many people cried out against the proceedings as a scandal, and represented Marcellus as an innocent victim, the council asked the learned Bishop of Caesarea to justify its decision by exposing and refuting the errors of the man whom they had condemned. This is the subject 1 See p. io8 supra. '^ Socrates, i. 36 ; Sozomen, ii. 33. V. 187] MARCELLUS OF ANCYRA 149 of his two books Against Marce/lus, which were immedi- ately published. A short time afterwards, he resumed the same subject in a second work, dedicated to Flaccillus, the Bishop of Antioch, and divided into three books, entitled, The Theology of the Church. To judge from Eusebius' extracts, which are of sufficient length to enable us to base an estimate upon them, the system of Marcellus did really approach Sabellianism, although, for all that, the two theologies were not identical. The SabelHans of that time ^ imagined God as a monad who extends Himself {ifKarvverai) in a Trinity. The designations, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, mean three successive manifestations, three roles (-TrpoV- wira, personae). As Father, God is the Law-giver of the Old Testament, as Son He manifests Himself in the Incarnation, as Holy Spirit in the sanctification of souls. These expansions are temporary : they are caused by the needs of the creature. When once this need has ceased, the expansion equally ceases, and the Divinity again draws itself in. This double movement of expansion and contraction (TrAarfcr/xo?, crfo-roXj/) may be compared to an arm which is stretched out and then drawn back again. The world, towards which these successive expan- sions are produced, is the work of God considered under another aspect, that of Word. The manifestation Word, differing therein from the other manifestations, is permanent: it lasts as long as the world lasts. The same cannot be said of the Son of God. The SabelHans were not agreed upon the subject of the Divine Sonship : some made it to consist in the humanity of the Christ {rov uvQpwTrov ov aveXa^ev 6 Hutri'ip) -^ ; others in the blend of the Word and humanity ; others again said that the Word assumes the character of Son at the moment of the Incarnation. This Incarnation was transitory; it ceased before the ' This exposition is based on St Athanasius, in his fourth treatise against the Arians., - In this explanation, however, the personality is attached to the divine element j it is not to be based upon the character of Son. 150 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [cii. v. sending of the Holy Spirit ^ ; the manifestation Son then came to an end ; the divine arm was drawn back again. What, then, became of the humanity of Christ, when the Incarnation had once ceased? We have no information on this point. Marcellus,^ also, taught a kind of divine expansion (TrAarucTyUo?). How could the monad have always remained a monad, and yet produce the world ? The eternal Reason of God (Aoyof) proceeds forth outside the Godhead in some manner {irpoepxerai) by an active energy (evepyeia SpacTTiKii) without ceasing to remain in God. In this way the Creation and the Incarnation are explained ; a subse- quent irradiation of the Logos produces the manifestation of the Holy Spirit.^ These irradiations do not give rise to the production of distinct Jiypostases ; there is only One divine hypostasis. At the end of all things, when once the reign of a thousand years is over, the irradiation will cease, and the Logos, as well as the Holy Spirit which emanated from Him, will return to the Bosom of God. Before the Incarnation, and here Marcellus invoked on his side the language of Scripture, there was only the Word. It was by the Incarnation alone that the Word became Son*; He will cease to be Son, when His reign on earth comes to an end. With this system, embracing conceptions which were very ancient, and assuredly foreign to Origen's theology and anterior to it, Marcellus defended very stoutly the idea of the Divine Mouarchia, the consubstan- tiality ; and in this respect he was, from a polemical point ' We may notice how this feature agrees with the fact that, in Cyrenaica, at the time of St Dionysius of Alexandria, the Son of God was no longer preached (Athan. De sentcntia Diottysii, 5). - On Marcellus, see the book of Th. Zahn, Marcellus von Ancyra (Gotha, 1867), and especially the memoir of Loofs in the Reports of the Berlin Academy, 1902, p. 764. ^ Thus, up to this point, Marcellus' Trinity has only two terms ; it is a " Binity." ^ ■* This opinion had the advantage of cutting short the Arian arguments as to the necessary priority of the begetter to the begotten ; but it did away with any idea of Divine generation. r. 189] THEOLOGY OF MARCELLUS 151 of view, on the same lines as the Roman Church, the Council of Nicaea, and St Athanasius. But these allied forces were confronted with an opposition, the claims of which were not all destined to be overthrown. Arius, Eusebius, and similar theologians had tradition against them, when they attacked the eternity of the Word and His absolute Divinity ; but tradition was on their side, when they defended the real distinction of the hypostases. Upon this point, their contention finally gained the day, after many struggles and eliminations, when men had at last grown weary of an impious warfare, when they con- sented to give each other the credit of being really sincere, and to listen to each other's arguments, and when, without actually expressing it in words, without proclaiming them- selves victors or avowing themselves vanquished, they resigned themselves to combine together the consub- stantiality and the three hypostases. But that time of peace was still far away. At the end of Constantine's reign, so far as the fighting propensities of the opposite parties had not been stifled by government pressure, they were determined to triumph over each other, and to exterminate one another />er /as ox per nefas. Eustathius, Athanasius, and Marcellus, three of the principal champions of Nicaea, were already disqualified from taking further part in the battle, the last of them, at least, on account of heresy, a fact which was well calculated to throw obloquy on the term ' consubstantial,' and to prove that behind this formula, which was so strongly insisted upon, dangerous doctrines might be hidden. Other bishops succumbed to the malice of the victorious party.^ But, in spite of all, the Creed of Nicaea still held its ground. At Tyre, no steps had been taken directly against it. The restoration of Arius could not be inter- preted as an abandonment of the celebrated formula : the ' St Athanasius {^Apologia de fuga, 3; Hist. Ar. 5) mentions several of these : Asclepas of Gaza, who, according to the synodal letter of the Easterns at the Council of Sardica (Hil. Frag. hist. Hi. 11), had been condemned seventeen years before, possibly in 326 ; Hellanicus of Tripoli, Cartcrius of Antaradus, Cymatius of 152 EUSEBIUS AND ATHANASIUS [ch. v. profession of faith delivered by the arch-heretic to the emperor was held to be equivalent to that of the three hundred bishops. Yet we cannot deny that by admitting the substitution of one formula for another a door was opened to many subterfuges. In the meantime, Constantine died, on May 22, 337, after having been baptized in a villa near Nicomedia. It was the bishop of that city, the aged Eusebius, the indefatigable champion of Arius, who officiated at the final initiation of the first Christian Emperor. His colleague and namesake of Caesarea began at once to compile the funeral oration in four books, known by the name of the Life of Constantine, an evidence of his enthusi- astic admiration for what he considered the good actions of the deceased emperor, and of his skill in disguising the others. No trace is found there of the murder of Crispus and that of Fausta; the author has discovered a way of telling the story of the Councils of Nicaea and of Tyre, and the ecclesiastical events connected with them, without even mentioning the names of Athanasius and of Arius. It is a triumph of reticence and of circumlocution. Paltus, Euphraiion of Balanea, Cyrus of Berca, in Northern Syria ; Diodorus {of Tenedos), in Asia ; Theodulus and Olymptus {of Actios), in Thrace, with two successive bishops of Adrianople, Etitropii4s and Lucius : the first was a declared enemy of Eusebius of Nicomedia, and Basilina, Constantine's sister-in-law, had a strong grudge against him ; Doinnio of Sinnium ; and finally, the Bishop of Constantinople, Paul, who succeeded Alexander in 336, CHAPTER VI THE EMPEROR CONSTANS The heirs of Constantine. Return of Athanasius. Intrigues of Eusebius ; the rivalry of Pistus. The Pope is made cognizant of the Alexandrian affair. The intrusion of Gregory. Athanasius in Rome. The Easterns and Pope Julius. Roman Council in 340. Cancelling of the sentences pronounced in the East against Athanasius and Marcellus. Constans sole Emperor in the West. Dedication Council at Antioch in 341. Death of Eusebius of Nicomedia. Paul of Constantinople. Council of Sardica : the Eastern schism. Negotiations. Condemnation of Photinus. Athanasius recalled to Alexandria. African affairs. The Circum- cellians. Mission of Paul and Macarius. Unity restored : Council under Gratus. Constantine had three brothers, the sons of Constantius Chlorus and Theodora: Delmatius, Julius Constantius, and Hannibah'an. Having little in common with the Empress Helena, as we can well understand, they remained for a long time at a distance from the court. Their residence was first at Toulouse, but in the end they drew nearer to the emperor, and after the death of Helena they attained high honours. Delmatius was appointed consul in 333, and even invested with the office of censor, which lay outside the ordinary course. In consequence of this he had to occupy himself with the accusations made against Athanasius. Julius Constantius also received in 335 the honour of the consulship. In regard to the third, Hannibalian, we have no similar information ; and it is probable that he died early, and certainly before Con- stantine. Julius Constantius had four children — two sons and a daughter by his first wife, and one son of his second marriage with Basilina. This last son afterwards became 163 154 THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [ch. vi. the Emperor Julian ; and one of the two others, Gallus, was Caesar under Constantius. These children were still too young, at the time of Constantine's death, for him to have taken any account of them in his political arrangements. It was otherwise with the two sons of Delmatius. The one of these, also called Delmatius, was created Caesar in 335 ; the other, Hannibalian, was provided, under the title of King of Pontus, with a sort of vassal sovereignty in the provinces bordering on Armenia. A new tetrarchy was to replace the united empire of Constantine. In the West, Constantine II. was to reign over Gaul, Britain, and Spain ; in the East, Constantius with the vassal king, Hannibalian, was to govern Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt; Italy, Africa, and the provinces of the Upper Danube were assigned to Constans, the third son of Constantine ; and all the rest, as far as the Bosphorus, was to be the inheritance of the Caesar Delmatius. Such were Constantine's intentions ; but they were not entirely realized. After his funeral, events happened in Constantinople in regard to which we are badly informed : palace intrigues, barrack conspiracies, demonstrations of troops, seditions and massacres. Constantius, the only one of the three brothers then present in Constantinople, allowed many things to be done which he might have prevented. The emperor's brothers were massacred ; and so were the Caesar Delmatius and King Hannibalian ; the eldest son of Julius Constantius shared his father's fate; the two others, Gallus and Julian, escaped — Julian, thanks to the intervention of a Syrian bishop, Mark of Arethusa. The praetorian prefect, Ablavius, was also murdered, and so was the patrician Optatus, brother-in-law of the deceased emperor.^ The pretext for these horrors was that only the sons of Constantine ought to have a share in the succession to him. There were three children. The eldest, Constantine II., was not yet twenty-one: the second, Constantius, was twenty : the third, Constans, was entering on his 1 He had married Anastasia, one of the three daughters of Constantius Chlorus. r. 11J4] THE SONS OF CONSTANTINE 155 fifteenth year. In the course of the summer they all three met at Viminacium, on the banks of the Danube, and agreed together to allow Constans to inherit all the provinces left without a ruler by the death of Delmatius. Thus, the youngest of the three princes was the best provided for; however, Constantine II. claimed a sort of guardianship over him. All three assumed the title of Augustus on September 9, 337. The sons of Constantine had been brought up in the Christian faith. Their interest was soon excited by religious questions. They agreed together to grant per- mission to all the exiled bishops to return to their flocks. In its wide extent, this measure of clemency was not without inconvenient consequences. Several of the re- called prelates had already been provided with successors : all had left behind them supporters and opponents ; and their reinstatement gave rise to disturbances. This was the case in Adrianople, Constantinople, Ancyra, and Gaza.^ A few days after the death of his father,^ Constantine II. had set Athanasius free, and had written to the " Catholic " Church of Alexandria to announce this fact, and to say that the step was only the fulfilment of the wishes of the late emperor. At Viminacium Athanasius met Constantius, the prince with whom henceforward he had specially to deal. Constantius, notwithstanding his youth, was a stiff and solemn person, of overwhelming vanity. He could not have been specially pleased to see the return of a man who, for ten years, had had the reputation in the East of a sower of trouble. It was perhaps on account of his ill-will that Athanasius was so long on his homeward journey. Bishop and prince met again at Caesarea in Cappadocia. Athanasius took good care not to speak to the emperor of his adversaries, Eusebius of Nicomedia and others. On his way to Egypt he was more than once mixed up with the quarrels provoked by the return ' Ep. Oriental. (Hil. Frag. hist. iii. 9). - The letter is dated from Treves, xv. kal.jul. (June 17) ; Constan- tine II. still bears in it the title of Caesar, which he relinquished three months later for that of Augustus. 156 THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [ch. vi. of the exiles. Later on, he was accused of taking a prominent part in their reinstallation, and even of ordain- ing new bishops in place of those already in possession.^ At Alexandria the conflict had already begun, even before his arrival, and the authorities were obliged to intervene.'^ At length Athanasius re-entered the city, on November 23, 337,^ after an absence of more than two years. His enemies took care not to leave him in peace there. Eusebius of Nicomedia was in high favour with the new sovereign of the East. He could not allow his revenge to be snatched from his grasp nor the decisions of the Council of Tyre to be lightly regarded. Athanasius, it was true, had been warmly welcomed by his faithful flock, and his popularity in Egypt was great. It would have been more prudent not to continue the attack on this energetic man, so fertile in resource. But was it possible to think of yielding? "Let us rather annihilate every- thing : such is the Church's spirit," thought the aged Eusebius, like Boileau's canon. ' " Per omnem viam reditus sui Ecclesiam subvertebat ; damnatos episcopos aliquos restaurabat, aliquibus spem ad episcopatus reditum promittebat ; aliquos ex infidelibus constituebat episcopos, salvis et integris permanentibus sacerdotibus, per pugnas et caedes gentil- ium, nihil respiciens leges, desperationi tribuens totum." — Ep. Or., loc. cit. 8. ■■^ Apol. contra Ar. 3. ^ The Festal Chronicle seems to indicate the year 338. Such a delay would be inexplicable : but, as the Chronicle assigns to the same year the death of Constantine and the return of Athanasius, it is possible that it really refers to the year 337, just as, a little before, it places the Council of Tyre in 336 instead of 335. The Xth Festal Letter, for the Easter of 338, begins by complaints of the afflictions to which Athanasius is exposed on the part of his enemies, who are detaining him at the ends of the world, and prevent him from celebrating Easter with his flock. It would seem, therefore, as if during the winter, 337-338, Athanasius were still at Treves. But the letter ends by expressing the joy which the bishop feels at the end of his persecution and the prospect of celebrating the feasts in company with his Church as they had been wont to do. It is evident that the beginning of one letter (that of 337) has been joined on to the end of another (that of 338). p. 197] RETURN OF ATHANASIUS 157 The first measures adopted were of a very elumsy character. The supporters of Arius, even before the death of their master, formed at Alexandria a well- organized group whom the excommunications of Athan- asius kept excluded from the Great Church. It was decided ^ that they should be given a bishop of their own, and that an effort should be made to secure his recognition abroad as the legitimate head of the Church of Alexandria. With this end in view, they chose one of the earliest converts to Arianism, Pistus, formerly a priest in Mareotis, who had been deposed, at the same time as Arius himself, by Bishop Alexander. Secundus, the ex-Bishop of Ptolemais, condemned at the same time as he was, ordained him on the spot." Everyone pretended to look upon Pistus as a brother, to conduct a considerable correspondence with him ; and letters were written to various bishops, in order to induce them to enter into communion with him.^ His friends even addressed themselves to Pope Julius, to whom a deputation was sent consisting of a priest named Macarius, with two deacons, Hesychius and Martyrius. These persons brought to Rome records of the proceedings of the Council of Tyre, in order to make it clear that Athanasius, having been deposed in due form, could no longer be regarded as Bishop of Alexandria. Athanasius replied to this attack by a synodal letter of all the Egyptian bishops : the story of the Council of Tyre was there related from his point of view, and thoroughly sifted ; at the same time, the existing position of affairs was described, the unanimity of the Egyptian episcopate, the reduction of the opposition, as usual, to the Meletian clergy and some few of Pistus' flock. Some Alexandrian priests set out for Italy with this document. They were the bearers of letters not only to the Pope, but also to the ' This intrusion of Pistus may very well have been before the return of Athanasius. 2 Supra, pp. 103, 122, and 131 (note 5). =• Letter of the Bishops of Egypt, ApoL contra Ar. 19 ; letter of Pope Julius, ibid. 24. 158 THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [ch. vi. Emperors Constantine II. and Constans, with whom attempts were being made to damage the credit of Athanasius. It was alleged that his return had not been well received at Alexandria, and that the opposition of the people had had to be forcibly overcome by the police ; that he was selling, for his own profit, the corn which the emperors were wont to entrust to the Bishop of Alexandria for distribution to the poor of Egypt and of Libya.^ These innuendoes had been brought to the notice previously of Constantius himself, the more effectually to prejudice him. It was about this time that Eusebius of Nicomedia, having succeeded for the second time in driving from Constantinople the unfortunate Bishop Paul, translated himself into his place, leaving the see of Nicomedia to Amphion, who had been appointed as a substitute to himself during his own exile. Eusebius of Caesarea was perhaps no longer living ; for, after the death of Constantine, we hear of him no more : he appears to have been swallowed up in the funeral oration of the great emperor, and in the observance of his memory.^ The arrival in Rome of the representatives of Athanasius was an unpleasant surprise for Macarius. He at once departed for the East, leaving behind him his two companions. The latter, seeing their assertions contra- dicted by the Alexandrians, took the initiative in a very grave step : they appealed to the Pope to convoke a synod, and to give judgment on the matter after hearing both sides. Julius would have hesitated to put the Eastern bishops to so much trouble ; nevertheless, as the council was asked for in their name, he did not think that he ought to refuse it, and letters of summons were sent to the Bishop of Alexandria as well as to the Bishop of Con- stantinople and his party. During these negotiations at Rome, the situation in Egypt was going from bad to worse. Eusebius and his followers, assembled in Antioch at the 1 Apol. contra Ar. 3-5, 18 ; Hist. Ar. 9 ; Apol. ad Const. 4. 2 Eusebius died on May 30, in a year that may have been 338, 339, or 340. p. 199] GREGORY THE CAPPADOCIAN 159 court of the Emperor Constantius, had recognized the impossibility of supporting Pistus, and resolved to send as bishop to Alexandria a man who, while agreeing with their opinions, had not been compromised in the disputes of the previous years. Their choice fell upon a certain Eusebius, a native of Edessa, who, after having studied with Eusebius of Caesarea and sojourned for some time in Alexandria, was living among the dependents of Flaccillus, Bishop of Antioch. Eusebius refused, not wishing to brave the popularity of Athanasius.^ Failing him, they agreed upon a native of Cappadocia, called Gregory, who was at once consecrated and then despatched to Egypt. Nothing could possibly have been more irregular. Even admitting the validity of the sentence of the Council of Tyre, and regarding Athanasius as no longer the lawful bishop, it was necessary at least that his successor should have been elected by the clergy and the faithful of Alexandria, and should then have been installed by the bishops within his jurisdiction as metropolitan. But they did not trouble about one illegality more or less. Philagrius, under the patronage of the aged Eusebius, who had formed a high opinion of his zeal at the time of the Council of Tyre, was once more prefect of Egypt. He announced by edict, about the middle of March, 339, that Alexandria had a new bishop. The Christian population flocked to the churches, raising protests. The churches of Alexandria, in spite of all that had been done against the bishop, had remained in his power ; during his exile, his priests continued to perform their functions there. The problem now was to take these from them, in order to hand them over to the intruder. The church of Quirinus^ was the first to be attacked, on March 18 ; as a result, some were killed, others wounded, and lamentable scenes took place : finally, fire seized upon ' Socrates, H. E. ii. 9, following George of Laodicea, a con- temporary and friend of Eusebius of Emesa. "- Hist. Ar. 10. The Chronicle of the Festal Letters gives the church of Theonas, which was, in 356, the theatre of similar scenes. There is perhaps some confusion here. 160 THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [ch. vi. the building itself, and it was burnt together with the neighbouring baptistery. Four days afterwards, Gregory made his entrance into the city, guarded by an escort, and welcomed with cries of joy by pagans, Jews, and Arians. The bishop's palace was opened to him, but not without scenes of pillage. It was during the season of Lent, and Easter was drawing near. Gregory went from church to church, under police protection, and caused them, one by one, to be handed over to him. In one of them, on Good Friday, he caused thirty-four persons to be arrested, and they were flogged and cast into prison. Even on Easter Day, arrests were made. Athanasius still held out in one church. He knew that it was going to be attacked, and withdrew from it of his own accord, to avoid further scandals. Of course, the official reports laid to his account all the horrors of which Alexandria was at this time the theatre. We can imagine his intense indignation. But there is not even need to imagine it, for we possess the indignant protest which he addressed at the time to the whole episcopate. It begins with a reference to the story of the Levite of Ephraim, who in days of old cut into small pieces the dead body of his outraged wife, and made use of these mournful fragments to excite the indignation of the tribes of Israel. His own Church of Alexandria, too, had been violated before his eyes : it had been torn from him bit by bit. Then follows the deplorable story of Gregory's intrusion. And finally, addressing himself to his colleagues, Athanasius appeals to them with unstudied eloquence : " Behold the comedy which Eusebius is playing ! Behold the intrigue which he has been so long fomenting, and which he has finally brought to a head, thanks to the slanders with which he besets the emperor. But that is not enough for him ; he would have my head ; he seeks to frighten my friends by threats of exile and of death. But that is no reason for bowing before his wickedness ; on the contrary, I must defend myself, and protest against the monstrous injustice of which I am the victim. ... If, p. 201-2] PROTEST OF ATHANASIUS 161 as you sit upon your thrones, presiding peacefully over the meetings of your flocks, — if all in a moment there came to you a successor appointed by authority, would you endure him ? Would you not cry aloud for vengeance ? Well ! Now is the time for vigorous action ; otherwise, if you keep silence, the present evil will spread to all the Churches ; our episcopal seats will be the object of the meanest ambitions, and of disgraceful bargains. . . . Do not suffer such things to be done; do not allow the illustrious Church of Alexandria to be trampled under foot by heretics." After launching this manifesto, Athanasius embarked for Rome. To do so was not a very easy matter, for the port was well watched ; but he was popular among the sailors, and they let him pass. Almost at the same time as himself, Carpones, one of the Alexandrian priests deprived with Arius, also landed in Italy, bearing a letter from Gregory. Such a messenger was well calculated to confirm what was already known — that Gregory and those who had sent him were supporters of Arianism. In Rome, where the Council of Nicaea was alone recognized, that party could not hope for success. Nevertheless, the Roman legates, Elpidius and Philoxenus, set out for the East. They were detained there for a long time on various pretexts : so much so, that they were not able to start on their return journey until January 340. They had not been much edified by the ecclesiastical world with which they had found themselves in contact. The invitation which they bore was refused ; and they were given a very haughty letter, containing a protest against the idea of revising in the West the decisions of Eastern councils, and hinting that the Pope must choose between the society of such people as Athanasius and Marcellus and communion with the prelates of the East. This document,^ which is no longer extant, was dated from Antioch, and written in the name of the Bishops of ' Besides what the reply of Pope Julius tells us about it, Sozomen's analysis (iii. 8) should be consulted. II L 162 THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [ch. vi. Caesarea in Cappadocia (Dianius), of Antioch (Flaccillus)/ of Constantinople (Eusebius), and of several other sees. The Pope was highly affronted by it ; but it did not prevent him from holding the council. The assemblage, consisting of some fifty bishops, was held in the church {tituhis) of the priest Vitus, one of Silvester's legates at the Council of Nicaea, during the summer or autumn of 340. Athanasius had no difficulty in justifying himself and unmasking the intrigues of which he was the victim. His was not the only case. Every bishop throughout the East who had been deposed and hounded out of his see, hastened to Rome at the first mention of the council. From Thrace, from Asia Minor, from Syria, from Phoenicia, and from Palestine, the exiled bishops and priests alike poured into Rome. Marcellus of Ancyra made a long stay there. He also had been denounced to the Pope, who had invited his accusers, as he had invited those of Athanasius, to appear before him. In their absence, Marcellus explained his belief, and his language seemed satisfactory ; Vitus and Vincent, the Roman legates to the Nicene Council, testified to the zeal he had then displayed against the Arians. In short, he was restored to communion and to his episcopal dignity. These decisions were notified to the Eastern episcopate by a letter which Pope Julius- addressed to those who had signed the one brought by the legates from Antioch. The Pope's letter is one of the most remarkable documents in the whole affair. Although deeply wounded by the bitterness of the Orientals, and the insolent tone they had adopted towards him, he maintained an attitude in keep- ' Title of the reply : 'loi^Xtos Aai'tV '^^' ^XaKiXXy, Xap/fitrcry, EiVe/Si^i Mdpt, MaKf5ovte(Tdai ij/j.tu Kal ourws tvdtv opi^ecrOai. to. oiKaia i^Apol, contra Ar, 35). 164 THE EMPEROR CONST ANS [ch. vi. would decide what was right, things would not have come to this pass. They must get out of these scandalous quarrels, in which the bitter grudges of self-love give themselves rein at the expense of charity and of brotherly union.^ The Pope was abundantly justified. Yet this letter marks the beginning of an alliance which was to have very troublesome consequences, that of the Roman Church and of St Athanasius with Marcellus of Ancyra. Marcellus may have had the best intentions : his teaching, as we have seen before, laid itself open to criticism, even in those times when precision in theological language still left much to be desired. Athanasius, tossed about in so many storms, has never been accused on the score of his belief, even by his bitterest enemies. It was other- wise with Eustathius and with Marcellus. Eustathius soon disappeared ; but Marcellus lived almost as long as Athanasius, and it is worthy of notice that — not to mention the Arianizers, whose special aversion he was — he was almost everywhere looked upon with suspicion. Two years after his death, St Epiphanius considered him a proper subject for his collection of heretics, and included him in it, though, it is true, with some reserve. He had questioned Athanasius himself upon the matter, and the old warrior, without either attacking or defending his former companion-in-arms, replied by a smile,- which Epiphanius interpreted as meaning that Marcellus had gone as near as possible to the danger-point, and had been obliged to justify himself He was already in this position at the time of which we are now writing. Pope Julius did not allow him to leave Rome, without asking him for a written profession of faith.^ This document, skilfully worded, managed to ^ This letter was carried to the East by a certain Count Gabianus {Ap. c. Ar. 20). ^ Kpiph. Haer. Ixxii. 4 : p.bvov hih. rov ■wpoad-wov fieidiaffas vir€lav fcDcrac, . 219-20] COUNCIL OF SARDICA 175 instituted it, and had proved the innocence of the Bishop of Alexandria. Asclepas produced the documents relating to his own trial, drawn up at Antioch in the presence of his accusers and of Eusebius of Caesarea : the course of this trial showed that he also was innocent. As to Marcellus, his notorious book was read. It was recognized, with too much leniency, that the objection- able passages were rather tentative propositions than assertions maintained, and that, at bottom, his faith was sound.^ As to the Easterns, their behaviour was severely judged. In the opinion of the council, their abrupt departure showed that they had but little confidence in their previous decisions, and feared to be accused in their turn ; as would actually have happened, since many plaints had been made against them. Their victims had presented themselves in large numbers, with witnesses, proofs, and even such damning exhibits as the instruments of torture to which they had been subjected. All these alleged wrongs were examined, and the council, so far as was in its power, made provision for the reparation necessary in each case. It also pronounced — for contumacy, just as the Easterns had done — several sentences of deposition and excommunication. These sentences were directed first against the three successors wrongfully appointed in place of the reinstated bishops, Gregory of Alexandria, Basil ' That in this Marcellus had imposed on the council is evident from these remarks on his doctrine : " He has not said, as his adversaries allege, that the Word oi God derives His origin from the Virgin Mary, nor that His kingdom would have an end ; he wrote that His kingdom is without end, as it is without beginning." What the adversaries of Marcellus really charged him with, was not the denial of the Eternity of the Word, but the assertion that His existence as Son began with the Incarnation. They accused him, not of setting limits to the Kingdom of the Word, as Word, but to His Kingdom as Christ, as the Word Incarnate. On these two points, he was certainly wrong. But Marcellus was skilful in manoeuvring. He had signed the Creed of Nicasa, in which the generation of the Word, before the Incarnation, is clearly affirmed ; he placed an interpretation then on the term yewrjO^vTa, which, in his system, could only be applied to the Incarnate Word. 176 THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [ch. vi. of Ancyra, Quintianus of Gaza ; then the actual leaders of the party, Stephen, Bishop of Antioch, Acacius of Caesarea in Palestine, Menophantus of Ephesus, Narcissus of Neronias, Theodore of Heraclea, Ursacius of Singidunum, Valens of Mursa ; the last three had taken part in the famous enquiry in Mareotis ; Valens, as an aggravation, had just distinguished himself by fomenting a sedition to secure his own election as Bishop of Aquileia. Scenes of violence had taken place there : a certain Bishop Viator had been so seriously injured that he died three days after- wards. To this list of persons proscribed the council added further George, Bishop of Laodicea in Syria, who had not, however, accompanied the other Eastern prelates ; but they had this against him, that, being a priest at Alexandria, he had been deposed by Bishop Alexander. Besides these questions of individuals, the council also wished, after the example of the Council of Nicaea, and as the Eastern prelates had just done, to draw up a profession of faith. With this intention, a composition of consider- able length was prepared, which, for the most part, either justified or disguised certain ideas for which Marcellus had been blamed, and which affirmed the unity of hypostasis, this word being taken, be it understood, in the sense of its Latin equivalent substantia} Hosius and Protogenes, who approved of this rather tenuous creed, had even prepared a letter to Pope Julius, to induce him to give it his approval. However, the proposal miscarried. The council was made to understand, and Athanasius seems to have exerted himself strongly to this end, that there was already quite sufficient difficulty in maintaining the Creed of Nicaea, without complicating it with appendices, which would only increase the centres of opposition to it ; and that therefore it was much better to keep to the text ^ For people who translated oyciooi^cnos by consubstantialis, the terms ovaio. and inrbaTacTis were equivalent. We must note carefully that the word essentia, by which we translate oiVia, was not at that time in use ; that, for the two Greek words, ovala and inroaTaais, there was but one Latin term, substatttia. We can therefore understand the Council of Sardica being tempted to pass from the ' consubstantial ' to the unity of hypostasis. p. 222] PERSONA, HYPOSTASIS, ESSENCE 177 unanimously adopted by that venerable assembly, and not to imitate the opposing party, who every year brought out a new creed. Athanasius was quite right, as the sequel showed. The Nicene Council, inspired solely by the desire to save the absolute Divinity of Christ, had accepted the Western homoousios, which really safeguarded the point assailed, but gave no explanation of the personality of the pre- existing Christ. Such a formula was incomplete in itself; it was necessary to supplement it by that of the Three Persons. This latter dogma the Western bishops at Nicaea may have held in the spirit : Tertullian and Novatian speak unhesitatingly of the tres personae. But it had not been introduced into the Creed of Nicaea ; and, besides, the word persona, irpocrunrov in Greek, was not sufficiently explicit. Persona has undoubtedly the sense of rational individuality, but it equally well signifies a character, a mask, a personage. The most orthodox among the Easterns clung to a greater precision of language. This they expressed by the term hypostasis, which was itself inadequate, for its proper meaning is substance, and, when one speaks of three divine hypostases, one has the appearance at first of speaking of three divine substances, of three gods. However, without really comprehending what they were trying to explain — and how can anyone comprehend such relations in the Infinite Being? — they ended by acknowledging the one essence and the three hypostases of the Easterns. It was finally agreed that that which, in the Trinity, was common to the Father, to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit, should be called " essence " (oOcrm), and that which was proper to each of them should be designated by the terms " hypostasis " or " Person." But, at the time of which we are now writing, that solution was still far off. It would certainly have been compromised, if the Council of Sardica had prejudiced it by proscribing the three hypostases. It was a wise inspiration on the part of Athanasius to oppose such a declaration. Nevertheless, the idea of a creed was not lost sight of, II M 178 THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [ch. vi. any more than the text of the letter which was to commend it to Pope Julius^ : and, later on, certain enthusiasts found an opportunity for taking advantage of it. But the encyclical addressed by the council to " all the bishops of the Catholic Church," contained nothing of the kind.^ It concluded with an invitation to those addressed to confirm by their signatures the definitions of the assembly in which they had not been able to take part. The edition of this encyclical inserted by St Athanasius some years later in his Apology against the Avians actually contains more than two hundred signatures which were thus added, besides those of the members of the council. The council was unwilling to separate without pass- ing some disciplinary canons. For the most part, these regulations were inspired by existing circumstances. Thus, the first two forbid in the severest terms the transla- tion of bishops from one see to another ; we can perceive here the impression left by the affair of Valens.^ Others condemn the constant journeys of bishops to the imperial court/ or deal with incidents which had taken place at Thessalonica '"^ ; others concern the ordinations of bishops, law-suits of clergy, and the sojourn of bishops outside their dioceses.^ The most famous are the canons relating to the condemnation of bishops.'^ Such condemnations can only be pronounced by the council of the province to ^ Both these are preserved in the Alexandrian dossier^ which the collection of the deacon Theodosius has preserved to us in Latin. The Greek text of the creed is in Theodoret, H, E. ii. 6, pp. 844-888 : ' AiroKTjpvTTOfj.ev di iKelvovs k.t.X. '^ HoXXa fiiv Kal iroWdKis (Athan. ApoL contra Ar. 44 et seq.). The council wrote also to the Church of Alexandria {ibid. 37), as well as to the bishops of Egypt and Libya {ibid. 41), and finally to the Churches of Mareotis, Etiani ex his (Collection of the deacon Theodosius, Migne, P. L. vol. Ivi., p. 848). Athanasius himself wrote to the priests and deacons of Alexandria, as well as to the priests and deacons of Mareotis {ibid., pp. 852 and 850). ^ A special report was addressed to the Emperor Constans upon this affair. * Can. 8-12 of the Latin text ; 7, 8, 9, 20 of the Greek text. ^ Lat. 20, 21 ; Gr. 16-19. 6 Lat. 13-19 ; Gr. 10-15. ' Lat. 3, 4, 7 ; Gr. 3, 4, 5. p. 224-5] THE CANON OF APPEALS 179 which the accused belongs. And if he is not satisfied with the decision given, his fellow-bishops of the province are to write to the Bishop of Rome, who shall decide if there is any occasion for revision, and if so, shall appoint judges of appeal. The appeal shall temporarily suspend proceedings, and the appellant bishop shall not be able to be replaced before the final decision has been pronounced. The judges of appeal must be the bishops of a province near to that of the first judges. The Pope shall be able, at the request of the accused, to cause himself to be represented at their council by legates. Here, what is evidently in mind is the deposition of the Bishop of Alexandria outside his own province, at the request of the Eastern prelates ; the decision given by Pope Julius, and the summoning of the Council of Sardica. These canons, with the other documents relating to the council, were despatched to Pope Julius,^ with a letter'^ signed by a majority of the members of the assembly; the legates were to give him information as to details. Regarded as a whole, the Council of Sardica, which was summoned with such excellent intentions, had failed in its essential task — the pacification of the Church. This failure was primarily due to the unfriendly attitude of the Eastern prelates, led throughout by the supporters of Arianism, and throughout implacable in their animosity against Athanasius. We must also admit that certain blunders had been made by the Western prelates, and especially by Hosius. This " Father of Councils," as he was called, who had had a seat at the Council of Elvira in ' Optimion et valde congriientissimum esse videtiir^ says the council (letter to Julius), si ad caput, id est ad Petri apostoli sedeifi, de singulis qiiibusque prpvinciis Domini refcrant sacerdotes. ^ Letter Quod Seviper {\\\\. Frag. hist. ii. 9-15). In this letter we must take note of the following phrase, which gives a peculiar signifi- cance to certain, pieces of information : — ipsi religiosissimi imperatores Permiserunt ut de i?itegro universa disciissa disputarentur, et ante omnia de sancta fide et de integritate veritatis. Thus the two emperors themselves decided the programme of the council. Besides the question of faith, there was that of the sentences unjustly passed and that of the acts of violence attributed to the Easterns. 180 THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [ch. vi. the days before the persecution, and who, under Con- stantine, had taken the principal part in the Council of Nicaea, was, nevertheless, not the kind of man needed to preside over such sessions. He was a true Spaniard, dictatorial, harsh, and inflexible. At Nicaea he had insisted upon the hoinoonsios, without any consideration for the feelings of dislike which such a formula, presented without any saving clause, might excite in the East ; now he had furnished his opponents with the very pre- text they were seeking against the council, by allowing them to pose as defenders of correctness of procedure and even of orthodoxy. The whole conduct of the proceedings, in short, repre- sented a bad enough piece of business. Pope Julius ordered the canons of Sardica to be inscribed upon his registers, following those of Nicaea. And there they remained dormant.^ After, as before, this legislation with regard to appeals, the Apostolic See continued to receive them ; but there is no evidence to show that in this matter it conformed to the procedure laid down at Sardica. Instead of confining himself to quashing the decisions and appointing new judges, the Pope continued to decide the appeal himself. The West scarcely troubled itself about the new canons ; the East only recognized them two or three centuries later, and even then rather as historical documents than as a code to which it owed obedience. On their return from the council,- the Eastern bishops met with a very cold reception at Adrianople, where Bishop Lucius had already had occasion to complain of them. They were treated as runaways, and the Church refused to hold communion with them. They took their revenge by once more sending the bishop into exile, with a chain around his neck, and manacles upon his hands.^ Ten workmen belonging to the armoury, who had been ' Pope Zosimus revised them a century later ; and then they were the cause of a celebrated controversy. 2 Athan. Hist. Ar. 18-20. ^ He died shortly afterwards, at the place to which he had been exiled. 1'. 227] RESULTS OF THE COUNCIL 181 wanting in respect to them, were put to death on the application of their friend, Philagrius, now raised to the dignity of Count. Several years afterwards, Athanasius, passing through Adrianople, had an opportunity of seeing their graves. As to those bishops who had been restored to their former position by Hosius' council, they were forbidden, under pain of death, to show themselves again in their episcopal cities. The Bishops Arius and Asterius, who had forsaken their colleagues to go over to the side of the Westerns, were arrested and banished to the wilds of Libya. Some priests and deacons of Alexandria were deported to Armenia. The condition of affairs throughout the East amounted almost to a reign of terror. Nevertheless, Constans did not abandon those whom he had promised to protect. No doubt he shared, just as his brother did, the opinions of his own bishops ; moreover, he would not be sorry to have a cause of quarrel with his imperial colleague : the exiles furnished him with this. Towards Easter, in the year 344,^ two Western bishops, Vincent of Capua, the former legate at Nicaea, and Euphratas of Cologne, arrived at Antioch ; they were escorted by a general, the inagister iniHtiaii, Salianus, and were the bearers of letters from their emperor. Bishop Stephen made them the subject of a plot which can only be characterized as abominable.- The house where they stayed was situated in a lonely spot. The bishop's servants engaged the services of a common prostitute, and, making one of the attendants their accomplice, introduced 1 This date follows from a narrative of St Athanasius {Hist. Ar. 21), who places the death of Gregory (June 25, 345) about ten months after certain events which followed closely upon the affair of Euphratas and the deposition of Stephen. This passage, in any case, prevents us from going back as far as the year 343, which would, besides, be inadmissible, if the Council of Sardica had really taken place in that year. If it was held in the autumn of 342, as seems probable, we must admit that the Western authorities waited some months to make sure as to the attitude of the Eastern emperor in regard to the restored prelates. - Athan. Hist. Ar. 20 ; cf. Theodoret, ii. 7, 8. Theodoret. who came from Antioch, has preserved some details as to the locality of the affair. 18:^ THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [ch. vi. her by night into the chamber where the Bishop of Cologne was sleeping. Euphratas awoke, and at once called for help. The woman, who had expected from what they told her to find a young man, herself took fright when she saw that she was in the presence of an old man whose appearance showed him to be a bishop. She too began to call out. At that moment, some persons, who were secreted in readiness, burst into the house. The bishops did not lose their heads ; their cries for help were answered, the outer door was closed, and the result was the capture of the woman and also of several of the organizers of the plot. The next morning the general, Salianus, who had lodgings elsewhere, appeared on the scene, and, without waiting to listen to the bishops under his charge, who were already beginning to show themselves mercifully inclined, went at once to the palace to make a complaint and to demand a formal enquiry. The Emperor Constantius, greatly shocked, granted his request without demur. Stephen's complicity in the affair was established : steps were speedily taken to gather together a synod of neigh- bouring bishops, and he was deposed. His place was filled by a native of Phrygia, Leontius, a staunch supporter of the Arianizing party. Thus, while the direction of ecclesiastical affairs changed hands, the spirit which actuated it was unchanged. However, Constantius, reflecting upon all that had just happened, and listening also to his brother's expostulations, began to relax the severities into which he had been led. The clergy of Alexandria were recalled from their exile in Armenia, and the Egyptian officials received orders to leave the partisans of Athanasius in peace.^ But the chief matter was the schism, for there was really a schism between the two episcopates. The pass of Tisucis, between Sardica and Philippopolis, formed a boundary between the two communions. On either side of the frontier, people might differ in their opinions, but they remained in religious communion one with another ; but, once over the border, it was not so.^ Such a state 1 Athan. Hist. At: 21. ^ Socrates, ii. 22. p. 229-30] PHOTINUS OF SIRMIUM 183 of things was intolerable. The Eastern prelates, no doubt as a reply to the affair of Vincent and Euphratas, or provoked in another way by delegates from their Western brethren, decided to send to the court of Milan four bishops — Demophilus, Eudoxius,^ Macedonius, and Martyrius — with instructions to explain their faith to the Emperor Constans and his bishops, and to see if some kind of understanding could not be arrived at. They carried with them, besides the creed already presented in 342 and republished at Sardica, a long explanation, in ten articles.- This contained nothing that was unorthodox, and, if it had not been for its silence as to the hoinoousios, it might have given satisfaction. Naturally, it expanded at length the points compromised by the teaching of Marcellus and his disciple Photinus, or, as he was called, by a play upon his name, Scotinus.^ This is the first time that we hear of him. Like his master, he was a Galatian, and, under Marcellus' instruc- tions, had performed at Ancyra the functions of a deacon. He was now at the head of the bishopric of Sirmium, a very important position. The members of his diocese were much attached to him ; they appreciated his learning, his eloquence, and his other qualities. Unfortun- ately, his doctrine left much to be desired. We may describe it with sufficient accuracy by saying that it was almost identical with that of Paul of Samosata. Besides, the principles of Marcellus, with his impersonal Word who became Son and a distinct hypostasis solely by His Incarnation, ended logically in the theology of the two Theodoti, a theology which was condemned at Rome by Pope Victor, and at Antioch in the time of Bishop Paul. The Easterns had abundant reasons for rejecting this theology, and even for charging the old Bishop of Ancyra 1 Eudoxius and Demophilus succeeded one another, later on, in the see of Constantinople. 2 Athan. De Syn. 26, who gives the date of it as three years after the Council of 341. He mentions three of these bishops, Eudoxius, Macedonius, and Martyrius. ^ 4>a)r€»'6s is an adjective meaning "light" ; 2i/coT€if6s means "dark" or " obscure." 184 THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [ch. vi. with being the father of it. The plain speaking of his disciple put Marcellus in a difficult position. Athanasius, who was then not very far from Sardica, and was living in retirement at Nisch, began to see more clearly into the ideas of his colleague, and to recognize that they hardly differed from those of Photinus. An understanding might have been arrived at in Milan. In fact, it was almost attained. The Western bishops, assembled around the emperor with the legates of the Roman Church,^ made up their minds to condemn Photinus. But in return they demanded of the Eastern delegates the condemnation of the doctrines of Arius. This was refused, and the Eastern contingent finally departed in anger.'^ Ursacius and Valens, subjects of the Emperor Constans, had no qualms about it ; they sacrificed themselves, and repudiated the Arian heresy. Notwithstanding the ill-humour of the Eastern envoys, the Council of Milan thought it a duty to notify to those whom they represented what had been decided upon with regard to Photinus. The receipt of this letter was acknowledged ; though, at the same time, it was carefully pointed out that, if Photinus was so deplorably heretical, it was because his education had been in the hands of his former bishop, Marcellus.^ To revive at ^ Hil. Frag. hist. ii. 20 ; viii. 2. - " Quattuor episcopi, Demophilus, Macedonius, Eudoxius, Mar- tyrius, qui ante annos octo, cum apud Mediolanum Arii sententiam haereticam noluissent damnare, de concilio animis iratis exierunt." Letter of Liberius written in 354 (Jaffe, 212 ; Hil. Frag. hist. v. 4). "[Photinus] qui ante biennium iam in Mediolanensi synodo erat haereticus damnatus" (Hil. Frag. hist. ii. 19). Observe the expression Arii sententiam haereticam. It was scarcely possible to ask the Eastern delegates to condemn Arius in person, since, after he had given a satisfactory explanation to them, they had readmitted him to ecclesiastical communion. ^ Hil. Frag. hist. ii. 22. St Hilary weakens his position here to show that Marcellus had not been formally condemned by any council since that of Constantinople. Unfortunately he was right. The Latins would have acted wisely in following the example of Athanasius, and refusing to recognize a compromising person. The support they gave him is a proof of their lack of insight. p. 232] RESTORATION OF ATHANASIUS 185 such a time the deHcate question of Marcellus, was evidence of feelings in which friendship was not con- spicuous. But opposing parties not infrequently have too long a memory. Athanasius, just about this same time, went some way of his own accord to meet the wishes of the Eastern prelates. He notified Marcellus that he could no longer hold relations with him ; and it is certainly worthy of remark that Marcellus accepted the position and abstained from any rejoinder. As to Photinus himself, Athanasius, whose views had certainly not gone uncon- sidered in the deliberations at Milan, could only have a highly unfavourable opinion. However, the Bishop of Sirmium, protected by his local popularity, troubled himself very little at the censure of which he had been the subject at Milan, and stood his ground in the face of and in spite of everyone. But at the end of two years, as his attitude was a cause of scandal, and as it was important from the point of view of relations with the East that the main body should not appear to be compromised by his heresy, a council was called together at Sirmium itself, with a view to getting rid of the bishop. But they tried in vain. Photinus, like Paul of Samosata, was a difficult person to dislodge. The intervention of the government was neither given nor even asked for ; and the bishops, reduced to spiritual weapons, were obliged to return home without having met with any success. However, a great event happened : Athanasius was reinstated at Alexandria. The intruder Gregory, who had long been ill, finally died on June 25, 345.^ Constantius took advantage of this to yield to his ' As to this date there can be no doubt. The Chroiiicle of the Festal Letters mentions the day (2 epiphi = June 25). It is true that it speaks of the event under the year 346, but in relation to the return of Athanasius to Alexandria — which actually occurred on October 21, 346 We know, from tlie Historia ArianoruDi, that Athanasius, who was recalled immediately after the death of Gregory, delayed for more than a year. 186 THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [cii. vi. brother's requests. He forbade the appointment of a successor to Gregory, and recalled Athanasius. It was more than a year before Athanasius would comply with the summons. He mistrusted both Constantius and his advisers. Who could tell whether, if the wind happened to change, the memory of the Council of Tyre might not be called up ? No one said anything of formally annulling the decision. But Constantius insisted ; he even wrote three times to the bishop, and made many of his intimates write also, even his brother Constans ; he swore that everything was forgotten. At last Athanasius made up his mind. From Aquileia, where he was at the time, he journeyed to Rome, to take leave of Pope Julius, who gave him a kind letter for the clergy and faithful of Alexandria ; he also went to see the Emperor Constans, who had upheld him so effectually, and at last he set out on his way to the East. His friends received him everywhere with joy ; some, who had not been so faithful as the others in upholding him, were rather embarrassed. As to his enemies, they found pretexts for not appearing at all. At Antioch he met the emperor, and requested that advantage might be taken of this opportunity to bring him face to face with his accusers, and investigate once for all their complaints against him.^ His request was not granted, and he continued his journey. The farther he travelled, the more pronounced was the sympathy shown to him. In Palestine — although the Metropolitan Acacius, who had succeeded Eusebius, was one of his most inveterate enemies — Maximus, the Bishop of Jerusalem, assembled a council of sixteen bishops to do honour to the exile. They gave him letters to the Egyptian bishops and to the faithful of Alexandria. At last he crossed the desert, and his triumph began ; the State officials themselves travelled as much as a hundred miles to meet the outlaw. They had received strict instructions : the emperor had given orders for the destruction, in the official records, of everything which might have been inserted against Athanasius and his ^ Letter of Hosius, in Athan. Hist. Ar. 44. p. 234-5] URSACIUS Ax\D VALENS 187 followers. On October 21, 346, the victorious bishop found himself once more in the midst of his Alexandrians.^ The wind had decidedly changed. This was the subject of the reflections of Bishops Ursacius and Valens, on the banks of the Danube. They had already made a move at the time of the Council of Milan, which apparently had referred them to Pope Julius. The Pope had demanded substantial pledges, and there is no doubt that the two bishops had hesitated some time before giving them. In the end they submitted, and addressed the Pope, asking pardon for their misdeeds and recognising the decisions of the Council of Sardica. It will be remembered that they had there been deposed. Wishing for peace, Julius thought it best to give them back the government of their Churches ; but he summoned them first to his presence, and made them sign a document, in which they retracted everything they had said and done against Athanasius, condemned Arius and his teaching, and promised to have nothing more to do with these affairs, whether at the invitation of the Easterns or of Athanasius, without the consent of the Pope.- They wrote also to the Bishop of Alexandria, in order to put themselves again in communion with him.^ Everything seemed to have been satisfactorily arranged. Nothing remained to be settled, so far as the West was concerned, but the question of Photinus, and this they might hope to dispose of, some time or another, without recourse to strong measures. In the East they had been too badly beaten by Athanasius not to bear him a grudge in consequence. But this also might come to an end, provided the position of external affairs remained unchanged. The Emperor Constans now turned his ' Upon this, see Apol. cotiira Ar. 51-57 ; Hisf. Ar. 21-23, with the official documents ; cf. Apol. ad Const. 4. The exact date is given by the Alexandrian chronicles. , 2 The letter was written by Valens, with his own hand, and signed by Ursacius. •" The original letters are in Hil. Frag. hist. 20 ; cf. Athan., Apol. contra Ar. 58. 188 THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [ch. vi. attention towards Africa, where, for more than twenty-five years, two religious parties had been in conflict, and indeed in armed conflict, much to the detriment of public order. We have already seen that Constantine, after trying his utmost to bring back the Donatists to unity, had ended by leaving them alone — a concession of which they had not failed to take advantage to stir up disturbances on all sides, and to ill-treat their opponents. The latter, left to their own resources, did the best they could, and tried to appeal to the good sense of the public, by enlightening it as to the origins of the dispute. To this end, they drew up a sort of apologetic dossier, in which there figured, side by side with the records of the enquiry on Felix of Aptunga and the trial of Silvanus,^ various documents relating to the decisions of Rome, Aries, and Milan.- But the Donatists were hardly in a mood for a discussion of the issues. Entrenched behind the barriers of their sullen obstinacy, their only answer to arguments was in the form of curses or blows. Towards the end of his reign the emperor seems for a moment to have lost patience. The praetorian prefect of Italy, Gregory (336- 337), undertook some measures of repression, Donatus protested against these with extreme violence : " Gregory, pollution of the senate, and disgrace of the prefecture ! " such was the beginning of his letter. The prefect replied with patience, and in a style, says St Optatus, which would befit a bishop.^ For all that, the Donatists ' Supra, pp. 90, 95. - This is what I have called the Sylloge Optatiatia, because it figures at the end of the work of St Optatus upon the Donatist schism. It is preserved, in a very incomplete form, in a Cormery MS. {Parisimis, \7i\). But as it was certainly seen by St Optatus and St Augustine, who often refer to it, I have been able to recon- struct it completely. On this subject, see my Memoir, Le dossier du Donatisme, in the Melanges of the French School at Rome, vol. x. 1890. The fragments contained in the Cormery MS. appear at the end of the text of Optatus in the Vienna Corpus scriptorum ecclesiasti- coruni latinorum, vol. xxvi. •* Optatus, iii. 3, 10. p. 237] THE CIRCTJMCELLIONS 189 inscribed his name, after those of Leontius, Ursacius, and Zenophilus, upon the list of their persecutors, and only became more and more insolent. It was about this time that there was formed under their auspices the strange body called Agonistics, or Circumcellions, This name was given to bands of fanatics, who travelled all over the country, especially in Numidia, to lend a hand to the good cause and wage war against the traditorcs. They claimed to observe strict chastity, and this was why the Donatists, later on, compared them to the Catholic monks. Armed with stout cudgels, they appeared everywhere, on the public roads and in the markets, prowled about cottages, whence came their name of Circumcellions, and kept a strict watch over farms and country houses. It was not only in the quarrel of Donatus and Caecilian that they interested themselves. Sturdy redressors of wrongs, the enemies of all social inequalities, they eagerly took the part of small holders against proprietors, of slaves against their masters, and of debtors against their creditors. At the first call of the oppressed, or those who pretended to be so, and especially of the Donatist clergy when they found them- selves hemmed in at close quarters by the police, the Circumcellions appeared on the scene in fierce gangs, uttering their war-cry: Deo laudes I and brandishing their famous clubs. One of their chief amusements, when they met a carriage preceded by running slaves, was to put the slaves inside the carriage, and make the masters run in front. Even for those who did not belong to any of the classes regarded with dislike by these extraordinary people, it was not at all pleasant to meet the Circum- cellions upon lonely roads. The sons of martyrs often had the intention of being martyrs themselves ; and as, to their uneducated minds, the meaning of martyrdom was simply and solely a violent death, they sought for it with the greatest eagerness. When the madness seized them, they appealed to passers-by, and endeavoured to compel them to kill them. If such an one refused, they killed him, and then hastened on to find someone who would be 190 THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [ch. vi. more obliging. If necessary, they procured martyrdom for themselves, burnt themselves alive, threw themselves into rivers or, very commonly, from precipices. Once dead, they were buried by their companions with the greatest respect; the plains of Numidia were studded with their tombs, to which the same honours were paid as to those of the real martyrs. In Aures, where they were very numerous, they ended by becoming an organized body. Their principal chiefs, Axido and Fasir, were powers both dreadful and dreaded. But at last they made themselves unbearable, not only to their victims, but to the Donatist clergy themselves, upon whom public opinion fastened the responsibility for this brigandage under the guise of religion. The bishops adopted an attitude of disapproval of them, and then, when they gained nothing by it, made up their minds to declare the Circumcellions incorrigible, and addressed themselves to the military authorities. Count Taurinus sent his troops into the market-places, and made some arrests. In one quarter, called Octava, the soldiers met with determined resistance, as a result of which there were a good many killed and wounded. The dead, of course, were held up as martyrs ; but this time the Donatist bishops refused them Christian burial.^ This local and temporary repression only served to strengthen their fanaticism. The Circumcellions began again to swarm everywhere. At length the Emperor Constans decided to undertake the work of pacification, which had baffled previous attempts. Two commissioners, Paul and Macarius, were despatched to Africa, well furnished with money, to try first if imperial subsidies, freely distributed among the common people, might not make them favourably disposed. At Carthage the)' presented themselves to Donatus, who received them majestically : " What can the emperor have to do with the Church ? " - he said, and added that he 1 Optatus, iii. 4. This event is not dated with sufficient definiteness ; it seems that it must fall between 340 and 345. ^ Optatus, iii. 3. r. 239-40] CONSTANS AND THE DONATISTS 191 would write everywhere, commanding his people to refuse the proffered alms. In spite of the opposition of the " Prince of Tyre," as Optatus calls him, the imperial emissaries began their circuit, which passed off quietly in Proconsular Africa, and was even in many places crowned with success. The alms were distributed, the people were exhorted in the name of the emperor, and an agreement was arrived at, without any too severe measures having been necessary. In Numidia the case was different. There, the Donatist bishops organized a savage resistance.^ They rallied in great numbers around the Bishop of Bagai, one of the most determined amongst them ; his name also was Donatus, like the great primate of Carthage. An appeal was made to the " chiefs of the Saints " : and from all the region of Aures the Circumcellions flocked to Bagai', where the church was transformed into a store-house for provisions. Ten bishops were appointed to meet the two commissioners, who arrived by way of Theveste, with instructions to protest energetically against " the sacri- legious union." The meeting took place at Vegesela. The Donatist prelates spoke in such a manner to the emperor's representatives that the latter considered them- selves obliged to chastise them without more ado. After being tied up to pillars and flogged, they moderated their tone. One of them, however, a certain Marculus, remained obstinate, and was kept a prisoner. Being informed of the state of things at Bagai, the commissioners did not think it prudent to venture there without an escort. The Count of Africa, Silvester, put his troopers at their service. Some of these, being sent on in advance to Bagai, were received with showers of stones, and compelled to fall back on the main body, carrying with them a number of wounded. It is quite certain that matters did not end there. We have no exact details, but the measures of repression were prompt and severe. ^ In what follows, I have combined with the information given in Book III. of Optatus some details from the Passioti of Marculus. 192 THE EMPEROR CONST ANS [cii. vi. Donatus of Bagai lost his life as a result ; Marculus/ after being taken for some time from one town to another, was finally thrown from the top of the rock at Nova Petra. The Donatists, as we may well imagine, honoured them as martyrs : their opponents alleged, on the contrary, that Marculus had cast himself down when there was no one with him, and that Donatus also had thrown himself into a well.^ Henceforth the operations of Macarius and Paul assumed a severer aspect. The imperial envoys travelled from town to town, accompanied by the Count of Africa's troopers. The Donatist clergy fled at their approach ; as to the faithful, they were persuaded to assemble in the church, which they entered not without fear, for they had been led to believe that Paul and Macarius were placing images on the altar — the reference no doubt was to portraits of the emperors — and that the Christian Sacrifice was about to be offered to these new idols.^ Of course, nothing of the kind happened. The commissioners spoke, and explained in appropriate terms the object of their mission. In certain places, their success was 1 " Ecce Marculus de petra praecipitatus est ; ecce Donatus Bagaiensis in puteum missus est. Quando potestates Romanae talia supplicia decreverunt, ut praecipitentur homines?" — Aug. In Joh. xi. 15. - Passion of Marcuhis (Migne, P. L. vol. viii., p. 760). This document itself betrays some perplexity : the Donatist author who compiled it does not disguise that the execution had no other witness but the executioner. Another document dealing with martyrdoms, the work of Macrobius, Donatist Bishop of Rome, relates the death of two Carthaginian Donatists, Isaac and Maximian. The latter had torn up a proconsular edict relating to union ; the other had uttered seditious cries before the judge. They were condemned to exile, and then died in prison. Their bodies were cast into the sea, but this was so unskilfully done that they were thrown back on the shore. The Donatists said that Maximian was still living when cast into the water. This happened, it seems, in August 347 (xviii. kal. sept, die sabbato\ when the union, already an accomplished fact in Carthage, was no longer meeting with any difficulties except in Numidia {P. L. vol. viii., p. 767). It is possible that Macrobius may also be the author of the Passion of Marculus. ^ Optatus, iii. 12,; vii. 6. p. 24-2] " SUPPRESSION " OF UONATISM 193 complete, and effected a union which even included the Donatist bishop, with whom his Catholic colleague found means of coming to an arrangement, either by a division of the parishes or in some other way.^ But such cases seem to have been rare. There was much local resistance, which was repressed with severity.- The name of Macarius remained an object of hatred among the Donatists, and even the Catholics found the recollection of his military reprisals becoming after a time inconvenient. Of those members of the clergy who had sought refuge in flight, many died of fatigue and want : others hid them- selves, or even succeeded in holding their ground, here and there, under the protection of the Agonistics. Those who were captured — the bishops at least — were banished from Africa. Donatus was among the number ; and he died in exile. Persecution, as it always does, only fanned to fever- heat the anger of the opponents. One of these, a certain Vitellius, published an eloquent book with the title : TJie Servants of God are hated of the World. This book is unfortunately lost ; but we still possess two Passions of Donatist " martyrs," from which we can form an idea of the state of mind of the persecuted sect.^ When, their task accomplished, the operarii ujiitatis re- embarked for Italy, the Donatist Church had been abolished, outwardly and officially. There remained but one body of clergy and one Bishop of Carthage. Gratus, who was at that time invested with this lofty dignity, called together a great council, in 348, at which there were present several Donatist prelates, who had been brought into union during the preceding years. It is a curious proof of the state of men's minds immediately after the re-union. There had already been partial councils in the provinces ; but for this one the letters of summons ' Council of Gratus, c. 12. '^ Optatus again and again returns to this : aspera, aspere gesia. ^ Gennadius, De viris, 4. Vitellius had already inveighed against the pagans and the Catholics. Upon these two Passions, see p. 192, note 2. II N 194 THE EMPEROR CONSTANS [ch. vi. embraced the whole of Africa.^ The president began by giving thanks to God, who had inspired the Emperor Constans with the thought of this work of union, and with the choice of his representatives, Paul and Macarius. Then the council adopted several regulations to meet questions which arose from the situation ; in particular, the repetition of baptism was forbidden ^ and the practice of honouring as martyrs persons who had been assassinated, or those who had killed themselves, either by throwing themselves over precipices or in other ways. Questions of general discipline were also dealt with. In conclusion, Gratus revived and solemnly renewed the condemna- tions directed long before against the traditores and rebaptizers. The censure of the traditores was a satis- faction granted to the reconciled Donatists ; that of the rebaptizers a condemnation, however indirect, of Donatism itself. Old disputes were allowed to sleep in peace. Caecilian, Felix, and Majorinus had long been dead : no further mention was made of them. With the wise spirit, of which these decisions of the council bore witness, peace would in the end have been restored, if only, side by side with a close supervision of the unquiet element still remaining in the country, and the prolongation of the exile of its leaders, time had been allowed to extinguish feelings of resentment, and to accustom people to live together who had been cursing each other for nearly forty years. But unfortunately for Africa — and we may say so quite apart from any religious ^ It is vexatious that we have not a complete list of signatures in connection with this council : it would have been of quite unusual interest. 2 Canons i, 2. The Donatists maintained the old Cyprianic principle, that there is no baptism outside the true Church. And as they did not accord this title to the Catholic Church, they were, of course, obliged, when a Catholic became a Donatist, to confer upon him the only baptism valid in their eyes, namely, their own. We have already seen that the Catholic Church of Africa had abandoned, at the Council of Aries in 314, the custom formerly upheld by St Cyprian. In these circumstances, it could not but recognize Donatist baptism. p. 244] JULIAN AND DONATISM 195 prejudice in the matter — the attitude of the government was not maintained long enough. The fire was still smouldering under the ashes, when Julian, to do an ill turn to the Church, released the exiles and once more let loose the storm upon the African provinces. CHAPTER VII THE PROSCRIPTION OF ATHANASIUS Assassination of Constans. The usurper Magnentius. Constantius makes himself master of the West. The two Cassars, Gallus and Julian. Deposition of Photinus. New intrigues against Athanasius. The Council of Aries. Pope Liberius. Councils of Milan and of Beziers. Exile of Lucifer, Eusebius, Hilary, Liberius, and Hosius. Police riots at Alexandria. Assault on the Church of Theonas : disappearance of Athanasius. Intrusion of George. Athanasius in retirement. The religious policy of Constans had in some measure succeeded. ' Order was supreme ' in Africa. It is true that on the Danube frontier the heretical bishop of Sirmium still held his ground ; but, as the members of his diocese put up with him, the interruption of relations between him and his colleagues was only of local interest. In the East, the restoration of Athanasius had been secured, and this meant the pacification of Egypt. The Egyptians, it is true, remained more or less isolated in the episcopal world of the East, and the Eastern bishops were not in agreement with the Western Church. But some steps had been taken towards union ; the bishops of Palestine and of the island of Cyprus had resumed communion with Athanasius ; and there was reason to hope that, in process of time, these tendencies towards peace would increase, and East and West arrive at last at mutual understanding. But to ensure this it would have been necessary that the political equilibrium should remain such as circumstances had made it. Unfortunately this was exactly what did not happen. p. 246] USURPATION OF MAGNENTIUS 197 On January i8, 350, a military conspiracy broke out at Autun, and the Count Magnentius was proclaimed emperor in place of Constans, who was assassinated a few days afterwards at Elna, at the foot of the Pyrenees. Against this attack upon the due succession in the line of Constantino, all the remaining members of his family instinctively set themselves in opposition. In the West, two daughters of Constantino were still living, Constantina and Eutropia, both of them widows, one of King Hannibalian, the other of the consular, Nepotianus. Constantina, who was residing at Sirmium, lost no time in setting up a rival to Magnentius, and proclaimed as Augustus an old general named Vetranio (March i). Eutropia, who lived in Rome, was at first out-flanked by the rapid movement of Magnentius, who secured his own recognition in the ancient capital ; but she quickly rallied, and advanced her own son Nepotianus to the imperial dignity on June 3. So far as he was concerned, however, Magnentius had little difficulty in getting the upper hand. Before a month had elapsed, his general, Marcellinus, recaptured Rome after a fierce conflict, in which Nepotianus was killed. The conqueror did not show himself disposed to mercy ; Eutropia was put to death, and with her a large number of prominent members of the Roman aristocracy. Constantius also did not lose hope. He had upon his hands, besides the catastrophes in the West, a never- ending war with the Persians. The city of Nisibis endured during this year a heroic siege, and its inhabitants, encouraged by their famous Bishop James, resisted for a space of four months all the attacks of King Sapor. In this quarter, the military operations were under the direction of the emperor's lieutenants. Constantius himself lost no time in gathering his forces and setting out on his march to the West. He had already come to some sort of understanding with Vetranio, who allowed him to pass through Illyricum. Vetranio did more than this : the son of Constantine managed to persuade him to resign the purple, succeeded him himself without a 198 PROSCRIPTION OF ATHANASIUS [ch. vii. struggle, and sent him to end his days in peace at Prusias in Bithynia. By this arrangement, Constantius gained the Balkan Peninsula and the Pannonian provinces, supposing always that Magnentius did not come to dispute them with him, a contingency which there was much reason to fear. In the meantime, Constantius took up his winter quarters at Sirmium. In the spring, he marched towards the Julian Alps; the "tyrant" came to meet him, and obliged him to fall back as far as the confluence of the Drave and the Danube. There, on September 28, 351, the battle of Mursa was fought, the result of which was unfavourable to Magnentius, and compelled him to recross the mountains. When winter set in, the two rivals remained in their positions of the preceding year, Constantius at Sirmium, Magnentius at Aquileia. It was not till the following summer (352) that Constantius succeeded in crossing the passes and making his way into Italy : Magnentius was obliged to fall back upon Gaul. The victor entered Milan, where he married Eusebia, a beautiful and capable woman, who soon gained an immense influence over her husband. In 353, Magnentius, who had tried in vain to defend the Alps, beat a retreat upon Lyons. Seeing that he was on the point of being betrayed by the remnant of his forces, he killed himself on August 10. Constantius entered Lyons, and the unity of the empire was once more re-established. None the less, like his predecessors, Constantius felt the need of sharing its burden. He could not at the same time conquer the West and carry on a struggle with the Persians, Already, in 351 (March 15), Gallus, one of the sons of Julius Constantius, had been brought out of his retirement and despatched to Antioch with the rank of Caesar ; a wife was found for him in the person of the emperor's own sister, Constantina, the widow of Hannibalian, the princess who a year earlier had made an emperor out of Vetranio. This enterprising person helped her husband to transform himself into an Asiatic p. 248] DEATH OF GALLUS, 354 199 tyrant ; and left to themselves they had soon succeeded in subjecting Antioch to an unbearable system of oppression. The cries of the victims were at last heard in Milan. Being summoned to appear before the master of the empire, Gallus sent his wife in advance, knowing her fertility in resource. She, however, died on the way,^ so that he felt himself obliged to go in person. As he had not been able to assume the attitude of a rival, he speedily found himself in the position of a culprit before his judge. He was taken to Flanona, near Pola, and there condem.ned and executed (at the end of 354). He had still one brother remaining, Julian. The latter, in the following year, was summoned to court and pro- claimed Caesar (November 6, 355). Gaul was entrusted to him, and he governed it well, gaining the gratitude of its people, especially for the bravery and skill with which he defended them against the barbarians beyond the Rhine. But we must now return to the affairs of the Church. The news of the death of Constans had burst upon the East like a thunderclap. All the enemies of Athanasius in Syria and in Asia Minor had not, indeed, dared to show their joy openly (for that might have been imprudent and dangerous), but trembled with hopefulness. Some of them had even plucked up courage to talk once more of the Council of Tyre, and the necessity of adhering to its decisions. These were in too great a hurry : Constantius refused to listen to them. He wrote to Athanasius and assured him that the wishes of his dead brother would be respected, and that, whatever rumours might reach him, his mind might be at rest : he should always be supported."^ The Egyptian officials received instructions to the same ^ It was she who built at Rome the celebrated basilica of St Agnes, where this fact was commemorated by a metrical inscription, the text of which is still extant : Constantina Deum venerans Christoque dkata, etc. She was buried there, in a mausoleum which is still in existence (see above, p. 51, note 2). It is this Constantina whom legend has transformed into a holy Virgin Constantia, in spite of the fact that she had been married twice, and that in other ways her life bore only the most distant resemblance to the evangelical ideal. 2 Athan. Hist. Ar. 23, 51. 200 PROSCRIPTION OF ATHANASIUS [ch. vii. effect. Athanasius, on his part, published in his own defence a brochure illustrated by documentary evidence, in which he set out, first, the decisions given in his favour by the Egyptian episcopate, by the Council of Rome, and by that of Sardica ; and then traced once more in a series of official documents, joined together by a short outline of narrative, the whole story of the intrigues directed against him, down to the time of his recall by the Emperor Constantius, and the retractation of Ursacius and Valens. This is the work which we call the Apologia against the Avians. Up to this time, Athanasius had abstained from writing anything on the subject, for fear that, as had happened in the case of Marcellus, his words might be misconstrued. And even now, he himself scarcely came into the open, being content to allow the documents to speak for themselves. There was another important person to whom the change of emperors must have seemed very unpleasant, namely, the Bishop of Sirmium. If he had become a cause of scandal to his colleagues of the West, we can imagine with what feelings he was regarded by those in the East. And the Eastern bishops were always represented among the personal attendants of Constantius. As soon as they saw him installed at Sirmium, they flocked thither and prepared to settle their old scores with " Scotinus," as they called him. But " Scotinus " was a man of resource. He succeeded at the outset in evading the council, and managed to arrange that a commission appointed by the emperor should decide between himself and those who criticized his teaching. Constantius, who delighted in this kind of disputation, appointed an Areopagus of eight officials, assisted by a staff of shorthand writers. Photinus appeared before them, and the opposing party chose as their speaker Basil, Bishop of Ancyra, a man of moderate opinions and a great talent for oratory. He, like Photinus, was a Galatian, and must have lived for a considerable time with him amongst the clergy of Marcellus. The story of Paul of Samosata was reproduced in all its details : Photinus and Basil resumed the duel between p. 250-51] COUNCIL OF SIRMIUM 201 the Bishop of Antioch and the priest Malchion.^ St Epiphanius had before him the formal record of this discussion,- which makes it possible to form a fairly clear idea of the errors of Photinus. Then the council assembled ; the Bishop of Sirmium received an additional condemna- tion from the Eastern episcopate, and the emperor exiled him. His place was filled by a certain Germinius, who was brought from Cyzicus, and who shared the views of the party. The Eastern bishops had recovered, on the banks of the Danube, two old friends, Ursacius and Valens, who had formerly been forced to desert them, but who were now free to display their sympathy, and hastened to rejoin the main body. A retaliation was being prepared ; but it was necessary to display caution. The Emperor Constantius was engaged in conquering the West ; and there were good hopes that this political victory might result in complete assimilation in religious matters. But the Latins, as experience had long shown, had prejudices which must be reckoned with. The council contented itself with publish- ing for the fourth time the Creed of Antioch, with an appendix of twenty-seven doctrinal canons, specially directed against Marcellus and Photinus, but without mentioning either of them by name. St Hilary,'^ who, as well as St Athanasius, has preserved for us the text of this document, finds in it nothing objectionable ; and indeed, if this creed had been presented through other hands, it might have found acceptance in the West. No doubt there is no question in it of the li07noousios ; but was it so certain that one could not dispense with this formula, which gave rise to so many objections, and which, while expressing but one aspect of the common faith, always required so many additions and explanations ? Even good 1 See vol. i., p. 342. "•^ Haer. Ixxi. i, 2. ^ Hil. De syn. 38-62 ; Athan. De syn. 27. Socrates, H. E. ii. 29, gives the date (351) of the assembly; and, notwithstanding the monstrous blunders which he makes here, we must acknowledge that the date he gives fits in well with the sequence of the facts as ascertained. 202 PROSCRIPTION OF ATHANASIUS [ch. vii. honest persons might have difficulties in regard to it. It is true that the homoousios had been canonized at Nicaea. But, without failing in respect for that venerable council, which no one then dreamed of doing, was it forbidden to interpret a little the words which it had decided upon ? Such thoughts must have passed through minds like that of Basil of Ancyra. They soon gained a great success, but it was only a transitory one, for they were the thoughts, not of all the Easterns, nor probably of the conscious or unconscious majority of that party, but only of a group of moderate persons. In the meantime, while his enemies were agitating in Illyria and preparing for the conquest of the West, Athanasius felt their intrigues once more beginning to twine around him. The winter of 351-352 seems to have been spent in a new attempt to get round the Emperor. They assured him that Athanasius, during his stay in the West, had maligned him to his brother, and that he had concluded an alliance with Magnentius.^ Constantius was engaged in building at Alexandria a great church, called the Caesareuni \ one day, during the Easter Festival, the faithful, who were somewhat crowded in the ordinary churches, betook themselves to it with their bishop. The enemies of Athanasius represented this as a great crime ; he ought to have waited until the Emperor himself had celebrated its dedication. In short, Athanasius again became in his eyes a dangerous person." The Eastern bishops ended by finding themselves ^ An embassy, sent to the Eastern court by Magnentius in 350, had, in order to avoid Vetranio, disembarked in Libya, and passed through Alexandria. Servasius, Bishop of Tongres, and Maximus, another bishop, formed part of it. Apol. ad Const. 9. ^ Ammianus Marcellinus (xv. 7, 6), who reproduces the gossip of the army, represents Athanasius as a sort of political sorcerer : '''' Athanasium episcopiim eo tempore apud Alexatidriatn ultra pro- fessionem altitis se efferentem scitariqiie conatutn externa, ut prodidere rumores adsidtii, coetus in uniiin qiiaesiius eiusdem loci miiltoriwi, sy nodus, ut appellant, reniovit a sacramcnto quod optinebat. Dicebatur enim fatidicarmn sortiiun fideni, qiiaeve augurales portenderent alites scientissinie callens, aliquoties praedixisse futura. Super his intende- bantur et alia quoque a proposito legis abhorrentia cui praesidebat." p. 253] POPE LIBERIUS 203 in a position to urge once more the idea that Athanasius had not in reality any recognized position, since he had been deposed by the Council of Tyre. Nothing therefore remained to be done but to rid Alexandria of him, and to secure his repudiation by the bishops of the West. Just at this very moment the Western Church lost its head: Pope Julius died on April 12, 352, about the time that Constantius was marching against Aquileia. His place was filled, a month later (May 17), by the deacon Liberius, destined, under the rigime which was beginning, to meet with many misfortunes. Shortly after his accession, various letters, emanating from Eastern and Egyptian bishops,^ reached him, denouncing Athanasius and his crimes. Like all the superior clergy of Rome, Liberius must have known what to believe. He read the letters of the Eastern bishops " to the Church and the Council," - and answered them, without accepting accusa- tions so often contradicted.^ By " the council " we may certainly understand the meeting of bishops which took place every year at the Pope's natale ; thus the date of it would be May 17, 353. About the same time, there arrived a deputation from the Egyptian bishops and the clergy of Alexandria, headed by Serapion of Thmuis, the most faithful lieutenant of Athanasius. These persons brought a protest, signed by eighty bishops, in favour of their persecuted brother.^ The Pope then addressed the Emperor, in the name of a large number of Italian bishops, requesting that a great council should be ' The Meletians, no doubt. - Hil. Frag. hist. v. 2. Letter from Liberius to Constantius, in 354(Jaflfe, 212). ^ I omit here, as apocryphal, the famous letter Studens pact, pre- served in the historical fragments of St Hilary {Frag. hist. iv.). It cannot be reconciled with the attitude of Liberius in the following years, and there is every appearance that St Hilary gives it as a document fabricated by some member of the Eastern party. * I connect the sending of this letter with the mission of Serapion and his companions, which left Alexandria on May 18, 353, according to the Athanasian Chronicle ; see also the Chronicle of the Festal Letters. 204 PROSCRIPTION OF ATHANASIUS [ch. vii. convened at Aquileia, to decide anew the controversy which was beginning to revive. Constantius had previously- given him reason to hope for an assembly of this kind. The papal legates, Vincent of Capua and Marcellus, another Campanian bishop, met the emperor at Aries, where he was spending the inclement season (353-4)- They found him in the middle of the celebration of his Tricemialia, surrounded by the bishops of the country, from whom he was demanding signatures against Athanasius. The Eastern quarrels were but little familiar to the clergy of Gaul. Ten years previously, at the time of the Council of Sardica, some of the bishops had found them- selves mixed up in these affairs : this was the case with Maximin of Treves, Verissimus of Lyons, and Euphratas of Cologne. The first, an avowed partisan of Athanasius, had been dead for some little time, and perhaps the two others also. The signatures, to the number of about thirty, which had been collected in favour of the decisions of Sardica, had no doubt been added, for the most part, on trust, at the request of the Emperor Constans and of important bishops such as those of Treves and Lyons. At the time of Constantius' arrival, all this was already rather ancient history. As to preceding events the bishops had but a faint idea ; even the Council of Nicaea was almost unknown. Hilary, Bishop of Poitiers, although a well- informed man, had never heard of the famous Nicene Creed, until Constantius had come to disturb the peace in which, on this subject, the Gallic episcopate was living. Possessed of but slight information on these matters and those which lay behind them, the bishops could scarce help following their natural inclination to do what so religious an emperor asked them. It was in vain that the Pope's representatives endeavoured to arrest this open action, to reserve the decision for the council which was to come, or, at least, to secure that, before condemning Athanasius, they should begin by reprobating the heresy of Arius. Their efforts were entirely unsuccessful. The eloquence of Valens, the spokesman of the Eastern prelates, and the p. 255-6] ATHANASIUS AND CONSTANTIUS 205 general enthusiasm for the son of Constantine, overcame all resistance. The Bishop of Aries, Saturninus, one of the first adherents secured, displayed great zeal. The legates themselves were carried away by the stream, and signed the condemnation of Athanasius. The Bishop of Treves, Paulinus, alone had the courage to protest. He was deposed and sent into exile.^ The vessel which had brought Serapion to Italy had passed on the high seas, after leaving Alexandria, an official galley, from which, on May 22, there disembarked a messenger from the court, named Montanus. He seemed thwarted in his embassy, for his instructions were to bring back Athanasius himself He handed the bishop an imperial letter by which he was authorized, "according to his request," to appear before his sovereign. Athanasius had made no request. Accustomed to the ways of the court, he scented a trap and excused himself His own messengers were refused admittance to Constantius, and returned to Alexandria. The bishop no doubt thought that the order would be pressed, and that, sooner or later, he would be forced to appear before the emperor. In view of this contingency, he prepared a defence of himself, in a dignified style, worthy of being pronounced before the court. He had even gone so far as to anticipate the changes of countenance which his eloquence might provoke in his imperial auditor : " You smile, sire, and your smile shows that you agree . . ." - This fine speech was never delivered.^ For more than two years the court pretended to know nothing of Athanasius. But if, for the present, he was left at peace in Egypt, his enemies in Italy and Gaul continued their efforts to isolate him more and more. Irritated by the opposition ' Indignus ecclesia ab episcopis, dignus exilio a rege est iudicatus (Hil. Frag. hist. i. 6). ^ Apol. ad Const. 16. Athanasius was very confident ; for it was not at all an easy matter to bring a smile to the august lips of the Emperor Constantius. ^ Athanasius took it in hand again later and published it, with additions supplied by the sequel of his tragic history. It is his Apology^Jo the Enipero?' Constantius. 206 PROSCRIPTION OF ATHANASIUS [ch. vii. of Liberius, the Emperor had sent a proclamation to Rome, in which the Pope was violently abused. He was reproached for his ambition, his boasting, his blind obstinacy, his spirit of discord. Liberius defended him- self. Grieved as he was at the hostile attitude of his sovereign and the weakness of his own legates, he did not lose courage ; he addressed himself a second time to the emperor, in order to obtain a council, in which, after a confirmation of the faith of Nicaea, all questions relating to persons might be arranged by general consent.^ His letter was carried by fresh legates, men to whom fear was unknown and from whom no weakness was to be feared, but rather excess of zeal : these were Lucifer, Bishop of Caliaris, the priest Pancratius, and the deacon Hilary. Liberius tried at the same time to fortify around himself the courage of the Italian bishops ; he confided his anxiety to Hosius of Cordova, the veteran warrior in these melan- choly conflicts.^ Constantius, who had nothing to fear from so pliable a body of bishops, listened to the Pope's suggestions, and consented to the assembling of a council, which was actually held, not indeed at Aquileia, but at Milan, in the early months of the year 355. Liberius had commended his legates to Eusebius, Bishop of Vercellae, formerly one of the Roman clergy, well known for the holiness of his life and his strength of character. He also relied much upon the Bishop of Aquileia, Fortunatian. When the bishops were assembled, Eusebius, who was not at all easy in mind as to their intentions, was in no hurry to present himself; he needed to be summoned in the name of the emperor, and to be entreated by the Roman legates to appear, " as St Peter formerly did, to expose the wiles of the Magician." At last he presented himself, escorted by the legates. But, for ten days, the bishops had been working incessantly : they were beginning to show signs of weakness. Eusebius was implored to sign the con- demnation of Athanasius. He declared that several of 1 Jaffe, 212 (Hil. Frag. hist. v.). - Jaffe, 209, 210 (Hil. Frag. hist. vi. 3). p. 268] COUNCIT.S OF MILAN AND B]^:ZIERS 207 the persons present appeared to him to be heretics, and that, to remove doubts on this point, every one must sign the Creed of Nicaea. As he said this, he drew out a copy of it, and handed it first to the Bishop of Milan, who took a pen and was on the point of signing it, when Valens threw himself on him, and tore pen and paper out of his hands, crying out that such a mode of proceeding could not be allowed. A great disturbance ensued. The faithful appeared on the scene, and threatened to interfere on behalf of their bishop. The deliberations were then transferred from the church to the palace, and soon changed their form. The bishops were asked to choose between signing and exile. Three only accepted exile — Lucifer, Eusebius, and Dionysius ; all the others submitted.^ Further measures were taken with regard to those who were absent. Commissioners went from one Church to another, demanding signatures ; some of the clergy of Ursacius and Valens accompanied the imperial envoys. In Gaul a council was held at Beziers in the following year (356), before which several belated laggards were summoned. Among their number was Hilary of Poitiers. Immediately after the Council of Milan, he had organized a protest in Gaul against the sentence of exile on the bishops, and, in general, against the intervention of the civil power in questions of faith and communion. His first Apology to Constantius'^ may be considered as the manifesto of this opposition. Hilary and his party had separated Ursacius, Valens, and Saturninus from their communion, and had called to repentance others who had given way at their instigation. He was compelled to present himself before the Council of Beziers. He absolutely refused to change his attitude, and carried with him by his example his colleague of Toulouse, Rhodanius, ^ Upon this council, see especially Hilary, Ad Const, i. 8, com- pleted by Athanasius, Hist. Ar. 32-34, Sulpicius Severus, Chron. ii. 39, and the letters collected by Mansi, vol. iii., p. 326 et seq. - Of this document we only possess a mutilated text ; Sulpicius Severus {Chron. ii. 39) had read the whole of it. The Cssar Julian seems to have attempted to defend Hilary (Hil. Ad Const, ii. 2). 208 PROSCRIPTION OF ATHANASIUS [ch. vii. a man of a more accommodating disposition, but one who, at the decisive moment, also made his choice in favour of exile. Pope Liberius was treated in a more ceremonious manner. His attitude had not changed : he was for the exiles against the government. At the outset, he had written to Eusebius, Dionysius, and Lucifer, a touching letter, in which he expressed to them his regret at not being able to follow them yet, and his firm persuasion that his own turn would not be long in coming.^ His envoys, the priest Eutropius and the deacon Hilary, were ill received ; they were both exiled, and the deacon had in addition to endure the torture of the lash.^ The eunuch Eusebius, a trusted agent, was sent to Rome to induce the Pope to yield : his arguments met with no success. In vain he produced his purse ; in vain he emptied it at the tomb of St Peter: Liberius caused the money to be cast forth outside. The prefect Leontius was then instructed to send the rebellious pontiff to court. This was not an easy matter, for Liberius was much beloved by the populace ; it was necessary to seize him by night, and to adopt great precautions.^ However, it was at last accomplished. Liberius was carried off to Milan. Brought into the emperor's presence, he could only repeat the protest he had been making ever and anon for two years : he could not condemn persons unheard ; the decision at Tyre, not having been based on a discussion in which both sides had been listened to, could be of no value whatever; it was necessary, first of all, to recall the exiles, and to make sure that everyone was in agreement with regard to the faith of Nicaea ; then, a meeting should be held at Alexandria, in the actual place where the facts in dispute had taken place. Of this interview we possess a kind of formal record,* in which the figures of the speakers — the 1 Jaffe, 216 (Hil. Frag. hist. vi. 1-2). "- Athan. Hist. Ar. 41. 3 Ammianus, xv. 7, 6. Cf. Athan. Hist. Ar. 35-40. ** Preserved by Theodoret, ii. 13; Sozomen, iv. 11, also had it before him. Cf. Athan. Hist Ar. 39, 40. p. 260-61] EXILE OF LIBERIUS 209 Pope, the Emperor, the eunuch Eusebius, and Bishop Epictetus^ — stand out in striking" relief. " Of what consequence art thou ? " said the emperor, " thou, who alone takest the part of an impious man, and dost thus disturb the peace of the whole world ? " " It is no matter if I do stand alone," replied the bishop, " the faith will lose nothing by that. In the days of old, there were but three, and they resisted," " How ! " interrupted Eusebius, " dost thou take our emperor for Nebuchadnezzar!" "A great deal he cares," said Epictetus, " for the faith, or for ecclesiastical decisions ! What he wants, is to be able to boast to the Roman senators that he has defied his sovereign." The conference ended by a final invitation to sign. The Pope was granted a delay of three days ; he refused it, and also refused the financial assistance offered by the emperor and empress. He was then sent to Berea in Thrace, where he was put into the charge of one of the heads of the party, the Bishop Demophilus. There still remained the " Father of the Councils," the living embodiment of the memories of Nicaea, the centenarian Bishop of Cordova. In spite of his years, Hosius was forced to come to Milan ; but he remained deaf to all entreaties, and had perforce to be sent back to his distant diocese. There, he was again attacked by letters and messengers. He resisted them all, and wrote a most touching letter to the emperor. Among other things, he said that, having confessed the faith under the emperor's grandfather Maximian, he was not disposed to deny it now, to please the Arians ; that he knew for a certainty the innocence of Athanasius and the bad faith of his accusers ; that the emperor ought to occupy himself with his own affairs, and leave the bishops to deal with those of the Church. But no eloquence was of any avail to move Constantius. He had among the bishops of Spain one man who was ^ This Epictetus was a young ecclesiastical adventurer, whom the court party had caused to be elected Bishop of Centumcellae {Civita- vecchia)^ and charged to keep an eye on the Pope. II O 210 PROSCRIPTION OF ATHANASIUS [ch. vii. capable of anything, Potamius, the Bishop of Lisbon, who played in that country almost exactly the same part as Saturninus in Gaul, and who, for that reason, had been roughly treated by Hosius. When he complained of this, Constantius again summoned the rebellious patriarch before him.^ They succeeded in transporting him as far as Sirmium, where the court was then in residence, and there he was kept in exile. Now unity was accomplished. Neither in the West nor in the East was there one single bishop in the possession of his see who had not declared against Athanasius. This was the time to take formal action against him. It seemed that there was nothing more to be done but to send him a sentence of exile, or to carry him off, as they had carried off Liberius. But the Pope of Alexandria had around him a populace even more devoted and more unmanageable than that of Rome ; and, besides, he had in his possession official letters, whereby Constantius had solemnly undertaken never to abandon him. To get out of these difficulties, the government conceived the idea of forcing his hand. They resolved to organize at all costs a disturbance in Alexandria. The project was difficult of execution. An imperial notary, Diogenes, arrived in the month of August 355, advised the bishop to go away, and began to work upon the clergy and the faithful. But Athanasius sheltered himself behind the emperor's letters, protesting that he would not leave Alexandria without formal orders emanating from him ; as to the people themselves, it was no use to be harsh with them, they would not submit to it. At the end of four months Diogenes returned, leaving things exactly as when he arrived. During the winter another attempt was made. Troops were collected from the whole of Egypt, under the command of the Dux Syrianus, who was placed in charge of the business. Athanasius made no movement, declaring ' Marcellini el Fausti?ii Libelhts precuvi, 32 {Coll. Avellana, ed, Giinther, p. 15). p. 263] THE CHURCH OF THEONAS 211 that a bishop could not desert his flock, unless for most serious reasons ; but that he would do so, if the emperor really wished it, or even if the " dux " or the prefect of Egypt would give him a written order to that effect. The people supported his attitude, and asked permission to send a deputation to the emperor. The tone of these protests caused Syrianus to reflect ; he declared that he would write to the emperor himself, and that, in the mean- time, he would take no action against the churches. This promise was not kept. On February 8, at midnight, the Church of Theonas was surrounded on all sides. It was still the principal church of the city : Athanasius was celebrating in it one of the nocturnal offices, called vigils (Havvvxioe?'), which only attracted the more devout ; hence, there was not a great crowd. The Dux Syrianus caused the doors to be forced ; his soldiers, augmented by a disorderly rabble, burst in, with drawn swords and trumpets sounding. Their helmets gleamed in the light of the candles, their arrows flew through the church. We can imagine the tumult which ensued. The consecrated virgins were represented by a large proportion in the devout congregation ; they were assailed with obscene cries ; several were killed, and others were outraged. Trampled under foot and crushed at the exits, the faithful left many corpses upon the floor. In the midst of all this, the bishop remained upon his seat ; monks and devoted laymen surrounded him. They succeeded at last in getting him away, but it was not without being severely bruised that he at last managed to penetrate through the crowd. Those who were seeking for him did not recognize him. Besides, they scarcely wished to take him prisoner ; what they wanted was that he should take himself off, that he should seem to have been driven away by a popular rising. They had their wish. From that hour, Athanasius was seen no more.^ ' Later on (about 388), Palladius saw in Alexandria an old nun, who, it was said, had given shelter to Athanasius, during the six years of his disappearance. He had been concealed in her house, certain 212 PROSCRIPTION OF ATHANASIUS [ch. vii. When the day dawned, the Christians of Alexandria hastened to the authorities to protest. But the Dux Syrianus was already preparing the ofificial version of the affair ; there had been no occasion for scandal ; Athanasius had passed judgment upon himself by leaving Alexandria of his own free will. In attestation of this signatures were demanded, and those who held back were beaten. But, on February 12, the people of Alexandria caused a second^ protest to be posted up, in which the number of those killed was given, and the presence of the Dux in the Church of Theonas, accompanied by an imperial notary, Hilary, was stated. The municipal strategos (duumvir), Gorgonius, was there also ; and his testimony was appealed to. Besides, the swords, javelins, and arrows, which had been used, had been kept in the church ; and were still being kept, as a proof of the violence employed. The prefect of Egypt and the police were entreated to bring these facts to the knowledge of the emperor and of the praetorian prefects ; and the captains of vessels were asked to spread the news in other ports. Above all, it was added, let no one think of sending to the Alexandrians another bishop ; they would not endure him, and would remain faithful to Athanasius. No attention was paid to them. A Count Heraclius was sent to Egypt, as bearer of imperial letters to the senate and people of Alexandria. In these Constantius excused himself for having, out of consideration for his brother, tolerated for a time the presence of Athanasius in Alexandria ; but now Athanasius was a public enemy ; he must be sought for and found, at any cost.- On June that no one would seek him in the house of a young woman as she then was. This story, improbable in itself, is contradicted by what St Athanasius himself tells us with regard to his wanderings as an exile. But it is possible that the person in question may have served as an intermediary for his correspondence, or may have given him hospitality from time to time during his secret visits to Alexandria {Historia Lausiaca, c. 64, ed. Butler). 1 The text of this protest has been preserved ; Athanasius included it in his History of the Arians. '^ Hist. Ar. 48, 49 p. 265-6] GEORGE OF CAPPADOCIA 213 14, the churches were taken from Athanasius* clergy and handed over to the Arians. This was not done, as may be imagined, without resistance. In the Caesareum especially, there were horrible scenes.^ The opposing party were not satisfied with seizing the churches ; an address was sent to the emperor, in which they declared their readiness to accept any bishop he might deign to send them. This petition was covered with signatures of pagans and Arians. Strange to say, the pagans had been warned that, if they did not take a side, their temples would be closed. Finally, on February 24, 357, the nominee of the emperor and of his religious party made his entrance into the city of Alexandria. He came from Antioch, where he had been invested by a council of about thirty bishops, from Syria, Thrace, and Asia Minor.- He was a certain George, a native of Cappadocia, like so many notable persons of the time. He had formerly held a post at Constantinople in the department of finance, and there, it was said, he had shown himself so honest that they were obliged to part with him.^ Since then, he had led a wandering life, in the course of which he had come into touch with the future Caesar, Julian, and had even lent him books. He had the reputation of being exceed- ingly fond of money. He was, besides, a hard, merciless man, capable of going to any imaginable length with a brazen face. This character suited well with the demands of the situation which awaited him in Alexandria. It remained to be seen, which would be stronger, the man or these demands. At first, all went as he desired. With him had been associated a military commander well fitted for rough measures, the Dux Sebastian, a Manichean in religion, and a man difficult to soften. After a few weeks, the ninety bishops of Egypt had become acquainted with George : sixteen of them were exiled, thirty of them were 1 Hist. Ar. 55-58. - Sozomen, iv. 8. ^ St Athanasius {^Hist. Ar. 51) calls him a devourer of the treasury (Taf.i.€t6. -.vxq COUNCIL OF CONSTANTINOPLE, 360 245 of Nic.ta and Ariminum, are in opposition and each excludes the other. We cannot, however, say that the Creed of Ariminum contains an expHcit profession of Arianism, It does not reproduce any of the technical terms of the primitive heresy ; and as to the new Arianism, — Anomofanism — it expressly excludes it : it is not the avojULoiog, the unlike, which is proclaimed, it is the o/xotof, the like, its contrary. Nevertheless, the vagueness of the formula allowed it to be understood in the most different and even the most directly opposite senses ; with a little complaisance, Athanasius and Aetius might have repeated it together. This is why it was so perfidious and so useless, and why no Christian worthy of the name, holding truly to the absolute Divinity of his Master, could hesitate for a moment to condemn it. Aetius was deposed from the diaconate, and excom- municated conditionally, that is to say, if he persisted in his opinions, " as having, in his books and discussions, made a display of a philosophy full of quibbles and foreign to the ecclesiastical mind, of having made use of blasphe- mous expressions, and so troubled the Church." This sentence, however, was not universally approved : about ten ^ bishops who were frankly Anomoean refused to throw Jonah into the sea "^ ; they were given six months to make up their minds. So much for the treatment of friends. Now came the turn of the others ; it was a wholesale slaughter. Sentence of deposition was pronounced against Macedonius of Constantinople, Eleusius of Cyzicus, Heortasius of Sardis, Dracontius of Pergamum, Basil of Ancyra, Eustathius of Sebaste in Armenia, Sophronius of Pompeiopolis in Paphlagonia, Helpidius of Satala, Neon of Seleucia in ^ Sozomen, iv. 25 ; c/. Philostorgius, vii. 6 ; viii. 4. '^ These were, first, Theophilus the Indian, the wonder-worker of the party (Aetius too, in spite of his scholastic learning, sometimes posed as inspired), next Seras of Paraetonium in Libya, Stephen of Ptolemais, and Helidorus of Sozousa in Cyrenaica ; a Phrygian, Theodulus of Kcretapa ; three Lydians, Leontius of Tripoli, Theodosius of Philadelphia, Phoebus of Polycalanda, and two others. 246 THE DEFEAT OF ORTHODOXY [en. viii Isauria, Silvanus of Tarsus, and Cyril of Jerusalem. The reason assigned for their condemnation had nothing to do with doctrine ; apart from the general reproach of having in the past two years gravely troubled the peace of the Church, each of them was made the object of special complaints of a disciplinary character. Basil, in particular, found thrown at his head all the strong measures and undue exercise of authority, which he had allowed himself during the few months he was in favour.^ The government took action in its turn. Aetius was imprisoned at Mopsuestia, and his works were proscribed. Basil was despatched to Illyria, the others to different places of exile. They were provided with successors. For Constantinople choice was made of Eudoxius, whom it would have been difficult to re-establish at Antioch ; and, without delay (on February 15, 360) they proceeded with the dedication of the great Church of the Divine Wisdom (St Sophia), which had been building for the last twenty years. The council took part in the ceremony. Eudoxius was spokesman ; " The Father," he said, " is impious (acre^j/9), the Son is pious (eJcre/S >;?)." To the murmurs which followed this strange language, he replied by explaining that the Son reverences the Father, while the Father has no one to reverence. This miserable quip, the memory of which was preserved in Constantinople, gives us a fair idea of the situation. We see what kind of priests were filling the higher positions in the Church of the East.- Hilary was still in Constantinople, overwhelmed and exasperated. To give vent to his anger, he set himself to ^ The details of all this are contained in Sozomen, H. E. iv. 24, who here summarizes the official Acts. - Eudoxius, moreover, clung to this idea. We meet with it again in his profession of faith, published by Caspari, Alte unci neue Quellen zur Geschichte des Tauf symbols (Christiania, 1879), p. 179. We must even restore there the word " impious," the omission of which in Caspari's text makes the passage incoherent : [d(Te/3^] on /uTideva aifteiv ire. 367] DOCTRINE OF THE HOLY SPHIIT 293 between the neo-CathoHcs of the East and the old Homoiousians of Asia was in a fair way of being accomplished, under the auspices of Rome and the Latin episcopate. The assembly at Tyana despatched to all quarters the documents brought from the West, and summoned all the bishops to a great council which was to be held at Tarsus in the following spring. But Eudoxius put himself in the way of this project. The Emperor Valens forbade the council.^ In addition to the acceptance of the Creed of Nicsea, there was yet another point upon which difficulties were now beginning to show themselves. Amongst those persons who were willing to grant to the Son likeness absolutely and in essence to the Father, and even to accept, with regard to the first two Persons of the Trinity, the term consubstantial, there were some who refused to make the same concession as to the Holy Spirit. Gradu- ally, as the dispute spread itself from this side, the positions adopted grew more definite in character. The question was first raised in Egypt. Athanasius, during the last years of the reign of Constantius, had dealt with it fully in his letters to Serapion. He had cut it short in 362, by the Council of Alexandria ; in the follow- ing year, he had declared to the Emperor Jovian that the Creed of Nicaea must be completed, so far as concerns the Holy Spirit. Following his example, the neo-orthodox of Syria and Asia Minor laid stress upon this point, either by expressly affirming the consubstantiality of the Holy Csesarea in Cappadocia, Athanasius of Ancyra, Pelagius of Laodicea, Zeno of Tyre, Paul of Emesa, Otreos of Melitene, and Gregory of Nazienzus (the father). 1 There is a httle uncertainty as to the exact date of these last councils. That of Lampsacus belongs certainly to 364. It is possible that the journey of the three bishops to Rome may have been deferred till 366. Liberius died in that year, on September 24. But it is difficult to suppose that such a step should have been taken just at the time of, or immediately after, the rivalry of Procopius (September 28, 365-May 27, 366). I should be inclined to think rather that the bishops set out in the summer of 365, before Procopius had created his disturbance. 294 AFTER ARIMINUM [ch. x. Spirit, or by producing formulas calculated to establish the dignity of the Third Divine Person. St Basil took up both attitudes in turn, teaching the consubstantiality in his books, but not going quite so far in his discourses in church. The creed then in use at Jerusalem, that which is still in use under the name of Nicene Creed, is not more explicit than the official eloquence of St Basil. It says of the Holy Spirit, that He is " the Lord and Life-giver, that He proceeds from the Father ; that He is adored and glorified with the Father and the Son, that He has spoken by the prophets." Nothing more ; it is not a vote inscribed against the " Enemies of the Holy Spirit." This term (Pneumatomachi) was speedily made use of to describe the new party. They were also called " Semi- Arians," which meant that, while orthodox in the main as to the Second Person of the Trinity, they were Arians so far as concerned the Third Person. But the title which continued in general use is that of Macedonians, from the name of Macedonius, the former Bishop of Constantinople. This came about as follows. Macedonius had been elected in earlier days in opposition to Bishop Paul by the Eusebian party, and had been imposed, not without difficulty, upon the populace of Constantinople. At first, he made life very hard for the defenders of Nicene orthodoxy, who remained faithful to his predecessor. When the anti-Athanasian party became divided (in 357), he took up a decided position in favour of the moderates, and supported the opinions of Basil of Ancyra. We have no proof that he was distinguished by any special doctrine with regard to the Holy Spirit. He died in retirement in the neighbourhood of the capital, shortly after his deposition by the council of 360. But his followers did not all abandon him. There were a great number of them who did not wish to join themselves to Eudoxius, and who organized themselves, as well as they could, in a community of their own. The pure Nicenes, since the deposition of Bishop Paul, in 342, formed a group apart, without a bishop of their own, a position closely resembling that of the Eustathians of Antioch, p. 369] THE PNEUMATOMACHI 295 before the ordination of Paulinus. The supporters of Macedonius, the Macedonians as they were called, did not merge themselves with them. They had, outside Constantinople, the support of a large number of bishops, especially in the provinces of Thrace, Bithynia, and the Hellespont. In these countries the Nicenes were scarce : nowhere did they possess churches. It was the Macedonians who represented in those quarters the opposition to official Arianism. This was not their sole recommendation. The best known of this group of bishops were, owing to the dignity of their lives, their asceticism and their zeal in organizing works of charitable relief, the objects of high esteem among the common people. From this point of view, they were honourably distinguished from votaries of ambition and of pleasure like Eudoxius and his associates. Among them we have the names of two of Macedonius' former clergy, Eleusius of Cyzicus, a man much esteemed by St Hilary, and Marathonius of Nicomedia.^ The latter was a man of great wealth : after having made his fortune in the offices of the praetorian prefect, he founded at Constantinople hospitals and refuges for the poor ; afterwards, by the advice of Eustathius of Sebaste, he embraced the ascetic life and established a monastery, which long retained the name of its founder."^ Eleusius was adored by the people of Cyzicus. We are told that, Valens having succeeded, by dint of entreaties and threats, in extorting from him a discreditable signa- ture, the bishop on his return home protested before his people that violence had been used towards him, but ■* We must add to the list the name of Macedonius of Apollonias in Lydia, according to the inscription cjuoted above, p. 292, note i. ^ Sozomen, iv. 27. Socrates (ii. 38, followed by Sozomen, iv. 20), on the authority of a Novatian source, apparently, says that he had been installed by Macedonius at Nicomedia. We cannot quite see where to place him. Cecropius was Bishop of Nicomedia from 351 to 358, when he was killed in the great earthquake on August 24, which destroyed the town. Acacius in 360 ordained a successor to him called Onesimus (Philostorgius, v. l). Tillemont, vol. vi., p. 770, proposes to place him in Julian's reign ; this would make him 296 AFTER ARIMINUM [ch. X. that he no longer thought himself worthy to remain in office ; and that they must therefore elect another bishop in his place. His flock refused to listen any further to the suggestion ; they declared that they wished for no one but him, and that they would keep him. And so they did.^ The Homoiousian bishops on either side of the Bosphorus were thus in communion with the group at Constantinople, to whom it was customary to give the name of Macedonians. At the time of which we are now speaking, they had, for the most part, adopted the formula of Nicsa, and found themselves on terms of friendship with the Roman Church. A day came when the question of the Holy Spirit which had not been presented to them by Pope Liberius, brought them into conflict with the neo-orthodox of Upper Asia Minor. Being thus formed into a dissenting party, they were designated by the name of Macedonians, which was borne by their supporters at Constantinople. It was in this way that Macedonius became, after his death, the patron who gave his name to a special form of dissent, of which he had probably never dreamed. It was not only with these dissentients on the right wing that the official clergy had to reckon. The irreconcil- ables on the extreme left also troubled their peace. After the council of 360, Aetius, as we have seen, had been exiled to Mopsuestia ; as he was treated too well there by the bishop, he was transferred to Amblada, a gloomy and unhealthy place in Lycaonia. As to Eunomius, his an anti-bishop set up in opposition to Onesimus by Macedonius or by his party. However this may be, the activity of Marathonius was exercised rather at Constantinople than at Nicomedia ; whether because being prevented for one reason or another from residing in the latter city he had established himself in the capital, or because there has been attributed to his name the influence exercised by his monastery. The " semi-Arians " of Constantinople have been called Marathonians as well as Macedonians, which gives some ground for thinking that Marathonius may have been the real author of the doctrine of the Pneumatomachi. 1 Socrates, iv. 6 ; Sozomen, vi. 9 ; Philostorgius, ix. 13. p. 372] AETIUS AND EUNOMIUS 297 celebrated disciple, he consented to sign the formula of Ariminum-Constantinople, and in consideration of this Eudoxius caused him to be installed as Bishop of Cyzicus, in place of the exiled Eleusius. Between Eudoxius and Eunomius there had been, so it was reported, secret agreements ; the new Bishop of Constantinople had pledged himself to bring about the reinstatement of Aetius ; in return, Eunomius had consented to moderate his language. He did not succeed in doing this sufficiently ; the people of Cyzicus travelled to Constantinople to denounce him, and, as Eudoxius did not make up his mind to rid them of their bishop, they complained to the Emperor Constantius. Eunomius relieved all parties of trouble by abandoning his bishopric. He then fell into the hands of Acacius, who looked with an unfavour- able eye upon Eudoxius' dallyings with the Anomoeans. Being summoned to Antioch, he was subjected to an enquiry, but his trial was still going on when Constantius died. The accession of Julian gave liberty to the sectarians. Aetius, who had had former relations with the new emperor, was summoned to court ^ ; and Julian, in spite of his scant sympathy with the " Galileans" of any descrip- tion, made him a present of a small estate in the island of Lesbos. The Anomcean party found itself better off than the official clergy to whom the support of the govern- ment was now lacking. Eudoxius and Euzoius, after having often cursed those tiresome persons, now thought it prudent to draw closer to them. Eudoxius would have wished Euzoius to reinstate them ; Euzoius that Eudoxius should do so ; they kept on passing from one to the other this compromising task. At length the Bishop of Antioch made up his mind to annul everything that had been done by the Council of Constantinople against the Anomceans. But he was in no hurry to publish his decision ; so little so that Aetius and his followers, grow- ing impatient, decided to organize themselves separately and to create a schism. Aetius was ordained bishop ; other ' Julian, Ep. 31. 298 AFTER ARIMINUM [ch. x. members of the party also received episcopal consecration, and were sent into the provinces to preside over the adherents of Anomceanism. Eudoxius took no notice. Besides, what hindrance could he have offered ? They went so far as to set up a rival to himself, by organizing in Constantinople itself an Anomoean Church, the first bishops of which were Pcemenius and Florentius. Towards Euzoius they used rather more ceremony : Theophilus, the saint of the party, was sent to Antioch to try to arrange matters with the bishop, in default of which he was to organize against him all the Anomoeans that the great city contained. This fine frenzy was allayed when, at the end of 364, Eudoxius had succeeded in installing himself in the good graces of Valens, and in inducing him to return to the tradition interrupted by the death of Constantius. At Antioch, Euzoius took up a hostile attitude ; he no longer hesitated to call Theophilus a blackamoor, and his disciples emissaries of darkness. Eudoxius himself called them plagues. Aetius returned to his island of Lesbos ; Eunomius retired to an estate which he possessed at Chalcedon. They had both renounced the exercise of sacerdotal functions ; but they remained none the less the leaders and, as it were, the prophets of the party. A little later came the usurpation of Procopius.^ The pretender, at the time (363 to 364) when he was leading the life of an adventurer, had found refuge with Eunomius at Chalcedon. When he had gained possession of power, 1 Procopius, a distant kinsman of Julian, was raised by him to important offices of State, and even, rumour said, chosen as his eventual successor. He appears to have been a pagan, or at least to have posed as such, for the time, to please his cousin. Shortly after the accession of Jovian, he thought it well to conceal himself for fear of being considered as a pretender to the throne, and treated accordingly. After many adventures, he ended by causing himself to be proclaimed emperor at Constantinople (September 28, 365) and secured at the outset some successes, which caused him to be acknowledged in the Asiatic provinces nearest to the Bosphorus. In the spring of 366, Valens gained the mastery over his rival, who was taken prisoner and beheaded on May 27. p. 374] DEATH OF AETIUS 299 several of the friends of Eunomius and Aetius himself were accused of having sided against his usurpation ; Eunomius intervened and succeeded in clearing them. But Valens returned, and they had to pay dearly for this momentary enjoyment of favour. Hardly used by the reaction, the Anomoean leaders invoked the support of Eudoxius, who, having no longer any need of them, treated them with disdain ; far from commiserating them, he told them that they deserved much worse punish- ments. Aetius, who had retired some time before to Constantinople, to the company of Florentius, now died : Eunomius closed his eyes, and his supporters gave him a magnificent funeral. As to Eunomius himself, being implicated in a political case, he was exiled to Mauritania. On his journey thither, he passed through Mursa in Pannonia, where Bishop Valens, a former disciple of Arius, took him under his protection. This protection was so successful that Eunomius was recalled. But it was not for long. Eunomius did not know how to keep himself quiet. He continued to direct and to defend his party, engaging in an incessant polemic with the orthodox doctors — Didymus, Apollinaris, Basil, and the two Gregorys. Under Valens, the prefect Modestus, with whom St Basil also had to deal, banished him, as a stirrer-up of ecclesiastical disturbances, to an island in the Archipelago. Under Gratian and Theodosius, the Eunomians lost the right of holding assemblies. Their leader was exiled anew to Halmyris on the Lower Danube, and afterwards to Caasarea in Cappadocia, where the remembrance of his conflicts with St Basil brought upon him so much unpleasantness that he was forced to retire to Dakora, in a country place. He was still living in 392, when St Jerome published his catalogue of ecclesiastical writers. After his death, he was buried at Tyana. It was in Cappadocia Secunda, of which this place was the metropolis, that there was born, in the little town of Verissos, the historian Philostorgius. His parents were Eunomians. He was brought up in the doctrines of that sect, and it was from 300 AFTER ARIMINUM [ch. x. their point of view that he wrote during the reign of Theodosius II. an ecclesiastical history, of which only some extracts remain. During his youth he had known Eunomius, who made a deep impression upon him. Though afflicted with a slight stammer, and with a face disfigured by a skin disease, the prophet none the less possessed charm and eloquence. Aetius, keen in intellect and quick at repartee, was a master in debate ; Eunomius himself was renowned for the lucidity of his exposition. It is thanks to Philostorgius that we know the history, and even the historiettes, of Anomoeanism. Notwithstand- ing the religious reputation enjoyed by some of its leaders, such as Aetius, Eunomius, and Theophilus, this party had never much practical importance. However, as it represented, from the doctrinal point of view, the clearest expression of Arianism, it figured for a very long time in the discourses and writings of controversialists, prone even from those far-off days to try their skill against the dead. CHAPTER XI BASIL OF C/ESAREA State of parties in the east of Asia Minor. The youth of Basil and of Gregory of Nazianzus. Eustathius, master in asceticism, afterwards Bishop of Sebaste. Basil, a solitary, afterwards priest, and Bishop of Caesarea. The religious policy of Valens. Death of Athanasius : Peter and Lucius. Valens at Caesarea. Basil and Eustathius. Basil negotiates with Rome. His rupture with Eustathius. Arian intrigues. Dorotheus at Rome. Affairs at Antioch. Paulinus recognized by Rome. Vitalis. The heresy of Apollinaris. Eustathius goes over to the Pneuma- tomachi. Dorotheus returns to Rome. Evolution of the Marcel- lians. The Goths. Death of the Emperor Valens. The ancient provinces of Galatia and Cappadocia, which under the early empire included the whole of Eastern Asia Minor, had been carved up under Diocletian. Out of their mountainous districts and those on the sea-board — in fact the part known as Pontus — three provinces had been made, Paphlagonia, the Pontus of Jupiter {Diospofitus)^ and the Pontus of Polemon, their capital cities being respectively Gangra, Amasia, and Neo- caesarea. In the interior, Ancyra continued to be the Galatian metropolis, and Caesarea that of Cappadocia ; but, to the east of Cappadocia, Armenia Minor formed a special province, of which Sebaste was the capital- Christianity, since the days of Firmilian and Gregory Thaumaturgus, had made great progress in these countries. ' Later Helenopontus, or Pontus of Amasia. 2 All these cities have preserved their names, under forms slightly altered by Turkish pronunciation : Kanghri, Amasia, Niksar, Angora, Kaisarie, Sivas. 801 302 BASIL OF C.^SAREA [en. xi. Yet, as towns there were few, there were not a great number of bishoprics. It is with difficulty that, in an extent of country as large as the Italian peninsula, we can prove or presume the existence of as many as forty episcopal sees. The most important were always those of Caesarea and Ancyra. As in the third century, the bishops of Upper Asia Minor were always ready to assemble in council, with the co-operation of their colleagues of Syria. We have spoken above of the synods of Ancyra and of Neocsesarea, earlier in date than the great Council of Nicaea. Later on, other councils were held at Gangra, at Ancyra again, at Melitene, Tyana, and Zela. Arianism did not, so far as we know, make any very notable recruits among this body of bishops. Cappadocia whose hour had come, rather late in the day, to attract attention to itself, produced at that time a great number of ecclesiastical adventurers, who distinguished themselves elsewhere, under the protection of the imperial police : men like Gregory and George, the two anti-popes of Alexandria, and Auxentius of Milan. Asterius, the lecturer in the time of Arius, and Eunomius, the last oracle of the sect, had seen the light in Cappadocia. But these worthies do not seem to have attracted much sympathy in their native country. The men whom election called to the exercise of episcopal functions were of less advanced views. At the time of the Council of Nicaea, the Bishops of Ancyra and Caesarea, Marcellus and Leontius, showed themselves the determined opponents of Arius. In the Churches of Tyana, Amasia, Neocaesarea, Sebaste, and in general throughout Pontus and Armenia Minor, the same doctrinal standpoint was maintained.^ After Marcellus of Ancyra, who pushed consubstantialist doctrine too far, they elected Basil, who at first fought in the ranks opposed to St Athanasius, but ended by ^ Athan. Ep. ad episcopos Aeg, et Libyae, 8. The testimony of Philostorgius upon the quarters from which Arius is alleged to have met with support at the Council of NicEea (Migne, P. G., vol. Ixv., . 623), is quite destitute of value. p. 379] GREGORY AND BASIL 303 becoming the leader of a reaction against Arianisnn, and was persecuted for that reason. His successor, another Athanasius, took the first opportunity to declare his fidelity to the faith of Nicaea, and never wavered in that attitude. At Caesarea, Bishop Leontius had been replaced by one of his clergy, Hermogenes,^ the man who had been entrusted at Nicaea with the task of drawing up the famous creed.- Dianius, who succeeded him (before 340), was not a man of strong character ; he was orthodox at bottom, but was never able to refuse his signature when it was demanded in the name of the party or of the government. He figures at the head of those " Easterns " who wrote from Antioch an insolent letter to Pope Julius, in 340, and who deposed him at the schismatical Council of Sardica.2 We do not hear that he put himself forward either for or against Basil of Ancyra, in 358 ; but, two years later, he signed, like so many others, the formula of Ariminum-Constantinople. One of his suffragans, also a very worthy man, Gregory, Bishop of Nazianzus — the father of that Gregory who afterwards made the name of this little place immortal — was guilty of the same weakness. When, in 355, Julian was staying in Athens, he made the acquaintance there of two young Cappadocians of high distinction, Gregory and Basil, both destined to become shining lights in the Church. The first was the son of the Bishop of Nazianzus, of whom I have just been speaking. His father was a saintly man of an original turn of mind, who had been at first a member of a confraternity of Hypsistarians, or worshippers of Zeus Hypsistos ^ ; he had been converted by the entreaties of ^ Eulalius, of whom Socrates speaks (ii. 43 ; cf. Sozomen, iv. 24), was not Bishop of Ca;sarea, but of Sebaste. His name appears among the signatories of the Councils of Nicaea and of Gangra. 2 Basil, Ep.Zi. 3 In this same council there took part the Bishops of JuHopolis in Galatia, of Sinope and Neocaesarea. •* On this cult, in which we can recognize elements derived from Jewish Monotheism, see E. Schurer, Die Judeti im Bospomnischen Reiche, in the Proceedings of the Berlin Academy, vol. xiii. (1897), p. 200, et seq. ; and Fr. Cumont, Hypsistos (Brussels, if-g?). 304 BASIL OF CESAREA [cH. xi. his wife Nonna, and had been elected bishop very soon after his baptism. At that time, celibacy was not yet obligatory everywhere, even for the bishops. Gregory and Nonna continued to live together, and it was then that their son Gregory was born. The family of Basil came originally from Neocsesarea in Pontus, and had long been Christian. His grandmother Macrina had witnessed the persecution of Diocletian, during which she had fled to the woods with her husband ; she had many memories of long ago, and had many things to tell of St Gregory Thaumaturgus. The father, Basil, was an advocate of high repute ; the mother, Emmelia, was the daughter of a martyr; one of St Basil's uncles was a bishop at the same time as himself. Like his friend Gregory, the future Bishop of Caesarea was born in 329. The two young people met first of all in the schools of Csesarea, and later found themselves together in Athens, where they were united in close friendship. At that time, a great deal was heard in Asia Minor of an ascetic named Eustathius,^ who was propagating every- where the practices, then quite novel, of the monastic life. In his youth he had stayed in Alexandria, and had attended the preaching of Arius^; also, and this was the most important fact, he had been initiated into asceticism. On his return to his own country, his father Eulalius, who was bishop at Sebaste,^ displeased at seeing him parade an extraordinary costume, drove him from his Church. Eustathius then attached himself to Hermogenes, Bishop of Caesarea, who, having doubts as to his orthodoxy, made him sign a profession of faith. After the death of Hermo- genes, Eustathius sought the company of Eusebius of 1 In regard to this personage, see Fr. Loofs, Eustathius von Sebaste unddie Chronologie des Basilius-Briefe (Halle, 1898) and the article, "Eustathius of Sebaste," in Hauck's Encyclopadie. In some places, the author goes a little too far, being led on by his great desire to rehabilitate Eustathius. - Basil, Ep. 130, I ; 223, 3; 244, 3; 263, 3; cf. Athan. Hist. Arianorum 4. 3 Socrates, ii. 43, and Sozomen, iv. 24, say that Eulalius was Bishop of Csesarea. See p. 303, note i. p. 381-2] EUSTATHIUS OF SEBASTE 30S Nicomedia, with whom he fell out on account of matters of administration. His mode of life and his propaganda of asceticism gave offence to everyone, and raised up enemies against him everywhere. He had already been condemned by a council held at Neocjesarea. Eusebius pursued him before another assembly of bishops which was held at Gangra in Paphlagonia, about 340. We still possess the letter which this council addressed on the subject of Eustathius to the bishops of Armenia Minor. To judge from this document, Eustathius had gone beyond all bounds, and had revived the exaggerated practices, already condemned, of the ancient Encratites. But the subsequent development of his career gives ground for thinking that the council is extravagant in its censures, either because it was ill informed as to the abuses which it condemns or, more probably, because it attributed to Eustathius the excesses of too zealous followers. By dint of discrediting marriage, the innovators had made the faithful believe that there was no possibility of salvation in that state ; hence came separations, and then falls. They despised assemblies in church, but held private ones, at which they dispensed special instructions. They had invented extraordinary costumics ; the women clothed themselves in these like the men, and cut off their hair ; when the slaves adopted this style of dress, their masters were no longer able to secure respect. In the matter of abstinence, they despised the rules of the Church, fasting on Sundays, and eating on fast-days. They dissuaded the faithful from making offerings to the Church, inviting them to assist their own communities instead. Some of them refused to eat meat, and would have no religious communion with married people, especially with married priests ; they despised meetings for devotion at the tombs of the martyrs, and proclaimed to the rich that, if they did not rid themselves of all their wealth even to the last stiver, they had no hope of salvation. The council censured in vigorous terms these extravagances and others of the same kind, for they saw in them a criticism of the religious life as it was practised in the Church. II U 306 BASIL OF C.ESAREA [ch. xi. This attitude of dislike is always the consequence of undertakings such as that of Eustathius. He, no doubt, made some promises of submission ; but he can only have kept them very imperfectly, for he was afterwards con- demned as a perjurer by a council at Antioch. The movement, for all that, did not cease to advance. Eustathius, powerfully assisted in Constantinople by Marathonius, a former official, introduced into the capital the monastic forms of the ascetic life.^ Marathonius had become deacon to Bishop Macedonius, Eustathius, absorbed in his propaganda, scarcely thought of troubling himself at that time about the theological preferences of the official clergy, or about the war which they were waging against St Athanasius. Athanasius knew him, and did not love him.^ Years passed away. Finally, about the year 356, Eustathius was elected Bishop at Sebaste, the metropolis of Armenia Minor. It was about this time (357) that Basil returned from Athens to Cappadocia. He had often heard Eustathius spoken of; perhaps he had already had some communication with him. At this moment he was hesitating between the world and the religious life. It was no doubt by the advice of the Bishop of Sebaste that he undertook a long journey in Egypt, Syria, and Mesopotamia, to visit for himself the most renowned solitaries. Fascinated with this ideal of life, he returned to his own country, and attached himself definitely to the man who was venerated there as the great master of asceticism. Eustathius was, and long remained, for him a mirror of perfection, a being almost divine. His relations and friends, especially his sister Macrina, who was already a religious, and Gregory, his companion in study, also urged him to forsake the world. He found in the valley of the Iris, not far from Neocaesarea, a solitude green and wild, where he took up his abode with several companions. Eustathius came from time to time to see his new disciples, and together they paid a visit to Emmelia, Basil's mother, who was living in a neighbouring town. ' Supra, P- 295. " Ep, ad episcopos Aeg. et Libyae, 70 ; Hist. Ar. I. i>. 384] EXILE OF EUSTATHIUS 307 War at this time had broken out in the Eastern episcopate : Eustathius, obliged by his new position as a bishop to take a side, played a very active part in it. In conjunction with Basil of Ancyra and Eleusius of Cyzicus, he led the Homoiousian Right Wing, and contended with the greatest energy against Aetius and his supporters. After a brief success, he saw the opposing party regain its foothold, and he received one of the first attacks. A council, assembled at Melitene in 358, under the influence of Eudoxius, declared him to be deposed from the episcopate, we know not for what reason, but no doubt on some pretext furnished by his ascetical extravagances. A priest of Melitene, Meletius, agreed to succeed him, and was ordained in his place. But the people of Sebaste would have none of it, and Eustathius remained bishop, declaring that, as those who had deposed him were heretics, there was no need for him to pay any attention to their sentences. A crisis which affected him more severely was that which ended, at the beginning of the year 360, in the condemnation of the hontoiotisios, and the deprivation of its adherents. Like the other leaders of his party, Eustathius was forced to submit at the last minute, and to put his signature at the end of the formula of Ariminum ; like them, in spite of this sacrifice, he was deposed for other reasons. With him fell Sophronius, Bishop of Pompeiopolis in Paphlagonia, and Helpidius, Bishop of Satala in Armenia Minor, the latter guilty, like the Metropolitan of Sebaste, of having paid no attention to the sentences of Melitene. Eustathius was exiled to Dardania. The young Basil, who had followed him to Constantinople, returned to his own country. He had the grief of seeino- the Bishop of Caesarea, Dianius, for whom he professed a respectful affection, sign like everyone else the confession of Ariminum. Deeply distressed at this exhibition of weakness, he fled to his solitude in Pontus, and only returned to C?esarea to be present at the last moments of the old bishop, who declared to him that, notwithstanding his signatures, he remained in his heart loyal to the faith 308 BASIL OF C.^SAREA [ch. xi. of Nicaea. It was then the year 362 ; Julian was emperor ; even if he had been well, Dianius could without danger have confessed himself a Homoiousian. He died, regretted by his disciple, and in his place there was finally elected, after disorderly debates, one of the notabilities of the city, named Eusebius, a man estimable for his uprightness and piety, but still a catechumen and very little versed in ecclesiastical affairs. Basil was still only a reader ; Eusebius raised him to the dignity of priest, to the great satisfaction of everyone, especially of the monks and their following. It was difficult for a priest so distinguished not to excite jealousy ; his enemies succeeded in stirring up strife between him and his bishop. The monastic party was already taking their stand at his back, when he wisely made up his mind to leave Caesarea and to take refuge once more in his beloved solitude of Pontus. However, the times were once more beginning to become difficult. Everywhere there was being published the edict of Valens against those prelates who had been restored to their sees in spite of their deposition in the time of Constantius. This was the case with Eustathius, but not with Eusebius. But the emperor and his immediate circle, whether episcopal or secular, were openly conducting a propaganda in favour of the confession of Ariminum. Valens, on his way to Antioch, appeared at Caesarea. The bishop recalled Basil, who, aided by his friend Gregory, gave him energetic support at this delicate crisis. The storm passed, and peace was preserved. Basil was concerned in the negotiations of Eustathius with the West. They went together to see the Bishop of Tarsus, Silvanus, in order to come to some understanding with regard to the Council of Lampsacus ; Eustathius even wished to take Basil there with him. He remained at Caesarea, but on the return of Eustathius and Silvanus from Rome he followed his bishop to the Council of Tyana, at which the letters of Pope Liberius were presented. Several years passed away, during which Basil, who from this time had enjoyed the confidence of Eusebius, governed in his name the Church of Cssarea. At last, in r. 387] BASIL, BISHOP ()V CtESAREA 309 370, the bishop died, and Basil, after numerous oppositions, was elected in his place. The aged Bishop of Nazianzus and Eusebius of Samosata figured among his consecrators. It was impossible to make a better choice. Basil had everything in his favour : personal holiness, which was widely recognized, a highly cultivated mind, eloquence, Christian knowledge, and political ability. From the point of view of orthodoxy, he was absolutely irreproach- able, never having been compromised by parties or signatures. He represented the old and simple faith of Pontus, transmitted and practised in the piety of his home. His ordination was perfectly regular. In his episcopal house at Alexandria, the illustrious Athanasius leapt for joy at the news ; at the first opportunity he was heard to give thanks to heaven for having given to Cappadocia such a bishop as should be desired everywhere, a true servant of God. The old champion of the faith could now leave this world ; he had someone to whom to hand on the torch. If the man himself was of the highest order, the position, by reason of the difficulties which it presented, was worthy of him. Valens was about to return to Caesarea. In 365, he had been suddenly called away from it by the rival claims of Procopius ; when this business was ended, he had been obliged to carry on a war for three or four years on the Lower Danube. Now, his hands were free, as regarded the pretenders and the Goths ; he intended to settle at Antioch. Valens was a man, masterful, brutal, and dogged. In the conflict between various religious parties, he had made up his mind from the first year of his reign ; he remained to the end faithful to this attitude, and resolutel}^ supported Eudoxius, Ituzoius, and their followers. The see of Constantinople became vacant in 370, about the same time as that of Caesarea ; he summoned to it the Bishop of Berea, in Thrace, Demophilus, the man who had been at one time the evil angel of Pope Liberius. This choice did not pass without opposition. When the name of Demophilus was pronounced in the presence of 310 BASIL OF C.ESAREA [cii. xi. the faithful of the capital, in place of the usual acclamation " Worthy," there were heard many voices which cried " Unworthy ! " Those who thus protested were punished with great severity. Some of them having decided to go to Nicomedia and to appeal to the emperor in person, he answered them by a sentence of exile. Eighty of them were put on board a ship ; then, when they were out at sea, the crew set fire to the vessel and escaped in the boats. Such an execution might well excite alarm in the episcopate of Asia Minor, The Goths were subdued ; it was now the turn of the bishops ; it was evident that they might expect harsh treatment. The method of procedure, as we can see from a large number of instances, was very simple. The prelates were presented, if they had not already signed it, with the formulary of Ariminum- Constantinople, and steps were taken to make sure that they accepted communion with the leaders of the party. In case of refusal, the churches were taken from the recalcitrant clergy ; they lost all their privileges, especially with regard to municipal service ; the monks were sent to the barracks. If there were disturbances, or if there were any reason to apprehend these, the bishops and the clergy were deported to distant provinces. Local opposition was broken down by force. The result was deplorable scenes, churches attacked and profaned, blood- shed, and sentences of extreme severity. This regime was applied everywhere, not however at the same time. In Egypt, they waited for the death of Athanasius (May 2, 373). The clergy and faithful of Alexandria had made haste to elect in his place his brother Peter,^ whom he had marked out as his successor. But the government refused to ratify this choice : they meant to secure the induction of Lucius, the leader of the Arians of Alexandria. To this end, the police, under the command of the prefect Palladius, and reinforced by the vilest of the rabble, once more invaded the Church of 1 Peter was forthwith recognized by St Basil {Ep. 133) and by Pope Damasus. p. 389] DISTURBANCES AT ALEXANDRIA 811 Theonas. The consecrated virgins were insulted, assassin- ated, violated, and carried naked through the city. A young man, rouged and dressed as a woman, was hoisted on to the altar, where he performed suggestive dances, while another youth, seated stark naked upon the throne of Athanasius, gave utterance from it to obscene homilies. Thus profaned, the venerable basilica welcomed the nominee of Valens. Lucius made his entry into it, escorted by the Count of the Largesses, Magnus, and the aged Euzoius, The latter had come post haste from Antioch to be guilty of this final outrage against the Church of Alexandria ; it was thus that he took his revenge for the sentence by which, fifty years before, Bishop Alexander had expelled him in company with Arius. On the following days, formal proceedings were taken against the clergy. Some twenty priests and deacons, several of whom were over eighty, were thrown into prison, and then despatched by sea to Syria, where they were confined in the pagan town of Heliopolis (Baalbek). The populace protested, more especially the monks ; the most enthusiastic of these, to the number of twenty-three, were arrested and sent to the mines of Phseno and of Proconnesus. Amongst those who went to Phaeno was a Roman deacon, an envoy from Pope Damasus to congratulate Peter on the occasion of his accession. These severities extended throughout the whole of Egypt. Magnus, acting as imperial commissioner, went from one bishopric to another to compel the recognition of the official patriarch, meting out ill-usage with a generous hand to anyone who offered resistance. Eleven bishops were removed from their sees and despatched to Palestine, to Diocaesarea, a town of Galilee, where there were only Jews. Some of those who protested, having travelled to Antioch to appeal to the emperor, received a decree of exile which banished them to Neocaesarea, far away in Pontus. Bishop Peter, a despairing witness of these horrors, did not long succeed in remaining concealed in Egypt ; he made up his mind to take refuge in Rome, 312 BASIL OF C.ESAREA [ch. xi. where he waited in the society of Pope Damasus for the return of happier days. So had his brother Athanasius acted, at the time of Gregory's usurpation (339); Peter initiated him further by bringing to the knowledge of the Catholic episcopate the violent measures which had compelled him to leave his see of Alexandria.^ With regard to other countries we have fewer details ; but the Catholics were everywhere treated with the same severity, Meletius, for the third time,^ was driven from Antioch. Flavian and Diodore, now ordained priests, undertook the government of his Church. The places of worship had been handed over to Euzoius and his clergy. The Catholics, hunted from one cover to another, ended by meeting in the open country, to which they owed the name given to them of "countrymen" {Campenses). Their courage was sustained by the exhortations of their brave leaders and of several celebrated monks, who hastened from the neighbouring deserts to join in the resistance. Pelagius of Laodicea, Eusebius of Samosata, Barses of Edessa, Abraham of Batna, and others besides were exiled together with numbers of the inferior clergy. The desolation was universal. Nevertheless there were but few complaints from Western Asia Minor, or from Bithynia. In these countries the " Macedonians " held the upper hand ; we do not know what was their attitude, nor if they were persecuted like the others.^ In Galatia and in Paphlagonia, the resistance does not seem to have been strong. The Bishop of Gangra, Basilides, was an Arian ; Athanasius of Ancyra who died about this time (371) was provided with a successor agreeable to the government. Thence- ^ See the letter preserved to a large extent in Theodoret, H. E. iv. 19 ; cf. Socrates, iv. 22. Upon these events, see Rufinus, ii. 3, 4 ; cf. Socrates, iv. 20-24 \ Sozomen, vi. 19, 20. ■■^ His first exile was that in the time of Constantius (361) ; the second must doubtless have been caused by the edict of 365. It lasted but a short time, for the story of St John Chrysostom pre- supposes the presence of Meletius at Antioch from 367 to 370, 3 See, however, the epitaph of Macedonius of Apollonias cited above, p. 292, note i. p. 392] VALENS AND BASIL 313 forward the bonds of communion were broken between Galatia and Cappadocia. In the latter country Basil, taken in hand first by the prefect Modestus, and then by the emperor in person, opposed them with admirable determination during the winter of 371-372. Tempering his firmness with prudence,^ strong in his personal dignity, his unsullied character and his popularity, he succeeded in preserving the government of his Church. Valens did not impose upon him either formulas or communion with bishops who were suspected. He confined himself to being present in person at the religious services presided over by the Archbishop of Csesarea. He deemed no doubt that such a bishop would have been very difficult either to depose or to replace. But whatever his reason may have been, an exception was made for Basil ^ ; he was allowed to live at Csesarea, as Athanasius had been allowed to die at Alexandria. He even received an official commission in 372 to set in order the religious affairs of the kingdom of Armenia and to ordain bishops there. It also appears that, in the early days at least, they left in peace the other bishops of Cappadocia, those of Armenia Minor and of the Pontic provinces. We do not find, for example, that they disturbed Eustathius of Sebaste at that time, who was most certainly not in line with the council of 360 ; nor the bishops of Neo- ca^sarea and Nicopolis who were still less so. In the spring of 372 Valens set out for Antioch, and the people of Caesarea breathed more freely. It was not only on account of religion that they were harassed. The government of Valens was engaged at this time in altering the boundaries of the provinces. Cappadocia, at the expense of which they had already 1 It appears that his refusal was rather temporizing than cate- gorical. In 375, in a letter to the Vicarius Demosthenes {Ep. 255), he begs him not to force a meeting between himself and bishops, with whom "we are not yet iovirtS) in agreement on ecclesiastical questions." The reference is to Arian bishops who accepted the confession of Ariminum. ^ Basil was treated by Valens very much as Auxentius had been treated by Valentinian. 314 BASIL OF C.ESAREA [ch. xi. created the province of Armenia Minor and those of Pontus, was now to be divided yet again. A Cappadocia Secunda was formed, comprising the western and southern part of the ancient province, with the cities of Tyana, Colonia (Archelais), Cybistra, Fausti- nopolis and, to the north of the Halys, the districts of Mokissos and of Doara. To this same division belonged also the postal stations of Sasima, Nazianzus/ and Parnassos, the last two of which already possessed bishoprics. Another postal station, Podandos, situated in the middle of the Taurus, at the opening of the Cilician Gates, remained outside the new province. It was decided to create a new city there, to which were to be attached a certain number of the municipal magis- trates of Caesarea. But these persons, not at all pleased at going to live in such an out-of-the-way place, had recourse to the influence of their bishop, who succeeded in causing the proposal to be withdrawn. Podandos, therefore, always remained a district or region (peyeciov) belonging to Cappadocia Prima. Basil might have intervened in this last business, which directly affected his own flock ; but he had evidently no valid reason to oppose to the division of the province, and so refrained.^ Tyana thus became a civil metropolis. Its bishop, Anthimus, lost no time in availing himself, in the ecclesiastical sphere, of the consequences of this administrative separation : he set up to be the metropolitan, the ecclesiastical superior of the bishops included in the new civil jurisdiction. Basil set himself in opposition. Hence arose a quarrel, in which the Metropolitan of Caesarea defended himself to the best of his ability, especially by organizing new ^ Nazianzus had perhaps possessed, under the name of Diocfesarea, a municipal organization. '^ It has often been said that this dismemberment of Cappadocia was a blow aimed at Basil, whose sphere of influence it was sought in this way to limit. But the influence of such a man could not be confined to the greater or less extent of his metropolitical jurisdiction. The government had more direct and more effectual ways of being disagreeable to him. p. 394] BASIL AND THE GREGORYS 315 bishoprics. Nazianzus remained faithful to him ; he installed his brother Gregory at Nyssa, a little place to the west of Caesarea ; in the south he wished to have a bishopric at Sasima, on the road to Cilicia, and forced his friend Gregory to accept that title. The Church of Caesarea possessed considerable property in the Taurus, the natural products of which had to pass through the new province in order to reach Caesarea. Anthimus intercepted these convoys. It was in vain that Gregory protested that he had no wish to interfere in the matter, or to make war upon Anthimus in defence of Basil's chickens and mules : the Bishop of Caesarea was deter- mined, and " laid hands upon " his unwilling friend. But he could not induce him to fulfil his episcopal duties at Sasima. Gregory never celebrated divine service there, nor ordained a single clerk. He had a horror of Sasima. It was a desolate place, only a few houses round a posting station. There was no water, no vegeta- tion : nothing but dust, and the never-ceasing noise of passing carts.^ As to inhabitants, there were only vaga- bonds, strangers, or executioners with their victims who could be heard groaning and clanking their chains. This melancholy bishopric was naturally the cause of many troubles to the unhappy Gregory. As for Basil, at first he met with some unpleasant opposition among the bishops of Cappadocia, but in the long run he triumphed over this. At Caesarea his position was very strong. It became still more so when he had endowed that great city with an enormous establishment for relief, the buildings of which formed in the suburbs practically a new town ; it was known as Basilias. The Emperor Valens had assisted him in its construction by granting him demesne lands. Basil had kept on very good terms with Eustathius, his neighbour at Sebaste. Eustathius himself had also founded near his episcopal city, a kind of "grand hospice," which served as a model for the Basilias at Caesarea. At the beginning of his episcopate, he had ^ Greg. Naz., Cariii. de vita sua, vv. 439-446. 316 BASIL OF C^SAREA [ch. xi. entrusted the charge of it to a certain Aerius/ one of his companions in the ascetic life, who, it was commonly said, bore a grudge against Eustathius because he had been preferred before himself for the office of bishop. Their relations, far from improving, became so greatly embittered that one fine day Aerius finally threw up his duties and set himself to uttering abuse against Eustathius, accusing him of avarice, and assailing him for the most legitimate acts of his administration. Aerius had supporters; they joined him in creating a schism, and followed him to the meetings which he held in the caves of the neighbourhood. He taught them that priests were not inferior to bishops, that the Paschal Feast (Easter) was only an old remnant of Judaism, that there ought to be no fixed times for fasting, and that it was useless to pray for the dead. The Aerians must have been few in number, for at a time and in a country where many pens were active, St Epiphanius is the only author who mentions them, lament- ing their errors, it is true, but well pleased in his heart of hearts at having, thanks to them, one item more for his collection of heresies. In his estimation, undoubtedly too severe, Aerius and Eustathius were both of them Arians, Aerius openly, Eustathius with some measure of circum- spection. It is certain that Eustathius was regarded with sufficient disfavour not only by the old Nicenes, such as Athanasius, Epiphanius, and Paulinus, but by the neo- orthodox themselves. The latter, with Meletius at their head, had accepted all Athanasius' conditions, i.e., not only the Creed of Nicsea, but also an explicit profession of the absolute Divinity of the Holy Spirit. Eustathius, always fond of compromise, did not say that the Holy Spirit was a created being, but neither did he affirm that He was God. It is possible that such a reserve appeared to him necessary. I have already said that it was observed by many others, and that Basil himself, although holding a very definite doctrine on this point, was accustomed to a certain economy in presenting it to his flock. 1 In regard to Aerius see Epiphanius, Haer. 74. p. 307] BASIL AND EUSTATHIUS 317 This similarity of attitude was calculated to strengthen, in the eyes of the colleagues of the Bishop of Cassarea, the bad. impression already produced by his great friendship for his neighbour at Sebaste. Eustathius, who looked upon Basil as his disciple, had lent him several of his monks to assist him in the organization of his projects. Through these agents, Sebaste kept a w^atchful eye upon Csesarea. Eustathius' monks soon allowed themselves to criticize Basil ; this gave rise to various cases of friction, with reports more or less truthful.^ The final result was a situation of considerable difficulty, which became more and more strained and, as we shall see, ended in a rupture between the two friends. The religious policy of the Emperor Valens was a melancholy contrast to that of his brother Valentinian.- Many people in the East might well say that they lived there under an evil star. Even in the now far-off times of the Great Persecution, the West had scarcely had two years of suffering ; in some countries, persecution had hardly touched them at all ; whilst the East, from Diocletian to Galerius, from Galerius to Maximin, had had ten years of misery. Licinius and Julian had only shown their severity in the East. The Western bishops had only had to endure Constantius in the last years of his reign. And from the time of Julian's accession no one any longer thought of molesting them. Was it not natural that, being thus favoured by Providence, the Westerns should set them- selves to work to rescue from affliction their brethren in ^ Ep. 119. - We must not judge of this, however, from the letter reproduced by Theodoret, H. E. iv. 7, a letter plainly apocryphal as well as the synodal epistle (iv. 8), which follows it. The imperial letter, headed with the names of the Emperors Valentinian, Valens, and Gratian, is addressed to the Pneumatomachi of Asia, and preaches to them the Trinity consubstantial in three hypostases, with a proclamation of anathema, which is scarcely in the imperial style. It incites the subjects of Valens to despise the commands of their sovereign, whom the forger apparently looks upon as the special protector of the heresy against the Holy Spirit. It is strange that Tillemont should have accepted such incongruities. 318 BASIL OF CJESAREA [ch. xi. the East? When persecuted by Constantius, Athanasius had found among them refuge and support. They had interested in his cause their own Emperor Constans. Was there not ground for hope, now that Constantius was living again in Valens, that Valentinian too might intervene effectually with his brother ? He would certainly do so, if the Western episcopate made energetic repre- sentations on behalf of the persecuted. And they certainly owed it to them to do so, for after all the orthodox and the well disposed had done their duty at Seleucia, and, if they did yield at Constantinople, it was because the other side had been able to urge upon them the appalling defection at Ariminum. In the West, they had reversed their opinions the moment a respite came, and in this new attitude perseverance was easy. It was upon the East that the error at Ariminum was pressing; and it was pressing severely. Full of such thoughts as these, Basil, from the begin- ning of his episcopate, took measures to excite the Western Church to interest herself in the sufferings of her sister in the East. The best intermediary for such negotiations was plainly the Bishop of Alexandria. Athanasius does not appear to have had very friendly relations with Pope Liberius during the Pope's last years.^ He found himself on better terms with the new Pope, Damasus, from whom in 371 he demanded the condemnation not only of Ursacius and Valens, but also of Auxentius, Bishop of Milan, who of all the adherents of Ariminum stood highest in the favour of the Emperor Valentinian. Basil wrote to Athanasius,^ begging him to stir up the West in favour of an improvement of the general state of things, and to bring about, as he alone could do, the union of the orthodox at Antioch. Antioch was, in his eyes, the Mother-Church of the East.^ Universal reconciliation ^ If they had been on good terms, Liberius would not have given so warm a welcome to the envoys of the Council of Lampsacus. Damasus showed himself far more circumspect in his dealings with the Easterns. " E-p. 66, ^ Even of the whole world, if one were to press too closely one of his expressions : Tt S dv yivoiro rah Kara TTiv oiKOVfxivr}v eKKX-rjaiais t^s p. 400] BASIL AND ATHANASIUS 319 depended upon its internal unity, which had been gravely compromised by the schism between Paulinus and Meletius. The reply of Athanasius was conveyed by one of his priests. It encouraged Basil to decide definitely upon his course. He took counsel with Meletius ; a Meletian deacon of Antioch, Dorotheus, was chosen to go to Rome.^ He was the bearer of a letter,^ couched in general terms, in which the Romans were reminded of their duties with regard to the Churches of the East, assisted in by- gone days by Pope Dionysius.^ What they asked of them at the present was the despatch of orthodox and peaceable persons, capable of restoring the concord which had been disturbed. Dorotheus was commended to the Bishop of Alexandria,^ to whom Basil confided his desires. The Westerns were to send all the documents relating to the steps they had themselves taken since Ariminum, to condemn Marcellus, and to settle the difficulty at Antioch. Up to the present, they had only condemned Arius ; this they continued to do on every occasion ; but of Marcellus they said nothing. As to Antioch, it must be understood that the only term of reconciliation admissible was the recognition of Meletius. In the meantime, Athanasius was entreated to grant to the Eastern bishops the privilege of communion with himself^ To make quite sure of not compromising him, he was to send his letters of communion to Basil, who would only deliver them to the right persons. But all this seemed to have remained fruitless. Dorotheus, on arriving at Alexandria, was dissuaded from embarking for Italy. The condemnation of Marcellus would have been, for the Westerns, a formal revocation of their previous judgment.*^ As to recognizing Meletius, 'AvTioxeioLs iiriKaipuiTepov ; the context shows that he was speaking especially of the East. ^ Ep.6%. '^ Ep.70. 3 <^ Vol. I. p. 311. ^ Ep. 69, 67. •' Ep. 82. ^ Basil is fully conscious of this, when he says {Ep. 69, 2) that the heresy of Marcellus is proved by his books ; but it was after having taken cognizance of these books that the Councils of Rome and Sardica had reinstated him. 320 BASIL OF CJi:SAREA [ch. xi. they might as well not recognize Athanasius, who, it was well known in Rome, openly lent his support to Paulinus. However, Athanasius thought it possible to bring about intercourse between Rome and Basil. A deacon of Milan, evidently unattached, for he was not in the service of Auxentius, landed at Alexandria, bearing a synodal letter in which Damasus, at the head of ninety-two bishops, notified to Athanasius the condemnation of Auxentius and of the Council of Ariminum, Sabinus, as the deacon was called, was sent on to Caesarea with his document. It was not calculated to please Basil ; for it said that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are all of one sole Divinity, one sole virtue, one sole image, one sole substance. But the word substance in Latin is equivalent to hypostasis in Greek. The Bishop of Caesarea could not possibly admit this statement except by a liberal interpretation. But Basil knew that Latin was a com- paratively poor language, and in particular that the term essence (ova-La) was lacking in it. Instead of raising objections, he took time by the forelock, and gave Sabinus a packet of letters,^ addressed to the Westerns in general, to Valerian of Aquileia, and to the Bishops of Italy and of Gaul. The last letter was in the name of Meletius, Eusebius of Samosata, Basil, Gregory of Nazianzus (the father), Anthimus of Tyana, Pelagius of Laodicea, Eustathius of Sebaste, Theodotus of Nicopolis, and others, thirty-two Eastern prelates in all. They had taken great care, this time, to avoid awkward refinements of expression, and to confine themselves to invoking the compassion of their Western colleagues, simply asking them to send some persons authorized to investigate the position and to bring about peace. Basil did not fail to urge Meletius to adopt a respectful attitude towards Athanasius; he would have liked Meletius also to despatch an envoy to the West - ; but Meletius sent no one. Sabinus set out once more in the spring of 372. A year, at least, passed away, and no news came from the 1 E/>. 90, 91, 92. - Ep. 89. p. 402-3] ROME AND THE EAST 321 Western Church. At last, in the summer of the following year (373), they saw the arrival from Italy of a priest of Antioch, Evagrius, who, eleven years earlier, had followed to Italy the celebrated confessor, Eusebius of Vercellae. After the latter's death, Evagrius was returning to his own country. He brought back with him from Rome a formula for signature, in which not a single word might be changed ; and also the letters which had been entrusted the year before to Sabinus : they had not given satis- faction. These proceedings, we must admit, were scarcely friendly. They were not softened by a demand that the Eastern prelates should themselves repair to Rome,^ in order that there might be some reason for making them a return visit. Basil was offended ; from that time forward he had only a poor opinion of the Westerns, and their chief. Pope Damasus, impressed him as a man of haughty and merciless temper. And moreover, the death of Athanasius had just deprived him of his best base of operations. Alexandria was in the hands of the Arians, and the episcopate of Egypt was a prey to the most cruel persecution. The negotiations with the West were broken off. And, to crown all, Evagrius, on his arrival at Antioch, refused to ally himself with the Meletians, and entered into communion with Paulinus.- It was at this moment that there took place at last the complete rupture between Basil and Eustathius. Eustathius, apart from Basil, had few friends. One party detested him on account of his monks, another because of his doctrine. It was impossible to get him to take a side in the dispute about the Holy Spirit ; notwith- standing his reticences, it was seen that he inclined to the opinion adverse to His absolute Divinity. In the provinces of Asia, the Hellespont, and Bithynia, he would have been in agreement with the other bishops. In the heart of Pontus, however, the loudest voices were in favour of the opposite doctrine, and some who would not, perhaps, of themselves have defended the Holy Spirit with so ' Ep. 138, 2. Cf. 140, 156. -^ Ep. 156. II X 322 BASIL OF C^SAREA [ch. xi. much vigour, ranged themselves on His side in order not to be on the side of Eustathius. Basil, to whom this dangerous friendship caused every day fresh anxieties, made up his mind to put an end to it, and to induce Eustathius to explain himself clearly. In the spring of 372 he repaired to Sebaste and, after prolonged confer- ences, persuaded his old master to embrace his own opinions. He proposed to continue his journey and to visit Theodotus, Bishop of Nicopolis, the declared opponent of Eustathius, in order to arrange with him and Meletius, who happened to be in that neighbourhood, a formula which should be signed by the Bishop of Sebaste. But, from information which reached him, he had reason to fear that Theodotus, disturbed by the conference at Sebaste, would give him an unfavourable reception. He therefore returned home, only to resume the same journey a few weeks later, the emperor having sent him on a mission in Armenia Major. For the business of this mission Basil needed the co-operation of Theodotus. He therefore had an interview with him, at the country house to which Meletius had retired ; they succeeded in coming to a temporary understanding in the matter of Eustathius. But Theodotus, after he had returned home, changed his opinion completely ; and when Basil came to conduct him to Armenia Major, he would not even admit him into his church. The mission to Armenia failed on that account. But Basil and Theodotus ended by being reconciled ; they even came to an agreement as to the formula ^ which was to be presented to Eustathius, and the latter consented to sign it. One might think that everything was accomplished, and that nothing remained but to shake hands. A meeting-place was appointed : Eustathius was to be there with Basil and his friends. They waited for him in vain. His companions had turned him back ; it is quite possible, too, that Basil's friendship for Meletius, his former rival, may have seemed to him inordinate ; one fact is certain, ^ Ep. 125. p. 405] EUSTATHIUS AND BASIL 323 that thenceforward he entertained a deadly hatred for his former disciple. On his return from a journey iri Cilicia which he made at this time, he wrote to Basil, declaring that he renounced all communion with him. The pretext was a letter from Basil to Apollinaris, a letter twenty years old, which contained no question of dogma whatever. Apollinaris and Basil were still laymen at the time of this correspondence. No matter : Basil had written to Apollinaris ; therefore, he was an Apollinarian, a heretic. Another letter, soon spread broadcast through- out the whole of Asia Minor, denounced Basil as an intriguer ; it painted in the blackest colours the part he had played in the matter of the signature. Thus began a deplorable controversy, in the course of which Basil and Eustathius exchanged the bitterest accusations. Basil was treated as a Sabellian, on account of his relations with Apollinaris. There was even circulated under his name a document in which his orthodoxy, on this head, was con- siderably compromised,^ Basil, on his side, revived the old story of the relations of Eustathius with Arius, and recalled that he had been the master of Aetius ; as if anyone could be responsible for his masters or for his disciples. The Arian party profited by this quarrel. From the outset Eustathius had found in the Cilician episcopate supporters whose orthodoxy was doubtful. In the following year (374) the Bishop of Samosata, Eusebius, the friend and adviser of Basil, was exiled to Thrace. Shortly afterwards, the Vicarius of Pontus, one Demosthenes, who did not love Basil, and with reason,^ undertook a cam- paign against the orthodox Churches of Cappadocia and Armenia Minor. There was held in Galatia, towards the end of the year, a council of official bishops, under the direction of Euhippius, one of the influential members 1 Ep. 129. The complete text was published at Rome, in 1796, by L. Sebastiani, Epistola ad Apollinare^n Laodicenutn celeberrima^ etc., and reproduced by Loofs, Eustathius von Sebastia, p. 72. - At the time of Valens' visit to Cassarea, Demosthenes was still only chefoiihe imperial kitchens. As he made a show of meddling in the affairs of the Church, Basil had sent him back to his pots and pans. This was the cause of much talk at Caisarea. 324 BASIL OF C^ESAREA [ch. xi. of the synod of 360. The Bishop of Parnassos, Hypsis, the nearest at hand, was deposed, and replaced by Ecdicius, a safe man. Gregory, Bishop of Nyssa, Basil's brother, being accused by a private individual, was summoned to appear and was brought under escort; but he escaped on the way. Demosthenes next visited Csesarea, where he sentenced the clergy to municipal service ; then he went to Sebaste, and did the same to those who supported Basil against Eustathius. Finally, he called together at Nyssa a council of bishops of Galatia and Pontus, who deposed Gregory and appointed his successor. The same proceeding was carried out at Doara. Just at this time, Theodotus, Bishop of Nicopolis, died. The official council transferred itself to Sebaste : Eustathius, who had already had at Ancyra itself some relations with these prelates, now fraternized openly with them. From Sebaste, they pushed on to Nicopolis. There, with Basil's approbation, the Bishop of Satala had already installed his colleague of Colonia, Euphronius^; Eustathius had another candidate, a priest called Fronto. Euphronius was sent back to Colonia, and Fronto was put in possession of the churches ; those who objected were evicted and had to hold their meetings in the open country, as the Meletians were wont to do at Antioch.^ It was while under the impression of these melancholy occurrences that Basil wrote a letter^ to the bishops of Italy and of Gaul. After the reception given to his correspondence, he was scarcely disposed to resume negotiations with Rome. Nevertheless, in the preceding year (374)* he had assisted with his recommendation a 1 Nicopolis, Satala, and Colonia formed part of the province of Armenia Minor, of which Eustathius was metropolitan. 2 Epp. 225, 237-240, 244, 251. 3 Ep. 243. ■* The date is given by Epp. 120 and 121, which show us Sanctissimus as in Armenia Minor, at the time when Anthimus, Bishop of Tyana, had just ordained Faustus, rhv cwovto. t^ JldTrci. This Papas is none other than the Armenian King Pap, called Para in Ammianus Marcellinus_(xxx. i), who was assassinated in 374. The p. 408] RETURN OF DOROTHEUS 325 certain priest Sanctissimus, who was very well informed as to the state of feeling in the West, and was travelling through Armenia Minor and Syria/ collecting signatures. Basil gave him his patronage. When he had finished his round, he set out for Italy (375), accompanied by Dorotheus, now promoted to the priesthood. They carried with them, fortified by the signatures collected by Sanctissimus, the formula which Evagrius had brought over in 373 and Basil's letter. The result was not that which was desired. No one came from the West ; however, Dorotheus brought back a letter- in which his zeal was acknowledged, and it was stated that a strong effort had been made to assist him. So far as doctrine was concerned, the letter condemned the errors of Marcellus and of Apollinaris, but without mentioning them by name. The term una substantia was no longer employed ; for it was substituted that of una usia, in Greek, since Latin did not possess the equivalent of this term.^ Attention was also called to the fact that the canonical rules as to the ordination of bishops and clergy {sacerdotum vel clericonini) must be observed, and that those who failed to do so could not be admitted easily to communion. This seems clearly aimed at Meletius. To show this intention more plainly, a letter was written to Paulinus, and he, when he received it, hastened to make a boast of it.^ Peter, the new Bishop of Alexandria, was installed in Rome ; and although he, fact that Faustus " was with Pap," gives reason for thinking that he had followed that prince in his journey to Cilicia, and that he was living with him at Tarsus. Sanctissimus then set out for Armenia Minor, where he made a long stay with Meletius. He did not go to Syria until the following year. I do not think that this chrono- logical datum has been made use of previously. 1 Epp. 120, 121, 132, 253-256. 2 Constant, Ep. Rom. Ponii/., p. 495 : " Ea gratia." •'' Basil {Ep. 214, 4) mentions this change. Henceforward, the Western Church will be found making the distinction between usia and hypostasis. ^ Epp. 214, 216. 326 BASIL OF CiESAREA [ch. xi. personally, was on good terms with Basil,^ he in no wise shared Basil's sympathies with Meletius. The letter - received by Paulinus was, I think, brought to him by Vitalis, a priest of Antioch, who down to that time had been one of Meletius' clergy, but who had now decided to forsake him, because his ideas as to the Incarnation were not well received in that quarter. Vitalis was an adherent of Apollinaris. I have explained above what constituted the peculiar doctrine of that learned man. Since the time of the Council of Alexandria (362), the opposition between the two opinions represented by Apollinaris and by Diodore had not ceased to accentuate itself. In the Church of Meletius, Apollinarianism was energetically repudiated. Apollinaris, although bishop at Laodicea, kept school for all that at Antioch. Among his hearers he had had in the course of the preceding years a Latin monk of considerable scholarship, named Jerome, who, after having studied in the schools at Rome and cultivated asceticism with the clergy of Aquileia, had made up his mind to make trial of the hermit's life in the deserts of the East But before burying himself there he stayed some time at Antioch, where he initiated himself in exegesis under the guid- ance of Apollinaris while avoiding his theological views. He had not thought it his duty to take a side between the two rival churches, and had confined himself in the matter of ecclesiastical communion to that of the Egyptian confessors, exiled to Syria for the Catholic Faith. At Rome also there had been a long hesitation between Meletius and Paulinus ; but it was inevitable that the Alexandrian connections of the latter should turn the scale in his favour. This actually happened in the same year, 375. Through " his son " Vitalis, Pope Damasus had written officially to Paulinus, giv- ing him power to deal with questions of communion. Damasus was badly informed ; he did not know at this time that Vitalis was on the side of Apollinaris. ^ Epp. 133, 266. - A lost letter, mentioned in Jaffe, 235. p. 410] DAMASUS AND PAULINUS 327 Pieces of information reached him, perhaps through Dorotheus ; and he changed his mind. While Paulinus was boasting at Antioch that he had been recognized by Rome, new messengers were on their way to him ; one, to warn him that difficulties had supervened ^ ; the other,- to give him in relation to Vitalis more com- plete instructions. Vitalis and his followers must only be admitted into communion after an explicit repudiation of the doctrine according to which Christ had not been a perfect Man — the Divine Word having taken the place in Him of the intelligent soul {sensus, vovi). Apollinaris was not mentioned by name. Rome and Alexandria still retained some feelings of respect for the illustrious theologian.^ The affair of Vitalis brought matters to a crisis. The Meletians already considered Apollinaris and Vitalis as heretics ; after the letter of Damasus it was impossible for Paulinus to receive them into his ' Per Petronium presbyteriim^ Jaffe, 235. 2 Jaffe, 235, but of course without the anathemas, and only as far as the words in suscipiendo tnbuat exefuplum. Following this letter, certain collections of canons (see Maassen, Quellen, vol. i., p. 232 ei seq.) give a document, also addressed to Paulinus of Antioch : Post concilium Nicaenutn. Other collections place it after the Council of Nicaea ; Theodoret {H. E. v. 11) gives it by itself, translated into Greek. This document contains two series of anathemas ; the first mentions by name Sabellius, Arius, Eunomius, the Macedonians, and Photinus. Without naming Eustathius or Apollinaris or Marcellus, it proscribes their principal errors, and concludes with a censure of those who migrate from one Church to another ; it is no doubt Meletius who is aimed at. The second part of the document : Si quis non dixerit, etc., has in view neither Marcellus nor Apollinaris ; it is concerned almost entirely with the Holy Spirit. I think that we have here before us two documents of different date which have been joined together later, without any regard to the chronological order. The second is really earlier than the first. It might well go back to the time (about 371) when St Athanasius wrote his letter to Epictetus. The errors with regard to the Incarnation which are mentioned in it are more closely akin to those that he refutes in that letter than to Apollinarianism properly so-called. ■'' We must remember that Apollinaris belonged to the "Little Church," and was the rival of Pelagius at Laodicea, as Paulinus was of Meletius at Antioch. 328 BASIL OF Ci^SAREA [ch. xi. Church. They founded another Church, and Vitalis him- self became its bishop. While these things were happening at Antioch, Eustathius, isolated in his own country where his suspicious dealings with the official bishops had still further deprived him of sympathizers, conceived the idea of making overtures to his old friends, the " Macedonians." This party held in 376 a council at Cyzicus ; Eustathius went to it. At this meeting a new confession of faith was adopted, in which the hojnoousios was repudiated afresh and replaced by the homoioiisios ; the Holy Spirit was also placed by it in the number of created beings. Eustathius signed this formula, and thus defined his attitude by ranking himself among the Pneumatomachi. From Basil's point of view, these events were well suited to enlighten the Westerns as to the worth of the persons who were sheltering themselves in the East under their patronage. Eustathius had been received at Rome by the previous Pope ; he had bragged of it for a very long time. Apollinaris and Paulinus, the heads of the Little Church, were prot^gis of Rome; so was Vitalis. No party was untarnished save Meletius and his followers, the very persons with whom the Romans would have nothing to do. Advantage was taken of this position of affairs to try a new course of action. In the spring of 377 Dorotheus and another priest, perhaps Sanctissimus again, set out for Rome with a letter addressed " to the Westerns," in the name of the Easterns collectively.^ This time things were stated exactly. The Romans were informed that it was no longer the Arians who needed to be repudiated ; their excesses were rendering them more odious than ever. Other enemies were threatening the Church, enemies all the more dangerous because to treat them kindly was to allow doubts to rise as to the pernicious nature of their doctrine. It was necessary to condemn in express terms Eustathius, the chief of the Pneumatomachi ; Apollinaris, who taught the Millenial reign and disturbed everyone by his doctrine * Ep. 263 ; cf. Ep. 129, in which Basil explains to Meletius the plan of this new step. p. 413] THE NEW SITUATION 329 as to the Incarnation ; and finally, Marcellus, whose disciples found too much support from Paulinus. This new embassy of Dorotheus had only, and could only have, partial success. That the Roman Church re- pudiated the errors attributed to Eustathius, Apollinaris, and Marcellus, there could be no manner of doubt. It had already expressed itself clearly on that point. It had done so especially in the letter which Dorotheus had brought back to the East. It did so once more, to satisfy the Easterns, in another letter which Dorotheus carried back on his return from this new journey.^ As to con- demning by name absent persons, such as Eustathius, Apollinaris, or Paulinus, without even giving them a chance of explaining themselves in a debate in which both sides were heard, this could scarcely be asked of the Apostolic See. The utmost that it could have done would have been to ratify a sentence pronounced after such a discussion by the lawful authorities of the East. But this debate had not taken place, nor did such a sentence exist. The situation was one from which there was no way out. On the men of this time who were well intentioned there weighed the consequences of the long war in which Eusebius of Nicomedia had embroiled the Easterns, first against Alexandria, and then against the Roman Church. Moreover, everyone was not well intentioned. Paulinus ought to have retired. But even when rid of the embar- rassment of his personality, the position would have re- mained critical, for opinion in Egypt would still have seen, behind Meletius, the shades of his former patrons, Eudoxius and Acacius and their like. However, as Meletius was personally very popular, things would have settled themselves at Antioch, and elsewhere people would have ended by taking his side in the matter. In any case, Rome and Alexandria would have ceased to tow in their wake the cumbersome wreck of the old Marcellian party ; and union would have been restored between them and the Churches of the East. This may be said in order to ' The Fragments, lllud sane miramur and Non nobis quidqicam (Constant, Ep. Rom. Pont^ pp. 498, 499). 330 BASIL OF CESAREA [ch. xi. indicate more clearly the lines and necessities of the situation, for I do not consider that it is the province of the historian to occupy himself with things which might have happened : he has quite enough to do with those that did happen as a matter of fact The interviews which Meletius' envoy had in Rome with Pope Damasus were not always of a very peaceable character. Peter of Alexandria was present at them. When it was a question of Meletius and of Eusebius of Samosata, he did not hesitate to display his aversion for them, and went so far as to treat them as Arians. Dorotheus at last lost patience, and attacked the Pope of Alexandria with some vehemence. Peter complained of this to Basil. Basil expressed his regret,^ but at the same time drew his attention to the fact that Meletius and Eusebius, two confessors of the faith, who had been exiled by the Arians, deserved the respect of their colleagues ; as to their orthodoxy on all the disputed points, he was certain of it, and would guarantee it. Meletius, Basil, and their party represented, generally speaking, an evolution to the right by the old party of opposition to the Council of Nicaea. It was not the only party which circumstances had led to moderate their first attitude. At the opposite extreme, the old adversary of the " Easterns," the man against whom, from Eusebius of Caesarea to St Basil, they had never ceased to fight, Marcellus of Ancyra, Marcellus the " Sabellian," was going through an evolution on his side or, rather, an evolution was going on around him. He was not yet dead when Basil became bishop. He was living in retirement at Ancyra, with a few clergy and a certain number of adherents, who formed around him a Little Church. The official bishop, Athanasius, he who gave his adhesion, in 363, to the Council of Nicaea, thought it his duty to harass this little group. Marcellus had long been estranged from the Bishop of Alexandria, his former companion in the struggles at Rome and at Sardica. But this did not hinder him from appealing to him. One of his clergy, 1 Ep. 266. r. 415] DEATH OF MARCELLUS 331 the deacon Eugenius, was sent to Alexandria with recommendations furnished by the Bishops of Greece and of Macedonia. He presented a profession of faith,^ in which the former doctrines of Marcellus were either toned down or cloaked ; however, it did not go so far as to speak of the three hypostases. Athanasius, as we have seen, if he did not rule out this expression, certainly did not lay stress on it. He gave letters of communion to Marcellus' deacon and to his Little Church. This happened, I think, at the same time as the Council of Alexandria, in 362. Marcellus died about the year 375 ; he must have been over ninety ,2 and it is perhaps on account of his great age that we hear no more of him in these latter days. Thus deprived of its head, and repulsed by Basil and his supporters, who continually invoked against it the anathemas of the West, his party addressed themselves to the Egyptian bishops, who were living in exile at Diocjesarea in Palestine. These confessors, to whom they presented, together with a profession of faith,^ the letters of communion given them in former days by St Athanasius, made no difficulty about admitting them. But Basil, to whom they next addressed themselves, thought that the exiles had been too hasty in the matter, and such was also the opinion of Peter of Alexandria.^ Basil asked for nothing better than to welcome the Galatians ; but he wished them to come to him, and not that they should presume to draw him to themselves. This affair, like several others, was still pending, when, in 378, events of great importance occurred to modify the political and religious situation in the Eastern empire. Two years before, the Goths established beyond the Danube had found themselves attacked by the Huns who came from the Ural. Driven back by these savage hordes, they had asked for shelter on imperial territory, and had been allowed to settle in Thrace, upon certain conditions, 1 Mansi, Concilia, vol. iii., p. 469. " He was already bishop in 314, at the time of the Council of Ancyra. ^ Epiphanius, Hacr. Ixxii. 11. ■* Basil, Ep. 266. 332 BASIL OF C^SAREA [ch. xi. among which was a promise to furnish them with means of support. The government of Valens organized this supply with so little conscience and humanity, that the immigrants revolted (376). It was necessary to under- take a regular campaign against them, which finally took such a turn for the worse that Valens was obliged to intervene in person. Before he left Antioch, moved by a wise clemency, he revoked the sentences of exile pronounced against ecclesiastical persons.^ Valens arrived at Constantinople on May 30, and - set out again a few days later to direct the military operations in Thrace. On August 9 he delivered battle. The Roman army suffered a terrible defeat, in which the emperor disappeared — either because his corpse could not be recognized among the dead, or because, according to a rumour which gained credence, he had perished in the burning of a cottage, to which he had been carried in order that his wounds might be cared for. ' Jerome, Chron. : " Valens de Antiochia exire compulsus sera poenitentia nostros de exilio revocat." — Rufin. H. E. ii. 13: "Turn vero Valentis bella quae ecclesiis inferebat in hostem coepta converti, seraque poenitentia episcopos et presbyteros relaxari exiliis ac de metallis resolvi monachos iubet." 2 According to a legend related by Sozomen (vi. 40), and adopted also, with some alteration, by Theodoret (iv. 31), a monk of Constantinople, Isaac, had in vain adjured him to restore the churches to the Catholics. This story, doubtful enough in itself, cannot be set against the testimonies of St Jerome and Rufinus, who were living at that time in the East, as to the recall of the exiles by Valens him- self; besides, the recall of the exiles is quite a different thing from their reinstatement in the place and position of the official clergy. CHAPTER XII GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS Gratian and Theodosius. Return of the exiled bishops. Death of Basil. The Easterns accept the conditions of Rome. Attitude of Theodosius. Situation at Constantinople. Gregory of Nazianzus and his church, the " Anastasis." Conflicts with the Arians. Alexandrian opposition : Maximus the Cynic. Gregory at St Sophia. The Second QEcumenical Council (381). Obstinacy of the Macedonians. Installation of Gregory. Death of Meletius : difficulties with regard to his successor. Resignation of Gregory. Nectarius. The canons. Hostility against Alexandria. Flavian elected at Antioch. Protests of St Ambrose. Roman Council in 382. Letter from the Easterns. Gratian, warned of the danger, but detained in Gaul by an invasion of the Alamanni, which was stayed by the battle of Colmar, arrived in time, in spite of all difficulties, on the Lower Danube. Valens should have awaited his arrival, in order that the Goths, being caught between the two armies, might have been easily overcome. After the disaster, the young emperor of the West — he was not twenty — first of all took steps to improve the situation ; and then, not feeling strong enough to govern by him- self both parts of the empire, shifted the burden of the East from his own shoulders to those of one of his generals, Theodosius, who was proclaimed Augustus at Sirmium on January 16, 379. Some time ere this Gratian had hastened to ratify and to extend the measures already taken by Valens for the recall of the exiled bishops. Meletius reappeared at Antioch, Eusebius at Samosata ; all the confessors reassumed the government of their churches. 334 GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS [cii. xii. One of the first to return was Peter of Alexandria. Before allowing him to leave Rome, Damasus had caused him to be present at a council, at which it was finally decided to condemn by name Apollinaris and one of his principal lieutenants, Timothy, who had just been made Bishop at Berytus. Peter set out immediately after. No sooner had he disembarked at Alexandria than a popular outbreak drove Lucius from the city ; he hastened to take refuge at Constantinople, where, although the Emperor Valens was gone, he found at any rate the hospitality of the Bishop Demophilus, still as always holding his position, and determined not to give it up till the last moment. It was just at this time that Basil died, on January i, 379. He had not completed his fiftieth year ; his career might well have been a more protracted one ; his endur- ance of adversity gave reason to look forward to what he would have been in prosperity. But his health, always poor, had not been made any stronger by the imprudences of asceticism and the fatigues of his episcopate. Among all his sufferings, he complains specially of a liver complaint, which we might suspect, apart from this testimony, from the restless and embittered tone of his correspondence. Exposed to the often brutal ill-will of the government, to opposition from ecclesiastics, opposition for the most part stupid but arising from several different causes, and, for that very reason, difficult to overcome ; deprived of coadjutors of any value, for notwithstanding their friendship and their ability, his brother Gregory of Nyssa and his friend Gregory of Nazianzus were more of a hindrance than a help to him ; Basil brought to the service of a programme of reconciliation, a natural temperament at once too sensitive and too pugnacious. Hence arose an endless series of failures. In the affair of Eustathius, we see him, to satisfy the fierce consubstan- tialists, holding a knife to the throat of an old friend, a venerable bishop, and the result which he achieved was that, in spite of this sacrifice, the irreconcilable Atarbius of Neocaesarea could not endure him, fled at his approach, p. 420] CHARACTER OF BASIL 335 and kept his flock in such a state of terror by his threatening dreams, that they revolted against the Bishop of Caesarea, their compatriot and the glory of their country. Basil desired that Meletius should be recognized as Bishop of Antioch, and fought doggedly to that end, without considering the difficult position in which such an event would place the Churches of Rome and Alexandria. He was opposed ; and he lost his temper, and expressed himself in no measured terms. Even in his own country and his own ecclesiastical circle, his influence was vigorously opposed. Some people have wished to see in him the founder of a kind of Patriarchate, with a jurisdiction corresponding to the "diocese" of Pontus. But it is evident that he had no authority in the Western provinces, those of Bithynia, Galatia, and Paphlagonia. The bishops of the sea-board of Pontus^ did not trouble themselves about him.^ In the interior, when the sees were not occupied by Arians, as at Amasia and in the Armenian Tetrapolis, their occupants were quarrel- ling with each other ; some approved of the monks, others would have none of them ; some thought that, on the question as to the Trinity, Basil inclined too much to the right ; others deplored his making concessions to the left. Had he been blessed with good health, the noble soul of the Bishop of Caesarea might perhaps have risen above all these miseries. But the bodily machine refused to act ; the pilot died, worn out, just when the tempest was abating. It was a bitter day for the pontiffs of official Arianism when they heard of the recall of their exiled rivals ! Besides, this was only a preliminary measure. They knew the sympathies of the young emperor, and they had doubts as to what would come next. At Antioch, Meletius, confronted by special difficulties, quickly grasped a situation now much simplified. To come to an under- standing with Rome had been, under Valens, a thing greatly to be desired ; under Gratian and Theodosius, it * Sinope, Amisos (Samsoun), Polemonion, Kerassond, Trebizond. 2 Ep. 203. 336 GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS [ch. xii. was the one and only solution. Basil, who perhaps might have had scruples, was no longer there to suggest conditions. A council of one hundred and fifty -three bishops assembled in the Syrian metropolis during the autumn 1 of 379, and voted an unqualified adhesion to the Roman formularies.^ They thus anticipated the intentions of Theodosius. The new emperor had settled at Thessalonica. He fell ill there during the winter, and was baptized by Bishop Acholius, a decided Nicene. In an edict,^ dated February 27, 380, Theodosius declared to his people that they must all profess the religion which "the Apostle Peter had taught in days of old to the Romans, and which was now followed by the Pontiff Damasus and by Peter, Bishop of Alexandria, a man of Apostolic sanctity." That party alone had any right to the title of " Catholics " ; all others were heretics; their conventicles were not regarded as churches, and they were threatened with penalties. 1 Nine months after the death of Basil, says Gregory of Nyssa, De vita Sanctae Macrinae (Migne, P. G., vol. xlvi., p. 973). 2 We still possess (Constant, Efi. Rom. Ponti/., p. 500) the signatures (seven formally set out, the others summarized) which were appended to this document. There is no doubt about the meaning of the formulary. As to the terms of it, that is not so easy to decide. The signatures are attached, in the MSS. where they are found, to a collection composed of the letter of Damasus, Confiditmis quidetn, and of the three fragments, Ea gratia, lllud sane iniramur, and Non nobis qiddquam (see above, pp. 320, 325, 329). But this collection of documents is very incoherent. It is clear that it only represents an extract from a more extensive collection. The Easterns would assuredly not have signed the letter Confidimus if it stood alone for in it we find the term una substantia Q-/j.ia virdaraais:'), against which they had always protested. But this term might be considered as explained by the subsequent letters, in one of which it is replaced by the expression una usia. It is possible, therefore, that they may have given their adhesion to the views contained in the dossier as a whole. In any case their adhesion must have been drawn up in a special formula, which the author of our extracts has neglected. The formula by which he introduces the signatures, and the explicit which comes after, presuppose a close connection between the Council of Antioch and the Roman documents which precede it. ^ Cod. Theod. xvi. i, 2. p. 422-3] roSITION UNDER THEODOSIUS 337 At Antioch, the orthodox, both those who belonged to the Great Church (the party of Meletius) and those who belonged to the Little Church (the party of Paulinus) were numerous. They could await with quiet confidence the executive measures which would hand over to them the ecclesiastical buildings still held from them, no longer by Euzoius, who had been dead some time, but by his successor, Dorotheus. The situation was not so clear at Constantinople. There, the Arian party was strong. Its leader, Demophilus, was enthroned at St Sophia ; the clergy under his orders were in possession of all the churches. Those in opposition to him, whether Mace- donians or Nicenes, were rigorously excluded from them, just as the adherents of Meletius and Paulinus were at Antioch. At the advent of Demophilus, the Nicenes had tried to appoint a bishop of their own, in the person of a certain Evagrius ; he was immediately seized by the police, and imprisoned at Berea, where he seems to have died, for we hear of him no more. Now that the times had become more favourable, the Nicenes felt the necessity of union and organization. The neo-orthodox party of the East hastened to assist them, being anxious that the place of Demophilus should be given to one of their own friends, and above all to prevent the Apollinarians, who were already on the move, from seizing upon it for them- selves. Negotiations followed, at the conclusion of which, Gregory, the son of the old Bishop of Nazianzus, was chosen as the Shepherd of this little flock. Ever since the death of his parents in 375, Gregory, free at last to follow his vocation to asceticism, had fled from Nazianzus. Leaving Basil to extricate himself as best he could from the difficulties which besieged him on every side, he had taken refuge in the monastery of St Thecla at Seleucia in Isauria. It was there that he heard of the defeat of Valens and the death of Basil. After refusing many entreaties, he at last consented to the request made to him, and went to Constantinople, where he opened a Little Church in the house of one of his relations. The orthodox party gathered round him. II Y 338 GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS [ch. xii. His signal uprightness of character and, above all, his wonderful eloquence, soon drew together a considerable body of hearers. The Church of Constantinople, oppressed for forty years by violence and intrigue, came to life again in that humble edifice. Gregory himself had given to his chapel the name of Resurrection (Anastasis). It was there that, among so many other homilies, he pronounced his five Discourses upon the Trinity — classic specimens of Greek theology. The dissenting oratory, thanks to the golden eloquence of this first of Chrysostoms, became more frequented and better attended than the official basilicas. The Arians were much disturbed. During the night before Easter Sunday (379) a furious crowd rushed from St Sophia to attack the Anastasis, where Gregory was baptizing his neophytes. The crowd consisted of the virgins and monks of the Arian Church, drawing in their wake the poor assisted by their charity, a docile following of the dominant clergy. It seemed to Gregory as if he saw a party of Corybants with Fauns and Maenads. Stones flew through the air against the Catholics ; some of them struck the bishop ; one of his people was beaten and left for dead.^ Yet none the less he himself was held responsible for the disorder, and dragged before the courts. He could make light of this ill-treatment from a quarter from which it was only to be expected. But far more grievous to him were the internal disputes of his little community. The reaction from the schism of Antioch was felt there. Gregory, who held strongly to the three hypostases, found himself treated as a tri-theist. He was asked if he were for Paul or for Apollos, i.e., for Meletius or for Paulinus. He would have preferred to be only for Christ ; but that was difficult. Far away in Alexandria, the Patriarch Peter was keeping a watchful eye upon what was happening at Constantinople, and, being always dominated by his old resentment against the Easterns, the former persecutors of his brother Athanasius, he was disturbed to see the ^ Details in Or. 35 ; Ep. jy ; Carmen de Vita., vv. Ssi-SjS. r. 425] iMAXIiMUS TllK CVNK* 339 Cappadocian orator, the friend of Basil and of Meletius, in a fair way to inherit at Constantinople the succession of the Arians. At the outset he had written to Gregory in very friendly tones ; Gregory, on his part, preached a panegyric on Athanasius. At the Anastasis, they felt quite secure about Alexandria. Hence they gave a warm welcome to a person, albeit a very extraordinary one, who came from that country. This was a certain Maximus, a Cynic philosopher, who had found a way to combine the observances of his sect with the profession of Christianity. Athanasius had corresponded with him.^ He had had in more than one place difficulties with the police ; but, as he said that he had been persecuted for the faith, that fact only gave him another claim on the good-will of guileless people. Among their number, we must admit, might be included the illustrious man whom circumstances had placed at the head of the Catholics of Constantinople. In spite of his staff, his philosopher's cloak, and his long hair, Maximus was treated by Gregory as a confessor of the faith, and as an intimate friend ; he took him into his house, gave him a place at his table, and trusted him with his complete confidence. That nothing might be wanting to these friendly demonstrations, Gregory also honoured him by a fine panegyric, pronounced in church in the presence of its hero.- On his side, Maximus was most attentive to Gregory's sermons, applauded him in church, and supported him outside by the popularity which he enjoyed in certain circles. Now this Maximus was Bishop Peter's candidate for the see of Constantinople. If he was now with Gregory, it was to rob him of his bishopric. One night the doors of the Church of the Anastasis, thanks to the complicity of a priest, were opened to give admission to a strange assembly. Sailors from the corn ships, just arrived from Alexandria, escorted a group of bishops of their country, who at once proceeded to the task of the election and consecration of Maximus as Bishop of Constantinople. 1 Ep. ad Maximum philosophum (Migne, P. G., vol.xxvi., p. 1085). - Or. 25. 340 GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS [ch. xii. Gregory, some distance away, was sleeping uneasily, for he was ill ; his faithful clergy too were slumbering. The ceremony began. The custom of that day did not allow clerics to wear their hair long. It was necessary, therefore, as Gregory said when he told the story later in the language of satire, " to shear the dog upon the episcopal throne." The result of this operation was the discovery that much of this celebrated head of hair was artificial. The ceremony was not over when the dawn brought people to the church. A fine tumult ensued. The Egyptians, terrified, retired in disorder, and only found refuge with a musician in the neighbourhood. There, in a wretched hovel, they finished their ceremony. One can imagine the position of Gregory, He was greatly distressed, angry with himself for his simplicity, and he wished to go away. But his faithful flock watched him carefully. In one of his discourses, they thought they discovered an intention to fly. They surrounded him and beset him with a thousand entreaties. As he still seemed determined, they said, " If you go, you will take the Trinity with you." Gregory understood, and remained. In the meantime the new bishop, accompanied by his consecrators, repaired to Thessalonica to obtain the recognition of Theodosius. He was quite mistaken. The emperor knew everything, and repulsed him harshly. Maximus then embarked for Alexandria, where he solicited the support of Bishop Peter. The latter was in a very difficult position. The matter had not gone well at Constantinople; the emperor was displeased; and, as a climax, Pope Damasus, being informed by Acholius and his Macedonian colleagues, protested strongly against the attempt.^ Peter's punishment came from the same quarter as his sin. His Bishop of Constantinople stirred up a riot against him at Alexandria to force his support. The prefect had to intervene, and banished the episcopal Cynic to a place where he could no longer disturb the tranquillity of the streets. We learn from these events that Gregory, notwith- I Jaffe, 237, 238. p. 428] AFFAIRS AT CONSTANTINOPLE 341 standing his indisputable sanctity and his eloquence, was a little wanting in practical common sense. He was certainly not pleasing to Peter of Alexandria, whose merits the imperial rescript of February 27 had so highly praised. Was he really the man needed, just then, at the head of the Church of Constantinople ? Theodosius, a strong man himself, must have had doubts like these. But, for the moment, he refrained from settling the matter. He could not, however, allow an indefinite prolongation of the state of uncertainty which existed in the capital with regard to religious affairs. He had hitherto been detained at Thessalonica by his military operations against the Goths. As soon as his hands were free there, he turned towards Constantinople, which he entered on November 24, 380. Two days afterwards, the churches were taken from the Arians and restored to the Catholics. Demophilus showed no more inclination at the last moment than previously to accept the Creed of Nicsea. He left the city. On November 26, the emperor conducted Gregory to St Sophia. An enormous crowd congregated on the route — not altogether a friendly crowd, far from it, but a large display of military force secured order. Behind the vigorous and imposing prince, the blue bird of Cappadocia led the triumph of orthodoxy. The weather was grey ; autumn clouds veiled the morning sky. Was the rain going to fall upon the Council of Nicaea? Arians and Catholics looked up to the heavens with very different desires. Gregory entered the darkened basilica, and, while the imperial procession took its place in the tribunes, he sat down in the apse beside the episcopal throne. Just at that moment, the sun, bursting through the clouds, shed its rays through all the windows ; it saluted the victory. Shouts rang out : " Gregory, Bishop ! " But Gregory, bewildered and speechless, proved unequal to the greatness of the occasion. In his stead, another bishop called upon all those present to recall their thoughts for the celebration of the sacred mysteries. From that day forward the Anastasis was abandoned ; 342 GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS [ch. xtt. it was at St Sophia that the eloquence of orthodoxy resounded. Under the roof which had once sheltered Eudoxius, the Saint of Nazianzus set in order his life of austerity and devotion. It was not without difficulty that he could set his hand to the reorganization of his great church. Many interests found themselves injured ; and Gregory was the object of an attempt at assassination. But the local opposition was gradually disarmed ; and the illustrious bishop saw the moment arriving when his position was finally to be regularized and strengthened. Theodosius had decided to gather together in a great council the episcopate of the Eastern empire. To this assembly he had committed the task of providing, in a definite manner, for the government of the Church of Constantinople. Notices of convocation were sent out. There is every appearance that at first invitations were not sent to the bishops of Egypt, nor to those of Eastern Illyricum, of whom the most distinguished was the metropolitan of Thessalonica. At all events these bishops did not arrive till much later than the others. Paulinus did not appear at all ; nor did the few bishops in communion with him, such as Diodore of Tyre and Epiphanius of Salamis. Meletius arrived early, escorted by seventy bishops from the "diocese" of the Orient. Helladius, the new Bishop of Caesarea in Cappadocia, also came, with the two brothers of Basil, Gregory and Peter ; then came his friends, Amphilochius of Iconium and Optimus of Antioch in Pisidia ; and last, some fifty bishops from Southern Asia Minor, Lycia, Pamphylia, Pisidia, and Lycaonia. On the whole, this assemblage of bishops represented fairly well the immediate followers of Basil. His bodily presence was wanting to his victory ; but his spirit pervaded the assembly. From Galatia and from Paphlagonia, where the bishoprics were still occupied by Arians, there came no one. Neither do we find among the signatories the name of any bishop of Western Asia Minor. In these countries there prevailed the semi-Arian or Macedonian confession, promulgated anew in the recent councils held at Cyzicus p. 430] COUNCIL OF CONSTANTINOPLE, 381 343 and at Antioch in Caria.^ Yet Theodosius had thought it his duty to summon also the bishops of that shade of opinion. Some of them came, thirty-six in all, headed by their old leader, Eleusius of Cyzicus, the famous champion of the Jwvio'iousios, and by his colleague, Marcian of Lampsacus. Eustathius of Sebaste was no longer alive to join them. His death took place either shortly before or after that of his old friend Basil ; it was Basil's youngest brother, Peter, who had replaced him as Bishop of Sebaste. It was in vain that the orthodox party discussed matters long and amicably with their opponents, and that, in a homily- delivered at St Sophia on the Feast of Pentecost (May i6), Gregory treated with the utmost circumspection the subject of the Holy Spirit ; Eleusius and his followers obstinately maintained their attitude. It was necessary to make up one's mind to a separation from them. This was done with all the more regret, because, whether at Constantinople or elsewhere, the " Macedonians " numbered in their ranks many estimable persons. The question of the Bishop of the see of Constantinople was easily settled in a friendly assembly. It was only a matter of form, for Gregory was very evidently, and had long been, the candidate of Meletius ; the support of all the Easterns was assured to him. We can imagine how glad the brothers and the friends of Basil were to give him their votes. No opposition was manifested. No one could take seriously the claims of Maximus the Cynic, repudiated as he was in the East by everyone, even by the Egyptians. As to the forced consecration which Gregory had received from Basil, everyone knew that it 1 On the Council of Cyzicus {supra, p. 328) see Basil, Ep. 244, § 9. That of Antioch in Caria is placed by Socrates {H. E. v. 4, with the mistake rfjs St-ptas) and by Sozomen {H. E. vii. 2) shortly after the accession of Gratian. Sozomen mentions elsewhere (vi. 12) another council held in Caria by thirty-four bishops, at the time fixed for the meeting of the Council of Tarsus {supra, p. 293), i.e., about twelve years earlier. It is probable that these two assemblies were really only one, and that it should be placed in 378 or 379. - (?r. 41, 344 GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS [ch. xii. had not been followed by any taking possession of his diocese ; that the so-called Bishop of Sasima had continu- ally protested against the violence done to him ; that he had never exercised any episcopal functions at Sasima ; and that, if he had exercised them at Nazianzus, it was only as assistant to his father, never as bishop of the see. It could not therefore be said that he was transferring himself from one diocese to another. It was from solitude, and not from another bishopric, that he had come to Constantinople. All this was clear as daylight. Gregory was fully installed by the council, and by its chief, Meletius. Twenty years had passed away since the latter had himself been called to the see of Antioch by the leaders of the Arian party of that time, the friends of EuzoTus and of Acacius, of Dorotheus and Demophilus. If Gregory had not signed the Creed of Ariminum, his father, the Bishop of Nazianzus, had done so. If the council was not an assembly of converts, at least many of its members must have had embarrassing memories. As a whole, they were returning from afar. But they had suffered enough under Valens not to be troubled under Theodosius by a past which was already distant. Although they had formerly been obliged either to keep silence or to sign, they had none the less kept the true faith ; they had known how to maintain it at the cost of the severest sacrifices ; and it was with sincere hearts that they acclaimed it in times of peace. And what they had done, they had done quite alone, kept at a distance and distrusted by the Western Church and the Egyptians. They were even conscious of having defended against their misgivings the formula of the three hypostases, the necessary complement to the Hovioousios of Nicaea. Basil was victorious all down the line. When his friend Meletius, whom he had so perseveringly defended, took the hand of Gregory to lead him to the episcopal throne of St Sophia, how many must have called to mind the great Bishop of Caesarea ! The Church of Antioch paid its debt to Basil, while making a magnificent atonement for its former persecu- p. 433] THE SUCCESSION AT ANTIOCH 345 tion of his heart's brother. No better honour could have been paid to his illustrious memory. Meletius died during these days of triumph. The installation of the Bishop of Constantinople was the last ceremony over which he presided. His obsequies were celebrated with the greatest pomp; Gregory of Nyssa pronounced the funeral oration. His removal from the scene re-opened a question of the greatest difficulty. On his return to Antioch, towards the end of the year 378, Meletius had tried to come to an arrangement with Paulinus. As to the proceedings or agreements which resulted in this connection, our informa- tion is derived only from legends.^ Is it true that Meletius suggested to Paulinus that they should sit together, with the Book of the Gospels between them ? Or that, at any rate, it was agreed that the first of them to die should have no successor ? We do not know. As to the last point, the pious desires of sensible persons of every opinion must have agreed. It is certain that suggestions to that effect had come from the West, especially from the circle of St Ambrose.- But in the West they only concerned themselves with theoretical right, and with regard to details they accepted the Alexandrian views of the situation. On the spot, it was evident that the community attached to Paulinus was of little importance, that Meletius was the real bishop, and that the rival Church only existed by the favour of Alexandria and of the West. The fact that the question of the succession to Meletius was raised at Constantinople, and during a great council, com- posed almost entirely of his partisans, was not calculated to ^ Socrates, H. E, v. 5 {cf. Sozomen, H. E. vii. 3), combines together two accounts — one favourable to Paulinus, the other in which his followers are treated as Luciferians. Theodoret i^H. E. v. 3) gives us no firmer ground. It is not even certain that the magister militum Sapor, who was instructed to conduct the restoration of the churches of Antioch to the Catholics, acted in the time of Meletius, rather than in that of Flavian. '■^ Letter of the Council of Aquileia, Ambrose, Ep. 12, 5 ; cf. 13,2. 346 GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS [ch. xii. advance the solution which was desired, not only by the Western Church but by sensible people in the East. The latter found a spokesman in the new Bishop of Constanti- nople. Gregory insisted strongly that they should unite themselves to Paulinus. He was not listened to. The circumstances of the Meletians, the new favour shown to them, the successes they had obtained, all served to enkindle them. As in the days of Eusebius of Nicomedia and the Council of Sardica, they vaunted their points of superiority as contrasted with the West. " Was it not in the East," they said, "that Christ was born?" "Yes," replied Gregory ; " and it was in the East also that He was slain." His efforts were in vain ; the bishops decided that Paulinus should not be recognized, and that a successor must be appointed to Meletius. Gregory was much dis- tressed. This council, over which he had presided since the death of Meletius, was beginning to irritate him. " The youngest of them," he said,^ "chattered like a flock of jays, and were as furious as a swarm of wasps; as to the old men, they made no attempt to control the others." In these ungrateful surroundings his beloved solitude returned to his mind, with memories of peace and religious meditation. He began to declare that, since no one would listen to him, it was better for him to go away. But this was not the wish of the bishops ; they insisted strongly upon his remaining at the post where they had placed him. In the meantime, there arrived the Bishop of Thessalonica, Acholius, and the new Pope of Alexandria, Timothy, who some months before had succeeded his brother Peter. " They blew with the rough wind of the West," said Gregory,^ meaning that they favoured Paulinus. From that point of view, it was the arrival of a reinforcement for the Bishop of Constantinople. But unfortunately they did not quite like Gregory, or rather they could not resign themselves to the fact that the see of Constantinople had been filled up by the successors of Eusebius of Nicomedia and Leontius of Antioch. They took their stand on ecclesiastical rules, raised objections ' Carmen de Vita, vv. 1680-1699. - Ihid, verse 1802. p. 435-6] RESIGNATION OF GREGORY 347 as to Sasima and Nazianzus, and protested against translations from one bishopric to another. These absurdities exasperated Gregory. Enough of these triflings, enough of these hypocritical disputes! In a final address, he gave an account of his spiritual steward- ship, and bade a most touching farewell to his people, to the city of Constantine, to his Church the Anastasis, to St Sophia, to the Hoi)' Apostles, to the Council, to the East, and to the West — the West, for which and through which he suffered persecution. Then he set out for Nazianzus. Acholius and Timothy had done a fine piece of work ! To his vacant place there was elected a man of the world, a certain Nectarius, a Cilician by birth, who had been a government official at Constantinople. His past had not been distinguished for austerity ; but his beard had grown white; he was now both affable and grave. The Bishop of Tarsus, Diodore, a celebrated ascetic, thought that he had a sacerdotal mien, and added his name to the list of candidates presented to the emperor. Theodosius nominated him.^ It was then discovered that he had not yet been baptized. It was the case of St Ambrose over again, minus the lofty virtue and the capabilities of the Bishop of Milan. Perhaps the emperor thought that Nectarius would turn out a second Ambrose. If so, he was mistaken ; but, at a moment when the Church of Constantinople, after so many dissensions, had so great a need of rest, Nectarius, who was not inclined to fret himself too much about delicate shades of difference, was perhaps, in spite of or even on account of his deficiencies, the man demanded by the situation. Under his presidency, evidently an honorary one, the council concluded its labours. These may even have been finished earlier. The four canons in which they are summed up show no signs of Alexandrian influence. We can scarcely believe that Timothy had had a share in their composition.- ^ Sozomen, H. E. vii. 8. ^ Nevertheless, his name appears, with that of a Bishop of Oxyrhyn- chus, in the list of signatories, which is in some places of a rather artificial character. 348 GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS [ch. xii. The first of these canons proclaims once more the faith of Nicaea, and anathematizes all heresies, mentioning by name those of the Eunomians or Anomoeans, of the Arians or Eudoxians, of the Semi-Arians or Pneumatomachi, and of the Sabellians,Marcellians, Photinians,and Apollinarians. The second canon forbids prelates to meddle with the affairs of other civil " dioceses " than their own ; the Bishop of Alexandria must confine his anxious care to Egypt ; the religious administration of the East concerns only the bishops of the Orient, who shall bear in mind what was decided at Nicaea with regard to the prerogatives of the Church of Antioch ; the same shall hold good of the dioceses of Asia, Pontus, and Thrace, As for Christian bodies situated beyond the frontiers of the empire, they shall be governed according to established custom. By the third canon, the Bishop of Constantinople finds himself attributed the pre-eminence of honour (to. irpecr^eia r^? Tifx^^) after the Bishop of Rome " because Constantinople is a new Rome." Finally, the last canon decides the case of Maximus the Cynic : he is not recognized as a bishop, and all his acts, especially his ordinations, are declared null and void.^ For anyone who can read between the lines, these decisions of the council represent so many acts of hostility against the Church of Alexandria and its claims to hegemony. It is orthodox in tone — there is no doubt of that, and it condemns all the heretical movements of the time; but care is taken, in enumerating them, to include among them the Marcellians, old dependants of Alexandria, to whom it had still, quite recently, extended its protection. If so much stress is laid on each bishop occupying himself only with his own affairs and remaining within the "dio- cesan " area to which he belongs, it is from a desire to pre- vent the interference of the Egyptian Pope in the affairs of Constantinople, Antioch, and other places. If the pre- eminence of Constantinople is asserted, without disputing that of Rome, it is in order to escape from that of ^ The three canons, which follow these in collections of canons, represent later additions. p. 438] THE CANONS OF CONSTANTINOPLE 349 Alexandria. It might have seemed perhaps of little use to allude to the blundering affair of Maximus ; but, as the recollection of it was disagreeable to the Alexandrians, the council did not fail to bring it to life again. In fact, old quarrels were remembered too well. Gregory had been quite right to flee ; it was not a time for peaceful souls. If the members of the council had been wiser, they might have asked themselves from which quarter — Alexandria or the East — interferences with the affairs of others had been more frequent and more harmful. Was it not an Egyptian affair, that matter of Arius? Who had added venom to it? Eusebius of Nicomedia, and his accomplices in Bithynia and Syria. Were they Egyptian bishops who had led the chorus at the Council of Tyre ? Whence came the rivals of Athanasius, men like Gregory and George? In this outbreak of passion against him, had Athanasius ever given a pretext by entrenching upon the rights of others ? They mistrusted the superior power of Alexandria. Had they not used and abused that of Antioch ? But all this was forgotten under the influence of present resentment. They even sacrificed the ancient prestige of Antioch. The traditional metropolis of the East, the second cradle of Christianity, weakened at that moment by schism, did not seem to be a sufficient bulwark against the Alexandrian peril. As a rallying centre, they preferred to it Constantinople, the city of Constantine, the new Rome. Constantius, Julian, and Valens had usually resided at Antioch : military exigencies called them on the side of the Persian frontier. But now the Danube was a greater cause for anxiety than the Euphrates ; and it was easy to foresee the abandonment of Antioch for Constantinople. The bishop of this great city was called upon to profit, so far as his influence was concerned, by the vicinity of the imperial court and the chief seat of government. From this point of view, he inherited the position of the Bishop of Antioch. Never did he forget this origin. The ecclesiastical history of the East was long to resound with his rivalry with his colleague of Alexandria. 350 GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS [gh. xii. Besides these practical decisions, tlie bishops drew up a doctrinal statement, which we no longer possess. It no doubt took the form of a letter addressed either to the whole episcopal body, or to certain churches.^ While the bishops were on their way home, Theodosius published, on July 30, 381, a law ordering the churches to be restored everywhere to the orthodox party, and, that there might be no occasions for doubt, he specified, in each civil "diocese," those prelates with whom communion would be a guarantee of orthodoxy for the guidance of his officials. For Thrace, besides Nectarius of Constantinople, there were the Bishops of Scythia and Marcianopolis ; for Egypt, Timothy ; for Pontus, Helladius of Csesarea, Otreius of Melitene, and Gregory of Nyssa ; for Asia, Amphilochius of Iconium and Optimus of Antioch in Pisidia ; for the Orient, Pelagius of Laodicea, and Diodore of Tarsus. The capital cities of the dioceses of Asia and the Orient — Ephesus and Antioch — had no bishop, or rather the Bishop of Ephesus was a " Macedonian," and in Antioch they were still waiting for a successor to Meletius. One was elected shortly after- wards : this was Flavian, the former companion in conflict of Diodore, who himself was now Bishop of Tarsus. Flavian had every possible claim and every necessary quality. But unfortunately his election took place under such conditions that it was not possible for either Rome or Alexandria to accept him. However, the wind from the West, the roughness of which was so unpleasant to the Easterns, began to blow once more. The Emperor Theodosius received letters - ' The synodal letter of 382, which will be quoted presently, is the only docuinent which mentions this statement (ro/xos). It pre- supposes, as it seems to me, that Pope Damasus had the text of it. There is certainly no connection between this document, which contained anathemas against the new doctrines (those of the Anomoeans, Macedonians, and ApoUinarians), and the creed called Niceno-Constantinopolitan, which is now sung in the Mass. The latter has nothing to do with the council of 381. Upon this often debated question, see the article of Harnack, in Hauck's Eiicyclopiidie, vol. xi., pp. 12-28. - Ambrose, Ep. 12, Quamlibet. p. 441] COUNCIL OF AQUILEIA 351 from a council held at Aquileia almost at the same time as that of Constantinople. This council had been attended by a certain number of bishops from North Italy, amongst others Valerian of Aquileia and Ambrose of Milan, with delegates from the episcopate of the Gauls and from that of Africa. They thanked the Eastern emperor for having restored the churches to the Catholics, but they deplored the fact that there was still no peace amongst the latter. Timothy of Alexandria and Paulinus of Antioch, who had always been in communion with the orthodox party, had cause of complaint against those " whose faith had, in the past, shown itself unstable."^ It was desirable that this matter should be decided by a great council : and it might be held in Alexandria itself Shortly afterwards, the wretched Maximus arrived at Aquileia, where the council was still assembled - ; he succeeded in insinuating himself into the good graces of Ambrose, showed him letters from Peter of Alexandria, and told him in his own way the story of his ordination. The Bishop of Milan did not wait for information from Rome: he believed what he was told, and new letters^ from the bishops of Italy conveyed to Constantinople a protest in favour of this strange client, whose rights, in the eyes of Ambrose, exceeded those of Gregory of Nazianzus. According to Ambrose, the council assembled in the capital of the Eastern empire ought at least to have suspended its judgment until the great council, demanded in the previous letter. No attention was paid to him ; perhaps his protest arrived too late. He soon heard that Maximus had been deposed, Gregory installed, and even provided with a successor in the person of Nectarius. In like manner at Antioch Meletius had been replaced, in spite of all agreements or suggestions in a contrary sense. For the third time, Ambrose addressed himself 1 " Quorum fides superioribus temporibus haesitabat." - This seems implied by the letter, No. 13, of St Ambrose, {Sanctum, c. 4), the text of which is corrupt. 3 A lost letter, mentioned in the following one, Ep. 13, Sanctum animum. 352 GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS [ch. xri. to Theodosius, in his own name and in the name of the bishops of the "diocese" of Italy/ by the advice, as he said, of the Emperor Gratian. He declared that such affairs ought not to be decided apart from the Western episcopate, which had a right to know with whom it ought to be on terms of communion. These protests, probably supported by Pope Damasus and by the Emperor Gratian, induced - Theodosius to accept the idea of a joint council, in which should be united the two episcopates of the East and the West. He invited the Eastern episcopate to send delegates to Constantinople, with that intention ; and it was decided that the meeting should be held in Rome. . We have but little information with regard to this council. PauHnus of Antioch was present, accompanied by Epiphanius, the metropolitan of the island of Cyprus. Acholius of Thessalonica also went to it. We may conclude that the Bishop of Alexandria was, at least, represented. As to the " Easterns," properly so called, the people who had held a council the year before at Constantinople, they avoided it, as their spiritual ancestors had done at Sardica forty years before. However, we must acknowledge that they did so more formally. Three of them were sent to Rome, bearing a letter in mingled tones, the text of which we still possess.^ It opens with a description of the melancholy state to which the religious policy of Valens had reduced the Eastern Church ; then comes a delicate reminder that the Westerns had troubled themselves little about their unfortunate brethren; then they are thanked for the interest which, in happier days, they are beginning to evince. The ' Ep. 13, Sanctum animum. By its title and its text, this letter betrays a date subsequent to the Council of Aquileia. The group of bishops in whose name Ambrose writes is that of the bishops of the "diocese" of Italy, which we must carefully distinguish from the group of bishops of the suburbicarian diocese, who depended directly upon the Pope, and had nothing to do with the Bishop of Milan. ^ He seems to have made some objections ; Letter 14 of St Ambrose, Fidei tuae, has preserved a trace of this. 3 Theodoret, H. E. v. 9. p. 443-4] THE EAST AND THE ROMAN COUNCIL 353 Eastern delegates would have had much pleasure in attending the Council of Rome ; but they had come to Constantinople without suspecting that it was a question of so long a journey, for which they had no instructions from their colleagues. It was now too late to consult them. " These reasons, and many others, prevent us from coming to you in a greater number. Nevertheless, to improve the position, and to show our affection for you, we have entreated our brothers in the episcopate, Cyriacus Eusebius, and Priscian, to be so good as to undertake this journey. Through them, we manifest to you our desires as being peaceable and in the direction of unity ,i as well as our zeal for the true faith." At this point there was set out the faith of the Eastern Church, in conformity with the Creed of Nicaea, the Trinity con- substantial with three hypostases, the Incarnation of the Word perfect with a perfect humanity. For details, the Westerns were referred to the confession (tojulo^) of Antioch,- and to that of the " CEcumenical " Council, held the year before at Constantinople. As to questions relating to individuals, they had been decided according to traditional rules and the decree of Nicaea, which committed the care of them to the bishops of the different provinces. It was in this way that Nectarius had been established at Constantinople, Flavian at Antioch, and that Cyril had been recognized at Jerusalem. All this had been done in a regular manner, and the Western Church had only to rejoice thereat. It came to this, that the Easterns, while showing that no difference with regard to the faith any longer divided them from the Westerns, refused the latter any right to interfere in their internal affairs. And it is true that the circumstances were calculated to justify in their eyes such an attitude. The peace of the East could not be indefinitely compromised for the sake of Paulinus and his Little Church. They had been wrong perhaps not to win over this old irreconcilable by giving him the succession to Meletius ; ^ Trji' 7)fi€Tipav irpoaipecriv (lpr)ViKT]v o!>. Maria in Trastevere), with another basilica (SS. Apostoli) near the Forum of Trajan, under Julius ; basilica Liberiana (S. Maria Maggiore), under Liberius ; titulus Damasi (S. Lorenzo in Damaso) under Damasus. * The Philocalian " Ferial" belongs to the year 336 ; it is probable that the one which is included in the compilation of the Hieronymian martyrology went back still earlier. p. 449] THE ROMAN CHURCH AND DOCTRINE 357 naturally resulted also a great development in religious observances and in the number of ecclesiastics. St Athanasius, who came to Rome in 339, made a great sensation in the best society. He was in a position to relate to the Roman ladies the extraordinary life of the hermits Antony and Pacomius and their followers.^ So was sown the first seed of many aristocratic vocations which soon bore fruit. The Roman Church had received in the days of Silvester, official intimation of the condemnation of Arius by the Bishop of Alexandria. Being invited to the Council of Nicaea, the Pope had sent there, as in the case of the Council of Aries, two priests to represent him. With regard to doctrinal questions, the Roman Church was at peace. The days of Hippolytus, Callistus, and Tertullian were now far away. In the matter of formulas, when any need was felt for making use of them, there was that of Tertullian and of Novatian, " One Sub- stance, Three Persons," which seemed sufficient for every need. Formerly, when Greek was spoken, the term homooiisios had been made use of; it was now translated by co7isubsiantialis, thus identifying the two words oJcr/a and viT6(jTa(Ti and 54 *-6i * [letter of Ammon to Theophilus] ). The other accounts {Hist tnofi. 3; Hist. Laus. 32-34; cf. 7, 18; Sozomen, iii. 14 ; vi. 28) are only of minor importance, and can scarcely count with regard to the earliest beginnings. As to the text of the Pacomian Rule, many recensions of it exist ; but these documents are liable to be modified considerably in the course of time. It is very difficult to distinguish, in those which we possess, what goes back to Pacomius himself from what has been added gradually by the care of his successors. A considerable number of texts of it go back to a summary given by Palladius {Hist. Laus. 32) ; according to him {cf. Gennadius, De viris, 7) an angel brought this text to St Pacomius, engraved upon a table of brass. Sozomen (iii. 14) even says that this table was preserved in his own time at Tabennesi. The best edition is still that which has come down to us in a Latin version by St Jerome (Migne, P. L., vol. xxiii., p. 61), which had certainly not been translated from the original Coptic, but from a Greek text coming from the monastery of Canope. Upon all this, see Ladeuze, op. cit., p. 256, et seq. Jerome also translated twelve letters of Pacomius (Migne, op. cit., p. 87), in which we meet with Greek characters employed as cryptographic signs. According to Palladius {loc. cit.) these characters seem to have served also to designate various classes of monks ; but this is not absolutely certain. p. 500] ATHANASIUS AND PACOMIUS 397 naturally, made a great deal. He was conscious of possessing in certain cases the power of sounding the consciences of people, and treated them in accordance with the impression he thus received. The bishops of the neighbourhood were disturbed in mind by this singular gift, and Pacomius had to explain himself before a synod held at Latopolis. Apart from this, the episcopate does not seem to have thrown any obstacle in the way of the development of his communities ; far from it. The " Pope," Athanasius, was their friend : he visited Tabennesi, in 333> during his pastoral journey through the Thebaid. The monks kept up a regular communication with Alexandria : they had boats which plied between their various colonies and went down the river as far as the capital, in order to sell the produce of their labour there, and to buy things of which they were in need. In 346, several of them found themselves just in time to welcome the bishop on his return from exile. On their way, they had disembarked at Pispir, to visit St Antony, Pacomius had only been dead a few months : the patriarch of the anchorites received them warmly, and extolled the merits of the founder of monastic houses. Later on, when exile had brought Athanasius back to Upper Egypt, the monks saw him once more among them, proscribed and pursued by the police of Constantius. Pacomius had been succeeded, after a short interval, by Orsisius, one of his first disciples, an excellent man, but one who found himself somewhat disconcerted when for the first time centrifugal tendencies began to manifest themselves in the congregation. He at once chose a coadjutor in the person of another Tabennesian monk of the early days, one Theodore, thanks to whom the Pacomian foundations multiplied. Soon they reached as far as Hermopolis Magna, opposite Antinoe. It was there that in the reign of Julian, Theodore, while on a tour of inspection, met for the last time Athanasius, the perpetual exile. Foreseeing that this might happen, he had brought many followers with him. Athanasius was received in triumph, with the chanting of psalms. The " Abbot " 398 THE MONKS OF THE EAST [ch. xiv. Theodore conducted him, holding the bridle of his ass. Acclamations echoed from shore to shore. In this land of the upper river, there was no occasion to trouble one- self about the police of Alexandria. It was another world. The people from the great town were like foreigners there ; they were called the Alexandrians, the city folk (ttoXitikoI), the Hellenes. In the monasteries, they were treated as guests, and grouped separately. Their first care, if they wished to join the community, was necessarily to learn the Coptic of Thebes (Sahidic). Theodore died about 368. The aged Orsisius, who had taken him as coadjutor, was still alive. Athanasius advised him to resume the reins of government. Here we come to an end of the information furnished by the Life of Pacomius, an interesting document, which seems to have been compiled immediately after the death of Theodore, by one of the few Greek or Greek-speaking monks then living in the chief monastery. Later on, a colony of Pacomians was established close to Alexandria, at Canope. It was from this colony that St Jerome got his information with regard to Pacomius and his Rule ; and it was from this that the greater part of the visitors, whether Greek or Latin, were able to form a judgment on the Pacomian institutions. Monasticism continued to flourish in the country of its origin ; but it appears that, gradually, people came to think of it as capable of realization apart from the grouping of communities, which was the ideal of St Pacomius. He was still living, when, about the year 343, a child of nine years of age, called Schnoudi, embraced not far from Tabennesi the profession of a monk. This child was destined to become one of the most original figures in the history of Egyptian cenobitism. Upon a spur of the Libyan chain, opposite the town of Achmin {Chemnis), there stands a kind of fortress of imposing appearance with its high and massive walls. This is the White Monastery — the monastery of St Schnoudi. In former days there was near it a village p. 503] SCHNOUDI OF ATRIPE 399 called Atripe. Towards the middle of the 4th century, an anchorite called Bgoul allowed several disciples to gather round him there, and amongst them his nephew Schnoudi was soon to be found. Bgoul had organized his followers into a monastery, adopting the cenobitic system of Pacomius. After his death, about 388, the government of the community passed into the hands of Schnoudi, under whom it assumed extraordinary proportions. On the outskirts of the great monastery arose branch- establishments; convents for women were added to the congregation. A man of ardent soul, served by a will of iron and most remarkable common sense, Schnoudi was a born leader of men. His monks, who were numbered by hundreds, were entirely in his hands. He led them with severity ; any infringement of the Rule was punished with blows of whip or of stick. Schnoudi was himself the operator, and he struck hard ; one day he struck so hard that the sufferer died in consequence, a circumstance which was not allowed to trouble him. His influence soon extended throughout the whole countryside, where his hand, when it was kind, was stretched out to every sort of suffering to relieve it ; when it was angry, it fell with terrible force upon evil-doers, upon bad priests, upon unjust judges, upon any pagans who still existed, and upon their temples. He lived to the incredible age of one hundred and eighteen years, venerated and feared by all the Thebaid and even by the barbarians, against whom his monastery offered to the Roman soldiers an unassailable retreat. Antony had given good example and advice ; Pacomius rules ; Macarius at Scetis and John at Lycopolis astonished the world by marvels of austerity; Schnoudi, in his White Monastery, was like Elijah on Carmel, an inspired administrator of justice, a redoubtable man of God. In the social and political confusion which prevailed in those desolate regions, it was not difficult for him to assume a kind of divine lieutenancy, and to exercise it in his own fierce way.^ ^ In addition to his Life, by his disciple Besas (AmdHneau, Mi'nipifcs de la missum archcol. dii Caire, vol. iv. i), we possess letters 400 THE MONKS OF THE EAST [cii. xiv. It was not only in Nitria, upon St Antony's mountain, and in the Pacomian or Schnoudist monasteries, that asceticism flourished. Egypt was filled with monks. In the reign of Theodosius, the entire town of Oxyrhynchus ^ belonged to them. Their cells invaded the towers of the encircling walls, the gates of the town, the temples, and other unused public buildings. In Antinoe, Palla- dius counted as many as twelve convents of women.^ From Syene to the Delta, in the deserts that lie between the cultivated lands and the barren mountains which enclose them to east and west, hermitages succeeded one another in an unbroken chain. Many were to be seen also in Lower Egypt, towards the desert of Suez and of Pelusium as far as Lake Menzaleh and the sea. Here and there, famous characters attracted attention. Some of the anchorites had lived retired from the world ever since the days of persecution or the first years of peace. To begin with, they had lived on roots amid trightful solitudes ; then disciples gathered around them. These they directed, teaching them, by brief maxims or long con- versations, the discipline of a solitary life, and giving them by their own life the most eloquent of examples. Their austerity shone throughout the neighbourhood, serving as a lesson to the clergy and the faithful who remained in the world, and also as an argument to overcome the obstinacy of the pagans. Every kind of miracle was of course attributed to them ; some, like John of Lycopolis, were reputed to be prophets. Their renown even reached the Court, which did not disdain, when necessity arose, to consult them as though they were oracles.^ and sermons of Schnoudi himself which help us to form a good idea of this personage. All these documents are in Sahidic Coptic. Schnoudi knew Greek, but he only spoke it when necessary. His surroundings were essentially Coptic, and so was his literature. This is why Greek and Latin authors, even those who, like Palladius, visited the Thebaid in his lifetime, betray no knowledge of him. The best monograph on Schnoudi is that of Herr Joh. Leipoldt, Schenute von Atripe^ in the Texte und Untersuchungen, vol. xxv. (1903). See also Ladeuze, op. cit. ^ Hist. mon. 5. "^ Hist. Laus. 59 (137). ^ John of Lycopolis was supposed to have predicted to Theodosius p. 505] PAPHNUTIUS 401 We must not think that austerity was their only virtue. Their maxims, many of which have been preserved to us, indicate a great concern for interior perfection ; they can readily be adapted to conditions of life very different from the terrible asceticism from whence they proceeded. Many generations of holy souls, in every class of Christian society, have profited by them for centuries, and still do so. They knew well, or if all of them did not, at least some of them did, that their fasts and mortifications of every kind were after all but one way amongst many others ; and that even those people who remained in the world could sanctify themselves in another manner. Paphnutius of Heracleopolis ^ or, rather, of the desert near that town, had mortified himself for a long time, when the idea came to him to ask God to what degree of merit he had attained. The answer was that he had arrived at the same stage as a man who followed in the nearest village the profession of a flute-player. Paphnutius wished to see him ; the man told him that, before cultivating music, he had been a brigand. This was not very reassuring. However, the hermit, by dint of questioning his flute-player, learned that once, during his career as a brigand, he had been able to save the life and the honour of a virgin consecrated to God. Paphnutius returned to his desert and renewed his mortifications, accompanied by his brigand musician, whom he had made his disciple. The disciple became an excellent monk, but he died. Left alone, his master made an effort to lead a life even more severe than before. After long years had passed, he again felt the desire to estimate his progress, and again asked God to tell him how far he had gone. " Exactly as far," he was told, " as the mayor of such and such a village." This man was a good peasant, an excellent father of a family, an upright and benevolent administrator who enjoyed universal esteem. A third attempt carried Paphnutius to the same level as a merchant his victories over Maximus and over Eugenius ; and also, after the latter victory, his approaching end. 1 Hist. mon. i6. II 2 C 402 THE MONKS OF THE EAST [cn. xiv. of Alexandria, an honest and charitable man, who was not unmindful of the hermits and used to make them presents of dried vegetables. Such lessons were not thrown away upon a humble and intelligent monk such as Paphnutius was. He took pleasure in impressing upon others the doctrine derived from his own experiences, and in proclaiming the truth that in every state of life it is possible to please God and attain to a high degree of holiness. When he died, his disciples saw him enter Heaven, and receive a welcome from the angels and the prophets. Visitors, as I have already said, were not lacking to these holy people.^ Some came from far — from Constanti- nople, Rome, Gaul, and Spain. All of these did not go so far as the Thebaid. As a general rule, they confined themselves to the valley of Nitria and to the monasteries of Lower Egypt. This was what was done by the two Melanias, and Silvania, the half-sister of Rufinus, the celebrated minister; and by St Paula and St Jerome himself — the latter, I fear, being rather more attracted by the libraries and learned men of Alexandria than by the heroes of the desert. Cassian went no further. With ' Besides the lives of Antony, Pacomius, and Schnoudi, the Egyptian monks of the 4th century are known to us from the follow- ing documents : 1st — The journey of 394, the Greek text of which, separate and entire, has not yet been published, although several manuscripts of it have been noted ; Sozomen derived information from it ; it is also to be found, blended with that of Palladius, in what was called until recent days the Historia Laitsiaca. Rufinus made a translation of it, under the title Hisfona Monackoriim, which gave it wide currency among the Latins. 2nd — The Historia Lausiaca of Palladius, the story of a hermit who later became a bishop, after having spent eleven years in Egypt (388-399), chiefly among the monks of Nitria. Dom Butler has succeeded in distinguishing the true text of Palladius from the interpolations of the Historia Monachorum (See The Lausiac History of Palladius, vol vi. of the Cambridge Texts and Studies, \Z()Z-igo4,). 3rd — The " Institutes " and "Conferences" of Cassian who was living in Egypt at the same time as Palladius, and who, like him, waited at least some twenty years before publishing his recollections. 4th — In these narrative documents we have already a good many mentions of the holy monks, and anecdotes concerning them. Others have come to us directly, in the letters of Pacomius p. 508] ETHERIA 403 greater determination Rufinus of Aquileia, who, besides, spent six years in Egypt, pushed on as far as Pispir. Posthumianus, one of the speakers in the Dialogues of Sulpicius Severus, was not satisfied even with that : he desired to visit the far-distant monasteries of St Antony and of St Paul, near the Red Sea. The Thebaid of that day comprised the present Fayoum, which from the time of Theodosius possessed, under the name o{ Arcadia, a separate provincial organiza- tion. Rufinus and Posthumianus went to the Thebaid. The pilgrim Etheria (or Eucheria^), whose account of her journey has unfortunately not come down to us in a com- plete form, also visited the Thebaid, In 394, a party of travellers ventured as far as Lycopolis ; Rufinus has translated an account of their journey. About the same and of Schnoudi, and above all in what is called " The Maxims of the Fathers," several collections of which are extant : one, in the alpha- betical order of the "Fathers" (Migne, P. G., vol. Ixv., pp. 72-440), has been preserved in Greek ; two others, Rosweyde's Vt/ae Fafriim, Books v.-vi. and Book vii. (Migne, P. L., vol. Ixxiii.) are known to us through ancient Latin versions. These collections belong to a time well on in the 5th century ; but in many cases they are taken from older collections. Upon this, see Butler, op. c/t, part i., p. 208. Indeed, for the whole literature of this subject, recourse should be had for informa- tion to Dom Butler's book. It must be added, however, that a synthetic work, and even a clear and convenient classification of the sources of information still remains a want to be supplied. This subject, treated with marvellous perception, but without a clear con- spectus of the matter as a whole, by the venerable Tillemont, has been complicated in recent times by unjustifiable hypotheses and allega- tions as absurd as they are ill-natured. It has been necessary also to fight against the tendency of the upholders of Coptic to claim originality and authority exclusively to the advantage of documents in the Egyptian language, and to depreciate the Greek texts. ' It is she who was at first confused with the Silvania or Silvia, mentioned above. On this question, see the memoir of Dom Ferotin, in the Revue des Qucstiotis historiques, 1903, vol. Ixxiv., p. 367. In the Revue augustlniennc, 1903 and 1904, Pere Edmond Bouvy, starting from the spelling Eucheria (the MSS. give the readings Etheria, Echeria, Eiheria, Egeria) identifies the pilgrim with a daughter of Fl. Eucherius, who was consul in 381, and uncle of Theodosius. In any case, Dom Ferotin has proved that she was a native of Galicia, and belonged to a community of religious in that country. 404 THE MONKS OF THE EAST [cii. xiv. time, Palladius himself went to see John the prophet. Later on, the persecution which he had to suffer as the friend of Chrysostom, forced him to make a closer acquaintance with Upper Egypt. Being banished to Syene, he embraced the opportunity of visiting several Pacomian communities, notably that of Panopolis. These journeys were not very easy ones. All along the marshes of the Nile, the pious travellers were liable to en- counter sleeping crocodiles, which woke up at their approach and frightened them terribly. Leviathan and Behemoth then still dwelt in the great river : hippopotamuses some- times came out of it, and roamed about the fields. In the deserts, certain caves gave shelter to enormous serpents. And lastly, the whole country was more or less infested with brigands. The severity of the imperial taxes ruined so many folk that the desert was peopled with starving highwaymen. When there was no one else to pillage, they pillaged the abodes of the solitaries. The monks con- verted some of them from time to time ; and several of these recruits even attained to a high degree of sanctity. But many remained in the world, and upon the roads. What most contributed to render the pilgrimage to Upper Egypt difficult was the barbarians of the south. In the reign of Diocletian, the Empire had retreated before them from the Second Cataract to the First. Not content with this success, they continued to extend their ravages into the part of the country which the Romans had reserved to themselves. In spite of the garrisons which the military commandant {dux Thebaidos) had established all along the river-bank and in the oases, they were everywhere to be seen, from Syene to Lycopolis. It was not without reason that the Pacomian monasteries were surrounded by high walls. Visitors, if they were rich, willingly left alms behind them. But the hermits were men of few wants ; and besides, it was seldom that they had not some form of manual labour, the product of which sufficed to supply the cost of such needs. In return for the marks of respect shown to them, they offered exhortations, good advice, p. 510-11] MET.ANIA IN EGYPT 40;" and sometimes little presents. The elder Melania, who was very generous to them, brought back with her from Egypt many tokens of remembrance. Pambo of Nitria, whose death she witnessed, made her a present of a basket, the last work which had occupied his hands.^ The gift of Macarius the Alexandrian to her was a sheep-skin, which had a very strange history. One day, the hermit had seen a hyena enter his cell, carrying her little one between her teeth ; she laid it at his feet, and gave him to under- stand by her attitude that she desired some favour of him. Macarius looked at the little creature, perceived that it was blind, and restored its sight. The hyena took it up again, and departed ; but some time after she returned to the hermit's abode carrying a sheep-skin, as a proof of her gratitude.- Melania found Egypt a prey to a very grave religious crisis. It was just at that time that the government of Valens was endeavouring to secure to the Arians the succession to Athanasius, and to impose its candidate Lucius as Bishop of Alexandria. The monks of Nitria were prominent among the opponents of this course. Several of the most venerable Fathers were arrested, and transported to an island in the middle of one of the great lakes on the coast.^ Others were joined to the company of the bishops deported to Dioczesarea. Melania accompanied them, and provided for their material wants. Her zealattracted attention; theco;is/i/an'so(Pa.\estinehemg ignorant of her rank had her arrested, meaning to extort money from her. The Patrician lady allowed herself to be put in prison ; but as soon as she was there, she disclosed her rank ; the government officials abased themselves. Egypt did not long preserve the monopoly of anchoritism and cenobitism. The East soon entered upon the paths opened by Antony and Pacomius. It was Hilarion who first introduced into Palestine the mode of life of the Egyptian solitaries.* He was ^ J7is/. Laiis. lo. - Ibid. i8 (ig-20). ^' Rufinus, H. E. ii. 4. * Upon St Hilarion, see his life written by St Jerome. Cf. Sozomen, H. E. iii. 14. 406 THE MONKS OF THE EAST [en. xiv. born in a pagan family at Gaza, and sent to Alexandria to pursue his studies. He became a Christian ; and then as he heard a great deal of Antony, who had just left his fortress at Pispir and begun to receive disciples, Hilarion visited him, and, after a short stay, returned to his own country accompanied by a few companions who, like himself, were attracted by a hermit's life.^ He took up his abode on the lonely coast to the south of Gaza, and lived there a long time in the practice of extra- ordinary asceticism. From time to time he preached to the pagans of the Philistine country, waged war against the temples, and converted the Arabs of the neighbouring tribes. His disciples soon numbered several thousands. Like Antony, Hilarion was a hermit, the master and director of hermits. Not far from him Epiphanius of Eleutheropolis organized a real monastery, following the model of Pacomius. He, too, had formed his projects in Egypt, where he had made some stay during the last years of Constantine's reign. His monastic colony was established in the place called Old Ad, near his native village of Besandouk.^ ^ According to St Jerome's account, Hilarion would seem to have been born in 291 ; at the time of his stay with St Antony he could only have been fifteen years of age. This visit would thus be placed in 306, when the persecution was in full vigour. It is strange that the persecution should not have left any trace in the narrative. ^ Hilarion and Epiphanius, who had no doubt already been acquainted with each other in Palestine, met much later in the island of Cyprus, where Epiphanius became a bishop about 367. Hilarion, being disturbed in his austerities by the constant influx of visitors, betook himself to Egypt about 356. Some years after, Julian's police, excited by the people of Gaza, who were no friends of a hermit opposed to the gods, forced him to fly to a greater distance. He then stayed in Sicily, afterwards in Dalmatia, and finally at Paphos in Cyprus. The pretty legend of his meeting with Epiphanius was well known. The bishop having set before him some fowl, the hermit protested that never in his life had he touched such food. To this Epiphanius is said to have replied that he himself had never lain down to rest without being reconciled to any person with whom he might have had some disagreement. " My father," said Hilarion, "your philosophy is worth more than mine. . . ." {Vttae Pafruvi, V. 4.) p. 513-4] SINAI 407 Farther to the south, the holy mountain of SinaV attracted pilgrims and solitaries. To these the intricate valleys at the end of the peninsula offered retreats suitable to their manner of life. They quickly multiplied. The Biblical memories of which these places were full could not fail to be eagerly cherished by these holy people. They soon set themselves to discover the exact situation of all the scenes of the Exodus. The sacred topography of Sinai was fixed for centuries. Very soon the summit of Djebel Mousa was crowned by a chapel : another oratory arose on the place of the burning bush, the spot on which visitors now find the celebrated monastery of St Catherine.^ In the present Wadi-Feiran, the inhabited place which used to be called the town of Pharan was, alike for the wandering tribes of the peninsula and for the hermits, a centre of commerce and administration. Hermitages and chapels were to be found even as far as the seashore, in terrible places where nevertheless, thanks to some poor little stream of water and to the modesty of their requirements, the monks succeeded in supporting life. It was in this maritime region that there lay the desert of Raithu, the monks of which were massacred in 373 by Blemmyan pirates who came from the extreme end of the Red Sea.'- On the same day, we are told, a band of Saracens fell upon the hermitages above Pharan ; some of the solitaries were able to take refuge in a tower ; the others were butchered.'^ Such raids were frequent. They produced but little booty. But 1 The publication of the Peregrinatio has definitely put an end to the theory according to which these identifications only date back as far as the time of Justinian, Serbal having been, before the Djebel Katarin, the sacred mountain visited by Christian pilgrims. The lady pilgrim of the time of Theodosius does not trouble herself about Serbal ; the holy places she visits are the same that we visit now. 2 These pirates did not attack the monks only. The people of Pharan who tried to stop them were beaten by them, and their wives and children made prisoners. =' So the account of Ammonius, an eye-witness, in Combefis, lUustrium martynun lecti triionphi (i66o), p. 88. Cf. the story of 408 THE MONKS OF THE EAST [ch. xiv. the monks themselves had a certain marketable value for the Bedouins. They sold them as slaves, or sacrificed them to their goddess Ouazza, the Morning-Star. In Palestine and in Syria, as in Egypt, the district of the monks was also that of the brigands. From the Red Sea to the Euphrates, solitaries and Bedouins en- countered each other in the deserts on the frontier. From time to time, incidents such as I have just been describing took place as the result. By degrees, however, their relations improved. The virtues of these holy men, their austerity and their charity at last ended by making an impression, at any rate to some extent, even upon barbarians, who were little enough disposed to gentle emotions. Little by little the monks led them to Christianity. But of this we shall have to speak later. Jerusalem and the whole of Palestine ^ were filled with monks. In the Holy City, the monazoiites et parthenae, whom we find such regular attendants at the services of Bishops Cyril and John, represent undoubtedly an efflorescence of the ancient local asceticism. But very early, around Jerusalem, there were' monasteries where the religious lived in community, and swarms of hermits of the Egyptian types. There were some of all languages. The Latin establishments over which Rufinus presided on the Mount of Olives, and Jerome at Bethlehem, are representatives to us of many others of the same type, inhabited by male or female religious of Greek language or Syriac speech. In Phoenicia, where Christianity had still made but little progress, settlements of ascetics were much less frequent. A few isolated hermits, however, were to be found there ; amongst them we hear of two disciples of St Antony, Cronius and James the lame. In this country Theodulus, the son of St Nilus, related by his father himself {Narrationes, Migne, P. G., vol. Ixxix., p. 589). This history belongs to the early years of the 5th century. ' Palladius, //z'sf. Laus. 43-46 (103, 104, 113, 117, 118), 48-55 (106-112) ; Sozomen, H. E, vi. 32. See also the Peregrinatio. p. 516] MONKS OF PALESTINE AND SYRIA 409 the monks had much to suffer; they encountered continually the ill-will of the pagan population.^ It was otherwise in Northern Syria, around the Christian cities of Antioch, Berea, and Chalcis ; and in the country beyond the Euphrates, in the neighbourhood of Edessa, Batna, and even Harran. Although the inhabitants of this town had remained unsubmissive to the preaching of the Gospel, the places consecrated by memories of Abraham, Laban, and Rebecca possessed their chapels, just as did those of Moses and Elias. The Syrian desert, from Lebanon as far as the mountains of Armenia, was full of solitaries. Aones was considered the oldest of all these. He lived for a long time near Harran, by the well at which Jacob and Rachel had first met. These solitaries led a life still more severe than their brethren of Egypt ; some of them were to be found who lived like wild beasts, in the heart of the forest, without any provisions, their only food being uncooked herbs. They were called shepherds (/3oo-/co/) by their neighbours — a charitable name, for they might more justly have been described as sheep. Others bound themselves to chains made fast in the rock, carried enormous weights, and gave themselves up to all the extravagances of Indian fakirs. Sometimes the bishops tried to persuade them to moderation ; but they were scarcely listened to. As a contrast, the Arabs of the desert and the Syrian peasants had the greatest veneration for these extraordinary beings. Their popularity even extended to the towns. In times of crisis, the clergy did not fail to avail themselves of their prestige. It was thus that, in the reign of Valens, we find Aphraates and Julian Sabbas leaving their solitudes in Mesopotamia, and going to Antioch to take sides with Flavian and Diodore, and to assist them in their struggle against heresy in official quarters." ^ Palladius, Hist. Laiis. 47 (90-95) ; Sozomen, H. E. vi. 34. 2 Upon Aphraates, see Theodoret, Hisf. rclig. 8 ; upon Julian, see his panegyric by St Ephrem (Assemani, S. Ephrae7ni Syri Opera, gr.- lat., vol. iii., p. 254); Palladius, Hist. Laus. 42 (102); Theodoret, Hist, rclig. 1 ; Sozomen, H. E. iii. 14. It is especially from the 410 THE MONKS OF THE EAST [ch. xiv. Several highly cultivated men, such as Jerome and Chrysostom, carried their admiration for this mode of life so far as to wish to practise it themselves. Jerome soon lost his taste for it ; Chrysostom only left the desert when illness, the natural consequence of his ascetical indis- cretions, finally triumphed over his courage. We do not find that the pious extravagances of the solitaries of the East had any definite connection with the movement in Egypt. The Eastern monks were not much inclined to a life in common. The grouping in monasteries or colonies of anchorites was only established amongst them by slow degrees. We never hear of any actual rules by which they were guided. It is not surprising that, having no superiors to direct them, living far from one another, and each of them according to his own will, they should have allowed themselves to be carried into real excesses. Quite otherwise was the form of monasticism which we meet with in Asia Minor. Here, Egyptian influence is evident. Eustathius first, and Basil afterwards, were disciples of the Egyptian monks. In the hands of Eustathius asceticism immediately assumed distinctive forms, which, whether through the master's own fault or that of imprudent disciples, offended the customs of the country and excited very lively protests. The nature of the country, in Pontus and Cappadocia, did not allow of the same liberty as in Egypt and in the Orient. In those regions, the desert was never very far off; and when once persons had found their way there, they could practise any extremes in the way of asceticism that they wished, without incommoding anyone else. Cold, too, was a hardship which they seldom had to fear, and the temperature in those parts moderates the appetite. If necessary, it is quite possible to live there on a few dates. It was quite different north of the Taurus. In that cold climate, the desert meant the bare mountain-side, fatal to human life in winter. It was absolutely necessary that the ascetics Historia religiosa of Theodoret that we derive our information as to the monks of Syria. r. 518-9] EUSTATHIUS AND BASIL 411 should not go very far from inhabited places, and, as their wants were not so few as those of their brethren in the Thebaid, they were obliged to enter into closer communication with the rest of mankind. Eustathius, notwithstanding his Egyptian experiences, does not appear, at first, to have propagated either monasticism nor anchoritism. The criticisms addressed to him by the Council of Gangra, about 340,^ are directed, not against an exotic form of asceticism, nor even against a gross exaggeration of the ancient and traditional asceticism, but rather against a tendency to represent it as obligatory, as the Encratites did. Whether Eustathius was judged too unfavourably at that time, or whether he corrected his ideas afterwards, one thing is certain, namely, that at the time when he allied himself with St Basil, his asceticism no longer excited on the part of the Church any objection founded on principle. Upon that ground master and disciple always walked hand in hand. The quarrel which separated them in their later years did not affect this point. A large number of ascetical works,- Great and Little Rules, Constitutions, etc., were soon collected together, under the name of St Basil,^ in a special collection, which was afterwards considerably enlarged by numerous additions. In the time of Sozomen,'* some people attributed the paternity of them to Eustathius. This is extremely doubtful. But, what- ever may be the truth about this question of literary history, the spirit, being assuredly that of Basil, can scarcely differ from that of Eustathius. What is of importance, though for quite other reasons, is that we possess in these books the monastic code of the Byzantine East. It is under the Rule of St Basil that all the monasteries of the Graeco-Slavonic world have lived for centuries, and still live at the present day. In spite of its Egyptian connections, Basilian monas- ' See above, p. 305. " Migne, P. G., vol. xxxi. ^ The a.(TK-qriKbv of Basil is already mentioned, in 392, in the De viris of St Jerome (c. 116). ^ iii. 14, ^ 31- 412 THE MONKS OF THE EAST [ch. xiv. ticism marks a great progress towards moderation and discipline. A strong point is made of the life in com- munity ; the inspiration of Pacomius prevails over that of Antony. The monks have a superior, whose office is to maintain discipline, to preside over admissions and novitiates, to instruct and direct the whole community. Their time is to be divided between meetings for prayer, the reading of the Bible, and manual labour, especially working in the fields. The austerities appointed by the Rule are of a simple character and comparatively moderate. From Pontus and Cappadocia, as also from the colonies of Constantinople,^ this new type of asceticism soon spread with the greatest rapidity. Public opinion, and especially episcopal opinion, could not fail to show more favour towards it than to Eastern eccentricities. It was even grateful to it for gradually absorbing the more ancient form of asceticism, that of the religious living in the world. In the monasteries, the enthusiasm of celibates and consecrated virgins found a discipline which the limits of the local Church could not have imposed upon them without difficulty. The monasteries themselves, it is true, had some trouble in the early days in reconciling themselves with the earlier ecclesiastical organization : there were clashings, tentative steps, some disputes. Gradually, however, the balance was attained, and the new relations were formally sanctioned by canonical legislation. As to the civil law, its intervention scarcely ever made itself felt in these early days, except occasionally and to meet particular circumstances. Valens, being angry with the monks of Nitria, who resisted the usurpation of Lucius, punished a certain number of them, and even made a law imposing upon them military service. This law, which St Jerome mentions in the year 377, could not have had any lasting effects. And besides, we have good reason for believing that it only affected those monks who had given cause for complaint. Theodosius ^ See above, pp. 295 and 306. r. 52ij THEODOSIUS AND THE MONKS 413 also took measures against the monks ; for some time he forbade them to live in the towns,^ where their presence was often prejudicial to good order. Pious as he was, this emperor had little taste for the interference of the monks in the affairs, even the religious affairs, of the world which they claimed to have renounced. And indeed we do not see what administration could have consented to allow the wandering through the towns and on the high-roads of these undisciplined bands of professed redressors of wrongs, who were always ready to interfere with sentences and with the application of the laws, to ill-use anyone who did not share their opinions, and to destroy with violence the edifices of proscribed forms of worship. MonacJii viiilta scelera f admit, said- Theodosius to St Ambrose. It was a still more serious matter that, with their austerity, their freedom of speech and their boldness, they were extremely popular. From this point of view, the government could not but look with a favourable eye upon their confinement in monasteries, where, thanks to the Rule and to the authority of the superiors, there was reason to hope that they would preserve the spirit of their vocation, and not transform themselves into disturbers of the public peace. But, in the time of Theodosius, the institution of the monasteries was very far from being sufficiently widespread, to produce these salutary effects everywhere. It was still necessary for a considerable time to reckon with the enthusiasm of the monks and their popularity. ' Cod. Theod. xvi. 3, i, a law revoked two years later (xvi. 3, 2). - Ambrose, Ep. 41, § 27. CHAPTER XV THE WEST IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE St Hilary and his writings. St Martin of Tours. Council of Valence. Priscillian and his asceticism. Spanish disputes : Council of Saragossa. Attitude of Damasus, of Ambrose, and of Gratian. Maximus in Gaul ; the trial at Treves. The Ithacians. Reaction under Valentinian II.; the schism of Felix; the rhetorician Pacatus. Priscillianism in Galicia. Council of Toledo : dissen- sions in the Spanish episcopate. The Priscillianist doctrine. St Ambrose and the Court of Justina. Ambrose and Theodosius. Pope Siricius. Jovinian and St Jerome. Hilary of Poitiers died in 366/ leaving behind him a great memory. Of all the bishops of the West, it was he who, throughout the final struggles, had played the greatest part, and that not only in Gaul but in the East and in Italy. He derived no special authority from the situation of his see, but his soul was the soul of a leader of men ; and in times of crisis they rallied round him as by instinct. High-spirited and determined, able to form a quick and confident judgment of a situation, he knew how to resist, and his resistance was not to be overcome ; he knew also how to open up ways of arrange- ment when any were to be found. The impression made by his actions was strengthened, for later generations, by the witness of his writings. To Christianity, which he did not embrace till the prime of life, he had brought a culture which was already very considerable. When banished to Asia, he found in study an employment for his enforced leisure : it was then that he made himself familiar with ^ On January 14, following the tradition of the liturgical anniversary. 414 p. 524] HILARY OF POITIERS 415 the Greek language, and gained acquaintance with the Doctors of the East, especially with Origen, whose figurative exegesis, always concerned to rediscover the New Testament in the Old, squared with what Hilary was familiar with in others and had himself attempted. But it was in theology especially that Hilary learnt from the Easterns. He had left Gaul with very vague ideas on the controversies of the day^; he returned, bringing not only his De Synodis, in which are treated questions of great subtlety, but also a great work, in twelve books, on the Trinity. These compositions display a very considerable advance upon his " Commentary on St Matthew," which was written before 356. In that, Hilary was still influenced by the ideas of Tertullian and Novatian : the Word is Eternal as Word, not as Son.2 The difficulty of this language of a bygone age was revealed to him by a deeper examination. We meet with it no more in the writings of his exile. Hilary also took an interest in poetry. He had com- posed a collection of hymns. One of these compositions, at least, has come down to us : it is an alphabetical canticle,^ in the Horatian metre Sic te diva potens Cypri. I have already mentioned his requests to the Emperor Constantius, and the terrible pamphlet he directed at him, in 360, during a moment of despair. It was at that time, too, that Hilary determined to expose to the public, in a narrative well supported by proofs, the origin and actual state of the episcopal disputes. Of this work, analogous in form and intention to the Apology of Athanasius against the Arians, we only possess now a few fragments'* and a prologue, evidently imitated from the Histories of Tacitus.^ And even the fragments which have survived are those of a revised edition, for we find in them documents 1 " Regeneratus pridem et in cpiscopatu aliquantisper manens, fidem Nicaenam numquam nisi exsulaturus audivi " {De Synodis^ 91). - In Matth. xvi. 4 ; x,xxi. 3. ■'' Published by Gamurrini, from a MS. at Arezzo {Sattcti Hilarii tmciatus, etc., Rome, 1887, p. 28). ■* These are what are called his Fragmenta historica. ^ Cf. Fragni. i. 4, with Tacitus, Hist. i. 2. 416 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [ch. xv. of a date later not only than 360, but also than Hilary's death. It is a singular thing that this great champion of Nicene orthodoxy, who fought and suffered so much for Athanasius, seems to have remained unknown to him. Not once is he mentioned in the writings of the Bishop of Alexandria. The other Easterns are not less ignorant of him. Theodoret never speaks of him ; if Socrates, and Sozomen after him, tell us something about Hilary, it is thanks to Rufinus whose ill-constructed history was trans- lated into Greek. It was quite otherwise in the West. The memory of the struggles against the Arians upheld by the Emperor Constantius soon passed into oblivion ; but Hilary's books did not perish. He was always considered a master in doctrine, even when men had Ambrose, Jerome, and Augustine. Among the friends of Hilary there had long been found a strange ascetic called Martin, who, after having served in the army, discharged for some time at Poitiers the office of exorcist. Martin's parents were pagans ; his father, an officer in the army, made him serve under the standards ; later he retired of his own accord from the service and settled at Sabaria, in Pannonia, of which he was a native. Martin, when only twelve years old, had secured admission as a catechumen, at Pavia, where his parents then resided. We find him, later on, at Amiens,^ and then at Worms, where he asked for his discharge from the army, acting under an inward prompt- ing to renounce the world and lead the life of an ascetic. Shortly after his establishment at Poitiers, he repaired to Pannonia in the hope of converting his parents. In the case of his mother he succeeded ; but the old tribune remained faithful to his gods. It was during this time that Hilary was beginning his journey into exile. Martin protested with as much vigour as he could in his position, strenuously undertaking the defence of his master, of the others who were proscribed, and of the faith of 1 It is with Amiens that the celebrated story of the divided cloak is connected. p. 526] ST MARTIN OF TOURS 417 Nicaea. He had much to endure on this account, for the bishops of Pannonia were all more or less on the opposite side. In Milan, where he wished to settle, Auxentius made his life so hard that he sought refuge in the little island of Gallinaria, on the coast of Liguria. On Hilary's return he rejoined him at Poitiers, where he was allowed to live as he liked. In the neighbourhood of the town he chose for himself a hermitage, round which other ascetics soon gathered. This was the origin of the monastery of Liguge, the first of the kind in Gaul and even in the West. These holy people, and especially their master, soon attracted attention. Seven years after the death of Hilary (in 373), the Church of Tours having lost its bishop, the voice of the people made itself heard to acclaim the Saint of Poitiers as his successor. There was some opposition, especially among the bishops, who did not like the idea of having as a colleague a monk who did not wash himself or dress properly. In this we see already the conflict between popular enthusiasm — which thinks more of character than of appearance — and the worldly considerations which prevail, and will do so more and more, with the superior clergy. Martin was consecrated in spite of this opposition, albeit reinforced by his own ; but he found means to combine the monastic life with the duties of his new position. Another monastery was founded by him near Tours, on the cliffs which overhang on the north the bank of the Loire.^ There he took up his abode with his disciples, and there he spent all the time which was not occupied by his pastoral cares. In his life, which we owe to the enthusiasm of one of his friends, Sulpicius Severus, a great nobleman who had been converted to asceticism, we find mention, in the midst of many miracles, of a characteristic trait — the war which he waged against the rural paganism. Martin had a difficult task in endeavouring to Christianize the peasants of Gaul, who were strongly attached to their ancient religious usages, to the worship associated with their rustic temples and the sacred trees. ^ This is Marmoutier {Martini monasterium). II 2D 418 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [ch. xv. This struggle against declining paganism was at this time the chief concern of the bishops. In other respects we do not find that in these districts of the Far West the twenty years which followed the Council of Ariminum were fertile in incident. Of the island of Britain we hear nothing until the 5th century. In Gaul, Martin was already a bishop, when a council assembled at Valence (in 374) to settle some dispute of which we know no particulars. We only possess some disciplinary regulations communicated in the form of a letter to the bishops of the two administrative dioceses ^ between which the Galilean provinces were divided. The first of the signatories, among whom appear the Bishops of Treves, Vienne, Aries, and Lyon, is the Bishop of Agen, Foegadius or Phcebadius, of whom we have heard in the time of the Emperor Constantius. In Spain, the little fire of schism which Bishop Gregory was feeding at Illiberris (Granada)'^ — it was not a fire which burnt very brightly — was extinguished with him. Certain Novatians afforded occupation to the pen of Pacian,'* Bishop of Barcelona. All this was of little consequence. But the moment was approaching when Spain would attract men's attention and set all the West in commotion. About the beginning of the reign of Gratian, a great deal was heard of an ascetic movement of a peculiar character, directed by an expert theologian called 1 " Fratribus per Gallias et quinque provincias constitutis episcopis." ^ See above, p. 284. ^ When St Jerome wrote his De viris (in 392) Gregory appears to have been still alive. * Three letters to a Novatian called Sympronianus (Migne, P. L., vol. xiii., p. 1051 et seq.). Pacian also left two homilies, one on baptism, the other on penitence. In a work which is lost, the Cervulus, he preached against certain pagan superstitions, in particular against the masquerades of January i. His success was small ; we even find him lamenting that his descriptions had given a taste for the Carnival to persons who had never heard of it before {Paraenesis, c. i ; Migne, oJ>. cit., p. looi). p. 529] PRISCILLIAN 41 y Priscillian.^ He was a rich man, distinguished by birth and education, well versed in Christian and other literature, even in astrology and the occult sciences, endowed with a keen intellect and a persuasive eloquence ; and all these gifts were at the service of an ardent zeal for the propaga- tion of his own ideas. These were chiefly connected with the right mode of life : Priscillian was a preacher of asceticism. Asceticism was not unknown in Spain. The Council of Elvira speaks much of celibates {confessores) and conse- crated virgins, meaning by those terms persons who practised continence and abstinence according to the already time-honoured customs of the Church, and within the bounds of its organization. The disciples of Priscillian went further in marking themselves out as distinct from these. In the first place they were disciples of a particular man, and of a man who had no mission to teach from the Church, who claimed to some extent an inspiration of his own and took his stand in his teaching, not only upon the received Scriptures, but also upon the apocryphal writings, and notably upon those lives of the Apostles Peter, John, Andrew, and Thomas, which were so strongly imbued with the Encratite spirit opposed to marriage, to wine, and to any kind of substantial food. Moreover, there prevailed among them a tendency to despise other Christians. They separated themselves at cer- tain times of the year, during Lent and in the days before the Epiphany ^ ; at such times they disappeared from sight ; no one saw them ; they kept themselves * Upon the Piiscillianist movement, see Sulpicius Severus, C/iron. ii. 46-51 (cf. Dial. ii. 6, ii), whose account must be corrected some- times by notes of Priscillian himself, in his apologetical memoirs, especially the second treatise addressed to Pope Damasus [^Corpus script, eccl. (Vienna), vol. xviii.] ; cf. the Council of Saragossa in 380 ; letter of Maximus to Pope Siricius {Coll. Avell. 40) ; Philastrius, De Haeresibus^ 84 ; Pacatus, Panci^yric of Theodosius, 29 ; Jerome, De viris, and letter 75 ; Council of Toledo in the year 400. - From December 17 to January 6, says the Council of Saragossa (canon 4). It is possible that at the time of the council the feast of Christmas had not yet been introduced into Spain. 420 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [ch. xv. shut up in their own houses or in the mountains. It was known that they held secret meetings in lonely villas, and it was remarked that they generally walked bare- footed. They fasted on Sundays. If they came to Church they allowed the Eucharist to be given to them ; but no one saw them communicate. Finally, and this was a more serious matter still, women who are always delighted with any novelty, even and especially of a relig- ious character, fluttered continually round the celebrated teacher. He held meetings for women only, over which he presided, either in person or by means of his assistants. All this was calculated to cause anxiety. A proselytiz- ing asceticism has always excited ill-feeling on the part of ordinary Christians. And, at the time of which we are now speaking, the clergy lent it little support or rather offered resistance to it, whether from bad motives, through attachment to a somewhat self-indulgent form of life, or from good, such as a care for unity, and a fear lest such observances might conceal some reprehensible doctrine. On this last point their fears were not without foundation ; from the very beginning, discreditable rumours were in circulation with regard to the new sect. Nothing, however, was as yet proved : criticism could only take hold of what was seen from the outside — seclusion, teachers without authority, meetings of women, and the use of apocryphal books. The first protest came from the Bishop of Cordova, Hyginus, who set in motion his colleague of Emerita, Ydacius. The latter at once entered upon a campaign. Among the adepts of the movement there was prominent a woman of considerable position, a certain Agape, who, in conjunction with a rhetorician named Helpidius, had communicated to Priscillian, so it was rumoured, the doctrines of a Gnostic, Mark of Memphis, an emigrant from Egypt to Spain. The Priscillianists were not with- out supporters among the episcopal body. Two of their friends, Instantius and Salvian, had become bishops and openly supported the party ; Symposius, Bishop of Astorga in Galicia also joined them, and soon the number was p. 531-2] COUNCIL OF SARAGOSSA IN 380 421 reinforced by the adhesion of the Bishop of Cordova, who had changed his mind and had finally convinced himself that the new ascetics were in no way dangerous. It was in the Western provinces, those of Lusitania and Galicia, that the movement appears to have been most definite. Ydacius, Metropolitan of Lusitania, thought it his duty to inform Pope Damasus. The Pope replied in a letter which we no longer possess ; in this, foreseeing that the Spanish bishops would assemble to deal with the matter, he advised them not to deliver any personal condemnation in the absence of those accused, and without having heard their explanation.^ A council was actually held at Saragossa in 380 ; we possess a formal account of its decisions divided into disciplinary canons, which have in view the points on which complaint was made of the Priscillianists. Two bishops from Gaul, Fcegadius of Agen and Delphinus of Bordeaux, took part in its meet- ings and signed first. With them were ten Spanish prelates, one of whom, Symposius, was favourable to the innovators. The latter, meanwhile, not being attacked by any direct condemnation," suffered their adversaries to say what they pleased, and continued their propaganda. They even assumed the offensive. The bishopric of Avila, in Ydacius' province, having become vacant, they secured the election of Priscillian there, and tried in other places to obtain colleagues who shared their opinions. Accusa- tions were laid against Ydacius ; and these excited great scandal in the Church of Emerita. Priscillian and his two friends entertained the charges, denounced Ydacius to the Spanish episcopate, and even went to Emerita to ^ " Ne quid in absentes et inauditos decerneretur " {PrtscilL, Treatise ii., p. 35). 2 Sulpicius .Severus {Chron. ii. 47) says in so many words that the council condemned the Bishops Instantius and Salvian, as well as the laymen Helpidius and Priscillian. But this is refuted by the account which the latter has left of this stage of the business. However, it is possible that something of the kind was attempted, for a rumour of the condemnation was circulated in Spain {Priscill., Treatise ii., p. 40). 422 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [on xv declare themselves openly against him. There was already talk of a new council. Ydacius took the initiative ; and, thanks to the support of Ambrose, whose sympathy he had managed to win, he obtained from the emperor a rescript, couched in general terms, against " the false bishops and the Manicheans." He prepared to make use of this against his opponents, although they were not mentioned by name in the rescript. Priscillian and his two colleagues, uneasy at the turn which affairs were taking, made their way in person to Milan, furnished with letters testimonial from their clergy and flocks, to prove that they were true bishops ; as to the accusation of Mani- cheism, they would be able to get rid of that by the language they adopted. The imperial Quaestor listened to them and answered them kindly ; but Ambrose remained ill-disposed to them : no settlement was arrived at. They pushed on to Rome, and sent to Pope Damasus a memorial of justification, which we still possess. Damasus refused to receive them. One of them, Salvian, died in Rome. Instantius and Priscillian returned to Milan, where, in spite of Ambrose's opposition, they succeeded in obtaining, through Macedonius, the Master of the Offices, a decree with which they returned to Spain, and reinstalled themselves in their bishoprics. The Bishop of Emerita had now to act with energy. In his campaign against the Priscillianists he had enlisted the assistance of his colleague of Ossonova, Ithacius, who claimed to have been commissioned by the Council of Saragossa to follow this matter up. Ithacius was by no means a model prelate ; he was worldly, luxurious, shame- less, addicted to the pleasures of the table, just the kind of person, in fact, to be obnoxious to holy people. Priscillian set the proconsul Volventius in motion against him, and the latter, on an accusation of attempting to disturb the public peace, was about to take steps against Ithacius when he succeeded in escaping to Gaul. There he was warmly welcomed by the praetorian prefect. This high official, whose name was Gregory, was taking steps to call the matter before his own tribunal, when a new rescript p. 534] THE ADVENT OF MAXIMUS 423 arrived from Milan, due, like the preceding one, to the friendly intervention of Macedonius. This time, the decision was ordered to be given in Spain ; the case was referred to the Vicarius of this " diocese " ; and an order was given for the banishment of Ithacius beyond the Pyrenees. The Bishop of Ossonova found himself in a most critical situation ; he vanished from the scene. It was the best thing he could have done. At that very moment, Maximus was declaring himself emperor in the island of Britain ; shortly afterwards he landed in Gaul ; Gratian, deserted by his troops, was killed at Lyon on August 25, 383. The "tyrant" made his entry into Treves, and his authority was recognized from the Ocean to the Alps. It was a disaster for the Priscillianists. Their friends in Milan could no longer avail at the new court at Treves.^ The bishop of that place, Britto by name, had been a helper of Ithacius ; he lent him support with the new emperor. Maximus naturally desired to make himself popular, especially with the bishops, whose influence over the people he knew. He had practised every sort of cajolery with St Martin. Ithacius profited by these inclinations, and persuaded Maximus to regard his adversaries as the most dangerous of evil-doers. The leaders of the Spanish movement were invited to appear before a council assembled at Bordeaux. Ithacius there assumed the part of accuser ; the document which he presented against his adversaries was long preserved. ^ The accused replied in the same manner : Tiberianus, Asarbus, and several others read a defence ; we still possess that of Priscillian and of Instantius.^ The tribunal showed itself unfavourable to them : Instantius was deposed from the episcopate. They were about to turn to Priscillian, when he conceived the fatal idea of ^ Macedonius, besides, had fallen into disgrace (Paulinus, Vt/a Ambr. 37). He was not a friend of Ambrose. , '^ Isidore, Z>^ 7//rz J ill. 15. It was undoubtedly from this source that Sulpicius Severus obtained the information which he relates as to Mark of Memphis as the master of Priscillian. ■' Prist'ilUani tract. \ 424 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [ch. xv. appealing to the imperial tribunal. The bishops con- sented,^ and the trial was transferred to Treves. The Galilean episcopate at that time showed no enthusiasm for asceticism ; and the Priscillianist bishops, compromised as they were by the disputes to which they had given rise in Spain, had against them, besides suspicions more or less clearly defined, the distrustful attitude of the two great ecclesiastical authorities of the West — Pope Damasus and Bishop Ambrose. Their pro- paganda was considered dangerous ; it had already made inroads into Aquitaine. In the district of Bordeaux, a great lady, Euchrotia, and her daughter Procula," lent it substantial patronage. The faithful of Eauze, so it was complained, had embraced Priscillianism in a body. Such circumstances as these produced a state of opinion which was not of a character to enlist for the innovators the sympathies of the new government. Supported by his metropolitan Ydacius, the Bishop of Ossonova played once more at Treves, before the criminal magistrate, the part of accuser. Now that he felt himself the stronger, he adopted a high tone ; it was not only against the Priscillianists that he inveighed ; every form of asceticism was detestable to him. He even found fault with St Martin and attempted to accuse him of heresy. Martin, on his side, besought Ithacius to abandon a hateful part, and protested to the emperor against the intervention of a criminal judge in a question of doctrine. " No shedding of blood ! " he said, " Ecclesiastical penalties, such as deposition, are quite enough." Maximus finally promised him that no extreme measures should be taken. And therewith St Martin departed. Freed from his presence, the bishops resumed their unhallowed work ; two of them, Magnus and Rufus, succeeded in converting the emperor once more to their opinion. An enquiry was 1 There were involved in the matter accusations belonging to the ordinary criminal lavi', which were not within ecclesiastical jurisdiction. ^ With regard to Procula, Sulpicius Severus does wrong in relating a petty story which is improbable and incapable of verification {Chron. ii. 48). p. 536-7] EXECUTION OF PRISCILLIAN 425 decided upon ; it was entrusted to the praetorian prefect, Euodius/ a harsh and severe man, who succeeded in convicting Priscillian of witchcraft. He made his report to the emperor, and Maximus decided that the accused deserved the penalty of death. The trial was formally resumed. It was not without difficulty that they succeeded at last in tearing Ithacius away from the accusers' bench. Priscillian was condemned to death and executed with six others, the deacons Asarbius and Aurelius ; then Felicissimus and Armenius, who had quite recently joined the sect; finally, Latronianus, a distinguished poet,- and the matron Euchrotia. Bishop Instantius escaped with sentence of exile, as did also the rhetorician Tiberianus ^ ; they were banished to the Scilly Isles. The affair did not end there. A military commission was appointed to go to Spain, with instructions to seek out the accomplices of Priscillian on the spot, and to try them summarily. Such atrocities filled all good people with loathing. Against the feeling of the majority of the bishops, one of their number, Theognis, ventured to excommunicate Ithacius. Martin returned to Treves. Bishop Britto had just died ; his colleagues assembled to choose his successor ; the choice had fallen upon a certain Felix, who was personally of good repute. On his arrival at the imperial Court, Martin refused to hold communion with the bishops, amongst whom he saw the blood-stained Ithacius. The latter tried hard to compromise Martin along with the condemned, but it was not possible for him so to deceive the emperor. Martin never ceased to protest against the 1 /j-(Euodius) Priscillianmn gemino iudicio audituni cotivictumque malejkii nee diffitefiteyn obscenis se studuisse doetrinis, noetumos etiam turpiutn feminarum egisse conventus nudumque orare solitum nocentem pronuntiavit (Sulpicius Severus, Chron. ii. 50), The crime of witchcraft by itself was a capital crime. For the rest we must remember that all extreme doctrines easily become obscenae, and women turpes, when malevolence is concerned in the matter ; the nudus orare might have been a form of asceticism. Besides, none of this was any concern of a secular judge. '^ Jerome, De viris, 122. ^ Ibid. 123. 426 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [ch xv. blood which had been shed, and to demand that there a stay should be finally made, and that the tribunes should not be sent to Spain. He absolutely refused on any consideration to listen to any proposal for entering into communion with those who were already beginning to be called the Ithacians. He yielded, however, when he was given the choice between his participation in the ordination of Felix and the immediate despatch of the commissioners. But to the end of his life he lamented this necessity of interrupting for a moment his protest against the blood which had been shed. He was not the only one to protest. The new Pope Siricius seems certainly to have asked for explanations, for we find Maximus in a hurry to offer them, by pre- tending to liken the Priscillianists to the Manicheans, which made them fall under the penalties of extremely severe laws. He also ordered all the documents of the trial to be sent to the Pope to show him that there had not been a condemnation of innocent men.^ Notwith- standing these explanations, Siricius did as St Martin had done, and refused communion with himself to the supporters of Ithacius. Ambrose adopted the same attitude.- This was plainly to be seen when he visited Treves, in 387, as ambassador from Valentinian H. He presented him- self at the Court of Maximus, but not at the Church of Felix, as he did not wish to have any relations with bishops " who had demanded the death of the heretics." But Ambrose, as the representative of a prince against whom armed preparations were already being made in the Gauls, was not in a position to put a stop to the severities ordered at Treves. The pursuit of Priscillianists continued. On his journey home, the Bishop of Milan met an old man, who was being led into exile ; it was his colleague of Cordova, Hyginus, the man who, having first denounced the Priscillianists, had ended by showing them goodwill. In vain Ambrose entreated that at least respect should be shown to his age, that he should 1 Coll. Avell. n. 40. ■-' Council of Turin, c. 6. Cf. Ambrose, Ep. 36. p. 539] THE REACTION 427 be given proper clothing and other necessaries. He was rebuffed. As long as Maximus lasted, i.e., until the summer of 388, the Priscillianists continued to be harassed, and the ascetics in general to be looked upon with suspicion. It was not wise, at that time, to appear with a face emaciated by fasting, or to devote one's nights to pious reading. The worldly prelates — Ithacius at their head — were on the alert and suppressed devotion. But all this was changed when Valentinian H. was restored in 388. There was a reaction as well ; and Ithacius v/as attacked. In vain he protested that he had not been the only one to take proceedings against Priscillian : his former accomplices made haste to desert him, and suffered him to be deposed from the episcopate. Ydacius of Emerita, his Metropolitan, had not waited for this, but had sent in his resignation. Unfortunately for him he changed his mind, and wished to return to his Church, which gave rise to disturbances. The government imprisoned the two bishops at Naples.^ However, the friends of those who had been put to death obtained permission to give them honourable burial. The remains of the Priscillianist leaders were transported to Spain, and buried with the greatest pomp, amid the enthusiasm of their followers. In Gaul, Priscillianism retained adherents in certain parts of Aquitaine ; but the most serious consequence of the whole affair was the discord it introduced among the bishops. Felix of Treves, ordained by the Ithacians, possessed the sympathies of the prelates who were hostile to asceticism. The others, without having any objection to him personally, avoided him as though he had the plague. It would have been better for him if he had been exiled, like the bishops of Emerita and Ossonova. In his own country, party-spirit had transformed him into a scapegoat ; the blood of Euchrotia and of Priscillian appeared to many eyes to ' Ithacius {Ithacius Clarus) seems certainly to have written, besides the memorandum aheady mentioned, a treatise on Arianism, in which he refuted an Arian deacon named Varimadus (Migne, P. A., vol. Ixii., p. 351). 428 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [ch. xv. stain his episcopal mantle, and could never be removed. Siricius and Ambrose^ would have nothing to do with him ; they had declared in express terms, by letter, that people must choose between communion with them and with him.2 The schism was still existing in 396, for it was with the main object of remedying it that there was held, in that year, a great council at Nimes^; and in 401, just when Sulpicius Severus, who complains bitterly about it, was finishing his Chronicle. Several years later the Italian Council, assembled at Turin, repeated the con- demnation. The quarrel was only stilled with the death of the unhappy Felix. Of course political matters played their part in this affair, and the Ithacians had to suffer for having been protected by Maximus. In 389, the rhetorician Pacatus Drepanius, an envoy from the Gauls to Theodosius, pronounced before that prince and before the Roman senate a panegyric in which the execution of the Friscillian- ists, especially of the matron Euchrotia, figured among the crimes of the usurper. With what were these people reproached ? For being too pious : nimia religio et diligent ius culta divijiitas. It was for that reason they were persecuted, and by informers who were priests only in name, and whom men saw, not without feelings of horror, pass from the trials by torture to sacred ceremonies.* In Spain, the reaction against Maximus had very different consequences. Priscillian became a demi-god ; his followers now swore only by his name. It was especially in Galicia, where, apparently, his tomb was situated, that the enthusiasm of his disciples broke forth. The anniversary of the new martyrs was celebrated, their ^ The matter appears to have been investigated in a council at Milan, held in 390, propter adventum Gallorum episcoporum (Ambrose, Ep. 51). ^ Council of Turin, c. 6. ^ Upon the Council of Nimes, besides the Synodal Letter (Hefele, Conciliengeschichte, vol. ii., p. 62), see Sulpicius Severus, Dial. i. 13. ^ Pacatus, Paneg. 29. p. 541-2] THEODOSIUS AND PRISCILLIANISM 429 books were eagerly read, and their doctrines openly preached. Several bishops joined the movement, some from conviction, others because they were forced to do so, that they might not offend their fanatical people. The most important among them was Symposius of Astorga, the bishop who had been present at the Council of Saragossa ; with him were Vegentinus, Herenas, and some others as well. As soon as a bishop died, the people acclaimed a Priscillianist candidate. Symposius, who was apparently the senior or the metropolitan of the province, lent his co-operation for the ordination. Thus he consecrated Paternus in the important town of Bracara Augusta (Braga) ; other bishops, such as Isonius, Donatus, Acurius, yEmilius, and his own son, Dictinius, received imposition of hands from him. These comprised almost the whole episcopate of Galicia ^ ; the province seemed lost to orthodoxy. Such a scandal could not last long. It excited no doubt the attention of Theodosius who, having been born in Galicia, could not fail to take an interest in his native country. The bishops of the other provinces assembled at Saragossa,- and afterwards at Toledo, and summoned their Priscillianist colleagues to appear before them. They refused. In the interval between the two councils, Symposius and Dictinius, who until then had only received priest's orders, travelled to Milan, hoping that Ambrose, so severe to the Ithacians, would give them some help. They were deceived. Ambrose decided that they must condemn Priscillian and his doctrine ; and in 1 We do not know at this particular time of any other orthodox bishop besides Ortygius o^ Aquae Celaenae. And even he was driven away by the sectaries. He was present at the Council of Toledo in 4GO, when his restoration to his see was determined upon. - We must not confound this new Council of Saragossa with that of 380, the attitude of which obliged Symposius and Dictinius to have recourse to St Ambrose and the Pope. The Pope at that time was Siricius, and no longer Damasus ; among the conditions imposed by St Ambrose on the two Galician bishops was a provision that they should erase Priscillian and his companions from the number of the Martyrs. All this indicates a date later than 385. 430 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [cu. xv. return for this they might be received to communion ; also Dictinius must give up all idea of being made a bishop. They promised to comply. Ambrose and Pope Siricius then wrote to the Spanish bishops to receive them on the conditions agreed upon. But such conditions were easier to accept in Milan than to keep in Galicia. On his return home, Symposius attempted to remove the name of Priscillian from the catalogue of the Martyrs, and Dictinius pretended to refuse the episcopate. But the people protested ; and so things were restored to the old footing, and letters from Dictinius were even soon found in circulation, in which the proscribed observances were more or less justified. Ambrose died in 397, and two years afterwards, Pope Siricius followed him to the grave. In the following year, the orthodox bishops of Spain met once more at Toledo. This time, the prelates of Galicia put in an appearance ; the secular authority had no doubt intervened. The situation was a very complicated one. Among the accused, some gave signs of repentance ; they condemned Priscillian, his books, and his doctrine, signed every retractation which was asked of them, declared that they had only sinned by mistake, and that, although their opinions remained orthodox, they had been forced to yield to the violence of the people. Others declared that Priscillian was a martyr, the victim of the jealousy of the bishops, and they would never forsake him. Vegentinus and Symposius were the leaders of the first party ; the other rallied behind Herenas. As to the orthodox party, they were themselves greatly divided ; the bishops of Betica and the district of Carthagena would not hear of a compromise ; they demanded the deprivation en masse of the whole Galician episcopate, or at all events that they should be put in a state of siege. The Lusitanians and the Tarragonese, though less implacable, were, never- theless, not greatly inclined to leniency. After much consideration, they began by deposing the refractory bishops — Herenas at their head. As to the others, one alone was admitted to communion, Vegentinus, who V. 544] PRISCILLIANISiAl Al^TEll AMBROSE 431 appeared to have compromised himself least. The Bishop of Bracara, Paternus, was allowed to enter into relations with him ; Paternus was thus admitted by an intermediary. The others, Symposius, Dictinius, Isonius, and all those in communion with Symposius, were invited to sign a formula, and, if they did so, they were to be allowed to retain their sees. But as it was impossible to come to an understanding on the question of what kind of relations were to be held with them, it was decided that the question should be referred to the new Pope, Anastasius, and to the new Bishop of Milan, Simplicianus. Until their decision was received, the reconciled bishops were to refrain from holding ordinations.^ The reply ^ of the two Italian primates was not long delayed ; it was favourable to the moderate orthodox party and to the penitent prelates. Communion was therefore re-established between them and the rest of the Catholic world. But there always remained in Galicia a nucleus of unyielding Priscillianists ; they held their ground there in spite of the imperial laws which quickly fell upon them ^ ; and, moreover, the Swabian invasion soon gave them full liberty. We still hear of them for a long time afterwards. Gradually, the cult of Priscillian was concentrated towards the extremity of the province, in the diocese of Iria Flavia, where some adherents were still to be found towards the end of the 6th century. It was in this very country, the last refuge of Priscillianism, that the Spaniards in the time of the Asturian kings were to " re-discover " the tomb of the Apostle James, the son of Zebedee, and to found a celebrated cult. As to the orthodox bishops, the reconciliation of the Priscillianists was to them "a stone of stumbling." The prelates of Baetica and of the district of Carthagena, • The document for all this is the Council of Toledo in 400, the record of which has come down to us only in fragments, inserted in the formal minute of another council held in 447. Cf. the Chronicle of Idacius, under the year 399. '■^ Presupposed by a letter of Pope Innocent, Jaflfe, 292. ^ Cod. Theod. xvi. 5, 40, 43, 48. 432 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [ch. xv. irritated at the indulgence shown by the Italians, refused all relations with those who accepted communion with the reconciled party. The spirit of Gregory of Illiberris moved them. In vain did Pope Innocent intervene i to censure the rigorists. They paid no attention to him ; their schism lasted until the invasion of the barbarians in 409. Such is the external history of the Priscillianist move- ment. At the present day, how are we to think precisely of the doctrine taught by Priscillian ? Sulpicius Severus condemns it very harshly, but without explaining himself. He seems to see in it a species of immoral Gnosticism. Since the rediscovery of several writings of Priscillian, it is the custom to oppose them to Sulpicius, and to represent Priscillian as a mere preacher of asceticism, who can be reproached at most only for his taste for apocryphal writings ; his affair was merely an episode in the continual battle between an episcopate corrupted by worldliness and the ascetic party. I cannot accept such a vindication. Undoubtedly, no heretical thesis is maintained in the writings of Priscillian which have come down to us. But it is well to remember that this literature is composed of three memoirs of self- justification, written for presentation to the ecclesiastical authorities, and of a few sermons preached to the faithful of Avila, at a time when the teaching of Priscillian was already looked upon with suspicion, and could scarcely have been exposed to the public.^ It is not in compositions of this kind that we can expect to find definite heresies. The author, it is true, declares repeatedly that he con- demns all heresies — the Ophites, the Nicolaitans, the Patripassians, the Manicheans, etc. ; but his anathemas always avoid the real point of the matter. Thus, for example, he sees in Manicheism only the worship of 1 Jaffe, 292. 2 What are called the Canones Prisctlliajtt were already known ; these are a sort of exposition of Christian doctrine in ninety articles, with a note of the texts from St Paul which prove them. But we have only an orthodox recension of them due to a bishop called Peregrinus. p. 547] PRISCIIJ.IANIST DOCTRINE 433 the sun and moon ; and the Patripassians are for him people who could not discover in the Gospel any mention of the Son of God. A man must be a mere tiro in investigation, if he allows himself to be taken in by such anathemas. Ambrose, Damasus, and Martin, persons whom no one would rank among the enemies of asceticism, regarded Priscillian with mistrust. The reception which they gave to the Spanish mystics is in this respect very significant, even though we do not quite understand what exactly they reproached them with. It is certain that it was not easy for them to be enlightened. The sect was a very mysterious one ; it was, not merely from the time when it had to endure suffering but from the outset, a secret society. In the meetings of the initiated clearly things were said which it was not considered proper to entrust to ordinary believers, even to ascetics of the old type. More than this, the Priscillianists admitted that they lied to disguise the doctrines of their sect. Dictinius, before his conversion, had composed a treatise called " The Scale " {Libra), in which is explained the theory of useful lying.^ People do not take so many precautions unless there is something to conceal. It is certain also that the Priscillianist initiates — like the Valentinian " pneumatici " and the Manichean "elect" — formed, according to the views of the sect, a class superior to the rest of the faithful. They alone possessed the fulness of the doctrine and perfection of life. The latter was realized in asceticism, an asceticism resting on a dualistic basis. In man there is an element which is divine in the proper sense of the word ; by this element God and man are of the same nature.- The world is the work of another principle. It was in vain that Priscillian condemned Patripassianism ; the doctrine of the Filius innascibilis, professed by his 1 St Augustine speaks of it at great length in his book Contra mendaciiwi. 2 Dictinius, at the council in 400, expressly admitted that he had held that doctrine. II 2 E 434 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [cH. xv disciples/ presupposes a Trinity purely nominal ; and I do not see in what other sense we can interpret the formula tres unum sunt in Chrtsto Jesu, which appears in one of his apologies. It is not without reason that the first persons who have described Priscillianism have presented it as a form of asceticism inspired by Gnostic ideas. It is thus that it is spoken of by Philastrius of Bresica^ shortly after the events at Treves. St Jerome in 392 had not yet studied the question for himself.^ He only knew that Priscillian had left certain writings; that some persons represented him a Gnostic, and others defended him from that error.^ Very little was then known of the Councils of Saragossa and Bordeaux, in which the questions of doctrine must have been discussed. The sect still kept its books secret. But it did not always do so. Orosiusand St Augustine were acquainted with them ^ ; the extracts which they give from them and the information which they derive from them agree entirely with the idea of an ascetic Gnosticism. Little by little opinion gained in precision in regard to them. Direct study came to strengthen the impression left by the proceedings of the Council of Toledo, and by the recantation which it secured from several Priscillianist leaders. It would be vain to allege a development in doctrine, presumably produced in the sect after the death of its founder. The bishops Symposius ^ Symposius, at the same council, repudiated the doctrine of the two principles, and that of the Filius innascibilis, but admitted that they were accepted in the sect. 2 Haer. 84. ^ De viris, 121. * Several years afterwards, about 399, St Jerome, writing to a noble Spanish lady, takes sides definitely against Priscillian ; but he does not seem to have studied his doctrine very deeply. What he says of it refers only to the memoir of Ithacius ; and in regard to this he makes a strange blunder, confusing Mark of Memphis, of whom Ithacius speaks, with Mark the Gnostic, a contemporary of St IrenEeus. Jerome, Ep. Ixxv. 5 ; cf. Adv. Vigilantium, 7, and In Esaiam, Ixiv. 5. '•^ See the Cotmnonitorium of Orosius, and the reply of St Augustine, P. Z., vol. xlii., p. 665 et seq. p. 549] POSITION OF ST AMBROSE 435 and Dictinius who abjured in 400 were not recent initiates ; there is nothing to prove that their Priscillianism differed in any respect whatsoever from that of Priscillian himself. In fact, horrible as the executions at Treves were, and strongly as they have been condemned in the Church, it was impossible for the Church to recognize its own traditions in the religious system of the victims. Ambrose at Milan was, for the whole of the West, a kind of oracle ; even in the East his was a power to be reckoned with. He was truly the sacerdos magnus of the Bible, the " gran prete " of the poet. A Roman by birth, by tradition, and by education, government was natural to him. He governed the Church fearlessly, as he would, had need been, have governed the State. Bishop of the Latin capital, he had the emperor within reach of his exhortations. And all went well in that quarter so long as Gratian lived. That amiable prince was to him an obedient son. War, the chase, and State affairs did not prevent him from taking an interest in matters of religion. He plied Ambrose with questions, and the bishop, absorbed as he too was by many cares foreign to pure speculation, was called upon to find time to write whole treatises of theology ^ for the information of his imperial disciple. It was a terrible blow for Ambrose, when he heard that Gratian, forsaken by the army of the Gauls, had been treacherously assassinated. To regret for the loss of the young and sympathetic emperor were added grave fears alike for the empire and for orthodox religion. Now, it was with Valentinian II. that he would have to deal, or rather with his mother, Justina, the friend and patroness of the Arians. However, at first, Justina had more serious anxieties than that for the Creed of Ariminum. Ambrose saw her come to him with her son, a child of twelve years old ; she put the child forward and placed him in his arms. The bishop promised to go over the mountains to negotiate with Maximus, and to save what ^ Treatises, Dejide, De Spiritu Sancto, De incamattonfs dominicae Sacramento. 436 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [ch. xv. could still be saved. Maximus just then showed himself in a very haughty mood ; and the negotiations were somewhat stormy. However, they came to an under- standing at last ; the envoys of Valentinian H. consented to recognize the usurper, who, for his part, promised not to cross the Alps. On his return to Milan, Ambrose had at first no cause for anything but satisfaction with the court. He was energetically supported in his dispute with Symmachus (384) in the matter of the altar of Victory, But, in the following year (385), the Arian question came forward again, and relations became gravely strained. There had remained at Milan, ever since the time of Auxentius, several persons who were attached to the confession of Ariminum, including even some clerics, although the new bishop had been wise enough to accept en bloc the ecclesiastical personnel of his predecessor. Ursinus, the pretender to the see of Rome, had made use of these people to stir up scandal against Ambrose^; an unattached Pannonian Bishop, Julianus Valens, busied himself in the same quarters, at Milan and in the neighbouring towns. He had been ordained at Pettau (Poetovio) by the Arian party, in opposition to Mark, the Catholic bishop of that place. When the Goths showed themselves upon the Upper Drave, Valens put himself on their side and helped them to make themselves masters of his episcopal city. He had made himself half a Goth, and wore a necklace and bracelets, in the manner of the barbarians. The city was pillaged, but the people of Pettau continued to refuse to have anything to do with Valens, and he was obliged to take his departure.'- Peace was concluded with the Goths in 382 : many of them then gained a footing in Court circles ; the army was recruited more and more from among the barbarians ; their leaders attained the highest dignities. All this tended to form round the empress an Arian circle which was a cause of much anxiety to 1 Ambrose, Ep. 1 1 ; see above, p. 370. 2 Ambrose, Ep. 12. This letter and the preceding one are written in the name of the Council of Aquileia (381). p. 552] AUXENTIUS OF DOROSTORUIM 437 Ambrose. It became still more so when circumstances provided the party with a religious leader, in the person of a second Auxentius. This man, I think, must be identified with Auxentius, the Arian Bishop of Doro- storum on the Lower Danube.^ He was a disciple of Ulfilas, and had even written the Life of that famous personage. If he was to be found at the Court of Milan, it was no doubt because the determined attitude of Theodosius would not allow a prelate who was notoriously Arian to continue to exercise his office in the Eastern Empire.- Auxentius wished to have a church of his own ; the Court asked Ambrose for the Portian Basilica (St Victor ad corpus), which was situated outside the walls. Ambrose refused. The demand was pressed ; it was even proposed, at one time, to take from him the new Basilica, i.e., one of the buildings of his own cathedral.^ The Feast of Easter (385) was approaching. The emperor caused the Portian Basilica to be seized, and then, in face of the attitude of the bishop and the people, relinquished his design.'* This defeat exasperated the Court extremely. Auxentius took advantage of this fact to obtain a law granting the right of meeting to the faithful who adhered to the Creed of Ariminum ; the opposing party, viz., the Catholics, thus suffered a severe rebuke.'' On the other hand we find Maximus intervening in the matter — Maximus, the usurper of 1 See below, Chapter XVII. ^ I am not aware that this identification of Auxentius of Dorostorum with the Auxentius of Milan — the contemporary of St Ambrose — has been made before. Ambrose says {Serino cojitra Aux. 22) that he came from Scythia, where he was called Mercurinus. Dorostorum was in Lower Moesia, but on the frontier between that province and that of Scythia. ^ There were at this time in Milan two cathedral basilicas ; the ancient church, which was preserved down to the i6th century, bore the name of St Thecla : it was demolished in 1 548 to enlarge the piazza of the Duomo ; the other was quite new in the time of St Ambrose ; it was the predecessor of the present cathedral. * All this is related, with profuse detail, in a letter of Ambrose to his sister Marcellina {Ep. 20). '"' Cod. Theod. xvi. i, 3. 438 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [ch. xv. Gaul, the murderer of Gratian. The Court of Milan received from him a letter, in very vigorous terms, in which he took up the defence of the persecuted Catholics.^ Such a proceeding could not fail to embitter the dispute. When the Easter celebrations came round again (386), Ambrose was once more summoned to give up one of his churches, and was then formally bidden to leave Milan. He refused to abandon his flock, who, besides, were determined not to allow him to go, and remained on the alert, spending whole days and nights in the church. He also refused to take part in a conference with Auxentius.-^ There was nothing for it but to leave him in peace. And it seemed also as if Heaven itself came to his aid. On June 17, 386, he discovered the remains of two Milanese martyrs, Gervase and Protasius ; no sooner were they exhumed than they caused miracles of so signal a character that not only the city of Milan, but the whole of Christendom rang with the tidings.^ Ambrose acquired in matters of this kind an unexpected success. Before his time, only three martyrs had been known at Milan — Victor, Nabor, and Felix ; but, after Gervase and Protasius, he discovered at Bologna, in 393, the tombs of SS. Vitalis and Agricola, and again at Milan, in 395, those of SS. Nazarius and Celsus.'* In the meantime, Maximus, the by no means dis- interested protector of the Catholics of Italy, was causing the Court of Milan more and more serious uneasiness. In the spring of 387,^ Ambrose, who had been reconciled with Valentinian and his mother, made his way once more to Gaul, with the ostensible object of recovering Gratian's remains, but evidently with the view to arrange matters, if ^ Coll. Ave II. 39. - Ep. 21 ; Senno cotitra Aux. •' Ep. 22. •* Paulinus, Vita Ambrosii, 14, 29, 32. Ambrose, Exhort, virgin, i. — On the Saints of Milan, see the works of P. F. Savio, Ambrosiana, 1897 (Nazarius^ and Celsus) ; Nuovo bull, di archeol. crist., 1898, p. 153 (Gervase and Protasius) ; Rivista di scienzc storiche, Pavia, 1906 (Victor, Nabor, and Felix). ° After Easter, which fell that year on April 25 ; it was at this time that Augustine received baptism at Milan, from the hands of Ambrose. p. 554-5] AMBROSE AND THEODOSIUS 439 it were still possible to do so. But it was no longer possible. Some months later, Maximus entered Italy ; Valentinian, Justina, and the whole of their court fled by- sea, and found refuge at Thessalonica. Theodosius received them kindly, and set himself to put in order again the affairs of his youthful colleague. This he succeeded in doing in the following summer. Maximus, being defeated on the Save and the Drave, took refuge at Aquileia ; the troops of the Eastern emperor came up with him there, and made themselves masters of his person. He was executed without delay, on July 28, 388, and Valentinian II. was recognized as Emperor of the whole of the West. It was about this time that he lost his mother, the last hope of the Arian party : Valentinian now passed under the moral guardianship of Theodosius, and under the religious influence of Ambrose. Moreover, Theodosius stayed nearly three years in the West. During this time he held frequent communica- tion with Ambrose. The esteem which they professed for each other did not prevent them from finding themselves sometimes at variance. The people of Callinica ^ on the Euphrates had sacked a synagogue, at the instigation, so it appeared, of their bishop. In the same country, a procession of monks having encountered a party of Valentinians, a fight took place, at the end of which the monks, having vanquished the heretics, fell upon their temple and burnt it to ashes. Theodosius ordered that the disorder should be severely repressed, and was especially urgent that the Bishop of Callinica should rebuild the synagogue at his own expense. Ambrose intervened, and succeeded in putting a stop to all reprisals. In these cases Theodosius allowed himself to yield, but he did so with much ill-temper, and complained bitterly of the monks.^ Ambrose declared that Jews and pagans had been guilty of many acts of the kind in Julian's reign, and no one had interfered with them. It was, it must be confessed, a poor argument. ' Upon this affair, see letters 40 and 41 of St Ambrose. ' Ep. 41, § 27. 440 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [ch. xv. On the other hand, he had reason on his side when he protested against the massacre of the people of Thessalonica who had been guilty of sedition, and required the emperor to do penance.^ Theodosius con- sented ; he had, indeed, been the first to regret his outburst of passion, and to deplore the frightful con- sequences which had resulted from it. Before he set out on his return to the East in 391, Ambrose again made strong representations to him in order to obtain a settle- ment of the affair at Antioch, in which he had never ceased to take an interest. The result of this application was that a great council assembled at Capua in 391. Pope Siricius must have been represented there, and the Bishop of Milan must have been the moving spirit in it; but with regard to this assemblage we have only a small number of pieces of information which refer quite as much to certain local affairs, of which we shall hear later on, as to the principal business. In the following year, the young Emperor, Valentinian 1 1., was assassinated in Gaul. His place was taken by a new usurper, Eugenius, under whose patronage a last revival of paganism was beginning to take shape, at any rate at Rome,^ when Theodosius reappeared on the scene in 394. Ambrose, broken-hearted at Valentinian's death, had held himself aloof from the new government. He did not long enjoy the pleasure of seeing Theodosius again, for that prince died on January 17, 395. His remains were transported from Milan to Constantinople. The great bishop followed him soon afterwards, on April 4, 397, which was Easter eve. Ten years before, at the same Paschal festival, he had poured the water of ^ Ep. 51. This story has been very dramatically told by Sozomen {H. E. vii. 25), and especially by Theodoret {H. E. v. 17). These authors add, following Rufinus {H. E. ii. 18), that Theodosius after this affair ordered by a special law that the execution of imperial sentences should always be deferred for a month, if they involved severe penalties {vindicari severius). This is the law, Cod. Theod. ix. 40, 13, which is wrongly dated in the Theodosian Code, as is shown by the observations of Mommsen with regard to another law, vii. 18, 8. - See below, Chapter XVII. i\ 557] DEATH OF ST AMBROSE 441 baptism on the forehead of Augustine. At the time of his death, his neophyte was already Bishop of Hippo : one light succeeded the other. And, moreover, Ambrose did not entirely pass away. Besides the brightness of his memory, he left many books — pastoral works, sermons on the Bible, transformed for publication into exegetical treatises ; funeral orations ; hymns and liturgical com- mentaries ; theological dissertations against Arianism, upon the Divinity of the Holy Spirit, upon the Incarna- tion ; moral exhortations on the duties of the clergy and on the profession of virginity ; and letters on the questions with which day by day his experience was called upon to deal. All these were written quickly in the midst of the cares of a devoted ministry. Ambrose did not mind availing himself of assistance from previous works. He knew Greek very well, and borrowed largely from Origen, Didymus, and Basil. In his treatise on duties he set himself to follow Cicero. He had no literary vanity. In his writings, he thought only of their practical utility, not at all of the lustre they might bring him. Whether they were of greater or less originality, he cared little, provided that they fulfilled the purpose for which he published them. Who could blame such a man for having saved his time for action ? Although somewhat eclipsed by his distinguished colleague. Pope Siricius was worthily administering the Apostolic Church. Like the majority of the Popes of these early days, he seems to have been of moderate abilities, abilities which were above all practical. At Rome it was the custom to choose the bishop among the local clergy ; the Pope invariably came from the professional ministry. An election like that of Ambrose was impossible. This system involved the loss of the chance of obtaining leaders of wide range of ideas, but it was almost certain that they would be always wise and experienced. The schism of Ursinus was suppressed. When assembled to choose a successor to Damasus, the faithful of Rome had protested against the usurper.^ The Roman Church 1 Letter of Valentinian II. to the Prefect Pinianus {Co//. Avell. 4), Feb. 24, 385. 442 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [en. xv. under Siricius lived almost in peace, recruiting itself more and more at the expense of paganism, and multiplying or enlarging its sacred buildings. It was at this time that the Basilica of St Paul ^ was rebuilt, with the proportions in which we see it at the present day. With regard to internal conflicts, we hear of none except quarrels between the monks and their opponents. Siricius, a man who loved order, supported the general principles of Christian asceticism, but looked with no favourable eye upon people who caused disturbance. In the very first days of his Pontificate, Jerome had felt that the air of Rome was becom- ing unhealthy for him. But he was not the only one who might be a cause of uneasiness. Jerome, at least, was an honest man ; his austerity was not feigned, his life was pure, and occupied in useful work. But at a time when no monastery existed in Rome, when the monks were left to themselves, and wandered all day long through the streets, we can imagine the eccentricities, and even the disorders, against which the ecclesiastical authorities had to keep a watchful eye. So-called celibates {cojitinentes) were to be seen vieing with the most exquisitely scented clerics in the assiduity with which they danced attendance upon great ladies, and in the skill with which they angled for legacies.^ It became necessary to repress abuses of this kind by a law,^ which was posted up in all the churches in Rome ; and this severe law, which forbade anyone to *make a will in favour of Christian priests and monks — while pagan priests preserved the right of inheritance — was declared by the ecclesiastical authorities of the time to be just and necessary. These abuses, however, had not the effect of bringing the religious profession into disrepute. Quite the con- trary ; for the bishops, manifestly supported by public 1 Letter of Valentinian II. to the Prefect Sallust. {Coll. Avell. 3). 2 It is with this, I think, that there is connected the composition of certain liturgical forms included later in the collection called the " Leonian Sacramentary." See my Origines du culte chr^tien, 3rd edition, p. 142. 3 Cod. Theod. xvi. 2, 20 ; cf. Ambrose, Ep. xviii. 14 ; Jerome, Ep. Hi. 6. p. 559-60] REACTION FROM ASCETICISM 443 opinion, had never set themselves more eagerly to raise it. They continually repeated that, all things being equal in other respects, virginity is superior to marriage, repre- sents a higher condition, and is more meritorious for the life to come. I have said " all things being equal in other respects," for no one dreamed of placing a bad monk or an indiscreet virgin above a father or mother of a family, who was faithful to his or her duties. But, with this one reservation, there is no kind of praise which was not bestowed on a life of continence and abstinence ; and, as was inevitable, the enthusiasm displayed for it some- times passed all bounds. Hence arose in some persons a tendency to reaction, which, when translated into words, was liable in its turn to be lacking in restraint. At the period at which we have arrived (about 390), this tendency was represented at Rome by a certain Jovinian,^ who, after having lived for many years as a monk — dishevelled in hair and in clothing, absorbed in fasting and mortification — had ended by convincing himself of the uselessness of his observances, and by returning to the ordinary conditions of life, without going so far, however, as to marry. If he had stopped there, there would have been nothing to say ; but he soon passed from practice to theory and to spreading his ideas abroad. According to the teaching of himself and his disciples to anyone who would listen to them, there was no moral difference between the life of celibates and that of married people ; abstinence and other ascetic practices were equally useless ; in the other world no special recompense would reward these observances ; all this, they declared, clearly followed from the stories of the Bible in regard to the patriarchs, the prophets, and the apostles themselves ; as to the Virgin Mary, she had ceased to be a virgin in bringing her Son into the world - ; after Him, she had had other children. All this was consistent enough, once the premises were granted. ' Upon Jovinian, see Haller, lovinianus in the Texte und Untersuchungen, vol. xvii. (1897). '" Jovinian did not deny the Virginal Conception of Christ. 444 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [ch. xv. Jovinian had another doctrine, according to which true Christians could not possibly sin ; those who do so have not been truly baptized ; they have only received the outward part of the Sacrament, without experiencing its inward efficacy.^ These ideas were propagated by disputations and addresses ; at last they were set forth in a book, and this was a misfortune for Jovinian, because henceforth his opponents had a basis for operations against him. Among the most active opponents were the friends of Jerome, especially the Senator Pammachius, a very pious man, who had renounced the world and devoted himself to works of charity. They denounced Jovinian to Pope Siricius ; he in his turn gathered his clergy together ; and when it had been proved that the new doctrines were incompatible with the " Christian Law," Jovinian and eight of his followers were excommunicated as propagators of heresy. News of this sentence was immediately given to Milan by three Roman priests, whom Siricius entrusted with the duty of carrying thither a sort of circular letter.- Jovinian was already there, hoping no doubt to arrange matters in his own favour with the assistance of the Court. He was mistaken. Ambrose needed little rousing against the enemies of virginity. He assembled some bishops around him, and pronounced against Jovinian an additional condemnation.^ The emperor, warned by the legates, gave no reception to the heretics ; they were even driven from Milan.* A little later, 1 Thanks to this doctrine, Jovinian (or rather, his memory), played a part later on in the controversies between Pelagians and anti-Pelagians, who each hurled him at the others' heads. - Jafife, 260. ^ Letter 42, addressed to Pope Siricius. The Council of Milan goes a little too far in comparing the opinions of Jovinian to Manicheism. So far as we are informed, there is nothing in common between the two systems. •* In a law of the Theodosian Code (xvi. 5, 53), Jovinian is represented as holding meetings in the outskirts of Rome. Orders are given for the deportation of himself and his adherents to different islands. The law is dated in 412 ; but the name of the prefect to whom it is addressed would point rather to the year 398. Besides, p. 562] JOVINIAN AND JEROME 445 in 396, two monks of Vercellae, having broken their vows, began to preach against asceticism. Ambrose wrote to the Church of Vercellae in the severest terms, speaking of the innovators as Epicureans.^ Augustine also had occasion to write against the doctrines of Jovinian.^ But these refutations were of somewhat later date. At the time, Pammachius, whom the sentences of Rome and Milan had not sufficed to appease, took it into his head to secure the intervention of Jerome. Of the latter, for several years nothing had been heard. He was immersed at Bethlehem in his Biblical studies, and seemed to have turned his back for ever upon the Babylon of Italy. If he ever wrote there it was to implore his friends to rejoin in Palestine the colony he had founded in it with Paula and Eustochium, and to extol the sanctity of the Holy Places. However, there still remained to him memories. Neither St Paul, nor the prophets, upon whom he was diligently commenting, nor Origen, whom he was translating so eagerly, caused him to forget Cicero ; and loudly as he celebrated the charms of the Holy Land or the virtues of the hermits of Palestine,^ Rome ever lived in the background of his memories. Pammachius sent him Jovinian's book. What a piece of good fortune ! Virginity, and asceticism as a whole to be defended, and that before the Roman public, and against an adversary who did not know how to write ! * Jerome let himself go. In a few weeks he had composed his two books against Jovinian, and Rome soon rang with them. Unfortunately, he had gone too far, and it was not against Jovinian, already crushed by official sentences, that public opinion was excited, but against the Imprudent controversialist, who, the name of the heretic in the MS. tradition \s /ovuifius, not Jov/m'anus. It is, in fact, very doubtful if our Jovinian is in question here. > Ep. 83, about 396. - This is the subject of his De bono coniui^ali. ^ His Lives of Malchus and of Hilarion belong to this period. * He quotes from Jovinian, while refuting him ; his extracts really give the impression of an author who cared little about his style. 446 IN THE DAYS OF ST AMBROSE [cii. xv. under pretext of defending asceticism, placed married people in a most awkward position. Pammachius was sorry for having invoked such a helper. He did all he could to withdraw the unfortunate philippic from circula- tion. The priest Domnio, another of Jerome's friends, for his part removed from it the most objectionable passages, and both of them wrote to the hermit. Jerome at once assumed the defensive. He began by modestly explaining to his friends that his books were not the kind which could be suppressed or expurgated at pleasure ; that the public gave them so great a reception that they were no sooner written than they were in everybody's hands. As to the objections made against him, he was naturally of opinion there was no common sense in them. In Jerome, the " old man " died hard. At the moment when he was embarking on the campaign against Jovinian, he had just published his De viris illustribus, in which his literary judgments manifest so strongly his friendships and his animosities. Thus he contents himself with mentioning Ambrose by name, without saying one word about his writings, " for fear he might be accused of flattery or suspicion cast upon his veracity." There was no fear of flattery, for, apart from a few common-place mentions, he never spoke of Ambrose except to decry him. Amply provided himself by the pens of Origen and of Eusebius, he finds fault with Ambrose's borrowings from Greek authors. He had even taken the trouble to translate the work of Didymus upon the Holy Spirit, in order that the Latin public might judge what, on a similar subject, a miserable crow iinformis cornicula, for which read "St Ambrose") owed to the Alexandrian Doctor. It was with an equally charitable intention that he had translated into Latin the homilies of Origen upon St Luke. In his Chronicle he had abused Cyril of Jerusalem and St Basil, treating the first as an Arian, and asserting that the merits of the Bishop of Caesarea were annihilated by his pride. Of John Chrysostom, whose eloquence at the moment when Jerome was writing his De viris held Antioch spellbound p. 564-5] JEROME S LITERARY JEALOUSY 447 and illuminated the whole of the East, he knew only a little treatise on the Priesthood. Later on, he was to aggravate in a signal degree the injustice of which he was guilty towards that illustrious man. But Basil had been the friend of Meletius, and Chrysostom was one of Flavian's priests : the relations of Jerome with the Little Church of Antioch would explain, in some measure, the bad temper which he displays when they are concerned. It is more difficult to understand why he showed so little goodwill to the Bishop of Milan, who was himself a supporter of PauHnus, himself a champion of asceticism, and a patron of virginity. Could there have been some unpleasantness between the pious salons of Marcella and of Marcellina? Or could Ambrose, who went to Rome in 382, at a time when Jerome was also there, have inadvertently inflicted a scratch upon that most sensitive of skins ? Of all this we know nothing. Very discreet in his mention of Ambrose's literary efforts, and in general as to those of authors who did not please him, Jerome is fortunately less reserved as to his own. His De viris concludes with a long chapter, in which he draws up a complete catalogue of all that he had published down to the year 392. It was no small amount. If Jerome was bad-tempered, at any rate he did not waste his time. CHAPTER XVI CHRISTIANITY IN THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS Christian settlements north of the Danube. Ulfilas and the conver- sion of the Goths. The sects. The assembly in 383. Divisions among the Arians and Eunomians. The Novatians. Fanatical sects : the Massalians. Amphilochius, Bishop of Iconium. Gregory of Nyssa. Gregory of Nazianzus. Epiphanius and the heretics. Apollinaris : his teaching and his propaganda. Diodore of Tarsus. Flavian and Chrysostom. The schism at Antioch : Council of Cassarea. Eusebius of Samosata. Edessa and its legends : St Ephrem. Palestine. Cyril of Jerusalem. Pilgrimages : visit of Gregory of Nyssa. Rufinus and Jerome, Arabia : the cult of Mary. Titus of Bostra and his successors. The Council of 394. I. Arianism among the Goths. Christian propaganda in the West had scarcely extended beyond the frontiers ; there still remained too much to be done in the interior without engaging in distant missions. Besides, the Scots and Picts to the north of Roman Britain, the Saxons, Franks, and Alamanni, in independent Germany, were in a state of continual hos- tility to the empire. There was quite enough difficulty already in preventing them from ravaging it, without thinking of going to them in order to preach the Gospel. At certain points, in Upper Germany {Agri Deciimates) and beside the Carpathians (Moesia and Dacia), Roman settlements had already passed the line of the Rhine and of the Danube ; but they had all been swamped by the invasions in the middle of the 3rd century; and then, finally, the empire had abandoned positions which stood out of all relation to the centre of government. It is 448 p. 567] DANUBIAN SETTLEMENTS 449 possible that Christianity had already been planted there in a few places ; but of this we have neither indication nor testimony. Such was the state of things down to the end of the 4th century. Except near the mouths of the Danube, we hear nothing of the establishment of churches beyond the frontiers, but much on the other hand of churches destroyed on Roman territory by the invasions of barbarians. Beyond the Lower Danube, the legatus of Moesia Inferior had long watched over the passage between the south-east angle of the Transylvanian plateau and the Black Sea. His protection extended along the shore of the latter to various Greek settlements, such as the towns of Tyra and Olbia, at the mouth of the Tyras (Dniester) and of the Borysthenes (Dnieper), the town of Cherson (Sebastopol), and the little kingdom of Bosphorus (Kertch) at the entrance to the Sea of Azov. Tyra and Olbia, ancient colonies of Miletus, were, under the empire, in a state of great decay. Hellenism there found itself more and more ground down by barbarism. We hear nothing more of them after the reign of Alexander Severus, which leads us to conclude that they were destroyed by the Goths. It was not so with Cherson and Bosphorus : these two cities, so different in their origin and institutions — the one democratic, the other monarchical — had no doubt to suffer a good deal from the new barbarians, both in their commerce and in the political influence which they exercised with the Scythians and Sarmatians ; but they held their ground and con- tinued to exist until the Middle Ages. Christianity was established there at an early period : a Bishop of Bosphorus was present at the Council of Niceea in 325,^ a Bishop of Cherson at that of Constantinople in 381. 1 KdSyuos Bo(j-7r6poi;. Another bishop of this see perished in 358 at Nicomedia, under the ruins of the church which was overthrown by an earthquake. Sozomen {H. E. iv. 16) mentions him without giving his name. Upon the Christian antiquities of Kertch, see the article of J. Kulakowsky, in the Roinische QuartalscJirift, vol. viii. (1894), p. 309 et seq. II 2 F 450 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [ch. xvi. The Goths themselves were reached by the spreading of the Gospel as soon as they began to live in the neighbourhood of the Black Sea. We might almost say that the beginning of their Christianity dated from the terrible invasions by which they harassed the empire towards the middle of the 3rd century. From their expeditions into Asia Minor they brought back with them, amongst other captives, several Christians who taught them with success the doctrine of Christ.^ Clergy were to be found amongst the captives ; and these organized the first groups of converts. The churches of Bosphorus and Cherson, as well as those on the Lower Danube, could not fail to serve as bases for propaganda. At the Council of Nicaea there was a bishop of " Gothia," called Theophilus. Certain indications lead us to connect him with a group of Germanic peoples who finally established themselves in the Crimea, abandoning their wandering life, while the main body of the Goths and their dependents flowed towards the West.^ ' Philostorgius (ii. 5) and Sozomen (ii. 6) agree as to this. One of these captives perhaps was the Eutyches of Cappadocia who is mentioned in a letter of St Basil {Ep. 165). ^ In the time of St John Chrysostom, these Goths received their bishops from Constantinople. He himself consecrated for them one of these who was called Unila, and of whom he speaks very favour- ably {Ep. 14). Unila died during his exile, which caused Chrysostom much anxiety, because he did not wish the successor to be consecrated by the intruder Arsacius {Epp. 206, 207). This mission was connected with a Gothic monastery at Constantinople — that of Promotus. In 547, certain Goths of the Crimea, whom Procopius calls Tetraxites, {Bell. Goth. iv. 5) asked a bishop from Justinian. They lived on the shores of the Sea of Azov. Other Goths are mentioned by the same writer {De aedif. iii. 7) as settled peoples, agriculturists, and allies of the empire, to which they were able to furnish 3000 fighting-men. They lived in the maritime region, in the neighbourhood of a place called Dory. It was on this side, ;>., to the east of Cherson, that there was situated the bishopric of Gothia which is noticed in Byzantine annals from the loth century onwards (N^a TaKTLKo) ; more ancient records do not mention it. It is possible that all these pieces of information refer to one and the same bishopric, which, since the time of Theophilus, may have represented the religious organization of the Goths and other barbarians who had settled in the p. 569-70] ULFILAS 451 Several Mesopotamian ascetics had been exiled to Scythia during the last years of Constantine's reign, perhaps a little later. Their leader was a certain Audius. The official clergy charged them (apart from their extra- ordinary mode of life) with an insolent insubordination towards the hierarchy, with various erroneous doctrines, anthropomorphism amongst others, and, finally, with their opposition to the Paschal decree of the Council of Nicaea.^ They were very zealous folk ; the idea of evangelizing the Goths attracted them. They threw themselves into it with enthusiasm, and obtained considerable success ; they even went so far as to organize monasteries. After the death of Audius, another Mesopotamian, Uranius, under- took the government of the sect. Both of them were bishops, although by irregular ordination. They also in their turn ordained some of their own converts, notably a certain Silvanus. But the most considerable effort was that made by Bishop Ulfilas. Notwithstanding his Germanic name, he was descended from a family of Cappadocian captives, carried away from their homes in the reign of Valerian.- At about the age of thirty, Ulfilas was fulfilling the duties of a reader, no doubt in some mission-church, when he was chosen by the king of the Goths to form one of an embassy to the Court of Constantius. Eusebius of Nicomedia saw him, and thinking that his abilities gave hope for the future, consecrated him bishop for his nation. When Ulfilas returned home, he set himself to fulfil his duties with the most intelligent ardour. It was he who Crimea. But this is not certain ; and in any case we should have to allow change of residence and perhaps interruptions in the succession. ' This decree was again confirmed by the Council of Antioch (canon i). On the Audians our best source of information is Epiphanius {Haer. Ixx.). Theodoret {H. E. iv. 9) adds some new particulars which apparently correspond to a further development. Upon the attitude of the Audians on the Paschal question, see my memoir, " La question de la Paque au concile de Nicee," in the Revue des questions hist., vol. xxviii. (1880), p. 29. ^ In the little town of Sadagolthina, on the skirts of Parnassus. 452 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [ch. xvi. initiated the Gothic nation into Roman and Christian civilization. He formed an alphabet, which replaced with considerable advantage the old Runic script ; and he translated into Gothic the greater part of the Holy Scriptures.^ A large number of his fellow-countrymen embraced Christianity. King Hermanaric at length grew uneasy at seeing so many of his companions-in-arms pass over to the religion of the Romans. He grew angry, and ordered all the missionaries, those of Audius as well as those of Ulfilas, to recross the Danube. The Audians returned to the East ; Ulfilas and his disciples, who had followed him in great numbers, were permitted to settle in the province of Mcesia Inferior, near the town of Nicopolis. This exodus took place in 349 or thereabouts. Ulfilas lived thirty-three years longer. He was an Arian. In 360, he was present at the Council of Constantinople, and gave his vote with those who approved of the Creed of Ariminum. In 383, being summoned by the Emperor Theodosius, with the leaders of other dissenting groups, he again travelled to the capital, and died on his arrival there. The con- fession of faith which he had prepared, and which was his spiritual testament, we still possess. It is Arianism pure and simple.2 The step taken by the king of the Goths against Bishop Ulfilas did not completely put an end to the ^ Philostorgius, ii. 5. He seems only to have omitted the Books of Kings, thinking it would be unwise to put so many descriptions of battles before the eyes of people who were only too much inclined to warfare. This is what Philostorgius says. If this was really the case, Ulfilas must have had to make other " cuts " in the Old Testament. 2 To the information gained from historians of the 5th century (Philostorgius, ii. 5 ; Socrates, H. E. ii. 41, iv. ■})Ty ; Sozomen, H. E. iv. 24, vi. 37), we can now add contemporary documents, preserved in the treatise of the Arian Bishop Maximin against St Ambrose. This treatise, transcribed in the margins of the Paris MS. 8907, was first studied by Waitz, Ueber das Leben und die Lehre des Ulfilas, Hanover, 1840 ; then by Bessell, Ueber das Leben des Ulfilas, etc., Gottingen, i860. It has been published entirely — so far as the state of the MS. permits — by Fr. Kauffmann, Aus der Schiile des Wulfila, in vol. i. of Texte und Untersuchungen zur altgermanischen Religionsgeschichte, Strassburg, 1899. It contains (pp. 73-76) a long extract from a letter p. 572] THE GOTHS AND THE EMPIRE 453 propaganda beyond the Danube. The Bishop of Thessalonica, AchoHus, took an effective interest in it. But the times became more and more difficult. The Goths near the Danube had supported the claims of Procopius against Valens ; hence, when the latter had got rid of his rival, ensued a war which lasted for three years (367- 369). The preachers of the Roman religion bore the brunt of the recoil of these hostilities. Several stories of martyrs belong to this period. The best authenticated is that of a St Sabas, who was drowned in the river Buseu ^ in 372. Others were burnt, sometimes en masse, in the tents which served them for churches.- The way being thus prepared, a general conversion to Christianity took place as the consequence of a grave political event. The Huns, crossing the line of the Don, forced the Goths back, upon the Dniester first, afterwards upon the Sereth, threatening to drive them still farther. Being brought to a stand at the Danube, the vanquished Goths determined to ask for a refuge in the Roman empire. They were welcomed there as guests and auxiliaries (376); but very soon they conducted them- selves in it like masters ; and after the disaster at Adrianople, in 378, their history follows them, no longer to the vicinity, but into the very heart of the empire. At the time when they penetrated there, the confession of Ariminum represented official Christianity ; the Church of in which Auxentius, Bishop of Dorostorum and a disciple of Ulfilas, relates the life of his master. It is at the end of this little document that we find the "Credo" of Ulfilas: "Ego Ulfila episkopus et confessor semper sic credidi et in hac fide sola et vera transitum facio ad dominum meum." 1 Moi/o-eor, a tributary on the right of the Sereth. This event took place on April 12, which is the day of his Feast. ^ Socrates, H. E. iv. 34 ; Sozomen, H. E. vii. 37 ; Basil, Ep. 164, 165 ; Ambrose, Ep. 15, 16 ; in Luc. ii. 37 ; Aug. De civ. Dei ^vm. 52 ; see also the hagiographical traditions relating to SS. Bathusius and Vereas (March 26), St Nicetas (September 15), and St Sabas (April 12). The remains of these martyrs were translated respectively to Cyzicus, to Mopsuestia, and to Csesarea in Cappadocia. The remains of St Sabas were collected and sent to St Basil by the Dux of Scythia, Junius Soranus, his fellow-countryman. 454 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [oh. xvi. Constantinople was governed by an Arian bishop. But this only lasted for a short time ; the government of Gratian and of Theodosius took up a decided position on the side of the faith of Nicaea. From that quarter the barbarians would not undergo any serious pressure. But the members of the episcopate were divided amongst themselves. If the Bishops of Tomi^ and Marcianopolis ^ were pillars of orthodoxy, Auxentius of Dorostorum ^ was a fervent disciple of Ulfilas ; Palladius of Ratiaria"* had long records of service in the Arian camp; and they were not the only ones. But it is Ulfilas more than any one else who has to be reckoned with in this matter. What instructor could commend himself more highly to the Gothic nation and to its leaders ? With him, Christian worship was clothed in national forms ; it was conducted in Gothic ; Gothic was the language for preaching and for prayer. It was true that, as regarded the Creed, he was not in agreement with the actual possessors of imperial authority ; but he had been so under the government of Constantius and Valens. Who could say that a new change was impossible? And after all, was it such an urgent matter to obliterate all religious distinction between Goths and Romans ? Whether or no people reasoned in this way on the situation, the fact remains that it settled itself in such a way that Arianism in proportion as it lost ground among the subjects of the empire gained it amongst its "allies." It was not only upon the Lower Danube that this was the case. Along the whole length of that river the barbarians who lived on the frontier passed over, one after another, to Christianity, and to Christianity in an Arian ^ form. The circumstances were almost exactly ^ The Bishop of Tomi was the only bishop in his province of Scythia. - Cod. Theod. xvi. i, 3. 3 Upon Auxentius, see above, p. 437. ^ Supra., pp. 375 et seq. ^ We must notice, however, the story of Fritigil, Queen of the Marcomanni, to whom St Ambrose had given reHgious instruction by letter (Paulinus, Vita Ambr. 36). She persuaded the king, her husband, to give himself to the Romans, and went herself to Milan, where St Ambrose had just died. p. 574-5] THE REVIVAL OF ARIANISM 455 the same. In Pannonia, as in Moesia, the churches had long been governed by Arian prelates. If on this side we do not find any bishop who was equal to Ulfilas, we must certainly acknowledge that the example of the Goths contributed greatly to determine the views of the other Germanic nations. Arianism enters at this moment upon a new career. Goths of the West and of the East, Burgundians, Swabians, Vandals, and Lombards begin to make it their national religion ; in the provinces wrested from the empire they are to restore to honour the confession of Ariminum ; down to the 6th and 7th centuries we shall see it holding the faith of Nicaea in check. But these are later and Western developments. For the moment all that we need notice particularly is that even in the interior of the empire, whether in the East or in the West, and among Roman populations, Arianism was to profit by the prestige of its new adherents. It was useless to think of eradicating it from the army ; the Goths henceforth added themselves to this as auxiliary troops, and that under the command of their national chiefs ; and besides, even in the ranks of the regular army and its senior staff, they were largely represented. The Goths had to be reckoned with in this respect as in so many others. 2. TJieodosiiis and the Sects. The barbarian adherents of Arianism were not the only ones to demand the attention of the Emperor Theodosius. It had been comparatively easy to restore the churches to the orthodox prelates, and to rain the condemnations of councils upon the followers of Demophilus and of Eunomius. Agreement in spirit between the two parties was not secured so quickly. Banished from the official buildings, the heretical teaching was still carried on in conventicles; the spirit of Aetius still breathed there ; it was useless to exile Eunomius ; he found means everywhere to carry on the controversy. It was at Constantinople more than anywhere else that it raged 456 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [ch. xvi. People were beset with it in the streets and in the pubHc squares. There was not a street-corner at which men were not to be found furiously discussing the most abstruse matters. The money-changer whom you asked for some money spoke to you of the Begotten and of the Unbegotten ; the baker, instead of telling you the price of bread, declared that the Father is greater than the Son, and that the Son is subject unto Him. If you asked for a bath, •' the Son comes certainly from nothing," would be the reply of the bath-keeper — an Anomoean. Theodosius had a great desire to put an end to these divisions, instead of having to punish the dissentients, who, after all, were mostly conscientious and peaceful folk. He persuaded himself that by his personal intervention he would obtain some results.'^ After the two councils of 381 and 382 he convoked a third in 383, which was to take the form of a conference between the leaders of the different confessions ; the emperor was to take part in it, and to endeavour to arrange an under- standing. The meeting actually took place ^ ; it was held in the month of June. Ulfilas, notwithstanding his great age, travelled to Constantinople, where he died on his arrival. We still possess the confession of faith which he intended to present to the emperor. Eunomius at this time was living at Chalcedon ; he came to present his own confession of faith, which has also been preserved.* The others, Demophilus, on behalf of the Arians, and Eleusius, on behalf of the Macedonians, did the same. To judge from the documents of Eunomius and of Ulfilas, each of them confined himself to stating his own belief, ^ Gregory of Nyssa, Or. de Deitate Filii et Spiritus Sajicti (Migne, P. G. vol. xlvi., p. 557). 2 A legendary account related by Sozomen {H. E. vii. 6) and Theodoret {H. E. v. 16), who makes Amphilochius of Iconium take part in it, represents Theodosius as hesitating, even at that time, between Arianism and orthodoxy. Nothing is more improbable. ^ Kauffmann, Aus der Schule des Wulfila, p. 76. * Migne, P. G. vol. Ixvii., p. 587, note 34 ; Mansi, Concilia^ vol. iii., p. 645. p. 577] ARIAN DISPUTES 457 without making the sHghtest step towards conciliation. The explanations by word of mouth gave no more sign of any desire for an understanding. There is a tradition that the orthodox party proposed that they should adhere to that formula, out of all of them, which should represent the teaching of the ancient Fathers, ?>., of those who lived before the appearance of Arianism ; and that this proposal was not accepted.^ In these circumstances there was nothing to be done but to persevere in severe measures; and this is what actually happened. A new law - forbade all meetings for worship — public or private — of the Eunomians, Arians, and Macedonians, in exactly the same way as those of the Manicheans and similar sects. The Novatians alone obtained toleration for their churches. There is every appearance also that, if not in law at any rate in fact, it was the same with the Macedonians and the Arians. Their meetings were prohibited ; but they held them all the same, and the police shut their eyes ^ in spite of the complaints of some of the bishops. What object was to be served by severity ? The sects of themselves were journeying to their end. Every day they were losing adherents ; those who remained got excited among themselves, quarrelled, and created new schisms. When Demophilus died they sought for his successor in Thrace, a certain Marinus ; other Arians acclaimed Dorotheus who had been dispossessed of his bishopric of Antioch. At one on the fundamental principle of Arian dogma, the two parties had discovered points on which they could not agree. Before the creation of the Son could God have been called Father? Yes, said Marinus : No, declared Dorotheus. A Syrian pastry-cook, Theoctistus, warmly defended the ideas of Marinus ; hence the disciples of the latter received the nickname of pastry- 1 Socrates, H. E. v. lo, who evidently exaggerates the part played at that time by the Novatians. 2 Cod. Theod. xvi. 5, 11, of July 25, 383; cf. xvi. 5, 12, and 13, which belong to December 3 and January 21 following. 3 Socrates, H. E. v. 20. 458 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [ch. xvi. cooks {Psathyriani). They had also the support of the Bishop of the Goths, Selenas, the successor of Ulfilas. This gave them a certain standing, but did not prevent them from forming fresh divisions. The Psathyrian Bishop of Ephesus, a certain Agapius, had disputes with Marinus. It was not until 419 that these internal quarrels were reconciled.^ The Eunomians, who indeed were no less divided amongst themselves, were pursued with more severity. I have spoken before of the successive periods of exile of their prophet, Eunomius. His followers seem to have taken pleasure in increasing the differences which separated them from orthodoxy. They even went so far as to change the ritual of baptism, from which they eliminated both the triple immersion and the enumeration of the Divine Persons. No sooner were they provided with a special baptism, than they hastened to declare it to be the only ef^cacious one, and to rebaptize those who joined them from the other sects. It was against them that legislation was directed, in rescripts continually renewed,- and that orthodox theologians directed their efforts from all sides. St Basil of Caesarea had inherited this controversy from Basil of Ancyra and his friends ; his brother, Gregory of Nyssa, took it up after him.-^ Chrysostom, at Antioch, pronounced a large number of discourses against the Anomoeans. ^ Socrates, H. E. v. 23. 2 Cod. Theod. xvi. 5, 8, 11-13, 17, 23, 25, 27, 31, 32, 34, 36, 49, SS, 60, 65. ^ The Apologeticus of Eunomius, an explanation of doctrine, published by that doctor during the early years of his career as a theologian, was refuted by St Basil, who has thus preserved the text of it for us, before his elevation to the episcopate. Eunomius replied to Basil ; but he took his time, and his reply had only just been published when Basil died. In it, the Bishop of Caesarea was attacked personally and with much bitterness. His brothers, Peter of Sebaste and Gregory of Nyssa, thought there was occasion for an answer. This was the origin of the twelve books of Gregory against Eunomius. Apollinaris and Didymus had also written against the Apologeticus, p. 579] THE NOVATIANS AT CONSTANTINOPLE 459 3. As/a Minor. It was not only with these recent forms of dissent, all more or less derived from the heresy of Arius, that Theodosius' bishops had to concern themselves. The old sects which had been organized since the second and third centuries, continued to exist and to divide the Church. The Novatians, who had enjoyed toleration for a consider- able period,^ were very numerous in Constantinople and in the Asiatic provinces of Bithynia, Paphlagonia, and Phrygia. In these countries of simple habits a severe form of religion was always popular. The most powerful Novatian communities, those which influenced all the others, were those of Constantinople, Nicomedia, Nicaea, and Kotyason (Kutahie). The historian Socrates, who is very well informed as to this religious sect, relates various particulars of the Novatian bishops of Constantinople — Acesius,^ who was alive at the time of the Council of Nicaea, and who had, it appeared, borne testimony to the /lof/ioousws ; and afterwards Agelius, persecuted as well as the Catholics during the reigns of Constantius and Valens. Agelius was still living in 383 ; he took part in the religious conference in that year.^ In this little circle of rigorists there were a few distinguished men, who, either through family tradition, or from an attraction to a more refined form of piety, found themselves more at home there than among the multitudes of the Great Church. During Valens' reign one of them, Marcian, after a career in the imperial palace, was elevated to the priesthood ; he was very learned, and his beliefs did not prevent the emperor from entrusting to him the educa- tion of his daughters, Anastasia and Carosa. Marcian profited by this favour to secure a mitigation of the severe measures from which his co-religionists were at that time called upon to suffer.* His son Chrysanthus was also a prominent man ; under Theodosius, he filled 1 With regard to their position under Constantineand Constantius, see the next chapter. - Socrates, J7. E. i. 10. ■' Ibid.t ii. 38 ; iv. 9 ; V. 10. •* Ibid.^ iv. 9. 460 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [ch. xvi. the office of Consularis of Italy, and Vicarius of the Britains.^ Another Novatian priest, Sisinnius, had formerly attended in company with Julian the lectures of Maximus of Ephesus. Agelius, before his death, conse- crated Marcian and Sisinnius bishops, stipulating, however, that Marcian should exercise episcopal functions first, and that Sisinnius should be his successor. The plan was carried out. Marcian had a good deal of difficulty with one of his priests, Sabbatius, who set himself to create a schism with regard to the date of Easter. This was an old quarrel. Among the Novatians, as among the Catholics before the Council of Nicsea, there had been two ways of fixing the Paschal date : some persons decided it by the equinox, and these were the more numerous ; on this point, the Novatians of Rome and of Constantinople were in agreement with the Great Church ; others, like the Easterns before Nicaea and the Audians afterwards, followed the calculations of the Jews. This latter use had been accepted, in the time of Valens, at a council held in the little town of Pazos, near the sources of the Sangarius, by a certain number of Novatian bishops belonging to the Phrygian region. Marcian dared not put himself in conflict with them ; he caused it to be decided in a synod, that each might celebrate Easter according to the use which he preferred.- In Phrygia, the Montanist centre at Pepuza still existed ; its influence even extended far enough to pro- voke repressive legislation. The Montanists, Priscillianists,^ Phrygians, Pepuzians, and Tascodrugitee are mentioned from time to time in the Theodosian Code.* Every year they celebrated, on April 6, a great ceremony, which was their Feast of Easter.^ Some of them were converted from time to time ^ ; but the further progress was made, the more these old sects tended to shut themselves off in ^ Socrates, H. E, vii. 12. '*' Ibid.^ iv. 28 ; v. 21. 2 Disciples of the prophetess Priscilla : not to be confounded with the PrisciUianists of Spain. ^ xvi. 5, 10, 40, 48, 57, 65. " Sozomen, H. E. vii. 18. « Basil, ^A 188. p. 582] THE MASSALIANS 461 grim exclusiveness. There were also the devotees of compulsory encratism, isolated at first, but now grouped together in propagandist confraternities, varying in nomen- clature and in observances — Encratites, Hydroparastatae, Apotactici, Saccophori.^ These last, as their name indicates, were clothed in sacks. Another species of fanatics appeared at the time of which we are now speak- ing. These were the Massalians or Euchites. These two denominations, the first of which was Semitic, the other Greek, may be defined by the name Prayers (those who pray). The movement which they represent came origin- ally from the region where the country of Syria borders on Armenia, and their numbers rapidly increased in Syria and in Asia Minor. Epiphanius mentions them in his Panarion, written before the death of the Emperor Valens. At the outset, the Massalians had no organization. They were people who had renounced all their possessions ; they lived entirely upon alms, and came and went, always praying and doing nothing else. When night came they slept anyhow, men and women together, and in the open air as far as possible. With the offices of the Church and its fasts they concerned themselves not at all. It was by prayer alone, and by an absolute detachment from the goods of this world, that they held communion with God and His saints — a communion so close that they did not hesitate to attribute to themselves the designations of angels, prophets, patriarchs, and Christs. According to them, baptism only effaces past sins ; it does not prevent the indwelling in every man, from the time of his birth, of an evil spirit with whom he has to struggle incessantly. This struggle against the evil spirits filled their minds to the exclusion of everything else ; when it became very violently within them, they were seen to make gestures as though shooting arrows, or to jump into the air with enormous leaps, sometimes even beginning to dance. These Christian dervishes were eminently calculated to cause alarm to the episcopate of that day, the whole energies of which were devoted to the task of restoring ' Basil, Epp. 1 88, 199. 462 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [ch. xvi. peace to the Church, and keeping it in good order. The first bishop to concern himself with them was the Metropolitan of Iconium, Amphilochius. Presiding over a council held at Side in Pamphylia, he severely con- demned such a manner of life. Information of this condemnation was given to Flavian, the Bishop of Antioch, who with the support of several bishops summoned before him one of the Massalian leaders, Adelphius, an old man of very advanced age. Flavian succeeded by strategy in making him disclose his secrets, for the sect had secrets and disguised them with the greatest care. For the second time the Massalians were condemned. Flavian besides took the necessary steps to secure the acceptance of his sentence by the bishops of Mesopotamia and Armenia Minor, the country in which this strange sect had first taken root.^ But these disciplinary measures, and the legal pro- hibitions which followed them, were far from putting an end to Massalianism. This heresy still flourished in Pamphylia and in the east of Asia Minor ; and in Armenia also it long gave cause for anxiety. Amphilochius of Iconium, whom we have just seen appearing in this affair, was during the reign of Theodosius the most important ecclesiastical personage in the whole of Asia Minor. In him, far more than in his own kin, Basil had found an heir. And, in fact, it was Basil who had made Amphilochius what he was. Educated in the school of Libanius, who always preserved a great affection for him, and afterwards an advocate at Constantinople, Amphilochius did not remain long in the world. He was living in retirement in Cappadocia with his invalid father, when, towards the end of the year 373, Basil was begged by the people of Iconium to choose for them a bishop. His choice fell upon Amphilochius, who had scarcely passed his thirtieth year. Just at this time, the town of Iconium became the metropolis of a new province, that of Lycaonia, formed at the expense of Pisidia and 1 Upon this affair see Photius, cod. 52, who gives the gist of a collection of official documents ; cf. Theodoret, Haer. fab. iv. 11. p. 584-5] AMPHILOCHIUS OF ICONIUM 463 Isauria. This gave rise to certain special difficulties, which obliged the new bishop to have frequent recourse to the wisdom of his illustrious protector. Basil did not fail him. A number of his letters are addressed to Amphilochius, notably his three synodical letters,^ which were included later on in the Greek codes of canons with an authority similar to that which clothes, in the Latin collections, the Decretals of the Popes. The Bishop of Caesarea, besides finding in this direction food for his zeal, was glad to have, in the heart of Asia Minor, a man whom he could thoroughly trust, and who was full of energy and devotion. Through him, Basil could command the persons of goodwill scattered throughout Phrygia, Pisidia, and even in the more distant provinces of Lycia and Pamphylia. Amphilochius came from time to time to Caesarea, in spite of the difficulty of a journey across the centra] steppe of Asia Minor. Basil also put in an appearance at Iconium. In 376, he sent there his Treatise on the Holy Spirit, which was read in synod, and sent by Amphilochius' exertions to the most distant provinces, as a preservative against the propaganda of the Pneumatomachi. Under such guidance, Amphilochius, who before becom- ing a bishop had scarcely troubled himself at all about theology, soon developed into a man of large doctrinal knowledge, and became a kind of oracle. Of his writings, however, we possess little more than fragments.- As we saw, in 381 he was chosen, with his neighbour Optimus, the Metropolitan of Pisidia, as the centre of all ecclesiastical relations in the western " diocese " of Asia Minor. They both appear to have lived to the end of the reign of Theodosius.^ They were closely allied friends with Basil's brothers and also with Gregory of Nazianzus ; and in Constantinople they also enjoyed a valuable friendship, 1 Epp. 188, 199, 217. 2 Upon Amphilochius, see the monograph of Karl Holl, Amphilo- chius von Iconium, Tubingen, 1904. Cf. G. Ficker, Amphilochiana, part i., Leipzig, 1906. ^ Amphilochius was also present at the council of 394. 464 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [ch. xvi. that of the celebrated matron Olympias, who afterwards rendered so many services to Chrysostom.^ It was in her house that Optimus died. In Cappadocia and the neighbouring countries, the memory of Basil was always cherished, being represented by his family and his friends. Emmelia had lived long enough to see her son a bishop ; when she was gone, her eldest daughter, Macrina, was superior of the monastery of Annesi, on the Iris, which had been established by them both, opposite the place where Basil himself had his hermitage. Macrina survived her mother for several years, but only lived a few months after Basil's death. Her youngest brother, Peter, had been brought up under her care, and shortly after her death he was elected Bishop of Sebaste. Her other brother, Gregory of Nyssa, was present during her dying hours ; their last conversations formed the groundwork for his dialogue on *' The Soul and the Resurrection." The Bishop of Nyssa who, up to that time, had been treated somewhat loftily by his great brother, Basil, now obtained considerable importance. He was an orator, and was much in request for great funeral orations, and other ceremonial discourses. He, whom Basil had thought too simple to be sent to negotiate with Pope Damasus, found himself entrusted by the Council of 381 ^ with an extremely confidential mission to the bishops of Arabia and Palestine ; it is true that he returned from it without having met with success. He was a theologian : he wrote against Eunomius^ and against Apollinaris ; we owe to him a remarkable exposition of doctrine, called the Great Catechism, and many other slighter treatises. His Lives of Saint Gregory the Wonder-worker, and of Saint Macrina, gives him a place among hagiographers. Like all the preachers of that time, he discoursed much ^ Palladius, Dial. 17. ^ It is not quite certain if this mission was from the Council of Antioch in 379, or from that of Constantinople, two years later. I think it was from the latter. •■' Supra, p. 458, note 3. p. 587] THE TWO GREGORYS 465 upon Holy Scripture. In exegesis, all the Cappadocians were debtors to Origen. Basil and Gregory of Nazianzus had compiled together, under the title of Philocalia, a collection of the choicest passages of the great Alexandrian Doctor. However, they had abstained from adopting those of his opinions which went beyond the accepted teaching. Gregory of Nyssa was less careful. He allowed himself to be led astray by the doctrine of the final restoration (aTro/caracrTao-/?), i.e., of universal salvation as destined to extend at last to the worst of men, and even to the evil spirits themselves. The other Gregory, the ex-Bishop of Constantinople, had retired to his own country of Nazianzus. Before leaving the capital, he had made his will — a curious document, which is preserved amongst his works. There was no bishop then in Nazianzus. Since the death of the elder Gregory, the see had remained unfilled. His son had not the least idea of establishing himself in it : his alleged translations from one see to another had brought him too many vexations for him to dream of allowing himself another. Nevertheless, it was impossible to him not to take an interest in this Church. He governed it from Arianzus, an estate belonging to his family, where he usually lived. His ill-luck had eaten into his heart. The bitter memory which he retained of it is reproduced in his letters and verses. For he wrote a great deal ; nearly all his letters belong to these closing years. He now had to spend Lent without uttering a single word, and this was certainly a heavy penance both for himself and for others ; but his pen was never at rest. Among the clergy of Nazianzus there was an Apollinarian party : and this complicated the situation. The bishops of that region — with Theodore, the new Metropolitan of Tyana, at their head — saw no objection to the vacancy being prolonged under such an adminis- trator, and it was this which made it so difficult for Gregory to find a successor to his father ; but there was further the fear that even if the bishops consented to an election, a candidate would be proposed to them whose II 2 G 466 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [ch. xvi. orthodoxy was doubtful. It was in these circumstances that Gregory wrote to Cledonius, one of the priests of Nazianzus, two letters in which he deals, in opposition to the Apollinarians, with the subject of the Incarnation. These letters became later as famous as his discourses upon the Trinity ; in the controversies of later centuries we find them continually appealed to. But, at the time, they produced no effect at Nazianzus. The Apollinarians, taking advantage of an illness which kept Gregory at a distance, succeeded in appointing a bishop of their own. This was too much : Gregory protested ; the governor rid him of the intruder, and the bishops of Cappadocia at length filled up the vacancy in the threatened Church. Gregory lived for some years longer in retirement and the practice of austerities, but never ceasing to interest himself in local affairs, nor even in the general interests of the Church. By his poetical compositions he sought to counteract those of Apollinaris ; he ever kept a watchful eye upon that party, which was then very active in spite of all the condemnations which had been heaped upon it. The Apollinarians took advantage of the toleration of Theodosius, who gladly allowed the laws with regard to heretics to lie dormant, and of the indolence of Nectarius, who seemed never inclined to reawaken them. Gregory thought it his duty, from the depth of his retirement, to address expostulations to his successor ^ for this. It was undoubtedly to his intervention that the Apollinarians owed the law made in 388 by which their religious organization was once more proscribed. Gregory died in 389 or 390. The island of Cyprus held constant communication with Southern Asia Minor. At the time of which we are now treating, this island formed in civil matters a province by itself, and its metropolis, Salamis, had as bishop, Epiphanius,^ a holy man, who was renowned throughout the East. The unanimous vote of the Cypriots, in 367, had drawn him from his monastery at Eleutheropolis in Palestine, where he had long led a life of austerity and ' Ep. 202. ^ Supra, p. 406. p. 590] EPIPHANIUS OF SALAMIS 467 study. I have already told how this monastic foundation was the result of quite a long stay which Epiphanius had made in Egypt in his early youth. It was not only with solitaries that he had been in touch there ; he had also come across many heretics, whose eccentricities attracted his attention. He even came very near forming too intimate an acquaintance with them. Some Gnostic ladies took an interest in him, and wished to initiate him in their redemptive ceremonies. But fortunately he began by reading their books, which enlightened him as to the intentions of these female doctors : Joseph, once again, escaped from the harem of Potiphar ! He took his revenge for this adventure by denouncing to the bishop of the place all the sectaries he knew ; the bishop put the matter in the hands of the police, and eighty persons were driven out of the town.^ It was clearly to this time that Epiphanius' intense hatred for heretics went back. He soon began to seek information as to their history, and to collect books and documents likely to instruct him thereon. But he did not write anything on the subject until he became bishop. It was at the request of certain people at Syedra in Pam- phylia that he composed first (on the Trinitarian heresies of the day) a treatise called Ancoratus, at the end of which appeared, for the first time, the Creed which we now use under the name of the Creed of Nicaea. Shortly after- wards, two Syrian hermits, Acacius and Paul, exhorted him to undertake a general refutation of all heresies. He laboured at it for several years, from 374 to 377 ; this second compilation received the name of Panarion. Eighty heresies are there described and controverted. The series opens with the philosophical sects — Stoics, Platonists, and Pythagoreans ; then he passes on to the Samaritan and Jewish sects ; and finally, beginning with Simon, we arrive at the Christian heresies. The ancient authorsofheresiologies, especially Irena^usand Hippolytus,'-' are laid very largely under contribution ; certain refutations of special heresies, and even some heretical books, have also 1 Haer. xxvi. 17. - See Vol. I., p. 227. 468 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [ch. xvi. been ransacked. And finally, on a great many points, especially in connection with contemporary forms of dissent, Epiphanius speaks from his own personal experience. In more than one passage he makes use of stories or of facts collected by himself during his stay in Egypt. At that time, already long past, he was the same simple and artless man that he remained all his life. It was not only with ladies who were adherents of Carpocrates that he came into contact. The Meletians laid hold of him in their turn and romanced to him about their early history. With regard to Origen also many stories were palmed off on him. And although it would have been so easy for him to discover the true history of that eminent man from the writings of Pamphilus and of Eusebius, he relates to us absurd legends in connection with him. Of course we have no reason to reproach Epi- phanius for his dislike of Origen's opinions. Many others before him had condemned them, especially Methodius, whose polemics he appropriated. But for Epiphanius Origen was the responsible author of all the heresies which were distracting the Church as he saw it ; hence he lost no opportunity of attacking him with a fury which amounted to mania. Epiphanius knew five languages^; and he set himself to use them, in order to slander Origen throughout the whole world. Thoroughly orthodox, and a most enthusiastic admirer of Athanasius, Epiphanius necessarily took the part of Paulinus against Meletius. But this did not hinder him from being on good terms with Basil, and accepting the three hypostases.^ Although he inveighed against Hellenic culture as represented by Origen, he was in no wise an enemy of learning : he held Apollinaris in great veneration, and was a friend of St Jerome. The fall of Apollinaris was a deep grief to him ; but he had no 1 Greek, Egyptian, Syriac, Hebrew, and Latin. As to his Latin, Jerome {Adv. Ruf. ii. 22) says that he knew this last language ex parte. In actual fact, he never wrote except in Greek, and that very badly. 2 Basil, Ep. 258. p. 592-3] APOLLINARIANISM 469 hesitation in giving to the Dimcerites, as he called the Apollinarians, a place in his gallery of heretics. 4. Apollinarianisfu. ApolHnaris, as we saw above/ was at Laodicea, bishop of a Little Church closely resembling that of Paulinus at Antioch. He was a man of very wide culture. Of all the highly educated Christians in the East at that time, he was by far the most prominent, and certainly the most prolific in his writings. He had fought for the common faith against Porphyry and against Eunomius^; in Julian's reign, he had written a whole series of classic stories taken from the Bible, to replace the authors of Greek antiquity who were then forbidden to the Christians. His exegesis was famous. Repudiating the ancient allegoriz- ing, which Origen and his imitators had so greatly abused, he explained the Sacred Books in their natural sense. This new departure was gladly welcomed, although it was not without its inconveniences. By following this method, ApolHnaris found himself led to deduce from the Apocalypse the promise of the Reign of a Thousand Years, and of an earthly restoration of the Temple and of the Law. The time when such ideas as these had been popular was long past ; in the East, they were quite out of fashion. These Judaizing ways of regarding it had done injustice to the Apocalypse itself: many Churches refused to it the status of a Canonical Book. But it was especially by his theology that ApolHnaris laid himself open to criticism. The friends of Meletius, who looked upon the Church of Paulinus as tainted with Sabellianism, had no hesitation in attributing to ApolHnaris language which was compromising from this point of view.^ It appears, however, that upon the question of the Trinity there was nothing serious with ' Supra, p. 273. - According to Epiphanius, Haer. Ixxvii. 24, he would seem to have been exiled by the Arians. ^ Basil, Ep. 129. 470 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [ch. xvi. which to reproach him. It was upon another point that his doctrine raised difficulties. And here some explana- tions are necessary. At the time when Apollinaris appeared upon the scene, the Church had settled upon the terms in which thence- forth it was to explain the sense in which it understands the relationship between the Unity of God and the Divinity of Jesus Christ. The Divine Being manifested in Jesus is absolutely identical with the One and Only God recognized by Christianity ; He is distinguished, however, by a differentia {specialite), obviously mysterious and incomprehensible, which, in the language of the New Testament, by which that of the Church guides itself, is expressed by the relationship of Son to Father. Hence arises the distinction of " Persons," to use the terminology of the West — of " Hypostases," in that of the East. To the two Hypostases or Persons of the Father and the Son is added, by an analogous distinction, the third Hypostasis or Person of the Holy Spirit. In this way is constituted the " Trinity " of theology ; thus the Christian tradition is formulated, as clearly as such a mystery allows, in the philosophical language of the time. Another problem remained to be solved. What is the exact relationship between the human form of Jesus and the Divine Being which is united to it ? What degree of human reality must be acknowledged in the Christ whom the Apostles knew, and with whom they lived and con- versed ? Christians of Hellenic education, whose numbers were swelled by the early preachings to the heathen, found themselves quite at the outset attracted by an explanation which was very natural from their point of view. The human form, the human life of Christ, including in that His Passion and His Resurrection, was only a succession of appearances. Was it not thus that the gods made them- selves visible ? Jupiter and his companions, when they showed themselves upon earth, assumed a material form, most frequently the human form. Everyone had become familiar with the magical operations which changed the exterior of beings, and allowed invisible spirits to manifest p. 595] EARLY CHRISTOLOGY 471 themselves. In the Bible itself divine apparitions were frequently mentioned ; stories like that of Tobit and his journey with the angel Raphael popularized the idea of beings, invisible in their proper nature, but clothing themselves on occasion in human semblances, and seem- ing then to belong to humanity. We must not be astonished that, in the time of Trajan, St Ignatius of Antioch had so much difficulty with the theory of "apparent" Incarnation — Docetism, as it was called. A hundred years later, his successor Serapion discovered at Antioch a sect of " Docetae," with an organization and sacred books of its own. Moreover, the Gnostics and the Marcionites had immediately appropriated this conception, which fitted in wonderfully well with their dualist ideas. In the 4th century there were still Docetae at Antioch, and we find the interpolator of the letters of Ignatius waging war against the Christology of " apparent " manifestations. In certain places, it had taken special forms : some said that the flesh of Christ came from Heaven, that it represented a physical humiliation {an^antissemenf) of the Divinity, and that it owed nothing to the natural development by which the child originates from its mother. Athanasius, when already near the end of his life, wrote on this subject to Epictetus, the Bishop of Corinth, in whose diocese these ideas had become prevalent. Shortly afterwards, we find them contested by St Basil, in a letter addressed to the people of Sozopolis in Pisidia. At the root of this system was always to be found the assumption of the incompatibility between human infirmities and the Divine Majesty : this assump- tion did not disappear : we meet with it again in the controversies of the centuries which followed. Far from being dismayed at such a conception, Christian mysticism, as St Athanasius so happily formulated it, enthusiastically embraced the idea that God willed to clothe Himself with all our weaknesses, that He might transform them into Divine strength ; that He willed to become Man, in order to make us divine : a\)TO]vOpw7n]crei' "iva tj/mei^ OeoTroifjOco/aei'. But if it 472 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [ch. xvi. is possible to speak of such matters as these in the language of religion, it is difficult to express them in the terms of philosophy. There were not wanting people, in the 4th century, who thought that they could settle every- thing by saying that the Divine Word had taken in Jesus the place of the soul, and that Christ was composed of a human body and a Divine soul. So thought Arius, and he was not the only one. Even among uncompromising Catholics, even among the associates of Apollinaris, this combination found supporters. Apollinaris himself had arrived at a somewhat different solution. Starting from the distinction between body, soul, and mind, he admitted that Jesus had received from humanity a body inspired by a soul {un corps animi), but that the human mind {yov^) had been replaced in Him by the Divine element. Apart from this collocation, he saw no means of preserving the Unity of Christ. Those who represented Him to themselves as formed of the Divinity and of a complete humanity, seemed to him madmen, capable of believing in centaurs, the hippogrifif, and other fabulous creatures. This assertion which Apollinaris treated as absurd was nevertheless maintained in Antioch itself by a great many persons who were by no means strangers to theo- logical culture. For Diodore and his followers, the mind in Jesus was a human mind. But they did not on that account deny the Unity of Christ, and tried to reconcile it with their way of thinking. Perhaps their explanations left something to be desired ; they had to be completed later on. Just then it was the system of Apollinaris which offended traditional feeling. It took, however, some time before matters arrived at a crisis. At the time of the Council of Alexandria in 362 the theory was already known ; Athanasius, who earnestly desired peace just then, seems to have changed his tactics, and to have been satisfied with ingenious explanations. Apollinaris had conceded to him that Christ possessed a soul and a mind, without specifying whether this mind were human or Divine. Athanasius had asked no more of him. Apollinaris was so much respected, the old 1'. 597-9] VIEWS OF APOLLINARIS 473 Nicene party in the East thought themselves so fortunate in possessing a scholar of such distinction, that there was a tendency on their part to shut their eyes to anything in his teaching which was possibly open to criticism. So long as Athanasius lived, it does not appear that the Christology of Laodicea caused any scandal in Alexandria.^ Even in Syria it was some time before anyone began to consider carefully what objection there was to it. It seems, too,- that with Apollinaris himself the question long remained in the sphere of academic disputa- tions. Diodore and Flavian exchanged refutations with him ; and he maintained his own opinions in various explanatory treatises. In spite of all the trials to which they were exposed during Valens' reign, the Catholics of Antioch found time to argue fiercely on the matter both for and against. The dispute did not assume an ecclesiastical character until one of the friends of Apollinaris — Vitalis a priest of Meletius like Flavian and Diodore — left that party and joined the Church of Paulinus. To this Church he rendered a great service at the outset by obtaining for it the alliance of the Roman Church. He travelled to Italy, saw Pope Damasus, and obtained from him letters recognizing Paulinus. I have already told how Damasus, uneasy on account of what others told him of Vitalis, changed his mind, and ordered that he was only to be received under certain conditions. To accept them would have been, for Vitalis, to betray his former attitude. He remained faithful to Apollinaris. Being expelled by Paulinus, and 1 The writings of Athanasius against ApolHnaris are entirely un- authentic. '^ The history of ApolHnaris is full of obscurities ; his contempor- aries tell us but little about him ; and as to his writings, they have been suppressed for the most part, or placed under false names. Driiseke, Apollinarios von Laodicea in the Texte und Unterstichungen ^ vol. vii. (1892), has tried to reconstruct his work in dogmatics ; but all the attributions are not equally certain. The most important of these writings are the treatise, Tepi tj^s ^ei'as aapKuicreoos t^s KaO' ofMoluKnif avOpth-wov, reconstructed by Draseke from quotations, op. cit., p. 381 ; and the profession of faith Kara n^pos Trian^ (p. 369) placed under the name of St Gregory Thaumaturgus. 474 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [ch. xyi having no longer any position in the Church of Meletius, he did not hesitate to found another Church : through his exertions, and in his own person, Antioch possessed a third bishop, not to mention of course the official Bishop Euzoius, who was an Arian. It was at this time that Epiphanius, who, from his island of Cyprus, was following all these movements with care, made up his mind to visit Antioch, and to find out what truth there was in the reports which reached him. He conversed with Paulinus, who was represented as a Sabellian by Vitalis ; Paulinus had no difficulty in clearing himself As to Vitalis, Epiphanius saw with pleasure that he repudiated the absurd doctrines put forward by Docetae of various types, but with regret that he adopted a theory representing Christ as imperfectly man — the Word per- forming in Him the functions of the mind.^ Epiphanius reasoned with Vitalis in vain, and was obliged to return home in great distress. However, Pope Damasus, without mentioning Apolli- naris by name, condemned his Christology, at the same time reprobating all those who divided Christ into two persons — the Son of man and the Son of God. For this latter theory no one in the East held himself responsible ; but the Apollinarians were always trying to drive their adversaries into it. The Egyptian bishops exiled in Palestine had declared in their turn against Apollinaris.^ The new dogma had thus against it both Rome and orthodox Egypt. It is strange that Vitalis and Apollinaris should have thought of resisting. What could they expect ? All those who in the East were supporters of Meletius and Basil had long mistrusted them : did they not belong to the " Little " Church ? Now, when even the Little Church rejected them, and when its protectors in the West and in Egypt expressly condemned them, upon what support could they count ? Nevertheless, they braved the risk. Besides the ^ See a curious account of this interview in Epiphanius, Haer. Ixxvii. 20-23. ^ Basil, Ep. 265. p. 600] APOLLINARIANISM CONDEMNED 475 two Churches of Antioch and Laodicea, they also organized another at Berytus, of which a certain Timothy became bishop. Other bishops were conse- crated and sent to a distance. From the year 377 on- wards, Basil complains bitterly of their propaganda ; their emissaries were everywhere abroad, trying to divide the Churches. We have seen that immediately after the death of Valens this party endeavoured to lay hands upon the Church of Constantinople, and that it was daring enough to make an attempt at Nazianzus itself in opposition to the illustrious Gregory. It was impossible that such attempts could meet with success. Rome, Alexandria, Antioch (both the Little Church and the Great one) multiplied their condemnations; the Oecumenical Council of 381 placed the Apollinarians in the catalogue of heretics, at the same time as it ensured in the East the predominance of their most avowed enemies. Then came finally, in 383 and later, the imperial laws,^ which classed them with the Eunomians, Arians, and Macedonians ; they were forbidden to hold meetings and to have clergy of their own. Being thus repressed, the movement was arrested or, rather, it disguised itself An Apollinarian Church was no longer possible, if it ever had been ; it remained a mere School, without any apparent organization. Its master lived on for some years, in a shadow which we cannot succeed in penetrating. He seems to have continued to write. When he was dead, his disciples, to preserve his compositions, adopted the plan of dissembling them under borrowed names. In this way, their circulation was maintained ; Gregory Thaumaturgus,Athanasius, and Popes Dionysius, Felix, and Julius, were invoked to shield with their patronage the works of Apollinaris and his school. This fraud met with great success : it made many victims in the next century.'- ' Cod. Theod. xvi., 5, 12, 13, 14, 33. 2 Leontius of Byzantium (?) Adv. fraudes Apollinarisfaruvi, Migne, P. G. vol. Ixxxvi.'^, p. 1948. 476 THE EAST UNDER THEODOSIUS [ch. xvi. 5. Syria. Diodore and Flavian, the two champions of the orthodox faith in the gloomy days of Constantius and Valens, were now presiding over the Churches of the East, the one as Bishop of Tarsus and Metropolitan of Cilicia, the other as Bishop of Antioch. Until his pro- motion to the episcopate in 378, Diodore had lived at Antioch, where he was much honoured. He was, like Apollinaris, a learned man, nurtured in the philosophy of Aristotle, and well versed in exegesis of the most solid kind. He wrote a great deal upon all kinds of subjects, provided always that they had a religious interest. It was not only against the Arians and against Apollinaris that he directed his polemics ; pagans and philosophers also employed his pen. Amid the frivolities of the great town, he managed to practise the most rigorous asceticism. His thinness was talked of far and wide ; he looked like a skeleton. The Emperor Julian, who knew him and did not love him, alleged that it was a punishment inflicted by the gods of Olympus.^ At the time when Julian gave currency to this idea, Diodore the thin had still more than thirty years to live. Before leaving Antioch, he trained there two young people, both of whom were called to great renown : Theodore, who like his master transferred himself later to Cilicia, where he died Bishop of Mopsuestia ; and John, after- wards surnamed Chrysostom, who was destined to so much success as an orator, and to be the centre of such pitiable tragedies. Theodore of Mopsuestia was the father of Nestorianism ; Diodore was its grandfather. A bitter enemy of Apollinaris, he had succeeded in maintaining against him the absolute and integral Humanity of Christ, and in thus saving for future generations the historical sense of the Gospels. But he had not succeeded in finding, to express the relation between the Humanity of Jesus Christ and His Divinity, a formula which could 1 Julian, Ep. 79. p. 603] DIODORE AND CHRYSOSTOM 477 satisfy the religious requirements of that grave problem. Between the two " natures " ^ he admitted only a moral bond. The terms, "two Sons," "two Persons," were avoided ; but in reality, Diodore and his followers represented Christ to themselves as a prophet " possessed " by the Divinity — not in a transitory and partial way like the old prophets of Israel, but in a manner which was permanent, perpetual, and complete. With such ideas, they could not reach that contact, that penetration, which is demanded alike by the language of the Gospel : " The Word was made Flesh," and by the mystical formula : " God became Man to make us divine." They approached rather to the conceptions which had been defended in bygone days at Antioch itself by Paul of Samosata. But, pending criticisms which were soon to follow, and not only from the ApoUinarian side, Diodore was for the moment the oracle in theology of the dominant Church. Flavian, when he became Bishop of Antioch, was already far advanced in years, for he could remember the discourses of Bishop Eustathius. He has left no reputation as a writer. Like Nectarius at Constantinople, he was a good and peace-making pastor. For his flock the time of acute struggle was over ; the old warrior took his rest. He could do so with the greater security, because he soon found himself provided with an admirable fellow- worker in the person of Chrysostom. Like Diodore, Theodore, and Flavian himself, John had sprung from a distinguished family. Libanius had had him as a pupil : it was a fact on which he long congratulated himself; we are even told that at the hour of his death the famous rhetorician named his Christian disciple to succeed him in his chair of eloquence. But John had other aims. Meletius had baptized him, and ordained him reader; he lived for some time with his bishop, and afterwards with 1 "Two Natures" was the technical phrase of Diodore; "A single Nature," that of ApoUinaris {/.da efseq., 59 hostility of, 55 downfall and death, 56, 57 Liguge, monastery of, 417 Literary polemics, 41-44 Logos-doctrine and Arianism, 100 et seq. Lucian, priest of Antioch, execu- tion of, 25, 26 and Empress Helena, 129 Lucifer, Bp. of Caliaris, exile of, 206, 207, 272 and Athanasius, 277 ordains Paulinus as Bp. of Antioch, 279 obstinacy, 284 and defaulters of Arminum, 366, . 367 . . Lucilla, opposition to Caecilian, 83, 84 Lucius, Bp. of Rome, and Eastern bishops, 180 banishment, 291 Lucius, entry into Alexandria, .3". Lusitania, province of, 421 Macarius, Bp. of Aelia (Jeru- salem), and Holy Places, 63, 64, 486 Macarius, Presbyter of Athanasius, brought to Tyre in chains, 139, 142 at ConP'^ 146 Macarius, Presbyter of Athanasius {confhiieed) — departs for the East, 158 goes as commissioner to Africa, 190 Macarius of Egypt, a monk, 386, 392 Macarius of Alexandria, a monk, 386, 392, 399 and hyena, 405 Macedonia, Christianity in, 6 Macedonians, otherwise called Pneumatomachi, Semi-Arians, 294-296 in Western Asia Minor and Bithynia, 312 and Eustathius, 328, 343 Arian disputes, 457 and Basil, 463 in Palestine, 488 n. Macedonius, Bp. of Con^'^ and Eusebius, 169, 170 delegate to Emp. Constans, 183 Counc. of Seleucia, 240 deposed, 245 at Coni''«, 294 and Ambrose, 423 n, and the Novatians, 515 Macrina, superior of the Annesi monastery, 464 Magnentius, Emperor, usurpation of, 1 96 et seq. defeat at Mursa, and death, 198 and paganism, 251 Magnus, imperial commissioner in Egypt — disturbances at Alex- andria, 311 Maiouma, port of Gaza, 266 Majorinus, Bp. of Carthage, 84 Malchion, a presbyter of Antioch, 201 Mamre, oak of, 65 Manicheans, 7, 432, 433, 492, 513 et seq. Mantineion, the Novatians at, 515 Marathonius of Nicomedia, an ascetic, 295, 306 Marcellinus, Pope, and the Dona- tists, 73 death, 73 omitted from calendar, 74 Marcellinus, General, recaptures Rome, 197 Marcellus, Pope, enthroned, 75 INDEX 539 Marcellus, Bp. of Ancyra, and Anti- Arian controversy, 114, 147 et seq. and Sabellianism, 121, 148, 149 deposed, 148 theology of, 149-152, 165, 168, 357 in Rome, 162 and orthodoxy, 165 and Pope Julius, 168 and Counc. of Sardica, iT^etseq. and Photinus, 183 and Athanasius, 185 Counc. of Sirmium, 201 and the hoinoousios, 219 death, 331 Marcellus, Bp. of Apamea, and paganism, 511 Marcellus, the centurion, martyr- dom of, 8 n. Marcian, Bp. of Lampsacus, and Counc. of ConP'% 343 a Novatian, 459, 460 Marcionites, 136, 366, 514 Marculus, a Donatist prelate, chas- tisement of, 191 death, 192 Marinus, Bp. of Aries, delegate to Rome, 86 Marinus, an Arian, 457 Maris of Chalcedon, an Arian, and the new creed of Antioch, 170, 244 Mark, Bp. of Arethusa, and new creed of Antioch, 170 draws up the dated creed of Sirmium, 236, 237, 288 tortured, 265, 266 Mark of Memphis, a Gnostic, 420 Marnas, the local god at Gaza, 511 Martin, St, Bp. of Tours, driven from Sabaria, 286, 287 early life, 416, 417 struggles against paganism, 424- 426, 512 Martyrius, a delegate to Emp. Con- stans, 183 Martyrs, of Palestine, 32, 33 of Egypt, 36, 37 Martyrs of Palestine^ The. See EUSEBIUS Massalians, the, or Euchites, 461 et seq. Maternus, Bp. of Cologne, delegate to Rome, 86 Maxentius, Emp., 14 defeat at Milvian Bridge, by Constantine, and death, 15, 45, 48 treatment of Christians, 20, 23, .74 banishment of Marcellus, 75 and Africa, 79 Maximian, Emp., 3 abdication, 13 death, 14 Maximin, Emp., persecution of, 23, et seq.., 261 panic of, 27 defeat and death of, 28 Maximin, Bp. of Treves, 171 deposed, 358 Maximin, Daia. See Daia Maximilian, a conscript, execution, 8 ;/. Maximus, Christian Emp., enters Treves, 423 Counc. at Bordeaux, 423 and St Martin, 424 execution of Priscillian, 425 the reaction, 427 and Valentinian II., 435, 436 enters Italy, 438, 439 defeat and execution, 439, 503 Maximus, Bp. of Jerusalem, and Athanasius, 186 sent to the mines by Emperor Daia, 486 Maximus, Bp. of Ephesus, 256 Maximus, the Cynic, Bp, of Con'''" — treatment of Gregory, 339, 340 banished, 340 ordination declared void, 348 Melania, daughter of Marcellinus, in Egypt, 405 and Rufinus, 490, 491 Meletians, the, schisms, 76-79 and Athanasius, 134, 135 Meletius, Bp. of Antioch, 247 driven from Antioch, 248, 291, 312 and Basil, 319, 320, 322, 330 returns to Antioch, 333 and Rome, 335 position under Theodosius, 337 Counc. of Con'''% 342, 344 death, 345 Meletius, Bp. of Lycopolis, 36 journey through Egypt, TJ^ 78 540 INDEX Meletius, Bp. of Lycopolis {conL)— sent to mines, 78 forbidden to exercise any pastoral functions, 116 Melito, Bp. of Sardis, 62 Mensurius, Bp. of Carthage — con- cealment of sacred books, 16, 80-82 death, 82 Mesopotamia, martyrdoms in, 40 Milan, Counc. of, 184, 206, 207, 225 Ambrose at, 436, 438 Miltiades, Pope, at Rome, 51, 76 Roman Counc, 86 Milvian Bridge, battle at, 15, 27, 46,48 Modalists, the, 121, 122 Monasteries, 394 et seq. Monks of the East, 385 ei seq., 408, 488-491 Monotheism, 121 Montanists, the, 136, 366, 460 Montenses, the, 366 Moses, a brigand-chief, 393 Mursa, battle of, 198 Narcissus of Neronias, 170, 176, 235 and Athanasius, 216 Nazianzus, 314, 315 Nectarius, Archbp. of Con"'*, 347 Counc. of Aquileia, 350 Counc. of ConP'^, 482 Neon, Bp. of Seleucia, deposed, 245 Nepotianus, death of, 197 Nicasa, Counc. of, 112 et seq., 168, ^77, 235, 459 Creed of, 117 et seq., 177, 207, 224, 238, 274 et seq., 290, 348, 375 Nicomachus Flavianus, a pagan Prsetorian prefect, 503-506 Nicomedia — burning of sacred books at, 10 martyrdoms at, 39 new churches at, 66 Nicopolis, Counc. of, 324 Nilus, an Egyptian bp., 36 Nimes, Counc. at, 428 Nisibis, siege of, 197 St Ephrem, James of, 197 Nitria, the monks of, 391 et seq. Novatians, the, 118, 136, 177 at Rome, 366 toleration for their churches, 457 at ConP'^459, 460, 515 defeat imperial troops, 515, 516 Numerian, Emp., death of, 2 Numidia, Donatism in, 95 Nundinarius, the deacon, and Sil- vanus, 95-97 Nyssa, Counc. of, 324 Old Ad, monastic colony at, 406 Olives, Mount of, grotto on, 65 Latin colony of, 490 Olympias, the celebrated matron, 464 Olympius, Bp., sent as commis- sioner to Carthage, 93 Olympius, pagan philosopher — his successful defence of the Sera- peum, 509 Optatus, Bp. of Milevis, 188, 190 «.- 193 Optimus, Bp. of Antioch (Pisidia), 350, 463 Origen, and grotto of the Nativity, 62 and Catechetical school, 100 the Logos-doctrine, loi at Ccesarea, 104 and his bishop, 124 his works found in monasteries, .394 his figurative exegesis, 415 Hellenic culture, 468 and Rufinus, 491 Orosius — his Commomtonum, 434 Orsisius, 397 Orthodoxy, the defeat of, 2\Zetseq. Otreius, Bp. of Melitene, 350 Oxyrhynchus, monks at, 400 Pacatus Drepanius, the rhetori- cian, 428 Pachymius, an Egyptian martyr, 37 Pacian, Bp. of Barcelona, 418 Pacomius, an ascetic — pious life, 357, 386, 394j« 'i^^ i.jS-' i^'r-f