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Chapter
XXX.—Bardesanes the Syrian and his
Extant Works.
1. In
the same reign, as heresies were abounding in the region between the
rivers,1337 a certain Bardesanes,1338
1338 Bardesanes or Bardaisan (Greek, Βαρδησ€νης), a distinguished Syrian scholar, poet, and theologian,
who lived at the court of the king of Edessa, is commonly classed among
the Gnostics, but, as Hort shows, without sufficient reason. Our
reports in regard to him are very conflicting. Epiphanius and
Barhebræus relate that he was at first a distinguished Christian
teacher, but afterward became corrupted by the doctrines of Valentinus.
Eusebius on the other hand says that he was originally a Valentinian,
but afterward left that sect and directed his attacks against it. Moses
of Chorene gives a similar account. To Hippolytus he appeared as a
member of the Eastern school of Valentinians, while to Ephraem the
Syrian he seemed in general one of the most pernicious of heretics, who
nevertheless pretended to be orthodox, veiling his errors in ambiguous
language, and thus carrying away many of the faithful. According to
Hort, who has given the subject very careful study, “there is no
reason to suppose that Bardesanes rejected the ordinary faith of the
Christians as founded on the Gospels and the writings of the apostles,
except on isolated points. The more startling peculiarities of which we
hear belong for the most part to an outer region of speculation, which
it may easily have seemed possible to combine with Christianity, more
especially with the undeveloped Christianity of Syria in the third
century. The local color is everywhere prominent. In passing over to
the new faith Bardaisan could not shake off the ancient glamour of the
stars, or abjure the Semitic love of clothing thoughts in mythological
forms.” This statement explains clearly enough the reputation for
heresy which Bardesanes enjoyed in subsequent generations. There is no
reason to think that he taught a system of æons like the Gnostics,
but he does seem to have leaned toward docetism, and also to have
denied the proper resurrection of the body. Ephraem accuses him of
teaching Polytheism, in effect if not in words, but this charge seems
to have arisen from a misunderstanding of his mythological forms; he
apparently maintained always the supremacy of the one Christian God.
There is nothing in his theology itself to imply Valentinian influence,
but the traditions to that effect are too strong to be entirely set
aside. It is not improbable that he may, as Eusebius says, have been a
Valentinian for a time, and afterward, upon entering the orthodox
church, have retained some of the views which he gained under their
influence. This would explain the conflicting reports of his theology.
It is not necessary to say more about his beliefs. Hort’s article
in Smith and Wace’s Dict. of Christ. Biog. contains an
excellent discussion of the subject, and the student is referred to
that.
The followers of Bardesanes seem
to have emphasized those points in which he differed with the Church at
large, and thus to have departed further from catholic orthodoxy.
Undoubtedly Ephraem (who is our most important authority for a
knowledge of Bardesanes) knows him only through his followers, who were
very numerous throughout the East in the fourth century, and hence
passes a harsher judgment upon him than he might otherwise have done.
Ephraem makes the uprooting of the “pernicious heresy” one
of his foremost duties.
Eusebius in this chapter,
followed by Jerome (de vir. ill. chap. 33), Epiphanius,
Theodoret, and others, assigns the activity of Bardesanes to the reign
of Marcus Aurelius (so also in the Chron.). But Hort says that
according to the Chronicle of Edessa (Assemani, Bibl. Or. I.
389) he was born July 11, 155, and according to Barhebræus
(Chron. Eccl. ed. Abbeloos and Lamy, p. 49) he died in 223 at
the age of sixty-eight, which confirms the date of his birth given by
the Chronicle of Edessa. These dates are accepted as correct by
Hilgenfeld and Hort, and the error committed by Eusebius and those who
followed him is explained by their confusion of the later with the
earlier Antonines, a confusion which was very common among the
Fathers.
His writings, as stated by
Eusebius, Epiphanius, Theodoret, and others, were very numerous, and
were translated (at least many of them) into Greek. The dialogues
against the Marcionists and other heretics are mentioned also by
Theodoret (Hær. Fab. I. 22) and by Barhebræus.
Epiphanius (who apparently had some independent knowledge of the man
and his followers) mentions (Hær. LVI.) an Apology
“in which he resisted Apollonius, the companion of Antoninus,
when urged to deny that he was a Christian.” This was probably
one of the many works which Eusebius says he wrote on occasion of the
persecution which arose at the time.
The Dialogue on
Fate is said by Eusebius, followed by Rufinus and Jerome, to have
been addressed to Antoninus. Epiphanius says that in this work he
“copiously refuted Avidas the astronomer,” and it is quite
possible that Eusebius’ statement rests upon a confusion of the
names Avidas and Antoninus, for it is difficult to conceive that the
work can have been addressed to an emperor, and in any case it cannot
have been addressed to Marcus Aurelius, whom Eusebius here means. This
Dialogue on Fate is identified either wholly or in part with a
work entitled Book of the Laws of Countries, which is still
extant in the original Syriac, and has been published with an English
translation by Cureton in his Spicileg. Syr. A fragment of this
work is given in Eusebius’ Præp. Evang. VI.
9–10, and, until the discovery of the Syriac text of the entire
work, this was all that we had of it. This is undoubtedly the work
referred to by Eusebius, Epiphanius, and other Fathers, but it is no
less certain that it was not written by Bardesanes himself. As Hort
remarks, “the natural impulse to confuse the author with the
chief interlocutor in an anonymous dialogue will sufficiently explain
the early ascription of the Dialogue to Bardaisan himself by the Greek
Fathers.” It was undoubtedly written by one of Bardesanes’
disciples, probably soon after his death, and it is quite likely that
it does not depart widely from the spirit of Bardesanes’
teaching. Upon Bardesanes, see, in addition to Hort’s article,
the monograph of Merx, Bardesanes von Edessa (Halle, 1863), and
that of Hilgenfeld, Bardesanes, der Letzte Gnostiker (Leipz.
1864). | a most able man and a most skillful disputant
in the Syriac tongue, having composed dialogues against Marcion’s
followers and against certain others who were authors of various
opinions, committed them to writing in his own language, together with
many other works. His pupils,1339 of whom he had
very many (for he was a powerful defender of the faith), translated
these productions from the Syriac into Greek.
2. Among them there is also his
most able dialogue On Fate,1340
addressed to
Antoninus, and other works which they say he wrote on occasion of the
persecution which arose at that time.1341
1341 Hort conjectures that Caracalla, who spent the winter of 216 in
Edessa, and threw the Prince Bar-Manu into captivity, may have allied
himself with a party which was discontented with the rule of that
prince, and which instituted a heathen reaction, and that this was the
occasion of the persecution referred to here, in which Bardesanes
proved his firmness in the faith as recorded by Epiphanius. |
3. He indeed was at first a
follower of Valentinus,1342
but afterward,
having rejected his teaching and having refuted most of his fictions,
he fancied that he had come over to the more correct opinion.
Nevertheless he did not entirely wash off the filth of the old
heresy.1343
1343 It is undoubtedly quite true, as remarked in note 2, that
Bardesanes, after leaving Valentianism, still retained views acquired
under its influence, and that these colored all his subsequent
thinking. This fact may have been manifest to Eusebius, who had
evidently read many of Bardesanes’ works, and who speaks here as
if from personal knowledge. |
About this time also Soter,1344
1344 On Soter, see chap. 19, note 2. | bishop of the church of Rome, departed
this life.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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