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| James, surnamed the Wise. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter I.
James,2573 surnamed the Wise, was bishop of
Nisibis the famous city of the Persians and one of the confessors under
Maximinus the persecutor. He was also one of those who, in the Nicean
council, by their opposition overthrew the Arian perversity of the
Homoousia. That the blessed Jerome mentions this man in his
Chronicle as a man of great virtues and yet does not place him
in his catalogue of writers, will be easily explained if we note that
of the three or four Syrians whom he mentions he says that he read them
translated into the Greek. From this it is evident that, at that
period, he did not know the Syriac language or literature and therefore
he did not know a writer who had not yet been translated into another
language. All his writings are contained in twenty-six books namely
On faith, Against all heresies, On charity towards all, On fasting,
On prayer, On particular affection towards our neighbor, On the
resurrection, On the life after death, On humility, On penitence,2574
2574 On penitence. A few mss. read “patience” for
“penitence” but the only one which the translator has been
able to find which gives both is one at Wolfenbüttel dated 1460,
nor is it in the earliest editions (e.g.) Nürn. Koburger 1495,
Paris 1512). But the later editions (Fabricius, Herding) have
both. | On
satisfaction, On virginity, On the worth2575
2575 worth, mss.
generally; feeling, editions generally. |
of the soul, On circumcision, On the blessed grapes, On the saying
in Isaiah, “the grape cluster shall not be destroyed,” That
Christ is the son of God and consubstantial with the Father, On
chastity, Against the Nations, On the construction of the tabernacle,
On the conversation of the nations, On the Persian kingdom, On the
persecution of the Christians. He composed also a Chronicle
of little interest indeed to the Greeks, but of great reliability in
that it is constructed only on the authority of the Divine Scriptures.
It shuts the mouths of those who, on some daring guess, idly
philosophize concerning the advent of Antichrist, or of our Lord. This
man died in the time of Constantius and according to the direction of
his father Constantine was buried within the walls of Nisibis, for the
protection evidently of the city, and it turned out as Constantine had
expected. For many years after, Julian having entered Nisibis and
grudging either the glory of him who was buried there or the faith of
Constantine, whose family he persecuted on account of this envy,
ordered the remains of the saint to be carried out of the city, and a
few months later, as a matter of public policy, the Emperor Jovian who
succeeded Julian, gave over to the barbarians the city which, with the
adjoining territory, is subject unto the Persian rule until this
day.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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