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| By the Co-operation of Eusebius and Athanasius a Synod is held at Alexandria, wherein the Trinity is declared to be Consubstantial. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter VII.—By the Co-operation of Eusebius and
Athanasius a Synod is held at Alexandria, wherein the Trinity is
declared to be Consubstantial.
As soon as Eusebius reached
Alexandria, he in concert with Athanasius immediately convoked a Synod.
The bishops assembled on this occasion out of various cities, took into
consideration many subjects of the utmost importance. They asserted the
divinity of the Holy Spirit476
476The bishops composing the Council of Nicæa
simply declared their faith in the Holy Spirit, without adding any
definition; they were not met with any denial of the divinity of the
Holy Spirit. This denial was first made by Macedonius, in the fourth
century.
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and comprehended him in the consubstantial Trinity: they also declared
that the Word in being made man, assumed not only flesh, but also a
soul, in accordance with the views of the early ecclesiastics. For they
did not introduce any new doctrine of their own devising into the
church, but contented themselves with recording their sanction of those
points which ecclesiastical tradition has insisted on from the
beginning, and wise Christians have demonstratively taught. Such
sentiments the ancient fathers have uniformly maintained in all their
controversial writings. Irenæus, Clemens, Apollinaris of
Hierapolis, and Serapion who presided over the church at Antioch,
assure us in their several works, that it was the generally received
opinion that Christ in his incarnation was endowed with a soul.
Moreover, the Synod convened on account of Beryllus477
477Euseb. H. E. VI. 33, says that this Beryllus
denied that Christ was God before the Incarnation. He, however, gives
the see of Beryllus as Bostra in Arabia, instead of Philadelphia. So
also Epiphanius Scholasticus; though Nicephorus, X. 2, calls him
Cyrillus, instead of Beryllus.
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bishop of Philadelphia in Arabia, recognized the same doctrine in their
letter to that prelate. Origen also everywhere in his extant works
accepts that the Incarnate God took on himself a human soul. But he
more particularly explains this mystery in the ninth volume of his
Comments upon Genesis, where he shows that Adam and Eve were
types of Christ and the church. That holy man Pamphilus, and Eusebius
who was surnamed after him, are trustworthy witnesses on this subject:
both these witnesses in their joint life of Origen, and admirable
defense of him in answer to such as were prejudiced against him, prove
that he was not the first who made this declaration, but that in doing
so he was the mere expositor of the mystical tradition of the church.
Those who assisted at the Alexandrian Council examined also with great
minuteness the question concerning ‘Essence’ or
‘Substance,’ and ‘Existence,’
‘Subsistence,’ or ‘Personality.’ For Hosius,
bishop of Cordova in Spain, who has been before referred to as having
been sent by the Emperor Constantine to allay the excitement which
Arius had caused, originated the controversy about these terms in his
earnestness to overthrow the dogma of Sabellius the Libyan. In the
council of Nicæa, however, which was held soon after, this dispute
was not agitated; but in consequence of the contention about it which
subsequently arose, the matter was freely discussed at Alexandria.478
478Valesius conjectures that Socrates is wrong here in
attributing such an action to the Synod of Alexandria, as the term
ousia does not occur in the Nicene Creed, and such action would
therefore be in manifest contradiction to the action at Nicæa.
This, however, is not probable, in view of the dominating influence of
Athanasius in both. But, as the acts of the Alexandrian synod are not
extant, it is impossible to verify this conjecture.
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It was there determined that such expressions as ousia and
hypostasis ought not to be used in reference to God: for they
argued that the word ousia is nowhere employed in the sacred
Scriptures; and that the apostle has misapplied the term
hypostasis479
owing to an inevitable necessity arising from the nature of the
doctrine. They nevertheless decided that in refutation of the Sabellian
error these terms were admissible, in default of more appropriate
language, lest it should be supposed that one thing was indicated by a
threefold designation; whereas we ought rather to believe that each of
those named in the Trinity is God in his own proper person. Such were
the decisions of this Synod. If we may express our own judgment
concerning substance and personality, it appears to us that the Greek
philosophers have given us various definitions of ousia, but
have not taken the slightest notice of hypostasis. Irenæus480
the grammarian indeed, in his Alphabetical [Lexicon entitled]
Atticistes, even declares it to be a barbarous term; for it is
not to be found in any of the ancients, except occasionally in a sense
quite different from that which is attached to it in the present day.
Thus Sophocles, in his tragedy entitled Phœnix, uses it to
signify ‘treachery’: in Menander it implies
‘sauces’; as if one should call the ‘sediment’
at the bottom of a hogshead of wine hypostasis. But although the
ancient philosophical writers scarcely noticed this word, the more
modern ones have frequently used it instead of ousia. This term,
as we before observed, has been variously defined: but can that which
is capable of being circumscribed by a definition be applicable to God
who is incomprehensible? Evagrius in his Monachicus,481
481The only work of Evagrius preserved to our days is
his Ecclesiastical History.
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cautions us against rash and inconsiderate language in reference to
God; forbidding all attempt to define the divinity, inasmuch as it is
wholly simple in its nature: ‘for,’ says he,
‘definition belongs only to things which are compound.’ The
same author further adds, ‘Every proposition has either a
“genus” which is
predicted, or a “species,” or a “differentia,”
or a “proprium,” or an “accidens,” or that
which is compounded of these: but none of these can be supposed to
exist in the sacred Trinity. Let then what is inexplicable be adored in
silence.’ Such is the reasoning of Evagrius, of whom we shall
again speak hereafter.482
We have indeed made a digression here, but such as will tend to
illustrate the subject under consideration.
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