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Introductory Notice
to
Alexander, Bishop of
Lycopolis.2183
2183
Translated from Gallandi, Vet. Patr. Biblioth. The
reverend translator is styled in the Edinburgh edition, “Curate
of Ilminster, Somerset.” |
————————————
[a.d. 301.] To the
following account, translated from Galland, I prefix only the general
date of Alexander’s episcopate. He was succeeded in the
bishopric of Lycopolis by the turbulent Meletius, of whose schism we
need not say anything here. But his early relations with the
heresy of Manes, and his subsequent orthodoxy (in all which he was a
foreshadowing of Augustine), render his treatise on the Manichæan
opinions especially valuable.
Combefis conjectured that
Alexander was called Λυκοπολίτης
, as having been born at Lycus, a city of the Thebaid, and so by race
an Egyptian, and to his opinion both Cave and Fabricius are
inclined. But this conjecture is plainly uncertain, if we are to
trust Photius, in his Epitome De Manichæis, which
Montfaucon has edited.2184
2184
Cf. Combef., Auctar. Noviss., part ii. p. 2; Cav.,
Dissert. de. Script. Eccl., incert. ætat. p. 2; Fabricius,
Bibl. Gr.,tom. v. p. 287; Montfaucon, Bibl. Coisl., p.
349, seqq. | For in this work Photius, whilst
speaking of the authors who wrote against those heretics, makes mention
also of Alexander as bishop of the city of Lycus, ὅτε τῆς
πόλεως Λύκων
᾽Αλέξανδρος
τοὺς
ἀρχιερατικοὺς
νόμους
ἐγκεχειρισμένος
.2185
2185
Photius, Epist. de Manich., Bibliotheca Coisliniana, p.
354. | So that
it is no easy matter to state whether our author was called
Λυκοπολίτης,
because he was born either at Lycopolis in the Thebaid, or at another
Lycopolis in Lower Egypt, which Stephanus places close to the sea in
the Sebennytic nome, or whether he was not rather called Λυκοπολίτης
, as having held the bishopric of Lycopolis. The unwonted manner
of speaking employed by Photius need not delay the attention of anyone,
when he makes Alexander to have been Archbishop of Lycopolis; for it is
established that the Bishop of Alexandria alone was Archbishop and
Patriarch of the whole Egyptian diocese. Epiphanius2186
2186
Epiph., Hær., lxviii. n. 1, lxix. n. 2; Le Quien,
Oriens Christianus, tom. ii. p. 597. | certainly
says, when speaking of Meletius,2187
2187
Meletius of Lycopolis, a schismatical bishop of the third and
fourth centuries. Athanasius tells us that Meletius, who was
Bishop of Lycopolis in Upper Egypt at the time of the persecution under
Diocletian and his successors, yielded to fear and sacrificed to
idols: and being subsequently deposed, on this and other charges,
in a Synod over which Peter, Bishop of Alexandria, presided, determined
to separate from the Church, and to constitute with his followers a
separate community. Epiphanius, on the other hand, relates that
both Peter and Meletius, being in confinement for the faith, differed
concerning the treatment to be used toward those who, after renouncing
their Christian profession, became penitent, and wished to be restored
to the communion of the Church. The Meletians afterwards
co-operated with the Arians in their hostility to
Athanasius.—See Art. Meletius, in Smith’s
Biograph. Dict.—Tr. | the schismatical Bishop of
Lycopolis, ἐδόκει δὲ ὁ
Μελήτιος τῶν
κατὰ τήν
Αἴγυπτον
προήκων, καὶ
δευτερεύων
τῷ Πετρῳ τῷ
τῆς
᾽Αλεξανδρείας
κατὰ τὴν
ἀρχιεπισκοπήν.
And to the same purpose he says elsewhere, Μελήτιος, ὁ
τῆς Αἰγύπτου
ἀπὸ Θηβαΐδος
δοκῶν εἶναι
καὶ αὐτὸς
ἀρχιεπίσκοπος.
But however these matters are understood, it is admitted that Alexander
came just before Meletius in the See of Lycopolis, and we know that he
occupied the episcopal chair of that city in the beginning of the
fourth century, in which order Le Quien places him among the
Lycopolitan prelates, on the authority of Photius.
In the time of
Constantine, the Eastern and Western Empire were each divided into
seven districts, called dioceses,2188 which comprised about one hundred and
eighteen provinces;2189 each province contained several cities,
each of which had a district2190
attached to it. The ecclesiastical rulers of the dioceses were
called patriarchs, exarchs, or archbishops, of whom there were
fourteen; the rulers of the provinces were styled metropolitans, i.e.,
governors of the μητρόπολις
or mother city, and those of each city and its districts were
called bishops. So that the division which we now call a diocese,
was in ancient times a union of dioceses, and a parish was a
combination of modern parishes.2191
2191
[More simply, the Church’s system naturally kept to the
lines of the civil divisions. A diœcese was, in fact,
a patriarchate; a province was presided over by a
metropolitan; a parish was what we call a
diocese. Before Constantine’s time these
arrangements existed for convenience, but were not invested with
worldly consequence. Neale adopts this twofold spelling
(diœcese and diocese) in his Alexandra,
vol. i. p. xiv. |
But however it be, whether Alexander was called
Λυκοπολίτης
from his birthplace, or from his episcopal See, this is certain
and acknowledged, that he of good right claims for himself a place
among ecclesiastical writers, for he has given us an elaborate treatise
against the Manichæan tenets; and he is therefore styled by
Allatius auctor eruditissimus et φιλοσοφικώτατος, and his work libellus aureus. Allatius wrote out and
brought to light two passages from it, while as yet it was lying hid in
the libraries. From the inscription of the work, we learn that
Alexander was first a pagan; and afterwards, having given up the
religion of the Greeks, became an adherent of the Manichæan
doctrines, which he says that he learnt from those who were on terms of
familiar intercourse with the heresiarch, ἀπὸ τῶν
γνωρίμων τοῦ
ἀνδρός;2192
2192
Cf. Alex., De Manich. placit., cap. 2. | so that he would seem to be not far wrong
in his conjecture who would place our author at no very distant date
from the times of Manes himself. From the errors of this sect he
was divinely reclaimed, and, taking refuge in the Church, he exposed
the scandals attaching to the heresiarch, and solidly refuted his
unwholesome dogmas. From having been an adherent of the sect
himself, he has given us more information concerning their tenets than
it was in the power of others to give, and on that account his treatise
seems to be held in much estimation.2193
2193
This treatise of Alexander was first published by Combefis, with
a Latin version, in the Auctarium novissimum, Bibl. S. S.
Patrum, Ps. ii. p. 3. It is published also by Gallandi,
Bibl. Patrum, vol. iv. p. 73. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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