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Chapter
VIII.—Origen’s Daring
Deed.
1. At
this time while Origen was conducting catechetical instruction at
Alexandria, a deed was done by him which evidenced an immature and
youthful mind, but at the same time gave the highest proof of faith and
continence.1809
1809 This act of Origen’s has been greatly discussed, and some
have even gone so far as to believe that he never committed the act,
but that the report of it arose from a misunderstanding of certain
figurative expressions used by him (so, e.g., Boehringer, Schnitzer,
and Baur). There is no reason, however, to doubt the report, for which
we have unimpeachable testimony, and which is in itself not at all
surprising (see the arguments of Redepenning, I. p. 444 sqq.). The act
was contrary to the civil law (see Suetonius, Domitian, c. 7;
and cf. Justin Martyr, Apol. I. 29), and yet was a very common
one; the existence of the law itself would alone prove what we know
from many sources to have been the fact. Nor was Origen alone among the
Christians (cf. e.g. Origen, In Matt., XV. 1, the passage of
Justin Martyr referred to above, and also the first canon of the
Council of Nicæa, the very existence of which proves the necessity
of it). It was natural that Christians, seeking purity of life, and
strongly ascetic in their tendencies, should be influenced by the
actions of those about them, who sought thus to be freed from the
domination of the passions, and should interpret certain passages of
the Bible as commending the act. Knowing it to be so common, and
knowing Origen’s character, as revealed to us in chap. 3, above
(to say nothing of his own writings), we can hardly be surprised that
he performed the act. His chief motive was undoubtedly the same as that
which actuated him in all his ascetic practices, the attainment of
higher holiness through the subjugation of his passions, and the desire
to sacrifice everything fleshly for the sake of Christ. Of course this
could not have led him to perform the act he did, unless he had
entirely misunderstood, as Eusebius says he did, the words of Christ
quoted below. But he was by no means the only one to misunderstand them
(see Suicer’s Thesaurus, I. 1255 sq.). Eusebius says that
the requirements of his position also had something to do with his
resolve. He was obliged to teach both men and women, and both day and
night (as we learn from §7), and Eusebius thinks he would
naturally desire to avoid scandal. At the same time, this motive can
hardly have weighed very heavily, if at all, with him; for had his
giving instruction in this way been in danger of causing serious
scandal, other easier methods of avoiding such scandal might have been
devised, and undoubtedly would have been, by the bishop. And the fact
is, he seems to have wished to conceal the act, which is inconsistent
with the idea that he performed it for the sake of avoiding scandal. It
is quite likely that his intimate association with women may have had
considerable to do with his resolve, because he may have found that
such association aroused his unsubdued passions, and therefore felt
that they must be eradicated, if he was to go about his duties with a
pure and single heart. That he afterward repented his youthful act, and
judged the words of Christ more wisely, is clear from what he says in
his Comment. in Matt. XV. 1. And yet he never outgrew his false
notions of the superior virtue of an ascetic life. His act seems to
have caused a reaction in his mind which led him into doubt and
despondency for a time; for Demetrius found it necessary to exhort him
to cherish confidence, and to urge him to continue his work of
instruction. Eusebius, while not approving Origen’s act, yet
evidently admired him the more for the boldness and for the spirit of
self-sacrifice shown in its performance. | For he took the words, “There
are eunuchs who have made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of
heaven’s sake,”1810 in too literal
and extreme a sense. And in order to fulfill the Saviour’s word,
and at the same time to take away from the unbelievers all opportunity
for scandal,—for, although young, he met for the study of divine
things with women as well as men,—he carried out in action the
word of the Saviour.
2. He thought that this would
not be known by many of his acquaintances. But it was impossible for
him, though desiring to do so, to keep such an action
secret.
3. When Demetrius, who presided
over that parish, at last learned of this, he admired greatly the
daring nature of the act, and as he perceived his zeal and the
genuineness of his faith, he immediately exhorted him to courage, and
urged him the more to continue his work of catechetical
instruction.
4. Such was he at that time. But
soon afterward, seeing that he was prospering, and becoming great and
distinguished among all men, the same Demetrius, overcome by human
weakness, wrote of his deed as most foolish to the bishops
throughout the world. But the bishops of Cesarea and Jerusalem, who
were especially notable and distinguished among the bishops of
Palestine, considering Origen worthy in the highest degree of the
honor, ordained him a presbyter.1811
5. Thereupon his fame increased
greatly, and his name became renowned everywhere, and he obtained no
small reputation for virtue and wisdom. But Demetrius, having nothing
else that he could say against him, save this deed of his boyhood,
accused him bitterly,1812
1812 On the relations existing between Demetrius and Origen, see below,
p. 394. | and dared to
include with him in these accusations those who had raised him to the
presbyterate.
6. These things, however, took
place a little later. But at this time Origen continued fearlessly the
instruction in divine things at Alexandria by day and night to all who
came to him; devoting his entire leisure without cessation to divine
studies and to his pupils.
7. Severus, having held the
government for eighteen years, was succeeded by his son, Antoninus.1813
1813 Septimius Severus died on February 4, 211, after a reign of a
little more than seventeen years and eight months, and was succeeded by
his two sons, Marcus Aurelius Severus Antoninus Bassianus (commonly
known by his nickname Caracalla, which, however, was never used in
official documents or inscriptions), and Lucius, or Publius, Septimius
Geta. Eusebius mentions here only the former, giving him his official
name, Antoninus. | Among those who had endured
courageously the persecution of that time, and had been preserved by
the Providence of God through the conflicts of confession, was
Alexander, of whom we have spoken already1814
1814 Eusebius makes a slip here, as this is the first time he has
mentioned Alexander in his Church History. He was very likely
under the impression that he had mentioned him just above, where he
referred to the bishops of Cæsarea and Jerusalem. He does refer to
him in his Chron., putting his appointment as assistant bishop
into the second year of Caracalla (Armen. fourth year), and
calling him the thirty-fifth bishop of Jerusalem (Armen.
thirty-sixth). In Bk. V. chap. 12 of the History (also in the
Chron.) we are told that Narcissus was the thirtieth bishop of
Jerusalem. The number thirty-five for Alexander (the number thirty-six
of the Armen. is a mistake, and is set right in connection with
Alexander’s successor, who is also called the thirty-sixth) is
made out by counting the three bishops mentioned in chap. 10, and then
reckoning the second episcopate of Narcissus (see the same chapter) as
the thirty-fourth. We learn from chap. 14 that Alexander was an early
friend of Origen’s, and a fellow-pupil in the school of Clement.
We know him next as bishop of some church in Cappadocia (chap. 11; see
note 2 on that chapter), whence he was called to be assistant bishop of
Jerusalem (see the same chapter). From this passage, compared with
chap. 11, we learn that Alexander was imprisoned during the
persecutions, and the Chron. gives the year of his
“confession” as 203 a.d. But from
chap. 11 we learn that he wrote while still in prison to the church of
Antioch on occasion of the appointment of Asclepiades to the episcopate
there. According to the Chron. Asclepiades did not become bishop
until 211; and though this may not be the exact date, yet it cannot be
far out of the way (see chap. 11, note 6); and hence, if Alexander was
a confessor in 203, he must have remained in prison a number of years,
or else have undergone a second persecution. It is probable either that
the date 203 is quite wrong, or else that he suffered a second time
toward the close of Severus’ reign; for the persecution, so far
as we know, was not so continuous during that reign as to keep one man
confined for eight years. Our knowledge of the persecutions in Asia
Minor at this time is very limited, but they do not seem to have been
of great severity or of long duration. The date of Alexander’s
episcopate in Cappadocia it is impossible to determine, though as he
was a fellow-pupil of Origen’s in Alexandria, it cannot have
begun much, if any, before 202. The date of his translation to the see
of Jerusalem is likewise uncertain. The Chron. gives the second
year of Caracalla (Armen. fourth). The connection in which
Eusebius mentions it in chap. 11 makes it look as if it took place
before Asclepiades’ accession to the see of Antioch; but this is
hardly possible, for it was his firmness under persecution which
elevated him to the see of Jerusalem (according to this passage), and
it is apparently that persecution which he is enduring when Asclepiades
becomes bishop. We find no reason, then, for correcting the date of his
translation to Jerusalem given by the Chron. At any rate, he was
bishop of Jerusalem when Origen visited Palestine in 216 (see chap. 19,
§17). In 231 he assisted at the ordination of Origen (see chap.
23, note 6), and finally perished in prison during the Decian
persecution (see chaps. 39 and 46). His friendship for Origen was warm
and steadfast (cf., besides the other passages referred to, chap. 27).
The latter commemorates the loveliness and gentleness of his character
in his first Homily on 1 Samuel, §1. He collected a
valuable library in Jerusalem, which Eusebius made use of in the
composition of his History (see chap. 20). This act shows the
literary tastes of the man. Of his epistles only the five fragments
preserved by Eusebius (chaps. 11, 14, and 19) are now extant. Jerome
(de vir. ill. 62) says that other epistles were extant in his
day; and he relates, on the authority of an epistle written pro
Origene contra Demetrium, that Alexander had ordained Origen
juxta testimonium Demetri. This epistle is not mentioned by
Eusebius, but in spite of Jerome’s usual dependence upon the
latter, there is no good reason to doubt the truth of his statement in
this case (see below, p. 396). | as bishop of the church in Jerusalem. On
account of his pre-eminence in the confession of Christ he was thought
worthy of that bishopric, while Narcissus,1815
1815 On
Narcissus, see the next three chapters, and also Bk. V. chap. 12, note
1. |
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