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| The Author's Defence of Origen. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XIII.—The
Author’s Defence of Origen.870
870The views of Origen met with opposition from the
very outset. During his own lifetime he was condemned at Alexandria,
and after his death repeatedly until 541 a.d.,
and perhaps also by the fifth general council held at Constantinople in
553. For a full account of the Origenistic Controversy, see Smith and
Wace, Dict. of Christ. Biog. and Antiq., art. Origenistic Controversies.
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But since carping detractors
have imposed upon many persons and have succeeded in deterring them
from reading Origen, as though he were a blasphemous writer, I deem it
not unseasonable to make a few observations respecting him. Worthless
characters, and such as are destitute of ability to attain eminence
themselves, often seek to get into notice by decrying those who excel
them. And first Methodius, bishop of a city in Lycia named Olympus,
labored under this malady; next Eustathius, who for a short time
presided over the church at Antioch; after him Apollinaris; and lastly
Theophilus. This quaternion of revilers has traduced Origen, but not on
the same grounds, one having found one cause of accusation against him,
and another another; and thus each has demonstrated that what he has
taken no objection to, he has fully accepted. For since one has
attacked one opinion in particular, and another has found fault with
another, it is evident that each has admitted as true what he has not
assailed, giving a tacit approbation to what he has not attacked.
Methodius indeed, when he had in various places railed against Origen,
afterwards as if retracting all he had previously said, expresses his
admiration of the man, in a dialogue which he entitled
Xenon.871
871‘The house of entertainment for
strangers.’ Methodius’ works were in the literary form of
the dialogue. Cf. his Convivum decem Virginum in Migne’s
Patrologia Græca, Vol. XVIII.
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But I affirm that from the censure of these men, greater commendation
accrues to Origen. For those who have sought out whatever they deemed
worthy of reprobation in him, and yet have never charged him with
holding unsound views respecting the holy Trinity, are in this way most
distinctly shown to bear witness to his orthodox piety: and by not
reproaching him on this point, they commend him by their own testimony.
But Athanasius the defender of the
doctrine of consubstantiality, in his Discourses against the
Arians872
872Athan. de Decr. Nic. 27.
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continually cites this author as a witness of his own faith,
interweaving his words with his own, and saying, ‘The most
admirable and assiduous Origen,’ says he, ‘by his own
testimony confirms our doctrine concerning the Son of God, affirming
him to be co-eternal with the Father.’ Those therefore who load
Origen with opprobrium, overlook the fact that their maledictions fall
at the same time on Athanasius, the eulogist of Origen. So much will be
enough for the vindication of Origen; we shall now return to the course
of our history.
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