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| Introduction. The complaint of the Arians against the Nicene Council; their fickleness; they are like Jews; their employment of force instead of reason. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
De Decretis or
Defence of the Nicene Definition
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Chapter I.—Introduction. The complaint of the Arians against
the Nicene Council; their fickleness; they are like Jews; their
employment of force instead of reason.
1. Thou hast done well,
in signifying to me the discussion thou hast had with the advocates of
Arianism, among whom were certain of the friends of Eusebius, as well
as very many of the brethren who hold the doctrine of the Church. I
hailed thy vigilance for the love of Christ, which excellently exposed
the irreligion746
746 εὐσέβεια,
ἀσέβεια,
&c., here translated “religion, irreligion, religious,
&c. &c.” are technical words throughout, being taken from
S. Paul’s text, “Great is the mystery of
godliness,” εὐσεβείας, i.e. orthodoxy. Such too seems to be the meaning of
“godly admonitions,” and “godly judgments,” and
“this godly and well-learned man,” in our Ordination
Services. The Latin translation is “pius,”
“pietas.” It might be in some respects suitably rendered by
“devout” and its derivatives. On its familiar use in the
controversy depends the blasphemous jest of Eudoxius, Arian Bishop of
Constantinople, which was received with loud laughter in the Cathedral,
and remained in esteem down to Socrates’ day, “The Father
is ἀσεβὴς, as
being without devotion, the Son εὐσεβὴς, devout, as paying devotion to the Father.” Socr.
Hist. ii. 43. Hence Arius ends his Letter to Eusebius
with ἀληθως
εὐσέβιε.
Theod. Hist. i. 4. | of their heresy; while I marvelled at
the effrontery which led the Arians, after all the past detection of
unsoundness and futility in their arguments, nay, after the general
conviction of their extreme perverseness, still to complain like the
Jews, “Why did the Fathers at Nicæa use terms not in
Scripture747
747 It
appears that the Arians did not venture to speak disrespectfully of the
definition of the Council till the date (a.d.
352) of this work, when Acacius headed them. Yet the plea here used,
the unscriptural character of its symbol, had been suggested to
Constantius on his accession, a.d. 337, by the
Arian priest, the favourite of Constantia, to whom Constantine had
entrusted his will, Theod. Hist. ii. 3; and Eusebius of
Cæsarea glances at it, at the time of the Council, in the letter
to his Church, which is subjoined to this Treatise. | , ‘Of the essence’ and
‘One in essence?’” Thou then, as a man of learning,
in spite of their subterfuges, didst convict them of talking to no
purpose; and they in devising them were but acting suitably to their
own evil disposition. For they are as variable and fickle in their
sentiments, as chameleons in their colours748
748 Alexander also calls them chameleons, Socr. i. 6. p. 12.
Athanasius so calls the Meletians, Hist. Arian. §79. Cyril
compares them to “the leopard which cannot change his
spots.” Dial. ii. init. t. v. i. Aub., Naz. Or. 28. 2. On
the fickleness of the Arians, vid. infra, §4. &c. Orat.
ii. 40. He says, ad Ep. Æg. 6. that they considered Creeds
as yearly covenants; and de Synod. §3. 4. as State Edicts.
vid. also §14. and passim. “What wonder that they
fight against their fathers, when they fight against themselves?”
§37. | ; and
when exposed they look confused, and when questioned they hesitate, and
then they lose shame, and betake themselves to evasions. And then, when
detected in these, they do not rest till they invent fresh matters
which are not, and, according to the Scripture, ‘imagine a vain
thing749 ’; and all that they may be constant to
their irreligion.
Now such endeavours750
750 ἐπιχείρημα. and so Orat. i. §44. init. but infra.
§25. ἐπιχειρήματα
means more definitely reasonings or
argumentations. | are
nothing else than an obvious token of their defect of reason751
751 ἀλογίας; an
allusion frequent in Athanasius, to the judicial consequence of their
denying the Word of God. Thus, just below, n. 3. “Denying the
Word” or Reason “of God, reason have they none.” Also
Orat. i. §35. fin. §40. init. §62. Orat.
ii. §7. init. Hence he so often calls the Arians “mad”
and “deranged;” e.g. “not aware how ‘mad’
their ‘reason’ is.” Orat. i.
§37. | , and a copying, as I have said, of Jewish
malignity. For the Jews too, when convicted by the Truth, and unable to
confront it, used evasions, such as, ‘What sign doest Thou, that
we may see and believe Thee? What dost Thou work752 ?
though so many signs were given, that they said themselves, ‘What
do we? for this man doeth many miracles753 .’ In truth, dead men were raised, lame
walked, blind saw afresh, lepers were cleansed, and the water became
wine, and five loaves satisfied five thousand, and all wondered and
worshipped the Lord, confessing that in Him were fulfilled the
prophecies, and that He was God the Son of God; all but the Pharisees,
who, though the signs shone brighter than the sun, yet complained
still, as ignorant men, ‘Why dost Thou, being a man, make Thyself God754 ?’ Insensate, and verily blind in
understanding! they ought contrariwise to have said, “Why hast
Thou, being God, become man?” for His works proved Him God, that
they might both worship the goodness of the Father, and admire the
Son’s Economy for our sakes. However, this they did not say; no,
nor liked to witness what He was doing; or they witnessed indeed, for
this they could not help, but they changed their ground of complaint
again, “Why healest Thou the paralytic, why makest Thou the
born-blind to see, on the sabbath day?” But this too was an
excuse, and mere murmuring; for on other days as well did the Lord heal
‘all manner of sickness, and all manner of disease755 ,’ but they complained still according
to their wont, and by calling Him Beelzebub, preferred the suspicion of
Atheism756
756 Or
ungodliness, ἀθεότητος. Thus Aetius was called ὁ ἄθεος, the
ungodly. de Synod. §6; and Arius complains that Alexander
had expelled him and his from Alexandria, ὡς ἀνθρώπους
ἀθέους.
Theodor. Hist. i. 4. “Atheism” and
“Atheist” imply intention, system, and profession, and are
so far too strong a rendering of the Greek. Since Christ was God, to
deny Him was to deny God. The force of the term, however, seems to be,
that, whereas the Son had revealed the “unknown God,” and
destroyed the reign of idols, the denial of the Son was bringing back
idolatry and its attendant spiritual ignorance. Thus contr.
Gent. §29. fin. he speaks of “the Greek idolatry as full
of all Atheism” or ungodliness, and contrasts with it the
knowledge of “the Guide and Framer of the Universe, the
Father’s Word,” “that through Him ‘we may
discern His Father,’ and the Greeks may know ‘how far they
have separated themselves from the truth.’” And
Orat. ii. 43. he classes Arians with the Greeks, who
“though they have the name of God in their mouths, incur the
charge of ‘Atheism,’ because they know not the real and
true God, ‘the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.’”
(vid. also Basil in Eunom. ii. 22.) Shortly afterwards he gives
a further reason for the title, observing that Arianism was worse than
previous heresies, such as Manicheism, inasmuch as the latter denied
the Incarnation, but Arianism tore from God’s substance His
connatural Word, and, as far as its words went, infringed upon the
perfections and being of the first Cause. And so ad Ep. Æg.
§17. fin. he says, that it alone, beyond other heresies,
“has been bold against the Godhead Itself in a mad way
(μανικώτερον, vid. foregoing note), denying that there is a Word, and
that the Father was always Father.” Elsewhere he speaks more
generally, as if Arianism introduced “an Atheism or rather
Judaism ‘against the Scriptures,’ being next door to
Heathenism, so that its disciple cannot be even named Christian; for
all such tenets are ‘contrary to the Scriptures;’”
and he makes this the reason why the Nicene Fathers stopped their ears
and condemned it. ad Ep. Æg. §13. For the same reason
he calls the heathen ἄθεοι, atheistical or
ungodly, “who are arraigned of irreligion by Divine
Scripture.” contr. Gent. §14. vid. εἰδώλων
ἀθεότητα. §46. init. Moreover, he calls the Arian persecution worse
than the pagan ‘cruelties,’ and therefore “a
Babylonian Atheism,” Ep. Encycl. §5. as not allowing
the Catholics the use of prayer and baptism, with a reference to
Dan. vi.
11,
&c. Thus too he calls Constantius atheist, for his treatment of
Hosius; οὔτε
τὸν θεὸν
φοβηθεὶς ὁ
ἄθεος. Hist.
Arian. 45. Another reason for the title seems to have lain in the
idolatrous character of Arian worship ‘on its own shewing,’
viz. as worshipping One whom they yet maintained to be a creature.
[Prolegg. ch. ii. §3 (2)a, sub. fin.] | , to a recantation of their own wickedness.
And though in such sundry times and divers manners the Saviour shewed
His Godhead and preached the Father to all men, nevertheless, as
kicking against the pricks, they contradicted in the language of folly,
and this they did, according to the divine proverb, that by finding
occasions, they might separate themselves from the truth757
757 A
reference to Prov. xviii. 1. which runs in the LXX.
“a man seeketh occasions, when desirous of separating himself
from friends.” | .
2. As then the Jews of that day, for acting thus
wickedly and denying the Lord, were with justice deprived of their laws
and of the promise made to their fathers, so the Arians, Judaizing now,
are, in my judgment, in circumstances like those of Caiaphas and the
contemporary Pharisees. For, perceiving that their heresy is utterly
unreasonable, they invent excuses, “Why was this defined, and not
that?” Yet wonder not if now they practise thus; for in no long
time they will turn to outrage, and next will threaten ‘the band
and the captain758
758 Apparently an allusion to Joh. xviii.
12.
Elsewhere, he speaks of “the chief captain” and “the
governor,” with an allusion to Acts xxiii.
22–24. &c. Hist. Arian. §66. fin. vid. also
§2. Apol. contr. Arian. §8. also §10. and 45.
Orat. ii. §43. Ep. Encycl. §5. Against the use
of violence in religion, vid. Hist. Arian. §33. 67. (Hil.
ad Const. 1. 2.) On the other hand, he observes, that at
Nicæa, “it was not necessity which drove the judges
to” their decision, “but all vindicated the Truth from
deliberate purpose.” ad Ep. Æg. 13. | .’ Forsooth in
these their heterodoxy has its support, as we see; for denying the Word
of God, reason have they none at all, as is equitable. Aware then of
this, I would have made no reply to their interrogations: but, since
thy friendliness759
759 διάθεσις. vid. also Hist. Arian. §45. Orat. ii.
§4. where Parker maintains without reason that it should be
translated, “external condition.” vid. also Theod.
Hist. i. 4. init. | has asked to know the
transactions of the Council, I have without any delay related at once
what then took place, shewing in few words, how destitute Arianism is
of a religious spirit, and how their one business is to frame
evasions.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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