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Chapter
XIX.—Circumstances Related of
Origen.
1. The
Greek philosophers of his age are witnesses to his proficiency in these
subjects. We find frequent mention of him in their writings. Sometimes
they dedicated their own works to him; again, they submitted their
labors to him as a teacher for his judgment.
2. Why need we say these things
when even Porphyry,1903
1903 Porphyry, one of the most distinguished of the Neo-Platonists,
disciple, biographer, and expounder of Plotinus, was born in 232 or 233
in the Orient (perhaps at Tyre), and at the age of thirty went to Rome,
where he came into connection with Plotinus, and spent a large part of
his life. He was a man of wide and varied learning; and though not an
original thinker, he was a clear and vigorous writer and expounder of
the philosophy of Plotinus. It may be well, at this point, to say a
word about that remarkable school or system of philosophy, of which
Plotinus was the greatest master and Porphyry the chief expounder.
Neo-Platonism was the most prominent phenomenon of the age in the
philosophic world. The object of the Neo-Platonists was both
speculative and practical: on the one side to elaborate an eclectic
system of philosophy which should reconcile Platonism and
Aristotelianism, and at the same time do justice to elements of truth
in other schools of thought; on the other side, to revivify and
strengthen the old paganism by idealizing and purifying it for the sake
of the philosophers, and at the same time by giving it a firmer
philosophic basis than it had hitherto possessed. Neo-Platonism, taken
as a whole, has therefore both a philosophic and a religious motive. It
may be defined in the briefest terms, in its philosophic aspect, as an
eclectic revival of Greek metaphysics (especially
Platonic-Aristotelian), modified by the influence of Oriental
philosophy and of Christianity; in its religious aspect, as an attempt
to restore and regenerate paganism by means of philosophy. In its
earlier and better days, the philosophic element greatly
predominated,—in fact, the religious element may be said to have
been, in large part, a later growth; but gradually the latter came more
and more into the foreground, until, under Jamblichus (d. 330 a.d.), the chief master of the Syrian school,
Neo-Platonism degenerated into a system of religious mysteries, in
which theurgic practices played a prominent part. Under Proclus (d.
485), the great master of the Athenian school, the philosophic element
was again emphasized; but Aristotelianism now gained the predominance,
and the system became a sort of scholastic art, and gradually
degenerated into pure formalism, until it finally lost all influence.
The extent of the influence which Christianity exerted upon
Neo-Platonism is a greatly disputed point. We shall, perhaps, come
nearest the truth if we say that its influence was in the main not
direct, but that it was nevertheless real, inasmuch as it had
introduced problems up to that time undiscussed, with which
Neo-Platonism busied itself; in fact, it may almost be said that
Neo-Platonism was at first little more than (Aristotelian-) Platonism
busying itself with the new problems of salvation and redemption which
Christianity had thrown into the world of thought. It was un-Christian
at first (it became under Porphyry and later Neo-Platonists
anti-Christian), because it solved these problems in a way different
from the Christian way. This will explain the fact that all through,
whether in the more strictly philosophic system of Plotinus, or in the
more markedly religious and theurgic system of Jamblichus, there ran a
vein of mysticism, the conception of an intimate union with the supreme
God as the highest state to which man can attain.
Porphyry, with whom we are at
present concerned, was eminently practical in his thinking. The end of
philosophy with him was not knowledge, but holiness, the salvation of
the soul. He recommended a moderate asceticism as a chief means of
freeing the soul from the bonds of matter, and thus permitting it to
rise to union with God. At the same time, he did not advise the neglect
of the customary religious rites of Paganism, which might aid in the
elevation of the spirit of man toward the deity. It was with Porphyry
that Neo-Platonism first came into direct conflict with Christianity,
and its enmity against the latter goes far to explain the increasing
emphasis which he and the Neo-Platonists who followed him laid upon
religious rites and practices. Its philosophy, its solution of the
great problems of the age, was essentially and radically different from
that of Christianity; and although at first they might run alongside
one another as independent schools, without much thought of conflict,
it was inevitable that in time the rivalry, and then the active
hostility, should come. Neo-Platonism, like Christianity, had a
solution of the great problem of living to offer to the world,—in
an age of unexampled corruption, when thoughtful men were all seeking
for a solution,—and each was essentially exclusive of the other.
The attack, therefore, could not be long delayed. Porphyry seems to
have begun it in his famous work in fifteen books, now lost, which was
answered in extenso by Methodius of Tyre, Eusebius, and
Apolinarius of Laodicea. The answers, too, have perished; but from
extant fragments we are able to see that Porphyry’s attack was
very learned and able. He endeavored to point out the inconsistencies
in the sacred narrative, in order to discredit its divine origin. At
the same time, he treated Christ with the greatest respect, and ranked
him very high as a sage (though only human), and found much that was
good in his teaching. Augustine (De consensu Evang. I. 15) says
that the Neo-Platonists praised Christ, but railed at his disciples
(cf. Eusebius’ words in this chapter). Porphyry was a very
prolific writer; but only a few of his works are now extant, chief
among them the ἀφορμαὶ
πρὸς τὰ
νοητ€, or
Sententiæ, a brief but comprehensive exposition of his
philosophic system. We learn from this chapter that he had met Origen
when very young (he was but about twenty when Origen died); where, we
do not know. He lived to be at least sixty-eight years old (see his
Vita Plot. 23), and Suidas says that he died under Diocletian,
i.e. before 305 a.d.
On Porphyry and
Neo-Platonism in general, see the great works of Vacherot (Hist.
critique de l’Ecole d’Alexandrie) and Simon (Hist.
de l’Ecole d’Alexandrie); also Zeller’s
Philosophie der Griechen, and especially Erdmann’s
History of Philosophy (Engl. trans., London, 1889). | who lived in
Sicily in our own times and wrote books against us,
attempting to traduce the Divine Scriptures by them, mentions those who
have interpreted them; and being unable in any way to find a base
accusation against the doctrines, for lack of arguments turns to
reviling and calumniating their interpreters, attempting especially to
slander Origen, whom he says he knew in his youth.
3. But truly, without knowing
it, he commends the man; telling the truth about him in some cases
where he could not do otherwise; but uttering falsehoods where he
thinks he will not be detected. Sometimes he accuses him as a
Christian; again he describes his proficiency in philosophic learning.
But hear his own words:
4. “Some persons, desiring
to find a solution of the baseness of the Jewish Scriptures rather than
abandon them, have had recourse to explanations inconsistent and
incongruous with the words written, which explanations, instead of
supplying a defense of the foreigners, contain rather approval and
praise of themselves. For they boast that the plain words of Moses are
enigmas, and regard them as oracles full of hidden mysteries; and
having bewildered the mental judgment by folly, they make their
explanations.” Farther on he says:
5. “As an example of this
absurdity take a man whom I met when I was young, and who was then
greatly celebrated and still is, on account of the writings which he
has left. I refer to Origen, who is highly honored by the teachers of
these doctrines.
6. For this man, having been a
hearer of Ammonius,1904
1904 Of
the life of Ammonius Saccas, the “father of Neo-Platonism”
very little is known. He is said by Suidas (s. v. Origenes) and
by Ammianus Marcellinus to have been a porter in his youth and to have
gained his second name from his occupation. That he was of Christian
parents and afterward embraced paganism is stated in this passage by
Porphyry, though Eusebius (§10, below) and Jerome assert that he
remained a Christian. From all that we know of the teachings of
Ammonius Saccas as reported to us by Plotinus and other Neo-Platonists,
we cannot imagine him to have remained a Christian. The only solution
of the difficulty then is to suppose Eusebius (whom Jerome follows) to
have confounded him with a Christian of the same name who wrote the
works which Eusebius mentions (see note 16). Ammonius was an
Alexandrian by birth and residence, and died in 243. His teaching was
of a lofty and noble character, to judge from Plotinus’
descriptions, and as a teacher he was wonderfully fascinating. He
numbered among his pupils Herennius, Longinus, the pagan Origen, and
Plotinus. The Christian Origen also studied under him for a time,
according to this passage. He wrote nothing (according to the Vita
Plot, c. 20), and hence we have to rely solely upon the reports of
his disciples and successors for our knowledge of his system. It is
difficult in the absence of all direct testimony to ascertain his
teaching with exactness. Plotinus claims to give only what he learned
from Ammonius, but it is evident, from his disagreement in many points
with others of Ammonius’ disciples, that the system taught by him
was largely modified by his own thinking. It is clear that Ammonius,
who undoubtedly took much from his great master, Numenius, endeavored
to reconcile Plato and Aristotle, thus laying the basis for the
speculative eclecticism of Neo-Platonism, while at the same time there
must have been already in his teaching the same religious and mystical
element which was present to some extent in all his disciples, and
which played so large a part in Neo-Platonism. | who had attained
the greatest proficiency in philosophy of any in our day, derived much
benefit from his teacher in the knowledge of the sciences; but as to
the correct choice of life, he pursued a course opposite to
his.
7. For Ammonius, being a
Christian, and brought up by Christian parents, when he gave himself to
study and to philosophy straightway conformed to the life required by
the laws. But Origen, having been educated as a Greek in Greek
literature, went over to the barbarian recklessness.1905
1905 τὸ β€ρβαρον
τόλμημα.
Porphyry means to say that Origen was originally a heathen, and was
afterward converted to Christianity; but this is refuted by the
universal tradition of antiquity, and is clearly a mistake, as Eusebius
(who calls it a “falsehood”) remarks below.
Porphyry’s supposition, in the absence of definite knowledge, is
not at all surprising, for Origen’s attainments in secular
learning were such as apparently only a pagan youth could or would have
acquired. | And carrying over the learning which he had obtained,
he hawked it about, in his life conducting himself as a Christian and
contrary to the laws, but in his opinions of material things and of the
Deity being like a Greek, and mingling Grecian teachings with foreign
fables.1906
1906 On
Origen’s Greek culture, see p. 392, and also his own words quoted
below in §12 sq. |
8. For he was continually
studying Plato, and he busied himself with the writings of Numenius1907
1907 Numenius was a philosopher of Syria, who lived about the middle of
the second century, and who exerted great influence over Plotinus and
others of the Neo-Platonists. He was, perhaps, the earliest of the
Orientalizing Greek philosophers whose thinking was affected by the
influence of Christian ideas, and as such occupies an important place
in the development of philosophy, which prepared the way for
Neo-Platonism. His object seems to have been to reconcile Pythagoras
and Plato by tracing the doctrines of the latter back to the former,
and also to exhibit their agreement with Jewish and other Oriental
forms of thought. It is significant that he was called by the Church
Fathers a Pythagorean, and that he himself called Plato a
Greek-speaking Moses (cf. Erdmann’s Hist. of Phil. I. p.
236). He was a prolific writer, but only fragments of his works are
extant. Numerous extracts from the chief of them (περὶ
τἀγαθοῦ)
have been preserved by Eusebius in his Præp. Evang. (see
Heinichen’s ed. Index I.). | and Cronius,1908
1908 Of
Cronius, a celebrated Pythagorean philosopher, apparently a
contemporary of Numenius, and closely related to him in his thinking,
we know very little. A brief account of him is given by Porphyry in his
Vita Plot. 20. |
Apollophanes,1909
1909 The
Apollophanes referred to here was a Stoic philosopher of Antioch who
lived in the third century b.c., and was a
disciple of Ariston of Chios. None of his writings are
extant. | Longinus,1910
1910 Longinus was a celebrated philosopher and rhetorician of Athens,
who was born about 213 and died in 273 a.d. He
traveled widely in his youth, and was for a time a pupil of Ammonius
Saccas at Alexandria; but he remained a genuine Platonist, and seems
not to have been influenced by the eclecticism of the Neo-Platonists.
He was a man of marked ability, of the broadest culture, and a thorough
master of Greek style. Of his numerous writings we possess a large part
of one beautiful work entitled περὶ ὕψους
(often published), and fragments of some others (e.g.
in Eusebius’ Præp. Evang. XV. 21). Longinus was the
teacher of Porphyry before the latter went to Rome to study under
Plotinus.
Porphyry has made a
mistake in classing Longinus with those other philosophers whose works
Origen studied. He was a younger contemporary of Origen, and cannot
even have studied with Ammonius until after Origen had left Alexandria.
It is possible, of course, that Origen in later life read some of his
works; but Porphyry evidently means that the works of all the
philosophers, Longinus among them, had an influence upon Origen’s
intellectual development. Heinichen reads ᾽Αλβίνου instead of Λογγίνου in his text, on the assumption that Porphyry cannot possibly
have written Λογγίνου; but the latter word has the support of all the mss. and versions, and there is no warrant for
making the change. We must simply conclude that Porphyry, who, of
course, is not pretending to give an exact list of all the
philosophical works which Origen had read, classes Longinus, the
celebrated philosopher, along with the rest, as one whose works such a
student of Greek philosophy as Origen must have read, without thinking
of the serious anachronism involved. | Moderatus,1911
1911 Moderatus was a distinguished Pythagorean philosopher of the first
century after Christ, whose works (no longer extant) were not without
influence over some of the Neo-Platonists. |
and Nicomachus,1912
1912 Nicomachus was a Pythagorean of the first (or second?) century
after Christ, who gained great fame as a mathematician and exerted
considerable influence upon European studies in the fifteenth century.
Two of his works, one on arithmetic and the other on music, are extant,
and have been published. | and those famous
among the Pythagoreans. And he used the books of Chæremon1913
1913 Chæremon was a Stoic philosopher and historian of Alexandria
who lived during the first century after Christ. He was for a time
librarian at the Serapeum in Alexandria, and afterward went to Rome to
become a tutor of Nero. His chief writings were a history of Egypt, a
work on Hieroglyphics, and another on Comets (mentioned by Origen in
his Contra Cels. I. 59). He also wrote on grammatical subjects.
His works, with the exception of a fragment of the first, are no longer
extant. Cf. Eusebius’ Præf. Evang. V. 10, and
Suidas,s.v. ᾽Ωριγένης. | the Stoic, and of Cornutus.1914
1914 Cornutus a distinguished Stoic philosopher, lived and taught in
Rome during the reign of Nero, and numbered among his pupils and
friends the poet Persius. Most of his numerous works have perished, but
one on the Nature of the Gods is still extant in a mutilated form (see
Gall’s Opuscula). See Suidas (s.v. Κορνοῦτος) and Dion Cassius, XLII. 29. | Becoming acquainted through them with the
figurative interpretation of the Grecian mysteries, he applied it to
the Jewish Scriptures.”1915
1915 Origen was not the first to interpret the Scriptures
allegorically. The method began among the Alexandrian Jews some time
before the Christian era, the effort being made to reconcile the Mosaic
revelation with Greek philosophy, and to find in the former the
teachings of the latter. This effort appears in many of the apocryphal
books, but the great exponent of the method was the Alexandrian Philo.
It was natural that the early Christians, especially in Alexandria,
should be influenced by this already existing method of interpretation,
which enabled them to make of the Old Testament a Christian book, and
to find in it all the teachings of the Gospel. Undoubtedly the Old
Testament owes partly to this principle of interpretation its adoption
by the Christian Church. Had it been looked upon as the Jewish
Scriptures only, containing Jewish national history, and in large part
Jewish national prophecy, it could never have retained its hold upon
the early Church, which was so bitterly hostile to all that savored of
Judaism. The early Gentile Christians were taught from the beginning by
Jewish Christians who could not do otherwise than look upon their
national Scriptures as divine, that those Scriptures contained
prophecies of Jesus Christ, and hence those Gentile Christians accepted
them as divine. But it must be remembered that they could of course
have no meaning to these Gentile Christians except as they did prophesy
of Christian things or contain Christian teaching. They could not be
content to find Christian prophecy in one part and only Jewish history
or Jewish prophecy in another part. It must all be Christian if
it was to have any meaning to them. In this emergency the allegorical
method of interpretation, already practiced upon the Old Testament by
the Alexandrian Jews, came to their assistance and was eagerly adopted.
The so-called epistle of Barnabus is an early and most significant
instance of its use. With Clement of Alexandria the matter first took
scientific shape. He taught that two senses are everywhere to be
assumed; that the verbal sense is only for babes in the faith, and that
the allegorical sense alone leads to true spiritual knowledge. With
Origen allegorical interpretation reached its height. He taught a
threefold sense of Scripture, corresponding to body, soul, and spirit.
Many voices were raised against his interpretation, but they were
directed against his particular explanations of the meaning of
passages, seldom against his method. In the early centuries Alexandria
remained the chief center of this kind of exegesis, while Antioch
became in the fifth century the seat of a school of exegetes who
emphasized rather the grammatical and historical interpretation of
Scripture over against the extremes of the Alexandrian teachers. And
yet even they were not entirely free from the vicious methods of the
age, and, moreover, errors of various kinds crept in to lessen their
influence, and the allegorical method finally prevailed almost
universally; and it has not even yet fully lost its hold. This method
of Scripture interpretation has, as Porphyry says, its analogy in the
methods of the Greek philosophers during the centuries immediately
preceding the Christian era. It became early the custom for
philosophers, scandalized by the licentious stories of their gods, to
interpret the current myths allegorically and refer them to the
processes of nature. Homer and others of the ancient poets were thus
made by these later philosophers to teach philosophies of nature of
which they had never dreamed. With the Neo-Platonists this method
reached its highest perfection, and while the Christian teachers were
allegorizing the Old Testament Scriptures, these philosophers were
transforming the popular myths into records of the profoundest physical
and spiritual processes. Porphyry saw that the method of pagans and
Christians was the same in this respect, and he may be correct in
assigning some influence to these writings in the shaping of
Origen’s thinking, but the latter was an allegorist before he
studied the philosophers to whom Porphyry refers (cf. chap. 2, §9,
above), and would have been an allegorist had he never studied them.
Allegory was in that age in the atmosphere of the Church as well as of
the philosophical school. |
9. These things are said by
Porphyry in the third book of his work against the Christians.1916
1916 On
this great work of Porphyry, see note 1. | He speaks truly of the industry and
learning of the man, but plainly utters a falsehood (for what will not
an opposer of Christians do?) when he says that he went over from the
Greeks,1917 and that Ammonius fell from a life
of piety into heathen customs.
10. For the doctrine of Christ
was taught to Origen by his parents, as we have shown above. And
Ammonius held the divine philosophy unshaken and unadulterated to the end of
his life.1918
1918 This is certainly a mistake on Eusebius’ part (see above,
note 2), in which he is followed by Jerome (de vir. ill. c. 55).
Against the identification of the Christian Ammonius, whose works are
mentioned by Eusebius and Jerome, with Ammonius Saccas, may be urged
first the fact that the teaching of Ammonius Saccas, as known to us
from Porphyry’s Vita Plotini and from other Neo-Platonic
sources, is not such as could have emanated from a Christian; and, in
the second place, the fact that the Christian Ammonius, according to
Eusebius, was the author of more than one important work, while
Longinus (as quoted by Porphyry in the Vita Plot. c. 20) says
explicitly that Ammonius Saccas wrote nothing. It is clear from
Eusebius’ words that his sole reason for supposing that Ammonius
Saccas remained a Christian is the existence of the writings to which
he refers; and it is quite natural that he and others should
erroneously attribute the works of an unknown Christian of Alexandria,
named Ammonius, to the celebrated Alexandrian philosopher of the same
name, especially since it was known that the latter had been a
Christian in his youth, and that he had been Origen’s teacher in
his mature years. We know nothing about the life of the Christian
Ammonius, unless he be identified with the presbyter Ammonius of
Alexandria, who is said by Eusebius to have perished in the persecution
of Diocletian. The identification is possible; but even if it be
accepted, we are helped very little, for is only the death, not the
life, of the presbyter Ammonius with which Eusebius acquaints us.
Ammonius’ writings, whoever he may have been, were well known in
the Church. Eusebius mentions here his work On the Harmony of Moses
and Jesus (περὶ τῆς
Μωϋσέως καὶ
᾽Ιησοῦ
συμφωνίας), and in an epistle addressed to Carpianus (see above, p.
38 sq.) speaks of a Diatessaron or Harmony of the Four
Gospels (τὸ
διὰ τεσσ€ρων
εὐαγγέλιον), composed by Ammonius. Jerome mentions both these works
(de vir. ill. 55), the latter under the title Evangelici
Canones. He refers to these Canones again in his preface to
the Four Gospels (Migne’s ed., Vol. X. 528); and so does
Victor of Capua. The former work is no longer extant, nor have we any
trace of it. But there is extant a Latin translation of a
Diatessaron which was made by Victor of Capua, and which was
formerly, and is still, by many scholars supposed to be a version of
this work of Ammonius. By others it is thought to be a translation of
Tatian’s Diatessaron. For further particulars, see above,
Bk. IV. chap. 29, note 11. | His works yet extant show this, as
he is celebrated among many for the writings which he has left. For
example, the work entitled The Harmony of Moses and Jesus, and such
others as are in the possession of the learned.
11. These things are sufficient
to evince the slander of the false accuser, and also the proficiency of
Origen in Grecian learning. He defends his diligence in this direction
against some who blamed him for it, in a certain epistle,1919
1919 The
names of the persons to whom this epistle was addressed we do not know,
nor can we ascertain the exact time when it was composed, though it
must have been written before Heraclas became bishop of Alexandria, and
indeed, we may assume, while Origen was in Alexandria, and still
engaged in the study which he defends in the epistle, i.e., if Eusebius
is correct in the order of events, before 216 a.d. (see note 23). | where he writes as follows:
12. “When I devoted myself
to the word, and the fame of my proficiency went abroad, and when
heretics and persons conversant with Grecian learning, and particularly
with philosophy, came to me, it seemed necessary that I should examine
the doctrines of the heretics, and what the philosophers say concerning
the truth.
13. And in this we have followed
Pantænus,1920
1920 On
Pantænus, see Bk. V. chap. 10, note 1. | who benefited many
before our time by his thorough preparation in such things, and also
Heraclas,1921
1921 On
Heraclas, see chap. 3, note 2. | who is now a member of the
presbytery of Alexandria. I found him with the teacher of philosophic
learning, with whom he had already continued five years before I began
to hear lectures on those subjects.1922
14. And though he had formerly
worn the common dress, he laid it aside and assumed and still wears the
philosopher’s garment;1923
1923 See above, Bk. IV. chap. 11, note 21. | and he
continues the earnest investigation of Greek works.”
He says these things in
defending himself for his study of Grecian literature.
15. About this time, while he
was still at Alexandria, a soldier came and delivered a letter from the
governor of Arabia1924
1924 The words used to designate the official who sent for Origen
(ὁ τῆς
᾽Αραβίας
ἡγουμενος) lead us to think him a Roman, and governor of the Roman
province of Arabia, which was formed by the Emperor Trajan in the year
106, and which comprised only the northern part of the peninsula. We
know no particulars of this visit of Origen to that province, but that
he was remembered and held in honor by the people is proved by chaps.
33 and 37, which record that he was summoned thither twice to assist in
settling doctrinal difficulties. | to Demetrius,
bishop of the parish, and to the prefect of Egypt who was in office at
that time, requesting that they would with all speed send Origen to him
for an interview. Being sent by them, he went to Arabia. And having in
a short time accomplished the object of his visit, he returned to
Alexandria.
16. But sometime after a
considerable war broke out in the city,1925
1925 In
the sixth year of his reign (216 a.d.)
Caracalla visited Alexandria, and improved the occasion to take bloody
vengeance upon the inhabitants of the city, from whom had emanated a
number of satirical and cutting comments upon the murder of his brother
Geta. He instituted a horrible butchery, in which young and old, guilty
and innocent, perished, and in which scholars were objects of especial
fury. (See Herodian, IV. 8, 9, and Dion Cassius, LXXVII. 22–24,
and cf. Tillemont, Hist. des Emp. III. p. 115 sq.) This was
undoubtedly the occasion, referred to here, which caused Origen to flee
from the city and retire to Palestine. |
and he departed from Alexandria. And thinking that it would be unsafe
for him to remain in Egypt, he went to Palestine and abode in
Cæsarea. While there the bishops of the church in that country1926
1926 οἱ τῇδε
ἐπίσκοποι. The τῇδε must refer to
Palestine, not to Cæsarea, for “bishops” are spoken
of, not “bishop.” | requested him to preach and expound the
Scriptures publicly, although he had not yet been ordained as
presbyter.1927
1927 In the apostolic age, and the generations immediately succeeding,
it was the privilege of every Christian to take part in the public
meetings of the Church in the way of teaching or prophesying, the only
condition being the consciousness of guidance by the Spirit (see
1 Cor.
xiii.). We cannot call this teaching and prophesying preaching in our
sense of the term. The services seem rather to have resembled our
“open prayer-meetings.” Gradually, as the services became
more formal and stereotyped, a stated address by the
“president” (as Justin calls him) became a regular part of
the service (see Justin’s Apol. I. 67), and we may assume
that the liberty of teaching or prophesying in the public meetings did
not now belong to all the members as it had in the beginning. The
sermon, in our sense of the word, seems to have been a slow growth, but
a direct development from this exhortation of the president mentioned
by Justin. The confinement of the speaking (or preaching) to a single
individual,—the leader,—which we see in Justin, is what we
find in subsequent generations quite generally established. It becomes,
in time, the prerogative of the bishop to preach, and this prerogative
he confers upon his presbyters also (not universally, but in most
cases), while deacons and laymen are almost everywhere excluded from
the right. We see from the present chapter, however, that the custom
was not the same in all parts of the Church in the time of Origen. The
principle had evidently before this become firmly established in
Alexandria that only bishops and presbyters should preach. But in
Palestine no such rule was recognized as binding. At the same time, it
is clear enough that it was exceptional even there for laymen to preach
(in the presence of their bishops), for Alexander in his epistle,
instead of saying that laymen preach everywhere and of right, cites
particular instances of their preaching, and says that where they are
qualified they are especially requested by the bishops to use their
gifts; so that the theory that the prerogative belonged of right to the
bishop existed there just as truly as in Alexandria. Origen of course
knew that he was acting contrary to the custom (if not the canon) of
his own church in thus preaching publicly, and yet undoubtedly he took
it for granted that he was perfectly right in doing what these bishops
requested him to do in their own dioceses. They were supreme in their
own churches, and he knew of nothing, apparently, which should hinder
him from doing what they approved of, while in those churches.
Demetrius, however, thought otherwise, and considered the public
preaching of an unordained man irregular, in any place and at any time.
Whether jealousy of Origen’s growing power had anything to do
with his action it is difficult to say with certainty. He seems to have
treated Origen in a perfectly friendly way after his return; and yet it
is possible that the difference of opinion on this point, and the
reproof given by Demetrius, may not have been wholly without influence
upon their subsequent relations, which became in the end so painful
(see chap. 8, note 4). |
17. This is evident from what
Alexander,1928 bishop of Jerusalem and
Theoctistus1929
1929 Theoctistus, bishop of Cæsarea, seems to have been one of the
most influential bishops of the East in his day, and played a prominent
part in the controversy which arose in regard to Novatus, as we learn
from chap. 46 of this book and from chap. 5 of the next. He was also a
firm friend of Origen’s for many years (see chap. 27), probably
until the latter’s death. We do not know the dates of his
accession and of his death, but we find him already bishop in the year
216, and still bishop at the time of the episcopate of Stephen of Rome
(254–257; see Bk. VII. chap. 5), but already succeeded by Domnus,
when Xystus was bishop of Rome (257–258; see Bk. VII. chap. 14).
We must, therefore, put his death between 255 and 258. | of Cæsarea, wrote to
Demetrius1930
1930 Eusebius is apparently mistaken in stating that this epistle was
addressed to Demetrius, for the latter is spoken of throughout the
epistle in the third person. It seems probable that Eusebius has made a
slip and said “to Demetrius” when he meant to say
“concerning Demetrius.” | in regard to the matter, defending
themselves thus:
“He has stated in his
letter that such a thing was never heard of before, neither has
hitherto taken place, that laymen should preach in the presence of
bishops. I know not how he comes to say what is plainly
untrue.
18. For whenever persons able to
instruct the brethren are found, they are exhorted by the holy bishops
to preach to the people. Thus in Laranda, Euelpis by Neon; and in
Iconium, Paulinus by Celsus; and in Synada, Theodorus by Atticus, our
blessed brethren.1931
1931 Of
the persons mentioned here by the Palestinian bishops in support of
their conduct, Neon, bishop of Laranda in Lycaonia, Celsus, bishop of
Iconium, and Atticus, bishop of Synada in Phrygia, together with the
laymen Euelpis, Paulinus, and Theodore, we know only the
names. | And probably
this has been done in other places unknown to us.”
He was honored in this manner
while yet a young man, not only by his countrymen, but also by foreign
bishops.1932
1932 οὐ πρὸς
μόνων τῶν
συνήθων, ἀλλὰ
καὶ τῶν ἐπὶ
ξένης
ἐπισκόπων.
συνήθων seems here to have the sense of “countrymen” or
(bishops) “of his own country” over against the
ἐπὶ ξένης, rather than the meaning “friends” or
“acquaintances,” which is more common. |
19. But Demetrius sent for him
by letter, and urged him through members and deacons of the church to
return to Alexandria. So he returned and resumed his accustomed
duties.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|