History of Dogma V III 3rd Ed.
History of Dogma V III 3rd Ed.
History of Dogma V III 3rd Ed.
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The original of tiiis book is in
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THEOLOGICAL TRANSLATION LIBRARY
VOL. VIII.
BY
VOL. III.
SECOND EDITION
1897
^V^.
A)
V^
EDITOR'S PREFACE.
A. B. BRUCE.
Glasgow, August, 1897.
AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION OF
VOLUME II. OF THE GERMAN WORK.
The first half of the second part of the History of Dogma is here
given apart and as the second volume, because it is complete in itself,
and I shall be prevented from completing the work at once by other
tasks.
The account contained in the following pages would have been shorter,
if Icould have persuaded myself of the correctness of the opinion, that
a single, all-determining thought obtained its true development in the
History of Dogma from the fourth to the eighth century. This opinion
dominates, apart from a few monographs, all writings on the History of
and Catholics. I share it within certain limits; but these very limits,
which I have endeavoured to define, '
have not yet received due
attention. In the fourth century the formula that was correct, when
judged by the conception of redemption of the ancient Church, pre-
vailed but the Fathers, who finally secured its triumph, did not give it
;
positions of the Fathers have only been brought under review, where
they appeared indispensable for the understanding of Dogma. In any
case I was not afraid of doing too much here. I am convinced that
a shorter description ought not to be offered to students of Theology,
unlessit were to be a mere guide. The history of Christian Dogma—
perhaps the most complicated history of development which we can
completely review— presents the investigator with the greatest difficult-
ies and yet it is, along with the study of the New Testament, and in
;
of the day. But the royal way to the understanding of the History of
Dogma, opened up by F. Chr. Baur, and pursued by Thomasius, does
not lead to the goal; for by it we become acquainted with the histori-
cal matter only in the abbreviated form required for the defence of
the completed Dogma.
The history of the development of Dogma does not offer the lofty in-
East we are no longer called upon to deal in any quarter with new
and original matter, but always rather with what is traditional, deriv-
ative, and, to an increasing extent, superstitious. Yet that to which
centuries devoted earnest reflection, holding it to be sacred, will
never lose its importance, as long as there still exists among us a
the doctrines of the Trinity and the divine humanity of Christ. The
inquirer who development of these dogmas after the fourth
follows the
century, to the want of originality and freshness in his
and who, owing
material, loses pleasure in his work, is ever and again reanimated,
when he considers that he has to deal with matters which have gained,
and still exercise, an immense power over the feelings and minds of
men. And how much it is still possible for us to learn, as free Evan-
have dedicated
gelical Christians, especially after generations of scholars
to this history themost devoted industry, so that no one can enter into
their labours without becoming their disciples!
I know very -well that it would be possible to treat the material
notes, but the text of the book is so written that the reader, if he
prefers it, may disregard them.
Page
CHAPTER I.— The decisive success of theological specula-
tion in the sphere of the Rule of Faith, or, the de-
fining of the norm of the Doctrine of the Church
due to the adoption of the Logos Christology ... i—
1. Introduction i
Page
Commodian, Arnobius, Laqtantius . . . -77
Theology of the West about A.D. 300 78
Modalistic Monarchians in the East Sabellianism and
:
SECOND PART.
FIRST BOOK.
The History of the Development of Dogma as the Doctrine of
the God-man on the basis of Natural Theology.
Page
CHAPTER I.— Historical Situation 121-162
Internal position of the Church at the beginning of
the fourth Century .121
Relative unity of the Church as World-Church, aposto-
licity and secularisation 123
Asceticism culminating in monachism as bond of unity 127
State of Theology i^i
Theology influenced by Origen departs from strict
monotheism 135
CONTENTS. XIII
Page
Conservative Theology in the East 137
Critical state of the Logos doctrine, and the epoch-
making importance of Athanasius 139
The two lines in which Dogma developed historically
after Nicene Council 144
Periods of History of Dogma, chiefly in the East . . 148
First period up to A.D. 381 150
Second period up to A.D. 451 152
Third period up to A.D. 553 154
Fourth period up to A.D. 680 156
Last period and close of process of History of Dogma 157
CHAPTER IL— Fundamental Conception of Salvation and
General Outline of System of Doctrine 163— igo
§ I. Conception of Redemption as deification of humanity
consequent upon Incarnation of Deity 163
Reasons for delay, and for acceptance in imperfect form,
of dogmatic formulas corresponding to conception
of Redemption 167 I
Page
Exegesis of Antiochenes 201
Exegesis in the West, Augustine . 202
Uncertainties as to attributes and sufificiency of Scripture 205
The two Testaments 206
2. Tradition. Scripture and Tradition , • 207
The creed or contents of Symbol is tradition ; Develop-
ment of symbol, Distinction between East and West 208
Cultus, Constitution, and Disciplinary regulations cover-
ed by notion of Apostolic Tradition, the Tra^dloaiq
aypad)o? 211
Authority and representation of the Church 2 14 ....
Councils 215
Common Sense of Church '219
"Antiquity"; Category of the "Fathers" 219
Apostolic Communities, Patriarchate . .221
Rome and the Roman Bishop: prestige in East 224 . . .
Page
CHAPTER IV.— Presuppositions and Conceptions of God the
Creator as Dispenser of Salvation 241—254
Proofs of God, method in doctrine of God . . . 241
Doctrine of nature and attributes of God . . .
244
Cosmology 247
The upper world 248
Doctrine of Providence. Theodicies 249
Doctrine of Spirits; Influence of Neoplatonism . . . 251
Significance of doctrine of angels in practice and cultus 151
Criticism .... 254
CHAPTER v.— Presuppositions and conceptions of man as
recipient of Salvation 255 — 287
The common element ... . .
....
.
255
Anthropology . . . .
256
Origin of Souls .... . . . .
259
Image of God . . . 260
CONTENTS. XV
Page
Primitive State 261
Primitive State and Felicity . . 261
Doctrine of Sin, the Fall and Death .... . 263
Influence of Natural Theology on Doctrine of Re-
demption ... . . . 265
Blessing of Salvation something natural .... 266
Felicity as reward 266
Revelation as law, rationalism .... 267
Influence of rationalism on Dogma 269
Neutralising of the historical; affinity of rationahsm and
mysticism 270
More precise account of views of Athanasius .... 272
Of Gregory of Nyssa 276
Of Theodore 279
Of John of Damascus ... ... ... . 283
Conclusion ... ... . . 287
^.—The doctrine of Redemption in the Person of the God-man, in its
historical development.
Page
CHAPTER VI.— Doctrine of the necessity and reality of
Redemption through the Incarnation of the Son of
God 288—304
The decisive importance of the Incarnation of God . 288
Theory of Athanasius 290
Doctrines of Gregory of Nyssa . . 296
Pantheistic perversions of thought of Incarnation . 299
Other teachers up John of Damascus
to ... . . 301
Was Incarnation necessary apart from sin? . . 303
Idea of predestination 303
Appendix. The ideas of redemption from the Devil, and
atonement through the work of the God-man . . . 305—315
Mortal sufferings of Christ 305
Christ's death and the removal of sin . . 306
Ransom paid to the Devil 307
Christ's death as sacrifice— vicarious suffering of punish-
ment 308
Western views of Christ's work. Juristic categories,
satisfactio ... . . . 310
Christ as man the atoner. . 313
I . Introduction.
Gesch. a. Entw. der Systeme der Unitarier vor der nic. Synode, 1831 Hagemann, ;
Die rdmische Kirche und ihr Einfluss auf Disciplin und Dogma in den ersten drei
Jahrh. 1864, (tTie most important and most stimulating monograph on the subject);
and my art. Monarchianismus in Herzog's R. E., 2nd ed., vol. X., pp. 178 213,
' ' —
on which the following arguments are based.
2 See Vol. 11., pp. 20 —38 and Iren. I. 10, i; TertitU. Depraescr. 13; Adv. Prax. 2.
were waged for more than a century within the Catholic Church
rather show, that the doctrine only gradually found its way
into the creed of the Church. ' But a higher than merely
Christological interest attaches to the gradual incorporation of
the Logos doctrine in the rule of faith. The formula of the
Logos, as it was almost universally understood, legitimised spe-
culation, i.e., Neo-platonic philosophy, within the creed of the
Church. ' When Christwas designated the incarnate Logos of
God, and when this was set up as His supreme characterisation,
men were directed to think of the divine in Christ as the
reason of God realised in the structure of the world and the
history of mankind. This implied a definite philosophical view
of God, of creation, and of the world, and the baptismal con-
fession became a compendium of scientific dogmatics, i.e., of a
system of doctrine entwined with the Metaphysics of Plato and
the Stoics. But at the same time an urgent impulse necessarily
made itself felt to define the contents and value of the Redeem-
er's life and work, not, primarily, from the point of view of
the proclamation of the Gospel, and the hopes of a future state,
but from that of the cosmic significance attaching to his
divine nature concealed in the flesh. Insomuch, however, as
such a view could only really reach and be intelligible to
those who had been trained in philosophical speculations, the
establishing of the Logos Christology within the rule of faith
was equivalent mass of Christians to the setting up
for the great
of a mystery, which in the first place could only make an im-
pression through its high-pitched formulas and the glamour of
the incomprehensible. But as soon as a religion expresses the
• The observation that Irenseus and TertuUian treat it as a fixed portion of the
rule of faith is shows that these theologians were ahead of
very instructive; for it
the Church of their time. Here we have a point given, at which we can estimate
the relation of what Irenasus maintained to be the creed of the Church, to the
doctrine which was, as a matter of fact, generally held at the time in the Church.
We may turn this insight to account for the history of the Canon and the constitu-
tion, where, unfortunately, an estimate of the statements of Irenseus is rendered
difficult.
order that men mi^ht become ods ;" and, finally, which was
^ —
not least— it could be brought, with httle trouble, into line with
• The points, which, as regards Christ, belonged in the second half of the second
century to ecclesiastical orthodoxy, are given in the clauses of the Roman baptismal
confession to which aAi)Sw? is added, in the precise elaboration of the idea of
creation, in the eI? placed alongside Xpia-TOf 'Iwoii, and in the identification of the
Catholic institution of the Church with the Holy Church.
of Celsus placed by him in the lips of his "Jew" (II. 31): w? s'lys 6 y,6yoi; herriv
vij,7\i vlii ToS &£oS, XXI ttiiilii ivaivov(j.eii; see also the preceding: iro(pi'^ovTixi 0!
Xpta-Ttacvot iv t^ ^eyetv tov vlov tov &£qv elvai avTO^oyov.
5 The conviction of the harmony of the Apostles, or, of all Apostolic writings,
could not but result in the Christology of the Synoptics and the Acts being inter-
preted in the light of John and Paul, or more accurately, in that of the philosophic
Christology held to be attested by John and Paul. It has been up to the present
day the usual fate of the Synoptics, and with them of the sayings of Jesus, to be
understood, on account of their place in the Canon, in accordance with tire caprices
of the dogmatics prevalent at the time, Pauline and Johannine theology having
assigned to it the role of mediator. The " lower " had to be explained by the
"higher" (see even Clemens Ale.\. with his criticism of the "pneumatic", the spiritual,
Fourth Gospel, as compared with the first three). In older times men transformed
the sense right ofTj nowadays they speak of slips which lead to the ///f//«- teaching,
and they diess the old illusion with a new scien.'if.c mantle.
Chap, i.] INTRODUCTION 7
' But the substitution of the Logos for the, otherwise undefined, spiritual being
(vvbSij,x) in Christ presented another very great advantage. It brought to an end
though not at once (see Clemens Alex.), the speculations which reckoned the heavenly
personality of Christ in some way number of the higher angels
or other in the
or conceived it as one y£on among many. Through'the definition of this" Spiritual
Being "as Logos his transcendent and unique dignity was firmly outlined and
assured.For the Logos was universally accepted as the Frius logically and tempor-
ally, and the causa not only of the world, but also of all powers, ideas, asons,
—
and angels. He, therefore, did not belong at least in every respect to their order. —
3 Augustine wrought to end this questionable monotheism, and endeavoured
first
to treat seriously the monotheism of the living God. But his efforts only produced
an impression in the West, and even there the attempt was weakened from the start
by a faulty respect for the prevalent Christology, and was forced to entangle itself
in absurd formulas. In the East the accommodating Substance-Monotheism of
philosophy remained with its permission of a plurality of divine persons; and this
doctrine was taught with such naivety and simplicity, that the Cappadocians, e.^.,
proclaimed the Christian conception of God to be the just mean between the
polytheism of the heathens and the monotheism of the Jews.
8 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
well as to all the needs of the Cultus, nay, even to new results
of Biblical exegesis. It revealed itself gradually to be a vari-
it s defende rs. With the Monarchians the first subj ect of inter est
wa s the man Jesus; then came monotheism and the divi ne
di gnity of Ch rist. From this point, however, the whole theo-
two first articles of the rule of faith,
logical interpretation of the
was again gradually involved in controversy. In so far as they
were understood to refute a crude docetism and the severance
of Jesus and Christ they were confirmed. But d id not th e doc-
trine of a h eavenly aeon, rendered incarnate in the R edeemer,
cont am remnant of the old Gnostic leave n? Did not~
another
the^ sending forth of the Logos (xpo/joAt? rov Xoyov) to cre ate
the world recall the emanation, of the aeo ns? Was not ditheism
s et up, if two divine beings were to be worshipp ed? Not only
was not laymen, but only theologians who had adopted the
creed of the laity, who opposed their brethren. ' We must
1 The Alogi opposed the Montanists and all prophecy; conversely the western
representativesof the Logos Christology, Irenxus, TertuUian and Hippolytus were
Chiliasts. But this feature makes no change in the fact that the incorporation of
the Logos Christology and the fading away of eschatological apocalyptic hopes
went hand in hand. Theologians were able to combine inconsistent beliefs for a
time; but for the great mass of the laity in the East the mystery of the person of
Christ took the place of the Christ who was to have set up his visible Kingdom
of glory upon earth. See especially the refutation of the Chiliasts by Origen
(s-Eff apx- II' 11) ^"<i Dionysius Alex. (Euseb. H. E. VII. 24, 25). The continued
1 This definition is, in truth, too narrow; for at least a section, if not all, of
the so-called Dynamistic Monarchians recognised, besides God, the Spirit as eternal
Son of God, and accordingly assumed two Hypostases. But they did not see in
Jesus an incarnation of this Holy Spirit, and they were therefore monarchian in
their docti'ine of Christ. Besides, so far as I know, the name of Monarchians
was
Chap, i.] INTRODUCTION 1
not applied in tlie ancient Church to these, but only to the theologians who taught
that there was in Christ an incarnation of God the Father Himself. was not
It
independence of a divine nature in Christ, yet held this nature to have been one
created by God ; in any case, the Arians were undoubtedly connected with Paul of
Samosata through Lucian. However, it is not advisable to extend the conception
so widely; for, firstly, we would thus get too far away from the old classification, and,
secondly, it is not to be overlooked that, even in the case of the most thorough-
going Arians, their Christology reacted on their doctrine of God, and their striict
Monotheism was to some extent modified. Hence, both on historical and logical
grounds, it is best for our purpose to understand by Monarchians those theologians
exclusively who perceived in Jesus either a man filled, in a unique way, with the
Spirit, or an incarnation of God the Father; with the reservation, that the former
in certain of their groups regarded the Holy Spirit as a divine Hypostasis, and were
accordingly no longer really Monarchians in the strict sense of the term. For the
rest, the expression "Monarchians'' is in so far inappropriate as their opponents
would also have certainly maintained the "monarchia" of God. See TertuUi., Adv.
Prax. 3 f. Epiphan. H. 62. 3 oh irohMieioiM eia-tiyovi^eice, aAA« liovcepxlzv y.ifpvTTOncv.
; :
They would even have cast back at the Monarchians the reproach that they were destroy-
ing the monarchy. "'H iJ,ovapX''<^ TO" @£oS " was in the second century a standing
title in the polemics of the theologians against polytheists and Gnostics see the —
passages collected from Justin, Tatian, Ireuceus etc. by Coustant in his Ep. Dionysii
adv. Sabell. (Routh, Reliq. Sacrse III., p. 385f.). Tertullian has therefore by no
means used the"Monarchians" as if he were thus directly branding his
term
opponents as heretical; he rather names them by their favourite catch-word in a
spirit of irony (Adv. Prax 10; "vanissimi Monarchiani"). Tlie name was therefore
not really synonymous with a form of heresy in the ancient Church, even if here
it was applied to the opponents of the doctrine of the
and there Trinity.
12 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
1 See Theol. Quartalschr. 1884, p. 547 ff, ICrawutzcky holds the Didache to be
at oace Ebionitic and Theodotian.
<^'hap. I.] INTRODUCTION 1
between the theory that made the power or Spirit of God dwell
in the man Jesus, and the view that sees in Him the incarnation
of the deity Himself.
Ce rtainly the common element,
so far as there was one, of
th e Monarchian movements, lay in the form of the conception
o f God, the distinguishing feature, in the idea of revelad on
But all the phenomena under this head cannot be classified
with certainty, apart from the fact that the most numerous and
important "systems" exist in a very shaky tradition. A really
reliable division of the Monarchianism that in all its forms
rejected the idea of a physical fatherhood of God, and only
saw the Son of God in the historical Jesus, is impossible on
the strength of the authorities up till now known to us.
Apart from a fragment or two we only possess accounts by
opponents. The chronology, again, causes a special difficulty.
Much labour has been spent upon it since the discovery of the
Philosophumena but most of the details have remained very
;
not yet been firmly settled. The concise remarks on the sub-
ject in what follows rest on independent labours. Finally, we
' It is very remarkable that Irenasus has given us no hint in liis great work
of a Monarchian controversy in the Church.
2 It was pointed out above, (Vol. I., p. 193) and will be argued more fully
later on, that the different Christologies could pass into one another.
' We have already noticed. Vol. I., p. 195, that we can only speak of a naive
Modalism in the earlier periods; Modalism first appeared as an exclusive doctrine
at the close of the second century; see under.
[Chap.
HISTORY OF DOGMA
i.
14
Lo gos~ot God to whom the Holy Spirit had borne witnesT 'in
Harnack in d. Ztsclir. f. d. histor. Theol. 1874, p. 166 f.; Lipsius, Quellen der
altesten Ketzergeschichte, p. 93 f., 214 f.; Zahn in d. Ztschr. fur die histor. Theol.,
^ See the list of writings on the statue of Hippolytus: i/teji tou naru iaav[v]iiv
ivayysMov xai axoxaAuvf/ea;; ; and Ebed Jesu, catal. 7 (Assemani, Bibl. Orient.
III. I, 15): "Apologia pro apocalypsi
et evangelio Johannis apostoli et evange-
listse." Hippolytus wrote: "Capita adversus Caium," a Roman sym-
Besides this
pathiser with the Alogi. Of this writing a few fragments have been preserved
(Gwynn, Hermathena VL, p. 397 f.
; Harnack, Texte und Unters. VI. 3, p. 121 ff.;
' It is certain that Epiphanius, besides the relative section of the Syntagma, also
copied at least a second writing against the "Alogi", and it is probable that this
likewise came from Hippolytus. The date of its composition can be prelty
still
accurately determined from Epiphan. H. 31, ch. 33. It was written about A.D. 234
for Epiphanius' authority closes the period of the Apostles 93 years after the
Ascension, and remarks that had elapsed. Lipsius has
since that date 112 years
obtained another result, but only by an emendation of the text which is unnecessary
(see Quellen der altesten Ketzergeschichte, p. 109 f.). Hippolytus treats his un-
named opponents as contemporaries; but a closer examination shows that he only
—
knew them from their writings of which there were several (see ch. 33), and there-
fore knew nothing by personal observation of the conditions under which they
appeared. A certain criterion of the age of these writings, and therefore of the
party itself, is given by the fact that, at the time when the latter flourished, (he
only Church at Thyatira was, from their own testimony, Montanist, while the
above-mentioned authority was already able to tell of a rising catholic Church, and
of other Christian communities in that place. A Christian of Thyatira, by name
Papylus, appears in the Martyrium Carpi et Papyli (see Harnack, Texte u. Unters.
III. 3, 4). The date when this movement in Asia Minor flourished can be dis-
covered more definitely, however, by a combination, proved by Zahn to be justified,
of the statements of Hippolytus and Irenasus III. 11. 9. According to this, the
party existed in Asia Minor, A.D. 170 iSo. —
6
dicted the other Gospels, and gave a quite different and, in-
'
surd and untrue (ch. 32 34). They ridiculed —the seven angels
and seven trumpets, and the four angels by the Euphrates;
and on Rev. II. 18, they supposed that there was no Christian
community in Thyatira at the time, and that accordingly the
Epistle was fictitious. Moreover, the objections to the Gospel
must also have included the charge (ch. 18) that it favoured
Docetism, seeing that it passed at once from the incarnation
of the Logos to the work of the ministry of Christ. In this
connection t hey attacked the expression "Logos" for the So n
of God ;
^ indeed, they scented Gnosticism in it, contrasted
John I. with the beginning of Mark's Gosp el, *
and arrived at
the result, whose contents were partly docetic,
that writings
partly sensuously Jewish and unworthy of God, must have been
composed by Cerinthus, the gnosticising Judaist. In view of this
fact it is extremely surprising to notice how mildly the party
was and treated by Irenaeus as well as by Hippolytus.
criticised
The former distinguishes them sharply from the declared
heretics. He places them on a line with the Schismatics, who
gave up communion with the Church on account of the hypo-
1 Epiph. LI., ch. 4 : (^xa-xoviTi on ou irU|ts<f>ftiv£7 rcc ^ijS^ix toS 'laavvov roll; f^oi-
TToti; oLTCoiTTO^oic^^ ch. l8: TO suayyE^iov to eit; '6vofza ^laixwov ^sv^srai . . . ^^syovtrt
ro Kccrx 'Iwavvjjv euxyysAiov, sTStSij [iij rx aurx ro7t; ixToa-To^oiQ 'iipvi, uhix^srov
eJvxt.
Epiphanius has preserved for us in part the criticism of the Alogi on John
2
I. II.,and on tlie Johannine chronology (ch. 3, 4, 15, 18, 22, 26, 28, 29). In their
conception the Gospel of John precluded the human birth and development of Jesus.
' Epiph. LI. 3, 28: Tov ^oyov tov @eov xvo^iiMovTai tov Sm 'luavvtjv xtfpur-
SevTX.
* Epiph. IJ., ch. 6: hiyoviriv 'iSat/ hurcpov euayyi^iov iripi XpurroC <r\fii.a!yov
Kxi oiSxi^ov UvuiSsv f,£yav riiv yin^mv if,?\a, (})t)ff;'i/, 'E» tw 'lopS&vvi xarijAJE to
vviunx '£T' a-JTOt Kxi (fiuvii- OCito; isTiv 6 uidg i ayaTjjTo'?, '1$ Sv yjl/SoK^o-x.
Chap, l] MONARCHIANISM : THE ALOGI 1
p laced, however, the chi ef empha sis on the human life of Jesu s,
on his birth, baptism, and temptation as told by the Synoptic s,
an d for this very, reason rejected the formula of the Logos, as
well as th e "birth from abo v e", i.e., the eternal generation of
' This milder criticism — and neither Montanists nor Alogi stand in Irenaeus'
catalogue of heretics —naturally did not prevent the view that those "unhappy-
people " had got into an extremely bad position by their opposition to the prophetic
activity of the Spirit in the Church, and had fallen into the unforgivable sin against
the Holy Ghost.
2 In Epiph. LI., ch. 4: SoxoSa-i xai aiiToi ta 'luu )5fi7v VKrTstjsrj.
and "gifts of the Spirit" (ch. 35), they, in doing so, gave the
clearest revelation of their Catholic character. Since they did
not beUeve in an age of the Paraclete, nor entertain material-
istichopes about the future state, they could not reconcile
themselves to the Johannine writings; and their attachment to
the of Christ in the Synoptics led them to reject
conception
the Gospel of the Logos. An explicitly Church party could
not have ventured to promulgate such views, if they had been
confronted by a Canon already closed, and giving a fixed place
to these Johannine books. The uncompromising criticism, both
internal —
and external as in the hypothesis of the Cerinthian
authorship —
to which these were subjected, proves that, when
the party arose, no Catholic Canon existed as yet in Asia Minor,
and that, accordingly, the movement was almost as ancient as
that of the Montanists, which it followed very closely. ^ On this
2 As regards the problem of the origin and gradual reception of the Johannine
writings, and especially of the Gospel, their use by Montanus, and their abrupt rejection
by the Alogi, are of the greatest significance, especially when we bear in mind the
Churchly character of the latter. The rise of such an opposition in the very region in
which the Gospel undoubtedly first came to light; the application to the fourth of a
standard derived from the Synoptic Gospels; the denial without scruple, of its apostolic
origin; are facts which it seems to me have, at the present day, not been duly
appreciated. We must not weaken their force by an appeal to the dogmatic character
of the criticism practised by the Alogi the attestation of the Gospel cannot
;
have been convincing, if such a criticism was ventured on in the Church. But
the Alogi distinctly denied to John and ascribed to Cerinthus the Apocalypse as
—9
well as the Gospel. Of Cerinthus we know far too little to be justified in sharing
in the holy horror of the Church Fathers. But even if the above hypothesis is
false,and it is in fact very probable that it is, yet the very fact that it could be
,
set up by Churchmen is instructive enough; for it shows us, what we do not know
from any other source, that the Johannine writings met with, and had to overcome,
opposition in their birth-place.
^ The Roman Caius took over this criticism from them, as is shown by Hip-
polytus' Caium. But, like Theodotus, to be mentioned presently, ho
Cap. adv.
rejected the view of the Alogi as regards John's Gospel.
20 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
ersteo Jahrh., 1864; Lipsius, Quellenkritik, p. 235 f.; Lipsius, Chronologie der
rbmischen Bischofe, p. 173 f.; Harnack, in the Ztschr. f. d. hist. Theol., 1874,
p. 200; Caspai-i, Qiiellen III., pp. 318—321, 404 f.; Langen, Geschichte der romi-
schen Kirche I., p. 192 f. ; Caspari, Om Melchizedekiterues eller Theodotianernes
eller Athinganemes Laerdomme og om hvad de herve at sige, naar de skulle Mine
optagne i. den kristelige Kirke, in the Tidsskr f. d. evang. luth. Kirke. Ny Raekke,
—
Bd. VIII., part 3, pp. 307 337. Authorities for the older Theodotus are; (i) the
Syntagma of Hippolytus according to Epiph. H. 54, Philaster-H. 50. and Pseudo-
TertuU. H. 28; (2) the Philosophumena VII. 35, X. 23, IX. 3, 12, X. 27; (3) the
fragment of Hippolytus against Noetus, ch. 3. 4) the fragments from the so-called
Little Labyrinth (in Euseb. H. E. V. 28), which was perhaps by Hippolytus, and
was written is the fourth decade of the third century, and after the Philosophumena.
This woric was directed against Roman Dynamistic Monarchians under the leader-
ship of a certain Artemas, who are to be distinguished from the Theodotians.
(For the age and author of the Little Labyrinth, and for its connection with the
writings against the Alogi and against Noetus; also for the appearance of Artemas,
which is not to be dated before ± 235 see Caspari, Quellen I.e., and my art.
:
"Monarchianismtis", p. 186). Eusebius has confined his extracts from the Little
Labyrinth to such as deal with the Theodotians. These extracts and Philos. Lib. X.
are used by Theodoret (li. F. II. 4. 5); it is not probable that the latter had him-
self examined the Little Labyrinth. A writing of Theodotus seems to have been
made use of in the Syntagma of Hippolytus. As regards the younger Theodotus, his
name has been handed down by the Little Labyrinth, the Philosoph. (VII. 36) and
Pseudo-TertuU. H. 29 (Theodoret H. F. 11. 6). The Syntagma tells of a party of
Melchizedekians, wliich is traced in the Philosoph. and by the Pseudo-TertuUian to
the younger Theodotus, but neitlier the party nor its founder is named. Very
mysterious in contents and origin is the piece, edited for the first time from Parisian
MSS. by Caspari (see above): TSfi M£A;)j<a-£j£x(av&iv xxi 0eoSoriavav xeei 'ASiy-
•yamv. Tlie only controversial writing known to us against Artemas (Artemon) is
the Little Labyrinth. Unfortunately Eusebius has not excerpted the passages aimed
at him. Artemas is, again, omitted in the Syntagma and in the Philosoph. For this
reason Epiphanius, Pseudo-TertuU. and Philaster have no articles expressly dealing
with him. He is, however, mentioned prominently in the edict of the last Synod
of Antioch held to oppose Paul of Samosata (so also in the Ep. Alexandri in
Theodoret H. E, I. 3 and in Pamphilus' Apology Pro Orig. in Routh, Reliq. S. IV.
p. 367); therefore many later writers against the heretics have named him (EpipL.
li. 65. I, esp. Theodoret H. F. IL 6. etc.). Finally, let it be noticed that the state-
Chap, i.] ROMAN ADOPTIANS 21
menls in the Synodicon Pappi, and in the Prsedestinatus are worthless, and that
the identification of the younger Theodotus with the Gnostic of the same name,
extracts from whose works we possess, is inadmissable, not less so than the iden-
tification with Theodotus, the Montanist, of whom we are informed by Eusebius.
In this we agree with Zahn (Forschungen III., p. 123) against Neander andDorner.
As an authority for the Roman Monarchians, Novatian, De Trinitate, also falls to
be considered.
to Theodotus had denied Christ during the persecution in his native city
tell that
2 VII. 35 : (paiTxuv rk Trepi (.isv tj)? tov ^iiVTO{; apx^i <7iii(pu\iu ex lispov; rc7Q
22 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
' Philos. VII. 35; 0£ov Ss olii'XOTS roSrov yeyovevai Hf.ov)nv ivi rji xx6dSa
ToS vMiviinroi;, 'irepot St jzsTa rijv Ix vsxfSv KvourTXtrn. The description in the
text is substantially taken from the Philos., with whose account the, contents of the
Syntagma are not inconsistent. The statement that Theodotus denied the birth by
the virgin is simply a calumny, first alleged by Epiphanius. The account of the
Philos. seems unreliable, at most, on a. single point, viz., where, interpreting Theo-
dotus, It calls which descended at the baptism "Christ" But possibly
the Spirit
this too is correct, seeing thatHermas, and, later, the author of the Acta Archelai
have also identified the Holy Spirit with the Son of God. (Compare also what
Origen [xipl cipx- pref-] has reported as Church tradition on the Holy Spirit.) In
that case we would only have to substitute the "Son of God " for " Christ ", and to
suppose that Hippolytus chose the latter term in order to be able to characterise
the teaching of Theodotus as Gnostic (Cerinthian). On the possibility that the Theo-
dotians, however, really named the Holy Spirit "Christ", see later on.
'Epiphanius mentions the appeal of the Theodotians to Deut. XVIII. 15; Jer.
XVII. 9; Isa. LIII. 2 f.; Mat. XII. 31; Lulce I. 35; John VIII. 40; Acts II. 22;
I Tim. II. 5. They deduced from Mat. XII. 31, that the Holy Spirit held a higher place
than the Son of Man. The treatment of the verses in Deut. and Luke is especially
instructive. In the former Theodotus emphasised, not only the " Trp o<|i)jti)v iSj e/xe ",
and the "Ix twv aSsA^wv", but also the "eyE/jsT", and concluded referring the
passage to the Resurrection 6 ix ®sov kyeipiiiSvoQ Xfia-roQ ouroQ oux i/v ®eoQ «AA^
:
ic'jQpai'jroQ, eTstSii e| al/ruv ^v, w$ xai Muva-)^^ Hv^pwjroi; ^v — accordingly the resus-
citated Christwas not God. On Luke I. 35 he argued thus " The Gospel itself says :
in reference to Mary: 'the Spirit of the Lord will come upon thee'; but it does
not say ' the Spirit of the Lord will be in thy body ', or,' will enter into thee.' "
:
—
(199 218) by the most important of the disciples of Theodotus,
viz., Theodotus the money-changer, and a certain Asclepiodotus.
must at least have interpreted the word "A^yo?" in the sense of "weSiJ,ce" and ;
an ancient formula really ran: "Xp/iTTo? Siv fiiv to Trparov jDiivfitt iyhsro ircip^"
(2 Clem. IX. s), where later "/i^yo?'' was, indeed, inserted in place of "TV£C/.4a".
See the Cod. Constantinop.
1 Euseb. (H. E. V. 28): "They falsified the Holy Scriptures without scruple,
rejected the standards of the ancient faith, and misunderstood Christ. For they
did not examine what the Scriptures said, but carefully considered what logical
24 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. I.
figure they could obtain from it that would prove their godless teaching. And
if any one brought before them a passage from Holy Scripture, they asked whether
a conjunctive or disjunctive figure could be made of it. They set aside the Holy
Scriptures of God, and employ themselves, instead, with geometry, being men who
are earthly, and talk of what is earthly, and know not what comes from above.
Some of them, therefore, study the geometry of Euclid with the greatest devotion
Aristotle and Theophrastus are admired; Galen is even worshipped by some. But
what need is there of words to show that men who misuse the sciences of the
unbelievers to prove their heretical views, and falsify with their own godless cunning
the plain faith of Scripture, do not even stand on the borders of the faith? They
have therefore laid their hands so unscrupulously on the Holy Scriptures under
the pretext that they had only amended it critically {SiojfSaxhxi). He who will
can convince himself that this is no calumny. For, if one should collect the
manuscripts of any one of them and compare them, he would find them differ in
many passages. At least, the manuscripts of Asclepiodotus do not agree with those
of Theodotus. But we can have examples of this to excess for their scholars have
;
noted with ambitious zeal all that any one of them has, as they say, critically
amended, i.i., distorted (effaced?). Again, with these the manuscripts of Hermo-
philus do not agi'ee; and those of ApoUonides even differ from each other. For
if we compare the manuscripts first restored by them (him?) with the later re-corrected
copies, variations are found in many places. But some of them have not even
found it worth the trouble to falsify the Holy Scriptures, but hove simply rejected
the Law and the Prophets, and have by this lawless and godless doctrine hurled
themselves, under the pretext of grace, into the deepest abyss of perdition.
Ze no, the Adop tians revered the Empiric ist s instead of the all e- ;
3 — —
As "genuine" scholars and this is a very characteristic feature tliey took very
great care that each should have the credit of his own amendments on the text.
* The Syntagma knows of these; Epiph. H. 55. c. I TA«TTOuir<v icevTo7i; xxi
:
26 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
1 Even the great anti-gnostic teachers had come to this view (see Vol. II., p. 304)
without indeed drawing the consequences whicli the Theodotians may have deduced
more certainly.
2 L.c. A£( ^^/5c*t5j MEA%«rf JJk Trpotripspsiv, cpxo-i'v, 'Act Si' aurov Tfioacvsx^'l """Jp
1f/ZftJv, KXl supciJiisv Si' aVTOV ^CtJ^V.
Chap, i.] ROMAN ADOPTIANS 2/
^ See Clem. Alex. Strom. IV. 25. 161; Hierakas in Epiph. H. 55, c. s,H. 67, c. 3;
Philast. H. 148. Epipli. has himself to confess (H. 55, c. 7), that even in his time
the view to be taken of Melchizedek was still a subject of dispute among Catholic
Christians: 01 /iiv yap aWov voiilXovtri tfiuasi tov viov tou @£ou iv ISex xvSfdiTTov
TOTS tSs 'A^paxfi ve^ijvevixi. Jerome Ep. 73 is important. The Egyptian hermit,
Marcus, wrote, about A.D. 400, an independent work Big rov Msf^xio-sSix kutcc
Vi.BhX'iTsisy.siSv, i.e., against those who saw in Melchizedek a manifestation of the
true Son of God (see Photius, Bibliolh. 200; Diet, of Christ. Biog. III. p. 827;
Herzog's R. E., 2 Aufl. IX. p. 290); cf. the above described fragment, edited for
the first lime by Caspari; further Theodoret H. F. II. 6, Timotheus Presb. in
Cotelier, Monum. Eccl. Grtecae III. p. 392 etc.
axi, @Eupe7T£ ttjjA/xo? oZtoc;' kxi 'oti to 'ihairirov £tc tov (/.Et^ovog £v^oy£7rizt, Sta
TOVTO, <P^^t, KOI TOV ^A^pasifi TOV TTOiTptlZpX^V £V^6yi1t7£V W? [jtSt^CtiV ItiV OXJ '^{^£'li
' Cf. the striking agreement with Sim. V., especially ch. VI. 3 : outo; xafla/i/ira;
Ta? x/icepriixi; tov AaoS 'eSei^ev avro7( Ta; rpi'^ovi tvh ^aii)?.
' The Theodotians seem tohave taken Christ in this verse to mean not Jesus,
but the Holy Spirit, the eternalSon of God, deleting the name Jesus (Epiph.
H. 55, ch. 9). If that is so then the Philosophumena is right when it relates that
the Theodotians had also given thename of Christ to the pre-existent Son of God,
the Yet it is not certain whether we should regard the above
Holy Ghost.
quoted chapter of Epiphanius at all as reporting the Theodotian interpretation
of I Cor. VIII. 6.
Chap, i.] ROMAN ADOPTIANS. 29
Son of God in order to rise to that Son from the man Jesus
of history, and to transcend the historical in general as some-
thing There is not a word of this to be found
subordinate. '
Hieraclte monks " as also in the monks who held the views of
Origen in Egypt in the fourth and fifth centuries.
We have accordingly found that these theologians retaine d
tVi p ancient Roman
represented by Hermas; but Christology
th at they and consequently changed its
edited it theologically
intention, ^f, at that time, the "Pastor" was still read in the
R oman Church, while the Theodotian Christolofyy was con-
demned, then its Christology must have been differently int er-
preted In view of the peculiar character of the book, this
.
u'lfimi Ku! Tot( '!rpo<T(popx{; uvix<^ifei, xctl xvtov elvai eitrxyayea Tpo; tov @£ov xxi
Si^ avTOv, (piio'iy Se't tw &Eut 7rpoa-<pep£iv, on xutm tovtoi
ixpxt^v ea-Tt StKiztotrvvijQ, stt^
Kxriza-raCeii vto tov @sov hv oi/pavta, 7nfsv[iaiTiKdi; riq wv, KXt vtot; @sov T£ray(iivo^
, . . . i;. I : XpttrrS^^ <pija-tv, efrriv ert vToSssa-Tspo^ tov MeA;^io-e5ex.
3 See my art. in Herzog R. E., 2 Aufl. VI. p. 100 (Epiph. LV. 5; LXVII. 3).
30 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
But then the difference between them and their opponents does
not belong to the sphere of the doctrine of God they are rather ;
stand, and did not carry out the complete revision of the pre-
vailing doctrine thatwould have justified them in proving their
Christological conception to be the one really legitimate and
satisfactory. They indeed supported it by Scriptural proof, and
in this certainly surpassed their opponents, but the proof did
not cover the gaps in their dogmatic procedure. Since they
took their stand on the regula fidei, it is unjust and at the
same time unhistorical to call their form of doctrine "Ebionitic",
or to dispose of them with the phrase that Christ was to them
exclusively a mere man (^4^iXog &v6paTog). But if we consider the
circumstances in which they appeared, and the excessive ex-
pectations that were pretty generally attached to the possession
—
of faith above all, the prospect of the future deification of
—
every believer we cannot avoid the impression, that a doctrine
could not but be held to be destructive, which did not even
elevate Christ to divine honours, or, at most, assigned him
an apotheosis, like that imagined by the heathens for their
emperors or an Antinous. Apocalyptic enthusiasm passed grad-
ually into Neo-platonic mysticism. In -this transition these scho-
lars took no share. They rather sought to separate a part of
the old conceptions, and to defend that with the scientific means
of their opponents.
1 Euseb. H. E. V. 28. 3: (paa-t yap Toiig ijlev TTfiozspoui; esTrxvTOii; aal siurovt; tdvq
ctTTOiTTi^ovg, TTapsi^i^ifiSvxt TS KCcl SeStSaxsvcii rcivTU, x vvv oi/TOt KsyoviTi^ y.cti m\\-
pvia-Sai rtiv uf.vthixv toS Kiipuyi/.aToi iJ.exP' twv pjpo'vmv toS BiKTopog . , . avo ii tov
itui6x<"J x'jToS Zs(pvp.'vov 7rapcixiX''f^X^^' "'"'t" xf^'^ieic'J.
32 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
still alive in Rome at the close of the 7th decade of the 3rd century,
but he was completely severed from the great Church, and
without any real influence. No notice is taken of him even in
the letters of Cyprian." Since Artemas was characterised as the
—
Adoptian Christology Dynamistic Monarchianism apparently —
passed rapidly and almost entirely away in the est. The W
str iking formula, settled by the Symbol, " Christu s, homo et
deus", and, above all, the conviction that Christ had appeared
liTThe O. T., brought about the destruction of the party. Yet,
1 Euseb. H. E. V. 28. 4, J.
- We know he still lived about 270 from the document of the Synod of
that
Antioch in the case of Paul of Samosata. We read there (Euseb. H. E. VII. 30. 17):
"Paul may write letters to Artemas and the followers of A. are said to hold
communion with him." We have probably to regard as Artemonites those unnamed
persons, mentioned in Novalian De Trinitate, who explained Jesus lo be a mere
man (homo nudus et solitarius). Artemas is also named in Methodius Conviv.
VIII. 10, Ed. Jahn, p. 37.
Chap, l] LAST TRACES IN THE WEST 3 3
id est unctus dei vivi, a deo vocitus est, spiritus carni mixtus
Compare ch. XIIL the H. S., Son of God, sees
Jesus Christus). :
Himself double, the Father sees Himself in the Son, the Son
in the Father, each in each (Sanctus spiritus, dei filius, gemi-
natum se videt, pater in filio et filius in patre utrosque se in se
vident). There were accordingly only two hypostases, and the
Redeemer is the flesh (caro), to which the pre-existent Holy
Spirit, the eternal Son of God, the Christ, descended. Whether
question did not occur to him. ' We do not hear that the
doctrine of Photinus, who was himself a Greek, gained any
considerable approval in the West. But we learn casually that
even in the beginning of the 5 th century a certain Marcus was
expelled from Rome for holding the heresy of Photinus, and
that he obtained a following in Dalmatia. Incomparably more
instructive, however, is the account given by Augustine (Con-
fess. VII. 19. [25]) of his own and his friend Alypius' Christ-
ological belief, at a time when both stood quite near the Catho-
• Even Tertulliau used the Christological formula of Hennas when he was not
engaged in Apologetics or in polemics against the Gnostics.
3 Hilary's work "De trinitate" also shows (esp. X. 18 iif., 50 ff.) what different
Christologies still existed in the West in the middle of the 4th century. There
were some who maintained :
" quod in eo ex virgine creando efficax dei sapientia
lie Church, and had been preparing to enter it. At that time
Augustine's view of Christ was practically that of Photinus;
and Alypius denied that Christ had a human soul yet both had ;
dis tinction, attributed to the Son a human nature only, ' and
1 Augustine, Quia itaque vera scripta sunt (sc. the Holy Scriptures) totum
I.e. . . .
cens, catholicje fidei colljetatus et contemperatus est. Ego autem aliquanto posterius
didicisse me fateor, in eo quod "verbum caro factum est " quomodo catholica Veritas
a Photini falsitate dirimatur.
Word on earth came to receive baptism from John that this divine nature originated,
when, i.e., John heard the voice of the Father from heaven. It was certainly
not so, etc."
2 Grig, on John II. 2, Lomm. I., p. 92 : Kai r'a 'aohhoi^ ((jMoJeoi/? sTi/af eu%o-
fievovQ Txpxirirov^ sv?^ci^ov(ievovc^ §60 avayofsvffcci 6€0vt;, Kxt Trapa tovto TrspiTi-TTTOVTixt;
ijjevSsiri xai utrs^strt h6yiJ.aaiv, vjTot apvov[xsvovi; l^ion^ra viov iripav irupcc rifv tov
TTXTpdg, OfjLO/iOyoGvTdt; @sov slvai rbv fiSXP^ ov6(J.uto^ 'jrap" uvroti; vthv TrpotTuyopsv-
oi^evov, i-/ xpvovi.ievovq TJjv fletfrjjr* tov vtov, tiHvtu^ Se avrov tvjv tStoT^TX Katrij)/
ov<7iixv xtxTX TTsptypx^^v Tvyxoivova-av srepoiv tov 7r«T/»dc, evreCSev ^^vstrQat Suvoirai,
see also what follows. Pseudo-Gregor. (ApoUinaris) in Mai (Nov. Coll. VII. 1,
Chap, i.] ADOPTIANISM IN THE EAST 35
lus required to point out "that Origen said that the Son of
God was born of the very substance of God, i.e., was o!jt.oov(TiO(;,
which means, of the same substance with the Father, but that
he was not a creature who became a son by adoption, but a
true son by nature, generated by the Father Himself" (quod
Origines filium dei de ipsa del substantia natum dixerit, id est,
O!jioou(7iov, quod est, eiusdem cum patre substantise, et non esse
creaturam />er adoptionem sed natura filium verum, ex ipso patre
generatum)." So Origen in fact taught, and he was very far
from seeing more in the Adoptian doctrine than a fragment of
the complete Christology. He attempted to convince the Adop-
tians of their error, more correctly, of their questionable one-
sidedness, ' but he had seldom any other occasion to contend
with them.
p. 171) speaks of men who conceived Christ as being 'filled with divinity', but
made no specific distinction betwpen Him and the prophets, and worshipped a man
with divine power after the manner of the heathens.
' Pamphili Apolog. in Routh, IV., p. 367; Schultz in the Jahrbh. f. protest.
Theol. 1875, p. 193 f. On Origen and the Monarchians, see Hagemann, I.e., p. 300 f.
' See I.e., p, 36S.
^ Orig. in Ep. ad Titum, Lomm. V., p. 287 "Sed et eos, qui hominem dicunt
dominum lesum prsecognitum et priedestinatum, qui ante adventum camalem sub-
stantialiter et non exstiterit, sed quod homo natus patris solam in se habuerit
propria
deitatem, ne illosquidem sine periculo est ecclesias numero sociari." This passage,
undoubtedly, need not necessarily be applied to Dynamistic Monarchians, any more
than the description about to be quoted of the doctrine of Beryll. There may have
existed a middle type between Dynamistic and Modalistic Monarchianism, according
to which the humanity as well as the deitas patris in Jesus Christ was held to
be personal.
36 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
^ L.c. : Tov o-WTiJfa KCci Kvpwv iifiuv [iif 7rpoii^S(rrxvai xar' lilav ola-ieei Tefi-
ypatpiiv Trpo ri?; e;? avipuvovt; £7riStiiJ.io!(;, /itiSi Ssoritrce ISiav exs'v, aAA iiJ.Tof,iT£vi)-
ImSv^v cevTci 1MV11V riiv TrxTpixviv. The word Trepiypxi^vi is first found in the Excerpta
Theodoti 19, where xxrii !7epi'ypct<pviv contrasted in the sense of personality with
is
the kut' ola-lxv (tov ®bov). The latter was accordingly felt to be Modalistic xeii :
h ipxfi h TXVTori^Ti hoyof xxrct wspiypxipiiv xxi oh xut' oiia-i'xv ysvoiisvoQ, 6 vioQ ;
cf, ch. 10, where TrspiypaipeirCai also expresses the personal existence, /.^., what was
afterwards termed i/TroVraa-i;. This word was not yet so used, so far as I know
in the 3rd century. In Origen wspiypcei^vt is likewise the expression for the strictly
self-contained personality; see Comm. on John I. 42, Lomm. I. 88: Ha-Trep oZv
$vviii{4et^ @£ou 7rAf/ove$ eiirtv^ civ exxa-ni xarcc 7reptypx(p)^v, cOv §iixlpepst 6 rrurvip,
oZtui; 6 ^dyof — el xxi wxp' iiiiiM olx 'sa-ri xxtx Trepiypacpiiv sxtoi; -^fiav votjSvitTCTXi
6 XpiiTTOi x.T.A. In our passage and Pseudo-Hippol. c. Beron. 1,4, it means simply
" configuration "-
Dogmengesch. I., p. 202. See on Beryll, who has become a favourite of the
3
historians of dogma, apart from the extended historical works, Ullmann, de Beryllo
1835; Theod. Stud. u. Krit., 1836; P'ock Diss, de Christologia B. 1843; Rossel in
the Berliner Jahrbb., 1844, No. 41 f.; Kober in the Theol. Qiiartalschr., 1848 I.
CilAP. I.] ADOPTIANISM IN THE EAST 37
Euseb. H. E. VII. 24, 5. By the Epiphany vi'e have to understand the future
"
p. —
135; Routh, Reliq. S. III., pp. 286 367; Frohschammer, Ueber die Verwerfung
des iiioovirioq, in the Theol. Quartalschr. 1850, 1.
38 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
1 Eusebius speaks (H. E. VII. 28. 2) of a whole party (0/ x/jK^i tov tunoiruTiee)
having been able to conceal their heterodoxy at the time.
' "
—
Euseb. H. E. VII. 27 30 (Jerome de vir. inl. 71); in Justinian's Tract, c. Mono-
phys. in the Contestatio ad Clerum CP.; in the Acts of the Ephesian Council; in
;
the writing against Nestor, and Eutych. by Leontius of Byzant.; and in the book
of Petrus Diaconus, " De incarnat. ad Fulgentium " all in Routh I.e. where the places
:
in which theyfound are also stated. Not certainly genuine is the Synodal
are
epistle of six Bishops to Paul, published by Turrianus (Routh, I.e., p. 289 sq.) yet ;
Creed against him (Caspari, Quellen IV., p. i6j f.), and another found in the libel
against Nestorius (Mansi, IV., p. loio). Mai has published (Vet. Script. Nova
Coll. VII., p. 68 sq.) five fragments of Paul's speeches: ol 'iTf6(; 'La^vov hdyot (not
quite correctly printed in Routh, I.e., p. 328 sq.) which are of the highest value,
and may be considered genuine, in spite of their standing in the very worst
company, and of many doubts being roused by them which do not admit of being
completely silenced. Vincentius mentions writings by Paul (Commonit. 35). In
the second grade we have the testimony of the great Church Fathers of the 4th
century, which rested partly on the Acts, partly on oral tradition see, Athanas c. :
40 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
Apoll. IX. 3; de Synod. Arim. et Seleuc. 26, 43—45, 51, 93; Orat. u. Arian.
II. 3,
II., Hilai-ius, De synod. §§ 81, 86, pp. 1196, 1200; Epliriem Junior in
No. 43;
Photius, Cod. 229; Gregor Nyss, Antirrhet. adv. Apoll., § 9, p. 141 ; Basilius, ep.
52 (formerly 300); Epiphan. H. 65 and Anaceph.; cf. also the 3 Antiochian for-
mulas and the Form. Macrosiich. (Hahn Biblioth. der Symbole, 2 Aufl. §§ 85, 89),
as also the 19 Canon of the Council of Nicsea, according to which Paul's followers
were to be re-baptised before reception into the Catholic Church. One or two
notes also in Cramer's Catena on S. John, pp. 235, 259 sq. Useful details are given
by Innocentius I., ep. 22 ; by Marius Mercator, in tlie Suppl. Imp. Theodos. et
Valentinian adv. Nestor, of the Deacon Basilius; by Theodorus of Raithu (see
Routh, I.e., pp. 327 sq. 357); Fulgentius, etc. In the later opponentsof the heretics
from Philaster, and in resolutions of Synods from the 5th century, we find nothing
new. Sozom. H. E. IV. 15 and Theodoret H. F. 11. 8 are still of importance. The
Libellus Synodicus we must leave out of account.
* MJJ ehxi TOv V40V rov @£ov svvTrotrTiZTOV, ahXa sv auTw tm 0g5j ev ©ew sTtT-
Tij|ti^ hv7r6<j-TS!T0Q — £?? ©f 05 6 wxTiip Kdi 6 vloQ ccuroS ev avrSi w? Ao'70; Iv mifiiTia.
' A6yoi; TTfKKpofixai — i Vfo zlaivaiv ui'oQ — rov f^oyov lyivvifG-sv 6 ©so; aveu wzp-
6evov KSii cxv€u rivot; ouSevo^ 'ovrot; 7rAJ}v tov ©fow" kxi oVtoji; vTreim^ ?^6yo^.
' 'Zo(^la ouK ^v SmxTOi h irxyiliCiTi eupi'a-xeaScei, oi/Ss sv Ua avip6i' (isiTav ycep
Tc3v 6pai[i£vuv strrlv.
* 'A6yoi lisv 'dva'isv, 'l-^ia-ovi Si Xpia-rii avSpuTOQ hreSisv —
Xp/o-To; asro Mzpixi;
xai SsSf6 sfTTiv — Hvipaiwoi; ^v 6 'Itjo-ov^, xcei sv mra
hvswvsvirev avaSsv 6 f^oyoQ- 6
yntriip yiip 'ilJ'X t^ via (soil, tw Kdyif) s7( @s6i, 6 Si 'avSpuTog xttTuHev to 'iSiov
TTpoactiTOV VTOipaivsi, xat ovro)^ Tct Svo '7rp6^oi7ra T?iifpovvTai —XpitTTOq hvTSilSsv TviC
vrdp^eag rijv upx'i^ stj-^^xui; —>isysi 'It^a-oSv Xpurrov xxrahv.
. 1
latter ' Mary did not bear the Logos, but a man like us in
.
his nature^ and m his baptism it was not the Logos, but the
man, who was anointed with the Spirit. * However, Jesus was,
on the other hand, vouchsafed the divine grace in a special
degree, ' and his position was unique. ^ Moreover, the proof
he gave of his moral perfection corresponded to his peculiar
equipment. ' The only unity between two persons, accordingly
between God and Jesus, is that of the disposition and the will. '"
• 'H; Iv vaSi —i/.UvTX tov f,6yov xati haim^o-xvTX Iv l-^aoS avipawta 'ovTi in sup- ;
port of this Paul appealed to John XIV. 10: "sapientia habitavit in eo, sicut et
habitaraus et nos in domibus" —
2 A6yov evEfiyov e% ol/pavou ev ccvtoi — <ro<Ptac; ef^Tveova-iii; 'e^ajhv.
3 Oy SiSu^, says Malchion, ovtriua-Sai gv t5j &'A^ (ruTiipi rbv {zovoyevi^.
* "AAA05 yxf hirriv 'l^a-ovi; XfitTTOt xxi 28/Ao5 6 ^oyoQ.
^ *0 ^6yoQ [/.et^av §v rov Xpta-Tov' Xpia-To^ yxp Stx a-o<pta^ t^^y^ii syhero.
^ Mxptx rbv ^oyov oux stskev ow5^ yap ijv Trpo ataivaiv j^ Mxpix^ ah?\oi 'av^pccTov
iljj.~i\i Trov 'erexev — UvSpavoi pjf/£T«(, 6 f^oyoQ ov %p/£Tac 6 Nci^upx7o( %f /£TiS!<, 6 xupioi;
flfiSv,
"
OuK etrriv 6 sx Aa^tS xpta-^eti; a?.?i6Tpio^ rij? tro^ta^.
s ^H a-oipia sv i^AAw oitx ovru^ olxei — xpstrrcav xuTa 'Ku.vrx, eTStSyj Ix TTVEvi^uToq
^ Paul has even spoken of a §ia<pope£ t^c xxTXa-xsv^t; {trva-Tatrsaiq) rov Xpta-rov.
•" From this point weAoyoi Trpoi; £«(37vov of Paul. We give them
refer to the
here on account of unique importance: (i) Tw dyi'if ttvcv/xxti xftt^htq Trpoa--
their
iiyopeuSii Xpia-Toi;, ^rao-^wv xara <pv(Tiv, SauiiaTovpyav xxtcc X'^P"' rif yap arpiTrTifi
T)J5 yvai(jitii 6iJ,oiiohU tw ®£w, xzi {isivai xaixpoq ccf^xpriz:; {jvaiSti zirlf, xai hifpyi^Stf
TTOV £^i(rSxi T^v Tftiv flajufiaraJv Svvx<7tsixv, e| Sv {j-iav xi/rbq xa.) rtiv xi/r^v yrpbq Tjj
6c^vi(T£i hipysiav 'ix^'" Ssix^^k^ ^vrpuriii; rov yivovQ xxi G-UTvip ixpyilJ.XTi(TBv. (2) At —
Siii<f>opoi (puirea; xxi rx Six^opx Trpoa-niTrx 'hx xxi (mvov ivaasui; 'ixo'J'ri rp6xov rijv
xxTX fl£A!jo-;v a-uii^xiriv, 1% )J5 vi xxrx hspyeixv evi tuv o'urui; o-ufi/Ji^ao-flevTSJv aA-
A!)A0(5 xvx(pxiv£Txi liovxt;. — (3) "Ayio; xxi Sixxici; yiysvtiiiho:; 6 a-UT^p, xyuvi xxi
yrbvia tx( toS Trpo^dropxi; viiiSv xpxTViirxi; xijLxpriXi' olq xxTOpS<o<rxi r^ «f£T{) o-uvif<fiSi/
T^ @£if, /iixii xxi r/fj xi/rfiv vpbt; x'jtqv fiouf^tio-iv xxi ivipyeixv Tx7g ruv xyxSHv
42 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
Such unity springs from love alone; but love can certainly
produce a complete unity, and only that which is due to love
— not that attained by "nature"— is of worth. Jesus was like
God in the unchangeableness of his love and his will, and be-
came one with God, being not only without sin himself, but
vanquishing, in conflict and labour, the sins of our ancestor.
As he himself, however, advanced in the manifestation of
goodness and continued in it, the Father furnished him with
power and miracles, in which he made known his steadfast
conformity to the will of God. So he became the Redeemer
and Saviour of the human race, and at the same time entered
into an eternally indissoluble union with God, because his love
can never cease. Now he has obtained from God, as the re-
ward of his love, the name which is above every name; God
has committed to him the judgment, and invested him with '
divine dignity, so that now we can call him God [born] of ''
o-TopyiJs '^77ai^.ov uWif ;^«f;o-8£v. — (4) Ta xpxTOvusvce tm AiJy^ Ti<5 (Pva-BUi oi/x 'ix^'
'eTTOiivov Tcc 5^ (TX^'^^i tpt^itx^ xparoviJisva vTspatve'tTCif^ jua xat rjj uut^ yvafM^ xpa-
TQViJLEVcc^ Six f'i.iai; xou TiJ$ ccuTVjti evspystdQ ^6^atQV{ji.evx, xdi Tvt^ xxt' eTrav^t^a-tv ov-
Settots Tuvaissvij^ xivvitrsuq' Kflj3' ijv rfii ©sw a-vvsc(p6£t^ 6 a-birijp ouSiwors ^sx^TUt
fiEpt<r[^bv eU Tovt; aiuvaq f/.tccv xutoq xat Tijv avriiv ex^v flgA^o-iV xai svepyeiavy aei
xivov/iivtiv Tj) (peivepairei —
rav ayaiSv. (5) Mi) Sai/ftao-ji; Sti liluv lisrcc tov &eou
T^v 6ih;jtn)/ cT^ev 6 irurvip' Ua-Trep yap <^vin( (/.Itiv rSv xoKt.uv xai t^v a^T^n
-h
vvapxoucav (^avepot r^v oviriav, olVa; trx^<^"i '^vii ayxT-^i; fzi'av' ruv TrohKuv xai
ii
T^v avTtfV spyd^erai Ssfit/a-iv Sics [itai xai tvii; airviQ C))avepovpLiviiv ei/apeiTTtitrsiiii;.
' Xpij Si yiyvua-xeiv, we read in the Catena S. Joh., 'dri 6 ij.h JTaCAo? 6 ^afi.
ouTU (pi^o-tv 'eSajxsv aurSi xpitnv JFOn'tVy on vioQ av!ipwirov strTtv,
' Athanas. . IlaBAo; 6 Za//.. @£iv ex t>j; vapShou oiioKoyei, ®eo\i ix Na^aptr
d(f)!hTa.
' Athanas.; 'O/MMyel ©eov ix iia^apcT oipUvTa, xai hrsSlliv t?; vTcep^eaf riiv
apxiiv itrxixoTCi, xai apx^i" ^ao-i^eia^ 5r«peM)<£()o'Ta, Ao'yov Si ivepyov e| oiipavoS, xai
irotpi'av Iv al/Tli otiof^oyei, t5J /zev vpoopKr/iSi Tcpi alaivaiv 'Svra, Tji Se VTcip^ei ex
Na^aper avaSeix^evra, 'ha el(; e'k, (Ptfu-iv, 6 ewi Travra 0fo« 6 TXTvip. Therefore it
is said in the letter of the six Bishops that Christ is God from eternity, ol vpoyvairsi,
«AA' ovfTta xai vT0<7Td(ret.
* ripoxaTayye^TixZi;. See p. 41, note 8.
'
to say that he became God through divine grace and his con-
stant manifestation of goodness. ' Paul undoubtedly perceived
in the imparting of the Spirit at the baptism a special stage
of the indwelling of the Logos in the man Jesus; indeed Jesus
seems only to have been Christ from his baptism: "having
been anointed with the Holy Spirit he was named Christ the —
anointed son of David is not different from wisdom" (tw xyia
wvsiifitXTi ;t;p((7^f/? Tpoeri^'/opsuSi! XpiiTTog — o ax. A«/3;5 %/);(7^f}? oux
xXKoTpiog ia-ri rijg (ToCplxg) The Bishop supported his doctrine
by copious from Scripture, " and he also attacked the
proofs
opposite views. He
sought to prove that the assumption that
Jesus was by nature {<pu(T£i) Son of God, led to having two
gods, ' to the destruction of Monotheism * he fought openly, ;
with great energy, against the old expositors, i.e., the Alexandri-
ans, * and he banished from divine service all Church psalms
in which the essential divinity of Christ was expressed.
' Vincentius, Commonit. 35 —Athanasius (c. Ariam IV. 30) relates that the disci-
ples appealed to Acts X. 36 in support of their distinction between the
of Paul
Logos and Jesus tov ^oyov uirea-TStKev roti; vtoii; ^la-paii^ shayy£^i^6{/.evoi; slp^vvjv
:
Six 'Itfo-av Xpurrov. Tiiey said that there was a distinction here lilce that in the
O. T. between the word of the Lord and of the prophets.
3 Epiphan. I.e., c. 3; see also the letter of the six Bishops in Routh, I.e., p. 291.
* On the supreme interest taken by Paul in the unity of God see p. 42, note 3,
Epiph. I.e., ch. I.
Si' an clpywdTO (pavepukia-tii. — (2) Sjjeo-ei yap rj) xxra Sixzioa-uvtfv xai xoStji t^
xoiTci (pi^ccv^puTTictv (ruvo!(pQ£^i; Tw 0e53, ovSlv 'itrx^v fj^si^spt^t^ivov Trpo^ tov ®s6v, Siot
TO t^ixv auTOu xai tov &soV yevsir^ai t^v fisA^o-zv xai tvjv svspyeiav tuv stti tvj
ffbiTyjpta Tc3v avSpaiTUv uya^uv. — (3) E; yap He^yjcrsv aWov @£o^ trTavpoilivtvai, xai
xaTcSi^aro f^iyoDi. Mti to ei-iov, i^Aa to a-ov yeviaSa) Ss^tfi^a, StfMv Uti /iiav 'ia-xev
liBTCi TOV @£ov Tiiv fle'A;)(7(V xai x^v ^rpa^iv, ixBivo isKyia-a^ xai 'jrpa^ai;, Vvep 'iSo^s
Tif 06ffl. The second and third fragments may be by Theodorus of Mops., but
hardly the first.
' Epiph. 1. t,, ch. Ill,: naCAo; ov hsyei uotov ®$h Sik to '^rt^yiiv itvai tqii waripx.
—
' This was a well-known matter at the time of the Avian controversy, and the Semi-
Arians, e.g:, appealed expressly to the decision at Ancyra. SeeSozomen H. E. IV. 15
;
Athanas., De Synod. 43 sq.; Basilius, Ep. 52; Hilarius desynodis 81,86; Routh,l.c.,
—
pp. 360 365, Hefele, Conciliengesch. I., 2, p. 140 f. Caspari, Quellen IV., p. 170 f.
:
46 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap, i,
divinity on the part of the Son is left out of the question. The
Synod again can very well have rejected of/.oovjiog in the inter-
ests of anti-sabellianism.
^ Yet it is just as possible that, as
Hilarius says, the Synod condemned the term because Paul
himself had declared God and the impersonal Logos (the Son)
to be ofiooiKTiog, i.e., "of the same substance, of one substance ".
However that may be, whenever Paul's view was seen through,
it was at once felt by the majority to be in the highest degree
two '
1 Athanas. I.e. ; mayxvf T(ii(i ohtiuii chai, i^fxv ij.iv Tpottyov/xiv^v, rai Si Svo
' This is also the opinion of Basilius (I.e.) : 'ii^uircev yap ixetvoi (the Bishops
assembled against Paul) rii\i rot o/ioova-iov (puviiv wafKrTSv 'ivvoiccv ouirixQ re xxi
rcSv 01'^'' avTVii, utrre KaTai^eptsSe'ia-scv tvjv ohiriccv TxpEX^tv rov Sizoovtr/ov rjjv Trpo-
(Ttiyopiav Toii 6J5 a SitfpiSii.
pretation of the word diioova-iof, Paul held the Father and Jesus to be oiioous-ioim
so far as they were persons^ and therefore the Synod eondemned the term.
< See De orat. 15, 16.
s Euseb. H. E. VII. 30 6, 16.
' See Malchion in Leontius (Routh, I.e., p. 312): naCAo; (fXfo-A, ^/^ Jt/o IxiVraff-
5aj u/oi/s' f; Si vtoi; i 'I, Xp. tov ®sov, uJo; Si Kxi ii a-ocfiia, xai ceA^o /^h i) ao(^ix.
Chap, i.] ADOPTIANISM IN THE EAST 47
this, and Paul was not in earnest about the "eternal Son".
Yet thiswas only a secondary matter. The crucial difference
had its root in the question as to the divine nature (physis) of
the Redeemer.
Now here it is of the highest interest to notice how far, in
the minds of many Bishops in Palestine and Syria, the specu-
lative interpretation of the Rule of Faith had taken the place
of that rule itself. If we compare the letter of Hymenaeus of
Jerusalem and his five colleagues to Paul with the regula fidei
— not, say, that of TertuUian and Irenaeus — but the Rule of
Faith with which Origen has headed his great work : itsp'i apx^v,
then we are astonished at the advance in the times. The
Bishops explain at the opening of their letter, ' that they desired
to expound, "in writing, the faith which we received from the
beginning, and possess, having been transmitted and kept in
the Catholic Church, proclaimed up to our day by the successors
of the blessed Apostles, who were both eye-witnesses and assistants
of the Logos, from the law and prophets and the New Testament."
{ey/pxCpov Tviv wiaTiv vjv i§ Apx^'S '!rixps?^tx(3of/,£V koCi sxofisv vxpx-
'(kKXo JJ 'I. Xp., Ji/o v<piiTrii!VTXi viol. See also Ephraem in Photius, Biblioth. cod.
229. Farther the Ep. II. Felicis II. papje ad Petrum Fullouem.
> See Routh, I.e., p. 289 sq.
2 The Tr/o-Tis, i% izp^ifS 7rxfaKf^(^h'liTos reads (I.e.) : "0t( ©eo? uyivvt^roi, siq avxf-
XO^, aoparo^, xvx^^oiajTOi;^ ov sJSsv ohSstq av^pwjrwv, ov^'i ?5e7v Svvartxr ou TJjv So^xv
ij TO fziyedoQ vovia-ai jj e^viyvi(r atrial xaSai^ hariv oi.%[ut; t^5 a^^ieiai^y avSpwrtvifl <pva-€t
xvs<ptKTov 'hvotav Se Koi ottoio-ovv (Msrptav Trspt uvtov ^ct^stv, ayaTnirdv^ aToxoi^uTr-
rovTQ^ TOV '
viov avTOv . . . toGtov §£ Toy vtov yevvjjT^v, fiovoyevii vtov, six6vx tov
aopuTOV @Eov Tvyx^vovTcc, TT paiTdTOxov Txa-iji; KTiosatg a-otpiav Kcci ^6yov xat Svvai{Mv
@£ov, TTpo atuvccv '6vTa, ov TTpoyvaia-si, aAA' ov^ia. vat v'KotrTu.vsi ©gov ©got/ u/ov, 'ev
T£ TTdKcuci. XXI via SiaSt/jx^ syvuxdTeq 6iJ.of.oyov^i)/ xa} xtipva-a-oiisv. S; J' av avTi/ia-
X^'^at TOV viov TOV @sov @£ov (jLVf slvai Trpo xara^ohi^i; xotrfzov (Je7v) Tta-Tsvsiv xat
ofio^oyE'tv, {paffxaiv Svo deovQ xaTayye^^^saSat, eav 6 vto^ tov &sov Qsbq x^pvtriniTai
TovTOv aMoTpiov TOV ixxf.ija-'xo-Tixov xavovoq viyoviaSa, xai Traa-ai at xaSo/.ixxi
kxx\ii<n'ai iiv{j.i^movutv iiiCiv. The prehistoric history of the Son is now expounded,
48 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
and then it goes on : tok i\ vlov Tcefoi rif vuTfi 'ovtcc ©eov ij,iv xa.) xupiov tUv
yevviTUV aTrcevTUv, vto S^ tov Trarfiog oiToa-TOiMvTOC g^ ovpixvSiv xat trcepxaidsvTa Ivjfv-
SpaiTn^xsvai. Sid^if xa) to ix Tviq vxpShav a-uiix pjojf^o-av ttxv to 7r>iVifi»iia Ti);
Se^TijTOQ truiiaTixSSg, r^ ^e6rviri XTpsTTTOai; iivurai xai rsSsoToii^TXt and at the close:
e; Si @soS iiiiociiii xxi @ioC a-o^icc jr/jo filmtaii iiTTir ovTia xai xaSo XpiiT-
Xpiirroi
T05 ^v xoct TO auTO ojv T^ ohtria' si xxi ret fzdi?it(i-TX 'TToKKctig syrivo/aeiQ sTivosirott.
See also Hahn, Bibl. d. Symbol. 2 Aufl. § 82.
• The propositions are undoubtedly as a rule phrased biblically, and they are
biblical; but they are propositions preferred and edited by the learned exegesis of
the Alexandrian which certainly j was extremely closely allied with philosophical
speculation.
2 The followers of Paul were no longer looked upon as Christians even at the
beginning of the fourth century, and therefore they were re-baptised. See the 19
Canon of Nicasa; Tlepl ruv'navMxvicrcivTb)VySlrci7rpoiF^v'y6vTbivr^xotiohixvisxx?i^fftcit
UpoQ hxrHsircci avafiaTrrt^ea-Qxt auTOvq e^XTTXVTOg.
3 Theodoret H. E. I. 4.
— —
> See my article "Lucian" in Herzog's R.E. 2 Aufl., Bd. VIII., p. 767 ff.
2 See Theodoret I.e. auTot yccf @io6>Say.roi strrs, oux xyvoovvTSi or; fj 'heiyxoi
:
Xy\^9<i ToC KctT^ 'AvTi6%sieev Tixuhov tou llci(j,(i(raTiai(;, a-vifdSifi xai xpi(T£i riSv ixTcev-
Tcexov STitrxoTuv xTTOxiifiuxfi^vTOi T^e fXKA^jo-Za^ iv StxSs^aixsvoQ AovxrxvoQ ofjroiTV-
vxyayoi 'ii.t.eivB rpiav ETria-xorav TroAi/fTsT? jjpoVou; Sv rtJQ xa-i^sixg rifj rpvya
eppo(t»txpT£i (scil. Arian and his companions) vvv iiixiv to 'E% ovx 'ovtoiv ive(^ti>fiTXV,
not even the slightest allusion in which one could perceive an echo of the Arian
controversies (Bickell, Ausgewahlte Schriften der syr. Kirchenvater 1874, p. 15). See
tract I, "On faith", and 17, "Proof that Christ is the Son of God."
* On the of the Acta Archelai see my Texte und Unters. I. 3, 137 ff.
origin
The principal passages are to be found in ch. 49 and 50. In these the Churchman
disputes the view of Mani, that Jesus was a spirit, the eternal Son of God, perfect
by nature. "Die mihi, super quem spiritus sanctus sicut columba desceudit? Si
perfectus erat, si filius erat, si virtus erat, non poterat spiritus ingredi, sicut nee
1
Chap, i.] 5
filius del in eo quod adventus eius procuratur ad terras, neque opus habuerit co-
lumba, neque baptismate, neque matre, neque fratribiis." On the other hand Mani
says in reference to the Church views: "Si enim hominem eum tantummodo ex
Maria esse dicis et in baptismate spiritum percepisse, ergo per profectum filius
videbitur et non per naturam. Si tamen tibi concedam dicere, secundum profectum
esse filium quasi hominem factum, hominem vere esse opinaris, id est, qui caro et
sanguis sit?" In what follows Archelaus says; "Quomodo poterit vera columba
verum hominem ingredi atque in eo permanere, caro enim camem ingredi non
potest? sed magis si lesum hominem verum confiteamur, eum vero, qui dicitur, sicut
columba, Spiritum Sanctum, salva est nobis ratio in utraque. Spiritus enim
secundum rectam rationem habitat in homine, et descendit et permanet et compe-
tenter hoc et factum est et fit semper Descendit spiritus super hominem dignum
. . .
se .. Poterat dominus in caelo positus facere quae voluerat, si spiritum eum esse
.
et non hominem dices. Sed non ita est, quoniam exinanivit semetipsum formam
servi accipiens. Dico autem de eo, qui ex Maria factus est homo. Quid enim?
non poleramus et nos multo facilius et lautius ista narrare? sed absit, ut a veritate
declinemus iota unum aut unum apicem. Est enim qui de Maria natus est filius,
qui tolum hoc quod magnum est, voluit perferre certamen lesus. Hie est Christus
dei, qui descendit super emn, qui de Maria est .Statim (post baptismum) in
. .
desertum a Spiritu ductus est lesus, quern cum diabolus ignoraret, dicebat ei: Si
(iei. Ignoratat autem propter quid genuisset filium dei (scil. Spiritus), qui
filius est
pradicabat regnum calorum, quod erat habitaculum magnum, nee ab ullo alio
parari potuisset; unde et affixus cruci cum resurrexisset ab inferis, assumptus est
illuc, ubi Christus filius dei regnabat . . . Sicut enim Paracleti pondus nuUus alius
valuit sustinere nisi soli discipuli et Paulus beatus, ita etiam spiritum, qui de cselis
descenderat, per quem vox paterna testatur dicens Hie est filius meus dilectus, :
nullus alius portare prcevaluit, nisi qui ex Maria natus est super omnes sanctos
lesus'' It is noteworthy that the author (in ch. 37) ranks Sabellius as a heretic
the famou s head of the school, "SabelUan i" from the second
half of the third century ;
yet the name of "Fatripassiani"
was not quite unknown there also. '
Hippolytus tells us in
origin of the Philosophumena, as also on the authorities for the history of the
early heretics, come See also Caspari, Quellen III., vv. //. The authorites
in here.
are for Noetus, the Syntagma of Hippolytus (Epipli., Philaster, Pseudo-TertuU.), and
his great work against Monarchianism, of which the so-called 'O/zM/a 'iTfuoKvTov
£('5 T^v a'l'fsiriv JioyiTov riviQ (Lagarde, Hippol. quae feruntur, p. 43 sq.) may with
extreme probability be held to be the conclusion. Both these works have been
made use of by Epiph. H. 57. [When Epiph. (I.e. ch. i) remarks that "Noetus appeared
±130 years ago", it is to be inferred that he fixed the date from his authority, the
anti-monarchian work of Hippolytus. P"or the latter he must have had a date, which-
he believed he could simply transfer to the period of Noetus, since Noetus is
described in the book as ov jrpo !roA/oP ;^piJvoi/ yevoiiSvoQ. But in that case his
source was written about A.D. 230 — 240, «'.<., almost at the same time as the so-
called Little Labyrinth. It is also possible, however, that the above date refers to the
excommunication of Noetus. In that case the work which has recorded this event,
can have been written at the earliest in the fourth decade of the fourth century].
Most of the later accounts refer to that of Epiph. An independent one is the
section Philos. IX. 7 sq. pC 27 ; on this Theodoret is dependent H. F. III. 3).
.
For Epigonus and Cleomenes we have Philos. IX. 7, 10, 11, X. 275 Theodoret
H. F. III. 3. For ^schines: Pseudo-TertuU. 26; Philos. VIII. 19, X. 26; for
Praxeas :TertuU. adv. Prax., Pseudo-TertuU. 30. The later Latin writers against
heretics are at this point all dependent on Tertullian; yet see Optat., de schism.
I. 9. Lipsius has tried to prove that Tertullian has used " Hippolytus against
Noetus" in his work adv. Prax. (Quellen-kritik, p. 43; Ketzergeschichte, p. 183 f.
Jahrbuch fur deutsche Theologie, 186S, p. 704); but the attempt is not successful (see
Ztschr. f. d. hist. Theol., 1874, p. 200 f.). For Victorinus we have Pseudo-TertuU. 30.
For Zephyrinua and Callistus Philos. IX. 1 1 sq. Origen has also had Roman
:
1 Orig. in Titum, Lomm. V., p. 287"... sicut et illos, qui superstitiose magis
quam religiose, ne videantur duos deos dicere, neque rursum negare salvatoris
uti
deitatem, unam eandemque substantiam patris ac filii asseverant, id est, duo quidem
nomina secundum diversitatem causarum recipientes, unam tamen vv6c-Tx<riv sub-
sistere, id est, unam personam duobus nominibus subiacentem, qui latine Fatripas-
1 IX. 6 : liiytiTTOv Txpaxov xxrci vainx rm x6itij,ov iv Tras-it Toig TrfsroT; Ifs-
semper pars credentium est, quoniam et ipsa regula fidei a pluribus diis sseculi ad
unicum et verum deum transfert, non intelligentes unicum quidem, sed cum sua
otxovoiiicc esse credendum, expavescunt ad oixovoiziav Itaque duos et tres iam . . .
four grades in religion: (i) those who worship idols, (2) those who worship angelic
powers, (3) those to whom Christ is the entire God^ (4) those whose thoughts rise
to the unchangeable deity. Clement (Strom. VI. 10) had already related that there
were Christians who, in their dread of heresy, demanded that everything should
be abandoned as superfluous and alien, which did not tend directly to blessedness.
3 above (Vol. I., p. 195) where reference is made, on the one hand,
See
to Modalism reflected in Gnostic and Enkratitic circles (Gosp. of the Egypt.,
the
and Acta Lenc, Simonians in Iren. I. 231); on the other, to the Church formulas
phrased, or capable of being interpreted, modalistically (see II. Ep. of Clement,
Ign. ad Ephes., Melito [Syr. Fragments]; and in addition, passages which speak
"of God having suffered, died, etc.). It is instructive to notice that the development
in Marcionite Churches and Montanist communities moved parallel to that in the
great Church. Marcion himself, being no dogmatist, did not take any interest in the
question of the relation of Christ to the higher God. Therefore it is not right to
reckon him among the Modalists, as Neander has done (Gnost. Syxteme, p. 294,
Kirchengesch. I. 2, p. 796). But it is certain that later Marcionites in the West
taught Patripassianism (Ambros. de fide V. 13. 162, T. II., p. 579 j Ambrosiaster
ad I. Cor. II. 2, T. II., App. p. 117). Marcionites and Sabellians were therefore
at a later date not seldom classed together. Among the Montanists at Rome there
were, about A.D. 200, a Modalistic pai-ty and one that taught like Hippolytus; at
the head of the former stood .^Eschines, at the head of the latter Proculus. Of
the Hippolytus says (Philos. X. 26) that their doctrine
followers of ^schines,
was of Noetus: cujtov elvai viav xxi vaTepa, opaTOV xxi adpxTOv; yevvtirdv xxi
that
uyhviiTOV, SvifTOV xxi okavaTOt. It is rather an idle question whether Montanus
himself and the prophetic women taught Modalism. They certainly used formulas
which had a Modalistic sound ; but they had also others which could afterwards be
54 HISTORY OF DOGMJ^i [Chap. i.
voi eTi yvji ii( cevUfdiTroi; Kxi a-di^aiv sv ai/Tai tov 'ASufj. ... 'drt 6 @bo( a-uiix Axpiiv
XXI (Tvveiriiav mipuTroiQ 'ia-aiasv mifuvovi ; Levi 5, Jud. 22, Issachar. 7 : 'sxovtiq
/zefl'iavrav rov 0eov rov oupxvQv, tTviJ.%opsv6[j,svov Toti; avQpaiTrott;', Zebul. g:'64''€o'6s
@Eov hv crxviiMaTt av6pai7rov Dan. 55 Naphth. 8: d<p(iii(rercet ®sot; kxtohcuv bv xv6pai'
:,
ologies, however, can be exemplified from the Testaments. It is not certain what
sort of party Philaster (H. 51) meant (Lipsius Ketzergesch., p. 99 f.). In the third
century Modalism assumed various forms, among which the conception of a
formal transformation of God into man, and a real transition of the one into the
other, is noteworthy. An exclusive Modalistic doctrine first existed in the Chmxh
after the fight with Gnosticism.
' TertuU. I.e. and ch. I. :
" simplicitas doctrinse ", ch. 9, Epiphan. H. 62. 2
a(pB^e<rTaTOi i) uKipmoi. Philos. IX. 7; " 2,£ipvp7vo( UiuTtfi; xxl uypijifiaTO^, I.e.
ch. 6 : uiiuHeii.
— •
is, of course,
an exaggeration. But once we grasp the whole
problem and scientifically "—and it was so
"philosophically
understood even by some scientific defenders of Monarchianism —
then it undoubtedly resembles strikingly the controversy regard-
ing the idea of God between the genuine Stoics and the Pla-
tonists. As the latter set the transcendent, apathetic God of
Plato above the AoVo^-^fo? of Heraclitus and the Stoics, so
Origen, e.g., has charged the Monarchians especially with stop-
ping short at the God manifest, and at work, in the world,
instead of advancing to the "ultimate" God, and thus
apprehending the deity "economically". Nor can it surprise
us that Modalistic Monarchianism, after some of its represent-
atives had actually summoned science, i.e., the Stoa, to their
assistance, moved
in the direction of a pantheistic conception of
God. But does not seem to have happened at the outset,
this
or to the extent assumed by the opponents of the school. Not
to speak of its uncultured adherents, the earliest literary defend-
ers of Modalism were markedly monotheistic, and had a real
interest in Biblical Christianity. It marks the character of the
opposition, however, that they at once scented the God of
Heraclitus and Zeno —
a proof of how deeply they themselves
were involved in Neo-platonic theology. ' As it was in Asia
1 That the scientifiG defenders of Modalism adopted the Stoic method — ^just as
the Theodotians had the Aristotelian (see above) — is evident, and Hippolytus was
therefore so Noetus with Heraclitus, i.e., with the father
far correct in connecting
of the Stoa. To Hagemann
belongs the merit (Rom. Kirche, pp. 354 371) of having —
demonstrated the traces of Stoic Logic and Metaphysics in the few and imperfectly
transmitted tenets of the Medalists. (See here Hatch, The influence etc., p. 19 f. on
the trunTraa-x^'^ and the substantial unity of •\ivx^ and (rujiu). We can still re-
cognise, especially from Novatian's refutation, the syllogistic method of the Modalists,
which rested on nominalist, i.e., Stoic, logic. See, e.^., the proposition: Si unus
deus Christus, Christus autem deus, pater est Christus, quia unus deus; si non
pater sit Christus, dum et deus filius Christus, duo dii contra scripturas introducti
videantur." But those utterances in which contradictory attributes, such as visible
invisible etc., are ascribed to God, could be excellently supported by the Stoic system
of categories. That system distinguished "J;a (oyo-Mj, i/Troxe/jnevov) from <ri//i/3£f3))xo'T«,
or more accurately (i) uvoKeliiiva (substrata, subjects of judgment); (2) V01&
(qualitatives) (3);
wix; 'ix"^'^'^ (definite modifications) and (4) s-fo? t< Tfti; 'ixovTx
(relative modifications). —
Nos. 2 4 form the qualities of the idea as a rvyxex"-
o/ihov; but 2 and 3 belong to the conceptual sphere of the subject itself, while 4
embraces the variable relation of the subject to other subjects. The designations
56 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
the conception of the Logos as a mere sound is verbally that of the Stoics, who
defined the <pmvi {^oyog) as itip TtTrAvyfevo; '^ to 'iSiov usiVSijtov axoiii. TertuUian
adv. Prax. 7 ; " quid est enim, dices, sermo nis^ vox et sonus oris et sicut gram-
matici tradunt, aer offensus, intelligibilis auditu, ceterum vacuum nescio quid et
inane et incorporale ?
" Hippolyt., Philos. X. 33: ©to? Xoyot avoyemiS, ou f,6yov
u( (paivtjv. Novatian, 31 "sermo filius natus est, qui non in sono per-
de trinit. :
gonus, was regarded as the head of the sect, and then, from
c. A.D. 215,
Sabellius. Against these there appeared, in the
Roman Church, especially the presbyter Hippolytus, who sought
to prove that the doctrine promulgated by them was a revolu-
tionary error. But the sympathies of the vast majority of the
Roman Christians, so any part in the
far as they could take
dispute, were on the side of the Monarchians, and even among
the clergy only a minority supported Hippolytus. The "unedu-
cated" Bishop Zephyrine, advised by the prudent Callistus, was
himself disposed, like Victor, his predecessor (see under), to the
Modalistic views; but his main effort seems to have been to
calm the contending parties, and at any cost to avoid a new
3 According to Hippol. c. Noet. I., he was not condemned after the first trial,
but only at the close of a second, —a proof of the uncertainty that still prevailed.
It is impossible now to discover
what ground there was for the statement that
Noetus gave himself out to be Moses, and his brother to be Aaron.
* The fact that Noetus was able to live for years in Asia Minor undisturbed,
has evidently led Theodoret into the mistake that he was a later Monarchian who
only appeared after Epigonus and Cleomenes. For the rest, Hippolytus used the
name of Noetus in his attack on him, simply as a symbol under which to oppose
later Monarchians (see Ztschr. f. d. hist. Theol. 1874, p. 201); this is at once clear
from ch. 2.
58 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
schism in the Roman Church, already sadly split up. After his
death the same policy was continued by Callistus (217 222), —
now raised to the Bishopric. But as the schools now attacked
each other more violently, and an agreement was past hoping
for, the Bishop determined to excommunicate both Sabellius and
Hippolytus, the two heads of the contending factions. The '
following the trend of the times, and the science of the Church.
This doctrine must have already been the dominant theory in
Rome when work De Trinitate, and from
Novatian wrote his
that date it was never ousted thence. It had been established in
the Capital by a politician, who, for his own part, and so far
' Philos. IX. \2 : OVtuq 6 Ki^AAhttos fjera t^k rov Zs(^vphov TB^evTifv •joiii^uv
Kxi vofii^ajv oVra Svvxtrdxi aiXorpi^Jsctrdaii t^v Tpb^ rk^ eKx^iia-iaq xxr^yopiaiVj w$ nijj
fore possible that he and his small faction had already separated from CaUistus,
and for their part had put him under the ban. This cannot have happened under
Zephyrine, as shown directly by Philos. IX. II, and all we can infer from ch. 7
is
is that the party of Hippolytus had ceased to recognise even Zephyrine as Bishop
so coiTectly DoUinger, I.e., p. loi f., 223 f. ; a different view in Lipsius, Ketzerge-
schichte, p. 150. The situation was doubtless this: Epigonus and Cleomenes had
founded a real school (JfJajxaAeicv) in the Roman Church, perhaps in opposition
to that of the Theodotians, and this school was protected by the Roman bishops,
(s. Philos. IX. 7 : Zscpvp7vot; [rw xep$£t 'jrpot7<pepo[^hai •xeiSdi^evoq] ff-v-jsx^psi T0T5
• The attempt has been made in the above to separate the historical kernel from
the biassed description of Hippolytus
in the Philos. His account is reproduced
most correctly by Caspari (Quellen III., p. 325 ff.). Hippolytus has not disguised
the fact that the Bishops had the great mass of the Roman community on their
side (IX. 11), but he has everywhere scented hypocrisy, intrigues and subserviency,
where it is evident to the present day that the Bishops desired to protect the Church
from the rabies theologorum. In so doing, they only did what their office demanded,
and acted in the spirit of their predecessors, in whose days the acceptance of the
brief and broad Church confession was alone decisive, while beyond that freedom
ruled. It is also evident that Hippolytus considered Zephyrine and the rest a set
of ignorant beings {idiotes), because they would not accede to the new science
and the "economic" conception of God.
- According to Pseudo-Tertull. 30, where in fact the name of Praxeas is sub-
stituted for Noetus.
3 De Rossi, Bullet 1866, p. 170.
'
So, eg., Hagemann, I.e., p. 234 f., and similarly at an earlier date, Semler.
''
L.c, p. 198.
«
Jahrb. f. deutsche Theologie, 1868, H. 4.
'i
The name has undoubtedly not been shown elsewhere up till now.
8 Chronol. rom. Bischofe,
d. p. 173 f.
6o HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
1 Adv. Prax. primus ex Asia hoc genus perversitatis intulit Romam, homo
: Iste
et alias inquietus, insuper de iactatione martyrii inflatus ob solum et simplex
et
breve carceris tedium.
2 L.c: Ita duo negotia diaboli Praxeas Romas procuravit, prophetiam expulit et
hffiresim intulit, paracletum fugavit et patrem crucifixit.
3 Pseudo-TertuU. Praxeas quidem hieresim introduxit quam Victorinus
:
corrobo-
rare curavit. This Victorinus is rightly held by most scholars to be Bishop •
Victor
(l) there is the name (on Victor = Victorinus, see Langen I.e., 196; Caspari'
p.
Quellen III., p. 323, n. 102); (2) the date; (3) the expression "curavit" whici^
1;
' This is definitely to be inferred from the words of TertuUian (I.e.): "Fructi-
caverant avense Praxean^ hie quoque. superseminatse dormientibus multis in sim-
plicitate doctrinae"; see Caspari, I.e.; Haucic, TertuUian, p. 368; Lan{;en, I.e., p. 199;
on the other side Hesselberg, Tertullian's Lehre, p. 24, and Hagemann, I.e.
- TertuUian, Avense Praxeanae traductae dehinc per quem deus voluit (scil.
I.e. :
per me), etiam evulsie videbantur. Denique caverat pristinum doctor de emendatione
sua, et manet chirographum apud psychicos, apud quos tunc gesta res est; exinde
silentium.
3 TertuU., I.e. Aven^ vero illte ubique tunc semen excusserant. Ita altquamdiu
per hypocrisin subdola vivacitate et nunc denuo erupit.
latitavit, Sed et denuo
eradicabitur, si voluerit dominus.
62 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
* C. I : ecfi^ TCv X^/iTTOv odnov ehxi tov TTiZTEpx K2i auTOv TQ'j TTXTspx ysyevvvjirlioit
'*
C. 2 : Et oii'j XfiCTTOv 6iio?,o'yaj Qeqv, uuto^ apa eirriv 6 TxTijpj eV ys 'itrriv 6
®€6t;. eTraOs'j $s Xpta-rbi;, ccuTOt; av ©eo'c, xpoc ovv sTrxhv Trariip, TTXT-^p yap xutoq ^v
* 4>xtniovtnv irvviiTTa'j tvz &s6v (c. 2).
5 Hippolytus defends himself, c. 11. 14: ou Sua icoii; ^sya, a. Philos. IX. II,
fin. 12: Sti(iOi!-i'x 6 KahM^Toq iifu-j hsihXii iiTreTv Si'Sioi sc-ts. From c. Noet. II it
;
appears that the Monarchians opposed the doctrine of the Logos, because it led to
the Gnostic doctrine of jEons. Hippolytus had to reply: t;5 xTocpxrjerai vAi^llvv
@eS-» !r«pu!(3aA/of6£v>)v xnTOi xciifovs. He sought to show (ch. 14 sq.) that the /tiuo--
T-.)f(cv oixctoiJ.icii of the Trinity taught by him was something different from the
doctrine of the .^ons.
1 Hippol. (c. Noet. I.) makes his opponent say, tj otiv xazov ttoiS So^ii^aiv tov
Xpia-TQ-j; see also ch. II. sq : Xfitrroi ?v 0£O? xai iTrcea-x^v S'' ilfixg airofm Trxri^py
'ivx Kxl y/ixq SvvtiOp, &>\>iO ou Suvx/j-sSx f.iysn; see again ch. IX. where Hip-
aSiiTX.1
polytus says to his opponents that the Son must be revered in the way defined by
God in Holy Scriptures.
-
S. c. 15 : ^AA' ipe'i i-ioi tiq- SeVv (pipeii; AiJyov At'yiav vii-j. 'Iwavv:<5 {j-h yxp
KeyBi ^6'yc-j, aAA' 2eAAw5 aAA^yofe'.
3 L. IX. 10. See also Theodoret.
64 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
"Noetus says, 'So far, therefore, as the Father was not made,
he is appropriately called Father ; but in so far as he passively
submitted to be born, he is by birth the Son, not of another,
but of himself.'" In this way he meant to establish the Mon-
archia, and to say that he who was called Father and Son,
was one and the same, not one proceeding from the other, but
he himself from himself; he is distinguished in name as Father
and Son, according to the change of dispensations; but it is
one and the same who appeared in former times, and submit-
ted to be born of the virgin, and walked as man among men.
He confessed himself, on account of his birth, to be the Son to
those who saw him, but he did not conceal the truth that he was
the Father from those who were able to apprehend it. Cleo- '
menes and his party maintain that "he who was nailed to the
cross, who committed his spirit to himself, who died and did
not die, who raised himself on the third day and rested in
the grave, who was pierced with the lance and fastened with
nails, was the God and Father of all." The distinction between
- See above (p. 55, note i). In addition Philos. X. 27: toutcv tov xxrifx
tti/riv vlh -lOjil^ova-i y.xric nxipouQ KaAoiz/zevcv vfii; ra a-viJ-^xiynvTce.
Chap, i.] MODALISTIC MONARCHIANISM 6$
• See Ignat. ad Ephes. VII. 2 : cTq iHrpdi; ea-Tiv a-ttpxixSi; re y.ai wevij.XTiy.6(,
yewiiToi; tcoci ayevvi^TOt;, hj trapxi ys-jofj^evoq ©e^c» Iv &u-jcirta ^u^ u^^6ivii, kou sk Mizpitxi;
Kui EK @eov, TTpMTOv 'Xu^vjTO^ KXi TOTS «5r«fli^e, ^l^tTOvt^ Xpto-rd^-, and See for Clement
Vol. I., p. 186 ff.
passum ipsum denique esse lesum Christum." c. 2: "post tempus pater natus et
pater passus, ipse deus, dominus omnipotens, lesus Christus prsedicatur " see also c. 1 3. ;
5
66 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
but they distinctly declared that the flesh changed the Father
into the Son; or even that in the person of the Redeemer the
1 C. 7 :
" Quid est enim, dices, sermo nisi vox et sonus oris, et sicut gi-amma-
tici tradunt, aer offensus, intellegibilis auditu, ceterum vanum nescio quid."
^ C. 2 :
" Unicum deum non alias putat credendum, quem siipsum eundemque
et patrera et filiutn et spiritum s. dicat." c. 3 :
" Duos et tres iam iactitant a nobis
prasdicari, se vero unius dei cultores prsesumunt . . . monarcliiam, inquiunt, tenemus."
c. 13: "inquis, duo dii prasdicuntur." <-. 19: "igitur si propterea eundem et patrem
et filium credendum putaverunt, ut unum deum vindicent etc." u. 23 " ut sic duos :
• See c. 14. 15: "Hie ex diverse volet aliquis etiam filium invisibilem conten-
dere, ut sermonem, ut spiritum Nam et illud adiiciunt ad argumentationem, quod
. . .
si filius tunc (Exod. 33) ad Moysen loquebatur, ipse faciem suam nemini visibilem
pronuntiaret, quia scil. ipse invisibilis pater fuerit in filii nomine. Ac per hoc si
eundem volunt accipi et visibilem et invisibilem, quomodo eundem patrem et filium . .
Ergo visibilis et invisibilis idem, et quia utrumque, ideo et ipse pater invisibilis, qua
et filius, visibilis Argumentantur, recte utrumque dictum, visibilem quidem
. . .
in carne, invisibilem vero ante carnem, ut idem sit pater invisibilis ante carnem,
qui et filius visibilis in came."
5 Thus to Exod. XXXIII. (ch. 14), Rev. I. 18 (ch. 17), Isa. XXIV. 24 (ch. 19),
esp. John X. 30; XIV. 9, 10 (ch. 20), Isa. XLV. 5 (ch. 20). They admit that in
the Scriptures sometimes two, sometimes one, are spoken of; but they argued
(ch. 18): "Ergo quia duos et unum invenimus, ideo ambo unus atque idem et
filius et pater."
Ch. 10 :
" Ipse se sibi filium fecit."
7 Ch. n :
" Porro qui eundem jiatrem dicis et filium, eundem et protulisse ex
semetipso facis."
* To this verse the Monarchians, according to ch. 10, appealed, and they quoted
as a parallel the birth from the virgin.
Chap, i.] MODALISTIC MONARCHIANISM 6"]
body man, Jesus) was the Son, but that the Spirit (God,
(the
was the Father.' For this they appealed to Luke I. 35.
Christ)
They conceived the Holy Spirit to be identical with the power
of the Almighty, i.e., with the Father himself, and they em-
phasised the fact that that which was born, accordingly the flesh,
not the Spirit, was to be called Son of God. The Spirit (God)
was not capable of suffering, but since he entered into the flesh,
he sympathised in the suffering. The Son suffered, ^
but the
Father "sympathised"" — this being a Stoic expression. There-
fore Tertullian says (ch. 23),"Granting that we would thus say,
as you assert, that there were two separate (gods), it was more
tolerable to affirm two separate (gods) than one dissembling
(turn-coat) god " [Ut sic divisos diceremus, quomodo iactitatis,
tolerabilius erat, duos divisos quam unum deum versipellem
praedicare].
tained. On
every attempt made by Modalism to
the whole,
meet the demands of the Logos doctrine could not fail logically
to lead to Dynamistic Monarchianism. We know definitely that
the formulas of Zephyrine and Callistus arose out of attempts
' Ch. 27: "^que in una persona utrumque distinguunt, patrem et filium, dis-
centes filium carnem esse, id est hominem, id est lesum, patrem autem spiri-
tum, id est deum, id est Christum." On this Tertullian remarks : " et qui unum
eundemque contendunt patrem et filium, iam incipiunt dividere illos potius quam
unare; talem monarchiam apud Valentinum fortasse didiceiunt, duos facere lesum
et Christum." Tertullian, accordingly, tries to retort on his opponents the charge
of dissolving the Monarchia; see even ch. 4. The attack on the assumption of a
transformation of the divine into the human does not, for the rest, affect these
" See ch. 26, 27: ''propterea quod nascetur sanctum, vocabitur filius dei ; caro
itaque nata est, caro itaque erit filius dei."
^ Ch. 29 :
"'
mortuus est non e.t divina, sed ex humana substantia."
^ L. c. : " Compassus est pater filio."
68 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
flesh, after he had assumed it, and united it with himself, and
2 'Eyw ofSoi 'ha ©eov Xf^o-Tov ^l^(70vv Kat T^i^v uvtdv 'srepcv ol/Shx yevvifTOv xa?
2 L.c. IX. 12, p. 458, 78 : a/Aa xcii Six ro vvo roS Sa(9eAA/ou 5-t/;^vw5 xxrifya-
peHa-Sai w? yrapoc^avTX t^v t/iiut>)v vi'a-Tn. It is apparently the very formula '' Com-
passus est pater filio" that appeared unacceptable to the strict Monarchians.
• Philos. IX. 12, p. 458, 80: K4AA;«-r(J5 Afysi tov >,iyoy mrov efvai vi'6v,xuriv
not TuTspci dv6[j.ari (jl^v Kx?iOV{^evoVj %v Si 'ov to TrvsCfix xSixipsrov. ovk aAAo stvat
Txrepa, aAAo Si vlov, iv Si x«i to xl/ro vvxpx^i'', >ix) Tie wxvtx yefisit tov Seiav
TTVSVf^XTO^ TX TS 't^VtU XXt KXTW KXl shxt TO 6V T^ 7rxp6sVta IT Xpttbi^iv TTVEVl^X olx
'irepov •jrxpx tov Trxrepx, ^AAos iv xxt to xIt6. Kx) roBra elvxt to slpyiiiivct. John.
14. II. To fiSv yxp /3A£7rrf|ii£vcv, i/jrep Io-tiv Uv^paiTroQ, tovto eJvxi tov u/o'v, tS Si Iv
Tu u/5j x^p;i&iv TrvsCf^x rovro e7vxt tov Txrepx' oh yoip^ ^^irh^ spa Sub 6eovt; Txrepx
KXl vtov^ aAA' 6VX. 'O ykp Iv xhria yev^iievaq 5r«T»Jp Tpoc^x^di^evoQ T^v a-xpnx Mso-
Chap, i.] MODALISTIC MONARCHIANISM 69
TOUTO %v 8v 7rp6^tii7roy (juii Svvxa-^xt eJvxi hvo^ text oilraii; rov TXTSpx a-uiiTTSTrcjihxi
' Adv. Prax. 8, 13.same with Hippolytus; both have in their attacks
It is the
on the Medalists taken Valentine, comparatively speaking, under their protection.
This is once more a sign that the doctrine of the Church was modified Gnosticism.
— 1
not alius a patre ' (different in person etc). Yet Tertullian and
his comrades were by no means at a disadvantage in compari-
son with the Monarchians. They could appeal (i) to the Rule
of Faith in which the personal distinction between the Father
and Son was recognised = (2) to the Holy Scriptures from
;
' On these grounds the doctrine of Sabellius will be described under, in the
history of Eastern Modalism.
' In forged Acts of Synod of the 6th century we read (Mansi, Concil. II.,
p. 621): "qui se Callistus ita docuit Sabellianum, ut arbitrio sue sumat unam per-
sonam esse trinitatis." The words which follow later, " in sua extollentia separabat
trinitatem" have without reason seemed particularly difficult to Dbllinger (I.e., p. 247)
and Langen (I.e., p. 215). Sabellianism was often blamed with dismembering
the Monas (see Zahn, Marcell. p. 211.)
See Dollinger, I.e., Hippolytus was under Maximinus banished along with the
•^
Roman Bishop Pontian to Sardinia. See the Catal. Liber, sub "Pontianus " (Lip-
sius, Chronologic, pp. 194, 275).
74 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
nised in Rome about 250: ' (i) Christ did not first become God.
(2)The Father did not suffer. (3) Christ pre-existed and is true
God and man. But it was not only
°-
in Rome that these tenets
were established, but also in many provinces. If the Roman
Bishop Dionysius could write in a work of his own against the
Sabellians, that " Sabellius blasphemed, saying that the Son was
himself Father",' then we must conclude that this doctrine
was then held inadmissible in the West. Cyprian again has
expressed himself as follows (Ep. 73. 4): " Fatripassiani, Valen-
tiniani, Appelletiani, Ophitse, Marcionitse et ceterae haereticorum
pestes" (—the other plagues of heretics), and we must decide
that the form of doctrine was then almost
strict Modalistic
universally condemned in the West. Of the difficulties met with
in the ejection of the heresy, or the means employed, we have
no information. Nothing was changed in the traditional Creed
— a noteworthy and momentous difference from the oriental
Churches But we know of one case in which an important
!
1 This writing shows, on the one hand, that Adoptians and Medalists still existed
and were dangerous in Rome, and on the other, that they were not found wilhin
the Roman Church. On the significance of the writing see Vol. II., p. 313 f.
"^
The Roman doctrine of as follows: He has always been
Christ was then
with the Father (sermo dei), but he
proceeded before the world from the
first
substance of the Father (ex patre) for the purpose of creating the world. He was
born into the flesh, and thus as, filius dei and devs adopted a /;omo; thus he is also
filiiis hominis. "Filius dei" and "filius hominis" are thus to be distinguished as
—
two substances (substantia divina homo), but he is one person; for he has com-
pletely combined, imited, and fused the two substances in himself. At the end
of things, when he shall have subjected all to himself, he will subject himself
again to the Father, and will return to and be merged in him. Of the Holy Spirit
it is also true, that he is a person (Paraclete), and that he proceeds from the substance
of the Father; but he receives from the Son his power and sphere of work, he
is therefore less than the Son, as the latter is less than the Father. But all three
persons are combined as indwellers in the same substance, and united by love and
harmony. Thus there is only one God, from whom the two other persons proceed.
' E^/SeA/io; ^A2o-4>!)f<E7, airSv tov u/ov H-txi hiywi tov Trxrefx. See Routh,
Reliq. S. III., p. 373.
Chap, i.] LAST STAGES IN THE WEST 75
has preserved it for us, tells ' that the addition was made, at
any rate as early as the third century, in order to exclude the
Patripassians.
But the exclusion of the strict Modalists involved neither their
immediate end, nor the wholesale adoption of the teaching of
Tertullian and Hippolytus, of the philosophical doctrine of the
Logos. As regards the latter, the recognition of the name of
Logos for Christ, side by side with other titles, did not at once
involve the reception of the Logos doctrine, and the very fact,
that no change was made in the Creed, shows how reluctant
men were to give more than a necessary minimum of space to
philosophical speculations. They were content with the formula,
extracted from the Creed, "Jesus Christus, deus et homo ", and
with the combination of the Biblical predicates applied to Christ,
predicates which also governed their conception of the Logos.
In this respect the second Book of the Testimonies of Cyprian
is of great importance. In the first six chapters the divinity of
Christ is discussed, in terms of Holy Scripture, under the follow-
ing headings, (i) et ipsum esse
Christum primogenitum esse
sapientiam dei, (2) quod
per quern omnia facta sunt;
sapientia
dei Christus (3) quod Christus
;
idem sit et sermo dei (4) quod ;
1 Expos. SymboH Apost. ch. 19. The changes which can be shown to have
been made on the first article of the Creed elsewhere in the West— see especially
the African additions— belong probably at the earliest to the fourth century.
Should
they be older, however, they are all, it would seem, to be understood anti-
stantia and persona) before the Council of Nicaea. ' The West
welcon^ed in the fourth century all statements which contained
dominus " 353 " deum talia passum, Ut enuntietur crucifixus conditor orbis ; "
; :
dominus ipse veniet." 630, 764: "Unus est. in cselo deus dei, terrje marisque, Quem
Moyses docuit ligno pependisse pro nobis " etc. etc. ;
Commodian is usually
assigned to the second half of the third century, but doubts have recently been
expressed as to this date. Jacobi, Commodian u. d. alt Kirchlich. Trinitatslehre,
in der deutschen Ztschr. f. Christi. Wissensch., 1853, p, 203 ff.
not have borne the deity: "And God was man, that he
might possess us in the future" (Et fuit homo deus, ut nos in
future haberet). "
'"
The Christianity and theology which these
1 See Francke's fine discussion, Die Psychologie und Erkentnisslehre des Arno-
bius (Leipzig, 1878).
- We recall the Theodotlans of Rome.
3 See Instit.30. —
The doctrine of the Logos is naturally worked out in
IV. 6
a subordinationist sense. Besides this, many other things occur which must have
seemed very questionable to the Latin Fathers 60 years afterwards " Utinam," says
:
most in vogue. ' Commodian does not stand alone, nor are the
features to be observed in his "Instructiones" accidental. And
puzzles whose solution is known to God alone (see e.g.^ B. 11. 74). Even in the
doctrine of the soul, which to him is mortal and only has its life prolonged by
receiving the doctrine brought by Christ, there is a curious mixture of antique
empiricism and Christianity. If we measure him by the theology of the foiu-th century,
Arnobius is heterodox on almost every page.
' See the Carmen apolog. with its detailed discussions of the final Drama, Anti-
christ (Nero) etc.; Lactant IV. 12, VII. 21 sq. ; Victorinus, Comm. on Revelation.
on the Apocalypse.
—
t^HAP. I.] LAST STAGES IN THE WEST 'jg
second half of the fourth century that the West was invaded
by the Platonic theology which Hippolytus, TertulHan, and
Novatian had cultivated, to all appearance without any thorough
success. Some of its results were accepted, but the theology
itself was not. Nor, in some ways, was it later on, when the
Western structure of Monotheism, energetic practical morality,
and conservative Chiliasm fell a prey to destruction. The mys-
tical tendencies, or the perceptions that led to them, were them-
selves awanting. Yet there is no mistake, on the other hand,
as we are taught by the Institutiones of Lactantius as well as
the Tractates of Cyprian, that the rejection of Modalism and
the recognition of Christ as the Logos forced upon the West
the necessity of rising from faith to a philosophical and, in fact,
1
The work of Arnobius is, in tliis respect, very instructive. This theologian
the
did not incline as a theologian to Neoplatonism, at a time when, in the East,
forbidden as
use of any other philosophy in Christian dogmatics was ipso facto
hei-etical.
80 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
1 Epiplianius (H. 62. i) tells us that there were Sabellians in Rome in his time.
Since he was acquainted with no other province or community in the West we may
perhaps believe him. This information seems to be confirmed by a discovery made
in A.D. 1742 by Marangoni. "He found at the Marancia gate on the road leading
to S, Paolo a, stair closed in his time which, as the discoverer believed, led to a
cubiculum of S. Callisto, and in which were painted Constantine's monogram in
very large letters, and, secondly, Christ sittingon a, globe, between Peter and Paul.
On the cover, in a mosaic of green stones, stood the inscription " Qui et fihus
diceris et pater inveniris" (Kraus,sott. 2 Aufl., p. 550). De Rossi, Kraus,
Rom.
and Schultze (Katakomben, suppose that we have here the discovery of a
p. 34)
burial place of Modalistic Monarchians, and that, as the monogram proves, of the
fourth century. The sepulchre has again disappeared, and we have to depend
entirely on Marangoni's account, which contains no facsimile. It is not probable
stillMonarchians in his time in the West. Augustine says (Ep. 118 c. II. [12]
ed. Bened. II., p. 498) dissensiones qusestionesque Sabellianorum silentur." Second-
hand information regarding them is to be found in Augustine, Tract, in Joh.
(passim) and Hser. 41. (The remarks here on the relation of Sabellius to Noetus
are interesting. Augustine cannot see why orientals count SabeUianism a separate
heresy from Monarchianism).
Again we have similar notices in Aug. Prsedest. IT. 41 in H. 70 Priscillians —
and Sabellians are classed together; as already in Leo I — , in Isidor, H. 43,
Gennadius, Eccl. Dogm. I. 4 (" Pentapolitana hsEresis ") Pseudo-hieron. H. 26
(" Unionita " etc., etc. In the Consult. Zacch. et AppoUon. 1. II. 1 1 sq. (Gallandi
T. IX., p. 231 sq )
—a book written about 430 —a distinction is made between the
Patripassians and Sabellians. The former are correctly described, the latter
confounded with the Macedonians. Vigilius Dial. adv. Arian. (Bibl. Lugd. T. VIII.).
1 ;
iTifi oLfX- I. 2; in Joh. I. 23, II. 2. 3, X. 21; in ep. ad Titum fragm. II; in
Mt. XVI. 8, XVII. 14; c. Cels. VIII. 12, etc. For Sabellius, Philosoph. IX. is, in
spite of its Hippolytus introduces him in
meagreness, of fundamental importance.
a way that shows plainly he was sufficiently well known at the time in the Roman
Church not to need any more precise characterisation (see Caspari, Quellen III.,
p. 327J. Epiphanius (H. 62) has borrowed from good sources. If we still possessed
them, the letters of Dionysius of Alex, would have been our most important original
authorities on S. and his Libyan party. But we have only fragments, partly in
Athanasius (de sententia Dionysii), partly in later writers— the collection in Routh
is not complete, Reliq. S. III., pp. 371—403. All that Athanasius imparts, though
fragmentary, is indispensable (espec. in the writings De synod.; de decret. synod.
Nic. and c. Arian. IV. This discourse has from its careless use led to a mis-
u. Marcell. and Prsepar. evang. Basilius, ep. 207, 210, 214, 235 Gregory of Nyssa,
; ;
i sq.)— tobe
h6yoti y.arci 'Apslau xai ^a^sMiav (Mai. V. P. Nova Coll. VIII. 2, p.
used cautiously—; Pseudo-Gregor (Appollinaris) in Mai, I.e. VII. i., p. 170 sq.
Theodoret. H. F. 11. 9 Anonymus, jrf 05 roii S«/3£AA('?'ovTa« (Athanas. 0pp. ed.
;
Montfaucon II., p. 37 sq.) Joh. Damascenus; Nicephorus Call., H. E. VI. 25. For
;
the accounts are not only confused, but fragmentary and curt.
It is quite as impossible to give a connected history of the
there are not a few passages where the various readings show a Monarchian or
anti-Monarchian, a. monophysite or dyophysite leaning. The most important have
been discussed by Ezra Abbot in several essays in the " Bibliotheca Sacra " and the
" Unitarian Review ". But we can trace certain various readings due to a Christolog-
ical bias as far back as the second century thus especially the famous 6 //cvoyEvi)?
:
u/05 for {io-joyi-aifi; &£6( John I. 18; on this see ITort., Two Dissertations I., on
MONOrENHS ©EOS in Scripture and Tradition, 1878; Abbot in the Unitarian
Review, June 1875. Since the majority of the important various readings in the
N. T. belong to the second and third century, a connected examination of them
would be very important from the standpoint of the history of dogma. For dogmatic
changes in the western texts, the remarkable passage in Ambrosiaster on Rom. V. 14
falls especially to be noticed.
'
"
This information, however, first appears in Basil, then in Philaster, Theodoret,
and Nicephorus; possibly, therefore, it is due to the fact that Sabellius' teaching
nominal. And this again seems to have been said not without
reference to the state of matters in Rome. The theology of
Origen made him an especially energetic opponent of the Modal-
istic form of doctrine; for although the new principles set up
—
by him that the Logos, looking to the content of his nature,
possessed the complete deity, and that he from eternity was
created from the being of the Father approached apparently —
a Monarchian mode of thought, yet they in fact repelled it more
energetically then Tertullian and Hippolytus could possibly have
done. He who followed the philosophical theology of Origen
was proof against all Monarchianism. But it is important to
notice that in all places where Origen comes to speak about
Monarchians, he merely seems to know their doctrines in an
extremely simple and without any speculative embroid-
form,
ery. They are always people who " deny that Father and Son are
two Hypostases" (they say: h ou f/Jvov ova-'icf,, x^Xx xcc) utto-
Ksifiiycfl), who "fuse together" Father and Son [s-uyx^^'^)) who
admit distinctions in God only in "conception" and "name",
and not in "number", etc. Origen considers them therefore to
be untheological creatures, mere "believers". Accordingly, he
did not know the doctrine of Sabellius, and living in Syria and
Palestine had even had no opportunity of learning it.
That doctrine was undoubtedly closely allied, as Epiphanius
has rightly seen (H. 62. i), to the teaching of Noetus; it was
distinguished from the latter, however, both by a more careful
theological elaboration, and by the place given to the Holy
Ghost. The opinion of Nitzsch and others, that we must dis-
'
>txi TOV Kvpiou vi[mSsv ^IvjiToC XpKTToV, a'KKTriccj re TToAA^v 'i^ovTO^ Trepi rov fMovoys-
vovi; 'rrxiSbi; ctvTOv KXt TTfuTOTdKou '^^o'vjq xr/Vew^, tov evavSpojTi^a-xvTOi; h6yov, avxtc-
Qijtrtaiv $^ TOV uyiov 'jrvsvf^aTO^,
Chap, i.] MODALISM IN THE EAST 85
^ Epiph., 1. c. : AoyiJ^XTt^et ya^ oZro^ xsii ol «t' chutov Zx^e/^Mavoi rov avrbv
stvat ^XTEpsCj Tov csvrov vtov, Tov avTOV sjvxi Uytov 'jrvsut^a' ait; slvai kv fxtS vTotrTaasi
rpe7q dvofj^seo-isi^^ jj wc ev a)/6jiu7rca ff-cSfza aaci 4'^X^ ^^' TvevfMcc, Koci elvcti /z£V to
irSiict wg smBiv riv TttnTSfu, vj'i';s^v ii 1S5 eiveTv tov vi6v, to srvEUfto! Si uii xvSfdiTrov,
ouTuii; xai to ciyiov Ti/EJ/fia Jv xj) ieiTifTi. '^H diQ exv p ev ^A;'^ 'ovti fiEv Iv /ztZ
vTroa-Txtj-ei, Tpsig Si 'i^ovTi Tag IvepyeixQ x.T.h. Method. Conviv. VIII. I0(ed. Jahu,
p. 37): ^ajSsMiog f^eysi tov vavTOxpccTOfx TivovUvai.
^ Epiph, H. 62, c. I ; ne{^<p6svTa tov vtov xaipia ttote, ua-Ksp axTlvcc xxl spya-
(ruiievov tx ttxvtx iv Titi xdcr/xifi Tse TifQ oixovo/^ixg r?? BvayysfLixifi; xai a-UTftpiai;
TcSv avSpuTtav, avaf^tftpSevTa Si auiii e'li; oipavov, aii; vvo ^A/ou frefi^h7(7av uxtIvx,
xai TToiMv e'li; tov viXtov txvxSpxiJ.oSirav, To <»'l Hyiov wveuiix viiJ-viu-iui e<; tov xotriMV, '
TTXTI^p.
86 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. I.
2 Epiph., 1. u., u. 2.
' L. i;. : Tiji/ ii v&irav aliTwv a'Aavijv kxi t^v tv? TrAavij? avreSv ivvujj.iv'ix'""^'^
g| ^ATToufv^wv TtvOlVy liu^ts^Tx xTTO TOv Kx^ovf^evov AlyuTTTiOV sbayysXiov, 5 rivsti
TO ^SvoiJtx h'JrsdsvTO rovro. 'Ev otvT^ yxf TroAAa Toixvra a)^ ev TFocpee^vo'rtfi //uctij-
piccSSg ex TTfOiruvov toS <roirvifii(; aveKpepirui, diQ avrou JijAouvto? Tolq imSijTaii t'ov
ctijTOV shxt TaripXt rov xvrov elvxi vi6vy tov xvtov slvxi xytov TveCiix.
* In the 2nd Ep. of Clement where it is frequently used, though this is disputed
by some, Modalistic formulas occur.
6 Clemens Alex, knew it; see Hilgenfeld, Nov. Testam. extra can. recept., 2 ed.,
fasc. 4, p. 42 sq.
Chap, i.] MODALISM IN THE EAST 87
pugned by formulas like the compassus est pater filio (the Father
suffered in sympathy with the Son). In the reference to the
Holy Spirit, Sabellius simply followed the new theology, which
was beginning to take the Spirit more thoroughly into account.
Most important is the third point mentioned. For in ranging
the Prosopon and energy of the Father in a series with the
two others, not only was cosmology introduced into the Modal-
istic doctrine as a parallel to soteriology, but the preeminence
fiuTU Koii 6 TOTJip airdi fisv hirri, v^arvvBTXi Si sk "lov xai Trviviice,
88 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
the same spirit, so also the Father is the same, but unfolds
himself in Son and Spirit" — seems at the first glance to con-
3 Sabellius seems to have been held a heretic all over the West about A.D. 3C0;
see the Acta Arclielai, Methodius etc.
* Higemann, I.e., p. 411 ff. ; Dittrich, Dion. d. Gr. 1867; Fbrster, intheZtschr.
f. d. hist. Theol., 1871, p. 42 ff. ; Routh, Reliq. S. III.,pp. 373—403. The main
(Source is Athanasius de sentent, Dionysii, a defence of the Bishop, due to the appeal
of the Arians to him; see also Basilius de spiritu, p. 29; Athan. de synod. 43 45. —
Chap, i.] MODALISM IN THE EAST 89
among the Bishops, "so that the Son of God was no longer
preached." Dionysius of Alexandria, therefore, composed various
letters in which he tried to recall those who had been misled,
and to refute Sabellianism. In one of these, directed to Euphra- '
TXsiovf Ivia-TOKai, wo-^te/j ml xara Sa;|3£AA/oi/ 5rpo5 "Afi/^ava Tije xxTa Bspsvixiiv sx-
xt^ffiTicii e7r/<7«05rcv, xai -h Tpoi; TeAeVcfopov xai y; ^rpo? Eu(ppeivopci, xxi TaA<v "Afcliuva
xau Ei/Vopov. ^vvrxTTSt S^ Trepi TtJc avT^c; vTroQea-sait; xai aKXx riirtTapct trvyypatij.-
Father without the Son and vice versa ' omitting to use the
world ofioovtTiog ; ' and finally, with regarding the Son as a crea-
ture, related to the Father as the vine to the gardener, or the
boat to the shipbuilder. * In these censures, which were not
inaccurate, it is obvious that Dionysius, continuing the Neo-
platonic speculations of his teacher, conceived the ^oyo? as
portio and derivatio of the i^ova,/;, thus, in order to meet Sabel-
lianism, actually dividing him from the deity. Dionysius sought
to excuse himself in his eXeyxoq (Refutation), and emphasised
exclusively the other side of Origen's doctrine, at the same time
3 De sententia 16: waripee Kiyav ^lovva-mg oux ovoiidi^ei tov ulov, xal tixMv vilti
^eyaiv oux ivopiii^ei tov TTxrefcc, sAA^ iiaipei xcei ftaxpvvei xui (xepi^si tov vloi eivi
roO irarpSi;.
1 L. u. 15.
' L. c. 18.
* L. u. 23. The expositions of vou? and A^yo; wliicli were found botli in the
2 and 4 books of Dionysius quite remind us of Porphyry: xai '^crriv 6 iJ.h ohv
TXTvjp 6 vovg ToO ?^6yoVi Siv e4*' ectvToVy 6 ^s xcsSaTsp vto^ 6 ^6yoq rav vov. yrpb
exeivov fiiv HivaTOV, «AA' ouii 'i%aUv vohv, iriv hxeivif yeviiievoi;, /SAao-rifo-a; Si
«t' ai/rov. ouraii 6 Trariip 6 lisyirroi; xxi xaUKou vovg jrpwTOii tov v/ov ^dycv ip^itvea
Hui HyyeKov iuvroS 'ix^'-
* L. c. 17.
92 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
7rXXTUV0[.A,SV OcSiyJpSTOV, KCi) TYIV TpioiSx TVX.'kiV Ctl/,elwTOV Eiq TifV f^O-
vTTcscTTxa'SiQ (jt,siJLspit7iJ,ivxt; slvact ?^syova-i, rps'tQ sltrt^ x«v /z^ SsfiOiff-tv tj rjjv hixv rpt~
aSa TTavTEAas avs?\iTao-xv. This accordingly is to be translated :
" if they maintain
that a separation is necessarily involved in the expression '
three Hypostases,' yet
there are three — vi'hether they admit it or no — or they must completely destroy the
divine triad."
' Lc. 20, 21. It is very noteworthy, that Dionysius has not even brought him-
self to use the expression oimovitux; in his 'iKB'yx'>'i- If he had Athanasius would
have given it in his extracts. For the rest, the attempt of Athanasius to explain
away the doubtful utterances of Dionysius, by referring them to the human nature
of Christ, is a makeshift born of perplexity.
3 De decret. synod. Nic. 26 (see besides de sentent. Dion. 13).
* The on the latter has alone been preserved by Athanasius along with
attack
the concluding argument; it is thus introduced: "Or; Se oh aoivinx ouSi xri'irixu 6
TOv @£ov ^6'yoq^ aAA' H^iov Ti^^ Tov TTarpoc ovtrtXQ ysyvvjiJ.a aStatpsrov Io-t/v, w5
'iypa^psv vj (jisyoih^ a-vvoSot;^ ISov kou 6 rvjt; 'Vati^iji; STritncoTot; Atovva-ioi; 'ypa<^(av naTct
rS'j TOi TOV i:,ci§£M!ov (PpovouvrMv^ o-^eT^ix^ei xxra rSi rxvrx ToAftwvTWi' Aeyiiv
Kxi <f»^(7<v oVrinf.
——
Finally —
and this is the third characteristic feature the letter —
shows that Dionysius had nothing positive to say, further
than that it was necessary to adhere to the ancient Creed,
definitely interpreting it to mean that the three, Father, Son,
and Spirit, were equally one. Absolutely no attempt is made
to explain or to prove this paradox. ^ But here undoubtedly
' 'E|i5? J' av sixoTHii; f.iyoiiu xce) vpoQ ToiJi Siaifovvrai y-cii KaraTEfivsvra? xcd
avxtpovvTaq to trsti'^STxrcv x^pvy[jLa r^t; SKU^^^a-iac;tov @£ov, t^v {xovxp^fa-j thus —
begins the fragment communicated by Athanasius, sU rps'i^ Smiiieii; riva? xxi
(iBI-ispiirfiivseQ vTTOo-rxaeig xmi SeortfrxQ rps't^' 7r£W{^tJ.cii yap eTvxfrrJiXi; rm srap' iiitv
x«T;f%oi^yrwv xai h^atrxovTOiv tov ds7ov ^6yov, TavTtj{; vipyjy^Tai; tvj^ (ppovyjireo)^' o't
xxTci StaijLETpov, ut; 'sTTOi; eJ^reTv, avTtxetVTXi tjj ^a^£?^?^tov yvu[j.^- 6 (zh yap
f3?iixir(pii(jL£7, auTOV tov vibv slvai ?.iyuv t6v •TraTepUy xxl £pi.7ra?^tv oiSe Tpsii; deoijQ
TpOTTOV TlVOi XtfpUTTOVO-IV, Slf TpS'lQ UVOITTOUTSIIi %ava(; 0!h>\VI>\lilV, TcavTxvxa-i xe-
Xupio'i^svx!;, SisitpovvTeg tvjv ayixv i^ovccStx. iivutrdai yap avxyx^j Tia 0£^ tuv H^uv
TOV fleTov >^6yov^ sf^ipt^oxojpe'tv S^ tZ ©sw xai iv^iaiTccirdai Ss7 to aytov ttvevizx, VjSii
xai Ti^v Qetav TpiaSa sti; 'ha^ utrTTsp stq xopv<ptjv Tiva {tov @ebv tuv H^ccv tov ttxv-
TOKpuTopa ?^Eybi) <rvyxe<pa?^aiovtrtiatT£ xai tj-vvaysirOai Traa-a avayxij. Mapxiuvoi; yap tov
fiXTaioippovot; SiSayf^a etc; Tpsli; apxoi^ Ti^t; [xovapXi^^^^ TO[iijv xai $ixtpe<Ttv (^topi^ei);
Tai^svfj.a 'ov §ia(3o?^ix6v, ov^i ^e tuv 'ovtu^ [^ixdi^TcSv tov Xpt<rTov . . . oZtoi yap Tpt-
u^a {jl^v xi^pvTTOi^svvjv vTTO Tvi^ ^BtaQ ypatpi^q iraipat; £7rit;TavTat, Tp£7t; §£ ^Eovq oVtb
7ra?iatav ovts xatvvjv StaS^x^v KvipvTTOvtrav According to Dionysius, then, some
Alexandrian teachers taught ^^Tpdwov Tiva" this is the only limitation a form of — —
Tritheism. The whole effort of the Bishop was to prevent this. We recognise here
the old Roman interest in the unity of God, as represented by Victor, Zephyrine,
and Callistus, but Dionysius may also have remembered, that his predecessors,
Pontian and Fabian, assented to the condemnation of Origen. Should we not
connect the angry reproach, levelled at the Alexandrian teachers, that they were
Tritlieists, the charge made by Callistus against Hippolytus, that he was a
with
Ditheist; and may we not perhaps conclude that Origen himself was also accused
of Tritheism in Rome?
"
The positive conclusion runs: OEiV' olv xaTxiJ,£p!^£iv xpii eii;TpB7g hoTi^raQTiiv
CavfiaiTTifv xai deiav fj^cvzSa, o\jtb 'j:oi^(r£i xxKv£tv to a\lbi{j.a xai to vwip^aT^Kov
[liys^oc, TOV xvptov izAAa 7r€7rta-T£vx£vai £ig @£cv TaTspa 'KavTOxpaTopa xat£iQXptir~
TOV ^Ij^iTOvv TOV vlov avTov xai £it; to aytov TV£v(j.a, ^jVUfrOat ^e tw @£^ tuv H^tuv
TOV KSyov iyii yap, <piia-i'. xai 6 waTVip %v £(j-iJ,£v. xai hyii h Tif waTpi xai S vaTiip £v
ijioi —these are the old Monarchian proof-texts ovtu yap av xai vi hla TpiaQ
xai TO ayiov xvipvyiia Ti^g iMvapxiag Siaa-cii^oiTo. We see that Dionysius simply
y
Person —perfect God and perfect man; one Person two wills. —
Their contentment with establishing a middle line, which possessed
the attribute of that known in mathematics, is, however, a proof
that they had not a positive, but merely a negative, religious
interest in these speculations. Otherwise they would not have
been satisfied with a definition it was impossible to grasp; for
no religion lives in conceptions which cannot be represented
and realised. Their religious interest centred in the God Jesus,
who had assumed the substantia humana.
The letter of the Roman Bishop produced only a passing
impression in Alexandria. Its adoption would have meant the
repudiation of science. A few years afterwards the great Synod
of Antioch expressly rejected the term oiioov(Jioq (consubstantial)
places the "holy preaching of the Monarchy" and the "Divine Triad" side hy
side: "stat pro ratione voluntas." Between this conclusion and the commencement
of the fragment preserved by Athanasius given In the preceding note, we liave a
detailed attack on those who hold the Son to be a To/ij/za like other creatures,
" while the Holy Scriptures witness to his having an appropriate birth, but not to
his being formed and created in some way." The attack on the iiv '6tb ovk ?»
touches the fundamental position of the Alexandrian scholars as little as the op-
position to three Gods; for Dionysius contents himself with arguing that God woidd
have been without understanding, if the Logos had not always been with him;
a thing which no Alexandrian doubted. The subtle distinction between Logos and
Logos Dionysius leaves wholly out of account, and the explanation of the Roman
Bishop on Proverbs VIIL 32 (xvpioi 'dxritrs //£ afX'iv °Suv avToE) 'ixria-e hrxCix:
UKOvtrriov avTi tov eTstrr^^tre toi^ vtt'' ccvtov yeyovdiriv 'ipyoK;^ yeyovdffi Je Si^ avrov
Tov vloS, must merely have caused a compassionate smile among the theologians
of Alexandria.
Chap, i.] MODALISM IN THE EAST 95
«See Euseb. H. E. VII. 26, 2; tlie fragments of the workinRouth, Reliq. S. IV.,
P- 393 sq. On this, Roch, die Sehrift des Alex. Bischofs, Dionysius d. Gr. iiber
die Natur (Leipzig 1882) and my account of this dissertation in the Th. L. Z. 1883,
No. 2. Dionysius' work, apart from a few Biblical quotations which do not affect
the arguments, might have been composed by a Neo-platonic philosopher. Very
characteristic is the opening of the fii-st fragment preserved by Eusebius. TIoTSfov
ev strn trvvx<psi to ttxv, wc ^/.i7i/ rs Kxi TOtt; ^otpaiTXTOt^ 'EAAjjvwv n?^XTUvt Ktxl
TluSxydpec to% a'jro riii Xtox^ xai 'HpccK^eiriii ipaiveTsci; there we have in a
y.oti
line the whole company of the saints with whom Epicurus and the Atomists were
confronted. We notice that from and after Justin Epicurus and his followers were
extremely abhoired by Christian theologians, and that in this abhorrence they felt
themselves at one witli Platonists, Pythagoreans, and Stoics. But Dionysius was the
first Christian to take over from these philosophers the task of a systematic refutation.
s Photius Cod. 119.
g6 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
he speaks of two " beings " and two natures using the words ;
that God have a son, and the Son; the third, took up the Holy Ghost;
should
the fourth, angels and demons; the fifth and sixth, the possibility and actuality of the
Son's incarnation; the seventh, God's creative work. From the description by Photius
it appears that Theognostus laid the chief stress on the refutation of two opinions,
namely, that matter was eternal, and that the incarnation of the Logos was an
impossibility. T/iese are., however, the two theses with which the Neo-platonic theo-
logians of the 4th and^th centuries confronted Christian science, and in whose assertion
the whole difference between Neo-platonism, and the dogmatic of Alexandrian
churchmen at bottom consisted. It is very instructive to notice that even at the end
of the 3rd century the antithesis thus fixed came clearly to the front. If Theognostus,
for the rest, rejected the opinion that God created all things from a matter equally
eternal with himself, this did not necessarily imply his abandonment of Origen's
Chap, i.] MODALISM IN THE EAST 97
principle of the eternity of matter; yet it is at any rate possible that in this point
he toolc a more guarded view of the master's doctrine.
' The fragment given by Athanasius (de deer. Nic. syn. 25) runs as follows:
Oi/K e^u^B'j TtQ ea-rh ecpsvpeh7irx i) rou viou ovtria., ouhl sk {j^ij ovruv kwstin^x^^' ^^^oi
SK rjj^ TOv TTXTpoQ overixt; 'i!^v, wc tov ^(liToi; to a'jrxvya(r(j.ai^ uq vSaroi; xTfjLit;' oVre
yap TO ofj? uvy a(r (MX qvts STTh ^ auTOQ 6 ^?^tot;, qI/te aKK6-
^ XTfMii xi/to to VSaip
Tptov Koi oijTE avToi; ea-Ttv 6 Trarvip oVts a/^^orptot; xKKa a,'JT6p{oia TVii; tou TrxTpb^
ova-i'aQ, ou iJ.epi(r(J.ov vTOjJ.eiviia'iiQ Tjj? tou ttxt poi; oi/iriai- w; yxp (/.ivav 6 ijAio? 6
•
uliToi; ou [jcetouTxt Toii; skxeoizSvxk; utt' xhrou auyaii;, outwq ou§e -/j oua-txrou 'jrxTpot;
xKholaiiTiv uTrei^sivsv, s'lxhx nauTiff 'ixouax tov ulov. Notice that the fMi pur 11,61; is here
negatived; but this negative must have been limited by other definilions. At all
(T£>iSioviMvoi), and that therefore the sin against the Holy Ghost, as the
sin of the"perfect", could not be forgiven.' The only novelty is
that Theognostus saw occasion expressly to attack the view " that
the teaching of the Spirit was superior to that of the Son " (tjjv
Tou 7rvevi/,o!.T0i; "BihotirxxXioiv u7rsp[3ii?,Xsiv rvji; tou u'lov ^I'Sxx^'^)- Per-
haps he did oppose another disciple of Origen, Hieracas,
this to
who applied himself to speculations concerning Melchizedek, as
being the Holy Spirit, and emphasised the worship of the Spirit."
This Copt, who lived at the close of the third and in the first half of
the fourth century, cannot be passed over, because, a scholar
like Origen, ' he on the one hand modified and refined on certain
doctrines of his master, * and on the other hand, emphasised his
practical principles, requiring celibacy as a Christian law. *
Hieracas is for us the connecting link between Origen and the
^ Epiphanius (H. 67) speaks in the highest terms of the knowledge, learning,
and power of memory, possessed by Hieracas.
* H. understood and repudiated the
the resurrection in a purely spiritual sense,
restitutio carnis. He would havedo with a material Paradise; and
nothing to
Alexander of Alex. (Epiph. H. 69. 7). P'rom his short description of it {oil iSs
'Upcixa? Ai/;i;vcv xto ^vx^ou, w? Kxij.7rxSx elf Sua— these are figures already
tj
employed by Tatian) we can only, however, conclude that H. declared the owfr/o! of
the Son to be identical with that of the Father. He may have developed Origen's
Christology in the direction of Athanasius.
' See my Herzog's R. E. 2 Aufl. VI, p. 100 f. Hieracas recognised the
Art. in
essential between the O. and N. T. in the commandments as to ayve/'«,
difference
iyxpcersiie, and especially, celibacy. "What then did the Logos bring that was new?"
or what is the novelty proclaimed and instituted by the Only-begotten? The fear
of God? The law already contained that. Was it as to marriage? The Scriptures
(r=. the O. T.) had already dealt with it. Or as to envy, greed, and unrighteous-
ness ? All that is already contained in the O. T. '^Ev Si fio'vov tovto xxTopiaa-ai
^A^e, rb rijv iyxp^TSiav tiJipv^ai ^v t^ xoffiita iuvTu ava^e^otir^ai dyvs.'av Koii
xoii
lyxp^TSixv. "Avev Si rovrou i^it Svvxa-iai ^iiv (Epiph. H. 67, ch. l). He appealed
•^•^AP. 1.] PETER OF ALEXANDRIA 99
Coptic monks the union of ascetics founded by him may mark
;
him between the Christian science of the perfect and the faith
of the simple was to be abolished. The former must be cur-
tailed, the latter added to, and thus a product arrived at in a
uniform faith which should be at the same time ecclesiastical
and scientific. After theology had enjoyed a period of liberty,
the four last decades of the third century, a reaction seems to
have set in at the beginning of the fourth, or even at the end of
the third century, in Alexandria. But the man had not yet risen
who was to preserve theology from stagnation, or from being
resolved into the ideas of the time. All the categories employed
by the theologians of the fourth and fifth centuries were already
current in theology, ^ but they had not yet received their defi-
nite impress and fixed value. ' Even the Biblical texts which
in those centuries were especially exploited pro and contra,
' We have unfortunately no more precise informatioQ as to Peter's attitude; we
may determine it, however, by that of Methodius (see under).
2 So — —
ficv^Q — Tptcii; — utoke/ixsvqv — VToa'TCsa'tQ — TrpotriUTrov— Trepfypa-
ovtrici (pvtri^
4)>f
— Statpeh — Tr^xTvvstv —
fxepi^sa-Qat — KTi^stv — ttoluv — ytyvsa-Hxi
irv'yy.eipa?^atDV(r(iat
hx <Put6g — ysvviiOevTCi
<pa}i; — ore ovk — ^v
oli TToii^'isvrx qvk ^v — §v ore
v.* v,v oliK lire
Tvi^ QsoTi^TOt; — §vo outrtai — ouTtx oua-taiixsvii — hvxvOpciiTnitrit;— ^exvUpoiTro^— evuiri^ ov^tai-
Sifi — 'hutrti; JiCCTOC t^sTovtriav — a-vvtx<p€ia nara fix^i^irrj koi [zsrovtrixv — trvyxpa^i^ —
ivoixeiv etc. Hipler in the Oesterr. Vierteljahrsclirift fiir kathol. Theol. 1869, p.
161 ff. (quoted after Losche, Ztschr. f. wiss. Theol. 1884, 8. 259) maintains that
expressions occurred in the speculations of Numenius and Porphyry as lo the nature
of God, which only emerged in the Church in consequence of the Nicene Council.
Those technical terms of religio-philosophical speculation, common to the Neo-
platonists of the 3rd century, the Gnostics and Catholic theologians, require re-
examination. One result of this will be perhaps the conclusion that the philosophy
of Plotinus and Poi-phyry was not uninfluenced by the Christian system, Gnostic
and Origenistic, which they opposed. We await details under this head from
Dr. Carl Schmidt.
' The meaning which was afterwards attached to the received categories was
absolutely unthinkable, and corresponded perfectly to none of the definitions previously
hit upon by the philosophical schools. But this only convinced men that Chiistianily
was a revealed doctrine, which was distinguished from philosophical systems by
mysterious ideas or categories.
'
noteworthy that Irenasus and Clement already delighted in appealing to the vfur^ir-
epoi, which meant for them, however, citing the Apostles' disciples, and that Paul
of Samosata was accused in the epistle of the Synod of Antioch, of despising the
ancient interpreters of the Divine Word (Euseb. VII. 30).
2 See Caspari IV., p. 10 ff. Ryssel, Gregorius Thaumaturgus, 1880. Vide also
;
Overbeck in the Th. L.— Z 1881, No. 12, and Drascke in the Jahrb. f. protest.
,
Theol. 1881, H. 2. Edition by Fronto. Duciius, 1621. Pitra, Analecta Sacra III.; also
Loofs, Theol. L. Z., 1884, No. 23.
3 See Caspari's (I.e.) conclusions as to Gregory's confession of failh, whose
genuineness seems to me made out. Origen's doctrine of the Trinity appears clearly
in the Panegyric. The fragment printed by Ryssel, p. 44 f is not by Gr.
Thaumaturgus. ,
^ See Caspari, I.e., p. rpiai re^eia, S6^>i xxi xiSiortiri xai /3ao-;A£/« i-tii l-ispi-
10 :
XoiUvvi liviii x'^af.^^orfwui^evii. Oi/Vf avv ktuttov t( j) JoCaov ev Tji TpixSt oVts
hveicraxTov, lig TfOTifOV fiiv olx i'Vaf^cv, ila-TSpov Si l7r£(o-eAio'v oiirs yap hehive
aiiTif rpiaiaei'.
u-OTE t//05 xa-rpi, oVre viif TveS/^LX, 2^AA' arpsTTOi; xxi otvuhholuTOf; ii
2 Ryssel, p. 65 f., 100 f. ; see Gregor. Naz., Ep. 243, Opp , p. II,, p. 196 sq.,
• See also the Sermo de incarnatione attributed to Gregoj-y (Pitra III., p. 144 sq,
395 sq.)
Chap, i.] METHODIUS IO3
has to tell of one: haym (J.'i'J <pi>\oii-6cpiiiv xai Ti(« «AAij; Tap' "EAAifo-; 7ra<j£/a? jrafi
To7s 7ro/Ao7« SaviJ-aa-hk, olx oimihk; ye fziiv wsfl ri)v Oei'av TTia-Tiv SiXTeisil^hoi.
- It is unknown who was the KUhKluv iiiJ.uv Vfer^uTti? xxi iJ.ciKixfi(Trig xvfip
But in the second half of the third century, and at the begin-
ning of the fourth, there were on the side of the Church antag-
onists of Origen's theology who were well versed in philo-
sophical knowledge, and who not merely trumped his doctrine
with their -^JiAii n-'tcTig (bare faith), but protected the principles
transmitted by the Church from spiritualising and artificial inter-
pretations, with all the weapons of science. The most impor- '
we have the greater part of a second —De resurr. ' The rest
' Besides these we have who, while they did not wrije
Eastern theologians,
against Origen, show no signs in their works of having been influenced by Alex-
andrian theology, but rather resemble in their attitude Irenseus and Hippolytus.
Here we have especially to mention the author of five dialogues against the Gnostics,
which, under the title '-De recta in deum fide," bear the name of Adamantius ;see
the editio princeps by Wetstein, 1673, and the version of Rufinus discovered by Caspari
(Kirchenhistorische Anecdota, 1883; also Th. L. —
Z. 1884, No. 8) which shows
that the Greek text is interpolated. The author, for whom we have perhaps to look
in the circle of Methodius, has at any rate borrowed not a little from him (and
also from the work of Theophilus against Marcionr). See Jahn, Methodii, Opp. I,,
p. 99, II. Nos. 474, 542, 733 —
749, 771, 777. Mdller in Herzog's R. E., 2 Ed.,
IX., p. 725. Zahn, Ztschr. f. Kirchengesch., Vol. IX., p. 193 ff. "Die Dialoge des
:
Adamantius mit den Gnoslikem." The dialogues were written + 300, probably
somewhere in East Asia Minor, or in West Syria, according to Zahn about 300
— 313 in Hellenic Syria, or Antioch. They are skilfully written and instructive; a
very moderate use is made of philosophical theology. Perhaps the Ep. ad Diogn. also
came from the circle of Methodius. Again, there is little philosophical theology to
be discovered in the original edition of the first six books of the apostolic Consti-
tutions, which belongs to the third century. See Lagarde in Bunsen's Analecta
Ante-Nic£ena T. 11. The author still occupied the standpoint of Ignatius, or the old
anti-gnostic teachers. The dogmatic theology, in the longer recension of the work,
who lived in or after the middle
preserved in Greek, belongs entirely to the reviser
of the 4th century (so App. Const. II. 24, VI. 11, 14, 41 [Hahn, Biblioth. der
Symbole, 2 Aufl., §§ 10, 11, 64]; see my edition of the AiSxx'i, P- 241 ff. That
Aphraates and the author of the Acta Archelai were unaffected by Origen's theology
will have been clear from what was said above, p. 50 f.
has been preserved in the Slavic language, and only very lately
been rendered accessible. The personality of Methodius himself,
with his position in history, is obscure. ' But what we do know
is enough to show
he was able to combine the defence of
that
the Rule of Faith by Irenseus, Hippolytus, and
as understood
Tertullian, " with the most thorough study of Plato's writings
and the reverent appropriation of Plato's ideas. Indeed he lived
in these. ' Accordingly, he defended " the popular conception of
the common faith of the Church " in an energetic counterblast
to Origen, and rejected all his doctrines which contained an
artificial version of traditional principles. ' But on the other hand,
1 See Zahn, Ztschr. f. Kirchengesch. Vol. VIII., p. 15 ff. Place : Olympus ia Lycia.
°
He was ranked in with Irensius and Hippolytus (see Andreas C^s.
later times
See the long fragments of the writing i/e restirrectiane which was directed
^
against Origen, as also the work Trepi rav ysnirSv. Methodius called Origen a
"Centaur" (Opp. I. 100, loi), i.e., "Sophist," and compared his doctrine with the
Hydra (I. 86). See the violent attack on the new-fashioned exegetes and teachers
De and 20, where the oo-tS voifra and ir&fxcc^
in resurr. 8, 9 (Opp I. 67 sq.) (p. 74),
TO eJvat Tov ehxt tov k6it(j.ov, dia Tt to ;|je7pov iipsliTQ Ton^tra^ tov xoa-izov 6
iJ.il
@s6q; «AA' ovS^v 6 ©eo5 ^uTUta^ j) X^''P^^ sttoisi. ovjcoVv sit; to elvoit xai fievetv Tijv
XTi'iTiv &eoi Siexotriitfij-aTO. Wisdom I. 14 and Rom. VIII. 19 follow. The fight waged
by Methodius against Origen presents itself as a continuation of that conducted by
Irenseus against the Gnostics. It dealt in part with the same problems, and used
the same arguments and proofs. The extent to which Origen hellenised the Christian
tradition was in the end as little tolerated in the Church as the latitude taken by
the Gnostics. But while Gnosticism was completely ejected in two or three genera-
tions it took much longer to get rid of Origenism. Therefore, still more of Ori-
gen's theology passed into the "revealed" system of Church doctrine, than of the
theology of the Gnostics.
2 See Conviv. III. 6 (p. 18 sq.) ; rai/Tji yaf tov mUfonrov avei'Aij^ei' >i6yo(;,
ijTut; 5Jf 5*' auTov xaTocXva^iJ r^v e^r' o^^eQpoi ysyovvtuv xaTot^Ui^v^ ijTTvia-aQTbv'6<ptv,
ifpiio^s yhp fJ-yj Si' STepov vixijdiivcii tov Trovt^pov a?i?^ai h' exstvov, iv 5^ xaci Ex6(i'
'jrx^sv awoiT^a-xq auTOv TETvpavvifxhai^ cjTt i^ij c^AAiu^ Tjjv u(MapTiuv ?^v6^vai xcct tjjv
xciTixxpit7tv SvvxTov ^v, St (/.ij TTaKiv 6 avTOQ Ixzlvoi; avdpwJToq^ St' iv sipviTO TO ^^yvi
SI xxi siq y^v aT7e^sv(ni\^'" xvtxT^xa-hiQ uvs^vtrs Tt^v X7r6<pa(rtv rijv St" avTov stq
clearer is III. 4, where it is expressly denied that Adam is only a type of Christ
tpsps yap i5//£7; svtcrxS'puiisSa TraJ? opSoSo^aQ {xvijyays tov 'Aja/.i £;'? tov XpiiTTOv,
oil iJt,6vov Ti/TTov avTov iiyo^i^svog slvat xai s}x6va, xMk xai auTO toSto Xpia-Tov xxi
avTQV ysyovevai Sia to tov Trpb atavcav s]t; avTov syxXTX^xvi^ui ?\6yov. vipfio^s yap
TO 7rpuT6yovQV tov &sqV xai 'JrpuTov (3/itxa-Tiii/ix xai (iovoyev^q rijv tro^tav tw TpUTO-
T^aa-Tia xai TrpajTU xai TpuToyovo} tuv avSpaiTtuv av6pu7rcc.xspaa'5s7a-av sv^vSpuTrijxsvxt,
TOVTO yap sivat tov Xpitrrov, avOpuTov sv axpaTu Qsot^ti xai TS^sia TrsT^^i^papievov
xai @sbv sv avdpuTifi xexcaptif^svov ^v yap TrpsTaiSea-TaTov tov TTpstr^vTaTov Tuv
attavuv xai TpcSTOv tuv apxayys^iUV, avUpuToit; (jLe?^XovTa ffvvo[it?.s7v, s]q tov Tpsff-
^VTaTOV xai xpaTov tSv avSpuvov siroixKrCiivai tov 'ASa/j,. See also III. 7 8 Trpo- :
ysyv/ivxa-ieti yctp ui apx 6 wpaT6%Kaa-T0i; oixeiuq siq xvtov xvaCpspstrSai SvvxTai tov
. . .
XpttTTOv^ ouxsTt TUTToq Ciiv xxi iZTStxxtr[ja [iovov xai sixoiv TOV (jiovoysvovQ, a?i^a xai xvTO
toCto (70<Pia yeyovaii xai ^iyoq. Sixviv yap vSxtoq avyxspairHsiQ 6 'avSpccTTOQ Tji <ro<pia
xai T^ ^uf TOVTO ysyovsv, (^Tsp ijv auTo to sit; ai/Tov syxaTxa-xi^^xv xxpaTov ^uq.
a
' Yet see, under, the new turn given to the speculation.
^ S. Conviv. III. 5: 'in ya( Tti^Aoufyovi-ievov riv 'A^aft, dii; 'ic-riv s/VeTv, xaii
T^fXTOV '6vrx rcei vSxp^, xcei iJ.ifSc7ra> (piaa-eivTX Sixifv 6(rTpixov t^ xif-Bxpa-ix xparxiu-
ivjvai XXI TTccyiaivivai, ilSiup atrvsp xaTa?KSi^oiJ.e\iff xcei xxTraa-ri^ovo-a iieKva-ev xl/TO
il uiiupTia. Sio Sij TTxMv 'avsohv mxSeuuv xxi wti?iOV>\xa-Tm tov xlirov sii ri/j-iiv 6
©£o'? vxphvixf xpxTxiaia-xQ Trparov xxi wi^ixf l^^Tpx xxi a-vvsvurxi; xxi
BV Tji
a-vyxipxirxQ t^ ^oya, 'xr^xTOV xxi xSpav<TTOv h^i^yxyev sii; tov |3;'ov, "vx iJ.ii kxKdi
ro7q TifS (pOopxi; 'iiaiev eTnxhVirhii fev/jxriv, mxsSovx yevvvia-xi; SixTea-iii. Methodius,
like gave much study to Paul's Epistles, because they were especially
Irenjeus,
quoted by Origen and his school (see ch. 51 fin., p. 90); on the difficulties which
he felt see De resurr. 26, p. 77; 38, p- 83.
' Theexpositions of concupiscence, sin, and death, are distinguished very
strongly from those of Origen. (For deatli^ as means of salvation see De resun-.
23 49). They resemble the discussions of Irenseus, only
Methodius maintains —
—
sign of the times that sinlessness is impossible even to the Christian. See De
resurr. 22 (I. p. 75) ^aifroi; yxp 'in roS a-ai/iXTOQ vpo rov rsSvt^^ea-Sxi a-v^iiv xvxyxii
:
xxi'iioiUv Toiixi'i;
xxi Tijv xiJ.xpTluv, 'ivSov rxQ pV^a? awTiJ? Iv ^iJ.1v xTToxpvTrrouiT-xv, ei
txIq xtto tuv !riiiCppovi(7iJ.uv xxi tSv vovdBTvta-suv xv£{rTi^?^iTO, STret oix ot]/ i^btx to
(ftuiTiirOiivxi a-vvi^xivsv xSixslv, xts vxvTcmxat^
s'lMxpivui x(pifptiiJ.ivii<; a<f>' iilJ-uv xijc
i^^Silv rov xyvi<rij.oS vo},-
xiixpTixQ- vSv^ Si xxi iJ-srx to vio-tbuitxi xxi 'exi to uSap
ixvTOV
Aiz;5 Iv litixpTiXii 'OMTBC, sipia-xoiieix- oiSsis yiip o'llrai; xpixprixi; sxroi shxi
xxvx^o-STXi, w« x&v ivSviitjiiivxt ro aCvoXov '6>.i>ii; rv,^ xSixixv. To this concep-
iJ.tiS£
' The allegory receives another version 0pp. I., p. 119: //ij ^015 %« ai rfsif
xuTXt rSjv Tpoydvaiv iiscpx?^at Tratr^^ t^5 oLvdptaTOT^roc; c(ioov<noi vTTOirrairstQ x«t'
sWovcc Tivx, ui; xai MsHoStui SaKs7 —the passage occurs in Anastasius Siti. ap. Mai,
Script. Vet. N. Coll. IX. p. 619 ruTrticoSi; yeyovxiri ri^t; tkyicc^ xal ofjLOQvtriov Tp/«-
5o5, Tov iJL^v uvcctriov xai ayevvvirov 'Aja// tvttov koH sIk:vx ¥;^oi'toc rov avotirlov
Kcti 'JTavTuv Oilriov TavroKpaTopo^ &€0u KOti Tarpot;, tov Si yevv^rov viov avTov
ettcova 7rpohixypa<povTot; tov yevvijrov vtov Kat y^oyov tov &eov. tvi^ 5t- IxTopgfTtjs
Ei/ac (7viiJ.arj3V(n^(; t^v tov xyiov Tvevy.siTOCi hxTopsvTiiv vTratrTx^iv.
'
"is the Spirit of truth, the Paraclete, from whom the enlightened
"receiving their portion are born again, in a worthy mariner, to
" immortality. But no one can participate in the Holy Spirit,
"and be accounted a member of Christ, unless the Logos has
" first descended upon him, and, faUing asleep, has emptied '
" himself, that he, rising again and rejuvenated, along with him
" who fell asleep for his sake, and re-fashioned in his own
" person, may participate in the Holy Spirit. For the side (ivXeu^a)
"of the Logos is really the spirit of truth, the seven- formed
"of the prophet, from whom God, in accordance with the self-
" sacrifice of Christ, that is, the incarnation and suffering of Christ,
"takes away something, and fashions for him his spouse, in
"other words, souls fit for him and prepared like a bride." ^
Methodius accordingly, starts in his speculations from Adam and
Eve as the real types of Christ and the Church but he then ;
varies this, holding that the individual soul rather must become
the bride of Christ, and that for each the descent of the Logos
from heaven and his death must be repeated — mysteriously and
in the heart of the believer.
This variation became, and precisely through the instrumentahty
of Methodius, of eminent importance in the history of dogma.^
We would not have had in the third century all the premises
from which Catholic Christianity was developed in the following
centuries, unless this speculation had been brought forward, or,
been given a central place, by a Christian theologian of the
earlier period. It marks nothing less than the tapering of the
realistic doct7-inal system of the Church into the subjectivity of
monkish mysticism. For to Methodius, the history of the Logos-
Christ, as maintained by faith, was only the general background
of an inner history, which required to repeat itself in each be-
liever: the Logos had to descend from heaven, suffer, die,
and
"De orat." 17.: "He who has perceived the beauty of the bride whom
see e.(j.
rise again for him. Nay, Methodius already formulated his view
to the effect that every believer must, through participation in
Christ, be born as a Christ. ' The background was, however,
not a matter of indifference, seeing that what took place in the
individual must have first taken place in the Church. The Church,
accordingly, was to be revered as mother, by the individual
soul which was to become the bride of Christ. In a word here :
erSxt vofii^oj tjjv gxxAj/^/av, ETrsiSyj tovi; x^P^'^'^^P^Q ^^' '^^^ sxtuttuitiv xat tv,v
CTTrxpyx y.sci ai^.'vii, /ze%/)/7rep xv 6 Xpitrrot; kv yiiJ-lv {^opCpctiH^ ysvvijisti;^ Uttoi^ '^KXtrroi;
Tuv ayittiv rto i^sreXEiv XpttrroV Xpta-Tcq ysvvi^Q^, KaO" "bv Koyov xat 'iv Ttvt ypci<p^
<Psp£Tat ^^
{jiii ci^\jt^(r^e tuv Xpii7Tc3v pLov" oiavei Xpia-Tuv yeyovorav rcSv xotTct {J.stov-
aiotv TOV 7rvsvfji.txT0^ elt; Xpitrrov ^e^aTTta-f^fjuv, ff-u^z/SaAAoi/o-jfS evTav6x t^v ev toj
Ao'y^ Tpdvaitriv avTuv xa) {^sTxi/.6p!pua-iy rijs EXK^^iriai;. Even TertuUian teaches
(De pud. 22) that the martyr who does what Christ did, and lives in Christ, is
Christ.
Chap, i.] METHODIUS III
"and fair practice is alone the ripe result, the flower and first
" fruits of incorruption, and therefore the Lord promises to admit
"those who have preserved their virginity into the kingdom of
" heaven ... for we must understand that virginity, while walking
"upon the earth, reaches the heavens ": /^^f/iXA)^ rig ia-Tiv VTrepCpvag
y.x) Sxufixa-rit y.x) h'So^Oi vi wxp&svU,
xp^ Cpxvspug sIttsTv
zx,) el
same for all; but on the soil of the Church there is room for
all may not yet reach it. The important and momentous
achievement of Methodius consisted in subordinating a reahstic
'
1 See Funk, Patr. App. Opp, II., pp. i — 27, and Harnack, Sitzungsberichte d.
Jahn, 1. c. I., p. 6 sq. The defence of Origen against Methodius by Pamphilus and
Eusebius has unfortunately been preserved only to a very small extent. SeeRouth,
Reliq. S. IV., p. 339 sq.
3
—
from about 250 320, at a result than which nothing grander
or more assured could be imagined. In the West the old, short,
Creed was retained, and, except in one case, ^ the Christological
conflicts did not induce men to change it. But in the leading
Churches of the East, and during the given period, the Creeds
were expanded by theological additions, ^ and thus exegetical and
speculative theology was introduced into the Apostolic faith
itself. * Thus, in the Catholic Churches of the East, this
time in many Churches. The history of the rise of Creeds — furtlier than the Bap-
tismal formula — in the East is wholly obscure. Of course there always were detailed
Christological formulas, but the question is whether they were inserted into the
Baptismal formula.
* It has been already pointed out oni p. 48, note I, that the Biblical character
of some of those additions cannot be used against their being regarded as theolo-
gical and philosophical formulas. The theology of Origen witness his letter to —
—
Gregory was throughout exegetical and speculative; therefore the reception of
certain Biblical predicates of Christ into the Creeds meant a desire to legitimise the
theology was for ever fused with the faith itself. A striking
example has been already quoted; those six Bishops who
wrote against Paul of Samosata in the seventh decade of the
third century, submitted a Rule of Faith, which had been elabor-
ated philosophically and theologically, as the faith handed down
themselves to the common faith; but he himself relates (De carne, 20; see Iren. I. 7,2)
that they preferred "Six Map/a?" to "ek Mapiui"; in other words, of these two
prepositions, which were still used without question even in Justin's time, they, on
theological grounds, admitted only the one. So also they said "Resurrection from
the dead" instead of "of the body." Irenteus as well as TertuUian has spolien of
the " blasphemous " regulce of the Gnostics and Marcionites which were always
being changed 5, III. II 3, I. 31 3; II preef ; IL 19 8, III. 16, I, 5;
(Iren. I. 21
TertuU., De prsescr. 42; Adv. Valent. 4; Adv. Marc. I. i, IV. 5, IV. 17). We can
still partly reconstruct these " Rules " from the Philosoph. and the Syntagma of
Hippolytus (see esp. the regula of Apelles in Epiphan. H. XLIV. 2). They have
nmtatis mutandis the most striking similarity to the oriental confessions of faith
published since the end of the third century compare, e.g.^ the Creed, given under, ;
of Gregorius Thaumaturgus with the Gnostic rules of faith which Hippolytus had
before him in the Philosoph. There is, further, a striliing affinity between them in
the fact that the ancient Gnostics already appealed in support of their regula to
secret tradition, be it of one of the Apostles or all, yet without renouncing the
by Holy Scripture through the spiritual (pneumatic) method
attestation of these rules
of Exegesis. Precisely the same thing took place in the Eastern Churches of the
next age. Kor the tenor and phrasing of the new Creeds which seemed to be
necessary, the appeal to Holy Scripture was even here insufficient, and it was
necessary to resort to special revelations, as in the case alluded to, p. 115, note 3,
or to a TrxfuSorii xypitipot; of the Church. That the new theology and Christology
had found their way into the psalms sung in the Church, can be seen from the
Synodal document on Paul of Samosata (Euseb. VII. 30, 11), where it is said of
the Bishop : ypa/^i^oiii; roiit; [x^v si^ tov xvptov y^fiuv 'I. Xp. 'jrixva-at; aq Sij veurepovq
XXI vsciiTefuy xvSfuv a-vyypiiiiiJ.XTx; i.e.^ Paul set aside those Church songs which
contained the philosophical or Alexandrian christology. In this respect also the
Church followed the Gnostics: compare in the period immediately following, the
songs of Arius, on the one hand, and the orthodox hymns on the other; for we
know of Marcionite, Valentinian, and Bardesanian psalms and hymns. (See the close
of the Muratorian Fragment, further my investigations in the Ztschr. f. wissensch.
Theol., 1876, p. 109 ff.; Tertull., De Carne Chr. 17 ; Hippol., Philos. VI. 37; the
psalms of Bardesanes in Ephraim ; the Gnostic hymns in the Acts of John and
Thomas, in the Pistis Sophite, etc.). It is self-evident that these psalms contained
the characteristic theology of the Gnostics; this also appears from the fragments
that have been preserved, and is very clearly confirmed by TertuUian, who says of
Alexander the Valentinian (I.e.): sedremisso Alexandra suis syllogismis^eiiam
'•''
mm
cum Psalmis Valentim\ quos magna impudeniia^ quasi idonei alictiius aucioris
interserit." The scholastic form of the Church was more and more complete in
the East in the second half of the third century, after one school, that of the
Alexandrian Catechisls, had finally succeeded in partly insinuating its teaching into
Chap. I.] DOCTRINAL DEVELOPMENT IN THE EAST II5
in the holy Catholic Church from the Apostles. But we possess '
XxpaKT^^po^ OiiSiav, re^stot; rs^eiau ysvvvjTup, irxTi^p viou [jLOvoyevov^^ E/? Kvptoi;^
(^ovOQ etc [zovov^ ©eo? sk ©gov, %ap«;cT^p xai eiKuv r^t; QsoT^irot;, ^oyoQ ivspyo^, a-ocptoi
TvJQ rav 'o'^.uv o-va-rxirsaii vepisxTixii rt-cii SvvxiJ.11; rvii '(Sf\^ii XTio-sui vmvjTixvi, vi'oi
a^ifliivoi; xKyidivoS varpoc;, aopxTog xopxTOU xai aCpflapTo; x(pSaprov xxi ceiivxroi; xdu-
vaTOV xa) xidio^ oiiStov. Kat "i-j ttvevimx xytov, sx ©eov r^v uTrap'^tv 'e%ov xxt St'' vtou
TKptfvoQ [StffixSii To1% xvSpaiwoii], eixwv rov viov, Tihiiov TiKitx, Z,oiy\ ^avrav airlx,
[yrviyij xyix\ xyiortfi; xyixtriJ.ov xopviyoq, ev ^ cpxvEpovrxi @s6i 6 frxriip 6 Isrj ttxvtoiv
Kxi hv vxa-i, XXI ©£o? 6 vioi 6 Six wxvriov-Tpixs reAe/a, Soi^ xxi xiSiir^iri xcci
^x<n?i.e!x fij) (j-epi^Ofihyi fiviSs xTtxK^.OTpiovtxsv^. OVre oZv XTia-riv ti tj Sovhov Iv Tjj
rpixSi, ovrs iveltrxxTcv, ws vporipov i^iv olx vvxpxo^i, vtrrepov Si s'Tsia-e^ior o'vrs
yxp iviMTS totb vioi 'KXTpi ovtb vuf ttviv/jx, aAA' xTpsTrTOi xxi rnxXKo'iarm; if
xbrti rpixQ xii. It ought to be distinctly noticed that the genuineness of this Creed
is in spite of Caspari's brilliant defence, not raised above all doubt. But the
external and internal evidence in support of its authenticity seem to me over-
whelming. According to Gregory of Nyssa it was said to have been revealed to
Gregory Thaumaturgus immediately before entering on his Bishopric, by the
Virgin Mary and the Apostle John. If this legend is old, and there is nothing to
show it is not then we may regard it as proving that this confession of faith could
only be introduced into the Church by the use of extraordinary means. The
abstract,
follower of
unbiblical character of the Creed is noteworthy it is admirably suited to a ;
himself
Origen lilce Gregory; but it is less suited to a post-Nicene Bishop. Origen
in which
would hardly have approved of so unbiblical a Creed. It points to a time
relaxing connection with
there was imminent danger of theological speculation
its
SJitiXijiTtai 5oK£7, sit; iJi6vov ayevv^rov Trarep*, ouSsva rov shai avru tov aiTiov
'^X^^'^^ • • • ***' ^'^ ^^^ Kvptov 'Ii^ff-oi/v Xpia-TOVy tov vtov TOV @£ov TOV fjLQVoysvi^, ysv-
V^HvTX OVK SK TOV /.ijj 'SvTO^, aAA' SX TOV 'SvTO^ TTSiTpd^ . . . TpoQ SI T^ SVtrS^st TKUTJI
vspl TTZTfOQ xai viov Jo'|{i, xaiiiQ iili&i cii h'leu ypmipx} SiSxirxovtriv, 'iv weviia Uyiov
6izo^o:yovfz£Vy TO xuivitrav TOvq t£ ti^i; 7ru?^aiSc^ ^lu^^x^^ uytovQ avSpai-Trovi; xxi tov^
TiiQ ;^/)tf/.iaTf^£?yo"*f? Kxivi^i; Tdi^svTai; 6eiov^. (Miuv xca fj,6v^v xa^o/^ix^v, tvjv utoitto-
Xix^v hxx^^ijtriixVj axx^atpsTOv ^ijv a£t, xxv Trace; 6 xStrfx-o^ avT^ 'Tro^sfxs'tv ^ovhe6^Txi .
'.
Mera; tovtuv rijv Ix vexpuv ^vxa-TXa-iv o'lSafzev, xTxpxii yeyovev 6 xvptog ii^av
^i;
'I. X/)., (rc3[^x (popstra^ aAjjfltw^ xxi ov Soxi^asi sx t^^ 6£ot6xov (one of the earliest
passages, of which we are certain, for this expression; yet it was probably already
used in the middle of the third century; a treatise was also written 7r£pi tvi(;^£ot6-
xou by Pierius) Map/ac, stti a-vvT£A£i'x tSv xioividv, £11; xSiTiiiriv xpixpTixch 7riSttiJ.^i!-xi;
T^ y£V£t rav xvCpaiTrav^ <rrxvpai&£t{; Kxi xttoSxvoiv, aAA' ov Sta txvtx tjJc ixvTov
^£6t:jtoi; iiTTOiv y£y£Viii^£Voq^ xvaa-Tcti; Ix v£xp^v, avaA^^/x^flg/^ hv oi/pxvo'i^, xa^^fjLEVo^
£v Se'^t^ Tvji; (^£yx?^6ja-vviiQ.
2 The CsKsarean Creed in Athanasius, Socrates, Theodoret and Gelasius, see
Hahn, § 116 and Hort, Two Dissertations, pp. 138, 139. It runs: Yli!TT£uoii£v £11;
£VX @£bv TUTEpU TXVTOXpaTOpa, TOV TUV XTTXVTUV OpXTUV T£ Xxi UOpuTOiV TTOI^T^V.
Kai £ii 'ivx xvpiov 'I Xp., tov tov @£ov ?\6yov, &£iv Ix ©£oC, <}>£; ix (fxiiTOQ, ^uiiv
£x ^wij$, viov i^ovoy£Vij, ttpoitStoxov TTXtr^Q KTitrsaj^, Trpb Tr^vrav T&iv xiuvuv sx tov
TxTpbt; y£y£vvij[j.£VOVj St^ ov xxi kysvsTo tx ttxvtx' tov hx t^v VjiJ.£T£pav a-atTvjptxv
a-xpxwUvTX xxi Ev xv^puTTOii 7ro?nT£virxii£voy, xxi TTxidvTX, xxi XVatJ-TXVTX Tif TpiTI)
i^epXy xxi XV£KHvTX TpQi; TOV TXT£pUj Kxi ij^OVTX TTX/^IV £V So£^ Xplvxl ^cSvTXQ Xxi
v£xpovg. Kxi ei? wsuij-x from its markedly
xyiov. This Creed is also remai-kable
theological character. On
and Jerusalem, which are at any
the Creeds of Antioch
rate earlier then A.D. 325, see Hort, (I.e. 73) and Hahn, § 63. We cannot appeal,
as regards the phrasing, to the so-called Creed of Lucian (Hahn, § 115). Yet it is
extremely probable that it is based on a Creed by Lucian.
— —7
' See the interesting passage in Eusebius' letter to his Church, in which he
(sophistically) so defends the rejection of the ohx ^v irpo toS yev\iti^v\vxi, as to fall
back upon the universally recognised pre-existence of Christ (Theodoret, H. E. 1. 12).
DIVISION II.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE DOGMA OF
THE CHURCH.
BOOK I.
Paul of Samosata.
Ohne Autoritat kaun der Mensch nicht existiren,
und doch bringt sie ebensoviel Irrthum als
Wahrheit mit sich sie verewigt im Einzelnen,
;
CHAPTER I.
development in ecclesiastical
theoretical interests, in spite of the
affairs, East and West felt that they belonged to
Christians in
one united Church. The Novatian and Samosatian controversies
ultimately resulted in strengthening the consciousness of
unity, ^even though a not altogether insignificant part of Chris-
tendom cast itself adrift. These controversies showed plainly
that the Western and Eastern communities held substantially
the same position in the world, and that both required to use
the same means to maintain it. Communities everywhere adopted
the character of the Church of the world. Their union preserved
all the features of a political society, and, at the same time,
of a disciplinary institution, equipped with sacred sanctions and
'
dreadful punishments, in which individual independence was lost.
Of course, in proportion as this confederacy of Christians adapted
itself to civic, national, and political relationships, in order to
indeed, strictly speaking, a unique place. But not only was their
extent not absolutely decided, but their interpretation was wholly
uncertain. In addition to this, the scope to be left to the "Apos-
tolic tradition ", i.e., the illusion of" antiquity ", and to the decision
of episcopal synods, was by no means defined ; for the sufficiency
of Holy Scripture was placed, theoretically, beyond doubt.
But where elementary wants, felt by the great majority, were
to be satisfied, where a reassuring sanction was required for the
advancing secularisation, men did not rack their brains, if no
inconvenient monitors were in the way, to find precedents
in Holy Scripture for what was novel. They went right back
to the Apostles, and deduced from secret traditions what no
tradition ever possessed. Huge spheres of ecclesiastical activity
—
embracing new and extensive institutions the reception of na-
tional customs and of the practices of heathen sects were in —
this way placed under " Apostolic " sanction, without any
controversy starting worth mention. This is true, e.g., of the
ritual of worship and ecclesiastical discipline, "The sacred
canons" or "the apostohc canons" constituted from the close of
the third century, a court of appeal, which practically held the
same rank as the sacred writings, and which, especially in the
East, cast its protection to an increasing extent over national
customs and traditional morals in the face of attacks of every
kind. It is obvious that authorities so obtained were likely, in
the end, to divide the Churches of the different nations.
The crudest superstition was thus consecrated by " apostolic
decrees, or legitimised, after the event, from the O. T., and '
from the middle of the third century it ascended from the lower
strata of Christians to the upper, which had lost all spiritual
stability. And now in the fourth century, when Church and
State were fused into one, everything was assigned to the former
which had ever, or anywhere been regarded as venerable or
holy. As it had submitted to the Church, it demanded indulgent
' See my Edilion of the A(Ja%^, Piolegg. pp. 222 239
ff., ff.
Chap, i.] HISTORICAL SITUATION 1
25
his pages! We see how paganism thrust itself into worship, in —to quote a well-
known instance — August. Confess. "VI. 2 ff. Let us, above all, remember that from
the beginning of the fourth century special chapels and churches were built to
different saints. The saints took the place of the local deities their festivals
the ;
of the old provincial services of the gods. We have just begun to investigate the
126 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
paganism ;
' while, at the same
making shipwreck of its
time,
own and common
unity For iven if priests and
character.
theologians were always to be in a position to keep the reins
in their hands, dissolution threatened the one undivided Church
which girt the Empire, if the local rites, customs, usages of
men were consecrated as Christian in every province, and might
establish themselves without any decided counterpoise.
But where was such a counterpoise to be found? In the
constitution ? That was indeed a firm structure, binding Christendom
strongly together; but even it presented sides on which the
centrifugal forces, destructive of unity, found entrance. Love of
rule and ambition were encouraged by the episcopal chair. And
when the danger of dismemberment into independent bishoprics
was met by a rigid metropolitan leadership, the way was opened
up to that lofty ambition which desired the first place and the
highest influence in the province, and which sought to domineer
over the civil powers and to master neighbouring provinces.
The Patriarchs and Metropolitans who to use an expression of —
transformation of heathen tales of gods and heroes into legends of the saints, and
ancient contributed its quota in works of travel and adventure
light literature has
by land and These researches promise, if instituted critically and soberly, to
sea.
give interesting results; yet I doubt if the state of our materials vifill admit of
confident conclusions. Besides the worship of the saints, the cultus of the Emperor
threatened in the fourth century to intrude itself into the Cliurch. Philostorgius
relates (H. E. II. 17) that Christians presented offerings to the picture of Constantine,
and honoured it wilh lanterns and incense; they also seem to have offered vota
to him that they might be protected from calamities.
1 Besides the worship of saints, martyrs, and relics, we have to notice the new
forms of faith in demons. It would be impossible to believe more sincerely in
demons than Christians did in the second century. But that age was yet ignorant
of the fantastic tricks with them, which almost turned Christendom into a society
of deceived deceivers. (The expression was first applied to Christians by Plotinus
see Vita Plot, by Porphyrins 16: 6|))7raTwv xai avToi liTccnuiivoi). When we reflect
that the Vita Antonii was written by an Athanasius, nothing can again surprise
us. Spiritualism with all its absurdity, which we are once more conversant witli in
the nineteenth century, had long been familiar in heathen circles, and then, as
now, it was connected with religious ideas on the one hand, and physical ex-
l^eriments and speculations on the other. It forced its way into the Church, in spite
of all protests, from the third, still more, however, from the fourth century, after
it had long been wide-spread in "Gnostic circles." As a religious phenomenon it
signified a renaissance of the lowest forms of religion. But even the most enlightened
minds could not keep clear of it, Augustine proves this.
;
Socrates —
played at being "hereditary lords" (Dynastai) no
longer protected, but undermined the unity of the Church. The
great Bishops of Rome and Alexandria, who sought to rule over
the Church in order to preserve its unity and independence,
entangled themselves in an and produced
ambitious policy,
division. The Emperors were and the
really patrons of unity,
supreme means at their disposal, the CEcumenical Synod, was
their contrivance; in all cases it was a political institution,
invented by the greatest of politicians, a two-edged sword which
protected the endangered unity of the Church at the price of
its independence.
But was not the bond of unity, the common ground, to be
found in the common ideal, in the certain hope of a future life,
and in asceticism? This bond was assuredly a strong one. The
Church would hardly have succeeded in following out the free
path opened up to it by Constantine had it not had in its midst,
besides its transcendent promises, a power to which all, Greek
and barbarian, polytheist and monotheist, learned and unlearned
required ultimately, if reluctantly, to bow. And that power was
the asceticism which culminated in monachism. The ancient
world had arrived, by all the routes of its complicated devel-
opment, at the bitterest criticism of and disgust at its own
existence but in no other faith was
; religion itself as effectively
moral law, could not have held its ground. One that commanded
all alike to renounce the world would have closed the world against
it. But a religion which graded its members as priests, monks, and
laity, embraced a threefold piety of initiated, perfect, and novices,
' The Fathers of the fourth century could not proceed so consistently as Hieracas
(see above, p. 98, n. 5) since they had to sanction the "lower" morality in the
Church. The Eustathians who condemned marriage —see the decrees of the Synod
of Gangra in Hefele, Concil. Gesch., I. 2, p. 777 — were therefore opposed. But
ff.
the numerous tractates '' De virginitate '' show how near the great Fathers of the
Church came to the Eustathian view. We can hardly point to one who did not
write on the subject. And the same thing is, above all, 'proved by Jerome's polemic
against Jovinian, in spite of its limitation, in the Ep. (48) ad Pammachium. For
the rest, Augustine did not differ from Jerome. His Confessions are pervaded by
the thought that he alone can enjoy peace with God who renounces all sexual
intercourse. Like Hieracas, Ambrose celebrated virginity as the real novelty in Christian
morality; see De virginibus, I. 3 sq. "Since the Lord wrapped himself in a bodily
:
form, and consummated the marriage of deity with humanity, without the shadow
of a stain, he has infused poor frail men with heavenly life over the whole globe.
That is the race which the angels symbolised when they came to serve the Lord
in the wilderness That is the heavenly host which on that holy Christmas the
. . .
exulting choirs of angels promised to the earth. We have the testimony of antiquity
therefore from the beginning of time, but complete submission only since the word
became flesh. This virtue is, in fact, our exclusive possession. The heathens had
Chap, i.] HISTORICAL SITUATION 1
29
But not only did the evangelical law culminate in virginity, but
to it also belonged all promises. Methodius' teaching that it
prepared the soul to be the bride of Christ, was from the fourth
century repeated by everyone. Virginity lies at the root of the
figure of bridegoom (Christ) . and bride (the soul) which is con-
stantly recurring in the greatest td^achers of East and West,
and it is the key to the corresponding exposition of the Song
of which often appear a surprising Religious
Songs, in individ-
ualism and an impassioned love of Christ.
as also loftier, because the priest consummated the holy sacrifice and had to wield
authority (Chrysostom de sacerdotio, esp. VI. 6 8 and III. 4. 6, VI. 4). But the — —
danger to which priests and bishops were subject of becoming worldly, was felt,
not only by men like Gregory of Nasianzum and Chrysostom, but by countless
earnest minded Christians. A combination of the priestly (episcopal) office and
professional asceticism was therefore early attempted and carried out.
' See Vols. II., III., p. 109. The allegory of the soul of the Gnostic as the bride
received its first Thence Origen got it.
lofty treatment in the Valentinian school.
The drawn upon by later writers were Origen's homilies and commentary
sources
on the Song of Songs (Lommatzsch. XIV., p. 233 sq.): the prologue of the latter
in Rufinus begins with the words: " Epithalamium libellus hie, id est, nuptiale
carmen, dramatis in modum mihi videtur a Salomone conscriptus, quern cecinit
instar nubentls sponsse, et erga sponsum suum, qui est sermo dei, coelesti amore
flagrantis. Adamavit enim eum, sive anima, quae ad imaginem eius facta est, sive
ecclesia." Jerome, who has translated the book, says that Origen surpassed himself
in it. Methodius' "Convivium" in which the same thought often occurs,
writing
was also much read. The purest and most attractive form of the conception in the
East appears in Gregory of Nyssa; see e g.^ his homilies on the Song of Songs,
and his description of the life of Macrina (Ed. Oehler, 1858, p. 172 sq.); we read
p. 210 sq. ^la. rovr6 iiot Soxs't rbv detov £Ke7v3v kxi y.xdxpov 'ipuTa rov oioparov
:
TTois^v TOTS rot^ TTxpovo-i XXI SiiiJioa-iev€iv Tifv sv xapSiix Stxdea-iv^ to STSiysa-dxt Tpd^
TOv JToHouizevcv, we av Stoi Ta^ovi; triv xvrai yevotTO tuv Seo-ixcSv SK^^vSs'iirx rov
a-eSi-iaroQ. Besides Gregory we have to mention Macarius with his "Spiritual
9
1 30 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
Homilies" (Migne T. XXXIV.; see Floss, Macarii Aegypt. epp. etc., 1850,
German by Jocham, Kempten, 1878); compare especially the 15th homily
translation
which contains already the figure, repeated a hundred times afterwards, of the soul
as the poor maiden who possesses nothing but her own body and whom the
heavenly bridegroom loves. If she worthily cherishes chastity and love for him,
then she becomes mistress of all the treasures of her Lord, and her transfigured
body itself shares in his divinity. Further, Horn. IV., ch. 6 sq., 14 sq. Compare
also Ep. 2. "A soul which has cast aside the ignominy of its outward form, which
is no longer ruled by shameful thoughts or violated by evil desires, has manifestly
become a partner of the heavenly bridegroom; for henceforth it has only one
requirement. Stung by love to him it demands and, to speak boldly, longs for the
immediate fulfilment of a. spiritual and mysterious union that it may enter the
indissoluble embrace of communion in sanctification." See Cyril Catech. III., ch. 16 ;
xai yivoiTO 5ravT«; i/fta? aiiai^uQ tw voi^tui mjii^lu TTxfeeaTxvreii; x.t./. Before this:
^ 'yoip TrpoTE^ov ^ov?^^ "^^x^ vuv a$£^<piSovv (xvtov tov ^ecTTOTJjv sTreypa^xTO, ^OQ TJfV
awTTOKpirov x'TToSex^l^^vot; Trpoaipetriv £7ri(ptav^a-sr ^iSov cT xaA*^ -^ 7F?^'^crlov t^ov^ iSou
si w? xyi^xi rwy Kexxppcsvuv (Cantic. 4, I). Stat rijv sutrvveiSiiTOV
xaA;}' oSSvTEQ trov
6iJ.oKoylav. We
can point to very few Greek Fathers in whom the figure does not
occur. All the greater is the contrast presented by the depreciatory verdict of
Theodore of Mopsuestia on the Song of Songs (Kihn, Theodorv. M. 1880, p. 69 f.).
It may be expressly noticed, besides, that Clement of Alex, as well as Methodius
and Macarius had already transferred the figure of the bride to the married woman.
Indeed, Macarius was conscious that he was acting boldly in doing so. Western
nuns and monks were distinguished by lavishing those sexual feelings which were
forbidden them on Christ (and Mary). Ambrose especially taught the West the
conception of the soul as the bride of Christ; while Augustine was, apart from a.
few passages, more reserved, and Jerome wanted strength in sentiment and language.
Not only in Ambrose's tractate '"De Isaac et anima", really a commentary on the
Song of Songs, but in innumerable passages in his works even when it is least —
expected, as in the consolatory discourse on Valentinian's death (ch. 59 sq.) the —
idea of a special tie between the virgin soul and Christ comes to the front. But
Ambrose gave it a colouring of his own due to the deep sentiment of a great
man, and his peculiar faculty of giving a warm expression to his personal love of
Christ (see also Prudentius); compare passages like De poenit. II. 8. We cannot
appreciate too highly the important influence exerted on after times, and first on
Augustine, by Ambrose's expression of his personal religion. The light that dawned
in Augustine's confessions already shone from the works of Ambrose, and it was
the latter, not the former, who conducted western piety to the specific love of
Christ. On the mysticism of Macarius, who was in many respects allied to these
western Christians, compare also the details in Fdrster (in the Jahrb. f. deutsche
Theol. 1873, p. 439 f.). Bigg (the Christian Platonists of Alex., p. 188 f.) has very
Chap. I.] HISTORICAL SITUATION 131
rov &£oV hx Tijv vTrojioviiv 'sAa/Se rov ev Ss^ta dp^vov^ u^^K" ac|)' ouTrsp itrriv '^%£/ to
^xtj-t^txov a^ixiJi-a . . . Mjfre aTTu^^orpiuff^jt; tov TrccrpoQ rev v;Vv, ^ijTg o-uvaAOf^J^v
'
wisdom arose through wisdom according to the will of the
wise God'. But in drawing this line, not only was the incar-
nation of the Deity rendered impossible, but every form of His
personal activity on earth. The theological interest in Christ threat-
ened to resolve itself entirely into cosmology and morality, or, as
in Methodius, to be deprived of its meaning by a mystical alloy.
The liberty which theology enjoyed in the East up to the
beginning of the fourth century, and the influence which it
exerted on the Church in the same period, could not but pro-
duce complete confusion and loss of meaning. All the elements
trepisxTiK^ xxi Sdvxinf t>); cfAi); XTiWeuf voitiTixtj, viof a^tjiivof aKifdivou TaTfrf;,
adfXTOi aofiiTov xal lx(p6ii!pT0<; iipDeefrou nctt aJavJSTo; oi'icf.vilirov kxi a'/J/oj «/J/ow.
I
See. Vol. III.j p. 1 10.
Chap, i.] HISTORICAL SITUATION 135
vided the idea with strong safe-guards, and Origen himself, who
in many points bordered on Polytheism, on the other hand
restored the Logos to the being of God, and united Father and
Son as closely as possible. But opposition to Sabellianism '
where called for and given with the zeal so noticeable in Origen
although it was just the school of Lucian which neglected it
least. But what could Scripture avail against the method? If
a Bishop so capable and learned, and so well versed in tradi-
tion as Eusebius of Csesarea was satisfied in his Christology
with the formulas we read there, if he could praise the religious
edicts and manifestoes of his Emperor, though they substantially
celebrated "God in nature", as briUiant specimens of his
we must conclude that the Logos doctrine
Christian conviction,
settled Church was the strongest means of completely
in the
effacing the figure of the historical Christ, and of resolving
everything into mist. ' Even the rationalist, who in his study
of the history of religions always follows with sympathy the
progress to natural religion, would require to restrain his
'
'
' GwatkiQ says very justly in Studies of Ariaaism (1882), p. 52: "In fact
Christendom as a wltole was neither Arian nor Nicene. If the East was not Nicene,
neither was it Arian, but conservative and if the West was not Arian, neither was
:
East and West." In the East it was considered conservative to uphold the formulas
of OrigeQ strengthened against Sabellianism. On the doctrine of the Logos and
Christ in Origen Bigg says very truly (The Christian Platonists of Alex., p. 182):
" What struck later ages as the novelty and audacity of Oi'igen's doctrine was in
truth its archaism and conservatism."
138 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
evident, enjoyed the sympathy of any large section ia the Church. There is nothing
to support the contention that the Christian Church passed through a period
from Origen up to the Synod of Chalcedon or A.D. 431 ^during which there —
prevailed universally, or even to a great extent, a supreme interest in the abstract
form of the contents of Religion, and an effort, with all the means at hand, to
expound it as exactly as possible. The great mass of Bishops, monks, and laity,
were then wholly occupied in satisfying themselves with what had been given.
This was the highest demand of the Catholic religion itself, which presupposed
the "Apostolic" as its foundation, which called everything else "heresy" (vemts-
f(o-/iif;), and as an institution for worship did not permit changes. Undoubtedly,
the period from Origen, or say, from Athanasius up to the Ephesian Council,
appears unique in the history of the Church. But that was an episode enacted in
opposition to the great body of Christians, and the theological leaders themselves,
in proportion to their piety, conceived their task to be compulsory, dangerous, and
ensnaring them in guilt. To prove the former read Socrates' Church History (see
my discussion in Herzog R. E., Vol. XIV. p. 408 ff.). This man was, on the one
hand, orthodox at every point, on the other, an enthusiastic partisan of 'EAAs(V(z^
•KUi^iia, full of veneration for the great Origen and his science, which he held
was lo be fostered continually. But the production of dogma by scientific theology
was repugnant to him in every sense, i.e.^ he accused and execrated dogmatic
controversies as much in the interest of a dogma fixed once for all as in that of
science. The Nicene Symbol belonged sufficiently to the past to be accepted by
him as holy and apostolical; but beyond this every new formula seemed to Socrates
pernicious, the controversies sometimes fights in the dark (nyktomachies), sometimes
an outflow of deceptive sophistry and ambitious rivalry: (7;o)Xjj xpoa-xvvciirliiii to
UpptlTov, i.e., the mystery of the trinity. Had Socrates lived 100 years earlier, he
would not have been a Nicene, but a Eusebian Christian. He therefore passes very
liberal judgments on, and can make excuses for, the latest "heretics ",/.^., theologians
who have been recently refuted by the Church. In this he stood by no means
alone. Others, even at a later date, went still further. Compare Evagrius (H. E. I. 1 1)
whose argument recalls Orig. c. Cels. III. 12.
Dogma has been created by the small number of theologians who sought for
precise notions, in the endeavour to make clear the characteristic meaning of the
Christian religion (Athanasius, Apollinaris, Cyril). That these notions, separated
from their underlying thought, fell into the hands of ambitious ecclesiastical
politicians, that the latter excited the fanaticism of the ignorant in their support,
and that the final was often due to motives which had nothing to do
decision
with the case, is admittedly undeniable. But the theologians are not therefore to
blame, who opposed in the Church a lazy contentment with mystery, or an un-
limited pursuit of scientific speculation. Their effort to make clear the essence of
Christianity, as they understood it, and at the same time to provide a Aoyixi)
MTfeix, was rather, next to the zealous order of monks with whom they were intimately
CHA.P. I.] HISTORICAL SITUATION 1 39
the contents and value of his doctrine, Arius was always disposed to make conces-
sions, and as semi-opponents defended him, so he unhesitatingly accepted half
friends for complete allies. This very fact proves, however, that he would never
have succeeded in clearing up the position.
"^
Athanasius always made a sparing use of the catch-word 'Ofioovirioi in his works.
The formula was him, but only the cause which he apprehended
not sacred to
and established under cover of the formula. His conduct at the Synod of Alexandria
shows that he laid no stress on words. For his theology he needed no Creed. The
existence of one in the Nicene was valuable to him, but he was far from wor-
Chap, i,] HISTORICAL SITUATION 141
shipping Symbols. While many of his friends sought support in the authority of
the formula, he sought and found it solely in the cause.
' Bigg (I.e., p. 188) has very rightly called attention to the high value attached
by orthodox Fathers after Athanasius' triumph to the Song of Songs in Origan's
exposition.
2 See the Vita Anton, of Athanasius and Gregory of Naz., Orat. 21.lt isnote-
vtforthy that Paul of Samosata and the Eusebians were v^forldly Christians. On the
other hand, the puritaiiism of Arius is, of course, famous.
142 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
dogma is refuted by adoption of the Word, and by faith in the Spirit, but the
illusion of the Greeks (EAA^v/^ovre?) in worshipping a multiplicity of Gods is
dispelled by the (doctrine of the) unity of nature which destroys the extravagant
opinion We must, in turn, retain the unity of being from
of a (divine) plurality.
the Jewish type of and only the distinction of personal (divine) existences
faith,
from the Greek; and by this means godless conceptions are met on the left and
right in correspondingly salutary ways. For the trinity is a corrective for those
who err as to unity, just as the doctrine of the unity (of God) is for those who
have made shipwreck by belief in plurality."
1 See Vol. III., p. 99 ff.
144 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap, i.
monks on the one hand, and in ritual on the other, until the
transitory was exalted into the permanent.
Atkanasius' importance to posterity consisted in this, that he
defined Christian faith exclusively as faith in redemption through
the God-man who was identical in nature with God, and that
fixed boundaries and specific contents.
'
thereby he restored to it
with the relations of dogma and theology. Here also one man
can be named it was the science that Origen had cultivated
:
comprehensible — and
he declares with absolute conviction that Porphyry and Julian
would not have written what they did if they had read the great teacher (III. 23).
Further, Origen was once more quoted in the Monophysite controversies. Apart
from special uses of it, his name represented a great cause, namely, no less than
the right of science, 'EAAi(v(x^ wcciisla, in the Church, a right contested by tradi-
tionalism in conjunction with the monks.
2 It was pointed out above, p. 138, note i, that even orthodox theological
leaders were not comfortable in their dogmatic work, so that the position from
the middle of the sixth century, the sovereign rule of traditionalism, was really
the goal desired from the beginning. The works of all prominent theologians
testify to this. Some deplored the fact that the mystery could not be worshipped
in silence, that they were compelled to speak; and the rest say explicitly, that the
Chap, i.] HISTORICAL SITUATION 1 47
sola fide explorari, quae prascepta sunt, oporteret, adorare scilicet patrem et venerari
cum eo filium, sancto spiritu abundare, cogimur sermonis nostri humilitatem ad ea,
quae inenarrabilia sunt extendere et in vitium vitio coarctamur alieno, ut, quae
conlineri religione mentium oportuisset, nunc in periculumhumauieloquii proferantur,"
148 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
which agreed only in the main points, and not even in all
these, the Councils substituted a dogmatic confession whose
proclamation, enactment, and extension excited the most violent
conflicts. At the same time the confederation of the Churches
1 But for CoQstantine the Nicene Council would not have been carried through,
and but for the Emperor's uniform creeds would not been arrived at. They were
Athanasius' best coadjutors. Nay, even the Emperors hostile to him helped him
for they used every effort to unite the Church on the basis of a fixed confession.
It is therefore absurd to abuse the State Church, and yet to regard the establishment
of the orthodox creed as a gain.
Chap, i.] mSTORICAL SITUATION 1 49
share of the State in this unity and its limitations compare also my Analekten,
;
p. 253 ff. In the process by which Christendom was united externally and ecclesias-
tically, we can distinguish in the East three, and in the West four, epochs. The
first three were common to the Churches of both East and West. The first was
characterised by the recognition of the apostolic rule of faith in opposition to the
erroneous creeds of heretical associations,a common ideal and a common
after
hope had united Christians up to the middle of the second century. The xctvuiv
T^( vi'a-Tcai; became the basis of oJeAcfoT));. The second epoch, in which organisa-
tion became already of supreme importance, was represented in the theory of the
episcopal office, and in the creation of the metropolitan constitution. While this
was struggling to establish itself amid violent crises, the State of Constantine
brought about the third epoch, in which the Church, by becoming completely
political, was united, and thus arrived at an external and uniform unity, so that
in it the essential nature of the Empire was continued. The Church became the
most solid organisation in the Empire, because it rested on the imperial order of
the ancient kingdom. It got no further than this organisation in the East; indeed,
several great provincial Churches soon separated from it for the creation of Con-
;
the West, on the contrary, the Roman Bishop began to engage in those enterprises
which, favoured by circumstances, succeeded In the course of centuries in sub-
stituting a new and distinctively ecclesiastical unity for that created by the state.
150 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
that the Christian idea (of Nicene orthodoxy) gained the upper
hand over Hellenistic and heretical systems, not from the doc-
trine alone, but from the course of events. The victory of the
Nicene 'Council was also decided at the Tigris by the defeat
of Julian, and at Adrianople by the death of Valens. In this
first period the Christian Church was still in constant touch with
men who defined the faith by its aim, and were not overawed
by traditionalism. Yet traditionalism grew more and more
powerful. Under the leadership of Epiphanius the great re-
action against Origen began, ^ and not only the Alexandrian
Bishop, but the greatest scholar of the age took part in
1 —
"Babylon is fallen, fallen," with these words of triumph did Jerome accom-
pany the overthrow of Chrysostom in the Origenist controversy (Ep. 88).
154 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. i.
ian Church condemned the glorious Fathers, and the fifth CEcu-
menical Council blotted out the freer theological science. How-
ever, measure was only possible because an orthodox
this
Church theology had developed in the first half of the sixth
century. It presupposed the Chalcedonian formula, which had
'
in the creed of the Church and was bound hand and foot.
1 The closing of the school of Athens has been disputed. It was certainly not
a great, formal action; see Krummacher, Gesch. d. Byzant. Litt., p. 4.
^ See the works of Gass and Gelzer, especially the latter's interesting lecture:
' Noteworthy, but not surprising, is the parallel capable of being drawn between
the .history of theology and that of (heathen) philosQphy during the whole period
from Origen to Justinian. The history of Greek philosophy finds its limits in the
middle of the fifth century, and again in the age of Justinian; the same is true
of the science of the Church. In the general history of science Plato comes to be
supplanted by Aristotle from the close of the fifth century ; in dogmatics the
influence of the Stagirite makes itself felt to an increased extent from the same
date. Justinian's epoch-making measures, the codification of the law, the closing of
the school of Athens, and the restoration of the Byzantine Church and Empire,
point to an inner connection. This has not escaped Ranke. On account of the
importance of the matter I give here his excellent discussion (Vol. IV. 2, p. 20 ff.)
"Justinian closed the school of Athens An event of importance for the whole
. . .
spirit,while to Roman genius sucli an advance was left open and was only now
rendered truly possible for after ages by means of the law-books. The philosophical
spirit perished in the contentions of religious parties the legal found a mode of
:
expression which, as it were, concentrated it. The close of Greek philosophy recalls
its beginning ; nearly a thousand years had elapsed during which the greatest
transformations in the history of the world had taken place. May I be permitted to
add a general reflection, as to which I merely desire that it may not be rejected
by the general feeling of scholars.
The Christian religion had risen upon earth in the conflict of religious opinions
waged by nations, and had then in opposition to these developed into a Church.
Christian theology which set itself to appropriate the mysterious and to come to
terms with the intellect had grown up in constant contact, sometimes of a friendly,
more often of a hostile kind, with Greeli philosophy. That was the business of
those centuries. Then appeared the great Christian theologians from Origen on-
wards as we said in passing, they passed through, without exception, Greek or
;
closely related Latin schools, and framed their doctrines accordingly. Greek philo-
sophy had produced nothing comparable to them it had, as regards public life,
;
been thrust into the background and now it had perished. But it is striking that
the great Christian theologians also came to an end. Never again do we find in
later times men like Athanasius, the Gregories of Cappadocia, Chrysostom, Am-
brose and Augustine. I mean Greek philosophy the original devel-
that along with
opment of Christian theology also came to a, stand-still. The energy of the Church
doctors, or the importance 'of the Church assemblies in these centuries cannot be
parallelled by analogous phenomena belonging to later times. DiflTerent as they are
in themselves we find a certain resemblance in the state of Roman law and of
Christian theology. The old Roman jurisprudence now appeared as universally
valid law in a redaction which while historical was yet swayed by the conditions
of the day. At the same time, limits were set by the triumph of orthodoxy, espe-
cially of the dogmas declared in the Chalcedonian resolutions, to all the internal
divisions of theology in which the divergent opinions were also defended with
ability and thoroughness Justinian who reinstated orthodoxy, and gave the force
. . .
of law to juridical conceptions, takes a high place in the rivalry of the centuries.
Yet, while he raised his government to such a pinnacle of authority, he felt the
ground shake momentarily under his feet." Qreek science and the monkish view
of the world, leagued as they were, dominated the spiritual life of the Church
before as well as after the Justinian age; they were at bottom indeed far from
being opposed, but possessed a common root. But how differently it was possible
to combioe them, what variations they were capable of! If we compare, e.g.^ Gre-
goiy of Nyssa with John of Damascus it is easy to see that the former still really
thinks independently, while the latter confines himself to editing what is given.
It is above all clear that the critical elements of theology had been lost. They
only held, their ground in the vagaries of mystical speculation; in all ages they
are most readily tolerated there.
Chap, i.] HISTORICAL SITUATION 1 57
the Church in the mysteries of the cultus now came to light '
' It is said of Polycarp in his Vita per Pionium (ssec. IV.) : ifinfiisSra! n
iKXvog iJLVfTTvipiu^ Qi To7i; 'KoKKoic, ^v a^dxptjipx, ourta <poivspc3t; xvtx s^eriHro^ tatrre
Toi/G atiovovTXt; iJ,aprvpstv^ 'on oh fidvcj axowovtriv «AA^ Kai dpuirty uvrd. That was
accordingly the supreme thing;, to be able also to see the mystery, the Christian
possession of salvation.
" The fight between Platonism and Aristotelianism was accordingly acute among
theologians in the following centuries; they often indeed made heretics of one
another. Up till now we only know these disputes in part ; they are important for
the later conflicts in the West, but they do not belong to the history of dogma
' Even to-day simple-minded Catholic historians of dogma exist who frankly
admit that he becomes necessarily a heretic who does not, e.g.^ use the conceptions
"nature'' and "person" correctly; and they even derive heresy from this starting-
poiat. Thus Bertram (Theodoreti, Ep. Cyrensis, doctrina christologica, 1883) writes
of Theodore of Mopsuestia: "Manifesto declarat, simile vel idem esse perfectara
naturam et perfectam personam Naturse vox designat, quid sit aliqua res, vel
. . .
these became more and more acute when the priesthood fell
completely under the sway of the monks. Even from the fifth
century the practice had begun of transferring monks to episco-
pal chairs, and it had almost become the rule in the following
centuries. But the monks both strove zealously to make the
Church independent and claimed sovereignty among the people,
and as a rule, though interested on behalf of the nations, they
also cherished a strong hostility to the State: in other words
they endangered the settlement of Church and State established
in the fifth and sixth centuries. Their most powerful instrument
was the sensuous cultus which had captivated the people, but
which undoubtedly, barbarous and mechanical as it was with
all its appliances and amulets, was yet connected with the ideal
tion of Athanasius bore that it only checked for a time the polytheistic
little fruit,
under-current, and, word, that the Church could not have got into a worse
in a,
state than, in spite of Athanasius, it did, as regards the worship of Mary, angels,
saints, martyrs, images and relics, and the trickery practised with amulets. But even
if we were go further and suggest that the later development of dogma itself, as
to
e.g., delighted the readers of the Acts of Thomas (even in the Catholic edition) or
of the numerous Apocalypses (see the edition of the Apoc. Apocal. by Tlschendorf
and James, Apocrypha anecdota, 1893).
Chap. i.J HISTORICAL SITUATION l6l
and feel freely and at their ease in the Church, although they
recognise in it a main defence of their national characteristics
against the West. From the West these Greek Slavs were'
'
The path into which Athanasius led the Church has not been
abandoned; but the other forces of life completely restricted it.
Orthodox dogma corresponds on the whole to the conception of
Athanasius; but the balance which he held between the religious
creed and the cultus has been disturbed to the disadvantage of the
former. The creed still shows life when it is called in question,
or when the nation it serves requires a flag. In other cases it
the formulas over which they fought, and which then made
good ground. This conclusion is, however, made further
their
certain from the fact that the oriental Church took no interest
in dogma, apart from those formulas, at least in the time of
these, conflicts. Anything else, therefore, outside of the formu-
'
' Very instructive in this respect is tlie Church History of Socrates. A man's
orthodoxy is completely decided for him by his attitude to the dogma of the
Trinity (see H. E. III. 7, VI. 13, VII. 6, 11). The Cappadocians and the theo-
logians after Socrates held similar views; see Gregory of Naz. Orat. XXVII. 10:
" Philosophise about the world and worlds, matter, the soul, rational beings, good
and bad alike, about resurrection, judgment, and retribution, and the sufferings of
Christ. For if on these points you hit on the truth it is not without service, but
if you fail, you can suffer no harm" (cf. UUmann, Gregory of Naz., 1867, p. 217 f.).
We have also to consider here tire contents of the oriental symbols, creed-decalogues
etc. The taken to an increasing extent from the fifth century in the tenets
interest
levelled Origen was biblical and traditional. It only became dogmatic at
against
a time when In theology and Christology the influence of " antiquity " had taken
the place of that of dogma. On the place and importance of the doctrine of the
Trinity in Gregory, see Ullman, p. 232 ff.
164 HISTORY OK DOGMA [Chap. n.
1 I share fully the view of Kattenbusch (Confessionskunde I., p. 296) that the
dogma was not merely supported by one idea, and that in the Greek Church of
to-day the idea of redemption held by the ancient Church no longer rules directly
but this view does not contradict the exposition given in the text.
appreciated in all its importance. After Theophilus, Iren^us, Hippolylus, and Origen,
it is found in all the Fathers of the ancient Church, and that in a primary position.
gaudia gustaret et dona gratise explorata et cognita haberet. Si deus sine carne
vicisset, quae ei tribuerentur laudes ? Secundo, ut dominus nosier manifestum faceret,
dum magnus et gloriosus erat, habitabat. Hinc illud: 'Ego dixi, dii estis'." Gregory
of Nyss., CoUoq. cum Macrina (ed. Oehler, p. 170): Taiv oSv roiouruv ToCiii Siarov
TTVpOQ tOirpEtXt^ EKKaixp6sVTCtiV T£ Kcii a<pX'yVta-6sVTUVj 'sKXa-rCV Tc3v TrpOQ TO Kpe^TTOV
voav(j.hm mTii<rsKi\iimcu, Vi xC^iaptTia, ii '^aiyj; vi rilJ.^, ii %api?, vi So^a, -^ Suv1xiJ.11;,
xai e/ Ti «AAo TotovTOv auT^ ts t5j 06^ h-Tri^Eupeta-^at sixx^Ofzev. Gregory of Naz.,
Orat. 40, 45 (Decalogus fidei, ed Caspari, Alte und Neue Quellen, 1879, p. 21):
c.
tou @eov
TVta-TsvB rov vfov TOG-ovTOv av^paiTTov Stx o-f, iitrov av yhiji St^ exe7vcv @eoQ.
. . .
So also Orat. I. 5 " We become like Christ, since Christ also became like us we
: ;
become gods on his account, since he also became man for our sake.'' On the
other hand, compare Orat. XLII. 17: fjel)' it/iSv to xr/ir/ia, tS\i oi &sur I'l nr'nr^iot
Si, oil @sdg, and XXXIX. 17: "How should he not be God, (o insert in passing
a bold deduction., by whom thou also dost become God?" Apollioaris Laod., Kara
lJ.ipo!i T(Vt;c (ed. Lagarde, p. no): (paiiiv mipavcv ysyBvija-Sxi tov tou @£ou f^Syov,
Vva TJJv Qfio/urtv TOU s'JTOupxvfov ^ci^caiMSv xxt hoTroit^QuiJSv. Macar., horn. 39. Pseudo-
hippolytus, Theophan. (ed. Lagarde, p. 41, 21): £i oiv oiUvceToiyeyovev zvipaivoi,
'ia-Tct xctt SeoQ. Dionys. Areopag., ssepissime, e.g., de caelesti hierar. c. i : -^ tiiJiSv
avec?iOy'o( iiua-tQ. Sophronius, Christmas Sermon (ed. Usener, Rhein. Mus. fiir Philo-
logie, 1886, p. 505) : hu^afiev hlaii iJ,£Tct^o?\Citi xx) iniii^a-sa-iv. Leo, Patriarch of
Russia (Pawlow, p. 126): iSeaSiiiie-j @iou t^ i^sTX^^'i^Bi. Gennadius, Confess, (ed.
Kimmel, p. 10): "dixit deus: Induam me carne . . . et erit omnis homo tamquam
deus non secundum naturam sed secundum participationem.'' We have, however, to
notice that this deification, as understood by the Greek Church, did not by any
means signify roundly "Becoming like God". The Greeks in the main did not
connect any clear conception with the thought of the possession of salvation (felicity)
further than the idea of imperishableness and this very fact was their characteristic
;
1 Athanasius (Ep. encycl. ad episc. ^gypt. et Lib. ch. I.) mentions as the gifts
of grace already possessed by Christians: (i) the type of the heavenly mode of
life, (2)power over demons, (3) adoption to be sons,and what is exalted and
(4)
rises high above every gift — the knowledge of the Father and the Word himself
and the grant of the Holy. Spirit. This list is not quite complete.
Chap, ii.] DOCTRINAL SYSTEM IN OUTLINE 1
6/
had the spirit of the Catholic Church against it, simply because
it was new; it could only gain acceptance by deceiving as to
men have been extremely rare. There have been few in all
periods of the history of dogma who clearly perceived and duly
appreciated the final interests which moved themselves. This
is true of the ancient Church, though then matters were a little
dogma. But we have to remark finally, that not only in theory was
the dogma planned eschatologically, i.e., with a view to the future
life, tfut that also in practice faith in the imminent approach of the
end of the world still influenced the pious. In a few Fathers this
faith undoubtedly held a subordinate place; but yet it formed
the rule, and the storms caused by the invasion of the tribes
as well as the political revolutions constantly gave it strength.
II. In relation to the blessing of salvation man is receptive
and passive. He receives it in this world in the hope of his
faith, and enjoys it in the other as a transcendently glorious
gift of grace. God alone can grant it, and no human effort
can deserve it. As we have already noticed, this religious blessing
of salvation is wholly different from moral goodness; for moral
ed. ' But the latter already found "grace" in "nature", i.e.,
tixitlTx} KCei Xpia-ToS liua-Tiipiav xoivuvoi, vSv i^iv r^ xAifa-e;, tier' oKiyov ii xai Tjj
Xxp'Ti, xxfSiav iuvrot^ Ttotvia-dTi xxiviiv xal ttvivjiu xciiv6v, Yvx eu<ppiia-iJViii v'!rdh(Tii
2 See Cyril, Catech. 4, c. 2 : 'O tvj^ dsoirs^sia^ Tp6%oci ex $vo tqvtuv trvviiTTyjKS,
^oyt^ixTCttv elitre^cSv xcci Trpti^eaiv ayxScSv. Kxi oijrs toc ^dyf^ara ^wp?? 'ip^ttiv ayu^Siv
su'jrpdtrSsxTX roi ®sta, oVt£ tx iJ.ii {xsr'' svt3-£(3i5v Soyi.txruv 'ipya ts^oui^svix TrpoaSs-
XSTXi 6 @s6i; . . . i^syio-TOV rotvvv XT^^pi.cc so-rt to tuv §oy{.cxTa}v fixdi^ija.
* Cyril begins his 18th Catechism with the words "The root of every good
action is the hope of the resurrection. For the expectation of obtaining a corres-
ponding reward is a spur to incite the soul to practise good works." The way to
morality is made easy by removal of the fear of death.
174 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. ii.
fiif/,^(r£(riv). '
In the last phrase the Greek fundamental thought is
put into a classic form. Only we must not take " i^eTx^oXxlg
and " be equivalent. The former signifies the actual
(iifA,>^ir£(riv" to
process, its condition and form; not the sufficient
the latter
reason, as is proved by ";^j«p;T;."^ There is, however, a form of
morality which does not appear to be merely subordinate to
religious faith and hope, but which anticipates the future blessings,
or puts man into the condition of being able to receive them
immediately. This is negative morality, or asceticism. It corresponds
in a true sense to the characteristic of the religious gift of salva-
tion ; it is no longer a mere adjunct to the latter,
also therefore
but it is the adequate and essential disposition for the reception
of salvation. But in so far as ecstasy, intuition, and the power
of working miracles can be combined with it, it forms the anti-
cipation of the future state. The ultimate rule of this conception
of Christianity may accordingly be compressed, perhaps, into the
saying: "Dost thou desire the supreme good, incorruption
(a<pdxp(jlt)i), then divest thyself of all that is perishable." Side
by side with this we have the more general rule "Dost thou
' Ed. Usener, 1, c. Once more we have to compare Cyril of Jerusalem. After
he has limited the "creed" to the ten sections of the Symbol he continues: jutx
$^ T*iv yvu(Tiv TVji; a-efivii^ xai evSo^ov ravTi]^ Kot TTuvayiuq 'jrhreon; Kcti a-eavTov
yvSSi Mmov 'da-Tii; ci. Accordingly, faith is that given from without, divine. Moral
self-kr»owledge and self-discipline are independent of it.
2 The Greek Fathers speak not infrequently of the new birth in connection
with N. T. passages, and
be admitted that some succeed in reproducing
it is to
the thought satisfactorily, but only so far as I know —
when they adhere closely to —
the sacred texts. At all events we must not let ourselves be misled by the mere
title. This is shown most clearly by the closing chapters of Gregory of Nyssa's
Orat. catechet. (ch. 33 sq). By regeneration Gregory understands the mysterious
birth in us of the divine nature^ which is implanted by baptism. As the natural
man is born of moist seed, so the new undying man is born of water at the
invocation of the Holy Trinity. The new immortal nature is thus begun in germ
by baptism and is nourished by the Eucharist. That this conception has nothing
in common with the new birth of the New Test., since it has a physical process
in view, needs no proof. According to Cyril, regeneration only takes place after
man has voluntarily left the service of sin (see Catech. I., ch. 2).
Chap. II.] DOCTRINAL SYSTEM IN OUTLINE 1 75
desire the supreme good, then first be good and nourish the
new nature implanted in thee in Baptism by the Eucharist and
the other mysterious gifts." The extent to which all this was
connected with Christ is shown by the saying of Clemens Alex.
(Protrept. I. 7) — a saying which retained its force in after times :
" Appearing as a teacher he taught the good life, in order that after-
wards as God he might grant everlasting lik" (to eu ^ijv s^i^a^ev
s'TTi^xveK; (ig "StSia-y.a.Kog, "vac to xs) ^ijiv vffTepov ut; @6oq X'>P17'i'^li)-
This whole conception of the importance of morality needed,
however, no doctrinal and specific description, any more than
the nature of morality and the principles of natural theology in
general. All that was already setded in its fundamental lines;
man knew it by his own reason; it formed the self-evident pre-
supposition of the doctrine of redemption. The very freedom
used by the Church Fathers in dealing with details shows that
here they were treating matters generally recognised and only
called in question by Manichaeans, Fatalists, etc., and that it
was therefore unnecessary to have recourse to revelation. In
describing the dogma of the Greek Fathers, therefore, we have
to consider their views of the nature of salvation, ' of God as
^outra $e (pva-fOTrois't Kcet Sn^veyxev oi/Sev ij <putret 7r?^air6iivat roi6vSe ^ ^tpovw xai
[jca^iTSi [j.eTXTi/7rai&i^vcer 'dcf^^Oi 5^ Kara ri^v Si^fjuovpyiaVj
Kvptot; ff^^!/)eo;^JJfTfl!/, to [jC£v
TO Si Kara ex rij; Sia^x^i; aviixriinv re xai mavsoitnt. The whole matter gradually
became really mystical, /.f., indescribable and inconceivable in every sense in the
Fathers; the intellectual phase and intention almost disappeared. Conversely, the
reality of the blessing in salvation was thought of from the beginning as something
supernatural, surprising, and bestowed from without.
Vj6 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. ii.
—
the world, and man with freedom and sin, are to be prefixed, as
presuppositions and conceptions, to dogma, i.e., the doctrines
of the godman, while they are only to be discussed in so far as
1 One might be disposed assume that the dogmatic of the ancieat Church
to
also contained articuli j>uri et would be misleading.
mixti^ but this designation
In the opinion of the Fathers, the gospel must have made everything clear; con-
versely, there is hardly anything in the dogmatics vifhich able philosophers had -
not foreshadowed. The realisation was the mystery. Socrates says (H. E. III. 1 6):
rioAAOf Twv Trap' "EAA'^tr; <Pt?iOff-o(p^<ravr6iv oh izaxpoiv tov yvuitxt rov @eov syEvovro,
xxi ycif Kxi TrfOQ toC; aTrpovoiia-ieev iltrctyovrxt;, o'ln 'ETriKOVfi'ovi;, i) ^AAoi; ifio-Tixoui;,
liETa TVi^ }^0'yiiiyii W tarvn^^ji; ysvvxioj^ XTr^VTiitrciv, TJjv a(xa6tav xi/rcov xvarpeTFCyre^,
xou hx rovrav rcSv Aoywv ;|^pf/wje/^ {/.iv ro7g ri^v sva-s^etav uywTTucri xccTetTTi^a'oev
ov fiiiv T>)5 Ke<f*^')5 fiij yvSvcu to xvoHfVTrrdiiivov mro
''''''' AiJyou ixpaTi^a-av, tov
Tuv yej/eSv xai xvo ruv xiavav xaTU Xpiu-Tov fiva-Tijpiov Socrates had already in
view violent opponents of the intrusion of 'EAA>(v;x)) waiislcc into theology; but
the dispute so passionately conducted never really weakened the confidence placed
in natural theology. The actual position is correctly described in Eusebius' phrase
(H. E, IV. 7, 14) : if xxi' tiiJ-Hi Itt) hloiq ts xxi !(iifiOr6(poii SoyiJ.a!iTi Si^aa-xahla.
Chap, ii.] OUTLINE OF TREATMENT 1 77
—
Supplement i. The Greek conception of Christianity appears
undoubtedly to be exceedingly compact and clear, as long as
we do not look too deeply into the heart of it. The freeing
of dogmatics of all matters which do not fall within the scope
of the' doctrine of redemption is very remarkable. But these
advantages are purchased, first, by abandoning any attempt to
establish an inner unity between the supreme notions of " moral
good" and "blessedness" (imperishableness) secondly, by the ;
1 79
xm) (rcoT>tpiix,).
!^ That is the confession which in the Greek
Church was the equivalent of i Cor. XV. 17 f.
—
Supplement 3. In order to learn the classical form of Greek
piety, the strongest root of dogma, it is necessary to study the
literature of asceticism. For it seldom comes clearly to light
in the dogmatic, apologetic, and polemical works, with the ex-
ception of the writings of Athanasius, and in the homiletic
1 Compare Gregory Nyss., Orat. catech. 5 : To fiJv tTva; h6ya)t @£oV xctl TrveSiia
Six re tUv xoivcSv ivvoiSv 6 "EAAi^v Kxi Six rav 'yfa(pixSv 6 ^lauSxtoi; 'i(j-ug olx xvti-
Ae|£<, r^v Si KXTX r'ov 'xvSpiiixov oixovoiJ.ixv raS @soi Aoy"" xxtx to 'lirov ixxrspoi;
Oh Thou who didst break the flaming sword, and didst restore
to Paradise man crucified with Thee who begged Thy
the
mercy. Remember me, too, in Thy kingdom, because I also
am crucified with Thee, piercing my flesh with nails fi-om fear
of Thee, and fainting in dread of May the
Thy judgments 1
an inquiry as to the aim and nature of the instruction. It begins with the words
1 82 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. ii.
"hJ;> liixxixpi6T>iroQ txriiy, vpoQ viJ^ag. Compare also ch. VI: EAsTre fioi v^kUijii troi
u^iav 6 ^Itio-ovQ ^ccpil^ETUi ... i^if voiiia-iii^ on (uxpov Tp&yixx ^x/^^avsit;' avipuTOQ
av otxrpdi, Qeou A«fi/3avg/5 Tcpocrviyoplav . . . tovto 'Jrpo^?^s7raiv 6 ^ixAfiwJoc 'sAeyev ex
Trpoa-aiTTOv rov ®sov, sTreiSii [i.i?^?^ov<Tfj xvSpaiTrot @£ov Trpoa-iiyopiav ?^xii^avetv 'Eyw
simx, 6eoi etrre xai vioi viiia-TOv TravrsQ, c. 12: lav ire xanj^oy/^Evo; hisraa-iji, ti
stp^xxa-tv 01 StSixa-xoVTet;^ (jl^SIv Xsye r^ 'i|w fjcvtrn^ptov ycip trot "jTccpa^t^oiJiev xoci
deals with the Church, which is not mentioned in the sketch. The whole is con-
cluded by five catechisms which explain the secret rites of the mysteries to the
baptised. The decalogue of the faith by Gregory contains, in the first commandment,
the doctrine of the Trinity in the second, the creation out of nothing and the
;
providence of God ; in the third, the origin of evil from freedom, not from an evil
matter or God; in the fourth, the doctrine of the incarnation and constitution of the
Redeemer; in the fifth, the crucifixion and burial ; in the sixth, the resurrection and
ascension in the seventh, the return of Christ in glory to act as judge ; in the
;
eight and ninth, the general resurrection and retributive judgment; the tenth runs:
AixxTOV ipya^ov to ayceSiv 1%) rovra tSi 6£iJ.£?\iif tSv Soyixiirav, eweiiSi Tr/ffTi?
XiopiQ '^pyoiv vixpii, w? '^pya Slxt T/Wew;.
Chap, ii.] SUPPLEMENTARY 1
83
deceit, much has been laid bare by the scholars of the seven-
teenth century. But if one considers the verdicts, anxieties,
and assertions of suspicion of contemporaries of those conflicts,
he cannot avoid the fear that present-day historians are still
much too confiding in dealing with this whole literature. The
uncertainties which remain in the study precisely of the most
important alterations of the history of dogma, and of the Church
of the Byzantine period, necessarily awaken the suspicion that
we almost throughout more or less helpless in face of the
are
systematically corrupted tradition. All the same I would not
recommend so bold a handhng of the sources as that formerly
by the Jesuits, and to-day by Vincenzi (Ketzertaufstreit,
practised
Acten des 5 Concils, Honoriusfrage).
—
Supplement 5. The form assumed by the substance of the
faith in the Greek Church shows very clearly the characteristic
point of view. First, namely, it was conceived though, so far —
as I know, seldom —
as law indeed Gregory of Nazianzus sketched
;
1 See the investigations into the so-called Arcan-Disciplin, by Rothe, Th. Har-
nack, Bonwetsch, and Von Zezschwitz.
- Constantine delighted in applying the name "law'' to the whole of the
Christian religion. This is western (nostra lex ^ nostra religio) j it is rare in the
East. On the other hand, the whole Bible was not infrequently "the law" in the
one Church as well as in the other.
3 Gregory of Nyssa still defended it, appealing to I Cor. XV. 28; see the
second half of his writing xep; 4'vX'ii ""' avsurTacreui, and Orat. catech. 8, 35.
— —
So also for a time Jerome and the older Antiochenes even in the fifth century ;
it had numerous defenders in both East and West. It was definitively condemned
with the condemnation of Origen under Justinian. See under, ch. XI.
Chap. II.] SUPPLEMENTARY 187
the resurrectionbody and our material body, and this faith, enforced in the West
by Jerome, soon established itself as alone orthodox. There now arose many problems
concerning the limbs and members of the future body, and even Augustine seriously
considered these. He experimented on the flesh of a peacock, and confirmed his
faith in the resurrection by the discovery of its preservation from decay.
1 88 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. ii.
spiritualising religion and of primitive Christian eschatology; see Vol. I., p. 129 f.
The latter required that blessedness should be attached to the return of Christ and
the last judgment; the former demanded that it should be comjDlete as soon as the
believing soul had parted fro^n the mortal body. Therefore, in spite of Jerome's
polemic against Vigilantius and Augustine's against Pelagius, no fixed Church
doctrine could be arrived at here, however much piety desired an absolute decision.
See for details Fetavius and Schwane D. Gesch. d. patrist Zeit, p. 749 ff.
Chap, ii.] SUPPLEMENTARY 1
89
system, but the thing had disappeared. In spite of all the em-
phasis laid on freedom, nothing exists but a cosmic process, in
which the many issues from the one, in order to return into
the one. In such a scheme the Judgment has been deprived
of meaning. In subsequent times apokatastasis univers-
its —
alism —was
indeed condemned in the East, and Origen's system
was rejected; but any one who studies closely Greek Byzantiqe
dogmatics will see how profound was the attachment to this
most important point in Origenism and Neoplatonism. The
problems to which the creed gave birth in the fourth to the
Oehler, Vol. I., p. 98 f.). From Origen and Gregory the conception passed to
Ambrose who established it in the West, after the way had been prepared for it
by TertuUian. The Scriptural proof was i Cor. III. 13 f.; compare .Augustine De
civitate dei, XXI. 23 sq. Euchir. 68 sq. (ignis purgatorius).
2 It still lived in the popular views of Christianity held by the Orientals.
19° HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. ii.
thus gaining the fixed point from which to cast down the walls
of dogmatics.
Literature. — Hermann, Nysseni sententiae de salute
Gregorii
adipiscenda, 1875. H. Die Lehre von der Gottheit
Schultz,
Christi, 1881. Kattenbusch, Kritische Studien der Symbolik, in
the Studien und Kritiken, 1878, p. 94 ff. Ritschl, Die Christi.
Lehre v. d. Rechtfertigung und Versohnung, 2 Ed., Vol. I.,
pp. 3 — 21. Kattenbusch, Konfessionskunde I., p. 296 ff. Oq
Monachism, especially in Russia, see Frank, Russ. Kirche, p. igo ff.
CHAPTER III.
but he made the question an articulus stantis et cadeniis ecclesia. We cannot now
determine what motive influenced him. The attacli of Marcellus of Ancyra on the
foundations of the prevalent theology, and his argument that the dogma was
essentially avifUTrivi^f (3ouA>(5 te xxi yvwfi))?, are of incomparably greater significance
in principle. But his arguments were not understood, and produced no effect. Mean-
while, Church in the East was at
the basis of the whole structure of the Catholic
no time left unassailed. The Church has never embraced everything which was,
and might be, named Christian. After the Marcionites and the older sects had
retired from the stage, or had fused with the Manichaeans, Paulicians, Euchites, and
Bogomilians, etc., came upon the scene. These Churches contested the Catholic
foundations as the Marcionites and Manichseans had done; they accepted neither
the Catholic Canon, nor the hierarchical order and tradition. They succeeded, in
part, in creating lasting, comprehensive, and exclusive systems, and afforded work
to Byzantine theologians and politicians for centuries. But important as it is to
assert their existence, they have no place in the history of dogma; for at no time
had they any' influence whatever on the formation of dogma in the East; they have
left no effect on the Church. Therefore general Church history has alone to deal
with them.
' The view held of the apostolate of the twelve first fully reached its Catholic
level in the fourth and fifth centuries. The Apostles were (i) missionaries who had
traversed the whole world and performed unheard of miracles, (2) the rulers of the
Churches, (3) teachers and law-givers in succession to Christ, having given in speech
and writing to the least detail all the regulations necessary to the Church for faith
and morals, (4) the authors of the order of worship, the liturgy, (5) heroic ascetics
and fathers of monachism, (6) though hesitatingly, the mediators of salvation.
2 See histories of the Canon by Holtzmann, Schmiedel (in Ersch and Gruber
"Kanon"); Weiss, Westcott, aod especially Zahn. Overbeck, Z. Gesch. des Kanons,
Chap, hi,] HOLY SCRIPTURE 1 93
1880. The controversy with the Jews as to the possession and exposition of the
O. T. still continued in the Byzantine period; see on this McGiffert, Dialogue
between a Christian and a Jew, entitled 'AvTif3oAi} TTxTria-Kou xcct tli/Awvo? k.t.A. . .
together with a discussion of Christian polemics against the Jews. New York, i88g.
1 On and his disciples to the Canon, see the thorough
the attitude of Theodore
of Kihn (Theodorus von Mopsuestia und Junilius Africanus, 1880).
investigations
Theodore rejected from the O. T., Job, the Song of Songs, Chronicles, Ezra and
Nehemiah, Esther, and the inscriptions of the Psalms; see Leontius Byz. Contra
Nestor, et Eutych. L. III., ch. 13—17, Migne T. 86, p. 1365 sq. The fifth Synod
expressly condemned Theodore's criticism and interpretation of Job and the Song
of Songs, as well as his idea of inspiration in reference to Solomon's writings, and
his exposition of some of the Psalms. On Theodore's prestige in Nisibis, see Kihn,
P- —
333 f- j °" Junilius' dependence on him, 1. c, 350 382. For the dependence of
the Nestorian Canon on Theodore's, see Noeldeke in the Gott. Gel. Anz. 1868,
cluded in theory, were copied along with the others. The legend
of the genesis of the LXX., again, was always highly valued,,
and it seemed to imply the sacredness of the whole translation.
Yet it was only in consequence of the attempts at union with
the Roman Church in the Middle Ages, and still more after
the ill-fated enterprise of Cyrillus L^icaris (17th century),
that the Greek Church was persuaded to give up the Hebrew
and adopt the Alexandrian and Roman Canon. But a binding,
official declaration never followed; the passiveness and thought-
• See Gass, Symbolilc der griechischen Kirche, p. 97 ff.; Strack, Kanon des
A. T. in Prot. R.-E., Vol. VII. 2, p. 412 ff. The reader is referred to this article and
to Introductions to the O. T, for details. Kattenbusch, Confessionsliunde I., p 292.
Chap, iii.] HOLY SCRIPTURE 1 95
a few circles among them there were retained in the Canon, the apocryphal con-espon-
dence of the Corinthians and Paul, the two Epp. of Clement, nay, even the Ep. of
Clement de virgiiiitate. On the other hand, some books were wanting. Not a few
apocryphal writings held an undefined rank in the Syrian Patriarchate. In a word,
the old Roman Canon, expanded in the course of the third century in Alexandria,
did not get the length of being acknowledged in vast territories of the East
proper. In spite of the association of the Apostolic Epistles with the Gospels, the
higher rank peculiar to the latter was not done away with as late as the fourth
century. Alexander of Alexandria (in Theodoret H. E. I. 4) describes the contents
of Holy Scripture briefly as 'Law, Prophets, and Gospels.'
196 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. hi.
• On the efforts of Eusebius to fix tlie extent of the N. T., see Texte und
Untersuch. zur altchristl. Litteratur-Geschichte, Vol. 11. I, 2, p. 5 ff.
' The N. T. had a peculiar history in the Syrian Churches, which has not yet
been written; see Nestle, 'Syrische Bibeliibersetzungen in the Prot. R.-E. Vol. XV.
'
that the vast majority even of these had accepted the Roman Canon of undisputed
books in the second half of the third century. But the agreement went no further;
for from the fourth century they v^ould take no more instruction from Alexandria.
1 rest, Weiss has rightly shown (Einleitung in das N. T., p. 98) that
For the
the extent towhich the Apocalypse was rejected, has been somewhat exaggerated.
Extremely noteworthy is the view of Didymus on 2 Peter (Enarrat. in epp. cathol.)
"Non est ignorandum praesentem epistolam esse falsatam, quae licet publicetur non
tamen in canone est."
" In the Byzantine Church also Apocalypses continued to be read, and new
ones were constantly being produced.
1 98 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. hi.
between the collection and all other writings, the more suspi-
cious must those have appeared whose title could lead, or had
once admittedly led, to a claim for recognition as Catholic and
Apostolic. The category of "apocryphal" in which they had
formerly been placed, solely in order to mark the alleged or
real absence of general testimony in their favour, now obtained
more and more an additional meaning; they were of unknown
origin, or 'fabricated', and this was often supplemented by the
charge of being 'heretical'. But however great the gulf between
the canonical and uncanonical books, it is impossible to con-
• See also under this head the verdict, freer because dependent on Theodore,
which Junilius passed on the Catholic Epistles. Critical investigations have not yet
arrived at a final result regarding the Decretum Gelasii. Augustine himself has not
failed, besides, to notice the doubts that existed in his lime; see Retractat. II. 4, 2.
In his De pecc. mer. I. 27, he still leaves the Ep. to the Hebrews unassigned. In
De doctr. christ. II. 8, he writes :
" In canonicis autem scripturis ecclesiarum catho-
licarum quam plurimum auctoritatem sequatur, inter quas sane illse sint, qu£e
apostolicas sedes habere et epistolas accipere meruerunt." Accordingly, this principle
still holds. "Tenebit igitur hunc raodum in scripturis canonicis, ut eas quae ab
omnibus accipiuntur ecclesiis catholicis, prjeponat eis quas qusedam nou accipiunt;
in iis vero quae non accipiuntur ab omnibus, prasponat eas, quas plures gravioresque
accipiunt eis, quas pauciores minorisque auctoritatis ecclesise tenent. Si autem alias
invenerit a pluribus, alias a gravioribus haberi, quamquam hoc facile inveniri non
possit, sequalis tamen auctoritatis eas habendas puto." Since the older copies of
the Bible continued to be transcribed, uniformity had not been secured. It is true
we no longer possess western Bibles whose contents are limited to the earliest
Roman Canon— Gospels, Acts, 13 Pauline Ep., I and 2 John, i Peter, Jude, Reve-
—
lation but we have them with an Ep. to the Laodiceans, the Pastor (though in
the O. T,), and even with the apocryphal correspondence of the Corinthians and
Paul.
Chap, hi.] HOLY SCRIPTURE 1 99
ceal the fact that the Church never published a general decision,
excluding all on the extent of the Canon in ancient
doubt,
times. The Canon of Augustine was adopted by Pope Innocent I.
(Ep. 6, ch. 7, ad Exsuperium).
With the complete elaboration of the conception of canonical
books, every other description applied to them gave way to
the idea of their divinity. ' What could any predicate signify
compared with the conviction that they had been composed
by the Holy Ghost himself? Therefore the categories of canon-
ical and inspired writings coincided, nay, inspiration in its
highest sense was Hmited to the canonical books. The belief
in inspiration was necessarily attended by the duty of pneu-
matic or allegorical exegesis. This sacred art was then prac-
tised by all, who were able thus to disregard the results of
any other kind of exposition. The problems which pneumatic
exegesis, praised even by cultured Hellenists, had to solve,
were mainly the following. It had (i) to demonstrate the agree-
ment between the two Testaments, in other words to christi- ;
authoritative,caused more anxiety. Had God a human form, eyes, or voice was ;
Paradise situated on the earth did the dead rise with all their bodily members,
;
—
even with their hair, etc.? to all these and a hundred similar questions there was
no sure answer, and consequently disputes arose between adherents of one and
the same confession. All had to allegorise, and, in turn, all had to take certain
texts literally. But what a difference existed between an Epiphanius and a Gregory
of Nyssa, and how many shades of belief there were between the crude anthro-
pomorphists and the spiritualists The latter, as a rule, had reason to dread the
!
arguments, and frequently the fists, of the former; they could not but be anxious about
their own orthodoxy, for the old regula was on the side of their opponents, and
the most absurd opinion had the prejudice that it was the most pious in its favour.
Ultimately, in the course of the' fifth century, a sort of common sense established
itself,which could be taken as forming, with regard to the anthropomorphists, a
middle line between the exegetic methods of Chrysostom and Cyril of Alexandria,
and which had been anticipated by a few Fathers of the fourth century. Yet not
many concessions were made to the anthropomorphists. Even Antiochians like
Theodore had become suspected of an anthropomorphism incompatible with the
honour of God (see Johannes Philoponus, De creat. mundi, I. 22. in Gallandi XII.,
p. 496). He who did not rise from the turpitude Utterce ad decorem intelligentim
(Jerome ad Amos. 2) might come under suspicion of heresy. But, on the
spiritalis
other the Cappadocians themselves opposed those who allegorised "too
hand,
much", and thus approximated too closely to heathen philosophers; and after a
part of Origeh's expositions had passed into the traditional possessions of the
Church, the restwas declared heretical.. Even before this Epiphanius had written
(H. 61, ch. 6): Tlana tic 6eix fvniXTcc ovx aAAijyof/ar; ieiTUi, aAA« (£5 £X"> '^X^''
ieafiui a Ss^Tou lecei aia-itjiTSux;. Origen's thorough-going principle that " God can
say and do nothing, which good and just", by which he criticised and
is not
occasionally set aside the letter of Scripture, was too bold for the Epigoni with
their faith in authority. God had done what Scripture said of him, and what God
did was good. This principle not only ruined all lucid science, but also deprived
the Church of the intrinsic completeness of her creed. Yet we must not minimise
the result of the compromise made in the fourth and fifth centuries, between the
literal, allegorical, and typical methods of inteipreting Scripture; for it has held
its ground up to the present day in u way really identical in all Churches, and
it seems to possess no small power to convince.
notices, even doubtful ones, which were accepted without reflection, since, having
entered into the stock of tradition, they no Ibnger roused criticism.
Chap, hi.] HOLY SCRIPTURE 201
1 Besides, when driven by necessity, i.e., when brought face to face with in-
convenient passages of Scripture, n. way was found out of the difficuhy in the
demand that the liistorical occasion of the text must be carefully weighed. Thus
Athanasius writes (Orat. c. Arian. I. 54), when setti];ig himself to refute the Scrip-
tural proofs of the Arians, and finding that he is in considerable straits: 6tt Si,
w? 65ri votiT^i; Tiji; &e!x( yfxi^viQ Trpoa-tixei 'ttoisiv xctl mccyKXiov eiTTiv, outui xxi
evTuv^a, x«d' "Bv sIttev 6 xT6a-Ta^o{;^xxipov xai to TrpoffoiTrov xai to Trpxy/.tx, St67rep
'iypef^is, TTiiTTai cx^aii^xveiv, ivx fsij 5r«pa tuvtcc >} xxi iruf' '^Tipov ti tovtuv ocyvoav
'0 mayiyt/aa-xaiv '^|fti Ti?; aAifSiviJj SiavoiaQ yevijTxi. The same contention was often
upheld in earlier times by TertuUian when driven into a corner by the exegesis of
the Marcionites (see De praescr. adv. Marc. II. — V.). The exegetical "principle " of
the Fathers gradually became the comfhxus oppositorum ; i.e., when the literal
meaning was disturbing, then it was, in the words of Gregory of Nazianzus, (Orat.
XXXI. 3): 'hSu/xx TvJQ xtre^eixg ha-Tiv {> (fiiKla tov ypxniJ.XToi: or men spoke of the
turpitudo litterce, the Jewish understanding of Scripture, the necessity of considering
historical circumstances or the like. Butif "advanced" theologians produced suspected
allegorical explanations, then the cry was raised w; 'ixn, '^X^'t Holy Scripture is
method of Philo and Origen followed by the Alexandrians was strenuously opposed
both in independent treatises, and in connection with exegesis. Secondly, an effort
was made to give the literal meaning in all cases its due; thus Diodorus says in
the Catena of Nicephorus (Leipz. 1772, I. p. 524): tov a/.^ittyofixoS ro la-rofixov
7r>.e7<rT0v Utov 7rpaTiiJ.uiJ.cv. Thirdly, a was accordingly recognised
real covenant
between God and the Jewish people, was accorded its significant
and that nation
place in the history of salvation: the " history of salvation" which thus originated
differed essentially from that of Irenjeus (see Vol. II., p. 305). Fourthly and finally,
the number of directly Messianic passages in the O. T. became extraordinarily
limited; while, according to pneumatic exegesis, everything in the O. T. was in a
sense directly Messianic, I.e., Christian, the Antiochenes only retained a few such
passages. The horizon of O. T. authors was more Theodore
correctly defined.
decidedly disputed the presence of anything in the O. T. about the Son of God
or the Trinity. Further, the Antiochenes distinguished grades of inspiration, namely,
the spirit of prophecy, and that of wisdom, and they placed the former far above
the latter. Although the advance of this exegesis on the Alexandrian is obvious,
yet it is seriously defective in completeness and consistency in method. First, the
Antiochenes, in spite of their polemic against the older expositors — Hippolytus, Origen,
Eusebius, Apollinaris, Didymus, and Jerome — could not altogether divest them-
selves of the old principle of the authoritative interpretation of Scripture; "they
regarded the old traditional doctrine, the exposition given by the Fathers, and the
definitions of Synods, as the standard and touch-stone of agreement with the creed
of the Church, and they made of this rule what use they pleased " from this source ;
speculative exegesis, yet without following any fixed principle. Thirdly, their typolo-
gical exegesis also often bordered very closely on the allegorical, and since they assumed
a double sense in Scripture, they did not remove, but only disguised, the fundamental
error of current exegesis. Fourthly, they could not make clear the difference between the
O. T. and the N. T., because, in spite of their assumption of different degrees of
inspiration, they placed the O. T. prophets on a level with the Apostles see ;
Theodore, Comment, on Neh. I. in Migne, T. LXVI., p. 402 : Tij? airiii toS ikyiav
TTveviJarog ;)jap;T05 0" te TraP^xi (J€Te7xov Ksci 01 Tut tvj(^ kkivvii; Sta&i^xiit; vTr^peTOVijsvot
IjviTTifpiiji. by assuming directly Messianic passages in the O. T. they gave
Finally,
up their own position, and placed themselves at the mercy of their opponents.
See later for the history of the school of Antioch, especially its relation to
Aristotle. Diestel, Gesch. des A. T. in der christl. Kirche, p. 126 ff. Fritzsche, de
Theod. Mops, vita et scriptis, Halae, 1836. Above all, the works of Kihn, Die
Bedeutung der Antioch. Schule a. d. exeget. Gebiete (1866), and Theodor von
Mopsuestia und Junilius als Exegeten (1880), where the older literature is given.
Swete, Theodori ep. Mops, in epp. Pauli Comment. Cambridge, 1880, 1881.
Chap, hi.] HOLY SCRIPTURE 203
1 These rules are of material importance (for theology). The first treats of the
Lord and body: i.e., we must and may apply the truth concerning the Lord
his
to the Church, and vice versa, since they form one person ; only in this way do
we frequently get a correct sense. The second deals with the bi-partite body of
the Lord: we must carefully consider whether the true or the empirical Church is
meant. The third takes up the promises and the law, i.e., the spirit and letter;
the fourth treats of genus and species: we must observe the extent to which texts
apply; the fifth, of the dates: we must harmonise contradictory dates by a fixed
method, and understand certain stereotyped numbers as symbolical. The sixth
discusses repetition i.e., we have frequently to refrain from assuming a chronolo-
:
gical order, where such an order appears to exist, and the seventh deals with the
devil and his body, i.e., the devil and the godless, many things referring to the
latter which are said of the devil and vice versa —see the first rule.
^ The thought wavers between that of Origen, who also elevates himself above
the historical Christ, and the genuinely evangelical idea that the Christian must
stop short at "means of salvation"; see De doctr. L 34: "Nulla res in via (ad
deum) tenere nos debet, quando nee ipse dominus, in quantum via nostra esse
dignatus est, tenere nos voluerit, sed transire ; ne rebus temporalibus, quamvis ab
illo pro salute nostra susceptis et gestis, h^reamus infirmiter, sed per eas potius
curramus alacriter etc." In ch. 35 love is held up as the exclusive goal: ch. 36
teaches that no one has understood Scripture who has not been led by it to love
God and his neighbour; but if he has been led to this love, then he loses nothing
by failing to hit on the correct sense of detached texts: in that case he is deceived,
but without guilt :
" Quisquis in scripturis (I. 37) aliud sentit quam ille qui scripsit,
204 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. hi.
but, on the other hand (I. 39) " Homo, fide, spe et caritate subnixus eaque incon-
:
cusse retinens, non indiget scrifturis nisi ad alios instruendos. Itaque multi per
h£EC tria etlam in solitudlne sine codicibus vivunt Quibus tamen quasi macliinis
. . .
tanta fidei, spei et caritatis in eis surrexit instructio, ut perfectum aliquid tenentes,
ea qu£e sunt ex parte non qucerant; perfectum sane, quantum in hac vita potest."
This forcible way of assigning a practical purpose to the reading of Scripture and
the understanding at the root of it, viz., that it was the whole that was of im-
portance, is the opposite of the conception that Scripture embraces innumerable
mysteries; but an affinity exists far down between them, inasmuch as Augustine
seems to reserve to the monks the state in which Scripture is not required, and
he borders on the belief of Origen (I. 34) that the Christ of history belongs to
the past for him who lives in love. The whole conception is first found, besides,
in the description by the Valentinian school of the perfect Gnostic; see Excerpta
ex Theodoto, ch. 27: vov it 'in ypafj)?; xcii naiyj<reaf xarifiuixit rji <|'i'%{i ixelvif
T^ KU&ccpSi ysvoiisviiit &Vov KXt a\iovTC6t TTpda-aiTTOv 'jrpoq 7rp6a-uvov &eov opSv besides ;
Augustine expressly argued against those who supposed they could dispense with
Scripture from the start, and appealed to an inner revelation (see the Prsefat. to
De doctr. christ.). He puts it beyond doubt that he who uses Scripture must bow
to its authority even where he does not understand it.
1See the second and especially the third book of the work quoted. The second
contains a short and precise review of all branches of knowledge which are
collectively perceived to spring from heathenism, and it states which may and must be
used by the Christian, and to what extent. The third book contains the hermeneutics
proper.
See Eucherius of Lyons, liber formularum spiritalis intelligentije adVeranium
-
filium, inMigne, Ser. lat. T. 50, p. 727. In later times the mnemonic formula was
composed: Lit/era gesta docet, quid credas allegoria,
Moralis quid agas, quo tendas anagogia.
Chap, hi.] HOLY SCRIPTURE 20S
dogma of inspiration did not exist. ' A clear idea of the suffi-
1 The work " Oq Christian Science " points to Scripture as its sole object, and
does not discuss tradition at all. However, the latter receives its due inasmuch as
Augustine regards the propositions of the rule of faith based on the Symbol as — —
the matters, which constituted the essential contents of Scripture. In this definition
we find the reason why dogmatics never ceased to waver between Scripture and
the rule of faith. Yet we know that Augustine was by no means the first to hold
this view. Even the writer of the Muratorian fragment and Irenseus knew no better.
2' Origen taught that Christian science was the science of Scripture; Augustine
stands upon his shoulders. But afterwards, in the East, the interest in dogmatic
formulas became uppermost, while in the West, the Bible remained pre-eminently'
the direct source of knowledge of the faith.
3 Even the men of Antioch, by whom, Chrysostom not excepted, human elements
were aknowledged to exist in the Bible, maintained the inspiration of other passages
quoad litleram, just like Origen and the Cappadocians. Augustine accepted this
freedom from error in its strictest sense; see Ep. 82. 3 (ad Hieron.): "Ego fateor
caritali tuse, solis eis scriptuarum libris, qui iam canonici appellantur, didici hunc
attitude toHoly Writ, he declares that the Apostles' writings make up sufficiently
for the absence ofany by our Lord for the Apostles were the Lord's hands, and
;
had written what he commanded. It is extremely surprising that this being the
—
view taken of the Bible and even the translation of the LXX. was held to be
—
inspired yet no one ever ex professo reflected on how the Canon was formed.
No miracle was assumed. Even Augustine quite naively stated, sancti ei docti
homines had formed the N. T. (c. Faustum XXII. 79). Here the authority of the
Church comes in.
• The early Catholic Fathers had already maintained the sufficiency of Holy
Scripture, as well as the necessity of proving everything out of it; see for the
latter point Orig. in Jerem., Horn. I. u. 7 (Lomm. XV. p. 115): Mapxi/fa; JeT Aa(3£7v
Ta:? ypccipa^. ^Af^aprvpot yap at e'ri^of^at >i(j.uv Kat at e^vjy^irsii; aTia-roiettrtv. Cyril
of Jerusalem has expressed himself sinailarly (Cat. 4, 17: Ae7 yap Trsp) rSv him
Kat aytojv tvi^ Trta-TSO)^ ixvffT^piaiv fiJjJ^ to rvxov avev rav Setav TrapaSiSotTdat ypa-
</)wv <eai liij dvASi 7n6av6T>i(7i xxi Arfywv y.aTa(TX£ua1<; 7rapa<Pep£a-$ai. Mi}5J Ifto;
Tctt ravToc. trot ^eyovrt^ u/TrKut; 'KiiTTSvfT^c; \av t^v aTrdSsihv rwv KaTayys?i^o{.iev6]v
avro TUV Ssiiiiv /^vj Aaj3^c ypacpcSv 'H trcari^pla yap aVr^ rij^ Trta-recii^ yifzcSv qvx s%
ivpeiri^oy/aQ, a>^f,k IJ aToSei^iuQ twv Oeiiov ia-Ti ypa^uv); cf. Athanasius (Orat. adv.
gentes init. Avt^pkeiq f^sv eta-tv at ay tat xai SsdTvsvtrrot ypa(pat Trpdt; t^v tjj$
:
2. Tradition.
were not clearly felt, because men always possessed the power,
when confronted by inconvenient monitors, to carry through
ultimately, whether in the form of dogma, or in that of order,
whatever was required. In face of traditions become obsolete
an appeal was made to other traditions, or to the Bible; where
written testimony was uncertain or awanting, recourse was had
to tradition ; i.e., that was declared to be tradition which was
' The Orientals, especially the Antiochenes, but Cyril of Jems, also, adhered
more exclusively to Scripture ; the Alexandrians, and even the Cappadocians relied
more strongly on tradition. Yet the differences are only in degi'ee. At any rate,
the difference comes out more strongly on d. comparison of Theodoret and Cyril
of Alexandria.
208 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. hi.
Scripture was contained within fixed limits of its own ' (scriptura
canonica certis suis terminis continetur), yet it never occurred
to him or any one else to maintain as much about tradition.
derived its claim to this view partly from the divine promises,
partly from the organisation instituted for it, yet without alleg-
ing confidently any empirical factor within the Church which
should be the bearer of its infallibility. The most important '
and the Roman sedes aposlolica, the whole relatively coordinated sides apostolica,
the relative and the absolute plenary councils were held to be representations of
the (infallible) Church; but not one of these factors, not all of them combined,
formed the (infallible) representation of the (infallible) Church. The latter possessed
no indubitably sure institution or organs indubitably representative of it." The
decrees of councils were only placed on a complete equality with Scripture in the
East, after councils had ceased to be held, and when the latter therefore were
seen, like Scripture, in a nimbus of hoary antiquity.
" See Vol. II., p. 20 f. and III., pp. 48 if., in ff.
Chap, in.] TRADITION 209
were supplanted in the period between the first and third (fourth)
CEcumenical Councils by the Nicene, or soon thereafter by the
so-called Constantinopolitan Symbol. " This confession ^ had
already been held at Chalcedon to be the creed pure and simple,
and it never lost this place of honour. If it had already been
constantly assumed that the doctrine of the Church was the
theme, or the matter, constituting the real contents of Scripture,
then this assumption was now definitely transferred to the
Nicene or the Constantinopolitan Symbol. All subsequent
dogmatic conclusions were accordingly regarded solely as ex-
planations of this Symbol, which was not maintained, how-
''
' The Symbol of Gregory Thaumaturgus was derived from a special revelation
see Vol. III., p. 115.
Confession was framed. The former of these embraced A.D. 250 —-325, the second,
A.D. 325 up to the beginning or the middle of the fifth century. In the latter
period the attempt was made either to transform the Nicene Creed into a baptismal
Confession, or to displace it by parallel formulas sometimes the leading words of
;
the Nicene Symbol were inserted in those of the provincial Churches. See on the
history of this, the part played by the Bishops of Asia Minor in these develop-
ments, and the history of the so-called Constanlinop. Symbol, my art. " Konstantinop.
Symbol" in Herzog's R.-E. 2, Vol. VIII.; Caspari's works, Hort's investigations,
Two Dissertations, Cambridge, 1876, and Kattenbusch, Confessionskunde I., p. 252 ff.
' It was originally the Baptismal Confession of the Church of Jerusalem, revised
soon after the middle of the fourth century, and furnished with a regtila fidei
concerning the Holy Spirit it came thus to be
; honoured first through the authority
of Epiphanius, and then through the energy of the Bishop of Constantinople, which
also led to its supplanting the Nicene Symbol.
Christological formulasword for word in the Symbol. The Greek Church maintains
to the present day that the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Symbol contains everything
we require to believe.
14
210 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. in.
had in truth intervened, yet so that its authority had a support placed still further
back, namely, the O. T. and the Lord's sayings.
3 See my
" Apostolisches Symbol " in Herzog's R.-E. 2 B. I. The opinion that
art.
the had composed the Symbol jointly (Rufinus) cannot be traced earlier
Apostles
than the middle of the fourth century, but it may be much older. Yet )\e must
not date it too soon; for if the Churches of the western provinces had received
the Symbol with this legend attached, they would hardly have ventured to propose
changes on it. It was certainly not extolled even in Rome in the third century,
so exuberantly as it was afterwards by Ambrose.
^ This point falls to be discussed in the next book. Augustine had to rest his
distinctive theology on the Symbol, though the latter was only imperfectly adapted
for the purpose.
Chap, hi.] TRADITION 2 1
" The history of the Apostolic Symbol between the fifth and sixth centuries
urgently requires investigation.
' Justinian's law-book is headed by the art. " De summa trinitate et de fide catholica
et ut nemo de ea publice contendere audeat " ; but see also the famous decree of
the Emperors, Gratian, Valentinian and Theodosius, A.D. 380, with which the
law-book begins.
* See, e.g.^ Socrates, H. E. V. 22.
real sense; for it conflicted with more than one main point in
the fundamental positions of the Church. But it attained high
honour, and its existence absolutely became a dogma. But
est, non nisi auctoritate apostolica traditum rectissime creditur." V. 23. 31; " Multa,
quae universa tenet ecclesia et ob hoc ab apostolis prtecepta bene creduntur, quam-
quam scripta non reperiantur."
1 The Apologists had God in Spirit and
exhibited Cluistianity as the worship of
in truth, and by equality and fraternity. But there had grad-
as an alliance regulated
ually developed a complicated cultus round the mysteries, and a comprehensive and
detailed code of discipline had become necessary. For both of these appeal was
made to an increasing extent to apostolic authority. Compare the Apostolic Con-
stitutions, the Kuvivei; ixx^tjo-iaa-Tixoi, the Apostolic Canons, in general the mass of
material, partly published, partly discussed, by Bicliell, Pitra, and Lagarde ; further,
the designation of the Liturgies of the provincial Churches as by Marlt, James, etc.
The history, still partly unwritten, of these Eastern forgeries under apostolic names
is closely connected witli the general history of the legends of the Apostles (see
Lipsius, Die apokryphen Apostelgesch.). The O. T. commandments were again
introduced into the Church by means of apostolic fictions, until the ancient awe of
Moses, the law-giver, was surmounted. After apostolic commandments of this sort
had been allowed to spring up luxuriantly for a time, the Church liad no little
trouble to exorcise the spirits it had conjured. A sifting process began from the
sixth century — at least in the Byzantine Church — to which, e.^., the Constitutions fell
a victim. In the law books of the Monophysite and Nestorian Churches, much more
compreliensive matter had been preserved, under apostolic names, as possessed of
the value of law. Yet it did not receive the same honour as the Holy Scriptures.
In order to an unabashed invention of regulations
realise the possibility of such
cloaked with the a,uthority and name we must remember that, from
of the Apostles,
the second century, writings bearing on discipline were in existence, called SiSax"!'
or SiaTii^Ei( Tuv a5roo-T<(A<ui', and that these, having no individual impress, were
thoroughly adapted for constant remodelling and expansion.
Chap, hi.] TRADITION 213
1 The assumption of a secret apostolic tradition —that is, the vap&Soa-i:; ci'ypa(poq
— first appeared among the Gnostics, i.e., among the first theologians, who had to
legitimise as apostolic a world of notions alien to piimitive Christianity. It then
was found quite logically among the Alexandrians, and from them passed to Euse-
bius, who not only accepted it (H. E. II. I, 4), but also vindicated it against Mar-
cellus (lib. I. c. tx^ xTrb rcSv 6siuv ypxi^uv /zxprvpiaQ s^ xypxipov
l) : SKKh^irixi;
vxpxSotrsuQ o-tppxyi^oiihiiQ. But the Cappadocians first established it in their conflict
with the Eunomians and Pneumatomachoi, yet the bold use made of it by them in
defence of the dogma of the Trinity, was not afterwards parallelled. Basil (De
spiritu sancto, 27) referred the orthodox doctrine of the Holy Ghost to the un-
written tradition, placing the latter on an equality with the public tradition; but
he endeavoured at the same time to retain the old Alexandrian distinction between
Kt^pwy/ix and S6yiJ.x, SSyiiX being meant to embrace the theological formulation of
the faith {rav ev t^ hutc^^i^a-ix 'jre(pv?ixy[.civti)v Soyt^xraiv xxt Ktjpvyi^xTuv rx (ziv e«
rij? hyypx<pov SiSx<7KX?^ix^ '^_3jo/^ev, rx S^ ey. tvjq twv xyroiTT6?^(av TrxpaSoa-EccQ Stx5o-
6evTX ^luv sv [zva-Tiipioi TxpeSs^iiiJieSx, xTsp xi^(p6T£px Tijv xvTyjv lirxvv 'g;^^; 5rpo5
TJ^v sua-i^etxv ^AAo yxp §6y[iX, kxi aAAo K^pvy{/.x, rx fMSv yxp S6y[zarx (Tiw-
. . .
the Church had been invested with authority through its con-
nection with the Holy Spirit himself. ^ At this point two pro-
blems arose, which, though hardly ever clearly formulated, were
yet felt, and which attempts were made to solve. I.
By —
whom and when did the Church speak? II. How were novel- —
ties to be explained in the Church, especially in the sphere of
Cyril of Alexandria, and others down to John of Damascus, who says plainly (De
fide orthod. IV. ch. 12): t^ypa(p6i; ktrrtv ^ TrapxSoa-ti; uutvi tcSv aTroa-ri^aiv, TroAAa
yap aypx(paif iifiiv TTcepiioirxv (see details in Langen, Joh. von Damaskus, 1879,
p. 271 ff.). So also the Greek Church of to-day teaches SiuptiTai to Se7ov p^fta :
£?C TB TO ypaTTTOv xat ixypx<po'j (see Gass, Symbolik der griech. Kirche, p. 107 ff.)
Quotations are especially taken from Pauline texts in which TrapaSoa-eii occur, and
thus a sort of Scriptural proof is led in support of what does not occur in Scripture.
The unwritten tradition is hardly again applied to the creed, since it was thought
to be sufficiently supported by Scripture and the Symbol. In the West, Augustine
was in the same doubtful position, with regard to certain theses which he defended
against Donatists and Pelagians, as the Cappadocians were in reference to the
orthodox doctrine of the Holy Ghost. Hence he derived, f.^., the doctrine of original
sin, which could not be otherwise proved out of tradition, from the rite of ex-
orcism, declaring this to have been an apostolic tradition ; (see c. Julian. VI. 5, 11):
"Sed etsi nulla ratione indagetur, nuUo sermone explicetur, varum tamen est quod
antiquitus veraci fide catholica praedicatur et creditur per ecclesiam totam; qu£e
filios fidelium nee exorcizaret, nee exsufflaret, si non eos de potestate tenebrarum.
et a principe mortis erueret, etc ). So also he appealed against the Donatists in
the controversy as to Baptism by Heretics (against Cyprian's authority) to Ihe un-
written testimony of the whole Church (see note 6, p. 211).
' Cyprian calls Scripture "dimna; tradifiom's caput et origo" (Ep. 74; ch. 10).
This designation is not common.
^ The universalis expressed in the famous sentence of Augustine
conviction
(C. ep. which he has given in various forms in the Confessions and
Manich. 6)
elsewhere Ego vera evangelio non crederem, nisi me catholicce ecclesice commoveret
:
auctoritas. Even Cyril of Jerusalem, who has emphasised most strongly the authority
of Scripture, could not pass over that of the Church (Cat. IV., ch. 33).
Chap, hi.] TRADITION 21
even, e.g., from the plan of Eusebius' Church History, that the
Bishops, the successors of the Apostles, were regarded as guar-
antors of the legitimacy of the Church. The conception never
emerged that the Bishop was infallible as an individual but ''
1 In his studies on Augustine, Reuter has shown that Augustine fell short of
Cyprian (see his theses in the Ztschr. K.-Gesch., Vol. VIII., p. 184, and the
f.
relative discussions in Vol. VII.). In the East the compiler of Apostolic Constitu-
tions took substantially the view of the Episcopate held by Ignatius, but not by
Irenaeus and Cyprian. Even Chrysostom's work, srep; lepcinrvviK, tends in the same
direction as the Constitutions. It is very remarkable that Cyril of Jerusalem
(Cat. XVIII., ch. 27) makes no mention of the hierarchy, but only of the Apostles,
prophets, teachers and other office-bearers enumerated in the well-known passage
in the Ep. to the Corinthians. That is a memorable archaism yet see even Vincentius, ;
Commonit. 40. He also says very little about Bishops, and nothing at all about
the apostolic succession.
Cyprian (Ep. LVII., ch. 5) introduces the decree of the provincial Council of Carthage
'
with the words, ''Placuit nobis spiritu sancto stiggerente." Acts XV. 28 certainly
influenced this phrase. On the other hand, we must not allow it too much weight,
for often appeals to instructions given to him personally by the Holy
Cyprian
Ghost. See also the Votum of Bishop Lucius of Ausafa, No. 73 of the sentent.
episcoporum LXXXVII. at the Carthaginian Council: Secundum motum animi mei '•'
et spiritus sancti." The Synod of Aries, A.D. 314, also used the formula, " /'/arazV
ergo, prccsenie spiritu sancto et angelis eius" (see Mansi, Collect. Concil. II. p. 469,
and Hefele, Conciliengesch. I. 2, p. 204) and Constantine wished to have its ;
decision regarded as '^cceleste iudicium": this judgment by priests was to have the
same honour as if it had been pronounced by the Lord himself (Mansi, I.e. p. 478).
For the rest, we may here recall the fact that lepce a-vvoSoQ had long been a ii
technical term in common use among the Greeks (see also ''holy senate" in
Justin). On the origin of the ecclesiastical Synods see Sohm's excellent discussions
in Kirchenrecht. I. p. 247 ff.
* This almost universally admitted; yet the idea was introduced by the
is now
great Oriental Synods in the cases of Novatian and Paul of Samosata, as well as
by the Synod of Aries already indeed summoned by Constantine. The latter has
2 1 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. hi.
course of the fourth century the idea that the Nicene Synod
possessed an infallible authority became slowly established ' ;
been looked on in the West as a General Council for more than a century, and can
also be regarded as such in many respects. On the Councils see Hatch's fine lecture
in his book "The Social Constitution of Christian Churches," p. 172 f.
See Constantine's letter to the Bishops after the Council of Nicjea (in Theodoret
'
2 The oi-thodox party made use of the advantage presented by the decision of
a Synod which none could refuse to recognise as a wholly extraordinary event.
On the other hand, nothing but such an event could atone for the unusual forms
given the creed, and thus attest a new theory.
to For in spite of everything
which had been hitherto possible to relate of Synods being under divine leader-
it
ship, it was a novelty to raise the decision of a Synod to the level of an author-
ity above discussion. Of such a thing even Bishop Julius of Rome, e.g.^ knew
nothing. And it was all the more startling when the decision was supported
neither by the letter of Scripture, nor a clear tradition, nor even an analogy of
any sort. But this very fact promoted the assumption of an absolute authority,
though not yet in the case of Athanasius (see Gwatkin, Stud, of Arianism, p. 50)
a virtue was made of necessity. With the first victory over Arianism, the view
arose that the dogma of the Trinity was a certain truth because it had been af-
firmed at Niccea by 318 Bishops inspired by the Holy Ghost thus the Cappado- —
cians, Cyril however, extremely paradoxical, that even up to
of Alex. etc. It is,
the middle of the fourth century the Eusebians laid greater stress on the author-
ity of Synodical decisions than the orthodox party. In order to get the West to
accept the deposition of Athanasius, they continued to appeal to their Antiochene
Synod, and declared its decisions to be irreversible. Although their tactics com-
pelled them also to admit the validity of the Nicene Creed, they did so in the
hope that after the removal of Athanasius they would be able to carry an inter-
pretation of it suitable to their own views.
3 The latter fact is admitted also by Hefele
(1. u. Vol. I., p. 3). Besides, nothing
could be more incorrect than the opinion that the distinction between GEcumenical
and other Synods, as regards dogmatics, was established soon after the Nicene
Council. The greatest variety of opinion prevailed till past the middle of the fifth
century as to what Synods were oecumenical and might be ranked along with the
Nicene. Gregory of Nazianzus we know, e.g., to have spoken very contemptuously
of the Constantinopolitan Synod, and, indeed, of Synods in general. Conversely
a certain authority was still ascribed to Provincial Synods in dogmatic questions.
Chap, hi.] TRADITION 2 1
Further, there is a passage in Augustine whicli infers not only a relatively bind-
ing authority on the part of Provincial Councils, but also uncertainty as to the
absolute authority of General Councils. The passage is extraordinarily character-
istic of the unsteadiness of the whole structure of tradition. Meanwhile Renter
(Zeitschr. f. IC-Gesch. VIII. p. 167, 173, 176, 186) has rightly decided that we
must keep steadily in view the special circumstances under which Augustine has
here written; De bap. c. Donat. II. 3, 4: "Quis nesciat sanctam scripturam canon-
icam tarn veteris quam novi testamenti certis suis terminis contineri, eamque om-
nibus posterioribus episcoporum litferis ita prseponi, ut de ilia omnino dubitari et
disceptari non possit, utrum verum vel utrum rectum sit, quidquid in ea scriptum
esse constiterit: episcoporum autem litteras quES post confirmatum canonem vel
scriptse sunt vel scribuntur, et per sermonem forte sapientiorem cuiuslibet in ea re
peritioris, et per aliorum episcoporum graviorem auctoritatem doctioremque pruden-
tiam et per concilia licere reprehend!, si quid in eis forte a veritate deviatum est:
et ipsa concilia quas per siugulas regiones vel provincias hunt, plenariorum concili-
orum auctoritati qu£e fiunt ex uni verso orbe Christiano, sine ullis ambagibus cedere:
ipsaque plenaria ssepe priora posterioribus emendari, cum aliquo experimento rerum
aperitur quod clausum erat, et cognoscitur quod latebat." Etnendari can only
mean here actual emendation — not merely explanation, as Catholic historians of
dogma have to assume. It is also worthy of note, that Augustine assigned
CEcumenical rank to several Synods e.g.^ that of Aries — which afterwards were
not held to be CEcumenical. On the other hand, it is instructive that he himself
did not, like the Orientals, regard the Nicene decree as the foundation of the
doctrine of the Trinity see Renter's arguments on the relation of the work " De
;
trinitate" to the Nicene Symbol, (Ztschr. f. K.-Gesch. V. p. 375 ff.). The Council
of Chalcedon first put an end to dubiety as to the number, and the author-
ity, of CEcumenical Councils in the East (even at the Robber Synod, A.D. 449,
only two had been recognised). Up till then the Nicene stood alone on an in-
accessible height moreover, in after times the uniqueness of this Council was still
;
remembered, though others were added beside it. For the rest, Roman Bishops
spoke very depreciaforily of, or even refused to recognise, many canons of later
councils; so Leo I. of the third of Constantinople (Ep. 106 [al. 80]), to say nothing
of the twenty-eighth of Chalcedon. But Leo did not recognise the second Council
as legitimate.Even Felix III. and Gelasius knew only of three Qicumenical Coun-
cils.General Synods Leo I. declared to be inspired (see Ep. 114, 2, to the Bishops
assembled at Chalcedon); but it is more than questionable whether he therefore
held all their resolutions to be absolutely irreversible.
1 After the Council of Chalcedon, it was, above all, Justinian's legislation which
confirmed and popularised, even in the West, the view that there had been four
CEcumenical Councils: see his edict on the Three Chapters, 131 : Of vto tuv re!r(rxpav
(TVvdSaVj Tuv ev Nitcaitx xai Kaiva-rxvTtvovTrd^si, sv 'Eipeo-w Kxt kv Xcc^^XijSovi ti^svtsq
'4foi vijinv rei^iy ep{e7-««'«v Kxi rk SdyiiXTX xirSv uf eel iedTTViuvTOi riiziijiiiireev
2l8 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. hi.
men spoke, and not infrequently speak and act up to the present
day, as if the Church possessed and required no other sources
of knowledge or authorities. As a rule, the Trxpi^otng xypaCpog
is not included when Holy Scripture and the seven Councils
are spoken of.
a-vv6§(Dy SioTt i} xpxii tuv [isptxuv vxoxpeajrtx&v SiJio^-oyiuv, yjv xxhspuo-xv xi ^oittxI
SKX^tftrixi, lo'Tiv ^ (J-yiTftp t?; Sizipia-saii; i) 77poiJ.vyiiiOvevh7a-a xvxyvui pitriQ ruv sttx
. . .
final statement an-ived at in A.D. 381, of the dogma of the Trinity was
tlie East,
more favourable to them than The Synod of Constantinople, A.D.
to Athanasius.
383, (see in loco) furnishes the first example of the authority of the Fathers being
made decisive, and of the Scriptures themselves being ignored. But the attempt
miscarried at the time.
' To the "teachers" the predicate " QeiTrveua-TOi" was also applied. Thus
Athanasius writes (De incarn. verbi 56): A/ yfacfia; /ziv ykf Sih $£oX6yciiv avifSiv
TFCi^ci @sov £Ka>,viO-^trav KCti kypacpifa-av. yif-is't^ S^ Trccpcc tuv avTCct^ £vrvyx^v6))ruv
^eoTvsvtTTUv ^i^actTKK^aiv, di Kott [jLixpTvpet; t^q Xpia-TOu HsoriiTO^ ysydvixiri, iJ.aHvreQ
nerxSiSo/j-ev xeel Tjj o-}) <^i?iOiici'ila. Similarly, though very rhetorically, Arius in his
Thalia (Athanas. Orat. c. Arian I.
5) xctrk w/Vt/v hx^iXTuv @bdS, a-vvETUV BsoS,
:
TtulSuv ayiaiv, hpHindiiuiv, Hyiov 0eo5 TveS/^a >,ct^6tTUV, tkSc 'i/iuiov 'syuye i/tto t«v
o-otpiV? //ETe;(jrfvTWv, ao-reiav, hoSiSccxruv, xark jravTa a-ocpuv re.
2 It would take us too far to give detailed instances of the points discussed
under this head. We only emphasise the following. (1) The attestation of a doctrine
by the Councils was often set side by side with that given by the "Fathers", the
"ancient" or "holy doctors", in such m, way that the former seemed often to be
merely a special case of the latter. Aiid this was quite natural. The Church
Chap. III.] 'TRADITION 221
possible to shut one's eyes to this question, because in most cases the teachers
were also bishops. As a rule, the Greeks spoke not of bishops, but the ancient
doctors, when appealing to the witnesses to the truth. It was otherwise with the
majority of the Latins after Cyprian (see p. 214). (3) As the usual procedure at
the Councils was to set up no doctrinal tenet unless ithave the
was believed to
support of the doctors, and as the claim was made always
that this course should
be adopted, the idea that the Councils were inspired was already abolished, and
they were subordinated to the continuous testimony of the Church (see under).
(4) The practice of consulting authorities began at the Ephesian Council it played ;
a more prominent part in every succeeding Synod. Athanasius and the Arians had
undoubtedly disputed before this over passages in the Fathers, but their disputes
were of slight importance compared with those that took place afterwards. (5) The
notion of ecclesiastical antiquity gradually became more and more comprehensive;
meanwhile the real ancient period of Christianity became more obscure, and bit by
bit came to be forgotten. After the seventh the whole period of the Councils was
looked on as the classical antiquity of the Church. If even in the fourth, nay, up
to the middle of the fifth century, Councils were held to be an innovation, their
absence was now considered a characteristic of the age of the Epigoni ; indeed they
were thought to be unnecessary, because everything was already settled. (6) The
opinion held by faith that the "Fathers" had decided every disputed point before-
hand, was a strong challenge to produce forgeries, and resulted in objective and
and subjective falsehood. Caspari (Alte und neue Quellen, etc., 1879) has shown
that the followers of ApoUinaris were the first to forge on a large scale; but the
Acts of Councils, and the examination of writings circulated under the names of
celebrated Fathers, show that they had numerous imitators in the ranks of all parties.
The practice of compiling collections of extracts, which was so much favoured
after the middle of the fifth century, was, besides, especially adapted to conceal
forgeries or inaccuracies. (7) But the limits, authority, and character of the Court
of Appeal of the "Fathers" were never determined. It was taught that the orthodox
Fathers agi-eed in all matters, nay, this theory was treated as a dogma. Stephen
Gobarus' attempt Cod. 232) to demonstrate the contradictions of the
(Photius,
Fathers was be profane, just as Eusebius had condemned as unchurchmanlike
felt to
the attitude of Marcellus of Ancyra, who had censured the consultation, without
222 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. hi.
independent examination, of the "wisest" Fathers. But even John of Damascus had
to admit that Fathers — —
otherwise orthodox held divergent opinions on single
points (De imag. I. 25), and Photius actually was more than once compelled, in
the course by them (see his
of his learned studies, to notice mistakes committed
Bibliotheca). Therefore was never decided who constituted the ortho-
the question
dox Fathers. It became the custom to prefer (Athanasius), Gregory of Nazianzus,
Chrysostom, Cyril, and aftenvards also John of Damascus. In the fourth century
the orthodox were much troubled by the fact that the Synod of Antioch (A.D. 268)
rejected, while that of Nicsea accepted, the term 'Ofioova-wi. The treatment of this
difficulty in Athanasius, " De synod." 43 sq., shows that no one had
on the idea that
hit
the later decision made the earlier obsolete. It was rather held on the contrary:
Of a(pavt^ovtrtv rovg [^erai rxvra yevofisvovt;.
5r/)DAflt/3ovTe5 Therefore Athanasius
sought and found evidences of the word 'Oii0ov<no( before the Samosatian con-
troversy. Ultimately, however, he had to adopt a different treatment of the whole
question, i.e., to show that 'Oftooi/o-fo; had only been rejected at Antioch as against
Paul, in order not to admit a contradiction in the chorus of the Fathers. The
same difficulty was caused about the middle of the fifth century by the term "Svo
cl>v(T£ii'", for it was hard to find an instance of that in antiquity. Of Eutyches the
in the assembly in which they were uttered, and the speaker felt himself compelled
at once to excuse them on the gi-ound of a momentary confusion.
• See above. Note 1, p. 198, and compare "De peccator. mer. et remiss." I., 50.
Here the auctoritas ecclesiartim orientalmm is mentioned (in reference to the Ep.
to the Hebrews), and to Augustine this auctoritas was exalted, because Christianity
had come from the Apostolic Churches, from the communities to which John and
Paul had written, above all, from Jerusalem {unde ipsum evangelium coefit fradi-
cari). The fact that the Donatists had been separated from Apostolic Churches
proved to him that they were wrong; see especially the Liber ad Donat. post
coUat. u. 4, c. 29; also Ep. 52, u. 3 and u. Lib. Petil. 1. II., c. 51 (Renter in the
Ztschr. f. K.-Gesch. V., p. 361 ff.). Optatus had already held the same view as
Augustine; see the important details "De schism. Donat." II., 6, VI., 3. But even
after middle of the sixth century a Roman Pope, Pelagius I., singled out the
the
fact in praise of Augustine, that he, "mindful of the divine teaching which founded the
Church on the Apostolic Chairs, taught that those were schismatics who seceded
from the doctrine and communion of these Apostolic Chairs" (Mansi, Concil. IX.,
Chap, in.] TRADITION 223
p. 716). Pelagius even declared that when doubts as to the faith arose it was
necessary to conform to the Apostolic Chairs (1. c. p. 732). This form of expres-
sion is all the more remarkable since the Roman Bishops of the fifth century spoke,
as a rule, as if the designation sedes apostolica belonged peculiarly to their Chair.
> At the transition from the fourth to the fifth century; see Hefele II., pp. 77 ff.,
"
See the 7th Canon of Nicfea, and in addition, Hefele's details, Vol. I., p. 403 f.;
II., 213. Jerusalem was first raised to a Patriarchate at Chalcedon, see Hefele
p.
II., pp. 477, 502. Jerusalem became once more the 'holy city' in the fourth cen-
tury; see Epiphanius and others.
3 See the 3rd Canon of Constantinople, Hefele, II., p. 1 7 f. and the 28th of Chal-
cedon, Hefele, II., p. 527 f.; t^ Of6ta rvii; vpea-fivTepai; 'P«/x>(? iik to ^a^iheieiv
riiv TToKiv tKsivitv, 01 xxTSfsi; iixoTCO^ aToSeSdxxa-i rce Vfea-fieia, xai Tu avT& (tkovSi
rif Ti(C v£«5 'P«f«)(? ayiUTarai ifovip, ev^oyuf xphxvrei, rtiv ^ctcrihelcf. xai o-tiy>!A>)TW
Tiiitfie7i!-av TTo^iv xal rcSti 'la-iov ccvof^nuovirav Tpea-^eiiov Tji VfKr^VTBfa ^aa-if^iSi
the sixth Canon of Nicfea and the third of Constantinople, I agree substantially with
the excellent arguments of Kattenbusch (I.e. I., p. 81 ff.); only it must be still
more strongly emphasised that the Canons of A.D. 381 bore a clearly marked
hostility to was considered necessary to suppress the
Alexandria. Even then it
authority of the Alexandrian Church, which was on the point of developing into
the premier Church of the East.
224 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. hi.
' An energetic protest was admittedly raised, especially by Leo I. and his suc-
cessors. Leo at the same time also advocated the rights of the Apostolic Churches
in general (Ep. io6). We cannot here follow out the controversy, although it
reflects the revivificationof the Byzantine Church and State, and the attitude of
the Roman Bishops, which was purely ecclesiastical, though it did rest on fictions
see Hefele IL, pp. 408, 539 ff., 549 ff., and Sohm 1. c. I., pp. 377 440. It was not —
until the fourth Lateran Synod (Can. 5), when a Latin Pati-iachate existed at Con-
stantinople (1215), that Rome recognised the 28th Canon of Chalcedon.
2 Although Bishops were held to be successors of the Apostles, yet Leo I.
all
singles out very distinctly those who had inherited the chairs of the Apostles; see
his letter to the Emperor Marcian (Ep. 104).
Not only Eusebius, but also Theodore of Mopsuestia had read Cyprian's
3
Epistles.At the Council of Ephesus evidence taken from him was read; see Vin-
cent, Commonit. 42. Of the Westerns, after Cyprian, Ambrose was especially
esteemed in the East. Augustine also possessed a certain authority.
* See Vol. II., p. 149 f.
Synods were not appointed and convoked by the Roman Bishops. His arguments
as to the presidency at tlie Synods are, however, biassed (pp. 29 44). It was at —
Clialcedon that the legates of the Roman Bishop first occupied a special position.
The sixth Canon of Nicaea, when correctly intei-preted, gives no preference to Rome,
but refers merely to the fact that it was the ecclesiastical metropolis for the Churches
of several provinces. It is credible that Julius I. uttered the principle (Socrates
H. E. II. 17): (J^ij §e7v Trapx yvw^ztjv rov STrttncoTrav 'Pajf^^ii; juxvovt^sivroi^ SKtc^ijcrixt;.
The peculiar authority of the Roman Chair showed itself in the fourth century in
the following facts. First, Coustantiue transferred to the Roman Bishop the duty
of presiding over the commission to examine the case of the Douatists. Secondly,
the oppressed of the Nicene Symbol in the East turned to him for
adherents
protection even Langen, 1. c. I., p. 425 f.). Thirdly, we have the request of
(see
the Eusebians that Julius should decide the dogmatic question it is true that very ;
—
soon when they foresaw their defeat in Rome they changed their tone. They —
still conceded a peculiar dignity to Rome; it does not seem to me possible to
translate (pi^oriiiiav (Sozom. III. 8) with Langen by "ambition." Yet they pointed
out that Rome had received its Christianity from the East, and that it was as little
entitled to review the decision of a dogmatic question given in the East, as the
Oriental Bishops would have been to take up the Novatian affair after Rome had
spoken. (The letter is to be reconstructed from Sozom. III. 8, and Athanas. apolog.
0. Arian. 25 — 35.) Fourthly, we have evidence of Rome's position also in Julius'
epistle to the Orientals (Athanas. 1. c); fifthly, in Canons 3 and 5 of the Synod
of Sardica; and sixthly, in the request of the Antiochenes, or Jerome, to Damasus,
for a decision in the Antiochene schism (Ep. 16).
' Damasus' policy did not at once succeed in raising the prestige of the Roman
Chair in the East (see Rade, 1. c, p, 137 f.), but the manner in which Theodosius I.
at first decided the Arian controversy there, did. " Cunclos fopulos^ quos dementia:
nostres regit temperamentum^ in tali volumus religione versari^ quam divinum
Petrum afostolum tradidisse Romanis religiousque ad nunc ab ipso insinuate
declarat" etc. Besides, the new style adopted by Damasus in his letter to the
Oriental Bishops (Theodoret H. E. V. 10) was not without effect in the East. He
calls them "sons" instead of my "brethren,'' and he no longer speaks, like
my
other Bishops, as commissioned by the Synod though the question at issue was —
—
a decision of the Synod or as representing the Western Church. On the contrary,
he addresses them in virtue of the authority of his " Apostolic Chair," which he
connects solely with Peter and without any reference to Paul. "The first rank is
due to the Holy Church, in which the Holy Apostle had his seat, and taught
how we should fitly guide the helm which we have undertaken to control." Rade
has, besides, here rightly conjectured (p. 136) that Jerome had a share in this letter,
which did a great deal to raise the influence of the Roman Chair in the East.
15
226 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. hi.
observer and arbiter, which the Roman Bishop was able to play
in the Christological controversies, made it possible for him to
maintain a time the lofty position he had won.
for ' (On the
of the Alexandrian Bishops, Athanasius, Peter, etc.,
aspirations
and the successful opposition to them by Leo, see chap. IX.)
There can be no doubt that even in the eyes of the Orientals
there attached to the Roman Bishop a special something, which
was wanting to all the rest,a nimbus which conferred upon
him a peculiar authority. ^ Yet this nimbus was not sufficiently
• From and after Siricius I., the Roman Bishops maintained that it was their
province to care for Churches (Constant., p. 659. Ep. 6, ch. i). On the relation
all
of Leo I. to the East, and to the fourth Council, see Langen, 1. c. II., pp. 10 f., 50 ff.
The phrase "our fatherly solicitude" occurs frequently even in the letters of his
predecessors to the East. The appeal of Cyril to Coelestine is very important in
its bearing on the dignity of the Roman Chair compare the language of the
;
2 In the v^^ork "Der Papst und das Concil von Janus" (1869), p. 93, we find
this "In the writings of the doctors of the Greek Church, Eusebius,
passage.
Athanasius, Basil the Great, the two Gregorys, and Epiphanius, not a word is to
be found of peculiar pregrogatives being assigned to a Roman Bishop. Chrysostom,
the most prolific of the Greek Fathers, is absolutely silent on the point, and so also
are the two Cyrils. Basil (Opp. ed. Bened. III. 301, Ep. 239 and 214) has expressed
his contempt for the writings of the Popes in the strongest terms [in the affairs of
Marcellus] these proud and conceited westerns, who would only fortify heresy
: '
'
even if their letters descended from heaven, he would not accept them." It is true
that, seeing the now wide-spread view of the apostolic succession of all Bishops,
the prestige of the Roman Bishop is hardly perceptible in the East at the be-
ginning of the fourth century, and that he had to fight, i.e., to wrest for himself
the position which had formerly belonged to the Roman Church. Therefore the
testimonies to a. special dignity being possessed by the Roman Bishops in the East
in the fourth century are in fact comparatively scanty. But they are not wanting
see, e.^.. Greg. Naz., Carmen de vita sua T. II., p. 9, and Chrysostom, Ep. ad
—
Innocent I. and from A.D. 380 this dignity bulked more largely in the eyes of
Orientals, though indeed, without receiving a definite and fixed meaning. Very
characteristic in this respect are the Church Histories of Socrates and Sozomen,
who on this point are free from partiality, and reflect the universal opinion. But
it does not occur to them to doubt that the Roman Bishop had a special authority
and a unique relation to the whole Church (see, e.g., Socrat. II. 8, 15, 17; Soz.
III. 8 ; also Theodoret's letter to Leo I.). Instructive here are the collections of Leo
AUatius and in the Innsbrucker Theol. Ztschr., 1877, p. 662 f. see also three ;
treatises by the Abbe Martin " Saint Pierre, sa venue et son martyre a Rome,"
:
in the Rev. des quest, historiq., 1873 (principally from oriental sources) ; "S.Pierre
et S. Paul dans I'^glise Nestorienne," Paris, 1875; "S. Pierre et le Rationalisme
devant les eglises orientales," Amiens, 1876. These discussions, though in part un-
critical, are very full of matter. Matt, XVI. 18, John XXI. 18, were undoubtedly
Chap, hi.] TRADITION 227
never referred in the East to the primacy of Rome (see Janus, p. 97). Still in any
case it is saying too little — even for the period about the year A.D. 380 — to
remark as Rade does (1. <.., p. 137). To the Orientals the Bishop of Rome was like
the rest, only, thanks to his situation, the natural representative of the Churches of
the western half of the Empire, acting, as it were, as correspondent in the name
of the Christians of the West.
• prestige of the Roman Bishop in the East was accordingly on the in-
The
crease from the beginning of the fourth till the middle of the fifth century, re-
mained at its height till about the time of Justinian, when, however, it lost its
practical importance, and then, apart from the events about A.D. 680 and the next
decades, slowly declined, yet without ever being wholly destroyed. The Roman
Chair was now held to be schismatic; if not that, it would still have been the
first. Undoubtedly there was a strong inclination in later times to oppose it by
advancing the see of Jerusalem, the seat of James, but it was not possible to gain
any confidence in the claim of the latter to the first place. See on the criticism
of the papacy by the Greeks, Pichler, Gesch. der kirchl. Trennung zwischen Or.
u. Occ, 1864; Hergenrother, Photius, 3 Vols. 1867 ff Gass, Symbolik, p. 2l6fr. ;
Kattenbusch, 1. c, pp. 79 —
124. It was a settled doctrine of the Church in the East,
that the Church has no visible head.
2 The terms Tvpavvii and Svvaa-Teia are first used, so far as I know, in reference
to Antioch, z.c, against Paul of Samos. (Eus. H.E. VII. 30), after Origen had already
complained of the ambition of the Great Bishops. Socrates has expressed himself
very frankly about this matter.
228 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. hi.
authority never defined, but the essential equality of all Bishops was steadily main-
tained in the East and the latest development of the Greek Church, z.«., its dis-
;
ruption into perfectly independent National Churches, has thrown overboard the
whole 'Constitution of the Patriarchate', which in all ages was more a matter of
assertion than reality. The Bishop of Alexandria, undoubtedly, nearly succeeded
in becoming in the fifth century supreme Bishop of the East, but Leo and Pul-
cheria overthrew him. Kattenbusch (1. c. p. 357 ff.) furnishes further details as
to the "five Patriarchs as symbolical figures." Has the Patriarchate of Rome come
to an end in the view of the Greek Church? In the abstract, no; in the concrete,
yes.
2 See above, p. 215 f. Augustine gives utterance to a vei-y remarkable statement
in De bapt. c. Donat. II., 4, 5 " Quomodo potuit ista res (the baptism by heretics)
:
Accordingly, only a matter which had already become ripe for decision through
frequent deliberations could be submitted to and decided by a Council.
Chap, ih.] TRADITION 229
offence. How far they did is showii by the history of the dog-
matic controversies. Above all, the unbiblical catch-word 'con-
substantial' ('Ojaaouir/o?), for a time directly rejected by the
Church, won acceptance under great difficulties, even
only
among those who had little or no objection to the cause it
represented. These formulas had to be proved in some way or
other to have been anciently held. For was of the 'OiAooutiioq it
fact. As the word gradually made good its ground, the Coun-
cil lay far enough in the past to be itself regarded as belong-
in Reuter, Ztschr. f.K.-Gesch. V., p. 363 ff. But if " faith " is itself a doctrine,
where does it cease and the doctrine begin? Besides the excuse of want of ac-
curacy, which, indeed, involves censure, that of a7rAoyo"Tgpov'yey/)fl!4'^''*''^^s asserted.
It no fault. Thus Athanasius writes (De Synod. 45) of the Fathers who
involved
in A.D. 268 rejected the term 'Oiioova-ioQ at Antioch Trspi rij? roS vi'oS isor^TO^
:
divinity of the Son, so long as that of the Father was not recognised, or to impose
—
upon the former if we may use such a bold expression that of the Spirit, while —
it (viz., the divinity of the Son) was not accepted." We may in this passage study
So, above all, Augustine, who excused Cyprian in this way, and further, set
'
up the general rule that as long as no unequivocal decisions had been giveii in a
question, the bond of unity was to be maintained among the dissentient Bishops
(De bapt. u. Donat. II. 4, 5). Augustine thus admitted that ecclesiastical tradition
did not at every moment solve all questions pending in the Church. The Donatist
and Pelagian controversy roused Western theologians to reflect on tradition. One
fruit of this reflection was the Commonitorium of Vincentius of Lerinum, unique,
because it deals professedly with the question of tradition. The arguments are
decisive of Western views, but the book did not extend its influence into the East;
there the ideas about tradition remained characteristically indefinite. A short analy-
sis of the Commonitorium is necessary. Let it be noticed that it is ultimately
aimed at Augustine's doctrine of grace and predestination, but that a large part
of the rules are taken from that theologian.
After a preface, in which Vincentius remarks that he is only sketching out what
he had received from the past, he sets side by side the two foundations of the
Chap, iti.] TRADITION 23
The former is sufficient by itself, but it requires the latter for its conect explana-
tion (2). The latter embraces what had been believed everywhere^ at all ti7nes, s.-ai
by all—ox^ at least, by almost all priests and doctors (3). Accordingly, the following
criteria were to be applied: (a) When a section of the Church renounced the
communion of the Catholic faith, the Christian followed the great communion;
(b) when a heresy threatened danger to the whole Church, he held by antiquity,
"which, certainly, could not now be seduced"; (c) when he came upon heresy in
antiquity itself, in a few men, or in a city or province, he followed the decision
of a General Council; (d) if no such Council had spoken, he examined and compared
—
the orthodox doctors and retained what not two, or three but all, had alike —
taught clearly, frequently, and persistently, in one and the same sense (4). These
rules are illustrated by reference to the dangers, which had threatened the Church
—
from Douatism, Arianism, and the Anabaptists (5 10). At this point, however,
it is conceded that orthodox teachers might have and had fallen into error on
one point; nevertheless they were blessed, but hell received the Epigoni, who, in
order to start a, heresy, took hold of the writings of one or other of the ancients
(as the Donatists did of Cyprian's) which were composed in obscure language,
and which, owing to the obscurity prevailing in them, seemed to coincide with
their teaching, so that the views brought forward by these heretics bore not to
have been maintained for the first time and exclusively by them. Such people
were like Ham in uncovering the shame of their father (11). After this excursus
the author adduces proofs from Paul's Epistles, that changes in the creed, in short,
—
any kind of innovation, constituted the worst evil (12 14). In order to prove and
tempt his own, God had permitted teachers belonging to the Church, and there-
fore not foisted in from without, to essay the setting up of new tenets in the
Church; examples are taken from Nestorius, Photinus, and ApoUinaris their heresy ;
spent on that proof. Yet even that is perhaps saying too much.
with expanded with time, and developed more subtly with age yet every-
years, ;
thing remains really what it was, no innovation takes place, for a single novelty
—
would destroy everything (29 31). The Church is intent only on clearness, light,
a more subtle differentiation and invigoration of doctrine. What then did it ever
seek to attain by the decrees of Councils, except that simple belief should become
more definite, supine preaching be rendered more urgent, and that a wholly in-
dolent conduct of affairs should give place to a correspondingly anxious perform-
ance of duty ? "Hoc inquam semper neque quidquam praeterea, hEereticorum novitati
bus excitata [that then is admitted], conciliorum suorum decretis catholica perfecit
ecclesia, nisi ut quod prius a majoribus sola tradilione susceperat, hoc deinde pos-
teris etiam per scripturje chirographum consignaret, magnam rerum summam paucis
litteris comprehendendo et flerumque propter intelligeniim lucent non novuvi fidei
sensum novce appellationis proprietate signando" (32). As compared with this ad-
mission, the author attacks all the more vigorously the wicked verbal innovations '
practised by all heretics (33, 34). But it was still more necessary to be on one's
guard when heretics appealed to Scripture as e.g., the Arians did to predicates —
taken from the Bible against the term 0{J.ooi(no^ for they were the real wolves'
—
in sheeps' clothing, sons of the devil, for the devil also quoted the Bible (35 — 37).
All that meet their exposition and obtain the correct sense, was
was necessary to
simply to apply the criteria given in ch. 4. (38). The last of these was the search
for the concordant views of many and great teachers, when a Council had not
yet decided the question concerned. Then follows a particular instruction which
betrays very clearly the uncertainty of that citerion. It was to be applied, not to
every unimportant question, but only, at least for the most part only, in the case
of the rule of faith; it was, further, only to be used when heresies had just arisen,
"before they had time to falsify the standards of the ancient creed, before they
could by a wider diffusion of the poison adulterate the writings of the forefathers.
Heresies already circulated and deeply rooted were not to be attacked in this
way, because in the long lapse of time they had had sufficient opportunity to pur-
loin the truth ''
( !
!
). Christians must try to refute these ancient heresies by the
authority of Scripture alone — accordingly the principle of tradition is declai-ed in-
solvent; or they must simply be avoided as having been already condemned. But
even the principle of the consensus of the teachers is to be used with the greatest
caution; it is strictly guarded; it is only of weight when, as it were, a whole
Council of doctors can be cited (39). But in that case no one is entitled to dis-
regard it, and teachers' ranked by Paul
for the ancient doctors are the 'prophets
next "to the and described by him as presented to the Church by God.
Apostles,
He who despises them despises God. We must cling to the agreement of the holy
Churches, which are holy because they continue in the communion of the faith (40).
In the so-called second Commonitorium (ch. 41 43) there is first a recapitulation —
in which the sufficiency of Scripture as source of truth is once more emphasised.
Chap, in.] THE CHURCH 233
the authority for, the truth; and tradition is the Church itself,
'
3. T/ie Church.
Perhaps the most notable feature in the whole of Vincentius' exposition is that
the Bishops as such— apart from the Council play absolutely no part, and that, —
in particular, no reference is made to their Apostolic succession as sharing in the
proof of doctrine. The ancient "teachers" are the court of appeal. We see tliat
Cyprian's influence was not so far-reaching, even in the West, as one should have
supposed. The proof of tradition was not really based on the hierarchy.
' Compare the statements of Kattenbusch, I.e., p. 330 ff. The East never arrived
at a definite theory of the nature and features of the Church.
2 On this attribute see Vol. II., p, 75, 11. i. From the middle of the fourth
century the clause "xa< [e<?] ft/av xyi'av Kx$o^ixiiv ixKAtfa-iccv" must have stood in
the Symbols of by far the most of the provincial Churches in the East. Tlie E/5
because they had crucified the Saviour, he built out of the heathen
a second Church, on which his favour rests that is the Church ;
prehends and leads to the true worship of God all men with-
out respect of class, is able to cure all sins in soul and body,
and possesses in its midst all virtues and all conceivable gifts
of grace.
These utterances of Cyril concerning the Church contain the
^
quintessence ofall that has ever been said of it by the Greeks.
' There are very numerous instances of this, and most of all in the influential
Chrysostom. Epiphanius' contention in the Expos, fid. cathol., ch. 3 is worthy of
notice: 'O ©eo;, h'xi vmrav, iiij,7v ©eo? vTTcifxii to7? sk t^i; ayixi; exxKifirioK;
7£vvi)fle7o-/v. This Jewish Christian regarded the Church as Israel, aod its God as
3 Gass, 1. c, p. 205 f.
1 Cyril of Alexandria frequently connects the Church with the incarnation and
the Eucharist; but even he has not gone beyond the horailetic and edifying point
of view.
" Religious truth, however, really embraced all philosophy, see Anastasius Sin.,
ViiE dux (Migne, Patrol., Vol. 8g, p. 76 sq.): 'Op^oJo|/a! eo-tiv aiJ/euJ^c ^te/ij @iov
nat KTia-sajt; tjT(^A)^4//$ j) 'hvota 'jrspi Trtivruv aAjjflj^^, »} §6%<x ruv '6vTa)v Koc^aTrep etertv,
3 Damalas has given a very pregnant summary of the old Patristic conception
'H opSdSo^oi; Trla-rif (1877) p. 3 : ^ JJ %iint(i aL/Ts) iXc, rijV (j-ixv dy/xv xxiof^ixifj xxi
aTTOiTTOMxiiv ixx^ijtr/av irrri 'jrsTroiOi^a-ig, on avrif ktrrtv 6 (popsv^ tviq 6sia^ ^aptToi;
Tii^ svS€tKVV(xsvii^ si^ ^vo Ttva, wpMTOv '6ti xvt^ £(7riv 6 a^aviaa-TOQ St^ao-xcx?^Oi; rif?
Xpto'Tioivtx^c; a?.ij&sia^ xai Sevrspov d yv^trto^ ruv {^va-r)^piaiv oikov6iioq.
* See Kattenbusch, 1. c, pp. 346 ff., 357 ff., 393 ff.
Chap, hi.] THE CHURCH ,237
r
1 See Vol. III. 4 — 6, VI. 4; also the Homily on the day of his ordination as
priest, Montfaucon I., p. 436 sq.
God" " Homoousios ", "Catholic" etc. The Monophysites especially made great
efforts to introduce their catch-words into older writers. Even to-day the Armenians
are not to be trusted.
3 Heretics and Schismatics were more and more identified; see the so-called
6th Canon of Constantinople, A.D. 381 (it really dates from A.D. 382) aipsTixovi; :
^iyofxev roui re aahcu rvii ixKhyiirlxi a7ro«;^/Jt/%fl£'vra5 Kui Tot/5 fiirii roanx, t!<))'
238 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. in.
1 The question whether the holiness of Christians was founded on being members
in the Church — initiation into it — or depended on personal virtue was not decided
in the East, but was never even definitely put. The cause of this vagueness existed
it
Literature. —Jacobi,
Die kirchliche Lehre von der Tradition u.
heil. Schrift,1847. Holtzmann, Kanon u. Tradition,
Part I.,
1 See, e.g., Elias of Nisibis, Proof of the truth of the faith (Ed. by Horst, 1886,
p. 112 ff.).
240 J4IST0RY OF DOGMA [Chap. hi.
—
A. Presuppositions of the Doctrine of Redemption,
or Natural Theology.
"Natural Theology" did not pass through any very thorough-
going development in the Greek Church; but it reveals differ-
ences, according as Aristotelianism or Neoplatonism prevailed.
By Natural Theology we are to understand the complex of
conceptions that, according to the view then held, formed the
self-evidentand certain contents of the human mind, which was
only held to be more or less darkened (see Chap. II.). These
conceptions, however, arose in fact historically, and corresponded
to the degree of culture at which the ancient world had arrived,
especially through the work of the Greek Philosophers. We
can divide them appropriately into doctrines concerning God
and concerning man. But changes also took place in pro-
portion to the growing influence exerted on these conceptions
by the words of the Bible literally understood. Nevertheless
the fundamental features remained in force; yet they were dis-
placed and confused by foreign material during the period
from Origen to John of Damascus.
A.— PRESUPPOSITION OF DOCTRINE OF REDEMP-
TION OR NATURAL THEOLOGY.
CHAPTER IV.
3 — 15, but the thought is also suggested elsewhere in his writings, e.g., the Confessions.
3 In this the great majority of the Fathers were agreed. Augustine describes (De
doctr. I. 6) tlie impossibility of declaring God, in a way that coincides word for
word with the tenets of the Basilidians (Hippol., Philos. VII. 20). Augustine writes
"Diximusne aliquid et sonuimus aliquid dignum deo? Immo vero nihil me aliud
quam dicere voluisse sentio; si autem dixi, non hoc est quod dicere volui. Hoc
unde scio, nisi quia deus ineffabilis est, quod autem a me dictum est, si ineffabile
Chap, iv.] THE DOCTRINE OF GOD 243
esset, dictum non esset? Ac per hoc ne ineffabilis quidem dicendus est deuS) quia
et hoc cum dicitur, aliquid dicitur. Et fit nescio quae pugna verborum, quoniam
si illud est ineffabile, quod dici non potest, non quod vel ineffabile
est ineffabile,
dici potest." Basilides: "Ea-ri yasp, (p^a-iv, Ixelvo oux «tAim5 appsjTOv, i bvoiiX^STxr
'i^fp^TOV yoGy aitro x^ifAovjuev, sKsivo J^ ov^i ^ppijTOv jcixt ykp to ovS" xfipi^TOv ova
'dffyiTOv cvoiid^srai, aAA^ Va-ri, tptfiriv, inrepmai ffavros bv6iiaT0i; ovoiia^oiihov. Men
were therefore at the point already reached by Basilides' followers in the second
century. Even Catechumens were taught this ; see Cyril, Cat. VI., ,ch. 2: ov ri t'i
ha-Ti @siQ h%viyoviJt.i^a . .. hv roi( Tepi @£oS iJ.£yii^>i yviHa-ii; ro rifv zyvaa-ixv 6iJ.oAoys7v.
Similar teaching is very frequent in Plotinus. In the Vita Plot, of Porphyry, ch. 23,
the supreme God is thus defined: S @£0i 6 {jl^ts liopipfjv ij-viti tivx liicnt 'ix'»''>
' The Dogmatics of John of Damascus begin with John I. 18, Matt. XI. 17,
and I Cor. II. 11.
In taking up this position they had of course to leave the nature of God out
of the question, and to confine themselves to his will, as it had been clearly
manifested in creation, and the preaching of the truth by the Logos. But this to
them was no limitation; for they only attached importance in the first place to
the knowledge of the divine will, and secondly to the renewed submission of men
to the sovereignty of the divine will : (not to participation in the divine nature,
unless in so far as that in the original equipment of man;
was already involved
see Socrates IV. 7; Epiph. H. LXXVI.
and the counter-observations of the 4,
Cappadocians). Their expositions are exceded by the Areopagite's completely Neo-
platonic theology, from which, meanwhile,. Augustine in one of his lines of thought
was not far removed. The Areopagite already adopted the position that ruled for
more than a thousand years, in which the contention that God by reason of his —
splendour— was absolutely unknowable, was balanced by the mystical assumption
of a sensuous, suprasensuous knowableness in virtue of the fusion of the mind of
244 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. iv.
via negattonis; see his Letters, the work, De divinis nominibus, and the beginning
of the tractate, De mystica theologia. The importance of John of Damascus consists
for posterity in his having united the Neoplatonic and Aristotelian elements in his
doctrine of God; see De fide orthod. I. 1—4.
Chap, iv.] THE DOCTRINE OF GOD 245
taught that prescience was consequent to the event perceived beforehand. But
Augustine was not perfectly satisfied with this idea. He deepened it through the
thought that the sum of all that happened was before God in an eternal now.
2 But of this the saying of Gregory of Nyssa is true (TSfi ^mX- " «vai7Ta5"
Oehler, p. 92): TIuvt6% aya&oi iTTBKSiva ij hia <pva-tg, ro Se ixyaSov ccyz^Si <pi?iOv
dsv £iQ Eavrov SsxQixsvv]. "E%u 51 avrij^ ouSsv^ '6ti (j.ij vi Kxy-tix. [iSvi^, ^rt^^ tcxv
7rxfaSa%ov p, h tm /i^ slvxi ro iliixi 'ixii. oh yxf 'i-Khvi tic, so-ti xxxlxi; yhso-iq, si
fiij Vi Tov 'ovTOQ a-TEpyjtriQ, To §s xvptajq "fiv ^ rov xyx6ov (^va-tt; etrriv S ovv |v tw
'ovT/ ovK 'itTTiVt ev TW fj,^
slvat 5ravT«? Ittiv,
246 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. iv.
1 See Leopold Schmidt, Die Ethik der alten Griechen, 2 Vols., 1882; further,
Ritschl in the Th. L. Z. 1883, Col. 6 f.
§ 3. The Cosmology.
' In this view — in the Middle Ages — God appears rather as the strictly Just,
2 Origen held that the present world was only a place of punishment and
purification. This view, which approximated very closely to the old Gnostic idea,
was rejected; but the conception remained of an upper world of spirits, of which
our world was the materialised copy. Where this conception was potent, a con-
siderable part of the feeling which possessed Origen (after Plato) as he looked at
our world must have endured. It was never wanting among the orthodox Fathers,
and the Greeks of to-day have not lost it. "The world is a whole, but divided
into two spheres of which the higher is the necessary prius and type of the lower "
that is still the Greek view (see Gass, Symbolik, p. 143 f.). "God first and by
his mere thought evoked out of non-existence all heavenly powers to exhibit his
glory, and this intelligible world {xSa-iMf voEprf?) is the expression of undisturbed
harmony and obedient service." Man belongs to both worlds. The conception,
as expounded by the Areopagite and established by John of Damascus (De fide
—
orthod. II 2 -12), that the world was created in successive stages, has not the
importance of a dogma, but it has that of a wide-spread theologoumenon. It is
Neoplatonic and Gnostic, and its publication and recognition show that the dis-
satisfaction felt by Origen with the account of the creation in Gen. I. was con-
stantly shared by others. Men felt a living interest, not in the way plants, fishes,
and birds came into being, but in the emanation of the spiritual from the Deity
at the head of creation down to man. Therefore we have the x6iriJ.oi voif6Q, the
intelligible world, whose most characteristic feature consisted in its
(3) gradations
{iMxotrij.via-sii), which again fell into (three) orders, down to archangels .tnd angels.
(See Dionys. De divina hierarch. 6 sq., and John of Damascus, I.e., ch. Ill: vxa-civi
isohoyla Tx( olpxviovi; oi/a-iai; ivvex ksk?:iixi. nxureci; 6 Qs'ioi; /epoTe/fa'Ti/; e;; t/jei;
xtpopiXei TpiaSiKXQ Sixxoi7iJ.vi(7ii(;^ Seraphim, Cherubim, thrones, dominions, powers,
forces, principalities, archangels, and angels. We find a step in this direction as
early as theApp. Constit. VII. 35). In the creation, the system of spiritual powers
was from above downwards; while in sanctification by the mysteries, it was
built
necessary to ascend the same series. The significant point was the union of the
Chap, iv.] THE DOCTRINE OF GOD 249
conception of creatioa with tlie system of the cultiis, or, better, the scheme which
embodied the idea of creation in accordance with the line of progress laid down
for asceticism and sanctification. This was retained by Greek theology in spite
of all its disavowal of Origen, Neoplatonism, and Gnosticism. But even in the
region of the material, incomparably gi-eater interest was talien in warmth, cold,
moistm-e, drought, in fire, air, earth, and water, in the four vital humours, than in
the childish elements which the O. T. narrative of creation takes into account.
Yet the whole was included under the title of the 'work of the six days', and the
allegories of Origen were, in theory, rejected. The exegesis of Gen. I. became the
doctoral problem proper among the Greek Fathers. The most important wrote
works on the Hexaemeron among them that of Johannes Philoponus is scientific-
;
ally the most advanced {vefi y.o<j-no7roiiix(); it is dependent, not on Platonism, but
on Aristotle, though it also opposes the latter.
250 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. iv.
5 See Vol. v., for the extent and form in which Augustine held such views.
Chap. IV.] THE DOCTRINE OF GOD 25 I
Christ, the sign of the cross, and the Sacraments. As regards the
'
> There undoubtedly existed, even in the earliest time, a view which conjoined
the with God, and thus made them also objects of worship, or, included
angels
them in the fiiies^ qiice creditiir. We may here perhaps recall even i Tim. V. 21:
SiXfxcepTvpoiJiat evuTtov rov @eov zai Xpt<7Tov It^trov xat tuv eK^eKrav ayyeAiuv. We
can at any rate refer to Justin., Apol I. 6 (We worship God) xai rov Tap' uvtoS
:
vidv . text
. Tov ruv a^?^(av iTOfj-svav kxi £^o{zoiovi^svuv ayaSav ayye^uv a-rpaT6v.
.
2 This thought is undoubtedly extremely ancient, but at the earlier date it only
existed in the outer circle of the faith.
3 It had long — as early as the fourth century — been on the way see the mirac-
;
ulous oratories of St. Michael; Sozom. II. 3, Theodoret on Coloss. T. Ill, p. 355 ff.
••
On the devil, " the prince of the ranks encircling the earth," see the exposi-
tion by John of Dam., De The
fide orthod. II. 4. devil and the demons of their
own free will turned away unnaturally from God,
Chap, iv.] THE DOCTRINE OF GOD 253
Clement of Alex.; see Strom. VI. 13, 107, and other passages.
Clement makes three dwellings in heaven correspond on one side to
the divisions of angels, and, again, to the threefold hierarchy on
earth. On the spread of this form of theosophy among the Syrian
Monophysite monks, see Frothingham, Stephen bar Sudaih, 1886.
2 54 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. iv.
§ I . Introductory
§ 2. The Anthropology.
1 Augustine's exposition in Ep. CCV. 19, was ultimately the opinion of most
of the Greek Fathers, so far as they were not completely devoted to Neoplatonism.
" Vis etiam per me scire, uti-um dei flatus ille in Adam idem ipse sit anima. Bre-
viter respondeo, aut ipse est aut ipso anima facta est. Sed si ipse est., actus est f . .
In hac enim quEestione maxima cavendum est, ne aiiima non a deo facta natura,
Chap, v.] THE DOCTRINE OF MAN 259
body was a prison of the soul, was contrasted with the other,
also ancient, that man was rather a microcosm, having received
parts from the two created worlds, the upper and under. ' But
this conception, theonly one which contained a coherent theory
of equal value formally with the doctrine of Origen, could not
fail remain a mere theory, for the ethics corresponding to
to
it, ethical ideal, were not supported by the final aims of
or its
sed ipsius del substantia tamquam unigenitus filius, quod est verbum eius, aut aliqua
eius particula esse tamquam ilia natura atque substantia, qua deus est
credatur,
quidquid est, commutabilis esse possit quod esse animam nemo non sentit, qui
:
se animam habere sentit." But the thought which underlay the last saying of the
dying Plotinus (Porphyr., Vita Plot., ch. 2) : 'rriipiSiixi to Iv fiiiiv ieiov aviyeiv a-po;
TO iv TM Tnxvri hlov, was not entirely surmounted by many Greek Fathers.
1 Therefore the great controversy lasting for centuries, whether the skins with
which God clothed Adam and Eve were real skins, or bodies. He who agreed with
Origen taught the latter; he who looked on man. as a microcosm, the former. Yet
here also there were composite forms: e.g., the skin meant only the fleshly body.
"Scriptural proofs in support of the pre-existence of souls were not wanting:
see John IX. 2. Jerome held to the doctrine for a time. Even Augustine was un-
certain, and up to the time of Gregory the Great its flat rejection had not been
determined on in the West (see Kp. VII, 53).
26o HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. v.
it the soul was begotten along with the body. Its extreme
opposite was Origen's idea of pre-existence which had still many
adherents in the fourth century, but more and more into
fell
that God was ever creating souls and planting them in the
embryos. The East contented itself with disowning Origen's
theory. Augustine, the greatest theologian of the West, was
unable to come to any fixed view regarding the origin of the soul.
The different views of the Fathers are further reflected in
the different conceptions of the image of God in man. Religious
and moral speculation were to be harmonised at this point;
for the former was, indeed, never wholly wanting. Apart from
such theologians as saw the image of God, somehow or other,
even in the human figure, almost all were convinced that it
consisted in reason and freedom. But with this it was impossible
to remain perfectly satisfied, since man was still able to break
away from God, so as in fact to become unlike him, and to die.
On the other hand, theologians were certain that goodness and
moral purity never could be innate. In order to solve the
problem, different methods were adopted. Some abandoned
the premise that the possession of the divine image was
inalienable, and maintained that as it resided in the spirit that
had been bestowed it could be completely lost through sinful
sensuousness. The spirit returned to God, and the man relapsed
to the level of the beasts. But this solution seemed unsatis-
factory, was necessary, in spite of it, to retain the
because it
See here even the Latins. Ambrosius learned the combination, as carried out by
>
him in his De officiis, from the Cappadocians see also the remarkable opening
;
Chap, v.] THE DOCTRINE OF MAN 263
§ 3. Ethics. Sin.
It. was recognised by all the Fathers that the human race
had turned from the good and thus degenerated from its origin,
i.e., — according to the view of the majority — from Adam. This
universality of sin was throughout explained, not from an innate
wicked power in man impelling him necessarily to sin, nor from
matter in itself, still less from complicity on the part of the
Deity. Nor, on the other hand, was it as a rule ascribed to
'
decorem universi."
2 Sin was described as something negative not only by Augustine, but by all
thinking Greeks before him. Their conception was undoubtedly based on aphilo-
264 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. v.
Both drove man from God. But in spite of this view the
assumption was retained of unaltered freedom. If on the one
hand stress was laid on sensuousness being a natural endow-
ment of man, the unnaturalness of wickedness was emphasised
on the other, and thus bare freedom received a closer relation
to goodness, which, of course, was conceived as repressed by
sin. The good was the natural, but, again, in view of man's
sensuousness, unnatural evil was also natural to him. The essence
of sin, since wickedness was held to be something purely nega-
tive, was universally seen in alienation from God, being and
goodness; but all that this meant positively was that man had
subordinated his will to his sensuousness, and thereby lost the
feehng, desire, and knowledge of the divine. The consequences
of sin were held to be the following: First, by the majority,
the universal mortality which had prevailed from Adam, or the
loss of the true Ufe secondly, the obscuration of the know-
;
'
sophical view that God was not only the originator of being, but really the sole
being. On the other hand, a distinction was made between the eternal being and
the creaturely, which came from God.
1 The Antiochenes thought differently (see under), and so did the author of the
App. Const., who is exceedingly lax in his views; see, e.g.^ V. 7, p. 132 (Ed.
Lagarde). The latter regards death as an original divine institution, which makes
it possible for God to punish or reward. The resurrection was due to the rational
Supplement. — The
view taken by Irenseus and Tertullian of
the fundamental importance of the first Fall for the whole future
tain rewards alone find a place; for his nature requires that he
should be independent in all his movements, nay, these only
possess any value through such independence. The Deity stands
at the and the close of the history of free men as
beginning
the power that creates and rewards. But the intervening space
is not occupied by the Deity himself in order to govern man,
and to preserve his allegiance. On the contrary, man has to
deal solely with divine knowledge and rules in accordance with
Chap, v.] THE DOCTRINE OF MAN 267
' We perceive the Greek conception most clearly from the law in Apost. Const.
VI. 19 —24. The, section begins with the words: yi/iJuTs; yap ©eov J(« 'liJo-oC Xpfa-xoC
KOii T^v a-vi^Traa-av aurov otxovoi^tav apx^hv ygyevjj^xgvj^v, tjTi SsSaixs vdfiov XTr^^ovv
stQ ^o^5etav tov i^vo-ikov KSi^apov, tTbtr^ptov, xytov^ ev ^ Kxi To'tSiov'Svofxa hyxaredsTO.
The Decalogue is meant; it was given to the nation before its revolt, and God
had no intention of adding sacrificial regulations, but tolerated sacrifices. After the
revolt (of the he himself, however, gave the ceremonial law: "He
golden calf)
bound the people with irremovable fetters, and imposed heavy burdens and a
hard yoke upon them, that they might abandon idolatry and turn again to that
law which God had implanted by nature in all men" (ch. XX,). These "branding
irons, lancets, and medicines" were, however, only for the sick. Christians who
voluntarily believed in one God were delivered by him, above all, from the sacri-
ficial service. Christ has fulfilled {xvpuraq) the law, but removed the additions,
"if not all, yet the more irksome"; this is the opposite of TertuUian's opinion.
He restored man's right of self-determination, and in doing so confirmed the
natural law {tov (puirixov v6iJ.ov l^s^xluo-si). More rigorous conditions ai'e only
268 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. v.
ingly agreed that, although men are sinners, they become just
in the sight of God through virtue and penitence, and redemp-
tion to eternal life through Christ can only benefit such as have
acquired this righteousness through their independent efforts.
The sacraments initiated men into this effort to obtain virtue,
and they had also an indescribable influence upon it. But
personal fulfilment of the law was still something thoroughly
independent. Finally, it followed from this moral view, that it
not say more.The Deity had come down to earth, God had
become man, and that in the historical Jesus faith in this —
stupendous fact, "the newest of the new, nay, the only new
thing under the sun," limited all rationalism. It imperatively
demanded the investigation, on the one hand, of the ground
and cause, on the other, of the fruit and blessing, of this divine
dispensation. was necessary to find the
It relation of the
latter to the mystery and horror of death. It was indeed
impossible to make the "naturalness" of death credible; for
all nature, and lower, rebelled against it. And the
higher
consciousness of a capacity for perfect knowledge and goodness
underlay in practical life the sense of incapacity. Hence the
conviction that man must be redeemed, and through Jesus
Christ is redeemed. The doctrines of innate freedom, the law,
and the independent achievement of virtue were not abandoned
non solum nos Cliristianos factos esse, sed Christum . . . aclmiramiui gaudete
Christus fecti sumus."
1 Platonists of Alex., 1886, p. 51 f.) has also correctly
Bigg (The Christian
perceived this; he speaking of the attitude of Clement and of the Alexandrians
is
generally: "On one side Rationalist, on another Mystic." " Though there is in them
a, strong vein of Common Sense or Rationalism, they were not less sensible of the
mystic supernatural side of the religious life than Irenaeus. The difference is that
with them the mystical grows out of the rational,"
2/2 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. v.
good for me to cleave to God " (Mihi adhaerere deo bonum est).
exercise of free will, devotes himself to the world, lets himself be seduced by its
pleasures, or revels in dissipations ? God only sends his help to him who renounces
worldly pleasures, and preserves himself completely from the snares and traps of
the sensuous world," etc. Here we see that the contrast between nature and grace
was not so seriously meant. The same is the case with "law and gospel." No
Greek Father was able to regard these as contrasted in the same way as we see
them in the writings of Paul and Augustine.
2 On its authenticity, see the next chapter.
Chap, v.] VIEWS OF ATHANASIUS 2/3
and after the fall as a contrast. That was not the characteristic
view of Athanasius, ' as is shown by other arguments in the
same writing, and the rest of the tractates. He contemplates
not a loss once for all, but a gradual enfeeblement. Mankind
has more and more lost, from generation to generation, the
consciousness i.e., through the darkening of his mind.
of God,
That which above burdened humanity, however, was not sin,
all
'to become' because they are called sons, not by nature, but
by adoption; but he has employed the word 'begotten', because
they in any case have received the name of son The good- . . .
consist of all who have received the Word and have obtained
power from him to become For since by
children of God.
nature they are creatures, they can only become sons by receiv-
ing the spirit of the natural and true Son. In order that this
may happen the Word became flesh, that men might be made
capable of receiving the Deity. This conception can also be
found in the Prophet Malachi, who says: 'Did not one God
create you? Have you notone Father?' For here again he
all
they are modified to the effect that our sonship depends on the
Logos dwelling in us, i.e., it receives a cosmological basis (see
c. Arian. III. 10). In some passages it indeed looks as if the
Logos only dwelt in us in consequence of the incarnation (see
above and 1. c. IV. 22) but it is quite clear in others that
;
Literature. —See,
besides the works quoted of Atzberger and
Wendt, Mohler, Athanasius, I. p. 136 ff. Voigt, Athanasius,
p. 104 ff., and Ritschl, Rechtfertigung und Versohnung, 2 Ed.
Vol. I. p. 8 ff
—
Gregory of Nyssa. Gregory's theories also appear to be
(2)
the sun-loving eye turned ever of its own accord to the eternal
light, living on it, and interpreting it to the earthly world
to which it essentially belonged." But ' on the other hand,
though Gregory rejected Origen's theories of the pre-existence
of souls, the pre-temporal fall, and the world as a place of
punishment {Trsp) xxratT^eui^i; dvSpuTrcov, ch. 28, 29), regarding
them as Hellenic dogmas and therefore mythological, yet he
was dominated by the fundamental thought which led Origen
to the above view. The spiritual and the earthly and sen-
suous resisted each other. If man was, as Scripture says,
created in the image of God, ^ then he was a spiritual being,
and his being so constituted his nature (see I.e. ch. 16 18). —
Man was a self-determining, but, because created, a change-
able spirit, meant to share in all the blessings of God. So far
as he had a sensuous side, and was mortal, he was not an
1 See Catech. mag. 5, 6, and the work, Tripl ipu%. h. xvcurrai., as also xspt
KaraiTK. avSpuiv. 2 ff. 16. MoUer in HerzogR.-E., 2 Ed. Vol. V.,p. 401, and his work,
Gregorii Nyss. de natura hom. doctr. illustr. et cum Origeniana comparata, 1854.
2 Orat. I. T. 150: Kax' £ix6va '^x'" '^^ Aoy;xo? elvai kuS' oiMioxriv hi yhoiJ.cci
I., p.
h TM Xpia-TicivoQ yevefrStxi. The " image " cannot consist in the bodily. The latter
is at most a copy of the "image," see Trsp? xarao-K. avSpww. 8, 12. But the " image
itself implies that it can only really be completely produced by free self-determination
on the part of man. " If any compulsion obtained, the image would not be realised,"
(Catech. mag. 5).
278 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. v.
Gregory borders very closely upon them, not only in wsfi Karxiry.., but also
in other
writings. The fall does not, indeed, take the form of an event in the
experience of individual men actually to be found in : pre-existent state, but of a
kind of "intelligible collective deed of all humanity,"
3 See vsfi xxrao-K- avSpuTr. i6 — 18,
Chap, v.] VIEWS OF THEODORE 279
for all who, in virtue of their freedom, led a holy life, i.e.,
who lived as man did in Paradise before the Fall; for that
was possible to man even when on earth. In all this we must
remember that Gregory's hold on the traditional dependence on
Gen. I. — was very loose he does not speak of Adam, but always
III. :
of us. All men had the same freedom as Adam. All souls '
and death was introduced sin also being death from which — —
man in fact could not deliver himself. Nothing but the union
of God with humanity procured redemption. Redemption was,
in harmony with the speculations as to Adam, strictly objective,
Gregory here carries his speculation still further: God did not first create a
I
singleman, but the whole race in a previously fixed number; these collectively
composed only one nature. They vifere really one man, divided into a multiplicity.
Adam— that means all (xEp? ko!t«o-z. 16, 17, 22). In God's prescience the whole of
humanity was comprised in the first preparation,
—
Antiochenes was teleological -but there was an entire absence of
any religious view of sin. In this respect it was directly opposed
to Augustine's system.
According Theodore, ^ God's plan included from the
to
beginning two epochs (" Ki!irx(Trci(reii; "), the present and future
states of the world. The former was characterised by change-
ableness, temptation, and mortality, the latter by perfection,
immutability, and immortality. The new age only began with
the resurrection of the dead, its original starting-point being
the Son of God. Further, there was a
incarnation of the
spiritual and a sensuous. Man was composed of both, the
body having been created first, and the soul having then been
breathed into it. This is the opposite of Gregory of Nyssa's
view. Man was the connecting link between the two spheres;
he was designed to reveal the image of God in this world.
"Like a king, who, after building a great city and adorning
it with works of every kind, causes, when the whole is com-
pleted, a fine statue of himself to be erected, in which all the
inhabitants may gratefully revere the constructor, so the Creator
of the world, after he had elaborated his work, finally produced
man be his own image, and all creatures find in him their
to
centre,and thus contribute to the due glorification of God." Now
although man is equipped with all the powers of reason and
of will, j/ei, from the very nature of his present condition, he
is changeable, is defeated in the conflict, and is mortal. Not till
the new principle of life was imparted by means of Christ
2 See Kihn, Theodor von Mops., p. 171 ff. Also the examples partly taken
from Theodore's commentaries on Genesis, Job, and Paul's epistles (see Swete, Theodori
in epp. Pauli comment. 1880, 1881), partly from fragments of other writings of
Theodore; of. also Dorner, Theodori de imagine dei doctrina, 1844,
Chap. v.J VIEWS OF THEODORE 28
—
consequence of sin it was rather natural; but it was designed
to inspire man with as great a hatred of sin, as if the latter
were punished by death. Death, natural in itself, was a divine
means of education, and accordingly salutary. " God knew
that mortality would be beneficial to Adam, for if they had
been invested with immortality, men, when they sinned, would
have been exposed to eternal destruction." But even the per-
mission of sin was salutary, and formed part of the divine
plan of education. God gave a command, and thereby elicited
sin, in order that he might, like a loving Father, teach man
his freedom of choice and weakness. " Man was to learn that
while he was in a state of moral changeableness, he would not
be capable of sustaining an immortal existence. Therefore
death was announced to him as the penalty of disobedience,
although mortality was from the beginning an attribute of
human nature." No sin without a command, but also no
'
will die.'" Theodore quoted Ps. CIII. 15, and Rome. II. 6.
Against original sin he appealed to the case of saints like
Noah, Abraham, and Moses. If God had passed sentence of
death on all as the punishment of sin, he would not have made
Enoch immortal. Accordingly, Baptism did not, according to
Theodore, remove inherited sin, but initiated the believer into
sinless discipleship of Christ, and at the same time blotted out
the sins he had himself committed. In the former sense it had
its use even for children; for Baptism, like all grace emanating
Since God, "overflowing with goodness ", was not satisfied with
the contemplation of himself, but desired to have some one to
whom he could do good, he created the universe, angels, and
men. Even were immortal, not by nature, but by
the angels
grace; for which has a beginning has necessarily
everything
an end. But immortality being a gift became natural to spirit-
ual beings, and therefore also to men. Men were created by
God from nature, visible and invisible, in his own image, to be
kings and rulers of the whole earth. Before their creation God
had prepared Paradise for them to be as it were a royal castle,
" set by his hands in Eden, a store-house of all joy and delight,
situated to the East, and higher than the whole earth, but
1 Chrysostom agrees entirely with Theodore in the opinion that man's freewill
first step, which is then seconded by God with his power, in
takes the the appro-
priation of the good; see his notes on Rom. IX. 16, in Horn. 16; in ep. ad Heb.,
Horn. 12; in Ev. Joh., Horn. 17, etc. The passages are reproduced in Miinscher,
Lehrbuch der Dogmengeschichte (1832), p. 363 fif.
3 De fide orthod. II. 2 ff., 11 ff. 24—30; III. 1, 14, 20; IV. 4, II, 19—22,
and the Homily in "ficum arefactum," as also the Dialogue against the Manichseans,
Langen, 1. c, p. 289 ff.; Wendt, 1. c, p. 59 ff.
284 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. v.
3 This is strongly emphasised by John(II. 12, IV. 4); but he has carefully
avoided stating how God could on hisadorn men with virtues. It cannot be
pai-t
proved that this is to be attributed to the influence of the West. Such an assump-
tion is not necessary, for we also find in the older Greek Fathers rhetorical
glorifications of the primitive state which do not harmonise with the
system of
doctrine.
* These are the two states (katastaseis) of the Antiochenes,
Chap, v.] VIEWS OF JOHN OF DAMASCUS 285
were within limits permitted, while the others were not. But,
the vital functions apart, over all was placed free will. It is in
our power to choose, and man decides on his own actions.
His origin alone is God's affair. " But error was produced by
our wickedness for our punishment and benefit For God did
not make death, nor did he delight in the ruin of the living; on
the contrary, death was due to man, i.e., to Adam's transgres-
sion, and so also were the other penalties." It was not right '
The significance of Adam's fall for his posterity is recognised (II. 28), but it
Man was created male. Woman was formed merely because God
foresaw the Fall, and in order that the race might be preserved
in spite of death. ' Man did not allow reason to triumph ; he
mistook the path and preferred his lusts. Conse-
of honour,
quently, instead of living for ever, he fell a prey to death and
became subject to tribulation and a miserable life. For it was
not good that he should enjoy immortality untempted and
unproved, lest he should share the pride and condemnation of
the devil. "Accordingly, man was first to attest himself, and,
made perfect by observance of the commandment when tempted,
was then to obtain immortality as the reward of virtue. For,
placed between God and matter, he was to acquire steadfast-
ness in goodness, after he had abandoned his natural relation
to things, and become habitually united to God." But, seduced
by the devil who enviously grudged man the possession which
he had himself lost, man turned to matter, and so, severed
from God, his First Cause, became subject to suffering, and
mortal, and required sexual intercourse. (The fig-leaves denote
the tribulations of life, and the skins the mortal body). Death,
come into the world through sin, henceforth^ like a hideous
wild beast, made havoc of human life, although the liberty to
choose good as well as evil was never destroyed. ^ But God
did not leave himself without a witness, and at last sent his
own Son, who was to strengthen nature, and to renew and
show and teach by his action the way of virtue which led from
destruction to eternal life. The union of Deity with humanity
was "the newest of the new, the only new thing under the
sun." ' It applied, moreover, to the whole of human nature in
order to bestow salvation on the whole. * This union resulted
in the restitutio to the original state, which was perfect in so
far as man, though not yet tested, was adorned with virtues.
Christ participated in the worst part of our nature in order, by
and in himself, to restore the form of the image and likeness,
and to teach us further by virtuous conduct, which by his aid
•
L. c, see Gregory of Nyssa.
2 11. 26 ff.
3 III. I.
4 III. 6.
Chap, v.] VIEWS OF JOHN OF DAMASCUS 287
CHAPTER VI.
Perhaps the most comprehensive passage is Eusebius, Demonstr. ev. IV. 12.
'
But it also shows how far Eusebius still was from the thorough-going view of
Athanasius: T^5 oiKovaizta^ oh fiixv aiTtav ^AAo: ncci •7r?\siovi; supot liv to; hQe^.'^irat;
^vfTslVy TrpwTJJv iJ.t]i yxp 6 ?^6yoi; hSxa-Ket^ Vva hxi vsKpav aai ^uvrtav Kvpisvcr^' §sv-
Tspav S^ iSTCi)g rkt; yji^srspcs:; ai7ro[£ix^oiTO aiJLxpria^, vTr^p viimccv Tpai6st^ Katy£v6{iSvoi;
vTTip iiijLav Karapa' rpiTijv wt; civ Ispstov &£ov xxi (jcsya^vi Qvtriix vTrsp a-v[iWxvTC^
xia-iiov vpoa-ax^^'1 '''? ^''' "'avTSJV ©ew- riTzpriiv diq av xvToi; rij; TroAi/^Aavou? xaj
^cii[jt,oyiKvi^ Evspysia^ aToppvjTotc; P^oyotq Ka^aipeatv a'TTspyatrairo' TrefXTTTtjv Wi raur^,
(65 Sv To7? xiirov yvapi(j.oii; xal liait^raii rijc xutx rov iixvarov wapx Oeti ^avii; Tijv
ihTTtSu iJ.il fidyoiq i^fiSi fiijiiaa-iv xceV (paivziQ aAA« aliTO'ii; 'spyoiQ Tafao-T^o-a?, otfiia^.-
lJ.oi<; ii weipxSavi; riiv Sik reSv Aoyaiv BTrayys^ieiVj eu^apo-s;; uuToii; xai H-poSufiOTEfOu;
canpy&iraiTO xca Trcia-iv "EAA!>ir(V ofJoC xa) ^ap^^poi? Tijv •rpb? otliTov xcira^}\vfi€i!7a,v
19
290 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. vi.
the incarnation to sin did not carry the Greeks beyond it.
The above combination had been made in the Church long
before this (see Irenseus), but in the theology of Origen it had
been subordinated to, and obscured by, complicated presup-
positions.
Athanasius wrote a treatise "Concerning the incarnation of
the Logos " [wsp) hxvSpcoTTj^iTsug rod Xoyou), an early writing whose
value is so great because it dates before the outbreak of the
Arian controversy. In this work he went a step further for
' :
@sov, As'ywv, 'dri !ia-!rsf ex Tvii Trxfa^iitTBiiK; eii; tphpciv yeyovcca-iv, outoii; hx t>)5
(.ceTSivotcsQ yi'joivTO TruXtv av s)c; oiip6ap<r(ixv. 'AAA' -^ [/.sravoia ovTSTOsli^iOyovTOTrpo^
Tov ©gov s<pv?\Cirrev 'i(JLev£ yxp ^aA/v ovx a/^yj^yjc;^ (xvi xpxTov(/.svuy sv ru QavxTcii
rav avSpuTrav ovts S^ w l^srixvottx xtto tuv kgctx <pva-iv uTcoxa^slrxi, iKAAa (j.6vov
wzuii Tuv ciiJ,ixpri^iJ.aTCii\i. El {/.sv olv /zo'vov y/v wA-.</.4f4£A!j^/« xcci iJ.ii (pSap^i IttaikoA-
ovStfirii;, xaAiMC xv ifv iJ.BTivoicf eJ Si avx^ v poKa§ov(Tm tJi^ Trxpz^dasui;, eh rifv
if
xara (pvciv <pdopav expxrovvro oi Hv^paiTToi, xcct t^v tov xxt^ eixovx X'^P^^ a(paipe~
Sevrei; via-av, ti ii^^^o 'eSei yevetrSai ; 'ij rivoQ ^v XP^'" "?»? '''*i^ toiocvt^v p;a/»v xu)
avcix^tia-iv, tj tou xai xaric t)}V apx'i'' £>« '^o" f^ 'ivroQ wevoivix6TO(; Tx JfAa rov @eov
^6yov ; al/rov yap ?jv txMv xxi to (pdxprov eti; a<pdxp<rfxv eveyxetv xxi to VTTep TrxvTav
e1j?.oyov xTToirutrxt Trpb^ tov TrxTspx. Compare Orat, c. Arian. II. 68.
292 . HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. vi.
XXI OiKi^croiVTOi; slt^ fj.iav tuv kv aur^ otKiuv, TravTCii; ^ rotavr^ TrdMt; r^/zjj^ tto^^^i^i;
xctTx^iovroti, Kxi oIksti Tii ex^PH aurijv oVrs k^rriiq eTrijSxivav xccTaa-rfi<pei, Tao-i)5
Si i^&AMiv BTrii^e^siui; a.%iourxi Six rov eiQ filxv uvTvii oixixv oix!j(rxvTX ^xri^ix-
oVru^ XXI S'jrt tov 'jtxvtuv /SacjAew? ysyovev. E^SSvtoi; yxp xvrov eTri riiv ^i^erspxv
Xupxv XXI olx^trxvTOi; sii; ^v tmv of^oiaiv truiix, ^qittov -xxcrx ^ xxtx tc3v av^puTuv
TTxpx T&v ix^p&v hTi(3ov^ii TSTrxuTxt^ Kxt TOV $xvxrov vj<^xvtcrTUi <p&opci
vj ttx^xi y;
xxt' xutSv ](yxvov(!-x. Kattenbusch is right in considering Ritschl (1. c, I., p. 10,
II) to have gone too far in liis assertion tliat "Athanasius' interpretation of the
death and resurrection of Christ is a particular instance of tire main thought that
tlie Logos of God guarantees all redemptive work, using the human body in which
he dwells as the means." Athanasius certainly did not regard the death and resur-
rection as merely particular instances. They formed the object of the incarnation;
not that they were added or supplementary to it; tliey were bound up with it.
3 Yet the view of Athanasius was not simply naturalistic; incorruptibleness
rather included the elements of goodness, love, and wisdom; a renewal affecting.
Chap, vi.] THE INCARNATION 293
TOv ©Eov haipiav, xxi uf sv (3uS!f fivSia-UvTSi; xccToi rov( offi^aAfioi; e^ovTEC, h ysvsasi
Koi Toic, xla-{i)^ro7g rov ©eov ave^ijTOvv. xv^paiTovi; Hvvjrovci xxt ^xi(j.ovx^ ixvToi^ ^soiit;
xvdTUTOviiSvor ravTov evs^az 6 (piAxv^paiTOQ Kca y.oivo^ TTciyTitiv cruri^p, rov @eov
>^6y!iii, PiX/ji^met iaurVf a-a[J.x xxt w« xvipaiTroi sv mipamOK^ mxa-TiifsTXi xai rxi;
@e6v, at})' Sv 6 xvpioi ipyx't^STXi Six tuv toC a-coizxroi; 'spyoiv, xr' xvtuv ml\(TOi<n
TVjt xhvi^iixi, Kxl Si' xutoS tqv TTxTifx ?^oy i(j- iii^T XI . The sequel shows, indeed,
that Athanasius thought above all of Jesus' miraculous works. He has summarised
his whole conception of the result of redemption in the pregnant sentence (ch. XVI.):
'Ai-KpoTspx yxp ^(pi^^xvSpoiTrsusTO 6 o-arjjp Sui r^i ivxvSpuvi^treMi. iiTi xxi rov Sxvxtov
i% ijliSv ii<pxvi^£ XXI xvsxxivi^ev iii-i^i;- xxi on x0xviif &v xxi xopxTOi; Six rm 'ipym
svetpatvs kxi syvciipt^sv ixvrbv slvxi rbv ^Syov.rov TrxrpSt;, rbv rov ttxvto^ iiye{j.6yx
XXI ^xm\ex. Origen had already laid stress on the perception of God in Christ,
and set it above philosophical knowledge (analytic, synthetic, and analogical, against
294 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. vi.
Alcinous, Maximus of Tyre, and Celsus): see c. Cels. VII. 42, 44; De princip. I. i.
For Clement see Protrept I. 8: 6 hoyof 6 tou OboC 'dvSfioTroi ysvoi.csvoi, i'va Sii kxi
2 The Apologetic argument also includes the treatment of the question, why the
redemption was not accomplished sooner. Apologists from Justin to Eusebius and
Athanasius had put it and attempted to answer it. Gregory also got rid of it by
referring to the physician who waits till illness has fully developed before he
interferes (Catech. magn., ch. 29 ff).
Chap vi.] THE INCARNATION 297
,
' L. c, ch. 16. For, since our nature in its regular course changed also in him
into the separation of body and soul, he reunited that which had been divided by
his divine power as if by a kind of cement, and rejoined in an indissoluble union
the severed parts (comp. IrenEeus and Methodius). And that was the resurrection,
viz., the return after dissolution and division of the allies to an indissoluble union,
both being so bound together, that man's original state of grace was recalled, and
we return to eternal life, after the evil mingled with our nature has been removed
by our dissolution (!); just as it happens with liquids, which, the vessel being
broken, escape and are lost, because there is nothing now to hold them. But as
death began in one man and from him passed to the whole of nature and the
human race, in the same way the beginning of the resurrection extended through
one man to the whole of humanity."
- See conclusion of the preceding note, and Herrmann, Gregorii Nyss. sententias
de salute adipis., p. 16 ff. Underlying all the arguments of the ' Great Catechism
we have the thought that the incarnation was an actus medicinalis which is to be
thought of as strictly natural, and that extends to all mankind. See Dorner (Entwick.-
Gesch. d. L. v. d. Person Christi, I., p. 958 f.), who, besides, regards Gregory's
whole conception as strictly ethical.
298 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. VI.
' See TTEff J/upj. K. icvx<Tr!i<r., p. 66 sq., ed. Oehler. Orat. cat. 26.
Chap, vi.] THE INCARNATION 299
lJ.iya (patrtv slvxi ot twv 'EAAtfvaJv <Pt?^6t7ocpot xut a/^yjSevovtri Keyovrsi;. 'Opuj^sv yap
ai/Tov xal ra rovTov {^epii Taut; atir$ija-£<n VTOTTiTTOvra. E; rotvvv hv r^ x6a-(ita truf^oiTi
^6vri 6 TOV ®sov ^6yo(; so-ti, Koii sv 'dZ-ott; xat toi^ Kara f^ipo^ avTCov Tratrtv eTrt^ejBiiKe.
Tt $av[4{x(rTQv j) Ti Utotov si Kai sv avOpaTToi (^apisv ahrov £7r/|3e/3^K£va/ k.t. A., u. 42.
300 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. vi.
incorporates and unites himself with the holy and faithful souls
in whom he is well pleased, etc." In each a Christ is born.
origin than his divinity. This Gnostic view, wliich, however, is not necessarily-
pantheistic,had supporters, e.g.^ in Corinth in the time of Athanasius, who himself
opposed it. (Ep. ad Epictetum Corinth.: see Epiphan.. p. 77, c. Dimoeritas). They
said that the body born of Mary was iy.ooi<Tioy t% tov f,6yov isoniTi, irvva'iSiov
uItSs Sik TTavrof ys'y£vii<T&xi, hvsiSti hx xii; ol/a-ixi Tij; ZoiplxQ irvvsirrvi. They taught,
accordingly, humanity itself sprang from the Logos; he had for the purpose
that
of his manifestation formed for himself by metamol-phosis a body capable of
suffering. He had, therefore, on one side of his being given up his immutability,
departed from his own nature (^AAayij t?; lilai (^iiriui;) and transfonned himself
into a sensuous man. The point of interest here was the perfect unity of Christ.
Those whom Hilary opposed (De trinit. X. 15 sq.) did not maintain the heavenly
and eternal humanity of the Logos. On the other hand, this thesis occurs in Apol-
linaris, in whom, however, it is not to be explained pantheistically, although
pantheistic inferences can hardly be averted. The heavenly humanity of Christ is
also opposed by Basil in Ep. ad Sozopol. (65); it re-emerged in the circles of the
most extreme Monophysites but it was at the same time openly affirmed there by
;
Stephen Bar Sudaili: "everything is of one nature with God"; "all nature is con-
substantial with the divine essence" (Assem., Biblioth. II. 30, 291); see Dorner,
1. c, II., p. 162 f., and Frothinghani, Stephen Bar Sudaili (1886) who has printed,
p. 28 sq., the letter of Xenaias which warns against the heresy " that assimilates the
creation to God." Finally, a kind of subtilised form of this phenomenon is found
in the old-catholic conception, that the Son of God came down to men immediately
after the Fall, that he repeatedly dwelt among them, and thus accustomed himself
to his future manifestation (see Irenseus' conception. Vol. II., p. 236). In the later
Fathers, they were not writing apologetically, this old conception does not,
when
so far as I know, occur often, or, it is very strictly distinguished from the incarna-
tion; see, e.g., Athan., Orat. III. 30.
1 See, e.g., Hilary, Tract, in Ps. LI, ch. 16: "Ut et filius hominis esset filius
dei, naturam in se universse carnis assumpsit, per quam effectus vera vitis genus in
se universfe propaginis tenet." Ps. LIV. ch. 9 " Universitatis : nostrse caro est factus.''
Other passages are given in Domer, Entw-Gesch. der Lehre v. d. Person Christi, I.,
2 Horn. 25, T. I., p. 504 sq. This exposition coincides completely with Gregory's
thought.
Dorner, 1. u., the xaxa; liifoi Trirrif. See besides the passage given in Vol. II.,
p. 223, n. 1.
302 HISTORY OF DOGMA [Chap. vi.
flgy (rvvx(pxvi(76ijvxt (j^sv TJjv 'TTspl ro aiJLapToivsiv y][ic3v svKO?iioiv, Sici tviq STt r^v a&ccv-
aa-ixv rov a-ui^izTOi; pcercca-ratrsu^.
^ Xpiu'TOi oil TTfOS 'ivx XXI Ssvrspov ^Aisv, uMce vpog t^v xaiiiijiJ (purtv.
Chap, vi.] THE INCARNATION 303
also involved the other, that Christ would have come even if
there had been no sin. Accordingly, those Fathers who laid no
special stress on sin, seeing it appeared to them to be more or
less natural, and who conceived redemption rather as a perfecting
than restitution, maintained the necessity of the incarnation even
apart from sin: so Theodore of Mopsuestia, Pelagius and others. ^
The incarnation was regarded by them as forming the basis of
the life in which man and common
is raised above his nature
virtue, that is, the ascetic and angelic
Clement of Alex., life.
the combination of Adam and Christ in the Bible stood in the way.
—
Supplement III. On the ground of Biblical texts like Matt.
1 See Vol. II., p. 272, 307; the thought is not wanting in Tertullian.
" See Dorner, Kihn, Theodor.,
1. i,. II., p. 432 ff. p. 179 f.
XXV. 24, Eph. I. 3 — 5, II, II. Tim. I. 8 — 10, the Greeks have
also spoken {e.g., Athan. c. 75 Tj) of an election
Arian. II.
The Greek Fathers did not go' beyond, nor could they giye
a more consistent form to, the views on this subject already
expounded by Irenaeus and Origan. The fact of the incarna- '
2 The two Cappadocians doubted, not without reserve, the necessity of Christ's
death. of Nazianzus says that the divine Logos could also have redeemed us
G.
S£A)fftaT( ij.6mt^ and G. of Nyssa (Orat. cat. 17) thought that the method of redemp-
tion was to be considered as arbitrary as the remedies of physicians. In other
places, indeed, they expressed themselves differently, and Athanasius connected the
death of Christ closely with the incarnation (see above).
20
306 HISTORY OF DOGMA
tery, and that not only in the intellectual sense. Here thought
yielded to emotion, and imposed silence on itself. Goethe said
towards the close of his Hfe, "We draw a veil over the suffer-
ings of Christ simply because we revere them so deeply; we
hold it to be reprehensible presumption to play and trifle with
and embeUish those profound mysteries in which the divine
jdepths of suffering lie hidden, never to rest until even the
noblest seems mean and tasteless." That exactly represents the
Greek feeling. It also gives the key to the saying of Gregory
of Nazianzus (Orat. XXVII. lo) that the appreciation of the
sufferings one of those points on which it was
of Christ was
possible to make a mistake with impunity (cf. Iren. I. lo). By
this he meant, not only that the specific result of the passion
was uncertain, but also that it was inexpressible. It was re- '
served for the Middle Ages and our modern times to cast off
all modesty and reverence here.
' See the great importance laid already by Justin on the Cross, an importance
*
which it still has for the piety of the Greek Church.
2 Apollinaris who was the strictest dogmatist of the fourth century, substantially
limited the significance of Christ's death, so far as I know, to this effect.
REDEMPTION FROM SATAN 307
fish, the devil, snapped at it, and was left hanging on the in-
visible hook, Christ's divinity. It proves that the Fathers had
gradually lost any fixed conception of the holiness and right-
that the devil's power will not first be broken by the future
appearing of Christ, but has been already shattered by his
death. In this sense it is the epitaph of the old dogmatics
which turned on eschatology. ' For the rest, Gregory of Nazi-
' Irenseus held, that men were God's debtors, but in ,the power (unjustly) of the
devil. Origen held a different view. The devil had a claim on men, and Christ
paid him his soul as the price, but the devil could not keep it. The devil acted
unjustly to Christ, he was not entitled to take possession of one who was sinless;
3o8 HISTORY OF DOGMA
with the other ideas that God's veracity required the threat of
death to be carried out, and that death accordingly was accepted
by Christ on behalf of all, and by him was destroyed. ^ The
idea that only the sacrificial death of God could vanquish death
which was decreed by him, and thus conciliate God, occurs also
see passages given in Miinscher, p. 428 ff. Leo I , following Ambrose, gives the
deception theory in a crude form.
3 De incarnat. 9 : ZvviSav yap 6 ^oyot;, '6ti a?^^ajQ ovk av Au^e/*) ruv avdpuTrajv
vj <pdopx, £1 iJ.ij ha TOv TTccvrat; aTroHavs'iv, ol/x oJov rs Se ijv tov ^6yov aToSave'tVj
u^avarov 'hvra Kxt tov TrccTpb^ vtov, tovtov evsxsv to Swufxevov QiTo6avs7v eavTu
Aa/^P«ve/ tyui^a^ "vx tovto tov £7rt TravT&iv ^oyov fj.£rct?^a^6vj ^vrt wxvrav txavov
ysv^Tai Tia Sxvartii kxi Stx tov evoiKvitravTX ?^6yov x<p6ixpTov ^lUfMstv^, nai Ao^ttov awo
TxvTOiv vi <p6opx 'JTdviTVjTat Tjj TvjQ uvxtTTaiTSUQ x^piTi' oSev w? Hpstov KBii 6vfA.a
•xscvTot; h^svdspov trTrf^ov, '0 avToi; iavTui 'gAajSe tru^a Trpotrxyaiv stg BavxTov, xtto
TTXVTUv sliQvi; Tuv o\iom)i ijcpxvt^e tov hxvxTOV t^ yrpotr^op^ tov xxTX^^ij^ov. We
see hovi' the conceptions of the vicarious endurance of punishment, and of a sacri-
fice, meet here ; indeed, generally speaking, it was difficult to keep them apart.
demand or ransom
the sacrifice —
but received it §;' ohovof/Jav. * —
In this case, as much as in earlier times, 5/' chovof/Jixv meant
"that the Scriptures might be fulfilled"; that is, it was tanta-
mount to abandoning a direct explanation of the fact itself.
In any case Cyril of Alexandria shows most clearly the
vicarious idea of the passion and death of the God-man in
connection with the whole Christological conception. ' Eusebius'
1 See esp. Cyril, Catech. XIII. 33, but also the Cappadocians ; cf. UUmann, 1. c,
p. 316 ff.
6 Ttjii vj/ux*)" "^^P yn-iiH" rshixdic;. Similarly Chrysostom in the Ep. ad Rom., Hom.
10, T. X., p. 121. But the idea is emotional, and not the starting-point of a
philosophical theory. It is different with the Westerns.
2 The expiation of our guilt is more infrequently thought of than the taking
over of sin's punishment; that is, guilt is only indirectly referred to.
* .See UUmann, 1. c, p. 319.
6 idea of sacrifice falls into the background, which was only to be expected
The
in the case of this energetic spokesman of genuine Greek Christian theology. Sub-
stitution passed naturally into, or rather grew out of, the idea of mystical mediation.
Because all human nature was purified and transfigured really and physically in
the Church in his time; it has not even the full significance that it possesses in
Cyprian.
° Necesse est ut omne peccatum satisfactio aut poena sequatur.
3 See Sulp. Sev., Dial. II. 10: Fornicatio deputetur ad poenam, nisi satisfactione
purgetur.
1 For fuller details see a later Vol,
312 HISTORY OF DOGMA
But Cyprian also applied the "satisfacere ^^o" to. Christ him-
self. As in the Middle Ages the most questionable consequences
1 On Ps. LIII. 12" passio suscepta voluntarie est, officio ipsa satisfactura poenali ";
:
Ch. 13: " maledictorum se obtulit morti, ut maledictionem legis solveret, hostiam
se ipsum voluntarie offerendo." Along with this Hilary has the mystical realistic
dom. he is never tired of answering the question as to the motive of the incarna-
tion with the phrase :
" ut caro, qua: peccaverat^ i-edimeretur^' frequently adding
"a culpa." He also uses very often the word ''offerr e" (applied to the death of
Christ). In Ps. XLVIII., exp. 17, we read: "qute maior misericordia quam quod
pro nostris fiagitiis se praebuit immolandum, ut sanguine sue mundum levaret, cuius
peccatum nullo alio modo potuisset aboleri." See Deutsch, Des Ambrosius Lehre
von der Siinde und Siindentilgung, 1867.
^ There are many striking passages in Leo which death is described as I. in
an expiatory sacrifice which blots out guilt. vSee, Gregory I., Moral. XVII. further,
46 " delenda erat culpa, sed nisi per sacrificium deleri non poterat. Qujerendum
:
erat sacrificium, sed quale sacrificium poterat pro absolvendis hominibus inveniri?
Neque etenim iustum fuit, ut pro rationali homine brutorum animalium victims;
CEederentur Ergo requirendus erat homo
. . . qui pro hominibus offerri debuisset,
. . .
ut pro rationali creatura rationalis hostia mactaretur. Sed quid quod homo sine
peccato inveniri non poterat, et oblata pro nobis hostia quando nos a peccato
mundare potuisset, si ipsa hostia peccali contagio non careret? Ergo ut rationalis
esset hostia, homo fuerat offerendus: ut vero a peccatis mundaret hominem, homo
et sine peccato. Sed quis esset sine peccato homo, si ex peccati commixtione de-
scenderet. Proinde venit propter nos in uterum virginis filius dei, ibi pro nobis
factus est homo. Sumpta est ab illo uatura, non culpa. Fecit pro nobis sacrificium,
corpus suum exhibuit pro peccatoribus, victimam sine peccato, quae et hum^nitate
raori et iustitia mundare potuisset."
SATISFACTION 3 I
3
' Whatever occurs in Ambrose is to be found also in Augustine; for the latter
has not, so far as I know, omitted to use a single thought of the former; he only
adds something new.
2 See Ambrose, De fide III. 5 :
" Idem igitur sacerdos, idem et hostia, et sacer-
"quia peccata nostra suscepit, peccatum dictus est" (Expos, in Ps. CXIX., X. 14).
314 HISTORY OF DOGMA
ception, which, indeed, in after times was full of gaps and in-
nobis profuit culpa quam nocuit: in quo redemptio quidem nostra divinum munus
invenit. Facta est mihi culpa mea merces redemptionis, per quam mihi Christus
advenit... Fructuosior culpa quam innocentia; innocentia arrogantem me fecerat —
—
and here indeed the paradox becomes nonsensical culpa subjectum reddidit."
(Numerous passages are given in Deutsch, 1. c, see also Fdrster, 1. c,, pp. 136, 297).
Augustine often repeats and varies this thought, and other Western writers repro-
duce it from him. "Felix culpa quae tantum et talem meruit habere redemptorem."
Lastly, Leo I. preaches (Serm. LXI. 3) " validius donum factum est libertatis, quam
:
debitum servitutis." Sayings like these, apart from the special pleading in which
Western writers have always delighted since TertuUian, are to be taken much
more seriously than if they had come from the East. And in fact momentous
speculations were certainly instituted by them.
SATISFACTION 3 1
5
against it; for they never were able to rise perfectly to the
contemplation of Christ's work as the assumptio carnis, an ex-
pression of the loftiest piety among the Greeks. Those of the
latter who, like the Antiochenes, either did not share or only
imperfectly shared the realistic idea of redemption, referred, it
Great as are the distinctions here — the West did not possess
in work
antiquity a definite dogmatic theory as to the atoning
of Christ. Greek views exerted their influence " and, besides. ;
Western Christians were not yet disposed, with a very few ex-
ceptions, to trouble themselves with thoughts that had no bearing
on practical life.
• An affinity exists between tlie theology of tlie Antioclienes and Latins
esp. pre-Augustinian; but it is greater to a superficial than to a more exact
observer. The Antiochene conception always had the Alexandrian for a foil; it
So from Hilary down to Augustine. The most important of the Western Fathers
2
accepted the Greek idea of the purchase from the devil, although -it flatly contra-
dicted their own doctrine of the atonement; and this proves how uncertain they
were. The grotesque conception of the role played by the devil at the death of
Christ, had nevertheless something good about it. It reminded men that every knave
is a stupid devil, and that the devil is always a stupid knave.
APPENDIX ON MANICHiEISM.
1 See Brandt, Die manclaische Religion, 1889 (further, Wellhausen in the deutsch.
Litt.-Ztg., 1890,No. 41).
MANICH^EISM 317
for it naturally failed. But, even apart from the contents of its
religion, Catholicism was superior to Manichaeism, because its
founder was venerated not merely as the bearer of revelation,
but as the Redeemer in person and the Son of God. The fight
waged by Catholicism with Neoplatonism had been already
decided middle of the fourth century, although the
about the
latter hold its ground in the Greek Empire for
continued to
almost two centuries longer. As against Manichaeism the Catholic
Church was certain of victory from the beginning; for at the'
moment when Manichaeism disputed its supremacy, it became
the privileged State Church. But opponent did not suffer
its
itself be annihilated; it
to lasted till Middle Ages
far into the
Mam's Life.
(c. A.D. 270) Mani returned to the Persian capital, and gained
adherents even at the court. Naturally, however, the ruling priestly
caste of the Magi, on whom the king was compelled to lean,
were hostile to him, and after a few successes Mani was taken
prisoner and driven into exile. The successor of Sapores,
—
Hormuz (272 273), seems to have been favourable to him,
but Bahram I. abandoned him to the fanaticism of the Magi,
and had him crucified at the capital, A.D. 276 277. His dead —
body was skinned; and his adherents were dreadfully perse-
cuted by Bahram.
Mani's Writings.
chsean works, and was also translated into Greek and Latin
being a brief summary of the whole fundamentally authoritative
doctrine. (4) The Book Schahpurakan. Fliigel was unable to
explain this title; according to Kessler, it means "Epistle to
King Sapores". This tractate contained eschatological teaching.
and the bad with darkness, was not merely figurative. The
light was really the only good, and darkness the only bad.
Hence it followed, that religious knowledge could be nothing
but the knowledge of nature and its elements, and that
redemption consisted exclusively in a physical deliverance of
the fractions of light from darkness. But under such circum-
stanceSj ethics became a doctrine of abstinence from all elements
arising from the realm of darkness.
The self-contradictory character of the present world formed
for Mani the starting-point of his speculation. But the incon-
sistency appeared to him to be primarily elemental, and only
secondarily ethical, in so far as he regarded the material side
of man as an emanation from the bad parts of nature. From
the self contradictory character of the world he inferred two
beings, originally wholly separate from each other, light and —
darkness. Both were, however, to be thought of after the
MANICH^ISM 325
all was the "Bema" (Bi^it^^), the festival of the "doctoral chair,"
in memory of the death of Mani, in the month of March. Be-
lievers prostrated themselves before a decorated, but vacant
chair, erected on a pedestal with five steps. Long fasts accom-
panied the festival. Christian and Mohammedan writers were able
to learn little concerning the mysteries and "sacraments " of the
Manichaeans; the Christians therefore raised the charge that
obscene rites and repulsive practices were observed. But it may
be held certain that the later Manichaean mysteries were solem-
nised after the style of Christian Baptism and the Lord's Supper.
They may have been based on old rites and ceremonies instituted
by Mani himself, and descended from natural religion.
account given above will also have shown, that Manichaeism did
not rise on the soil of Christianity. We would even be better
justified if we were to call Mohammedanism a Christian sect
for Mohammed
approaches the Jewish and Christian rehgions
incomparably more closely than Mani. Kessler has the credit of
having shown that the ancient Babylonian religion, the original
source of all the Gnosis of Western Asia, was the foundation
of the Manichaean system. The opinion formerly held is accord-
33° HISTORY OF DOGMA
where it had secret followers even among the clergy; this may
perhaps be explained by the Semitic origin of a part of the
population. Augustine was an "Auditor" for nine years, while
Faustus was at the time the most distinguished Manichsean
teacher in the West. In his later writings against Manichaeism
Augustine chiefly discusses the following problems: (i) the
relations of knowledge and faith, reason and authority; (2) the
nature of good and evil, and the origin of the latter; (3) the
existence of free-will, and its relation to divine omnipotence;
(4) the relation of evil in the world to the divine government.
The Christian Byzantine and Roman Emperors from Valens
onwards issued strict laws against the Manichaeans. But at
first these bore little fruit. The "Auditores" were difficult to
detect, and really gave slight occasion for a persecution. In
Rome itself the doctrine had a large following, especially among
the scholarsand professors, between A.D. 370 and 440, and
it made its way among the mass of the people by means of a
Literature. —
Beausobre, Hist, critique de Manichee et du
Manicheisme, 2 vols. 1734 sq. Too great prominence is given
in this work to the Christian elements in Manichaeism. Baur,
Das manichaische Religionssystem, 1831. Manichaean specu-
lation is here presented speculatively. Mani, 1862; an
Fliigel,