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| Of the reign of Julianus; how from a child he was brought up in piety and lapsed into impiety; and in what manner, though at first he kept his impiety secret, he afterwards laid it bare. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
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III.
Chapter I.—Of the reign of Julianus; how from a child he was
brought up in piety and lapsed into impiety; and in what manner, though
at first he kept his impiety secret, he afterwards laid it
bare.
Constantius, as has been narrated, departed this life groaning and grieving
that he had been turned away from the faith of his father. Julian heard
the news of his end as he was crossing from Europe into Asia and
assumed the sovereignty with delight at having now no rival.
In his earlier days, while yet a
lad, Julian had, as well as Gallus595
595 On the
murder of the Princes of the blood Gallus was first sent alone to
Tralles or Ephesus, (Soc. iii. 1,) and afterwards spent some time with
his brother Julian in Cappadocia in retirement, but with a suitable
establishment. On their relationship to Constantius vide Pedigree in
the prolegomena. | his brother,
imbibed pure and pious teaching.
In his youth and earlier manhood
he continued to take in the same doctrine. Constantius, dreading lest
his kinsfolk should aspire to imperial power, slew them;596
596 The
massacre “involved the two uncles of Constantius, seven of his
cousins, of whom Dalmatius and Hannibalianus were the most illustrious,
the patrician Optatus, who had married a sister of the late Emperor,
and the præfect Abcavius.” “If it were necessary to
aggravate the horrors of this bloody scene we might add that
Constantius himself had espoused the daughter of his uncle Julius, and
that he had bestowed his sister in marriage on his cousin
Hannibalianus.” “Of so numerous a family Gallus and Julian
alone, the two youngest children of Julius Constantius, were saved from
the hands of the assassins, till their rage, satiated with slaughter,
had in some measure subsided.” Gibbon, Chap. xviii. Theodoretus
follows the opinion of Athanasius and Julian in ascribing the main
guilt to Constantius, but, as Gibbon points out, Eutropius and the
Victors “use the very qualifying expressions;”
“sinente potius quam jubente;” “incertum quo
suasore;” and “vi militum.” Gregory of Nazianzus (Or.
iv. 21) ascribes the preservation of both Julian and his brother Gallus
to the clemency and protection of Constantius. | and Julian, through fear of his cousin, was
enrolled in the order of Readers,597
597 Tertullian (De Præsc. 41) is the earliest authority for the
office of Anagnostes, Lector, or Reader, as a distinct order in the
Church. Henceforward it appears as one of the minor orders, and is
frequently referred to by Cyprian (Epp. 29. 38, etc.). By one of
Justinian’s novels it was directed that no one should be ordained
Reader before the age of eighteen, but previously young boys were
admitted to the office, at the instance of their parents, as
introductory to the higher functions of the sacred ministry. Dict.
Christ. Ant. 1. 80. | and used to
read aloud the sacred books to the people in the assemblies of the
church.
He also built a martyr’s
shrine; but the martyrs, when they beheld his apostasy, refused to
accept the offering; for in consequence of the foundations being, like
their founder’s mind, unstable, the edifice fell down598
598 Sozomen (v. 2) tells us that when the princes were building a
chapel for the martyr Mamas, the work of Gallus stood, but that of
Julian tumbled down. A more famous instance of the care of Gallus for
the christian dead is the story of the translation of the remains of
the martyr Babylas from Antioch to Daphne, referred to by our author
(iii. 6) as well as by Sozomen v. 19, and by Rufinus x. 35. cf. Bishop
Lightfoot, Ap. Fathers II. i. 42. | before it was consecrated. Such were the
boyhood and youth of Julian. At the period, however, when Constantius
was setting out for the West, drawn thither by the war against
Magnentius, he made Gallus, who was gifted with piety which he retained
to the end,599
599 Gallus was made Cæsar by the childless Constantius in 350, in
about his 25th year. “Fuit” says Am. Marcellinus (xiv. 11.
28) “forma conspicuus bona, decente filo corporis, membrorumque
recta compage, flavo capillo et molli, barba licet recens emergente
lanugine tenera.” His government at Antioch was not successful,
and at the instigation of the Eunuch Eusebius he was executed in 354 at
Pola, a town already infamous for the murder of Crispus. | Cæsar of the East. Now Julian
flung away the apprehensions which had previously stood him in good
stead, and, moved by unrighteous confidence, set his heart on seizing
the sceptre of empire. Accordingly, on his way through Greece, he
sought out seers and soothsayers, with a desire of learning if he
should get what his soul longed for. He met with a man who promised to
predict these things, conducted him into one of the idol temples,
introduced him within the shrine, and called upon the demons of deceit.
On their appearing in their wonted aspect terror compelled Julian to
make the sign of the cross upon his brow. They no sooner saw the sign
of the Lord’s victory than they were reminded of their
own rout, and
forthwith fled away. On the magician becoming acquainted with the cause
of their flight he blamed him; but Julian confessed his terror, and
said that he wondered at the power of the cross, for that the demons
could not endure to see its sign and ran away. “Think not
anything of the sort, good sir;” said the magician, “they
were not afraid as you make out, but they went away because they
abominated what you did.” So he tricked the wretched man,
initiated him in the mysteries, and filled him with their
abominations.
So lust of empire stripped the
wretch of all true religion. Nevertheless after attaining the supreme
power he concealed his impiety for a considerable time; for he was
specially apprehensive about the troops who had been instructed in the
principles of true religion, first by the illustrious Constantine who
freed them from their former error and trained them in the ways of
truth, and afterwards by his sons, who confirmed the instruction given
by their father. For if Constantius, led astray by those under whose
influence he lived, did not admit the term ὁμοούσιον, at all events he sincerely accepted the meaning underlying
it, for God the Word he styled true Son, begotten of his Father before
the ages, and those who dared to call Him a creature he openly
renounced, absolutely prohibiting the worship of idols.
I will relate also another of
his noble deeds, as satisfactory proof of his zeal for divine things.
In his campaign against Magnentius he once mustered the whole of his
army, and counselled them to take part all together in the divine
mysteries, “for,” said he, “the end of life is always
uncertain, and that not least in war, when innumerable missiles are
hurled from either side, and swords and battle axes and other weapons
are assailing men, whereby a violent death is brought about. Wherefore
it behoves each man to wear that precious robe which most of all we
need in yonder life hereafter: if there be one here who would not now
put on this garb let him depart hence and go home. I shall not brook to
fight with men in my army who have no part nor lot in our holy
rites.”600
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