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| Of the heresy of the Messaliani. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter X.—Of the heresy of the Messaliani.
At this
time also arose the heresy of the Messaliani. Those who translate their
name into Greek call them Euchitæ.703
703 The
Syriac name whence comes “Messaliani” or
“Massaliani” means praying people ןילצָמְ, י אלָצְ Dan. vi.
1.
Epiphanius rendered the name εὐχόμενοι, but they were soon generally known in Greek as
εὐχῆται or εὐχῖται |
They have also another
designation which arose naturally from their mode of action. From their
coming under the influence of a certain demon, which they supposed to
be the advent of the Holy Ghost, they are called enthusiasts.704
704 The
form ἐνθουσιαστὴς
is ecclesiastical, and late Greek, but the verb
ἐνθουσιάζειν
occurs at least as early as Æschylus. (Fr. 64
a.) |
Men who have become infected
with this plague to its full extent shun manual labour as iniquitous;
and, giving themselves over to sloth, call the imaginations of their
dreams prophesyings. Of this heresy Dadoes, Sabbas, Adelphius, Hermas,
and Simeones were leaders, and others besides, who did not hold aloof
from the communion of the Church, alleging that neither good nor harm
came of the divine food of which Christ our Master said “Whoso
eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood shall live for ever.”705
705 Compare John vi. 54 and
51;
the citation as before is inexact. |
In their endeavor to hide their
unsoundness they shamelessly deny it even after conviction, and abjure
men whose opinions are in harmony with their own secret
sentiments.
Under these circumstances
Letoius, who was at the head of the church of Melitine,706
706 Melitine (Malatia). metropolis of lesser Armenia; the scene of the
defeat of Chosroes Nushirvan by the Romans a.d. 577. | a man full of divine zeal, saw that many
monasteries, or, shall I rather say, brigands’ caves, had drunk
deep of this disease. He therefore burnt them, and drove out the wolves
from the flock.
In like manner the illustrious
Amphilochius707
707 Archbishop of Iconium, the friend of Basil and first cousin of
Gregory of Nazianzus, B. probably about 344. He is not mentioned after
the beginning of the 5th century. | to whom was committed the charge of
the metropolis of the Lycaonians and who ruled all the people, no
sooner learnt that this pestilence had invaded his diocese than he made
it depart from his borders and freed from its infection the flocks he
fed.
Flavianus,708 also, the far famed high-priest of the
Antiochenes, on learning that these men were living at Edessa and
attacking with their peculiar poison all with whom they came in contact, sent a
company of monks, brought them to Antioch, and in the following manner
convicted them in their denial of their heresy. Their accusers, he
said, were calumniating them, and the witnesses giving false evidence;
and Adelphius, who was a very old man, he accosted with expressions of
kindness, and ordered to take a seat at his side. Then he said
“We, O venerable sir, who have lived to an advanced age, have
more accurate knowledge of human nature, and of the tricks of the
demons who oppose us, and have learnt by experience the character of
the gift of grace. But these younger men have no clear knowledge of
these matters, and cannot brook to listen to spiritual teaching.
Wherefore tell me in what sense you say that the opposing spirit
retreats, and the grace of the Holy Ghost supervenes.” The old
man was won over by these words and gave vent to all his secret venom,
for he said that no benefit accrues to the recipients of Holy Baptism,
and that it is only by earnest prayer that the in-dwelling demon is
driven out, for that every one born into the world derives from his
first father slavery to the demons just as he does his nature; but that
when these are driven away, then come the Holy Ghost giving sensible
and visible signs of His presence, at once freeing the body from the
impulse of the passions and wholly ridding the soul of its inclination
to the worse; with the result that there is no more need for fasting
that restrains the body, nor of teaching or training that bridles it
and instructs it how to walk aright. And not only is the recipient of
this gift liberated from the wanton motions of the body, but also
clearly foresees things to come, and with the eyes beholds the Holy
Trinity.
In this wise the divine
Flavianus dug into the foul fountain-head and succeeded in laying bare
its streams. Then he thus addressed the wretched old man. “O thou
that hast grown old in evil days, thy own mouth convicts thee, not I,
and thou art testified against by thy own lips.” After their
unsoundness had been thus exposed they were expelled from Syria, and
withdrew to Pamphylia, which they filled with their pestilential
doctrine. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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