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| The Question then agitated concerning the Passover. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XXIII.—The Question then agitated
concerning the Passover.
1. A question of no small importance arose at that time. For
the parishes of all Asia, as from an older tradition, held that the
fourteenth day of the moon, on which day the Jews were commanded to
sacrifice the lamb, should be observed as the feast of the
Saviour’s passover.1687
1687 The great question of dispute between the church of Asia Minor and
the rest of Christendom was whether the paschal communion should be
celebrated on the fourteenth of Nisan, or on the Sunday of the
resurrection festival, without regard to Jewish chronology. The
Christians of Asia Minor, appealing to the example of the apostles,
John and Philip, and to the uniform practice of the Church, celebrated
the Christian passover always on the fourteenth of Nisan, whatever day
of the week that might be, by a solemn fast, and closed the day with
the communion in commemoration of the last paschal supper of Christ.
The Roman church, on the other hand, followed by all the rest of
Christendom, celebrated the death of Christ always on Friday, and his
resurrection on the Sunday following the first full moon after the
vernal equinox, and continued their paschal fast until the latter day.
It thus happened that the fast of the Asiatic Christians, terminating,
as it did, with the fourteenth of Nisan, often closed some days before
the fast of the other churches, and the lack of uniformity occasioned
great scandal. As Schaff says: “The gist of the paschal
controversy was whether the Jewish paschal day (be it a Friday or not)
or the Christian Sunday should control the idea and time of the entire
festival.” The former practice emphasized Christ’s death;
the latter his resurrection. The first discussion of the question took
place between Polycarp and Anicetus, bishop of Rome, when the former
was on a visit to that city, between 150 and 155. Irenæus gives an
account of this which is quoted by Eusebius in chap. 25. Polycarp clung
to the Asiatic practice of observing the 14th of Nisan, but could not
persuade Anicetus to do the same, nor could Anicetus persuade him not
to observe that day. They nevertheless communed together in Rome, and
separated in peace. About 170 a.d. the
controversy broke out again in Laodicea, the chief disputants being
Melito of Sardis and Apolinarius of Hierapolis (see above, Bk. IV.
chap. 26, note 1, and chap. 27, note 1). In this controversy Melito
advocated the traditional Asiatic custom of observing the fourteenth
day, while Apolinarius opposed it. To distinguish two parties of
Quartodecimans,—a Judaizing and a more orthodox,—as must be
done if Apolinarius is regarded, as he is by many, as a Quartodeciman,
is, as Schaff shows entirely unwarranted. We know only of the one
party, and Apolinarius did not belong to it. The third stage of the
controversy, which took place while Victor was bishop of Rome, in the
last decade of the second century, was much more bitter and important.
The leaders of the two sides were Polycrates, bishop of Ephesus, and
Victor, bishop of Rome,—the latter an overbearing man, who
believed that he, as Bishop of Rome, had a right to demand of all other
churches conformity to the practices of his own church. The controversy
came to an open rupture between the churches of Asia and that of Rome,
but other churches did not sympathize with the severe measures of
Victor, and the breach was gradually healed—just how and when we
do not know; but the Roman practice gradually prevailed over the
Asiatic, and finally, at the Council of Nicæa (325), was declared
binding upon the whole Church, while the old Asiatic practice was
condemned. This decision was acquiesced in by the bishops of Asia, as
well as by the rest of the world, and only scattered churches continued
to cling to the practice of the earlier Asiatics, and they were branded
as heretics, and called Quartodecimanians (from quarta decima),
a name which we carry back and apply to all who observed the fourteenth
day, even those of the second and third centuries. This brief summary
will enable us better to understand the accounts of Eusebius, who is
our chief authority on the subject. The paschal controversy has had an
important bearing upon the question of the authenticity of the fourth
Gospel, the Tübingen critics having drawn from this controversy
one of their strongest arguments against its genuineness. This subject
cannot be discussed here, but the reader is referred, for a brief
statement of the case, to Schaff’s Ch. Hist. II. 219. The
Johannine controversy has given rise to an extensive literature on
these paschal disputes. Among the most important’ works are
Hilgenfeld’s Der Paschastreit der alten Kirche nach seiner
Bedeutung fur die Kirchengesch. u. s. w.; and Schürer’s
Die Paschastreitigkeiten des zweiten Jahrhunderts, in the
Zeitschrift für hist. Theologie, 1870, p.
182–284,—the latter perhaps the ablest extended discussion
of the subject extant. The reader is also referred to the article
Easter, in Smith’s Dict. of Christ. Ant.; to
Hefele’s Conciliengesch. I. p. 86–101; and
especially to the chapter on the paschal controversies in
Schaff’s Ch. Hist. Vol. II. p. 209–220. This chapter
of Schaff’s is the clearest, and, in the opinion of the writer,
by far the most satisfactory, brief statement of the whole subject
which we have. | It was
therefore necessary to end their fast on that day, whatever day of the
week it should happen to be. But it was not the custom of the churches
in the rest of the world to end it at this time, as they observed the
practice which, from apostolic tradition, has prevailed to the present
time, of terminating the fast on no other day than on that of the
resurrection of our Saviour.
2. Synods and assemblies of
bishops were held on this account,1688
1688 Although other synods are mentioned by the Libellus
synodicus (of the ninth century), the only ones which we have good
reason for accepting are those mentioned by Eusebius in this chapter
and the next; viz. one in Palestine (the Libellus synodicus
gives two: one at Jerusalem, presided over by Narcissus, and another at
Cæsarea, presided over by Theophilus, but the report is too late
to be of authority); one in Pontus, under the presidency of Palmas; one
in Gaul, under Irenæus; one in Osrhoëne in Mesopotamia; and
one in Asia Minor, under Polycrates. Hefele (Conciliengesch. I.
p. 101) adds one in Rome under Victor; and although Eusebius does not
distinctly mention such a synod, we are undoubtedly to conclude that
the epistle written by Victor was a synodical epistle and hence Hefele
is, in all probability, correct in assuming that some kind of a synod,
whether municipal or provincial, took place there at this time (see
note 4). From the words of Eusebius at the close of the chapter, we may
gather that still other synods than those mentioned by him were held on
this subject. The date of all of these councils is commonly given as
198 a.d., but there is no particular authority
for that year. Jerome’s version of the Chron. assigns the
composition of the various epistles to the fourth year of Septimius
Severus (196–197); but it is clear that he is giving only an
approximate date. We can say only that the synods took place sometime
during Victor’s episcopate. All the councils, as we learn from
this chapter, except the one under Polycrates in Asia Minor, decided
against the Quartodeciman practice. Athanasius, however (de Syn.
c. 5), speaks of Christians of Syria, Cilicia, and Mesopotamia as
celebrating the paschal feast on the fourteenth day; and Jerome (de
vir. ill. c. 35) says that many bishops of Asia and of the
Orient kept up this observance. It is possible that the practice
was from the beginning more widely spread than Eusebius supposed, or,
what is more probable, that the words of Athanasius and Jerome refer to
individual churches and bishops, whose observance of the fourteenth day
was not general enough to invalidate what Eusebius says of the common
consent of the whole Church, outside of Asia Minor, against the
Quartodeciman practice, and that this individual observance, not being
officially recognized by any synod, did not seem to him to require
mention. | and
all, with one consent, through mutual correspondence drew up an
ecclesiastical decree, that the mystery of the resurrection of the Lord
should be celebrated on no other but the Lord’s day, and that we
should observe the close of the paschal fast on this day only. There is
still extant a writing of those who were then assembled in Palestine,
over whom Theophilus,1689
1689 On Theophilus and Narcissus, see the preceding chapter, notes 6
and 7. | bishop of
Cæsarea, and Narcissus, bishop of Jerusalem, presided. And there
is also another writing extant of those who were assembled at Rome to
consider the same question, which bears the name of Bishop Victor;1690
1690 ἐπίσκοπον
βίκτορα
δηλοῦσα.
This and the following epistles are no longer extant, nor have we any
fragments of them. They seem to have disappeared, even before
Jerome’s time; at least, he speaks only of the memory of them as
remaining to his day (see chap. 22, note 6). Heinichen is certainly
wrong in making this epistle an individual letter from Victor alone,
for Eusebius expressly says that the epistle was from “those at
Rome” (τῶν
ἐπὶ ῾Ρώμης), which seems to imply a council, as in the other cases.
The grammatical construction naturally leads us to supply with
the τῶν the word used with it in the previous sentence, συγκεκροτημένων,—“those who were assembled.” Valesius,
Hefele, and others are, therefore, quite justified in assuming that,
according to Eusebius, a synod met at Rome, also, at this
time. | also of the bishops in Pontus over whom Palmas,1691
1691 Palmas, bishop of Amastris, in Pontus, mentioned by Dionysius, in
Bk. IV. chap. 23, above. | as the oldest, presided; and of the
parishes in Gaul of which Irenæus was bishop, and of those in
Osrhoëne1692 and the cities
there; and a personal letter of Bacchylus,1693
1693 This epistle of Bacchylus is distinguished from the preceding ones
by the fact that it is not a synodical or collective epistle but the
independent production of one man, if Eusebius’ report is correct
(see the preceding chapter, note 8). The epistles “of many
others,” mentioned in the next sentence, may have been of the
same kind. | bishop of the church at Corinth, and of
a great many others, who uttered the same opinion and judgment, and
cast the same vote.
3. And that which has been given
above was their unanimous decision.1694
1694 Namely, against the observance of the fourteenth day. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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