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| Chapter I. The Life of Cassian. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter I.
The Life of Cassian.
“Cassianus natione
Scytha” is the description given by Gennadius530
530 Gennadius Catalogus, c.
lxii. |
of the writer whose works are now for the first time translated into
English. In spite, however, of the precision of this statement,
considerable doubt hangs over Cassian’s nationality, and it is
hard to believe that he was in reality a Scythian. Not only is his
language and style free from all trace of barbarism, but as a boy he
certainly received a liberal education; for in his Conferences he
laments that the exertions of his tutor and his own attention to
continual study had so weakened him that his mind was so filled with
songs of the poets that even at the hour of prayer it was thinking of
those trifling fables and stories of battles with which it had from
earliest infancy been stored; “and,” he adds, “when
singing Psalms or asking forgiveness of sins, some wanton recollection
of the poems intrudes itself or the image of heroes fighting presents
itself before the eyes; and an imagination of such phantoms is always
haunting me.”531 Further evidence of
the character of his education is also supplied by the fact that in his
work on the Incarnation against Nestorius he manifests an acquaintance
not only with the works of earlier Christian Fathers, but also with
those of such writers as Cicero and Persius.532
These considerations are sufficient to make us
hesitate before accepting the statement of Gennadius in what would at
first sight be its natural meaning; although from the fact of his
connection with Marseilles, where so much of Cassian’s life was
spent, as well as the early date at which he wrote (a.d. 495), it is dangerous to reject his authority
altogether. It is, however, possible that the term “Scytha”
is not really intended to denote a Scythian, but to refer to the desert
of Scete, or Scitis,533
533 Σκιαθίς, and
Σκιαθική (v. l.
Σκιθιακή)
χώρα are the forms of the
name given by Ptolemy. The Greek Fathers speak of the district as
Σκήτις,
while in Latin writers the name appears as Scythia, or Scythis; and,
though the printed texts of Cassian give the form as Scitium, heremus
Scitii, and heremus Scitiotica, yet we learn from Petschenig that in
the mss. of his works it is not seldom written
as Scythium. It should be added that in the text of Gennadius the
reading is not absolutely free from doubt, as there is some slight
authority for reading “natus Serta.” | in Egypt, where
Cassian passed many years of his life, and with which his fame was
closely associated; and, therefore, without going to the length of
rejecting the authority of Gennadius altogether, we are free to look
for some other country as the birthplace of our author. But little
light is thrown on this subject by the statements of other writers.
Photius534
534 Bibliotheca, cod.
cxcvii. | (a.d. 800) calls
him ῾Ρωμαῖος,
which need mean no more than born within the Roman Empire; while
Honorius of Autun (a.d. 1130) speaks of him as
Afer. The last-mentioned writer is, however, of too late a date to be
of any authority; and it is just possible that the term
“Afer,” like the “Scytha” of Gennadius, may be
owing to his lengthy residence in Egypt. 535
535 Dr. Gregory
Smith (Dictionary of Christian Biography, art. Cassian) thinks
that ‘Cassianus’ possibly points to Casius, a small town in
Syria; but, apart from the fact that the name was not uncommon in the
West as well as in the East, the description of his home as being in a
country where there were no monasteries is quite fatal to this
idea. | In
the writings of Cassian himself there is nothing to enable us to
identify the country of his birth with certainty; but, in describing
the situation of his ancestral home, he speaks of the delightful
pleasantness of the neighbourhood, and the recesses of the woods, which
would not only delight the heart of a monk but would also furnish him
with a plentiful supply of food;536 while in a
later passage he says that in his own country it was impossible to find
any one who had adopted the monastic life.537
From these notices, compared with a passage in the Preface to the
Institutes, where
the
diocese of Apta Julia in Gallia Narbonensis is spoken of as still
without monasteries, some ground is given for the conjecture that
Cassian was really a native of Gaul, whither he returned in mature age
after his wanderings were ended, and where most of his friends of whom
we have any knowledge were settled. On the whole, then, it appears to
the present writer to be the most probable view that Cassian was of
Western origin, and, perhaps, a native of Provence, although it must be
freely acknowledged that it is impossible to speak with certainty on
this subject.538
538 No difficulty need
be felt on the score of his thorough knowledge of Greek, for this could
easily be accounted for by his education at Bethlehem, and prolonged
residence in the East. |
Once more: not only is there this doubt about his
nationality, but questions have also been raised concerning his
original name. Gennadius and Cassiodorus539
539 De Div. Lect. Pref.,
and c. xxix. |
speak of him simply as Cassianus. In his own writings he represents
himself as addressed by the monks in Egypt more than once by the name
of John.540
540 Conference XIV. ix.;
Institute V. xxxv. | Prosper of Aquitaine
(his contemporary and antagonist) combines both names, and speaks of
him as “Joannes cognomento Cassianus.”541
In the titles of the majority of the mss. of
his own writing he is merely “Cassianus,” though in one
case the work is entitled “Beatissimi Joannis qui et
Cassiani.”542
542 Parisinus.
Nouv. acquis. Lat. 260, of the eighth or ninth
century. | Are we, then, with
the writer of the last-mentioned ms., to
suppose that the names John and Cassian are alternatives; or, with
Prosper, that John was his nomen and Cassianus his cognomen, or, more
strictly, agnomen? The former view is, perhaps, the more probable, as
he may well have taken the name of John at his baptism or at his
admission to the monastic life. The theory which has sometimes been
advocated—that he received it at his ordination by S. John
Chrysostom—falls to the ground when we notice that he represents
himself as called John during his residence in Egypt, several years
before his ordination and intercourse with S. Chrysostom.
To pass now from the question of his name and
nationality to the narrative of Cassian’s life. Various
considerations point to the date of his birth as about the year 360. Of
his family we know nothing, except that in one passage of his writings
he incidentally makes mention of a sister;543
543 Institutes XI.
xviii. |
while the language which he uses of his parents would imply that they
were well-to-do and pious.544 As we have already
seen, he received a liberal education as a boy, but while still young
forsook the world, and was received, together with his friend Germanus,
into a monastery at Bethlehem,545
545 See the Institutes III.
iv.; IV. xix.–xxi., xxxi. Conferences I. i.; XI. i. v.; XIX. i.;
XX. i. The date is too early for this to have been S. Jerome’s
famous monastery, as that father only settled at Bethlehem towards the
close of 386, by which time Cassian himself must have been already in
Egypt; nor does he anywhere in his writings make any allusion to Jerome
as his teacher, although he mentions him with great respect in his work
on the Incarnation, Book VII. c. xxvi. | where he spent
several years and became thoroughly familiar with the customs and
traditions of the monasteries of Syria. Eager, however, to make further
progress in the perfect life, the two friends finally determined to
visit Egypt,546
546 Conference XI.
i. A good account of Cassian’s visits to Egypt is given in
Fleury’s Ecclesiastical History, Book XX., c.
iii.–vii. | where, as it was
the country in which the monastic life originated, the most famous
monasteries existed, and the most illustrious Anchorites were to be
found. Permission to undertake the journey was sought and obtained from
their superiors, a pledge being required of a speedy return when the
object of their visit was gained.547 Sailing from
some port of Syria, perhaps Joppa, the friends arrived at Thennesus, a
town at the mouth of the Tanitic branch of the Nile, near Lake
Menzaleh. Here they fell in with a celebrated Anchorite named
Archebius, bishop of the neighbouring town of Panephysis, who had come
to Thennesus on business connected with the election of a bishop. He,
on hearing the object of their visit to Egypt, at once offered them an
introduction to some celebrated Anchorites in his own neighbourhood.
The offer was gladly accepted, and under his guidance they made their
way through a dreary district of salt marshes, many of the villages
being in ruins and deserted by their inhabitants owing to the floods
which had inundated the country and turned the rising grounds into
islands, “and thus afforded the desired solitudes to the holy
Anchorites, among whom three old men—Chæremon, Nesteros, and
Joseph—were famed as the Anchorites of the longest
standing.”548
548 Conference XI.
i.–iii., and compare VII. xxvi. for another description of the
same district. | Archebius brought
them first to Chæremon, who had already passed his hundredth year,
and was so far bent with age and constant prayer that he could no
longer walk upright, but crawled upon his hands and knees. The
saint’s hesitation at allowing himself to be thus interviewed by
strangers was soon overcome, and he finally
gratified their curiosity by delivering
three discourses, on the subjects of Perfection, Chastity, and the
Protection of God.549
549 Conferences XI., XII.,
XIII. | From the cell of
Chæremon Cassian and his companion proceeded to that of Abbot
Nesteros, who honoured them with two discourses, on Spiritual
Knowledge, and Divine Gifts;550
550 Conferences XIV., XV. | and from him they
repaired to Joseph, who belonged to a noble family, and before his
renunciation of the world had been “primarius” of his
native city, Thmuis. He was naturally better educated than the others,
and was able to converse with them in Greek instead of being obliged to
have recourse to the help of an interpreter, as had been the case with
Chæremon and Nesteros.551 His first question
referred to the relationship between Cassian and Germanus: were they
brothers? And their reply—that the brotherhood was spiritual and
not carnal—furnished the old man with a text for his first
discourse, which was on Friendship, and which was followed up on the
next day by one on the Obligation of Promises,552
552 Conferences XVI.,
XVII. |
called forth by the perplexity in which the travellers found themselves
owing to their promise to return to Bethlehem,—a promise which
they were loth to break, and which yet they could not fulfil without
losing a grand opportunity of making progress in the spiritual life. In
their difficulty they consulted Joseph; and, fortified by his authority
and advice, they determined to break the letter of their promise and
make a longer stay in Egypt, where they accordingly remained for seven
years in spite of their brethren at Bethlehem, whose displeasure at
their conduct, Cassian tells us, was not removed by their frequent
letters home.553
553 See Conference XVII.
i.–v. and xxx. |
It was while Cassian and his fellow-traveller were
still in the neighbourhood of Panephysis that these energetic
precursors of the modern “interviewers” paid a visit to
Abbot Pinufius, a priest who presided over a large monastery. This man
was an old friend of theirs, whose acquaintance they had previously
made at Bethlehem, whither (after an ineffectual attempt to conceal
himself in a monastery in the island of Tabenna) he had fled in order
to escape the responsibilities of his office. There he had been
received as a novice, and had been assigned by the abbot as an inmate
of Cassian’s cell, until he was recognized by a visitor from
Egypt and brought back in triumph to his own monastery.554
554 Conference XX. i., ii.
The story is also told in the Institutes, IV. xxx. | To him, therefore, Cassian and Germanus made
their way; and by him they were warmly welcomed; the old man repaying
their former hospitality by giving them quarters in his own cell. While
staying in this monastery they were so fortunate as to be present at
the admission of a novice, and heard the charge which Pinufius made to
the new-comer on the occasion;555
555 Institute V.
xxxii.–xlii. | and afterwards the
abbot favoured them with a discourse “on the end of penitence and
the marks of satisfaction.”556 After this,
resisting his pressing invitation to remain with him in the monastery,
they proceeded once more on their travels, and, crossing the river,
came to Diolcos, a town hard by the Sebennytic mouth of the Nile. Here
was a barren tract of land between the river and the sea, rendered
unfit for cultivation by the saltness of the soil and the dryness of
the sand. It was, therefore, eagerly seized upon by the monks, who
congregated here in great numbers in spite of the absence of water; the
river from which it had to be fetched being some three miles
distant.557 In this
neighbourhood they made the acquaintance of Abbot Piamun, a most
celebrated Anchorite, who explained to them with great care the
characteristics of the three kinds of monks; viz., the Cœnobites,
the Anchorites, and the Sarabaites.558
558 Conference XVIII. On
the Sarabaites, see the note on c. vii. | This
discourse had the effect of exciting their desire more keenly than ever
for the Anchorites’ life in preference to that of the
Cœnobite,—a desire which was afterwards confirmed by what
they saw and heard in the desert of Scete. They next visited a large
monastery in the same neighbourhood, which was governed by the Abbot
Paul, and which ordinarily accommodated two hundred monks, but was at
that moment filled with a much larger number, who had come from the
surrounding monasteries to celebrate the “depositio” of the
late abbot.559 Here they met a
certain Abbot John, whose humility had led him to give up the life of
an Anchorite for that of a Cœnobite, in order that he might have
the opportunity of practising the virtues of obedience and subjection,
which seemed out of the reach of the solitary. He was accordingly well
qualified to speak of the subject which he selected for his discourse;
viz., the aims of the Anchorite and Cœnobite life.560 Another well-known abbot, whose acquaintance
they now made, was Theonas, who, when quite a young man, had been
married by his parents, and later on, on failing to obtain the consent
of his wife to a separation, in
order that they might devote themselves
to the monastic life, had deserted her and fled away into a monastery,
where after a time he had been promoted to the office of almoner. From
him they heard a discourse on the relaxation of the fast during
Eastertide and Pentecost,561 and, later on, one
concerning Nocturnal Illusions,562 and another on
Sinlessness.563 By these various
discourses the two friends were rendered more desirous than ever of
adopting the Anchorite life, and less inclined than before to return to
the subjection of the monastery at Bethlehem. A far better course
seemed to them to return to their own home, probably (as we have seen)
in Gaul, where they would be free to practice what austerities they
pleased without let or hindrance.564 In their
perplexity they consulted Abbot Abraham, who threw cold water on their
plan in a discourse on Mortification,565 which was
entirely successful in persuading them to relinquish their half-formed
intention. They, therefore, remained in Egypt for some years longer;
and it is to the time of their stay in the neighbourhood of Diolcos
that their acquaintance with Abbot Archebius must be assigned. This
man, so Cassian tells us,566
566 Institute V.
xxxvi. sq. | having discovered
their desire to make some stay in the place, offered them the use of
his cell, pretending that he was about to go off on a journey. They
gladly accepted his offer. He went away for a few days, collected
materials, and then returned and proceeded to build a new cell for
himself. Shortly afterwards some more brethren came. He at once gave up
to them his newly built cell, and once more set to work to build
another for himself.
It is difficult to determine whether a stay in the
desert of Scete was comprised in the seven years which the two friends
now spent in Egypt, or whether they visited it for the first time
during their second tour, after their return from Bethlehem. On the one
hand, the language used in Conference XVIII. cc. i. and xvi. would
almost suggest that they made their way into this remote district
during their first sojourn in Egypt; and, on the other hand, that
employed in Conference I. c. i. might imply a distinct journey to Egypt
for the sake of visiting this region: and in XVII. xxx. Cassian
distinctly asserts that they did visit Scete after their return
to Bethlehem in fulfilment of their promise. On the whole, it appears
the more natural view to suppose that their first tour was not extended
beyond the Delta, more distant expeditions being reserved for a future
occasion. Adopting, then, this view, we follow the travellers, after a
seven years’ absence, back to the monastery at Bethlehem, where
they managed to pacify the irate brethren, and, strange to say,
obtained leave to return to Egypt a second time.567
567 Conference XVII.
xxx. | On this occasion they penetrated farther
into the country than they had previously done. The region which they
now visited was the desert of Scete, or Scitis; that is, the southern
part of the famous Nitrian Valley, a name which is well known to all
students from the rich treasure of Syrian mss.
brought home from thence by the Hon. Robert Curzon and Archdeacon
Tattam now more than forty years ago. The district lies “to the
northwest of Cairo, three days’ journey in the Libyan
desert,”568
568 Butler’s
Coptic Churches, Vol. I., p. 287. | and gains its
name of Nitria from the salt lakes which still furnish abundance of
nitre, which has been worked for fully two thousand years. The valley
has some claims to be considered the original home of monasticism. Some
have thought that a colony of Therapeutæ was settled here in the
earliest days; and hither S. Frontonius is said to have retired with
seventy brethren, to lead the life of ascetics, about the middle of the
second century.569
569 Rosweyd,
Vitæ Patrum; and the Bollandist Acta Sanctorum, 14
April, Vol. II., 201–3. | Less doubtful is
the fact that S. Ammon, a contemporary and friend of S. Antony,
organized the monastic system here in the fourth century, and
“filled the same place in lower Egypt as Antony in the
Thebaid.”570
570 Dictionary of
Christian Biography, art. Ammon; cf. Rufinus, Hist.: Monach, xxx.;
and Palladius, Hist.: Lausiaca, viii. | Towards the close of
the fourth century the valley was crowded with cells and monasteries.
Rufinus, who visited it about 372, mentions fifty monasteries;571
571 Hist., Monach,
c. xxi. | and the same number is given by Sozomen,
who says that “some were inhabited by monks who live together in
society, others by monks who have adopted a solitary mode of
existence.”572
572 Sozomen, H.E. VI.
xxxi. | About twenty years
later Palladius passed a considerable time here, and reckons the total
number of monks and ascetics at five thousand.573
573 Hist., Laus.,
c. vii. |
They were also visited by S. Jerome about the same time, and various
details of the life of the monks are given by him in his
Epistles.574
574 Epp.: ad Eustochium,
ad Rustic. | Some few monks
still linger on to the present day to keep up the traditions of nearly
eighteen centuries. They were visited (among others) by the Hon. Robert
Curzon in 1833; and an interesting account of them is given by him in
his volume on “the monasteries of the Levant:”575
575 Part. I., cc. vii.,
viii. | but the latest and best account of them is
that given by Mr. A. J. Butler, who
succeeded in gaining permission to visit
them in 1883, and has described his journey in his excellent work on
“the ancient Coptic Churches of Egypt.”576
576 The Ancient Coptic
Churches of Egypt, by Alfred J. Butler. 2 vols. (Oxford, 1884). | Four monasteries alone remain; known as
Dair Abu Makâr, Dair Anba Bishôi, Dair es Sûrianî,
and Dair al Baramûs; but the ruins of many others may still be
traced in the desert tracts on the west side of the Natron lakes, and
the valley of the waterless river which at some very remote period is
supposed to have formed the bed of one of the branches of the
Nile.”577 The monasteries
are all built on the same general plan, so that, as Mr. Butler tells
us, a description of one will more or less accurately describe the
others. Dair Abu Makâr (the monastery of S. Macarius), the first
which he visited, which lies strictly within the desert of Scete, is
spoken of as “a veritable fortress, standing about one-hundred
and fifty yards square, with blind, lofty walls rising sheer out of the
sand.” “Each monastery has also, either detached or not, a
large keep, or tower, standing four-square, and approached only by a
draw-bridge. The tower contains the library, store-rooms for the
vestments and sacred vessels, cellars for oil and corn, and many
strange holes and hiding-places of the monks in the last resort, if
their citadel should be taken by the enemy. Within the monastery is
enclosed one principal and one or two smaller court-yards, around which
stand the cells of the monks, domestic buildings, such as the
mill-room, the oven, the refectory, and the like, and the
churches.”578
578 Butler, Vol. I.,
pp. 295, 6, 7. | The outward
aspect can have changed but little since the fourth century. The
buildings are perhaps stronger and more adapted to resist hostile
attacks, but the general plan is probably identical with that adopted
in the earliest monasteries erected in this remote region. Such, then,
was the district to which Cassian and Germanus now made their way. Here
they first sought and obtained an interview with Abbot Moses, who had
formerly dwelt in the Thebaid near S. Antony, and was now living at a
spot in the desert of Scete known as Calamus,579
579 Conference II. ii.;
III. v. |
and was famous not only for practical goodness but also for
contemplative excellence. After much persuasion he yielded to their
entreaties and discoursed to them “on the goal or aim of a
monk,”580 and, on the
following day, on Discretion.581 They next visited
Abbot Paphnutius, or “the Buffalo,” as he was named, from
his love of solitude. He was an aged priest who had lived for years the
life of an Anchorite, only leaving his cell for the purpose of going to
the church, which was five miles off, on Saturday and Sunday, and
returning with a large bucket of water on his shoulders to last him for
the week. From him they heard of the “three kinds of
renunciation” necessary for a monk.582
They also visited his disciple Daniel, who had been ordained priest
through the instrumentality of Paphnutius, but was so humble that he
would never perform priestly functions in the presence of his master.
The subject of his discourse in answer to the inquiry of the two
friends was “the lust of the flesh and the
spirit.”583 The next ascetic
interviewed was Serapion, who spoke of the “eight principal
faults” to which a monk was exposed; viz., gluttony, fornication,
covetousness, anger, dejection, “accidie,” vain glory, and
pride.584 After this they proceeded on a journey of
some eighty miles to Cellæ, a place that lay between the desert of
Scete (properly so called) and the Nitrian Valley, in order to consult
Abbot Theodore on a difficulty which the recent massacre of a number of
monks in Palestine by the Saracens had brought forcibly before them;
viz., why was it that men of such illustrious merits and so great
virtues should be slain by robbers, and why should God permit so great
a crime to be committed? The difficulty was solved by Abbot Theodore in
a discourse on “the death of the saints;”585 and thus the journey was not taken in
vain. Two other celebrated monks were also visited by the friends,
whose discourses are recorded by Cassian: viz., Abbot Serenus, who
spoke of “Inconstancy of mind, and Spiritual
wickedness,”586 as well as of the
nature of evil spirits, in a Conference on
“Principalities;”587 and Abbot Isaac,
who delivered two discourses on the subject of Prayer.588 A few days after the first of these was
delivered there arrived in the desert the “festal letters”
of Theophilus, Bishop of Alexandria, in which he denounced the heresy
of the Anthropomorphites. This caused a great commotion among the monks
of Scete; and Abbot Paphnutius, who presided over the monastery where
Cassian was staying, was the only one who would allow the letters to be
publicly read in the congregation. Finally, however, owing to the
conciliatory firmness of Paphnutius, the great body of the monks was
won over to a sounder and less materialistic view of the nature of the
Godhead than had hitherto been prevalent among them.589
589 See Conference X.
cc. i–iii. |
These are all
the details that can be gathered from Cassian’s writings of his
stay in Scete, further than which he does not appear to have
penetrated, as, when he speaks of the Thebaid and the monasteries
there, it is only from hearsay and not from personal knowledge,
although his original intention had certainly been to visit this
district among others.590
590 See Conference XI.
i. |
In considering the date of Cassian’s visit
to Egypt there are various indications to guide us. In Conference
XVIII. c. xiv., S. Athanasius is spoken of by Abbot Piamun as “of
blessed memory;” and the language used of the Emperor Valens in
c. vii. is such as to imply that he was already dead. The former died
in 373, and the latter in 378. Again, in Conference XXIV. c. xxvi.
Abbot Abraham is made to speak of John of Lycopolis as so famous that
he was consulted by the very lords of creation, who sought his advice,
and entrusted to his prayers and merits the crown of their empire and
the fortunes of war. These expressions evidently allude to John’s
announcement to Theodosius of his victory over Maxentius in 388, and
his success against Eugenius in 395.591
591 Compare the Institutes,
IV. xxiii. | If they stood
alone, we could scarcely rely on these indications of date with any
great confidence because the Conferences were not written till many
years later, and it is impossible to determine with certainty how far
they really represent the discourses actually spoken by the Egyptian
Fathers, or how far they are the ideal compositions of Cassian himself.
But, as we have seen, it is certain that Cassian was actually in Egypt
at the time of the Anthropomorphite controversy raised by the letters
of Theophilus in 399; and, as the other notices of events previously
mentioned coincide very fairly with this, we cannot be far wrong in
placing the two visits to Egypt between 380 and 400. About the
last-named date Cassian must have finally left the country; and we next
hear of him in Constantinople, where he was ordained deacon by S.
Chrysostom,592 and, together with
his friend Germanus, put in charge of the treasury, the only part of
the Cathedral which escaped the flames in the terrible conflagration of
404. Thus Cassian was a witness of all the troublous scenes which
attended the persecution of S. Chrysostom, whose side he warmly
espoused in the controversy which rent the East asunder. And when the
Saint was violently deposed and removed from Constantinople, the two
friends—Germanus, who was by this time raised to the priesthood,
and Cassian, who was still in deacon’s orders—were chosen
as the bearers of a letter to Pope Innocent I. from the clergy who
adhered to Chrysostom, detailing the scandalous scenes that had taken
place, and the trials to which they had been exposed.593
593 Palladius Dial. iii.;
Sozomen, H. E. VIII. xxvi. | Of the length of Cassian’s stay in
Rome we have no information, but it is likely that it was of some
considerable duration; and it may have been at this time that he was
ordained priest by Innocent. Possibly, also, it was now that he made
the acquaintance of one who was then quite young, but was destined
afterwards to become famous as Pope Leo the Great; for some years
afterwards (a.d. 430) it was at the request of
Leo, then Archdeacon of Rome, that Cassian wrote his work on the
Incarnation against Nestorius. Leaving Rome, Cassian is next found in
Gaul,594
594 It is highly
precarious to infer from the language used in the Institutes, III. that
Cassian visited Mesopotamia before settling in Gaul. His departure from
Rome may perhaps have been occasioned by the Gothic invasion of Italy
and Alaric’s sieges of Rome, 408–410. | which (if we are right in the supposition
that it was his birthplace) he must have quitted when scarcely more
than a child. When he left it monasticism was a thing almost if not
quite unknown there, but during his absence in the East a few
monasteries had been founded in the district of the Loire by S. Martin
and S. Hilary of Poictiers. Ligugé was founded shortly after 360,
and Marmoutier rather later, after 371; and about the time of his
return similar institutions were beginning to spring up in Provence. In
410 S. Honoratus founded the monastery which will ever be associated
with his name, in the island of Lérins, and, in the eloquent words
of the historian of the monks of the West, “opened the arms of
his love to the sons of all countries who desired to love Christ. A
multitude of disciples of all nations joined him. The West could no
longer envy the East; and shortly that retreat, destined in the
intentions of its founder to renew upon the coasts of Provence the
austerities of the Thebaid, became a celebrated school of theology and
Christian philosophy, a citadel inaccessible to the waves of barbarian
invasion, an asylum for literature and science, which had fled from
Italy invaded by the Goths;—in short, a nursery of bishops and
saints, who were destined to spread over the whole of Gaul the
knowledge of the gospel and the glory of Lérins.”595
595
Montalembert’s Monks of the West, Vol. I. p. 464
(Eng. Translation). The names of Hilary of Arles, Vincent of
Lérins, Salvian, Eucherius of Lyons, Lupus of Troyes, and
Cæsarius of Arles, are alone sufficient to render the monastery of
Lérins illustrious in the annals of the Church of Gaul. |
It must have been about the same time—a little
earlier or a little later—that Cassian settled at Marseilles; and
there, “in the midst of those great forests which had supplied
the
Phœnician navy,
which in the time of Cæsar reached as far as the sea-coast, and
the mysterious obscurity of which had so terrified the Roman soldiers
that the conqueror, to embolden them, had himself taken an axe and
struck down an old oak,”596 two monasteries
were now established,—one for men, built it is said over the tomb
of S. Victor, a martyr in the persecution of Diocletian,597
597 The Acts of S.
Victor’s martyrdom given by Ruinart, Acta Sincera, p. 225,
have been attributed by Tillemont and others to Cassian, but without
sufficient reason. | and the other for women. Cassian’s
long residence in the East and his intimate knowledge of the monastic
system in vogue in Egypt made him at once looked up to as an authority,
and practically as the head of the movement which was so rapidly taking
root in Provence; and, although his fame has been overshadowed by that
of the greatest of Western monks, S. Benedict of Nursia, yet his is
really the credit of being, not indeed the actual founder, but the
first organizer and systematizer, of Western monachism: and it is hoped
that the copious illustrations from the Benedictine rule given in the
notes to the first four books of the Institutes will serve to show how
much the founder of the greatest order in the West was really indebted
to his less-known predecessor. “He brought to bear upon the
organization of Gallic monasteries lessons learnt in the East. Although
S. Martin and others were before him, yet his life must be regarded as
a new departure for monasticism in the land. The religious communities
of S. Martin and S. Victricius in the centre of France were doubtless
rudimentary and half-developed in discipline when compared with that
established by Cassian at Marseilles, and with the many others which
speedily arose modelled upon his elaborate rules.”598
598 The Church in
Roman Gaul, by R. Travers Smith, p. 245. | The high estimation in which his work was
held throughout the Middle Ages is shown not only by the immense number
of mss. of the Institutes and Conferences
which still remain scattered throughout the libraries of Europe, but
also by the recommendation of them by Cassiodorus, and by S. Benedict
himself, who enjoins that the Conferences should be read daily by the
monks of his order.
At Marseilles, then, Cassian settled; and here it
was that he wrote his three great works,—the Institutes, the
Conferences, and On the Incarnation against Nestorius; the two former
being written for the express purpose of encouraging and developing the
monastic life. Of these the Institutes was the earliest, being composed
in “twelve books on the institutes of the monasteries and the
remedies for the eight principal faults,”599
599 This is the title
which Cassian himself gives to the work in his Preface to the
Conferences. | at
the request of Castor, Bishop of Apta Julia, some forty miles due north
of Marseilles, who was desirous of introducing the monastic life into
his diocese, where it was still a thing unknown.600
As Castor died in 426,601
601 Castor is
commemorated on the twenty-first of September. See the Bollandist
Acta Sanctorum, Sept. VI. 249. | and the work is
dedicated to him, it must have been written some time between the years
419 and 426. When it was first undertaken Cassian’s design
already was to follow it up by a second treatise containing the
Conferences of the Fathers, to which he several times alludes in the
Institutes as a forthcoming work,602
602 See the Institutes II.
i., ix., xviii.; V. iv. | and which, like
the companion volume, was undertaken at Castor’s instigation.
But, before even the first part of it was ready for publication, the
Bishop of Apta was dead; and thus, to Cassian’s sorrow, he was
unable to dedicate it to him, as he had hoped to do. He therefore
dedicated Conferences I.–X. (the first portion of the work) to
Leontius, Bishop (probably) of Fréjus, and Helladius, who is
termed “frater” in the Preface to this work, though, as we
see from the Preface to Conference XVIII., he was afterwards raised to
the episcopate.603
603 With Papa
Leonti et Sancte frater Helladi, in the Preface to Conference I.,
compare beatissimis Episcopis Helladio ac Leontio, in the
Preface to Conference XVIII. |
This portion of Cassian’s work must have been
completed shortly after the death of Castor in 426. It was speedily
followed by Part II., containing Conferences XI. to XVII. This is
dedicated to Honoratus and Eucherius, who are styled
“fratres.” Eucherius did not become Bishop of Lyons till
434; but, as Honoratus was raised to the see of Arles in 426, the
volume must have been published not later than that year, or he would
have been termed “Episcopus,” as he is in the Preface to
Conference XVIII., instead of “frater.”
The third and last part of the work, containing
Conferences XVIII. to XXIV., is dedicated to Jovinian, Minervius,
Leontius, and Theodore, who are collectively styled
“fratres.” Leontius must, therefore, be a different person
from the bishop to whom Conferences I.–X. were dedicated; and
nothing further is known of him, or of Minervius and Jovinian. Theodore
was afterwards raised to the Episcopate, and succeeded Leontius in the
see of Fréjus in 432. This third part of Cassian’s work was
ready before the death of Honoratus, Bishop of
Arles, who is spoken of in the Preface as if
still living; and, therefore, its publication cannot be later than 428,
as Honoratus died in January, 429.
Thus the whole work was completed between the
years 426 and 428; and now Cassian, who was growing old, was desirous
of rest, feeling as if his life’s work was nearly over.604 But the repose which he sought was not to be
granted to him, for the remaining years of his life were troubled by
two controversies,—the Nestorian, and the Pelagian,—or,
rather, its offshoot, the Semi-Pelagian. Into the history of the former
of these there is no need to enter here in detail. It broke out at
Constantinople, where Nestorius had become bishop in succession to
Sisinnius, in 428. The immediate occasion which gave rise to the
controversy was a sermon by Anastasius, the Bishop’s chaplain, in
which he inveighed against the title Theotocos, as given to the Blessed
Virgin Mary. This at once created a great sensation, as Nestorius
warmly supported his chaplain, and proceeded to develop the heresy
connected with his name, in a course of sermons. News of the
controversy was brought to Egypt, and Cyril of Alexandria at once
entered into the fray. After some correspondence between the two
bishops, both parties endeavoured to gain the adherence of the Church
of Rome early in the year 430; and now it was that Cassian became mixed
up with the dispute. Greek learning was evidently at a low ebb in the
Roman Church at this time;605
605 See the Epistle of
Celestine to Nestorius in Mansi IV. 1026, in which he apologizes for
delay by saying that the letter and other documents sent by Nestorius
had had to be translated into Latin. | and it was, perhaps,
partly owing to Cassian’s familiar acquaintance with this
language, as well as owing to his connexion with Constantinople, where
the trouble had now arisen, that Celestine’s Archdeacon Leo
turned to him at this crisis for help. Anyhow, whatever was the reason,
an earnest appeal from Rome reached him, begging him to write a
refutation of the new heresy. After some hesitation he consented, and
the result of his labours is seen in the seven books on the Incarnation
against Nestorius. The work was evidently done in haste, and published
in 430, before the Council of Ephesus (for Cassian speaks of Nestorius
throughout as still Bishop of Constantinople), and, judging from the
way in which Augustine is spoken of in VII. xxvii., before the death of
that Father, which took place in August, 430. A great part of the work
is occupied with Scripture proof of our Lord’s Divinity and unity
of Person; but, taken as a whole, the treatise is distinctly of less
value than Cassian’s earlier writings, and betrays the haste in
which it was composed by the occasional use of inaccurate language on
the subject of the Incarnation, and of terms and phrases which the
mature judgment of the Church has rejected. But the writer’s keen
penetration is seen by the quickness with which he connects the new
heresy with the teaching of Pelagius, the connecting link between the
two being found in the errors of Leporius of Trêves, who, in
propagating Pelagian views of man’s sufficiency and strength, had
applied them to the case of our Lord, not shrinking from the conclusion
that He was a mere man who had used his free will so well as to have
lived without sin, and had only been made Christ in virtue of His
baptism, whereby the Divine and human were associated in such manner
that virtually there were two Christs.606 The
connexion between Nestorianism and Pelagianism has often been noticed
by later writers, but to Cassian belongs the credit of having been the
first to point it out. Of the impression produced by his book we have
no record. He appears to have taken no further part in the controversy,
which, indeed, must have been to him an episode, coming in the midst of
that other controversy with which his name is inseparably associated;
viz., that on Semi-Pelagianism, on which something must now be
said.
The controversy arose in the following way. During
the struggle with Pelagianism between the years 410 and 420,
Augustine’s views on the absolute need of grace were gradually
hardening into a theory that grace was irresistible and therefore
indefectible. “Intent above all things on magnifying the Divine
Sovereignty, he practically forgot the complexity of the problem in
hand and failed to do justice to the human element in the mysterious
process of man’s salvation.”607
607 The Anti-Pelagian
Treatises of S. Augustine; with an Introduction by William Bright,
D.D. (Oxford), 1889, p. 1. | The
view of an absolute predestination irrespective of foreseen character,
and of the irresistible and indefectible character of grace, was put
forward by him, in a letter to a Roman priest, Sixtus, in the year
418.608 Some years afterwards this letter fell
into the hands of the monks of Adrumetum, some of whom were puzzled by
its teaching; and, in order to allay the disputes among them, the
matter was referred to Augustine himself. Thinking that the monks had
misunderstood his teaching, he not only explained the letter but also
wrote a fresh treatise,—“De Gratia et Libero
Arbitrio” (426); and, when that failed
to satisfy the malcontents, he followed
it up with his work “De Correptione et Gratia” (426),
which, so far as the monks of Adrumetum were concerned, seems to have
ended the controversy. Elsewhere, however, hesitation was felt in going
the full length of Augustine’s teaching; and, in the South of
Gaul especially, many were seriously disturbed at the turn which the
controversy had lately taken, and were prepared to reject
Augustine’s teaching, as not merely novel, but also practically
dangerous. “They said, in effect,” to quote Canon
Bright’s lucid summary of their position, “to treat
predestination as irrespective of foreseen conduct, and to limit the
Divine good-will to a fixed number of persons thus selected, who, as
such, are assured of perseverance, is not only to depart from the older
theology, and from the earlier teaching of the Bishop of Hippo himself,
but to cut at the root of religious effort, and to encourage either
negligence or despair. They insisted that whatever theories might be
devised concerning this mystery, which was not a fit subject for
popular discussion, the door of salvation should be regarded as open to
all, because the Saviour ‘died for all.’ To explain away
the Scriptural assurance was, they maintained, to falsify the Divine
promise and to nullify human responsibility. They believed in the
doctrine of the Fall; they acknowledged the necessity of real grace in
order to man’s restoration; they even admitted that this grace
must be ‘prevenient’ to such acts of will as resulted in
Christian good works: but some of them thought—and herein
consisted the error called Semi-Pelagian—that nature, unaided,
could take the first step towards its recovery, by desiring to be
healed through faith in Christ. If it could not,—if the very
beginning of all good were strictly a Divine act,—exhortations
seemed to them to be idle, and censure unjust, in regard to those on
whom no such act had been wrought, and who, therefore, until it should
be wrought, were helpless, and so far guiltless, in the
matter.”609
609 Anti-Pelagian
Treatises, p. liv., lv. | Of the party which
took up this position Cassian was the recognized head. True, he did not
directly enter into the controversy himself, nor is he the author of
any polemical works upon the subject; but it is impossible to doubt
that the thirteenth Conference, containing the teaching of Abbot
Chæremon on the Protection of God, was intended to meet what he
evidently regarded as a serious error; viz., the implicit denial by the
Augustinians of the need of effort on man’s
part.
Augustine was informed of the teaching of the
School of Marseilles, as it was called, by one Hilary (a layman, not to
be confounded with his namesake, the Bishop of Arles), who wrote to him
two letters, of which the former is lost. The latter is still existing,
and contains a careful account of what was maintained at Marseilles.
Towards the close of it Hilary says that, as he was pressed for time,
he had prevailed upon a friend to write as well, and would attach his
letter to his own. This friend was Prosper of Aquitaine, also a layman
and an ardent Augustinian, whose epistle has been preserved as well as
Hilary’s.610
610 Epp. ccxxv.,
ccxxvi., in the correspondence of S. Augustine. Works, Vol. II.
820, in the Benedictine Edition. | From these letters,
and from the works which Augustine wrote in reply, we learn that the
“Massilians” had been first disturbed by some of
Augustine’s earlier writings, as the Epistle to Paulinus; and
that their distrust of his teaching on the subjects of Grace,
Predestination, and Freewill had been increased by the receipt of his
work “De Correptione et Gratia,” although in other matters
they agreed with him entirely, and were great admirers of his.611
611 Cassian himself
quotes Augustine as an authority for the Catholic doctrine of the
Incarnation in his work against Nestorius, VII. xxvii. But it is
remarkable that, whereas on all the other authorities quoted (Hilary,
Ambrose, Jerome, Rufinus, Gregory, Nazianzen, Athanasius, and
Chrysostom) a high encomium is passed, Augustine alone is alluded to
with no words of praise, being simply spoken of as priest (sacerdos) of
Hippo Regius. There is no authority for the reading “magnus
sacerdos,” found in the editions of Cuyck and Gazet, which misled
Neander. Ch. Hist. Vol. IV. p. 376, E. T. | Personally, they are spoken of with great
respect as men of no common virtue, and of wide influence; and, though
Cassian’s name is never mentioned in the correspondence, yet it
is easy to read between the lines and see that he is referred
to.612
612 The only person
referred to by name is Hilary, who had just succeeded Honoratus as
Bishop of Arles. This fixes the date of the correspondence as 429. |
Augustine replied to his correspondents by writing
what proved to be almost his latest works,—the treatises
“De Prædestinatione Sanctorum” and “De dono
Perseverantiæ.” In these volumes Augustine, while freely
acknowledging the great difference between his opponents and the
Pelagians, yet maintained as strongly as ever his own position, and
“did not abate an iota of the contention that election and
rejection were arbitrary, and that salvation was not really within the
reach of all Christians.”613
613 Bright’s
Anti-Pelagian Treatises, l. c. | Thus the books
naturally failed to satisfy the recalcitrant party, or to convince
those who thought that the denial of the freedom of the will tended to
destroy man’s responsibility. Prosper, however, was delighted
with the treatises, and proceeded to follow them up with a work of his
own, a poem of a thousand lines,
“De Ingratis,” by which he
designates the Pelagians and Semi-Pelagians, whose opinions he speaks
of as spreading with alarming rapidity. The date of this publication
was probably the early part of 430. It was certainly written before the
death of Augustine, which took place on August 28 of the same year. The
removal from this life of the great champion of Grace did not bring to
an end the controversy to which his writings had given birth. The
school of Marseilles continued to propagate its views with unabated
vigour, in spite of the protests of Prosper and Hilary, who finally
took the important step of appealing to Pope Celestine, from whom they
succeeded in obtaining a letter addressed to the Gallican Bishops,
Venerius of Marseilles, Leontius of Fréjus, Marinus, Auxonius,
Arcadius, Filtanius, and the rest.614
614 The letter is given in
full in Gazet’s edition of Cassian, with certain doctrinal
articles appended, which really belong to a later date. See Dr.
Newman’s note to the English translation of Fleury, Book XXVI. c.
xi. | Celestine
speaks strongly of their negligence in not having suppressed what he
regarded as a public scandal, and says that “priests ought not to
teach so as to invade the episcopal prerogative,” an expression
in which we may well see an allusion to Cassian, the leading presbyter,
of the diocese of Marseilles, whose Bishop is named first in the
opening salutation; and the letter concludes with some words of
eulogium on Augustine “of holy memory.” Never, perhaps, was
Gallican independence shown in a more striking manner than in the
sturdy way in which the Massilians clung to their views in spite of the
authority of the Pope now brought to bear upon them. Prosper and Hilary
on their return found the obnoxious teaching daily spreading, so that
the former of them finally determined to put down, if possible, the
upholders of the objectionable tenets by a direct criticism of
Cassian’s Conferences. This was the origin of Prosper’s
work “Contra Collatorem,” against the author of the
Conferences, a treatise of considerable power and force, although not
scrupulously fair.615
615 The treatise is given
in Gazet’s edition of Cassian. | The respect in which
Cassian was held is strikingly shown by the fact that his antagonist
never once names him directly, but merely speaks of him as a man of
priestly rank who surpassed all his companions in power of arguing. The
work consists of an examination of the thirteenth Conference, that of
Abbot Chæremon, on the Protection of God, from which Prosper
extracts twelve propositions, the first of which he says is orthodox
while all the others are erroneous.616
616 The propositions
extracted by Prosper are the following:—
(1) That the initiative not only of our actions but also
of our good thoughts comes from God, who inspires us with a good will
to begin with, and supplies us with the opportunity of carrying out
what we rightly desire; for “every good gift and every perfect
gift cometh down from above, from the Father of light,” who both
begins what is good, and continues it and completes it in us. c. iii.
This proposition Prosper allows to be catholic and orthodox.
(2) The Divine protection is inseparably present with
us, and so great is the kindness of the Creator towards His creatures
that His Providence not only accompanies it, but even constantly
precedes it, as the prophet experienced and plainly confessed, saying,
“My God will prevent me with His mercy.” And when He sees
in us some beginnings of a good will, He at once enlightens and
strengthens it, and urges it on towards salvation, increasing that
which He Himself implanted, or which He sees to have arisen from our
own efforts. c. viii.
(3) Only in all these there is a declaration of
the grace of God and the freedom of the will, because even of
his own motion a man can be led to the quest of virtue, but always
stands in need of the help of the Lord. For neither does any one enjoy
good health whenever he likes, nor is he of his own will and pleasure
set free from disease and sickness. c. ix.
(4) That it may be still clearer that, through the
excellence of nature, which is granted by the goodness of the Creator,
sometimes the first beginnings of a good will arise, which, however,
cannot attain to the complete performance of what is good unless they
are guided by the Lord, the apostle bears witness, and says, “For
to will is present with me, but to perform what is good I find
not.” Ib.
(5) And so these are somehow mixed up and
indiscriminately confused, so that, among many persons, the question
which depends upon the other is involved in great difficulty; i.e.,
does God have compassion upon us because we have shown the beginning of
a good will, or does the beginning of a good will follow because God
has had compassion upon us? For many, believing each of these
alternatives, and asserting them more broadly than is right, are
entangled in all kinds of opposite errors. For if we say that the
beginning of free will is in our own power, what about Paul the
persecutor, what about Matthew the publican, of whom the one was drawn
to salvation while eager for bloodshed and the punishment of the
innocent, the other while eager for violence and rapine? But, if we say
that the beginning of our free will is always due to the inspiration of
the grace of God, what about the faith of Zacchæus, or what are we
to say of the goodness of the thief on the cross, who by their own
desires brought violence to bear on the kingdom of heaven, and
prevented the special leadings of their vocation? c. xi.
(6) These two, then, viz., the grace of God and
Free-will, seem opposed to each other, but really are in harmony; and
we gather from natural piety that we ought to have both alike, lest if
we withdraw one of them from men we should seem to have broken the rule
of the Church’s faith. Ib.
(7) Adam, therefore, after the fall, conceived a
knowledge of evil which he had not previously, but did not lose the
knowledge of good which he already possessed. c. xii.
(8) Wherefore we must take care not to refer all
the merits of the saints to the Lord in such a way as to ascribe
nothing but what is evil and perverse to human nature.
Ib.
(9) It cannot be doubted that there are by nature
some seeds of goodness implanted by the kindness of the Creator, but
unless they are quickened by the assistance of God they cannot attain
an increase of perfection. Ib.
(10) And for this, too, we read that in the case of Job,
his well-tried athlete, when the Devil had challenged him to single
combat, the Divine righteousness had made provision. For, if he had
advanced against his foe not with his own strength, but solely with the
protection of God’s grace, and, supported only by Divine aid,
without any virtue of patience on his own part, had borne that manifold
weight of temptations and losses, contrived with all the cruelty of his
foe, might not the Devil have repeated with some justice that
slanderous speech which he had previously uttered, “Doth Job
serve God for nought? Hast Thou not hedged him in, and all his
substance round about? But take away thine hand,” i.e., allow him
to fight with me in his own strength, “and he will curse Thee to
Thy face.” But, as after the struggle the slanderous foe dared
not give vent to any such murmur as this, he admitted that he was
vanquished by his (i.e., Job’s) strength, and not by that of God:
although, too, we must not hold that the grace of God was altogether
wanting to him, which gave to the tempter a power of tempting in
proportion to that which he had of resisting. c. xiv.
(11) The Lord marvelled at him (viz., the
centurion), and praised him, and put him before all those of the people
of Israel who had believed, saying, “Verily, I say unto you, I
have not found so great faith in Israel.” For there would have
been no ground for praise or merit if Christ had only preferred in him
what He Himself had given. Ib.
(12) Hence it comes that in our prayers we proclaim God
as not only our protector and Saviour, but actually as our helper and
sponsor. For whereas He first calls us to Him, and while we are still
ignorant and unwilling draws us towards salvation, He is our protector
and Saviour; but whereas, when we are already striving, He is wont to
bring us help, and to receive and defend those who fly to Him for
refuge, He is deemed our sponsor and refuge. c. xvii.
This last extract is in itself perfectly
orthodox, and might be thought merely to express the distinction
between “preventing” and “co-operating” grace;
but the context makes it clear that Cassian means that in some cases
grace “prevents,” while in others the initial movement
towards salvation comes from man, and grace is only needed to
“co-operate.” | He
concludes
by warning his
antagonist of the danger of Pelagianism, and expresses a hope that his
doctrine may be condemned by Pope Sixtus as it had been by Celestine
and his predecessors. The last statement fixes the date of the book as
not earlier than 432; for Celestine only died in April in that
year.
Cassian was evidently still living when this
attack upon him was made; but, so far as we know, he made no reply to
it. Its publication is the last event in his life of which we have any
knowledge. He probably died shortly afterwards, as the expression used
by Gennadius in speaking of his work against Nestorius would seem to
imply that it preceded his death by no long interval; for he says that
with this he brought to a close his literary labours and his life in
the reign of Theodosius and Valentinian.617
617 Gennadius, in
Catal., c. lxii. Ad extremum rogatus a Leone Archidiacono,
postea urbis Romæ Episcopo, scripsit adversus Nestorium “De
Incarnatione Domini” libros septem, et in his scribendi apud
Massiliam et vivendi finem fecit Theodosio et Valentiniano regnantibus.
The local commemoration of Cassian is on July 23. |
The controversy on Grace and Freewill lingered on
for nearly a century longer, and was only finally disposed of by the
wise moderation shown by Cæsarius of Arles and those who acted
with him at the Council of Orange (Arausio), in the year 529.618
618 On the history
of Semi-Pelagianism see Bright’s Anti-Pelagian Treatises of S.
Augustine, Introd., pp. xlix.–lxviii., and the Christian
Remembrancer, Vol. XXXI. pp. 155–162. |
While it cannot be denied that the teaching of
Cassian and his school in denying the necessity of initial and
prevenient grace is erroneous and opens a door at which Pelagianism may
easily creep in, yet it was an honest attempt to vindicate human
responsibility; and it must be frankly admitted that the teaching of
Augustine was one-sided and required to be balanced: nor would the
question have ever been brought into prominence had it not been for the
hard and rigorous way in which the doctrine of Predestination was
taught, and the denial that the possibility of salvation lay within the
reach of all men. While, then, it is granted that a verdict of guilty
must be returned on the charge of Semi-Pelagianism in Cassian’s
case, we are surely justified in claiming that a recommendation to
mercy be attached to it on the plea of extenuating circumstances. Since
his death Cassian has ever occupied a somewhat ambiguous position in
the mind of the Church. Never formally canonized, his name is not found
in the Calendars of the West; nor is he honoured with the title of
“Saint.” He is, however, generally spoken of as “the
blessed Cassian,” holding in this respect the same position as
Theodoret, of whom Dr. Newman says that, though he “has the
responsibility of acts which have forfeited to him that œcumenical
dignity,” yet he is “not without honorary title in the
Church’s hagiology; for he has ever been known as the
‘blessed Theodoret.’”619
619 Historical
Sketches, Vol. III., p. 307. | In
the East Cassian’s position is somewhat better. He is there
regarded as a saint, and may possibly be intended by the Cassian who is
commemorated on February 29.620
620 The identification is
anything but certain, for though there is no difficulty in the term
῾Ρωμαῖος, as that is also
applied to our author by Photius, yet the additional statement made in
the Horologion, that he was originally στρατιωτικὸς
τήν τάξιν, suggests
that a different person is alluded to, possibly the same as the Cassian
commemorated in the Roman martyrology on August 13.
A list of some twenty-five churches
where Cassian is honoured as a saint is given in Guesnay’s
Cassianus Illustratus. | It is only natural
that this difference should be made, for the Eastern Church has always
held a milder view of the effect of the Fall than that which has been
current in the West since the days of Augustine; and, indeed, Cassian,
in making his protest against the rising tide of Augustinianism, was in
the main only handing on the teaching which he had received from his
Eastern instructors.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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