Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| A Comparison of Constantine's Piety with the Wickedness of the Persecutors. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Book III.
Chapter I.—A Comparison of Constantine’s Piety with the
Wickedness of the Persecutors.
In this
manner that spirit who is the hater of good, actuated by envy at the
blessing enjoyed by the Church, continued to raise against her the
stormy troubles of intestine discord, in the midst of a period of peace
and joy. Meanwhile, however, the divinely-favored emperor did not
slight the duties befitting him, but exhibited in his whole conduct a
direct contrast to those atrocities of which the cruel tyrants had been
lately guilty,3223
3223 Compare contrast with the other emperors in Prolegomena, under
Life. | and thus
triumphed over every enemy that opposed him. For in the first place,
the tyrants, being themselves alienated from the true God, had enforced
by every compulsion the worship of false deities: Constantine convinced
mankind by actions as well as words,3224
3224 Eusebius expressly states that Constantine’s words had
little result in conversion. It is meant here that the success of one
who relied on God itself proved the vanity of idols. | that
these had but an imaginary existence, and exhorted them to acknowledge
the only true God. They had derided his Christ with words of blasphemy:
he assumed that as his safeguard3225
3225 This may perhaps mean “ordered to be inscribed” or
“wrote it to be his safeguard.” This form of Bag. is
a satisfactory paraphrase. | against
which they directed their blasphemies, and gloried in the symbol of the
Saviour’s passion. They had persecuted and driven from house and
home the servants of Christ: he recalled them every one, and restored
them to their native homes. They had covered them with dishonor: he
made their condition honorable and enviable in the eyes of all. They
had shamefully plundered and sold the goods of godly men: Constantine
not only replaced this loss, but still further enriched them with
abundant presents. They had circulated injurious calumnies, through
their written ordinances, against the prelates of the Church: he on the
contrary, conferred dignity on these individuals by personal marks of
honor, and by his edicts and statutes raised them to higher distinction
than before. They had utterly demolished and razed to the ground the
houses of prayer: he commanded that those which still existed should be
enlarged, and that new ones should be raised on a magnificent scale at
the expense of the imperial treasury. They had ordered the inspired
records to be burnt and utterly destroyed: he decreed that copies of
them should be multiplied, and magnificently adorned3226
3226 Their bindings were adorned with precious stones according to
Cedrenus. Compare Prolegomena, Character,
Magnificence. | at the charge of the imperial treasury.
They had strictly forbidden the prelates, anywhere or on any occasion,
to convene synods; whereas he gathered them to his court from every
province, received them into his palace, and even to his own private
apartments and thought them worthy to share his home and table. They
had honored the demons with offerings: Constantine exposed their error,
and continually distributed the now useless materials for sacrifice, to
those who would apply them to a better use. They had ordered the pagan
temples to be sumptuously adorned: he razed to their foundations those
of them which had been the chief objects of superstitious reverence.
They had subjected God’s servants to the most ignominious
punishments: he took vengeance on the persecutors, and inflicted on
them just chastisement in the name of God, while he held the memory of
his holy martyrs in constant veneration. They had driven God’s
worshipers from the imperial palaces: he placed full confidence in them
at all times, and knowing them to be the better disposed and more
faithful than any beside. They, the victims of avarice, voluntarily
subjected themselves as it were to the pangs of Tantalus: he with royal
magnificence unlocked all his treasures, and distributed his gifts with
rich and high-souled liberality. They committed countless murders, that
they might plunder or confiscate the wealth of their victims; while
throughout the reign of Constantine the sword of justice hung idle
everywhere, and both people and municipal magistrates3227
3227 [Πολιτευτῶν
ἀνδρῶν, here,
apparently, the Decurions, who formed the corporations of the
cities, and were subject to responsible and burdensome offices. Vide
Gibbon, Decline and Fall, chap. 17.—Bag.] So
Valesius maintains, and has been generally if not universally followed.
Though it might be overventuresome to change the translation therefore,
it befits the sense better and suits the words admirably to apply to
the different classes, Peregrini and Cives. This distinction did not
fully pass away until the time of Justinian (Long, art. Civitas,
in Smith, Dict. Gr. and Rom. Ant.), and it seems certain that
Eusebius meant this. | in every provence were governed rather
by paternal authority than by any constraining.3228
3228 This above is a sort of resumé of the life of Constantine.
For illustration of the various facts mentioned, compare the latter
part of the Church History and the various acts and documents in
this Life. Compare also Prolegomena, under Life, and especially
under Character. It seems now and then to be like a little
homily on the glory of having the shoe on the other foot—the
glory of having done to others what others had done to them. | Surely it must seem to all who duly
regard these facts, that a new and fresh era of existence had begun to
appear, and a light heretofore unknown suddenly to dawn from the midst
of darkness on the human race: and all must confess that these things
were entirely the work of God, who raised up this pious emperor to
withstand the multitude of the ungodly.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|