(B) Louth, A. - Denys Dionysius The Areopagite (Continuum 2001 1989)
(B) Louth, A. - Denys Dionysius The Areopagite (Continuum 2001 1989)
(B) Louth, A. - Denys Dionysius The Areopagite (Continuum 2001 1989)
Lonergan Aquinas
Frederick Rowe SJ Brian Davies OP
continuum
LONDON NEW YORK
Continuum
www.continuumbooks.com
Bibliography viii
Abbreviations x
2 A liturgical theology 17
7 Afterlife 111
8 Conclusion 130
V
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Editorial Foreword
Brian Davies OP
vii
Bibliography
DENYS'S WORKS
The works of Denys the Areopagite are printed in: Patrologia
Graeca 3, ed. J.-P. Migne (Paris, 1857), from the edition by Baltha-
sar Corderius (2 vols, Antwerp, 1634). A new critical edition is still
awaited from Gottingen.
The translation in the Classics of Western Spirituality series, by
Colm Luibheid and Paul Rorem (London/Mahwah, NJ, 1987) takes
account of the Gottingen edition.
In this book, column references to Migne are frequently added (or
used alone): these are printed in the margin of the Luibheid-Rorem
translation.
English translations are usually my own, though sometimes I have
used the Luibheid-Rorem translation. Even when I have not used
their translation, I have found it most helpful.
viii
BIBLIOGRAPHY
ix
Abbreviations
CA Corpus Areopagiticum
CH Celestial Hierarchy
DN Divine Names
EH Ecclesiastical Hierarchy
Ep. Epistle
MT Mystical Theology
PG J.-P. Migne (ed.), Patrologia Graeca
Works =
Pseudo-Dionysius, The Complete Works, trans. Colm Luibheid and
Paul Rorem
Koch, Ps-Dionysius =
H. Koch, Pseudo-Dionysius Areopagita in seinen Beziehungen zum
Neoplatonismus und Mysterienwesen
Roques, L'Univers =
R. Roques, L'Universdionysien. Structurehierarchiquedu monde
selon le Pseudo-Denys
Roques, Structures =
R. Roques, Structures theologiques de la gnose a Richard de Saint-
Victor
Rorem, Symbols =
Paul Rorem, Biblical and Liturgical Symbols within the Pseudo-
Dionysian Synthesis
X
1
A HIDDEN AUTHOR
At the beginning of the sixth century the Christian community began
to become aware of a collection of writings, the Corpus
Areopagiticum or the Areopagitical Corpus, that has exercised a
profound influence on Christian theology from that day to this. For
centuries it was thought that they were the works of that Dionysius
(or Denys, as he became known in the vernacular) who is mentioned
as having been converted by St Paul's defence before the Areopagus
in Athens (Acts 17:34). The writings themselves locate their writer in
first-century Christianity: he speaks of Paul as his mentor, addresses
letters to Timothy and Titus, and even to the apostle John in exile on
Patmos; he tells of experiencing the darkness that covered the earth
at the time of the crucifixion (when he was in Egypt, still a pagan),
and (perhaps) presents himself as present, with some of the apostles,
at the death of the Blessed Virgin. Eusebius in his Church History
(III.4.6) states that Denys the Areopagite became the first Bishop of
Athens, basing this information on the testimony of another Denys,
who was Bishop of Corinth at the end of the second century. Later
tradition, in the West and especially in France, made Denys the
Areopagite not only Bishop of Athens, but also the apostle to the
Gauls and first Bishop of Paris who was martyred for the Christian
faith on what is now Montmartre.
Gradually, however, this whole tradition was dismantled. Peter
Abelard added to his troubles by questioning the theory that the
martyr-bishop of Paris (and patron of the Abbey of Saint-Denis)
1
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
was the author of the Corpus Areopagiticum. Scholars from the time
of the Renaissance onwards revived ancient doubts about the
authenticity of these writings, and more recent research1 has proved
beyond any reasonable doubt that, far from being works from the
first century, these writings belong to the end of the fifth or
the beginning of the sixth century.2 Denys the Areopagite became the
Pseudo-Denys or Pseudo-Dionysius, and interest in him declined,
apart from attempts to solve the fascinating problem as to who
exactly he was. But interest in Denys could not lapse for long, for,
whoever he was, his writings exercised an enormous influence on the
so-called mystical tradition of the mediaeval West. As interest in that
tradition increases as the twentieth century wears on, so curiosity, at
least, about Denys and his writings has grown.
Denys veiled himself in the folds of a lightly-worn pseudonymity.
The curiosity of modern scholarship has stripped off from him the
veil he chose to wear, but has hardly come much closer to discovering
his own true identity. Almost everyone in the period has been sug-
gested, but few of the suggestions have convinced anyone other than
their authors and none has gained general acceptance.3 Even what
virtually everyone accepts—that the author of the Corpus
Areopagiticum belongs to the end of the fifth or beginning of the
sixth century—reveals very little: it simply locates him in a period of
the Church's history, little known and much misunderstood. So, as
we cannot begin this study with an account of our author's life,
perhaps we may begin with a sketch of the period of church history in
the shadows of which he still hides himself. But it is indeed an
obscure period—the ideal hiding-place for one such as our
author—and in our attempt to make something clear of it some of
the way will seem rather hard going. But, though obscure, it was a
crucially important period in the life of the Church, and it is essential
to come to terms with it, if we are ever to understand Denys.
4
THE INTELLECTUAL WORLD OF THE LATE FIFTH CENTURY
5
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
and took refuge in the Serapeum, a former pagan temple, where they
were burnt alive. An uneasy calm was eventually restored. But when
the Emperor Marcian died in 457, Timothy Aelurus (The Weasel',
so called because of his spare physique) was elected Patriarch
(Dioscorus having died in exile some time earlier) and within days
Proterius had been torn to pieces by the Alexandrian mob. The
Church in Egypt has never come to accept the Council of Chalcedon.
This Cyrilline reaction against Chalcedon—called 'Monophysite'
(from the Greek for 'one, single, nature') by the supporters of
Chalcedon, because of its rejection of the Council's phrase 'known
in two natures'—commanded the hearts and minds of the East.
The great names of the seventy or eighty years after
Chalcedon—Timothy Aelurus, Peter Mongus ('the Hoarse'), Peter
the Fuller, Philoxenus of Mabbog, Severus of Antioch, Jacob of
Serugh—all rejected Chalcedon in the name of Cyril; everywhere
they could call on popular support. It can, indeed, be claimed that
Chalcedon only gained final acceptance by large concessions being
made to the Cyrilline tradition, so that the Chalcedonian Definition
came to be read in the light of the theology of the great Alexandrian.
But a divided empire, and still worse, an empire professing a stan-
dard of orthodoxy repugnant to many of its citizens, was politically
intolerable. So various attempts were made to unite those who sup-
ported Chalcedon and those who rejected it. In 475 Basiliscus
usurped the imperial throne. In his brief reign he issued the Encycli-
cal which set aside Leo's Tome and the Council of Chalcedon and
reasserted the authority of the Council of Nicaea (supplemented by
the decisions of the Councils of Constantinople and Ephesus). But
Basiliscus did not last long. Zeno, who reasserted his authority as
Emperor in 476 and reigned until 491, attempted to achieve unity
among Christians with the so-called Henoticon (482). This again
sought to return to the authority of Nicaea (supplemented again by
Constantinople and Ephesus), and has a brief Christological state-
ment which lays emphasis on the unity of Christ, avoids any lan-
guage at all of 'nature' (either one or two), and further asserts that
the One who became incarnate was 'one of the Trinity, God and
Word'. It thereby met the Alexandrian fear that Nestorianism intro-
duced a fourth member into the Trinity, but (more significantly)
brought into mutual relationship the doctrines of the Trinity and the
incarnation in a way that foreshadowed the theological develop-
ments of the next century.
The Henoticon did, in fact, secure a large measure of unity in the
East. It was promulgated (and composed) by Acacius, Patriarch of
6
THE INTELLECTUAL WORLD OF THE LATE FIFTH CENTURY
7
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
8
THE INTELLECTUAL WORLD OF THE LATE FIFTH CENTURY
sermon. The liturgy became the focus for the encounter between
God and man in Christ that is the heart of the Christian faith.
Christological differences were expressed in different understand-
ings of the liturgy. For the Antiochenes the liturgical action
impressed on Christians the pattern of Christ's life of obedience and
incorporated them into his humanity, his body; while for the
Alexandrines, in the Eucharist the Word of God who came to be with
us in the incarnation is 'again in the flesh'—in communion
Christians are united with God, they are 'deified'.
Peter the Fuller, from 471 Patriarch of Antioch (though with
several periods of banishment), carried the enthusiasm for doctrinal
purity—understood as enthusiasm for the old teaching of Nicaea as
reaffirmed by Cyril, free from the corruptions introduced by
Chalcedon—into the liturgical sphere. By the use of creeds as stan-
dards of orthodoxy, Nicaea (and Constantinople) had expressed the
faith in a way that could be given liturgical expression, for creeds
were the summary of faith affirmed at baptism and the creeds of the
councils were adopted in the baptismal liturgy (later wholesale, ear-
lier by the incorporation of distinctive language such as 'of one sub-
stance with the Father').9 Peter the Fuller carried this a step further:
during his second period as Patriarch (475-477) he introduced the
Creed into the Eucharistic liturgy, in much the same place as it
occupies nowadays, between the liturgy of the word and the liturgy
of the sacrament. It underlines the claim to orthodoxy on the part of
those, like Peter the Fuller, who rejected Chalcedon, and expressed
this orthodoxy in the words of the creed with which the Fathers at
Constantinople had reaffirmed the faith of Nicaea, the so-called
Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed (still, perhaps significantly,
called the 'Nicene Creed' in the Anglican Book of Common
Prayer).10 Peter's other liturgical innovation related to a part of the
liturgy that was still a relative novelty: the so-called Trishagion, that
is, the chant 'Holy God, Holy Strong, Holy Immortal, have mercy
upon us'. First recorded in Constantinople in the time of the Patri-
arch Proclus (Patriarch 434-446/7), this chant had had from early
days two interpretations (as had the older Sanctus, derived from
Isaiah 6, found in the Eucharistic Prayer in most liturgies): a tri-
nitarian and a Christological.11 The trinitarian interpretation
regarded the chant as addressed to the Trinity, as the threefold 'holy'
suggests. The Christological interpretation regarded the chant as
addressed to the second Person of the Trinity, the Son of God. This
latter interpretation was prevalent in Syria, and the one known to
Peter. To emphasize that it was indeed God himself, the Son of God,
9
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
who became incarnate and suffered for us—something that Cyril felt
had been obscured by Nestorianism, and his supporters by the Coun-
cil of Chalcedon—Peter added to the chant 'who was crucified for
us', so that it now ran: 'Holy God, Holy Strong, Holy Immortal,
who was crucified for us, have mercy upon us'. This shocked the
Byzantine Greeks, who understood the chant as addressed to the
Trinity and thus saw the addition as qualifying the impassibility of
God: they accused Peter of 'theopaschitism', the doctrine that God
can suffer. For Peter and those who thought like him, it simply
underlined the belief that the Incarnate One was one of the Trinity,
God himself: something, incidentally, affirmed in the Henoticon.
(In the end Peter was vindicated: not that the text of the Trishagion
was changed,12 but the Theopaschite formula, 'One of the Trinity
suffered (or, was crucified) in the flesh', was accepted as orthodox
and given conciliar authority at the Second Council of Con-
stantinople, the Fifth Ecumenical, in 553.)
10
THE INTELLECTUAL WORLD OF THE LATE FIFTH CENTURY
ever, most unlikely that it had had a continuous existence since the
time of Plato) and was to remain there until the Emperor Justinian
closed it in 529. For much of the fifth century the head of the Aca-
demy, the diadochus (the successor—of Plato), had been the great
philosopher (and redoubtable pagan) Proclus. The most compelling
reason for dating Denys the Areopagite to the turn of the fifth and
sixth centuries is the deep sympathy that we shall see exists between
the vision of Denys and the philosophy of Proclus. Denys the
Areopagite, the Athenian convert, stands at the point where Christ
and Plato meet. The pseudonym expressed the author's belief that
the truths that Plato grasped belong to Christ, and are not aban-
doned by embracing faith in Christ. Both Denys and Proclus were
men of their time: just as Denys saw no anachronism in speaking
with the voice of a first-century Christian, so Proclus saw no
anachronism in counting his elaborate speculations no more than
elucidations of Plato. What appears to us a strange mongrel, the
product of late Greek philosophy and a highly developed form of
Christianity, appeared to Denys a pure-bred pedigree, or rather the
original specimen of the species.
The great Church historian, Adolf von Harnack, dismissed the
Chalcedonian Definition in these words:
The four bald negative terms (unconfusedly, unchangeably,
indivisibly, inseparably) which are supposed to express the
whole truth, are in the view of the classical theologians
amongst the Greeks profoundly irreligious. They are wanting
in warm, concrete substance; of the bridge which his faith is to
the believer, the bridge from earth to heaven, they make a line
which is finer than the hair upon which the adherents of Islam
one day hope to enter Paradise.16
There was much in the Chalcedonian Definition that caused distress,
but it was hardly that. The four adverbs were drawn from Cyril of
Alexandria and used by him to express the closeness of the union and
the reality of the natures thus united. In using these terms, Cyril,
though no professional philosopher himself, was drawing on the
developing philosophical terminology of the late Platonists, such as
Proclus who was fond of adding such adverbs as 'inseparably and
indivisibly' when saying that two identical things were nevertheless
distinct, and 'unconfusedly and unchangeably' when saying that dis-
tinguishable things are ultimately identical. Such philosophical
terminology helped Cyril to affirm the mysterious unity of God and
man that effected human salvation.17
11
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
Denys was fond of such language, too, but his enthusiasm for late
Platonism (or Neoplatonism) went well beyond use of logical
terminology: much in the deeper concerns of such philosophy
attracted him. Neoplatonism is generally held to begin with the
thought of the third-century philosopher Plotinus, though neither he
nor his successors would have regarded themselves as innovators:
they were simply Platonists. In his reflections, put together in vari-
ous treatises (called the Enneads or the 'Nines', since they were
edited by his pupil Porphyry into six books, each of nine treatises),
Plotinus drew together ideas from Plato and other later thinkers into
a suggestive vision.
For Plotinus, as for many of his contemporaries (and many
others), multiplicity cried out for explanation and found such
explanation if it could be traced back to some primordial unity. That
primordial unity Plotinus called the One: everything derived from it,
all beings owed their existence to a declension from original unity, or
put another way were an effect of the outflow from the potent reality
of the ultimacy of the One. Closest to the One was the realm of Intel-
lect, which corresponds to Plato's realm of the Forms or Ideas,
where there is true knowledge of differentiated reality. Beyond that
is the realm of Soul, which is still further from the unity of the One,
where knowledge is only the result of searching, and Soul itself is dis-
tracted by its lack of unity. Beyond the soul is the material order
which receives what coherence it has from the realm of Soul. Beyond
that there is nothing, for such disintegration has itself no hold on
being.
This outward movement of progressively diminishing radiation
from the One, called 'procession' or 'emanation', is met by a move-
ment of yearning on the part of all beings for unity, or—which
comes to the same thing—for return to the One. Such return is a
spiritual movement towards deeper inwardness, a movement of
recollection, fostered by and expressed in contemplation.
Such a way of understanding reality answers two problems: on the
one hand, it suggests a way of looking at the interrelatedness of
everything; on the other, it answers the spiritual problem of how to
cope with our sense of being disorientated, at odds with ourselves
and other people, out of touch with the roots of our being. Plotinus's
insights were developed in various ways by his successors: all that
really concerns us is the form they took in the late Athenian Neo-
platonism that Denys found so congenial. For us that means
Proclus, as little else has survived, though it is very likely that Denys
knew much that is now lost to us.
12
THE INTELLECTUAL WORLD OF THE LATE FIFTH CENTURY
13
DENYS THE AREOPAG1TE
14
THE INTELLECTUAL WORLD OF THE LATE FIFTH CENTURY
Notes
1 See esp. Koch, Ps-Dionysius; idem, 'Proklus als Quelle des Ps-
Dionysius Areopagita in der Lehre von Bosen', Philologus 54/1 (Neue
Folge, 8/1; 1895), pp. 438-54; J. Stiglmayr, 'Der Neuplatoniker
Proclus als Vorlage des sog. Dionysius Areopagita in der Lehre vom
Obel', Historisches Jahrbuch 16 (1895), pp. 253-73, 721-48. On the
earlier history of doubts about the authenticity of CA, see I. Hausherr,
'Doutes au sujet du "Divin Denys" ', Orientalia Christiana Periodica
2 (1936), pp. 484-90.
2 For perhaps the last attempt to defend the traditional legend, see J.
Parker, The Celestial and Ecclesiastical Hierarchies of Dionysius the
Areopagite (London, 1894), pp. 1-14.
3 See Roques, Structures, pp. 74-115.
4 Cyril, Ep. 39 (108C-D).
5 The word 'Fathers' is, in fact, an example of this kind of reverence for
the past. The term, applied to past orthodox teachers of the Christian
faith, is first used in the third century. It later comes to mean (and is still
used to mean) the orthodox teachers of the formative years of the
Christian tradition: a flexible period, usually spanning the first seven or
eight centuries, sometimes stretching as far as the twelfth (St Bernard in
the West) or the fourteenth (St Gregory Palamas in the East). The pass-
age from the Council of Ephesus, just quoted, invokes the 'Holy
Fathers', and the Chalcedonian Definition begins with the expression,
'Following therefore the Holy Fathers . . .'. See the articles by G.
Florovsky, reprinted as chs 6 and 7 in Bible, Church and Tradition: an
Eastern Orthodox View (Belmont, MA, 1972), pp. 93-120.
6 Basil, On the Holy Spirit XXVII.66.
7 Eusebius, Oration on the Tricennalia of Constantine 2.1-5.
8 See E. J. Yarnold, The Awe-Inspiring Rites of Initiation (Slough,
1972).
9 On this see J. N. D. Kelly, Early Christian Creeds (3rd ed., London,
1972), pp. 323-5, 344-8.
10 Ibid., pp. 348-51.
11 On this whole question, see Sebastian Brock, 'The thrice-holy hymn in
the liturgy', Sobornost'/Eastern Christian Review 1:2 (1985),
pp. 24-34.
12 See John Damascene, Expositio Fidei III. 10 (54) (ed. B. Kotter, Berlin
and New York, 1973, pp. 129-31).
13 See Norman Baynes's lecture The Hellenistic civilization and East
Rome', repr. in Byzantine Studies and Other Essays (London, 1955),
pp. 1-23.
15
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
16
2
A liturgical theology
17
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
him as part of a. society. Denys does not present himself to the world
simply as the author of various treatises: he presents himself as a
member of a society, bound and defined by relationships. This con-
sciousness of belonging to an ordered society is further underlined
by the order of the letters: addressed to holders of the office of
monk, deacon, priest, bishop, and apostle, in that order, with the
exception of Ep. VIII which is addressed to a monk, though between
letters written to bishops—but that break in hierarchical sequence
has its own significance, since it is concerned to rebuke a monk who
usurped the role of a priest. A society, an ordered ecclesiastical
society, within which one member turns to another for advice and
counsel, in which there are teachers and disciples, venerated holy
men, propounders of false teaching and raisers of objections, in
which there is a regular cycle of prayer and worship: that is the
society Denys reflects in his writings, and of which he seems very
fond. And we should admit straight away that it is a somewhat
limited conception of society. There is no mention of the everyday
world of work and play, nor is there any mention of political
authority. It is an ecclesiastical, even a monastic society. But it is
nonetheless a society: the Dionysian writings are not a collection of
academic treatises concerned simply with ideas and concepts.
That is an important point to grasp, since, too often, in the history
of Christian thought (especially in the West) they have been taken to
be just that. In the Western Middle Ages, the Divine Names was
regarded as a treatise discussing what properties may be said to per-
tain to God, and the Mystical Theology was taken to concern the rare
case of mystical experience of God; the works on the hierarchies fell
into the background, though the Celestial Hierarchy was valued for
the information it gave on the structure of the realm of the angels
and the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy for its useful hints on sacramental
causality. This way of treating Denys has continued to the present
day, so that Denys is thought of primarily as a philosopher or a
mystic. It may be that the real core of what Denys is trying to say is
philosophical, but that is not how he presents his writings. They are
intended to serve the needs of a Christian community, and the
immediate object of his concern is the use of the Christian Scriptures
within that community. One of his treatises, the Divine Names, is
concerned with the meaning of various scriptural terms for God;
another, the Celestial Hierarchy, is concerned with the meaning of
imagery drawn from the realm of the senses and applied, by the
Scriptures, to the immaterial realm (of the angels) where the revela-
tion of the Supreme Godhead is first manifest; the Ecclesiastical
Hierarchy is concerned to expound and interpret the ceremonies of
18
A LITURGICAL THEOLOGY
19
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
and quotes from: the Hymns of Love and the Elements of Theology
of the one he regarded as his mentor, Hierotheus. Such a silence in
the tradition makes one wonder whether the missing treatises are not
fictitious, conjured up to give the impression, perhaps, that the
works we have were all that survived to the end of the fifth century of
a much larger corpus of writings written at the end of the first. 6
Mystical Theology III gives a brief account of theological method
and speaks of a theology that traces the movement down from God
through the successive manifestations of himself to the material and
sensible order, a movement that is followed in the three treatises: the
Theological Outlines, which treats of the doctrines of the Trinity and
the incarnation; the Divine Names, which discusses how goodness,
being, life, wisdom and power are ascribed to God; and the Symbolic
Theology, which considers the use of images drawn from the
material world when applied to God. These Denys calls cataphatic
theologies (that is, concerned with affirmation), and contrasts them
with apophatic theologies (that is, concerned with negation), which
he does not name and which seem to trace the corresponding move-
ment of return, or ascent from the material to the divine. If we look
from this to the work which is called the Divine Names, we see that
DN I-II correspond to the Theological Outlines, and are perhaps a
summary of it, while the rest of DN corresponds to what the Mystical
Theology says it contains. Ep. IX says that it is a summary of part of
the Symbolic Theology, and the Celestial Hierarchy (especially
ch. XV) covers the same kind of ground as that work. This suggests
that the 'loss' of the 'missing' treatises is not as serious as it first
seems, since here—the one place where Denys makes any attempt to
explain the relationship between his writings, even though only one
out of three of the treatises mentioned survives—we can reasonably
well make out from what we do have what his system contains.7
20
A LITURGICAL THEOLOGY
21
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
and entice the men to tumble down among them. Carpus finds the
plight of the men fascinating and is only sorry that they do not fall
into the pit more quickly. Then he looks up and sees Jesus again,
going down to the men to stop them from falling. Jesus turns to
Carpus and says, 'You were going to strike them. Strike me instead. I
would gladly suffer again for men if by doing so I could stop other
men from sinning.' It is a telling illustration of the gentle endurance
that Denys sees as characteristic of the love of God. There is a very
similar account of such a vision granted to a monk called Carpus pre-
served in Greek monastic literature under the name of Nilus, dating
from the fifth century.9 It is conceivably the source of Denys's
account. The contrasts are instructive: Nilus does not make out that
Carpus was his contemporary, whereas Denys does; and Nilus's
account is innocent of the Platonic allusions that we find in Denys.
Denys's account is redolent of the myth of Er from the Republic,
book X; the 'many-coloured flames' are from there, the 'vault of
heaven' from the Phaedrus (247C). Carpus's vision occurs at mid-
night, the holy hour when men see visions, by Denys's account. He
has both made the account subserve his pseudonymity, and also
given it a much more distinctively Platonic colouring.10
Even his attitude to the Scriptures is given a 'pagan' colouring. He
hardly ever uses the Christian word (graphe), but prefers to refer to
them as 'oracles' (logid), using the word pagans used. He also, in
Ep. IX, presents a picture of the absurdity of the literal meaning of
the Scriptures that it would be hard to find in any other Christian
Father: it sounds much more like a pagan Greek apologizing for the
absurdities of the Greek myths:
Viewed from outside they seem full of so many incredible and
fictitious fairy-tales. So, for example, in the case of the com-
ing-to-be of God [the theogony] that is beyond being, they
imagine the womb of God bodily giving birth to God, or the
Word poured forth into the air from a human heart which
sends it out, or they describe the Spirit as breath breathed out
of a mouth, or the theogonic bosom embracing the Son: all this
we celebrate in forms befitting bodily things, and we depict
these things with images drawn from nature, suggesting a cer-
tain tree, and plants, and flowers, and roots, or fountains
gushing forth water, or sources of light radiating beams of
light, or certain other sacred forms used by the Scriptures to
expound divine matters beyond being. In the matter of the
intelligible providences of God, or His gifts, or manifestations,
22
A LITURGICAL THEOLOGY
23
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
24
A LITURGICAL THEOLOGY
25
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
26
A LITURGICAL THEOLOGY
cross, prayer facing East, the words used in the Eucharistic Prayer to
consecrate the sacred elements of bread and wine, the blessing of the
water of baptism, the oil of anointing, the words used at the rite of
baptism itself, the triple immersion, and so on. All this, Basil says, is
based on no written tradition, on no Scripture, but it is based on a
teaching kept private and secret which our holy fathers have
preserved in a silence that prevents anxiety and curiosity... so
as to safeguard by this silence the sacred character of the mys-
teries. The uninitiate are not permitted to behold these things:
their meaning is not to be divulged by being written down.
Basil goes on to say that the same principle of safeguarding what is
sacred was employed by Moses in his planning of the Temple, and by
the 'apostles and the Fathers' in their regulations concerning
Christian worship. He adds that the obscurity which envelops the
Scriptures and makes it difficult to grasp the teaching they contain is
a 'form of silence'.14 Basil's distinction between kerygma and
dogma seems then to amount to this: kerygma is the Church's
preaching of the gospel, it is something proclaimed, it seeks to
awaken faith in those who do not believe, it seeks to persuade, to
convert; dogma, on the other hand, is the experience of the mystery
of Christ within the bosom of the Church, which is to be kept secret
from those outside, from those who do not have faith—it is a grow-
ing understanding of the faith mediated through the experience of
the liturgy of the Church and a deeper grasp of the hidden signi-
ficance of the Scriptures. This distinction seems very close to
Denys's 'twofold tradition of the theologians'. The hidden, inner
dimension of theology is a matter of experience, but not (or not
necessarily) a matter of extraordinary, ecstatic experience (we shall
have something to say later about Denys's understanding of
ecstasy): it is a matter of a lifetime's experience of prayer and wor-
ship within the bosom of the Church. The inner riches of the mystery
of the faith are continually being unfolded: Basil goes on to say that
'a whole day would not suffice to expound the unwritten mysteries
of the Church'. 15 It is presented in the liturgy in the form of sym-
bolism: the symbolism of the ceremonies and gestures of the liturgi-
cal rite, the symbolism of the material elements used—water, bread,
wine, oil, incense, the colours of the vestments, and so on—and the
symbolism of the language of the Scriptures read, and perhaps even
more importantly of the songs sung during the liturgy (one of
Denys's 'lost works' is On the Divine Hymns}.
21
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
HIEROTHEUS
It is in this context that we should understand Hierotheus. Denys
refers to him several times as his revered teacher or guide
(kathegemon): one presumes that he was a bishop, or at least a
priest.16 Twice he speaks of his visions (DN II.9, III.2), and several
times he refers to him for particular details of Christian teaching: for
example, the idea that the angels are ranked in three triads (CH
VI.2), or the dignity of the Eucharist as the 'rite of rites' (EH Ill.i).
We have seen that it is probably misleading to describe him as a
mystic. But it is not so much because such language is inappropriate,
as because we tend to give it a meaning that is anachronistic when
applied to Hierotheus by Denys. For the word 'mystic' does have a
use in the Dionysian writings, which bears very closely on
Hierotheus's importance for Denys.
Behind the words 'mystic', 'mysticism', lies the Greek root, mu-,
suggesting something closed: the group of words derived from
it—mystikos, mysterion, mystes—were used in connection with the
Greek mystery religions. The use of such language quickly became
little more than a stylistic device to underline the idea that truth is
hard of access, less something discovered than something disclosed:
such use of this language goes back to Parmenides and Plato. The
Christian use of this vocabulary really stems from the Pauline use of
the word mysterion. Mysterion means a secret, but in its use in the
New Testament it has a very specific reference, to the mystery of
God's love for mankind revealed in Christ. It is a secret, or a mys-
tery, not because it is kept secret; on the contrary, it is something to
be proclaimed and made known. But since it is a matter of the reveal-
ing of God's love for mankind, it is the revelation of something that
remains hidden in its revealing, inexhaustible and inaccessible in the
very event of its being made known and accessible to us in the life,
death and resurrection of Christ. So in Christian vocabulary,
mystikos means something that refers us to this mystery of God's
love for us in Christ and makes it accessible to us. Thus it comes to
have three ranges of meaning: first, refering to a 'mystic', or hidden,
meaning of Scripture; secondly, referring to the 'mystic', or inner,
meaning of the sacraments (or 'mysteries', as they are called in
Greek); and thirdly, 'mystical theology', knowing God as revealed in
Christ, by living the life 'hid with Christ in God' (Col 3:3), by
belonging to the 'fellowship of the mystery' (Eph 3:9), by living the
mystery into which we are incorporated in baptism and which comes
to fruition in us through the sacramental life and growth in faith,
28
A LITURGICAL THEOLOGY
17
hope and love. For Denys, Hierotheus exemplifies such under-
standing of the hidden ('mystic') truth of the Christian mystery. His
experience of the Christian life is such that he has a 'sympathy' with
divine matters, and thus is an expert (an experienced guide) in the
hidden meaning of the Scriptures and the sacraments.
His visions fit into this context, too. The language of the second
account of Hierotheus's visions (DN III.2) suggests that the context
was liturgical.18 This is supported by the fact that the other two cases
of visions in CA, Carpus's in Ep. VIII and Moses' in MT I, seem to
envisage a liturgical context, Carpus's explicitly and Moses' because
the language that speaks of his approach to the vision is full of
liturgical allusions.19 Hierotheus's experience seems rooted in the
Christian liturgy: his 'suffering divine things' (DN II.9), his
'experiencing communion with the things praised' (DN III.2) are to
be understood of his celebrating the Christian sacraments. He was
one who had entered into the heart of the Christian liturgy (its
'mystic' significance) and could thus explain it to others, perhaps by
the very way he celebrated (hence, maybe, his being called guide,
rather than simply teacher).
LITURGICAL THEOLOGY
If the heart of Denys's theology is liturgical, as all this suggests, then
it perhaps explains another thing about his attitude to theology.
Twice—in Epp. VI and VII—Denys warns against a polemical atti-
tude in theology. To Sosipater he explains that a polemical argument
that demolishes the opinions of an opponent does not establish any-
thing, and, to Bishop Poly carp, he explains why he does not engage
in controversy with the pagan Greeks: it is more important to
expound what one holds to be true, rather than to spend one's time
and energy in refuting error. There is a calmness about these two
passages, a sense of serenity in the truth that is unshakable. One can
imagine that if the heart of his own religious experience was the cor-
porate experience of the Christian liturgy, this would give him a
sense of sureness: the truth does not depend on his grasp of it, it has
been received from the tradition, through a community which gave
him, too, the support of belonging.
The two traditions of theology, Denys says, are interwoven. Even
those plain and open parts of the Scripture that express the gospel to
be proclaimed, the gospel of the coming of the Kingdom, or repent-
ance, and faith in Christ—even those plain and open parts are
29
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
30
A LITURGICAL THEOLOGY
Notes
1 Martyrdom ofPolycarp, trans, in Early Christian Writings (Penguin
Classics; rev. ed., Harmondsworth, Middx, 1987), pp. 125-35.
2 Denys himself mentions Ignatius: DN IV. 12.
3 See Early Christian Writings (op. cit.), pp. 115f.
4 Oeuvres Completes du Pseudo-Denys I'Areopagite, trans. M. de
Gandillac (Paris, 1943; repr. 1980). This ordering of Denys's works is
not universally accepted—see G. Heil's note in his translation of the
Hierarchies (Bibliothek der Griechischen Literatur, 23; 1986),
p. 1—but is argued for by Roques, Structures, pp. 133f.
5 Hans Urs von Balthasar, The Glory of the Lord 2 (Eng. trans.,
Edinburgh, 1984), pp. 154-64.
31
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
32
T
33
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
34
THE ANGELIC CHOIRS
35
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
36
THE ANGELIC CHOIRS
trine of the angels fits into their emphasis on God's ineffability: even
the angels cannot come to know God completely. Even though they
reach more deeply than men and women could ever hope into the
mystery of God, this closeness to God is characterized by silence.12
The same idea is found in the Syrian Father, Ephrem (also fourth
century): for instance in one of his Hymns on the Faith (4.1): 'A
thousand thousands stand, ten thousand ten thousands run: thou-
sands and ten thousands are not able to search into the One: for all of
them in silence stand to minister.' The angels, as it were, display the
utter ineffability of God, and come from that silence in which God
dwells to communicate with men and women. Whereas earlier
Christian theology had thought in terms of the Word (or Logos) of
God coming from the silence that God is and declaring it,13 and had
interpreted the theophanies of God in the Old Testament as mani-
festations of the Word of God, Denys sees angels coming from the
silence that God is (cf. DN IV.2), just as by the fifth century
Christian theology had come increasingly to interpret theophanies as
the work of angels.14 Angels shroud, as it were, the greatly enhanced
incomprehensibility of God.15
Denys, however, takes this growing interest in angels a step
further, and in doing so lays the foundations for later theology. For
he does not simply enumerate the nine ranks of angels, he sees them
as constituting three orders, each consisting of three ranks of heav-
enly beings. No Christian writer before Denys produces this doubly
threefold pattern (Denys himself attributes the idea to Hierotheus:
CH VI.2). Where, we might wonder, does it come from? A Neo-
platonic interest in triads is doubtless in the background. Proclus
tells us that lamblichus had 'three triads of intelligible gods'16 in the
'intelligible hebdomad', which is very close to Denys's three triads of
angels (who are also intelligible beings, that is, belonging to the
realm of intellect or nous), and even earlier Porphyry (whose disciple
lamblichus had probably been) comments on one of the Chaldaean
hymns (or oracles): 'This oracle gives knowledge of the three orders
of angels: those who perpetually stand before God; those who are
separated from him and who are sent forth with a view to certain
messages and ministrations; those who perpetually bear his throne
. . . and perpetually sing.'17 So it looks as if Denys's distinctive
contribution to Christian angelology is of Neoplatonic inspiration.
37
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
38
THE ANGELIC CHOIRS
39
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
how much the passing on of the divine light depends on those who
receive it, on their attentiveness and unwavering steadfastness. The
light does not just shine, it is received and passed on. This sense of
hierarchy as an active transmitter of the divine light is enormously
important, and Denys expounds it by a triad that leaves its impress
on almost every page of the works on the hierarchies. That is the
triad of purification, illumination, and union or perfection
(katharsis, photismos, henosis or teleiosis).
40
THE ANGELIC CHOIRS
41
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
42
THE ANGELIC CHOIRS
TALKING OF ANGELS
The Celestial Hierarchy is not just about the principle of hierarchy: it
contains chapters on each of the three ranks of angelic beings and
various other chapters on specific scriptural accounts of such angelic
beings (for example, Isaiah's vision in the Temple and his being puri-
fied by one of the seraphim). Denys, then, has something to tell us
about the angelic beings. What?
It might be better to ask, Why? Denys is not interested in clearing
up some obscure points of celestial geography (if one can use such an
expression) for their own sake. It is impossible for us to know 'the
mysteries of the intelligences beyond the heavens', we can only know
what God has revealed to us (CH III. 1). And as the purpose of God's
revelation is to draw mankind back to union with himself, the lan-
guage of revelation is not there to convey information, but to raise us
up to God. Revelation does not so much reveal something, as effect
something.
In CH II Denys discusses the use of language in such revelation.
Revelation concerning heavenly beings (and even more revelation of
the Divine itself) makes use of language that refers to things within
our earthly experience in order to draw us up to communion with
that of which it speaks. Such language is symbolic. What is conveyed
is not conveyed directly. To understand such language is to respond
to it rightly; it is to be raised up towards the heavenly realm and
thence to God. If we attempted to understand what the Scriptures
say about heavenly beings simply and descriptively, then it would
lead us into absurdity:
One would likely then imagine that the heavens beyond really
are filled with bands of lions and horses, that the divine praises
are, in effect, great moos, that flocks of birds take wing there
43
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
or that there are other kinds of creatures all about or even more
dishonourable material things. (CH II.2)
Denys gives two reasons for 'creating types for the typeless, for
giving shape to what is actually without shape':
First, we lack the ability to be directly raised up to conceptual
contemplations. We need our own upliftings that come
naturally to us and which can raise before us the permitted
forms of the marvellous and unformed sights. Secondly, it is
most fitting to the mysterious passages of scripture that the
sacred and hidden truth about the celestial intelligences be con-
cealed through the inexpressible and the sacred and be
inaccessible to the many. Not everyone is sacred, and, as scrip-
ture says, knowledge is not for everyone. (CH II.2)
This latter point, that the obscurity of the Scriptures is intended to
protect their secrets from the profane, we have already come across
in St Basil (see above, p. 27), and it is common in the Fathers. St
Augustine saw such obscurity as a challenge to our pride, since it
demands of the reader a humble, patient effort to understand.22 The
modern Orthodox theologian, Vladimir Lossky, spoke of a 'margin
of silence' belonging to the words of Scripture, 'which cannot be
picked up by the ears of those outside' ,23 Only those who can discern
this margin of silence are able to enter into the real meaning of the
Scriptures. It is only in a spirit of prayer that we can become attuned
to this silence. But the first reason Denys gives for the use of sym-
bolic, and apparently absurd, language in Scripture is that we are
incapable, as beings of flesh and blood caught up in the concerns of
the material world, of being lifted up by 'conceptual contempla-
tions', that is, by immaterial representations of angelic matters.
They would simply pass us by, we would miss the point. Part of
Denys's point here is a point that is commonplace amongst Pla-
tonists. It is by abstraction that we form immaterial concepts, by
thinking away the particular and the material, but whereas properly
such abstraction should lead us to a deeper grasp of reality, it can
often go the other way; by thinking away the particular and material
we simply drain our thoughts of any grasp on reality at all. So
abstraction, the formation of immaterial concepts, is not a simple
operation, but an exercise, a practice, by which the human mind is
weaned from its dependence on the material and particular and
accustomed to the more austere world of pure, immaterial truth.
Plato (and the Neoplatonists were with him in this) thought that
44
THE ANGELIC CHOIRS
mathematics was indispensable for the soul in its transition from the
material to the conceptual. That gave the whole ascent to the divine a
strongly intellectual bias which Christians tended to resist;
mathematics was, consequently, much less important in Christian
circles.
45
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
since God is in no way like the things that have being. Since unlike
symbolism compels us to seek understanding of God by denying
what we say about him, it is more reliable. As Denys puts it, 'Since
the way of negation appears to be more suitable to the realm of the
divine and since positive affirmations are always unfitting to the
hiddenness of the inexpressible, a manifestation through dissimilar
shapes is more correctly applied to the invisible' (CH II.3).
This applies, too, to the invisible realm of the angels. Scripture
deliberately describes the heavenly beings as horses, cows, wheels
and so forth, for there is less danger we will understand such lan-
guage literally. If Scripture had used what is nearest to the angelic
realm to describe it (the human realm) we might easily depict the
angels as simply superhuman—'golden and gleaming men, gla-
morous, wearing lustrous clothing', as Denys puts it (and how right
he was!); whereas 'the sheer crassness of the signs is a goad so that
even the materially inclined cannot accept that it could be permitted
or true that the celestial and divine sights could be conveyed by such
shameful things'. Such language, Denys adds, also reminds us that
'there is nothing which lacks its own share of beauty, for as Scripture
rightly says, "Everything is good" '. 'A goad': that is the point of
such language, not to describe but to stir up our devotion and lift us
up towards heaven.
Denys goes on to apply these principles to the way in which human
emotions are applied to the transcendent realm. It is worth pausing
to consider this, for there were two currents in Christian ascetic
literature contemporary with Denys. All (or nearly all) saw the
attainment of apatheia (freedom from passions or emotions) as the
goal of Christian ascetic struggle: such freedom from passions was
seen as releasing a pure love for God and for men. Some saw
apatheia as suppression of the passions: that was the tendency of the
Evagrian tradition;24 others saw apatheia as a transformation of the
passions, a redirection of them: Diadochus, Theodoret (both fifth
century) and later Maximus the Confessor (c. 580-662) are repre-
sentatives of such a tradition. Denys's interpretation of the way
human emotions are applied to the celestial realm suggests that he
belonged to the second tradition: for if such feelings have meaning in
the transcendent realm, that sublimation is presumably the goal for
our ascetic endeavour here below. So anger is interpreted as 'the
sturdy working of reason in [the celestial beings] and the capacity
they have to be grounded tenaciously in holy and unchanging
foundations': the sublimation of anger is a kind of rational strength
and sturdiness. Desire becomes 'a strong and sure desire for the clear
46
THE ANGELIC CHOIRsa
47
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
mainly a matter of turning from sin) and illumination (in the sense of
filling a need) is inappropriate in the exalted realm of the first hier-
archy. But not entirely, at least in the realm of illumination; for even
to the angelic hierarchies the incarnation is something new, some-
thing they have to learn about. Psalm 24:10, with its question 'Who
is the King of Glory?' celebrates the angelic questioning as Jesus
ascends into heaven in human form: the Lord of hosts, the Lord of
the heavenly powers, he is the King of Glory, is their answer.
Others, as they puzzle over the nature of Jesus, acquire an
understanding of this divine work on our behalf and it is Jesus
himself who is their instructor, teaching them directly about
the kindly work he has undertaken out of love for man. 'I
speak of righteousness and saving judgement.' (VII.3)
The last scriptural quotation, placed on the lips of Jesus, is from
Isaiah 63:1 (in the form found in the Greek Bible, the Septuagint),
and is the answer to the question, 'Who is this that comes from
Edom, in crimsoned garments from Bozrah, he that is marching in
his apparel, marching in the greatness of his strength?'. The answer
provokes another question, 'Why is thy apparel red, and thy gar-
ments like his that treads in the wine press?', which leads into the
splendid song of verses 3-6. The Fathers, from Origen onwards,26
had interpreted this questioning as a questioning of Jesus by the
angelic beings. But the first question is not directly addressed to
Jesus, though he answers it, and Denys sees in this a marked
similarity between those exalted beings and us when it comes to
enlightenment in divine matters: 'They do not first ask, "Why are
your garments red?". They begin by exchanging queries among
themselves, thus showing their eagerness to learn and their desire to
know how God operates. They do not simply go leaping beyond that
outflow of enlightenment provided by God.' It is a splendid picture
of the highest angelic beings wondering among themselves, as Christ
re-enters heaven in his wounded humanity.
As the angels surround God and 'dance around an eternal know-
ledge of him' (VII.4), they celebrate their gloriously transcendent
enlightenment with hymns of praise: 'Some of these hymns, if one
may use perceptible images, are like the "sound of many waters"
. . . others thunder out that famous and venerable song telling of
God: "Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts. The whole earth is full
of his glory".'
Denys then goes on to discuss the second rank of angelic beings:
dominions, powers, and authorities (CH VIII). Oddly, he does not
48
THE ANGELIC CHOIRS
seem very sure about the order
t
of the heavenly beings in this inter-
mediate rank: his normal order is what we have given, but once (the
first time he mentions them, at CH VI.2: 201A) he interposes the
dominions and powers; and once (at the beginning of VIII: 237B) he
seems to interpose the powers and authorities. Not surprisingly,
Denys uses this chapter on the intermediate rank of angels to say
something about mediation, about the 'process of handing on from
angel to angel' which is a 'symbol for us of the perfection which
comes complete from afar and grows dimmer as it proceeds'
(VIII.2).
The final hierarchy consists of principalities, archangels, and
angels. This is the angelic hierarchy that directly presides over
'human hierarchies' (oddly in the plural: 260B) and the different
nations are allotted to different angels, Israel's angelic ruler being
Michael (whom Denys does not seem to regard as an archangel). The
idea of guardian angels for nations is found in the Bible (e.g., Dan
10:13, 20f.), and the same belief is found among Neoplatonists, for
instance in lamblichus.27 Denys explains the election of Israel, in
contrast to the faithlessness to the truth of the pagan nations, in
terms not of special divine favour, but of Israel's faithfulness that
made them worthy of God's special favour. Unlike other nations,
Israel did not desert its angelic illumination, and thus it merited
being called God's people (CH IX.3).
The rest of the Celestial Hierarchy deals with various problems
presented by the language that Scripture uses to describe the celestial
beings. In particular, Denys is worried about apparent breaches of
hierarchical order, such as when Isaiah is said to be visited by one of
the seraphim, instead of by an angel. His long and involved attempt
to answer this problem struggles both to maintain the principle of
hierarchy and to preserve his conviction that what is mediated
through the hierarchies is God's own activity: a point, he argues,
which is made by attributing human purification in this case to one
of the seraphim (CH XIII). Other breaches of hierarchy are seen in
the application of the term 'angel' to angelic beings in general (easily
solved in that the higher can be held to contain the lower: CH V), and
in the way all such beings are sometimes called 'powers' (less easily
solved, and more of a problem, perhaps, because it was something of
an established tradition in Christian circles to refer to celestial beings
as powers28). This latter is solved by the introduction of the Neo-
platonic doctrine (derived ultimately from Aristotle's distinction
between potentiality and actuality) that every mind possesses being,
power and activity:29 so just as we call the heavenly minds 'beings',
49
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
we could equally well call them 'powers' (CH XI). The final chapter
of the Celestial Hierarchy deals with the corporeal images used of the
angels in detail.
So in the Celestial Hierarchy Denys introduces us to the principle
of hierarchy that informs his understanding of the universe. The
glorious array of the celestial realms manifests and passes on the
effulgence of the divine glory. Just as the celestial hierarchy is an
'image of the thearchic comeliness' (165B), so the earthly hierarchy,
among which we find our own place, mirrors at a still lower level the
splendour of the celestial hierarchy. To that hierarchy, 'our' hier-
archy, as Denys calls it, we shall now turn.
Notes
1 See MT III: 1033A-B; there are examples of symbolic theology in CH,
e.g., at II.5.
2 On the subject of angels in the Fathers, see J. Danielou, Les Anges et
leur mission (Chevetogne, 1951), and, more generally (especially good
for their iconography), P. L. Wilson, Angels (London, 1980). See also
the new Blackfriars edition of St Thomas Aquinas, Summa
Theologiae, vol. 9 (la, 50-64), by Kenelm Foster, OP (London, 1967).
3 Philo, On the Giants 6.
4 lamblichus, On the Mysteries II.4 (78); cf. II.7 (83): ed. E. des Places
(Paris, 1966), pp. 84f., 87f.
5 The Greek words for the angelic beings of the second and third ranks
are: kyriotes, dynamis, exousia; arche, archangelos, angelos. Note how
the form of the words suggests archangelos as an intermediary between
arche and angelos.
6 Catechetical Lecture 23 (5th Mystagogical), 6. (These homilies may be
by Cyril's successor in the see of Jerusalem, John.)
7 John Chrysostom, Homily on Genesis 4.5.
8 See Roques, Structures, pp. 11 Iff.
9 See the introduction by J. Danielou to the edition of Chrysostom's
homilies On the Incomprehensibility of God in Sources Chretiennes (28
bis; Paris, 1970), pp. 40-50.
10 Homily XV in Gregorii Nysseni Opera (ed. W. Jaeger), vol. VI,
pp. 445f.
11 Rilke, Duineser Elegien, I, 11.1-2, 4-7.
12 See J. Danielou, op. cit., pp. 46f. and the passages cited there.
50
THE ANGELIC CHOIRS
51
4
OUR HIERARCHY
Hierarchy, we have seen, is concerned with communicating the
Divine Light from the source of that Light, God himself, and
drawing all rational creatures back into union with the Supreme
Beauty. In the hierarchy of the angelic beings we see this diaphanous
manifestation of the divine glory, and the receiving and passing on
of that glory, in pure conditions: conditions of pure, spiritual
reality. Now in the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy, we see the extension of
the outreach of God's alluring love into the human realm. These
'human hierarchies' (as Denys calls them: 260B) reflect the same
principles as the angelic ones: they take the form of triads, the triads
express the threefold movement of purification, illumination and
perfection, and the purpose of the whole arrangement is to draw
rational beings up to union with God and deify them. Things are dif-
ferent, though, with 'our hierarchy' (as Denys habitually refers to it:
the expression 'ecclesiastical hierarchy' only occurs in the title of the
work), mainly because whereas the angels are purely spiritual beings,
men and women are composed of body and soul.
The difference this makes comes out very clearly in chapter V, at
the beginning of his discussion of the ranks of the clergy. There he
says that every hierarchy is divided into three. He specifies this triad
as sacraments (teletai), those who understand the sacraments and
initiate others into them (the clergy), and those who are initiated by
them into the sacraments (what we would call the laity). There is
nothing odd about the hierarchies' being structured in triads, but in
52
THE EARTHLY LITURGY
53
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
54
THE EARTHLY LITURGY
55
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
56
THE EARTHLY LITURGY
THE SACRAMENTS
As we have seen, Denys enumerates three sacramental rites
(teletai)—baptism, the Eucharist, and the sacrament of oil—and
also expounds three other services—ordination, monastic consecra-
tion, and the funeral service. This list, taken either way, does not
bear much relation to the list of seven sacraments, taken as tradi-
tional in the West. That is hardly surprising, as the list of seven
sacraments—baptism, confirmation, the Eucharist, marriage, ordi-
nation, penance, and the anointing of the sick (or extreme
unction)—does not emerge until the twelfth century, though it then
won rapid acceptance in the West. In the East, however, the list of
seven sacraments only became common much later, as a result of
Western influence, and it is not surprising that lists of sacraments
among the Orthodox, rarely thought of as definitive, are often
reminiscent of Denys. Theodore the Studite, in the ninth century,
gives a list of six sacraments—the holy 'illumination' (baptism), the
'synaxis' (the Eucharist), the holy chrism, ordination, monastic
tonsure, and the service of burial 8 —while Nicolas Cabasilas's book
The Life in Christ is a commentary on baptism, chrismation and the
Eucharist.9 There seems to be a certain difference of feel between the
Western list and those inspired by Denys: the latter are seen very
much as ecclesiastical rites, whereas the former is a series of signifi-
cant events in the life of the individual Christian. Denys himself,
however, only calls baptism, the Eucharist, and the sacrament of oil
sacraments or rites (teletai): the other three ceremonies are not
57
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
BAPTISM
The first of the rites, properly so called, is baptism, which Denys
always calls by one of its traditional names, 'illumination'
(photisma, so called by Clement of Alexandria, Gregory of Nyssa
and others): the word 'baptism' is only used twice and refers not to
the whole ceremony but to the immersion in water (the word,
baptisma, means dipping). The New Testament has two main ways
of understanding baptism: as rebirth (especially characteristic of the
Johannine tradition), and as death and resurrection (especially
characteristic of St Paul). Denys, though he does not ignore the
Pauline tradition (immersion, baptisma, symbolizes our sharing in
Christ's death: EH II.iii.6: 404A), primarily sees baptism as rebirth,
thus following the Johannine tradition, which had also been charac-
teristic of early Syriac Christianity as a whole.10 This rebirth is a
divine birth Qtheogenesia) which makes possible deification. Denys
refers to the teaching of Hierotheus that 'in the realm of intellect it is
the love of God which first of all moves us towards the divine': in
baptism, it is the love of God that gives us a divine beginning, a
divine birth, and enables us to move towards the divine.
Denys then moves on to the second section, the mystery, and gives
an account of the baptismal rite. It begins when someone 'fired by
love of transcendent reality and longing for a sacred share of it' seeks
out a Christian, who takes him to the bishop. The bishop rejoices,
like the shepherd who found the lost sheep, and calling together the
clergy marks him with the sign of the cross and has him enrolled as a
catechumen. Then a description of the baptismal rite follows: the
stripping and renunciation of Satan (facing West), followed by the
candidate's turning East and confessing Christ, the pre-baptismal
anointing, the blessing of the water of baptism (into which oil is
poured), the triple immersion, the clothing, post-baptismal anoin-
ting and signing with the cross, and then participation in the cele-
bration of the Eucharist.11 The 'contemplation' which completes the
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THE EARTHLY LITURGY
59
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
THE EUCHARIST
The movement from the One to multiplicity and back again governs
Denys's understanding of the Eucharist. He calls it, we have seen,
thesynaxis, the 'gathering-together' of the many into unity. It is, for
Denys, the most important of the sacraments: he says that his 'cele-
brated teacher', Hierotheus, had called it the 'rite of rites', or 'sacra-
ment of sacraments' (teleton telete), and as he expounds this he plays
on the associations of the word telete, which recalls telos, end or
purpose, and teleiosis, perfection. No other rite can take place
without the Eucharist, so that they are only perfected by its means.
And each 'sacredly initiating operation', thus perfected by the
Eucharist, 'draws our fragmented lives together into a one-like deifi-
cation. It forges a divine unity out of the divisions within us. It grants
us communion and union with the One.'
Denys's account of the celebration of the Eucharist has many
points in common with that given by Theodore of Mopsuestia in his
Homilies on the Eucharist, which is not surprising if Denys is
recording the liturgical customs of some part of Syria. There is an
initial censing. The first part of the liturgy consists of psalm singing
and readings from the Scriptures (by the deacons), and then the cate-
chumens, penitents and possessed leave (supervised by the deacons).
The Creed is sung (something not found in Theodore's rite: as we
have seen, it was only introduced towards the end of the fifth
century), the kiss of peace follows and then there takes place the
intercession for the living and (especially) the departed, during
which the deacons and priests place the bread and wine on the altar.
Then follows the Eucharistic Prayer, communion, and a final prayer
of thanksgiving.
But Denys's account is selective. He is primarily concerned with
the movement of the liturgical action, and sees that movement
almost exclusively in terms of God's love outwards to us in creation
and redemption, drawing us back to him in our own answering
movement of love. It is the Neoplatonic movement of procession
and return that is most prominent. In contrast, Theodore is con-
cerned with much more of the liturgical action and relates it much
more directly to the historical events of Christ's life that are recalled
in the liturgy. So for Theodore the first part of the liturgy, the
60
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THE EARTHLY LITURGY
63
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
64
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65
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
as if they derive their authority from their intrinsic, moral and intel-
lectual qualities. He comes very close to suggesting that the efficacy
of a priest's ministrations depend upon his own holiness and purity:
he is very far from any Augustinian notion of the validity of orders
which guarantees the efficacy of the ministry of an unworthy priest.
Part of the reason for this is historical. The Augustinian doctrine
of the validity of orders was worked out in the context of the
Donatist controversy in the African Church, in which the Donatist
Church had broken with the Catholic Church over the issue of the
value of the sacramental ministrations of a priest who had com-
promised with the pagan authorities during the last persecution, the
so-called 'Great Persecution' under Diocletian (303-311). It was a
controversy that did not have much impact in the Eastern Church
where the traditional (and normal) expectation that a priest should
be an example to the laity was not detached from the formal question
of the source of his sacramental efficacy. The sacraments are a
source of holiness: it is thus appropriate that the priest who ministers
such sacraments should be holy. The Eastern Church has never
worked out a formal doctrine of sacramental validity (nor involved
itself in the complications it has introduced). That partly explains
why Denys lays so much stress on the holiness of the priest whose
ministrations are sanctifying.
But Denys's insistence seems to go further than this, and the
reason is, it seems to me, that he does not see the principle of hierar-
chy as at all an impersonal principle. The members of the hierarchy
are persons and the relationships within the hierarchy are personal
relationships (like Denys's own relationship to his teacher, Hiero-
theus): therefore the correlation between the worth of the priest and
the dignity of his office is imperative. Just as the heavenly beings are
holy beings of transcendent purity who receive and pass on the rays
of divine illumination, so this should be the case in the earthly
hierarchy:
Therefore the founding source of all invisible and visible order
quite properly arranges for the rays of divine activity to be
granted first to the more godlike beings, since theirs are the
more discerning minds, minds with the native ability to receive
and to pass on light, and it is through their mediation that this
source transmits enlightenment and reveals itself to inferior
beings in proportion to their capacity. It is therefore the task of
the first ranks of those beholding God to reveal fittingly and
without jealousy to those of second rank the sacred sights
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DENYS THE AREOPAG1TE
THE MONK
When Denys turns to the order of the laity, his attention is mainly
drawn to the highest rank of laity, the order of monks. In chapter VI
he discusses the two lower orders—the order of those who need
purifying, the catechumens, the penitents and the possessed, and the
order of the baptized laity whom he here calls the 'contemplative
order' (EH VI.iii.5: 536D 6)—but the ceremony that is described in
the second part of the chapter and whose significance is drawn out in
the third part is that of monastic consecration. The ceremony is rela-
tively simple consisting of prayer, a promise on the part of the monk-
to-be to be faithful and earnest in his monastic life. Then, after being
marked with the sign of the cross, his hair is cut and he exchanges his
clothes for others (Denys is very inexplicit about what is clearly the
giving of the monastic tonsure and the clothing with the monastic
habit).
By Denys's time the monastic state had achieved an important role
in the life of the Church, and was to continue to exercise such a role
throughout the Middle Ages and indeed, beyond, both in the East
and West. But it had not always been so. In the early centuries we
hear nothing about any organized Christian monasticism: it is only
in the fourth century, after the Church passed from being a per-
secuted minority to the favoured religion of the Empire, that
monasticism appears on the scene and grows rapidly.
The primary focus of this development sems to have been in
Egypt. In the Egyptian Desert, the 'Desert Fathers', as they came to
be called,18 established the pattern for future monasticism. There
were three types of monks: hermits, who lived a solitary life; others
(semi-eremites, half-hermits) who lived what was essentially a soli-
tary life, but lived within earshot of one another in what was known
as a lavra\ and those who lived in a community, and shared a
common life of worship, eating together and working together, who
were called coenobites (from coenobium, derived from the Greek for
'common life', koinos bios).19 The life in community eventually
established itself as the basic form of the monastic life: in the East
the Rules of St Basil the Great provided the guidelines for this life; in
the West, there were various rules, the most important being that of
St Benedict (c. 480 -c. 540) who must have been more or less a
contemporary of our Denys.
Denys's understanding of the monastic life is concentrated on one
point: the monk is a single-minded pursuer of union with unity or the
One: 'Theirs is a single-minded type of life and they have the duty to
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THE EARTHLY LITURGY
be at one only with the One, to be united with the sacred unity' (EH
VI.iii.2: 533D). We hear nothing of rules or communities or abbots
or superiors or of obedience—all an important part of monasticism
as Denys would have known it. Nor do we hear anything about
monasticism as a radical way of imitating Christ: a naked following
of the naked Christ (nudum Christum nudus sequere) as Jerome put
it.20 For Denys the monastic life is characterized by unity, both as the
way and the goal. As Roques puts it, 'The monk is a solitary in
pursuit of perfect unity. While the baptized simply leads the divine
existence of the ecclesial community, the effort of the monk is
directed towards the highest perfection.'21 Denys uses two words for
the monk, monachos and therapeutes. 'They are called therapeutae
or monks, from the pure service and worship they offer to God, and
the single undivided lives they live as they strive for simplicity in a
sacred folding together of all division into a God-like unity and per-
fection of the love of God' (EH VI.i.3: 533A). The first became the
normal word for a monk in Greek (and hence in other languages),
and etymologically does suggest a solitary and thus supports Denys's
emphasis on unity. The second is an unusual word for a monk: it
only seems to occur in Denys and in the church historian Eusebius,
who uses the term because he took Philo's account of an ascetic
community in Egypt called therapeutae to be an account of an early
Christian community.22 It means a servant, and Eusebius repeats
Philo's suggestion that one reason for this might be 'because of their
pure and sincere service and worship of the Divine', a hint Denys
picks up. It could be that Denys knew the passage in Eusebius, and
that the use of therapeutes is part of the first-century 'colour' he
wants to give to his writings.
These two words, monk and therapeutes, are not used indis-
criminately in his work. Apart from mentioning the word the-
rapeutes, Denys does not use the word at all in EH : he uses the word
'monk' and exploits its suggestions of singleness. In his letters, on
the other hand, we find that the word therapeutes is used exclusively.
Five of the letters are addressed to therapeutai: Epp. I-IV are
addressed to one called Gaius, and Ep. VIII is addressed to Demo-
philus. Ep. VIII we have met several times already: not only does he
use the word therapeutes to address Demophilus, it is the idea of
service, implicit in that word, that governs his presentation of the
monastic life in that epistle. Epp. I-IV are concerned to expound
particular themes discussed elsewhere in the Dionysian Corpus: Ep.
I is concerned with the 'divine darkness', Ep. II with the notion of
divine transcendence, Ep. Ill with the adverb 'immediately' and its
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DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
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71
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
who have not died but, as the Word of God teaches us, who have
passed from death to a more perfectly divine life' (EH III.iii.9:
437B).
It is probably not by chance that Denys's defence of the apparent
absurdity of the Christian liturgy to those who do not share the
Christian faith is sparked off by his account of the Christian burial
service. The pagan horror at Christian reverence for the bodies of the
departed, especially the remains of the martyrs, finds eloquent
expression in the account by Eunapius of Sardis of the Christiani-
zation of the pagan temples in Egypt:
For they collected the bones and skulls of criminals who had
been put to death for numerous crimes, men whom the law
courts of the city had condemned to punishment, made them
out to be gods, haunted their sepulchres, and thought that they
became better by defiling themselves at their graves. 'Martyrs'
the dead men were called, and 'ministers' of a sort, and
'ambassadors' from the gods to carry man's prayers.25
Eunapius (c. 345-c. 420) was a pagan Neoplatonist, and his Lives of
the Philosophers tells us about several of the early Neoplatonists,
Porphyry and lamblichus among them. His distaste for the
Christian reverence for the bodily remains of their departed would
have been shared by those pagan Neoplatonists with whom Denys
must be assumed to have studied. Denys defends the absurdity of
Christian liturgical practices by deflecting attention from Christian
burial rites to the custom of infant baptism. Here, infants who
cannot understand what is going on are baptized and admitted to
Communion (as still happens in the Eastern Church). Denys's
defence has two prongs: first, it is not surprising the divine mysteries
should be beyond our grasp; secondly, when infants are baptized,
sponsors promise that they will have a godly upbringing. For Denys
the supportive nature of the Christian community is so important, it
is not surprising that he feels that infants born into Christian families
and cared for by Christian sponsors can be, as it were, carried by the
Christian community. But his point is not that the rites are unintel-
ligible but valid, rather that understanding is a matter of degree and
something that is never complete. He seems, too, to envisage a kind
of dual sacramental action in which the soul is raised up to union
with God by understanding the symbolism of the liturgy, and the
body is prepared to be a fitting companion for the enlightened soul
by the action of the material elements in the sacraments (EH
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DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
74
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Notes
75
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
77
5
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THE NAMELESS GOD OF MANY NAMES
that we ascribe to God: they are names with which we praise him, or
celebrate or hymn him (the Greek is hymnein).
A SYRIAN BACKGROUND?
In composing a treatise on the names of God, Denys was not
altogether original. As Sebastian Brock has pointed out, several of
the hymns or songs of Ephrem the Syrian (c. 306-373) also take the
form of a consideration of the divine names. This is especially true of
the thirty-first Hymn from the cycle on the Faith, which begins:
Let us give thanks to God who clothed himself in the names of
the body's various parts;
Scripture refers to his 'ears', to teach us that he listens to us;
It speaks of his 'eyes', to show that he sees us.
It was just the names of such things that he put on,
And, although in his true being there is no wrath or regret,
Yet he put on these names, too, because of our weakness.
We should realize that, had he not put on the names
Of such things, it would not have been possible for him
To speak with us humans. By means of what belongs to us
did he draw close to us:
He clothed himself in our language, so that he might clothe us
In his mode of life. He asked for our form and put this on,
And then, as a father with his children, he spoke with our
childish state.1
Ephrem mentions some of the names God put on—Old Man,
Ancient of Days, Valiant Warrior—and goes on to compare God's
revealing himself to man, with a man teaching a parrot to talk:
A person who is teaching a parrot to speak
Hides behind a mirror and teaches it in this way:
When the bird turns in the direction of the voice which is
speaking,
It finds in front of its eyes its own resemblance reflected;
It imagines that it is another parrot conversing with itself.
The man puts the bird's image in front of it, so that thereby it
might learn how to speak.
This bird is a fellow creature with the man,
But although this relationship exists, the man beguiles and
teaches
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DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
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THE NAMELESS GOD OF MANY NAMES
our minds lay hold of is in fact nothing other than certain activities
apparent to us, activities which deify, cause being, bear life, and give
wisdom' (DN II.7).
But there is much in Denys's treatment of the divine names that
seems very different from Ephrem. He has, for instance, no real
parallel to Ephrem's distinction between 'perfect' and 'borrowed'
names: his classification of the divine names proceeds on quite other
lines. He distinguishes between names expressive of concepts and
names drawn from the realm of the senses: these latter names belong
to 'symbolic theology', the former are the concern of the treatise, the
Divine Names (DN 1.8). He maintains, like Ephrem, that names like
'father' and 'son' apply properly to God and to human beings only
in a secondary sense (DN II.8): but this had been a commonplace of
Christian theology from the time of the Arian controversy.5 We have
already seen that there is a good deal of evidence that Denys's back-
ground is partly that of Syrian Christianity, and it is tempting to see
further evidence here. It may well be that Ephrem's outlines of a
treatment of the names of God inspired him: but there are other
influences on Denys's treatment of the divine names that seem more
important.
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DENYS THE AREOPAG1TE
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DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
all that is) and that it is Good (meaning the ultimate goal of all that
is). The henads are (ultimately) the recipients of the divine attributes
or names yielded by the later hypotheses of the Parmenides, and by
the other Platonic dialogues. For it is not the Parmenides alone that
yields a doctrine of divine attributes: Proclus finds them discussed in
many other dialogues. A notable example is the famous analogy of
the sun in the Republic. The sun, which is transcendent over the
visible world and by its light makes both knowledge and life possible,
is presented by Socrates as an analogy of the Good (or form of the
Good) which is transcendent over the world of understanding
(indeed 'beyond being and knowledge') and by its influence (its
'light') gives being and knowledge to that world. In the Platonic
Theology, Proclus supports his exposition of the Parmenides by
referring to the analogy of the sun and regards the two
sequences—One-divinity-henads-intelligibles (derived from the
Parmenides) and Good-light-gods-intelligibles (derived from the
Republic)—as identical."
What this means is that the process of emanation from the One,
which is the source of all reality, through Intelligence and Soul, is to
be seen in a more complex way, whereby the multiplicity that is the
result of emanation can be traced back to the level of the One in the
henads: so one can think equally of emanation from the One or
emanation from the henads. The advantages of the second way of
thinking are (philosophically) that the manifold, belonging to (or
manifested in) the henads, is not illusory, and (religiously) that all
that is, and the governance of all that is (providence), can be ascribed
to the gods. The first way of thinking (of emanation from the One
itself) is more ultimately true: to think like that is to pass beyond the
knowable into the realm of the unknowable.
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DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
86
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Instead of a distinction between the One and the gods, Denys has a
somewhat different distinction in that 'being itself, etc., are applied
to God, but in two ways: either to God himself, or to his activity in
the world. Denys's distinction recalls (or rather foreshadows) the
distinction between the essence and energies of God, found in St
Gregory Palamas (c. 1296-1359) and other late Byzantine (and
indeed modern Orthodox) theologians.
But this example reveals an untidiness (or, perhaps, a paradox) in
Dionysian theology, in contrast to Neoplatonism. Denys is here
trying to explain how God can be regarded both as 'being itself and
as the source of 'being itself. This contradiction was reconciled in
Procline Neoplatonism by applying these different terms to different
entities. The source of all, beyond any attribute, is the One; the attri-
butes are then applied to different beings who proceed from the One,
the henads. In place of such logical simplicity (although complicated
in other ways), Denys wants to speak of the attributes of One who is
beyond all attribution.
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DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
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89
DENYS THE AREOPAG1TE
room is one and undivided: here there are 'things united in differen-
tiation and things differentiated in union' (641 A-B). All this seems
to suggest that the indivisibility of the Trinity is both expressed in the
fact that the divine attributes (or divine activities) cannot be distri-
buted amongst the Persons of the Trinity, and also is to be found in
the mutual indwelling of the Persons of the Trinity (what was later to
be called perichoresis, or coinherence: St John Damascene, whose
Exposition of the Faith first popularized the language of peri-
choresis in Byzantine theology, does so in language which is deeply
indebted to the Areopagite18). Denys then says that differentiation in
speaking of God who is beyond being is applied in two ways: either
to the names we give to the Persons that distinguish them ('Father'
and 'Son', for instance) or to the way in which God manifests
himself in creation as being, life, wisdom, etc., so as to share these
properties (and ultimately divinity itself) with the whole created
order (DN 11.50). So union and differentiation can be conceived of
in two different ways. There are 'unified names' which refer to the
whole indivisible Godhead: as a result of differentiation ('the
generous procession of divine unity overflowing with goodness in a
way that transcendently preserves unity and making itself manifold')
these manifestations of God flow into the world, manifesting the
divine and stirring up beings to return to the One. There are
'differentiated names' which refer to the Persons of the Trinity:
these differentiations are contained within the unity of the Godhead.
Another example of differentiation is the incarnation, for this refers
to the Person of the Word (or the Son) and not to the Father or the
Spirit (644C): Denys refers to this a little later on, to profess its utter
ineffability (DN II.9: 648A). It is, however, clearly something quite
different from God's manifestation of himself through the divine
names.
If we try and put all this together, we seem to have the idea that
God manifests his whole being in attributes (or names) which we
grasp as they are differentiated from God in their procession or
radiation from him. There is also the idea that within the Godhead
there is some kind of primordial procession in which 'the Father is
the originating Source of the Godhead, and the Son and the Spirit
are divine shoots, and, as it were, flowers and transcendent lights of
the divinely fruitful divinity' (DN II.7). (The Father as 'originating
source of Godhead' is not far from the Cappadocian idea of the
Father as 'source of divinity'; the rest of the language is reminiscent
of the Chaldaean Oracles, doubtless transmitted through Proclus.)
In the incarnation, it seems, this primordial procession is manifest in
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PRAYER
Denys's exposition of the doctrine of the Trinity is presented only in
summary form and as a preface to the main body of the work, a
systematic treatment of the divine names. Before he embarks on this,
however, he turns in prayer to the Holy Trinity and reflects on the
nature of prayer itself. In prayer we are drawn into the divine
presence, not as if the divine became present when before he was not,
but in our turning to him we realize his presence within us. He gives
two vivid analogies of what he means:
It is as if there were a great chain of light let down from the
summit of the heavens and reaching down to the earth, and as
we grasp it first with one hand, then another, we seem to be
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DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
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THE NAMELESS GOD OF MANY NAMES
PROVIDENCE
The notion of providence (pronoia) casts a long shadow over
Denys's thought: he rarely talks about it explicitly,25 but he very fre-
quently speaks of the divine influence (in its many forms) as being
'providential' (pronoetikos). Such an emphasis on providence is yet
another sign of his affinity with Neoplatonism. For Plato, to deny
that the gods exercise providence was a blasphemy drawing upon
itself the gravest punishment;26 later Platonists defended the notion
of providence against the idea of fate with which the Stoics and
others identified it. In Neoplatonism, providence is a dimension of
the notion of procession: lower beings do not simply proceed from
the One and the henads, but are the object of the providence of the
henads. Proclus derives the term pronoia from 'before mind' (pro
nou) and sees in it the transcendent form of intelligence found
amongst the gods.27 It is, as it were, the original of which thought
and reasoning in minds and souls are a copy or an echo: providence
contains within itself the meaning that is discerned at lower levels by
thought and reasoning.28 Providence, or pronoia, characterizes very
generally the relation of the henads to lower levels of reality.
All this deeply colours Denys's thought and language: the
'providential rays' that shine forth from God communicate his
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DENYS THE AREOPAG1TE
LOVE
A particularly striking way in which Denys speaks of providence is
when he considers the divine name, Good, under the aspect of love
(eros or agape, which he argues, following patristic precedent, to be
equivalent). God creates the world out of his goodness, or out of his
love. And love is defined as essentially 'ecstatic', that is: the one who
loves is drawn out of himself and centres his being on the object of
his love. Love is ecstatic, because it is unitive: the lover is united to
the beloved, who is, for him, a manifestation of beauty. For love is 'a
power that unites and binds together and effects an indissoluble
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THE NAMELESS GOD OF MANY NAMES
fusion in the beautiful and the good' (DN IV. 12: 709C). But love is
not for Denys mainly a matter of our striving for God: it is essentially
something divine, and when we love God, we love him with his love.
But since it is essentially divine, we can speak of God's love, and
indeed of God's ecstatic love:
We must dare add this as being no less true: that the Source of
all things himself, in his wonderful and good love for all things,
through the excess of his loving goodness, is carried outside
himself, in his providential care for all that is, so enchanted is
he in goodness and love and longing. Removed from his
position above all and beyond all he descends to be in all accor-
ding to an ecstatic and transcendent power which is yet insepar-
able from himself. (DN IV. 13: 712A-B)
The idea of a divine 'providential love' (erospronoetikos) is found in
Proclus, but not the idea of God's 'ecstatic' love. Nor is Proclus's
divine 'providential love' quite the same as Denys's notion of God's
'providential love', for Eros is one of the gods for Proclus, and not
indeed one of the highest of them.31 John Rist's comment is to the
point:
The first person to combine the Neoplatonic idea about God as
Eros with the notion of God's 'ecstasy' is Pseudo-Dionysius,
and it would seem merely perverse to deny that Dionysius'
Christianity is the direct cause of this adaptation. Dionysius
has in fact adapted Eros to the Christian demand that God love
all things, and he is the first person to do so.32
What we have in Denys is really a transformation of the Greek
notion of eros: for Plato eros primarily (though not exclusively) met
a need, and the neediness of love remains in the pagan Greek tradi-
tion; for Denys eros, yearning love, is an overflow of divine
goodness—it needs nothing, it is the source of everything.
The way in which love, though mentioned only briefly in DN IV,
has deeply coloured Denys's understanding of reality can be seen in
his treatment of the twin names, Power and Peace, for love is a force
as powerful as anything we know and its goal is unity. So Denys
waxes his most eloquent as he hymns the name, Power:
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DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
THE ONE
The last chapter of the Divine Names leads us back to the name, the
One, which is not only the source and goal of all things, but, as we
have seen, one of Denys's favourite terms for God. It provides an
opportunity for summing up much that he has said about the essen-
tial role of unity in the nature of reality. But the absolute nature of
the One implies that it is beyond any kind of attribution, and so the
Divine Names ends by reminding us of the greater ultimacy of
apophatic over cataphatic theology:
But they [sc. the theologians, the Scriptural writers] prefer the
ascent through negations. This way draws the soul out of what
is connatural to it, and leads it through all divine conceptions
which are transcended by the One that is beyond every name
and all reason and knowledge, and brings it into contact with
Him beyond the uttermost boundaries of the universe, insofar
as such contact is possible to us. (DN XIII.3: 98IB)
Notes
1 Ephrem, Hymn 31 on the Faith, If. (ed. E. Beck, Corpus Scriptorum
Christianorum Orientalium 154 (Scriptores Syri 73; Louvain, 1955),
pp. 105ff.): trans, in Sebastian Brock, The Luminous Eye (Rome,
1985), pp. 43f.: see the whole section ('The garment of names'),
pp. 43-8.
2 Hymn 31, 6f. (ed. Beck, pp. 106f.): trans, pp. 44f.
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DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
98
6
VISIONS
In his second letter to the Corinthians, St Paul comes to talk of
'visions and revelations of the Lord' and tells of a 'man in Christ'
(most probably a veiled allusion to himself) who 'was caught up to
the third heaven—whether in the body or out of the body I do not
know, God knows— . . . and he heard things that cannot be told,
which man may not utter' (2 Cor 12:2, 4). It is not surprising then
that one who wishes to be seen as a close disciple of St Paul should
also speak of visions and of the ineffability of what is thus revealed,
nor that he, too, tells of these visions by ascribing them to a third
party. Only with Denys, the third party is no nameless 'man in
Christ', but a monk, Carpus, his 'revered guide', Hierotheus, and
Moses. The choice of Moses is not that surprising, either, as Moses
and Paul were often bracketed together as notable recipients of the
vision of God.1
We have already seen something of Carpus's vision which Denys
describes at the end of Ep. VIII. It has a liturgical context: it took
place as Carpus was praying during the night office. Another remark
Denys makes about Carpus underlines the connexion he sees
between visions and the liturgy: he tells us that Carpus would not
celebrate the liturgy 'unless during the sacred prayers of preparation
there was shown to him a favourable vision' (1097C). This may seem
strange, indeed rather pagan: one recalls the story from the Sayings
of the Desert Fathers:
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DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
Abba Olympios said this, 'One of the pagan priests came down
to Scetis one day and came to my cell and slept there. Having
reflected on the monks' way of life, he said to me, "Since you
live like this, do you not receive any visions from your God?".
I said to him, "No." Then the priest said to me, "Yet when we
make a sacrifice to our God, he hides nothing from us, but dis-
closes his mysteries; and you, giving yourselves so much hard-
ship, vigils, prayer and asceticism, say that you see nothing?
Truly, if you see nothing, then it is because you have wicked
thoughts in your hearts, which separate you from your God,
and for this reason his mysteries are not revealed to you." So I
went to report the priest's words to the old men. They were
filled with admiration and said that this was so. For impure
thoughts separate God from man.'2
There is something very moving about the humility of the 'old men',
conscious of their need for continual repentance and calmly unsur-
prised that they see no visions. But other Christians did expect to see
visions, notably the author of the homilies ascribed to Macarius the
Great. These homilies, of Syrian not Egyptian provenance, lay
considerable stress on visions: after much struggle and prayer 'the
face of the soul is unveiled, and it gazes upon the heavenly Bride-
groom face to face in a spiritual light that cannot be described'.3
This tradition was influential in Eastern monasticism and reached its
apogee in Hesychasm with its doctrine of the vision of the uncreated
light of God.4 In the tenth/eleventh century, a similar emphasis on
the vision of the divine light is found in Symeon the New Theologian,
who regarded experience of the divine vision as a prerequisite for
ecclesiastical office:5 a generalized version of what Denys admired
so much in Carpus.
DARKNESS
The short treatise, the Mystical Theology, seems to be about a dif-
ferent kind of vision. There Denys talks of Moses in his ascent of
Mount Sinai. As he ascends, he passes beyond all that can be dis-
cerned by the senses and the intellect and enters into a divine
darkness where he is united with God in a way that surpasses know-
ledge. Denys's account of the ascent of Moses into the Divine
Darkness has many parallels with Gregory of Nyssa's much more
extended treatment in the second part of his Life of Moses, and it
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VISIONS AND DARKNESS
seems certain that Denys has drawn on it.6 This suggests an arche-
typal 'mystical ascent', in which the soul passes beyond images and
comes to know God as he is in himself: the Mystical Theology was
read in that way in the Middle Ages, notably by the author of the
Cloud of Unknowing, and is still so read today. According to this
interpretation, Denys is speaking of a contemplative union with
God, where the soul abandons forms of prayer that rely on imagery
and reasoning ('meditation' as it was, and still is, called) and learns
an openness to God himself in the darkness of the abandonment of
techniques within its control. But it has been noted7 that Denys's
account of the ascent of Mount Sinai by Moses is full of liturgical
echoes. Moses purifies himself and then, separating himself from the
crowd, ascends the mountain with his chosen priests: just as the
hierarch is purified and then approaches the altar with his priests.8
In his ascent he passes beyond 'all divine lights and sounds and
heavenly words' into the 'Darkness': just as the liturgy progresses
from the first part full of readings from Scripture and sacred hymns,
into the hidden (and perhaps also silent) consecration in the sanc-
tuary. It is to be noted, too, that the Mystical Theology is addressed
to Timothy, a hierarch. Several times in the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy
the hierarch's experience of the liturgy is spoken of in terms that
recall the language of the Mystical Theology (especially 1.3, which
describes the ascent of Moses). At the end of the rite of illumination
(or baptism) the hierarch is said to turn 'from the procession to the
secondary things and reach up to contemplation of those that are
first'; 9 at the end of his account of the Eucharist, Denys says that
'while the many are content to behold the divine symbols alone, the
hierarch is ever being raised up hierarchically by the thearchic Spirit
to the holy sources of the sacramental rites in blessed and conceptual
visions, in the purity of his godlike condition' (EH Hl.ii: 428A); in
the case of the still more hidden sacrament of oil, the actual cere-
mony is said to be hidden from the ordinary people and sacredly
veiled by the priests who are allowed to behold, 'for the ray of all-
holy things enlightens purely and directly godly men, as kin of the
Light, and the fragrance is received by their minds without any hin-
drance' (EH IV.iii.2: 476B). All this suggests that the Mystical
Theology has a liturgical context, and indeed that it relates especially
to the hierarch and his role in the liturgy.
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DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
HIEROTHEUS AGAIN
The other visionary Denys speaks of is his guide, Hierotheus. He
speaks of his 'many and blessed visions' as being the source of his
teaching (DN II.9); and in DN III.2 describes the extraordinary
experience Hierotheus had on the occasion of the death of Mary, the
Mother of God (her 'dormition' or falling asleep) when, in the
context of that solemn occasion, he surpassed the other apostles and
holy men in singing praises of the 'boundlessly powerful goodness of
the thearchic weakness', and being 'wholly caught up, wholly out of
himself, and suffering communion with the things praised, so that he
was considered by all who heard and saw him, and knew or rather
did not know him, to be divinely possessed, to be uttering divine
praises' (681D-684A).10 We encounter here themes we are already
familiar with: Hierotheus's ecstasy ('wholly out of himself) and his
experiencing (or rather suffering) divine things. We hear, too,
language that Denys characteristically uses of the liturgy: for the
hierarch in the celebration of the Eucharist is said to 'come into
communion' with the 'things praised' (EH Ill.ii: 425D).
We suggested earlier (pp. 28-29) that Hierotheus's significance is
to be seen in relation to the liturgy. Now is the time to draw out what
Denys says about Hierotheus, for it seems that it is Hierotheus's
experience that will be our surest guide to the meaning of the
Mystical Theology. Hierotheus's significance for Denys is spelled
out in the Divine Names: in the two passages just referred to, and in
the discussion of love (eros and agape) in DN IV. lOff., which culmi-
nates in extracts from Hierotheus's Hymns of Love (DN IV.15-17).
From all this a remarkably consistent picture emerges. Hiero-
theus's knowledge of the divine is derived partly from his study of
the Scriptures, and partly through an untaught experience, where
he did not 'learn' but 'suffered' or experienced divine things. As a
result Denys speaks of his 'sympathy' with divine things, which was
both an expression of and a means towards his 'hidden union and
faith' (DN II.9). This sympathy, or suffering of divine things, is pre-
sented as divine possession, which issues in ecstasy. Given this
language of possession, ecstasy, suffering, it is no surprise that all
this is summed up in Denys's teaching on love. Love, we have seen, is
defined as a 'power that unites and binds together and effects an
indissoluble fusion in the beautiful and the good' (DN IV. 12: 709C),
and it is ecstatic in the sense that it draws the lover out of himself and
centres his life on the beloved: 'those who are possessed by this love
belong not to themselves, but to the objects of their love' (712A).
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VISIONS AND DARKNESS
103
DENYS THE AREOPAG1TE
A CELEBRANT'S HANDBOOK?
The Mystical Theology, then, is to be seen as relating to the liturgy,
as referring to the inner nature of what is accomplished in the liturgy:
union with God and deification. But for whom does it elucidate this
inner meaning? Much of what we have said so far would suggest that
it is concerned with the hierarch, or bishop. It is addressed to
Timothy, a hierarch. Hierotheus seems to be the model of the
experience it speaks of, and he too was most likely a hierarch. Other
considerations might suggest this as well. The Mystical Theology is
speaking of what happens beyond the symbols of the liturgy and
beyond the affirmations, both metaphorical and conceptual, of our
praise of God. It is the theology of silence and union with God. How
does the notion of such union with God relate to the hierarchies that
figure so large in his books on the heavenly and earthly hierarchies?
Hierarchies seem to trace a movement away from God.
The most natural suggestion (which Denys himself takes up, when
he speaks of the seraphim in CH VII and VIII, and EH IV) is that
union with God is the prerogative of those beings immediately
present to God: the seraphim, or perhaps the whole of the first rank
of angelic beings—seraphim, cherubim and thrones—who several
times are said to dwell in the 'antechamber' of the Thearchy (pro-
thyroi, a Neoplatonic expression: e.g., CH VII.2, and cf. DN V.5).
Indeed, when in CH XIII Denys expands on the role of the seraphim,
much of his language is reminiscent of the Mystical Theology.12
Perhaps, then, in the case of our hierarchy, union with God is
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VISIONS AND DARKNESS
reserved for those who occupy the highest rank, namely the
hierarchs or bishops. Much of what we have seen in this chapter
suggests such an inference. Denys does seem to imply that the
hierarch lives in contact with the realities that he displays in symbolic
fashion for the sake of the people in the liturgy. The Mystical
Theology would then be intended for bishops: it would be a kind of
celebrant's handbook.
That may be so, but there are considerations that weigh against
such a conclusion. What about the monks?—we might wonder.
Their vocation is to live out a union with the One, and to draw every-
thing into that unity. One might observe, too, that the first four of
Denys's letters which seem to be appendices to the Mystical
Theology—the first two are concerned with the notion of the divine
darkness and of the divine transcendence, the central notion of the
Mystical Theology, the other two with the meaning of the incar-
nation, which we have seen to be equally central—are all addressed
to a monk, Gaius. That would suggest that Denys does not reserve
the theme of the Mystical Theology for the attention of bishops
alone. Perhaps then we should see the two human hierarchies—the
priestly hierarchy and the lay hierarchy—as united with God
through their highest rank, bishops and monks respectively?
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DENYS THE AREOPAG1TE
106
VISIONS AND DARKNESS
107
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
108
VISIONS AND DARKNESS
thropia, his love for all humanity. And that response is required of
all who take part in the liturgy. As he explains each sacred rite, Denys
passes from the 'mystery' to 'contemplation' (theoria): and all the
baptized are expected to contemplate, to watch, to take part, to be
involved in the movement of God's love. It is the rank of the holy
people whom Denys calls the 'contemplative order'.
Notes
1 E.g., Gregory of Nyssa expounds Moses' vision by reference to Paul's
in the Life of Moses II.173ff. ; and for Augustine on the visions of
Moses and Paul, see C. Butler, Western Mysticism (2nd ed., London,
1926), pp. 78-88.
2 Alphabetical Collection, Olympics, 1 (PG 65: 313C-D), trans, (with
modifications) by Benedicta Ward SLG, The Sayings of the Desert
Fathers (London, 1975), p. 135.
3 Macarius, Homily X.4 (trans. A. J. Mason, London, 1921; p. 78).
4 See Vladimir Lossky, The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church
(Eng. trans., Cambridge, 1957), pp. 217-35.
5 SeeEthical Treatise V. 11.404-54, and Darrouzes' remarks in his intro-
duction: Sources Chretiennes 122 (Paris, 1966), pp. 33-5.
6 See H.-C. Puech's article, 'LaTenebre mystique chez le Pseudo-Denys
I'Areopagite'.repr. inEnquetedelagnose(Paiis, 1978), pp. 119-41;
esp. pp. 131f.
7 Notably by Paul Rorem in a paper (as yet unpublished) given at the
Ninth International Patristic Conference in 1983, and in his notes to the
translation of MT in Works.
8 EH Ill.ii: 425C-D; cf. EH HI.iii.10.
9 EH H.ii.8: 397A; cf. EH III.iii.3: 429B.
10 The translation in the Classics of Western Spirituality gives the impres-
sion of a vision of the Mother of God shared by the apostles, Hiero-
theus and Denys himself. The point is, surely, that they were there and
saw the body of Mary.
11 SeeDNVII.l.
12 See, especially, CH XIII.4: 304C; the account of the seraphim in EH
IV.hi.5-10 has, however, very few echoes of MT.
13 Ennead I.6.9.9ff.
14 DNXIII.3:981B.
15 See Roques, Structures, pp. 143-5.
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DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
16 The Platonic phrase (from Theaetetus 176B) and the idea of analogy
mutually echo each other in CH III.2: 165A-C.
17 See V. Lossky, 'La notion des "analogies" chez Denys le Pseudo-
Areopagite', Archives d'histoire doctrinale et litteraire du moyen-age 5
(1931), pp. 279-309; O. Semmelroth, 'Die Lehre des Ps-Dionysius
Areopagita vom Aufstieg der Kreatur zum gottlichen Licht', Scho-
lastik 29 (1954), pp. 24-52.
18 An etymology that goes back to Plato: Cratylus 416C.
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7
Afterlife
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DENYS THE AREOPAG1TE
112
AFTERLIFE
113
DENYS THE AREOPAG1TE
114
AFTERLIFE
115
DENYS THE AREOPAG1TE
orders), the physical world (heaven and earth), man (body and soul),
soul (contemplative intellect and practical reason), Scripture
(mystical and literal meaning). The movement of the liturgy between
sanctuary and nave can therefore be seen to echo at all levels from
the cosmic to the individual.
Maximus was deeply influential on the tradition of Byzantine
theology: a measure of his importance for the later monastic tradi-
tion in the East can be seen in the fact that he is assigned more space
than anyone else in the Philokalia of St Nicodemus of the Holy
Mountain and St Macarius of Corinth (163 pages out of 1,206 in the
editio princeps of 1782; most of the second volume of the English
translation). The influence of Denys on St Maximus was therefore
widely felt throughout the Byzantine East. Nevertheless there are
still Byzantine writers totally unaffected by Denys: notably St John
Climacus, a close contemporary of Maximus, whose Ladder of
Divine Ascent is perhaps as important in Eastern Orthodox mona-
sticism as the Rule of St Benedict in the West. But from the time of
Maximus onwards, Dionysian themes become more and more
commonly accepted. In the century after Maximus, the influence of
Denys can be traced along lines by now familiar in the works of St
John Damascene (c. 650-c. 750). John follows Denys for his angelo-
logy, and takes over his language of apophatic and cataphatic
theology, and other aspects of Denys's doctrine of the divine names
(for example, in relation to the doctrines of the Trinity and the incar-
nation), but this is all part of a much wider synthesis that owes most
to others—others with whom we are already familiar.
If John Damascene represents Dionysian influence in the wake of
Maximus on the theological side, then Germanus of Constantinople
(who died in 733 and was the Damascene's contemporary and with
him one of the principal opponents of iconoclasm) can be taken as
representing that influence on the liturgical side. His 'Ecclesiastical
History and Mystical Contemplation' (to translate it literally: a more
idiomatic translation would be, 'What takes place in Church and its
hidden meaning') gives an account of the Eucharistic liturgy and its
significance that leans heavily on Denys's Ecclesiastical Hierarchy,
as well as incorporating the typological understanding of the liturgy
characteristic of Theodore of Mopsuestia's Homilies, and notable
by its absence from Denys. The very first chapter epitomizes this
double filiation: 'The Church is an earthly heaven in which God,
who is beyond the heavens, dwells, and which represents the cruci-
fixion, burial and resurrection of Christ'. 12 Germanus's inter-
pretation of the liturgy remained dominant in Constantinople for
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AFTERLIFE
117
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
good ground in the parable of the Sower (Mk 4:3 -20 and parallels):
these bear the heaviest fruit, a hundred-fold. The rank of the domi-
nions, powers and authorities is the place of rest for the martyrs and
confessors and the holy ascetics who work miracles: these have
ascended from practical philosophy to the heights of contemplation,
they bear fruit a moderate sixty-fold, and offer to the Church the
seed of the word of knowledge (18). The rank of the principalities,
archangels and angels is the place of rest for leaders and holy abbots
and lay people of holy life: these have fulfilled the commandments
and have shown themselves accomplished in practical philosophy,
they bear fruit thirty-fold and offer within the Church protection
and relief for the needy (19).
That is Nicetas's first attempt at relating the two hierarchies: in the
succeeding chapters he offers a more detailed account, which
attempts a more precise correlation of the several ranks. To do this
he produces three ranks of three in the ecclesiastical hierarchy to
match more exactly the celestial hierarchy. Denys, we recall, had
only two ranks of members of the Church: the clerical and the lay. In
comparison, Nicetas's ecclesiastical hierarchy is thoroughly clerical.
His highest rank consists of patriarchs, metropolitans and arch-
bishops; his middle rank is Denys's clerical hierarchy (called by their
usual names: bishops, priests—as in Denys, but now the usual
ecclesiastical term—and deacons); and his lowest rank consists of
sub-deacons, lectors and monks (some manuscripts bracket the
lectors and monks together, thus making room for the laity as the
lowest rank: but this seems to be a later modification). There is a
direct correspondence between the two hierarchies: thrones corres-
pond to patriarchs, cherubim to metropolitans, seraphim to arch-
bishops, and so on. Each triadic rank is said to have its own chant or
hymn of praise. Nicetas works out appropriate chants with some
ingenuity. The thrones, etc. sing 'Blessed be the glory of the Lord in
his place' (Ezek 3:12); the patriarchs, etc. sing 'Blessed be the
kingdom of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, now and for
ever, and to the ages of ages' (the introductory chant of the Eucha-
ristic liturgy, sung by the celebrant). The dominions, etc. sing the
sanctus in the version as it appears in Isaiah, 'Holy, holy, holy is the
Lord of Sabaoth: the whole earth is full of his glory' (Isa 6:3—oddly
enough, said in Isaiah to be the song of the seraphim); the bishops,
etc. sing the sanctus in its liturgical form, 'Holy, holy, holy, Lord of
Sabaoth: heaven and earth are full of thy glory; hosanna in the
highest. Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord; hosanna in
the highest.' The lowest rank, both in heaven and on earth, sing
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DENYS THE AREOPAG1TE
120
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121
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
122
AFTERLIFE
It seems that Denys made his influence felt through the Schools:
he was not very influential in the revival of monasticism in the
twelfth century. Isaac of Stella (mid-twelfth century) seems to have
known him well, but the great Cistercian reformer, St Bernard of
Clairvaux, seems to have been little influenced by him.25 The
eventual influence of Denys in the West cannot, however, be under-
stood without a grasp of Bernard's impact on Western spirituality.
In Bernard we begin to see a disjunction between knowledge and
love, thinking and feeling, that was destined to have a profound
influence in the West.26 In earlier thinkers (Augustine, for instance)
feeling and thinking are held together, so that in love, the intellect
realizes a deeper dimension of its own nature: in love, the intellect
passes beyond a dispassionate discursive kind of thought, and comes
to know the beloved in an intuitive way, through some kind of
communion. In Bernard, however, love is opposed to knowledge, it
is a matter of feeling. Knowledge is regarded as superficial—it is only
thinking about things; feeling engages the depths of the human
person—it is in love that a man discovers himself.
It is this tendency to separate love and knowledge that prepares the
way for the peculiar form of Dionysian influence in the West. But
this separation of love and knowledge can be seen as part of a much
wider phenomenon—what has been called the 'discovery of the
individual'27—and that, too, prepared the ground for the reception
of Denys.
Denys's notion of hierarchy seems to have been taken up as a
major interpretative concept in the high Middle Ages. St Bona-
venture, for instance, develops Denys's idea in an original way by
extending the notion of hierarchy up into the divine nature itself, and
down into the human soul.28 Everything is seen as hierarchical: the
notion of hierarchy is used to hold together the idea of different
levels in a single whole. The several hierarchies—the divine, the
heavenly, the ecclesiastical, and the psychological—all mutually
illuminate one another: in particular, the heavenly hierarchy, which
stretches from human contact to the presence of God himself, illumi-
nates the psychological hierarchy which itself stretches from human
concerns and efforts to surrender to God in contemplation. The
soul's ascent to God is an ascent through the hierarchy of the soul: it
can be compared to ascent through the ranks of the celestial hier-
archy. We noticed earlier that Denys himself does not regard the
hierarchies as ladders for us to ascend: but it is just such an under-
standing of hierarchy we find emerging here. Probably the earliest
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DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
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DENYS THE AREOPAG1TE
126
AFTERLIFE
Notes
1 For the influence of Denys on later Christian thought see the series of
articles in Dictionnaire de Spiritualite HI (Paris, 1957), cols 286-429
(some of which have, however, been superseded by more recent
research).
2 The Paradise or Garden of the Holy Fathers, trans. E. A. Wallis
Budge, 2 vols (London, 1907).
3 For the history of the Kephalaia Gnostica, and their influence, see A.
Guillaumont, Les "Kephalaia Gnostica" d'Evagre le Pantique (Paris,
1962). For a brief account of what was available in Syriac, see Sebastian
Brock in The Study of Spirituality, ed. Cheslyn Jones, Geoffrey Wain-
wright, Edward Yarnold (London, 1986), pp. 207-9.
4 Surviving works, with Eng. trans, in A. Mingana, Early Christian
Mystics, Woodbrooke Studies VII (Cambridge, 1934).
5 Ibid., p. 15.
6 Ibid., p. 11.
7 Ibid., p. 57.
8 Guillaumont, op. cit., pp. 302-32.
9 See Hans Urs von Balthasar, 'Das Scholienwerk des Johannes von
Scythopolis', Scholastik 16 (1940), pp. 16-38; repr., with minor revi-
sions, in Kosmische Liturgie (2nd ed., 1961), pp. 644-72.
10 See H. D. Saffrey, 'Nouveaux liens objectifs entre le Ps-Denys et
Proclus', Revue des sciences philosophiques et theologiques 63 (1979),
pp. 3-16.
11 E.g. by A. Riou, Le Monde et I'Eglise selon Maxime le Confesseur
(Paris, 1973), p. 160.
12 St Germanus of Constantinople, On the Divine Liturgy, with intro-
duction, translation and commentary by Paul Meyendorff (Crest-
wood, NY, 1984), p. 56.
13 See R. Bornert, Les commentaires byzantins de la divine liturgie du
Vile au XVe siecle (Paris, 1966).
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DENYS THE AREOPAG1TE
129
8
Conclusion
130
CONCLUSION
131
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
But we have suggested that Denys does not really regard hierarchy
as something imposed on 'us' and independent of 'us': rather it con-
sists of us. The theophany that the cosmos is, that the hierarchies
are, is not over against us: we are part of it. If Denys's vision is balle-
tic, then we are all meant to join in the dance.
Perhaps the problem lies in the word 'hierarchy'. We do not now-
adays in the West think naturally in hierarchical terms. We pre-
suppose that all men and women are equal; we tend to see society on
some sort of 'social contract' model: we have (or can be regarded as
having) agreed together to form a society, by accepting the con-
straints that living together imposes. Our notion of community tends
to mean 'doing things together'. Applied to the liturgy, such an
understanding of community produces the notion of worship which
is becoming more and more prevalent in the Christian West.
Christian worship is everyone doing everything together: we sing
hymns, we repeat prayers together; if anything is said, then we all
want to be able to hear it, so that we can all 'take part'. It was not
always like that (nor is it yet in the Orthodox Church). Some parts of
the liturgy used to be silent, other things would be going on at the
same time, there was no 'single line' in the liturgy that all should
follow. The idea that there should be—at least as far as the part sung
by the choir is concerned—is not new. Church authorities have long
deplored polyphony and have never appreciated the great,
incomprehensible bursts of praise produced in baroque Mass
settings by compressed Glorias and Credos. But this idea of commu-
nity and communal worship really is individualistic: it envisages a
collection of individuals doing everything together (as far as
possible).
The notion of hierarchy suggests something very different. It
suggests a community that is essentially structured, where there are
genuinely different roles, and the putting together of those different
roles creates something new and different from all the parts that go
to make it. Such an understanding of an essentially hierarchical
society is not something new in Christian history with Denys; on the
contrary, it is very ancient. We can find it at the end of the first
century in the first Epistle of Clement of Rome:
For to the high priest [i.e., the bishop] his proper ministrations
are allotted, and to the priests the proper place has been
appointed, and on levites [i.e., deacons] their proper services
(diakoniai) have been imposed. The layman is bound by the
ordinances for the laity. Let each of us, brothers, celebrate the
132
CONCLUSION
133
DENYS THE AREOPAGITE
Notes
1 B. F. Westcott, Essays in the History of Religious Thought in the West
(London, 1891), pp. 189-91 (the complete essay is found on
pp. 142-93).
2 J. Meyendorff, Le Christ dans la pensee byzantine (Paris, 1969),
p. 147.
3 A. Schmemann, Introduction to Liturgical Theology (Eng. trans.,
London/Portland, ME, 1966), p. 155 (the 'ascetic' is to be understood
as 'individualistic': see pp. 106f.)
4 / Clement 40f.
5 Mary Douglas, Natural Symbols (Pelican ed., Harmondsworth,
Middx, 1973).
134