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Introduction to Apologia Ad Constantium.
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This address to the
Emperor in defence against certain serious charges (see below) was
completed about the time of the intrusion of George, who arrived at
Alexandria on Feb. 24, 357. The main, or apologetic, part of the letter
was probably composed before George’s actual arrival, in fact at
about the same date as the encyclical letter which immediately
precedes; §§27 and following (see 27, note 2) forming an
added expostulation upon hearing of the general expulsion of Catholic
Bishops, and of the outrages1280
1280 See
Apol. Fug. 6, note 5. | at Alexandria. It
is quite uncertain whether it ever reached the emperor; whether it did
so or not, his attitude toward Athanasius was in no way affected by it.
It had probably been begun with the idea of its being actually
delivered in the presence of Constantius (see §§3, 6, 8, 16
‘I see you smile,’ 22), but, although by a rhetorical
fiction the form of an oral defence is kept up to the end, the
concluding sections (27, 32 init.) shew that any such idea had
been renounced before the Apology was completed. The first 26 sections
are directed to the refutation of four personal charges, quite
different from those of the earlier period, rebutted in the Apology
against the Arians. They were (1) that Athanasius had poisoned the mind
of Constans against his brother (2–5). To this Ath. replies that
he had never spoken to the deceased Augustus except in the presence of
witnesses, and that the history of his own movements when in the West
entirely precluded any such possibility. The third and fourth sections
thus incidentally supply important details for the life of Athanasius.
(2) That he had written letters to the ‘tyrant’ Magnentius
(6–13), a charge absurd in itself, and only to be borne out by
forgery, but also amply disproved by his known affection toward
Constans, the victim of the ‘tyrant.’ (3) That he had
(14–18) used the new church in the ‘Cæsareum,’
before it was completed or dedicated, for the Easter festival of 355
(Tillem. viii. 149). This Athanasius admits, but pleads necessity and
precedent, adding that no disrespect was intended toward the donor, nor
any anticipation of its formal consecration. (4) That he had disobeyed
an imperial order to leave Alexandria and go to Italy (19–26, see
esp. 19, n. 4, and Fest. Ind. xxvi. Constantius is at Milan July
21, 353—Gwatkin p. 292). This charge involves the whole history
of the attempts to dislodge Athanasius from Alexandria, which
culminated in the events of 356. He replies to the charge, that the
summons in question had come in the form of an invitation in reply to
an alleged letter of his own asking leave to go to Italy, a letter
which, as his amanuenses would testify, he had never written. Of the
later visit (355, Fest. Ind. xxvii.) of Diogenes, he merely says
that Diogenes brought neither letter nor orders. Syrianus, he seems to
allow, had verbally ordered him to Italy (Constantius was again at
Milan,—Gwatkin ubi supra) but without written authority.
As against these supposed orders, Ath. had a letter from the emperor
(§23) exhorting him to remain at Alexandria, whatever reports he
might hear. Syrianus had, at the urgent remonstrance of the clergy and
people, consented to refer the matter back to Constantius (24), but
without waiting to do this, he had suddenly made his famous night
attack upon the bishop when holding a vigil service in the Church of
Theonas. Thereupon Athanasius had set out for Italy to lay the matter
before the emperor in person (27 init.). But on reaching, as it
would seem, the Libyan portion of his Province, he was turned back by
the news of the Council of Milan, and the wholesale banishment which
followed. Here we pass to the second part of the Apology. He explains
his return to the desert by the three reports which had reached him:
first, that just mentioned; secondly, that of further military
outrages, about Easter 356 (or possibly those of George in 357, see
Apol. Fug. 6; the clear statements of Fest. Ind. and
Hist. Aceph. compel us1281
1281 See
also note 1, supr., and the discussion Prolegg. ch. ii. §8
(1). | to place these in
the latter year, although on
à priori grounds we might have followed Tillem., Bright,
&c., in placing them in 356), and of the nomination of George;
thirdly, of the letters of Constantius to the Alexandrians and to the
Princes of Abyssinia. He had accordingly gone into hiding, in fear, not
of the Emperor, but of the violence of his officers, and as of bounden
duty to all (32). He concludes with an outspoken denunciation of the
treatment of the virgins, and by an urgent entreaty to Constantius
‘which supposes the imperial listener to be already more than
half appeased’ (Bright). The Apology is the most carefully
written work of Athanasius, and ‘has been justly praised for its
artistic finish and its rhetorical skill’ as well as for the
force and the sustained calmness and dignity of its diction. (So
Montfaucon, Newman, Gwatkin, &c. Fialon, pp. 286, 292, gives some
interesting examples of apparent imitation of Demosthenes in this and
in the two following tracts.) But the violent contrast between its
almost affectionate respectfulness and the chilly reserve of the
Apol. pro Fuga, or still more the furious invective of the Arian
History, is startling, and gives a prima facie justification to
Gibbon, who (vol. 3, p. 87, Smith’s Ed.) charges the great bishop
with simulating respect to the emperor’s face while denouncing
him behind his back. But although the de Fuga (see introd.
there) was written very soon after our present Apology, there is no
ground for making them simultaneous, while its tone (see Ap.
Fug. 26, note 7) is very different from that of the later Hist.
Arian. Doubtless much of the material for the invectives of the
latter was already ancient history when the tract before us was
composed. But Constantius was the Emperor, the first personage in the
Christian world, and Athanasius with the feeling of his age, with the
memory of the solemn assurances he had received from the Emperor
(§§23, 25, 27, Apol. Ar. 51–56, Hist. Ar.
21–24), would ‘hope all things,’ even ‘against
hope,’ so long as there was any apparent chance of influencing
Constantius for good; would hope in spite of all appearances that the
outrages, banishments, and intrigues against the faith of Nicæa
were the work of the officers, the Arian bishops, the eunuchs of the
Court, and not of ‘Augustus’ himself (see Bright, Introd.
to this Apology, pp. lxiii.–lxv.).E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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