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| The Ecclesiastical Writers that flourished in Those Days. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XXI.—The Ecclesiastical Writers that
flourished in Those Days.
1. At
that time there flourished in the Church Hegesippus, whom we know from
what has gone before,1217
1217 On
Hegesippus’ life and writings, see the next chapter. He has been
already mentioned in Bk. II. chap. 23; Bk. III. chaps. 11, 16, 20, 32;
and Bk. IV. chap. 8. | and Dionysius,1218
1218 On the life and writings of Dionysius, see below, chap.
23. | bishop of Corinth, and another bishop,
Pinytus of Crete,1219
1219 On
Pinytus, see below, chap, 23, note 14. | and
besides these, Philip,1220
1220 On
Philip, see below, chap. 25. | and Apolinarius,1221
1221 On
Apolinarius, see below, chap. 27. | and Melito,1222
1222 On
Melito, see chap. 26. |
and Musanus,1223
1223 On Musanus, see chap. 28. | and Modestus,1224
1224 On
Modestus, see chap. 25. | and finally, Irenæus.1225
1225 Irenæus was born in Asia Minor, probably between the years
120 and 130. There is great uncertainty as to the date of his birth,
some bringing it down almost to the middle of the second century, while
Dodwell carried it back to the year 97 or 98. But these extremes are
wild; and a careful examination of all the sources which can throw any
light on the subject leads to the conclusion adopted by Lipsius, and
stated above. In Asia Minor he was a pupil of Polycarp (cf. the
fragment of Irenæus’ letter to Florinus, quoted by Eusebius,
Bk. V. chap. 20). The Moscow ms. of the
Martyrium Polycarpi states that Irenæus was in Rome at the
time of Polycarp’s martyrdom (155 or 156 a.d.), and appeals for its authority to a statement in
Irenæus’ own writings, which does not exist in any extant
work, but may have been taken from an authentic work now lost (cf.
Gebhardt, in the Zeitschrift für die hist. Theologie, 1875,
p. 362 sqq.). But whatever truth there may be in the report, we find
him, at the time of the great persecution of Lyons and Vienne
(described in the next book, chap. 1), a presbyter of the church at
Lyons, and carrying a letter from the confessors of that church to the
bishop Eleutherus of Rome (see Bk. V. chap. 4). After the death of
Pothinus, which took place in 177 (see Bk. V. præf. note 3,
and chap. 1, §29), Irenæus became bishop of Lyons, according
to Bk. V. chap. 5. The exact date of his accession we do not know; but
as Pothinus died during the persecution, and Irenæus was still a
presbyter after the close of the persecution in which he met his death,
he cannot have succeeded immediately. Since Irenæus, however, was,
according to Eusebius, Pothinus’ next successor, no great length
of time can have elapsed between the death of the latter and the
accession of the former. At the time of the paschal controversy, while
Victor was bishop of Rome, Irenæus was still bishop (according to
Bk. V. chap. 23). This was toward the close of the second century. His
death is ordinarily put in the year 202 or 203, on the assumption that
he suffered martyrdom under Septimius Severus. Jerome is the first to
call him a martyr, and that not in his de vir. ill., but in his
Comment. in Esaiam (chap. 64), which was written some years
later. It is quite possible that he confounded the Irenæus in
question with another of the same name, who met his death in the
persecution of Diocletian. Gregory of Tours first gives us a detailed
account of the martyrdom, and in the Middle Ages Irenæus always
figured as a martyr. But all this has no weight at all, when measured
against the silence of Tertullian, Hippolytus, Eusebius, and all the
earlier Fathers. Their silence must be accepted as conclusive evidence
that he was not a martyr; and if he was not, there is no reason for
assigning his death to the year 202 or 203. As we have no trace of him,
however, subsequent to the time of the paschal controversy, it is
probable that he died, at the latest, soon after the beginning of the
third century.
Irenæus was the most
important of the polemical writers of antiquity, and his works formed a
storehouse from which all subsequent heresiographers drew. He is quoted
very frequently by Eusebius as an authority for events which happened
during the second century, and is treated by him with the most profound
respect as one of the greatest writers of the early Church. Jerome
devotes an unusually long chapter of his de vir. ill. to him
(chap. 35), but tells us nothing that is not found in Eusebius’
History. His greatest work, and the only one now extant, is
his ῎Ελεγχος καὶ
ἀνατροπὴ τῆς
ψευδωνύμου
γνωσεως,
which is commonly cited under the brief title πρὸς
῾Αιρέσεις, or Adversus Hæreses (“Against
Heresies”). It consists of five books, and is extant only in a
very ancient and literal Latin translation; though the numerous
extracts made from it by later writers have preserved for us the
original Greek of nearly the whole of the first book and many fragments
of the others. There are also extant numerous fragments of an ancient
Syriac version of the work. It was written—or at least the third
book was—while Eleutherus was bishop of Rome, i.e. between 174
and 189 (see Bk. III. chap. 3, §3, of the work itself). We are not
able to fix the date of its composition more exactly. The
author’s primary object was to refute Valentinianism (cf. Bk. I.
præf., and Bk. III. præf.), but in connection
with that subject he takes occasion to say considerable about other
related heresies. The sources of this great work have been carefully
discussed by Lipsius, in his Quellenkritik des Epiphanios, and
in his Quellen der ältesten Ketzergeschichte, and by
Harnack in his Quellenkritik der Geschichte des Gnosticismus
(see also the article by Lipsius mentioned below). Of the other works
of Irenæus, many of which Eusebius refers to, only fragments or
bare titles have been preserved. Whether he ever carried out his
intention (stated in Adv. Hær. I. 27. 4, and III. 12. 12)
of writing a special work against Marcion, we cannot tell. Eusebius
mentions this intention in Bk. V. chap. 20; and in Bk. IV. chap. 25 he
classes Irenæus among the authors who had written against Marcion.
But we hear nothing of the existence of the work from
Irenæus’ successors, and it is possible that Eusebius is
thinking in chap. 25 only of the great work Adv. Hær. For a
notice of Irenæus’ epistle On Schism, addressed to
Blastus, and the one On Sovereignty, addressed to Florinus, see
Bk. V. chap. 20, notes 2 and 3; and on his treatise On the
Ogdoad, see the same chapter, note 4. On his epistle to Victor in
regard to the paschal dispute, see below, Bk. V. chap. 24, note 13.
Other epistles upon the same subject are referred to by Eusebius at the
close of the same chapter (see note 21 on that chapter). In Bk. V.
chap. 26, Eusebius mentions four other works of Irenæus (see notes
on that chapter). In addition to the works referred to by Eusebius,
there are extant a number of fragments which purport to be from other
works of Irenæus. Some of them are undoubtedly genuine, others
not. Upon these fragments and the works to which they belong, see
Harvey’s edition of Irenæus’ works, II. p. 431 sq.,
and Lipsius in the Dict. of Christ. Biog. article
Irenæus, p. 265 sqq.
The best edition of
Irenæus’ works is that of Harvey (Cambridge, 1857, in 2
vols.). In connection with this edition, see Loof’s important
article on Irenæushandschriften, in
Kirchengeschichtliche Studien, p. 1–93 (Leipzig, 1888).
The literature on Irenæus is very extensive (for a valuable list,
see Schaff’s Ch. Hist. II. 746), but a full and complete
biography is greatly to be desired. Lipsius’ article, referred to
just above, is especially valuable. | From them has come down to us in writing,
the sound and orthodox faith received from apostolic tradition.1226
1226 ὧν
καὶ εἰς ἡμᾶς
τῆς
ἀποστολικῆς
παραδόσεως, ἡ
τῆς ὑγιοῦς
πίστεως
žγγραφος
κατῆλθεν
ὀρθοδοξία. Compare chap. 14, §4. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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