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| Of Eusebius Bishop of Samosata. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter IV.—Of Eusebius814 Bishop of
Samosata.
Apollinarius after thus failing to get the government of the churches,
continued, for the future, openly to preach his new fangled doctrine,
and constituted himself leader of the heresy. He resided for the most
part at Laodicea; but at Antioch he had already ordained Vitalius, a
man of excellent character, brought up in the apostolic doctrines, but
afterwards tainted with the heresy. Diodorus, whom I have already
mentioned,815
815 Vide
pages 85 and 126. | who in the great storm had saved the
ship of the church from sinking, had been appointed by the divine
Meletius, bishop of Tarsus, and had received the charge of the
Cilicians. The see of Apamea816
816 Ad
Orentem, now Famiah. This John was prefect at Constantinople in 381. A
better known John of Apamea is an ascetic of the 5th c., fragments of
whose works are among the Syriac mss. in the
British Museum. | Meletius
entrusted to John, a man of illustrious birth, more distinguished for
his own high qualities than for those of his forefathers, for he was
conspicuous alike for the beauty of his teaching and of his life. In
the time of the tempest he piloted the assembly of his fellows in the
faith supported by the worthy Stephanus. The latter was however
translated by the divine Meletius to carry on another contest, for on
the arrival of intelligence that Germanicia had been contaminated by
the Eudoxian pest he was sent thither as a physician to ward off the
disease, thoroughly trained as he had been in a complete heathen
education as well as nurtured in the Divine doctrines. He did not
disappoint the expectations formed of him, for by the power
of his spiritual
instruction he turned the wolves into sheep.817
817 This seems to be all that is known of Stephanus of Germanicia (now
Marash or Banicia in Syria) mentioned also as the see of Eudoxius. cf.
Book II. p. 86. |
On the return of the great
Eusebius from exile he ordained Acacius whose fame is great at
Berœa,818
818 Acacius of Berœa (Aleppo) was later an opponent of Chrysostom
and of Cyril, but in his old age of more than 100 in 436. | and at Hierapolis Theodotus,819
819 Theodotus is mentioned also in the Relig. Hist. c. iii. as paying
an Easter visit to the hermit Marcian. Hierapolis, or Bambyce, is now
Bumbouch in the Pachalic of Aleppo. | whose ascetic life is to this day in all
men’s mouths. Eusebius820
820 Similarly mentioned in Relig. Hist. c. iii. Chalcis is in
Cœle Syria. | was moreover
appointed to the see of Chalcis, and Isidorus821
821 Also one of Marcian’s Easter party. As well as these bishops
there were present some men of high rank and position, who were earnest
Christians. When all were seated, Marcian was asked to address them.
“But he fetched a deep sigh and said ‘the God of all day by
day utters his voice by means of the visible world, and in the divine
scriptures discourses with us, urging on us our duties, telling us what
is befitting, terrifying us by threats, winning us by promises, and all
the while we get no good. Marcian turns away this good like the rest of
his kind, and does not care to enjoy its blessing. What could be the
use of his lifting up his voice?’” Relig. Hist. iii.
3. |
to our own city of Cyrus; both admirable men, conspicuous for their
divine zeal.
Meletius is also reported to
have ordained to the pastorate of Edessa, where the godly Barses had
already departed this life, Eulogius,822
822 Vide Book iv. 15. p, 118. | the well
known champion of apostolic doctrines, who had been sent to Antinone
with Protogenes. Eulogius gave Protogenes,823
823 Vide Book iv. 15. p, 118. |
his companion in hard service, the charge of Carræ, a healing
physician for a sick city.
Lastly the divine Eusebius
ordained Maris, Bishop of Doliche,824
824 Doliche is in Commagene. | a little
city at that time infected with the Arian plague. With the intention of
enthroning this Maris, a right worthy man, illustrious for various
virtues, in the episcopal chair, the great Eusebius came to Doliche. As
he was entering into the town a woman thoroughly infected with the
Arian plague let fall a tile from the roof, which crushed in his head
and so wounded him that not long after he departed to the better life.
As he lay a-dying he charged the bystanders not to exact the slightest
penalty from the woman who had done the deed, and bound them under
oaths to obey him. Thus he imitated his own Lord, who of them that
crucified Him said “Father forgive them for they know not what
they do.”825
Thus, too, he followed the
example of Stephanus, his fellow slave, who, after the stones had
stormed upon him, cried aloud, “Lord lay not this sin to their
charge.”826 So died the great Eusebius after
many and various struggles. He had escaped the barbarians in Thrace,
but he did not escape the violence of impious heretics, and by their
means won the martyr’s crown.827
827 The Martyrdom of Eusebius is commemorated in the Eastern Churches
on June 22; in the Roman Kalendar on June 21.
We compare the fate of
Abimelech at Thebez (Judges ix. 53, and 2 Sam. xi. 21) and Pyrrhus, King of
Epirus, at Argos, b.c. 272. “Inter
confertissimos violentissime dimicans, saxo de muris ictus
occiditur.” Justin. xxv. 5. The story is given at greater length
by Plutarch. Vit: Pyrrh: |
These events happened after the
return of the bishops, and now Gratian learnt that Thrace was being
laid waste by the barbarians who had burnt Valens, so he left Italy and
proceeded to Pannonia. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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