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| Letter to Rufinianus. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Letter
LV.—Letter to Rufinianus.
To our lord, son, and most desired
fellow-minister Rufinianus4665
4665 This
letter (Migne xxvi. 1180) deals with one of the questions which
occupied the council of 362 (supr. p. 481), and was probably
written not long after, although the contents furnish no precise
terminus ad quem. The personality and see of Rufinianus are
uncertain. The latter must have been distant from Alexandria: the
Coptic documents call him ‘Rufinus the archbishop,’ which
seems to place him outside Egypt. The mention of Eudoxius and Euzoius
sub. fin. possibly points to Syria. I suspect that he is the
‘Lucinianus’ associated with ‘Eusebius’ (of
Vercellæ?) in the little fragment (4) quoted in note 7 below,
which comes from a letter of Ath. dealing with the same subject. The
Coptic ‘Acts’ of Revillout, p. 462 (as referred to
supr. p. 188) give part of a letter of Rufinianus himself, which
shews that the correspondence of which our letter is the principal
relic bore on the Christological decision of the Council of 362:
‘Sound is the idea of perfection for the Divinity, as for the
Economy of the Manhood: Sound is the doctrine of the Divinity in a
single essence. Pure, and wholesome for the souls of the faithful, is
the Confession of the Holy Triad. Perfect then is the Economy of the
Manhood of the Saviour, and Perfect is His Soul also; nothing is
lacking to Him. It is thus that It was manifested to
us.’ | . Athanasius
greeting in the Lord.
You write what is proper for a beloved son to
write to a father: accordingly, I embraced you when you came near me in
writing, most desired Rufinianus. And I, though I might write to you as
a son both in the opening and the middle and the close, refrained, lest
my commendation and testimony should be made known by writing. For you
are my letter, as it is written4666 , known and
read in the heart. That you then are in such case, believe, yea
believe. I address you, and invite you to write. For by doing so you
afford me the highest gratification. But since in an honourable and
church-like spirit, such as becomes your piety, you ask me about those
who were drawn away by necessity but not corrupted by error, and wish
me to write what resolution has been come to about them, whether in
synods or elsewhere; know, most desired Lord, that to begin with4667
4667 Immediately after the death of Constantius. | , when violence was ceased, a synod4668
4668 At
Alexandria, a.d. 362, see above p.
481. | has been held, bishops from foreign parts
being present; while others have been held by our fellow-ministers
resident in Greece, as well as by those in Spain and Gaul4669
4669 These
unnamed councils are all connected with the general return of the
exiled orthodox bishops on Julian’s accession. They are possibly
the same as are referred to again in the opening of the letter to
Epict. below, p. 570. | : and the same decision was come to here and
everywhere, namely, in the case of those who had fallen and been
leaders of impiety, to pardon them upon their repentance, but not to
give them the position of clergy: but in the case of men not deliberate
in impiety, but drawn away by necessity and violence, that they should
not only receive pardon, but should occupy the position of clergy: the
more so, in that they offered a plausible defence, and what had
happened seemed due to a certain special purpose4670 . For they assured us that they had not gone
over to impiety; but lest certain most impious persons should be
elected and ruin the Churches they elected rather to acquiesce in the
violence and to bear the burden, than to lose the people. But in saying
this, they appeared to us to say what was plausible; for they alleged
in excuse Aaron the brother of Moses, who in the wilderness acquiesced
in the people’s transgression; and that he had had as his excuse
the danger of the people returning to Egypt and abiding in idolatry.
For there was reason in the view, that if they remained in the wilderness they might cease from their
impiety: but if they went into Egypt they would become ruined and
increase the impiety in their midst. For this reason, then, they have
been allowed to rank as clergy, those who had been deceived and
suffered violence being pardoned. I give this information to your piety
in the confidence that you will both accept4671
4671 ‘Do you, then, who confess all this, abstain, I pray, from
condemning those who confess the same. But explain the words they use,
nor, ignoring the latter, repel their authors. Nay, entreat and advise
them, that they be willing to come to one mind.’ ad Eus.
Lucin., &c., supr. note 1. |
what has been resolved upon, and not charge those who assembled, as I
have said, with remissness. But be good enough to read it to the clergy
and laity under you, that they may be informed, and may not blame you
for being thus minded about such persons. For it would not be fitting
for me to write, when your piety is able to do so, and to announce our
mind with regard to them, and carry out all that remains to be done.
Thanks to the Lord that filled you4672 with all
utterance and with all knowledge. Let then those that repent openly
anathematise by name the error of Eudoxius and Euzoius. For they
blasphemed still, and wrote that He was a creature, ringleaders of the
Arian heresy. But let them confess the faith confessed by the fathers
at Nicæa, and that they put no other synod before that one. Greet
the brotherhood with you. That with us greets you in the Lord.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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