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| Of the Office of Penitentiary Presbyters and its Abolition. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XIX.—Of the
Office of Penitentiary Presbyters and its Abolition.
At this time it was deemed
requisite to abolish the office of those presbyters in the churches who
had charge of the penitences:751
751On account of which he was called the Penitentiary.
Cf. Bingham, Christ. Antiq. XVIII. 3.
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this was done on the following account. When the Novatians separated
themselves from the Church because they would not communicate with
those who had lapsed during the persecution under Decius, the bishops
added to the ecclesiastical canon752
752‘The sacerdotal catalogue or order, clerical
order, the clergy in general.’ See Sophocles, Greek Lex. of
the Rom. and Byzant. Periods.
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a presbyter of penitence in order that those who had sinned after
baptism might confess their sins in the presence of the presbyter thus
appointed.753
And this mode of discipline is still maintained among other heretical
institutions by all the rest of the sects; the Homoousians only,
together with the Novatians who hold the same doctrinal views, have
abandoned it. The latter indeed would never admit of its
establishment:754
754See Euseb. H. E. VI. 43.
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and the Homoousians who are now in possession of the churches, after
retaining this function for a considerable period, abrogated it in the
time of Nectarius, in consequence of an event which occured in the
Constantinopolitan church, which is as follows: A woman of noble family
coming to the penitentiary, made a general confession of those sins she
had committed since her baptism: and the presbyter enjoined fasting and
prayer continually, that together with the acknowledgment of error, she
might have to show works also meet for repentance. Some time after
this, the same lady again presented herself, and confessed that she had
been guilty of another crime, a deacon of the church having slept with
her. When this was proved the deacon was ejected from the church:755
but the people were very indignant, being not only offended at what had
taken place, but also because the deed had brought scandal and
degradation upon the Church. When in consequence of this, ecclesiastics
were subjected to taunting and reproach, Eudæmon a presbyter of
the church, by birth an Alexandrian, persuaded Nectarius the bishop to
abolish the office of penitentiary presbyter, and to leave every one to
his own conscience with regard to the participation of the sacred
mysteries:756
756Although the plural is used here, the reference is,
no doubt, to the sacrament of the Lord’s supper only. The
mysteries recognized by Theodorus Studites, Epist. II. 165, are
six; i.e. baptism, eucharist, unction, orders, monastic tonsure, and
the mystery of death or funeral ceremonies. The Greek Church of modern
times enumerates seven: baptism, unction, eucharist, orders, penitence,
marriage, and extreme unction.
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for thus only, in his judgment, could the Church be preserved from
obloquy. Having heard this explanation of the matter from Eudæmon
I have ventured to put in the present treatise: for as I have often
remarked,757
I have spared no pains to procure an authentic account of affairs from
those who were best acquainted with them, and to scrutinize every
report, lest I should advance what might be untrue. My observation to
Eudæmon, when he first related the circumstance, was this:
‘Whether, O presbyter, your counsel has been profitable for the
Church or otherwise, God knows; but I see that it takes away the means
of rebuking one another’s faults, and prevents our acting upon
that precept of the apostle,758
758Eph. v.
11. Valesius rightly infers
from this answer of Socrates to Eudæmon that the former was not a
Novatian. For he disapproves of the abolition of the penitentiary
bishop’s office, whereas as a Novatian he would have been against
its institution before it was established, and in favor of its
abolition afterwards. The Novatians never admitted either of penitence
or of the penitentiary bishop.
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“Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but
rather reprove them.”’ Concerning this affair let this
suffice.
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