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| Constantine enacts a Law against all Heresies, and prohibits the People from holding Church in any place but the Catholic Church, and thus the Greater Number of Heresies disappear. The Arians who sided with Eusebius of Nicomedia, artfully attempted to obliterate the Term “Consubstantial.” PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XXXII.—Constantine enacts a Law against all Heresies,
and prohibits the People from holding Church in any place but the
Catholic Church, and thus the Greater Number of Heresies disappear. The
Arians who sided with Eusebius of Nicomedia, artfully attempted to
obliterate the Term “Consubstantial.”
Although the doctrine of Arius
was zealously supported by many persons in disputations,1203
1203This chapter, outside of the law of Constantine
against the heretics (Eus. V. C. iii. 64), consists of
Soz.’s reflections on the state of the heresies.
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a party had not as yet been formed to whom the name of Arians could be
applied as a distinctive appellation; for all assembled together as a
church and held communion with each other, with the exception of the
Novatians, those called Phrygians, the Valentinians, the Marcionites,
the Paulianians, and some few others who adhered to already invented
heresies. The emperor, however, enacted a law that their own houses of prayer should be abolished; and
that they should meet in the churches, and not hold church in private
houses, or in public places. He deemed it better to hold fellowship in
the Catholic Church, and he advised them to assemble in her walls. By
means of this law, almost all the heresies, I believe, disappeared.
During the reign of preceding emperors, all who worshiped Christ,
however they might have differed from each other in opinion, received
the same treatment from the pagans, and were persecuted with equal
cruelty. These common calamities, to which they were all equally
liable, prevented them from prosecuting any close inquiries as to the
differences of opinion which existed among themselves; it was therefore
easy for the members of each party to hold church by themselves, and by
continually conferring with one another, however few they might have
been in number, they were not disrupted. But after this law was passed
they could not assemble in public, because it was forbidden; nor could
they hold their assemblies in secret, for they were watched by the
bishops and clergy of their city. Hence the greater number of these
sectarians were led, by fear of consequences, to join themselves to the
Catholic Church. Those who adhered to their original sentiments did
not, at their death, leave any disciples to propagate their heresy, for
they could neither come together into the same place, nor were they
able to teach in security those of the same opinions. On account either
of the absurdity of the heretical dogmas, or of the utter ignorance of
those who devised and taught them, the respective followers of each
heresy were, from the beginning, very few in number. The Novatians
alone,1204
1204Sozomen speaks with favor of the Novatians, though
not with the earnestness of Socrates.
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who had obtained good leaders, and who entertained the same opinions
respecting the Divinity as the Catholic Church, were numerous, from the
beginning, and remained so, not being much injured by this law; the
emperor, I believe, willingly relaxed in their favor the rigor of the
enactment, for he only desired to strike terror into the minds of his
subjects, and had no intention of persecuting them. Acesius, who was
then the bishop of this heresy in Constantinople, was much esteemed by
the emperor on account of his virtuous life; and it is probable that it
was for his sake that the church which he governed met with protection.
The Phrygians suffered the same treatment as the other heretics in all
the Roman provinces except Phrygia and the neighboring regions, for
here they had, since the time of Montanus, existed in great numbers and
do so to the present day.
About this time the partisans of Eusebius, bishop of
Nicomedia, and of Theognis, bishop of Nicæa, began to make
innovations in writing upon the confession set forth by the Nicæan
Council. They did not venture to reject openly the assertion that the
Son is consubstantial with the Father, because this assertion was
maintained by the emperor; but they propounded another document, and
signified to the Eastern bishops that they received the terms of the
Nicæan doctrine with verbal interpretations. From this declaration
and reflection, the former dispute lapsed into fresh discussion, and
what seemed to have been put at rest was again set in motion. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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