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Chapter
XIII.—The Writings of
Clement.1840
1840 On
the life of Clement, see Bk. V. chap. 11, note 1. He was a very
prolific writer, as we can gather from the list of works mentioned in
this chapter. The list is repeated by Jerome (de vir. ill. c.
38) and by Photius (Cod. 109–111), the former of whom
merely copies from Eusebius, with some mistakes, while the latter
copies from Jerome, as is clear from the similar variations in the
titles given by the last two from those given by Eusebius, and also by
the omission in both their lists of one work named by Eusebius (see
below, note 10). Eusebius names ten works in this chapter. In addition
to these there are extant two quotations from a work of Clement
entitled περὶ
προνοίας. There are also extant two fragments of a work περί
ψυχῆς. In the
Instructor, Bk. II. chap. 10, Clement refers to a work On
Continence (ὁ περὶ
ἐγκρατείας) as already written by himself, and there is no reason to
doubt that this was a separate work, for the third book of the
Stromata (to which Fabricius thinks he refers), which treats of
the same subject, was not yet written. The work is no longer extant. In
the Instructor, Bk. III. chap. 8, Clement speaks of a work which
he had written On Marriage (ὁ γαμικὸς
λόγος). It has been
thought possible that he may have referred here to his discussion of
the same subject in Bk. II. chap. 10 of the same work (see the Bishop
of Lincoln’s work on Clement, p. 7), but it seems more probable
that he referred to a separate work now lost. Potter, p. 1022, gives a
fragment which is possibly from this work.
In addition to these
works, referred to as already written, Clement promises to write on
First Principles (περὶ
ἀρχῶν; Strom.
III. 3, IV. 1, 13, V. 14, et al.); on Prophecy
(Strom. I. 24, IV. 13, V. 13); on Angels (Strom.
VI. 13); on the Origin of the World (Strom. VI.
18),—perhaps a part of the proposed work on First
Principles, and perhaps to be identified with the commentary on
Genesis, referred to below by Eusebius (see note 28),—Against
Heresies (Strom. IV. 13), on the Resurrection
(Instructor, I. 6, II. 10). It is quite possible that Clement
regarded his promises as fulfilled by the discussions which he gives in
various parts of the Stromata themselves, or that he gave up his
original purpose. |
1. All
the eight Stromata of Clement are preserved among us, and have been
given by him the following title: “Titus Flavius Clement’s
Stromata of Gnostic Notes on the True Philosophy.”1841
1841 Clement’s three principal works, the Exhortation to the
Greeks (see below, note 5), the Instructor (note 6), and the
Stromata, form a connected series of works, related to one
another (as Schaff says) very much as apologetics, ethics, and
dogmatics. The three works were composed in the order named. The
Stromata (Στρωματεῖς) or Miscellanies (said by Eusebius in this passage
to bear the title τῶν
κατὰ τὴν
ἀληθῆ
φιλοσοφίαν
γνωστικῶν
ὑπομνημ€των
στρωματεῖς) are said by Eusebius and by Photius (Cod. 109) to
consist of eight books. Only seven are now extant, although there
exists a fragment purporting to be a part of the eighth book, but which
is in reality a portion of a treatise on logic, while in the time of
Photius some reckoned the tract Quis dives salvetur as the
eighth book (Photius, Cod. 111). There thus exists no uniform
tradition as to the character of the lost book, and the suggestion of
Westcott seems plausible, that at an early date the logical
introduction to the Hypotyposes was separated from the remainder
of the work, and added to some mss. of the
Stromata as an eighth book. If this be true, the Stromata
consisted originally of only seven books, and hence we now have the
whole work (with the exception of a fragment lost at the beginning).
The name Στρωματεῖς, “patchwork,” sufficiently indicates the
character of the work. It is without methodical arrangement, containing
a heterogeneous mixture of science, philosophy, poetry, and theology,
and yet is animated by one idea throughout,—that Christianity
satisfies the highest intellectual desires of man,—and hence the
work is intended in some sense as a guide to the deeper knowledge of
Christianity, the knowledge to be sought after by the “true
Gnostic.” It is full of rich thoughts mingled with worthless
crudities, and, like nearly all of Clement’s works, abounds in
wide and varied learning, not always fully digested. The date at which
the work was composed may be gathered from a passage in Bk. I. chap.
21, where a list of the Roman emperors is closed with a mention of
Commodus, the exact length of whose reign is given, showing that he was
already dead, but also showing apparently that his successor was still
living. This would lead us to put the composition at least of the first
book in the first quarter of the year 193. It might of course be said
that Pertinax and Didius Julianus are omitted in this list because of
the brevity of their reigns, and this is possible, since in his own
list he gives the reigns of the emperors simply by years, omitting Otho
and Vitellius. The other list which he quotes, however, gives every
emperor, with the number of years, months, and even days of each reign,
so that there is no reason, at least in that list, for the omission of
Pertinax and Didius Julianus. It seems probable that, under the
influence of that exact list, and of the recentness of the reigns of
the two emperors named, Clement can hardly have omitted them if they
had already ruled. We can say with absolute certainty, however, only
that the work was written after 192. Clement left Alexandria in 202, or
before, and this, as well as the rest of his works, was written in all
probability before that time at the latest.
The standard edition of
Clement’s works is that of Potter, Oxford, 1715, in two vols.
(reprinted in Migne’s Patr. Gr., Vols. VIII. and IX.).
Complete English translation in the Ante-Nicene Fathers, Amer.
ed., Vol. II. On his writings, see especially Westcott’s article
in the Dict. of Christ. Biog. and for the literature on the
subject Schaff’s Ch. Hist. II. 781. |
2. The books entitled
Hypotyposes1842
1842 The Hypotyposes (ὑποτυπώσεις), or Outlines (Eusebius calls them οἱ
ἐπιγεγραμμένοι
ὑποτυπώσεων
αὐτοῦ
λόγοι), are no longer
extant, though fragments have been preserved. The work (which was in
eight books, according to this passage) is referred to by Eusebius, in
Bk. I. chap. 12 (the fifth book), in Bk. II. chap. 1 (the sixth and
seventh books), in Bk. II. chaps. 9 and 23 (the seventh book), chap. 15
(the sixth book), in Bk. V. chap. 11, and in Bk. VI. chap. 14 (the book
not specified). Most of these extracts are of a historical character,
but have to do (most of them, not all) with the apostolic age, or the
New Testament. We are told in chap. 14 that the work contained abridged
accounts of all the Scriptures, but Photius (Cod. 109) says that
it seems to have dealt only with Genesis, Exodus, the Psalms,
Ecclesiastes, the epistles of Paul, and the Catholic epistles
(ὁ δὲ ὅλος
σκοπὸς
ὡσανεὶ
ἑρμηνεῖαι
τυγχ€νουσι
τῆς Γεγέσεως
κ.τ.λ.). Besides the detached
quotations there are extant three series of extracts which are supposed
to have been taken from the Hypotyposes. These are The
Summaries from Theodotus, The Prophetic Selections, and the
Outlines on the Catholic Epistles. On these fragments, which are
very corrupt and desultory, see Westcott in the Dict. of Christ.
Biog. They discuss all sorts of doctrines, and contain the
interpretations of the most various schools, and it is not always
clearly stated whether Clement himself adopts the opinion given, or
whether he is simply quoting from another for the purpose of refuting
him. Photius condemns parts of the Hypotyposes severely, but it
seems, from these extracts which we have, that he may have read the
work, full as it was of the heretical opinions of other men and
schools, without distinguishing Clement’s own opinions from those
of others, and that thus he may carelessly have attributed to him all
the wild notions which he mentions. These extracts as well as the
various references of Eusebius show that the work, like most of the
others which Clement wrote, covered a great deal of ground, and
included discussions of a great many collateral subjects. It does not
seem, in fact, to have been much more systematic than the
Instructor or even the Stromata. It seems to have been
intended as a part of the great series, of which the
Exhortation, Instructor, and Stromata were the
first three. If so, it followed them. We have no means of ascertaining
its date more exactly. | are of the same number. In them
he mentions Pantænus1843
1843 Pantænus, see above, Bk. V. chap. 10, note 1. | by name as
his teacher, and gives his opinions and traditions.
3. Besides these there is his
Hortatory Discourse addressed to the Greeks;1844
1844 The Exhortation to the Greeks (ὁ λόγος
προτρεπτικὸς
πρὸς
῞Ελληνας), the first of the series of three works mentioned in note 2, is
still extant in its entirety. It is called by Jerome (de vir.
ill. chap. 38) Adversus Gentes, liber unus, but, as Westcott
remarks, it was addressed not to the Gentiles in general, but to the
Greeks, as its title and its contents alike indicate. The general aim
of the book is to “prove the superiority of Christianity to the
religions and philosophies of heathendom,” and thus to lead the
unbeliever to accept it. It is full of Greek mythology and speculation,
and exhibits, as Schaff says, almost a waste of learning. It was
written before the Instructor, as we learn from a reference to
it in the latter (chap. 1). It is stated above (Bk. V. chap. 28,
§4), by the anonymous writer against the Artemonites, that Clement
wrote (at least some of his works) before the time of Victor of Rome
(i.e. before 192 a.d.), and hence Westcott
concludes that this work was written about 190, which cannot be far out
of the way. | three books of a work entitled the
Instructor;1845
1845 The Instructor (ὁ παιδαγωγός, or, as Eusebius calls it here, τρεῖς τε οι
τοῦ
ἐπιγεγραμμένου
παιδαγωγοῦ), is likewise extant, in three books. The work is chiefly
of a moral and practical character, designed to furnish the new convert
with rules for the proper conduct of his life over against the
prevailing immoralities of the heathen. Its date is approximately fixed
by the fact that it was written after the Exhortation to which
it refers, and before the Stromata, which refers to it (see
Strom. VI. 1). | another with the title What Rich
Man is Saved?1846
1846 The Quis Dives Salvetur? as it is called (τίς ὁ
σωζόμενος
πλούσιος), is a brief tract, discussing the words of Christ in
Mark x.
17 sqq. It is still extant, and contains the beautiful story of John
and the robber, quoted by Eusebius in Bk. III. chap. 23. It is an
eloquent and able work; and when compared with the prevailing notions
of the Church of his day, its teaching is remarkably wise and
temperate. It is moderately ascetic, but goes to no extremes, and in
this furnishes a pleasing contrast to the writings of most of the
Fathers of Clement’s time. | the work on
the Passover;1847
1847 τὸ περὶ τοῦ
π€σχα
σύγγραμμα. This work is no longer extant, nor had Photius seen it,
although he reports that he had heard of it. Two fragments of it are
found in the Chronicon Paschale, and are given by Potter. The
work was composed, according to §9, below, at the instigation of
friends, who urged him to commit to writing the traditions which he had
received from the ancient presbyters. From Bk. IV. chap. 26, we learn
that it was written in reply to Melito’s work on the same subject
(see notes 5 and 23 on that chapter); and hence we may conclude that it
was undertaken at the solicitation of friends who desired to see the
arguments presented by Melito, as a representative of the Quartodeciman
practice, refined. The date of the work we have no means of
ascertaining, for Melito’s work was written early in the sixties
(see ibid.). | discussions
on Fasting and on Evil Speaking;1848
1848 διαλέξεις
περὶ
νηστείας καὶ
περὶ
καταλαλιᾶς. Photius knew both these works by report (the second under
the title περὶ
κακολογίας), but had not seen them. Jerome calls the first de
jejunio disceptatio, the second de obtrectatione liber unus.
Neither of them is now extant; but fragments of the second have been
preserved, and are given by Potter. | the
Hortatory Discourse on Patience, or To Those Recently Baptized;1849
1849 ὁ προτρεπτικὸς
εἰς ὑπομονὴν
ἢ πρὸς τοὺς
νεωστὶ
βεβαπτισμένους. This work is mentioned neither by Jerome nor by Photius,
nor has any vestige of it been preserved, so far as we know. | and the one bearing the title
Ecclesiastical Canon, or Against the Judaizers,1850
1850 ὁ ἐπιγεγραμμένος
κανὼν
ἐκκλησιαστικὸς,
ἢ πρὸς τοὺς
᾽Ιουδαϊζόντας. Jerome: de canonibus ecclesiasticis, et adversum eos,
qui Judæorum sequuntur errorum. Photius mentions the work;
calling it περὶ
κανόνων
ἐκκλησιαστικῶν, but he had not himself seen it. It is no longer extant,
but a few fragments have been preserved, and are given by
Potter.
Danz (De Eusebio,
p. 90) refers to Clement’s Stromata, lib. VI. p. 803, ed.
Potter, where he says that “the ecclesiastical canon is the
agreement or disagreement of the law and the prophets with the
testament given at the coming of Christ.” Danz concludes
accordingly that in this work Clement wished to show to those who
believed that the teaching of the law and the prophets was not only
different from, but superior to the teachings of the Christian
faith,—that is, to the Judaizers,—that the writers of the
Old and New Testaments were in full harmony. This might do, were it not
for the fact that the work is directed not against Jews, but against
Judaizers, i.e. Judaizing Christians. A work to prove the Old and New
Testament in harmony with each other could hardly have been addressed
to such persons, who must have believed them in harmony before they
became Christians. The truth is, the phrase κανὼν
ἐκκλησιαστικός
is used by the Fathers with a great variety of
meanings, and the fact that Clement used it in one sense in one of his
works by no means proves that he always used it in the same sense. It
is more probable that the work was devoted to a discussion of certain
practices or modes of living in which the Judaizers differed from the
rest of the Church Catholic, perhaps in respect to feasts (might a
reference to the Quartodeciman practice have been perhaps included?),
fasts and other ascetic practices, observance of the Jewish Sabbaths,
&c. This use of the word in the sense of regula was very
common (see Suicer’s Thesaurus). The work was dedicated,
according to Eusebius, to the bishop Alexander, mentioned above in
chap. 8 and elsewhere. This is sufficient evidence that it was written
considerably later than the three great works already referred to.
Alexander was a student of Clement’s; and since he was likewise a
fellow-pupil of Origen’s (see chap. 8, note 6), his student days
under Clement must have extended at least nearly to the time when
Clement left Alexandria (i.e. in or before 202. a.d.). But Clement of course cannot have dedicated a work
to him while he was still his pupil, and in fact we shall be safe in
saying that Alexander must have gained some prominence before Clement
would be led to dedicate a work to him. We think naturally of the
period which Clement spent with him while he was in prison and before
he became bishop of Jerusalem (see chap. 11). It is quite possible that
Clement’s residence in Cappadocia with Alexander had given him
such an acquaintance with Judaizing heresies and practices that he felt
constrained to write against them, and at the same time had given him
such an affection for Alexander that he dedicated his work to
him. |
which he dedicated to Alexander, the bishop mentioned above.
4. In the Stromata, he has not
only treated extensively1851
1851 Literally, “made a spreading” (κατ€στρωσιν
πεποίηται). Eusebius here plays upon the title of the work
(Στρωματεῖς). | of the Divine
Scripture, but he also quotes from the Greek writers whenever anything
that they have said seems to him profitable.
5. He elucidates the opinions of
many, both Greeks and barbarians. He also refutes the false doctrines
of the heresiarchs, and besides this, reviews a large portion of
history, giving us specimens of very various learning; with all the
rest he mingles the views of philosophers. It is likely that on this
account he gave his work the appropriate title of Stromata.1852
6. He makes use also in these
works of testimonies from the disputed Scriptures,1853
1853 ἀντιλεγομένων
γραφῶν. On the
Antilegomena, see Bk. III. chap 25, note 1. | the so-called Wisdom of Solomon,1854
1854 The Wisdom of Solomon and the Wisdom of Sirach were two Old
Testament apocryphal books. The Church of the first three centuries
made, on the whole, no essential difference between the books of the
Hebrew canon and the Apocrypha. We find the Fathers, almost without
exception, quoting from both indiscriminately. It is true that
catalogues were made by Melito, Origen, Athanasius, and others, which
separated the Apocrypha from the books of the Hebrew canon; but this
represented theory simply, not practice, and did not prevent even
themselves from using both classes as Scripture. Augustine went so far
as to obliterate completely all distinction between the two, in theory
as well as in practice. The only one of the early Fathers to make a
decided stand against the Apocrypha was Jerome; but he was not able to
change the common view, and the Church continued (as the Catholic
Church continues still) to use them all (with a few minor exceptions)
as Holy Scripture. | and of Jesus, the son of Sirach, and the
Epistle to the Hebrews,1855
1855 On
the Epistle to the Hebrews, see Bk. III. chap. 3, note 17. | and those of
Barnabas,1856 and Clement1857
1857 The Epistle of Clement, see Bk. III. chap. 16, note 1. | and Jude.1858
1858 On the Epistle of Jude, see Bk. II. chap. 23, note 47. |
7. He mentions also
Tatian’s1859
1859 On Tatian and his works, see Bk. IV. chap. 29, note 1. | Discourse to
the Greeks, and speaks of Cassianus1860
1860 This Cassianus is mentioned twice by Clement: once in
Strom. I. 21, where Clement engages in a chronological study for
the purpose of showing that the wisdom of the Hebrews is older than
that of the Greeks, and refers to Cassian’s Exegetica and
Tatian’s Address to the Greeks as containing discussions
of the same subject; again in Strom. III. 13 sqq., where he is
said to have been the founder of the sect of the Docetæ,
and to have written a work, De continentia or De
castitate (περὶ
ἐγκρατείας ἢ
περὶ
εὐνουχίας), in which he condemned marriage. Here, too, he is
associated with Tatian. He seems from these references to have been,
like Tatian, an apologist for Christianity, and also like him to have
gone off into an extreme asceticism, which the Church pronounced
heretical (see Bk. IV. chap. 29, note 4). Whether he was personally
connected with Tatian, or is mentioned with him by Clement simply
because his views were similar, we do not know, nor can we fix the date
at which he lived. Neither of his works referred to by Clement is now
extant. Jerome (de vir. ill. chap. 38) mentions the work which
Eusebius speaks of here, but says that he had not been able to find a
copy of it. It is called by Clement, in the passage referred to here by
Eusebius, ᾽Εξηγητικοὶ, and so Eusebius calls it in his Præf. Evang.
X. 12, where he quotes from Clement. But here he speaks of it as
a χρονογραφία, and Jerome transcribes the word without translating it.
We can gather from Clement’s words (Strom. I. 21) that the
work of Cassianus dealt largely with chronology, and hence
Eusebius’ reference to it under the name χρονογραφία
is quite legitimate. | as the
author of a chronological work. He refers to the Jewish authors
Philo,1861
1861 On Philo and his works, see Bk. II. chaps. 4, 5, 17 and
18. | Aristobulus,1862
1862 The Aristobulus referred to here was an Alexandrian Jew and
Peripatetic philosopher (see the passages in Clement and Eusebius
referred to below), who lived in the second century b.c., and was the author of Commentaries upon the
Mosaic Law, the chief object of which was to prove that Greek
philosophy was borrowed from the books of Moses (see Clement,
Strom. V. 14, who refers only to Peripatetic philosophy, which
is too narrow). The work is referred to by Clement of Alexandria (in
his Stromata, I. 15; V. 14; VI. 3, &c.), by Eusebius (in his
Præp. Evang. VII. 14; VIII. 9, 10; XIII. 12, &c.), by
Anatolius (as quoted by Eusebius below, in Bk. VII. chap. 32), and by
other Fathers. The work is no longer extant, but Eusebius gives two
considerable fragments of it in his Præp. Evang. VIII. 10,
and XIII. 12. See Schürer’s Gesch. d. jüdischen
Volkes im Zeitalter Jesu, II. p. 760 sq. Schürer maintains the
authenticity of the work against the attacks of many modern
critics. | Josephus,1863
1863 On Josephus and his works, see Bk. III. chap. 9. | Demetrius,1864
1864 Demetrius was a Grecian Jew, who wrote, toward the close of the
third century b.c., a History of
Israel, based upon the Scripture records, and with especial
reference to chronology. Demetrius is mentioned by Josephus (who,
however, wrongly makes him a heathen; contra Apionem, I. 23), by
Clement of Alexandria, and by Eusebius. His work is no longer extant,
but fragments of it are preserved by Clement (Strom. I. 21) and
by Eusebius (Præp. Evang. IX. 21 and 29). See Schürer,
ibid. p. 730 sq. | and Eupolemus,1865
1865 Eupolymus was also a Jewish historian, who wrote about the middle
of the second century b.c., and is possibly to
be identified with the Eupolymus mentioned in 1 Macc. viii.
17.
He wrote a History of the Jews, which is referred to under
various titles by those that mention it, and which has consequently
been resolvent into three separate works by many scholars, but without
warrant, as Schürer has shown. The work, like that of Aristobulus,
was clearly designed to show the dependence of Greek philosophy upon
Hebrew wisdom (see Clement’s Strom. I. 23). It is no
longer extant, but fragments have been preserved by Clement of
Alexandria (Strom. I. 21, which gives us data for reckoning the
time at which Eupolymus wrote, and I. 23) and by Eusebius
(Præp. Evang. IX. 17, 26, 30–34, and probably 39).
See Schürer ibid. p. 732 sq. | as showing, all of them, in their works,
that Moses and the Jewish race existed before the earliest origin of
the Greeks.
8. These books abound also in
much other learning. In the first of them1866
1866 Eusebius is apparently still referring to Clement’s
Stromata. In saying that Clement ὧν ἐν
τῷ πρώτῳ
περὶ ἑαυτοῦ
δηλοι ὡς
žγγιστα τῆς
τῶν
ἀποστόλων
γενομένου
διαδοχῆς, he was perhaps thinking of the passage in Strom. I. 1,
where Clement says, “They [i.e. his teachers], preserving the
tradition of the blessed doctrine, derived directly from the holy
apostles, Peter, James, John, and Paul, the sons receiving it from the
fathers (but few were like the fathers), came by God’s will to us
also to deposit those ancestral and apostolic seeds.” Clement in
this passage does not mean to assert that his teachers were immediate
disciples of the apostles, but only that they received the traditions
of the apostles in direct descent from their immediate disciples.
Eusebius’ words are a little ambiguous, but they seem to imply
that he thought that Clement was a pupil of immediate disciples of the
apostles, which Clement does not assert in this passage, and can hardly
have asserted in any passage, for he was in all probability born too
late to converse with those who had seen any of the
apostles. | the author speaks of himself as next after the
successors of the apostles.
9. In them he promises also to
write a commentary on Genesis.1867
1867 In his Stromata (VI. 18) Clement refers to a work on the
origin of the world, which was probably to form a part of his work
On Principles. This is perhaps the reference of which Eusebius
is thinking when he says that Clement in the Stromata
promises εἰς
τὴν Γένεσιν
ὑπομνηματιεῖσθειν. If so, Eusebius’ words, which imply that Clement
promised to write a commentary on Genesis, are misleading. | In his book
on the Passover1868
1868 On this work, see note 8. | he
acknowledges that he had been urged by his friends to commit to
writing, for posterity, the traditions which he had heard from the
ancient presbyters; and in the same work he mentions Melito and
Irenæus, and certain others, and gives extracts from their
writings.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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