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| Synodical Act of Damasus, Bishop of Rome, and of the Western Bishops, about the Council at Ariminum. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XVII.—Synodical Act of Damasus, Bishop of Rome, and of
the Western Bishops, about the Council at Ariminum.
The condemnation of this formula by all the champions of the truth,
and specially those of the West, is shewn by the letter which they
wrote to the Illyrians559
559 The
letter is given in Soz. vi. 23. The Latin text (Coll. Rom. ed. Holsten.
p. 163) differs materially from the Greek. | . First of the
signatories was Damasus, who obtained the presidency of the church of
Rome after Liberius, and was adorned with many virtues560
560 These
were displayed after his establishment in his see. He was the nominee
of the Arian party, and bloody scenes marked the struggle with his
rival Ursinus. “Damasus et Ursinus, supra humanum modum ad
rapiendam episcopatus sedem ardentes, scissis studiis asperrime
conflictabantur, adusque mortis vulnerumque discrimina
progressis.…Constat in basilica ubi ritus christiani
conventiculum uno die centum triginta septem reperta cadavera
peremptorum.” Amm. Marc. xxvii. 3, 13. “But we can say that
he used his success well, and that the chair of St. Peter was never
more respected nor more vigorous than during his bishopric.” Mr.
Moberly in Dict. Christ. Biog. i. 782. Jerome calls him (Ep.
Hier. xlviii. 230) “an illustrious man, virgin doctor of the
virgin church.”
But not his least claim
to our regard is that in the Catacombs it was his “labour of love
to rediscover the tombs which had been blocked up for concealment under
Diocletian, to remove the earth, widen the passages, adorn the
sepulchral chambers with marble, and support the friable tufa walls
with arches of brick and stone.” “Roma Sotterranea,”
Northcote and Brownlow, p. 97. | . With him signed ninety bishops
of Italy and Galatia561
561 Γαλάται = Κέλτοι, the
older name, which exists in Herodotus II. 33 and IV. 49. Pausanias (I.
iii. 5) says ὀψὲ δέ
ποτε αὐτοὺς
καλεὶσθαι
Γαλάτας
ἐξενίκησε,
Κέλτοι γὰρ
κατά τε σφᾶς
τὸ ἀρχαῖον
καὶ παρὰ τοῖς
ἄλλοις
ὠνομάζοντο. Galatia occurs on the Monumentum Ancyranum. Bp. Lightfoot
(Galat. p. 3) says the first instance of Gallia (Galli) which he has
found in any Greek writer is in Epictetus II. 20, 17. | , now called Gaul,
who met together at Rome. I would have inserted their names but that I
thought it superfluous.
————————————
“The bishops assembled at
Rome in sacred synod, Damasus and Valerianus562
562 In
Sozomen, Valerius, Bishop of Aquileia. “But little is known of
his life, but under his rule there grew up at Aquileia the society of
remarkable persons of whom Hieronymus became the most famous.”
Dict. Christ. Biog. iv. 1102. | and
the rest, to their beloved brethren the bishops of Illyria, send
greeting in God.
“We believe that we,
priests of God, by whom it is right for the rest to be instructed, are
holding and teaching our people the Holy Creed which was founded on the
teaching of the Apostles, and in no way departs from the definitions of
the Fathers. But through a report of the brethren in Gaul and Venetia
we have learnt that certain men are fallen into heresy.
“It is the duty of the
bishops not only to take precautions against this mischief, but also to
make a stand against whatever divergent teaching has arisen, either
from incomplete instruction, or the simplicity of readers of unsound
commentators. They should be minded not to slide into slippery paths,
but rather whensoever divergent counsels are carried to their ears, to
hold fast the doctrine of our fathers. It has, therefore, been decided
that Auxentius of Milan is in this matter specially condemned. So it is
right that all the teachers of the law in the Roman Empire should be
well instructed in the law, and not befoul the faith with divergent
doctrines.
“When first the wickedness
of the heretics began to flourish, and when, as now, the blasphemy of
the Arians was crawling to the front, our fathers, three hundred and
eighteen bishops, the holiest prelates in the Roman Empire, deliberated
at Nicæa. The wall which they set up against the weapons of the
devil, and the antidote wherewith they repelled his deadly poisons, was
their confession that the Father and the Son are of one substance, one
godhead, one virtue, one power, one likeness563
563 χαρακτήρ; contrast the statement in Heb. i. 3, that the Son is
the χαρακτήρ of the person of the Father. χαρακτήρ in the letter of Damasus approaches more nearly our use of
“character” as meaning distinctive qualities. cf. Plato
Phæd. 26 B. | ,
and that the Holy Ghost is of the same essence564 and
substance. Whoever did not thus think was judged separate from our
communion. Their deliberation was worthy of all respect, and their
definition sound. But certain men have intended by other later
discussions to corrupt and befoul it. Yet, at the very outset, error
was so far set right by the bishops on whom the attempt was made at
Ariminum to compel them to manipulate or innovate on the faith, that
they confessed themselves seduced by opposite arguments, or owned that
they had not perceived any contradiction to the opinion of the Fathers
delivered at Nicæa. No prejudice could arise from the number of
bishops gathered at Ariminum, since it is well known that neither the
bishop of the Romans, whose opinion ought before all others to have
been waited for, nor Vincentius, whose stainless episcopate had lasted
so many years, nor the rest, gave in their adhesion to such doctrines.
And this is the more significant, since, as has been already said, the
very men who seemed to be tricked into surrender, themselves, in their
wiser moments, testified their disapproval.
“Your sincerity then
perceives that this one faith, which was founded at Nicæa on the
authority of the Apostles, ought to be kept secure for ever. You
perceive that with us, the bishops of the East, who confess themselves
Catholic, and the western bishops, together glory in it. We believe
that before long those who think otherwise ought without delay to be
put out from our communion, and deprived of the name of bishop, that
their flocks may be freed from error and breathe freely. For they
cannot be expected to correct the errors of their people when they
themselves are the victims of error. May the opinion of your reverence
be in harmony with that of all the priests of God. We believe you to be
fixed and firm in it, and thus ought we rightly to believe with you.
May your charity make us glad by your reply.
“Beloved brethren,
farewell.” E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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