The Life And Writings Of Eusebius Of
Caesarea
Chapter I
The Life of Eusebius
Eusebius' Birth And Training. His Life
In Caesarea Until The Outbreak Of The Persecution
Our author was commonly known among the
ancients as Eusebius of Caesarea or Eusebius Pamphili. The former
designation arose from the fact that he was bishop of the church
in Caesarea for many years; the latter from the fact that he was
the intimate friend and devoted admirer of Pamphilus, a presbyter
of Caesarea and a martyr. Some such specific appellation was
necessary to distinguish him from others of the same name. Smith
and Wace's Dictionary of Christian Biography mentions 137 men of
the first eight centuries who bore the name Eusebius, and of
these at least forty were contemporaries of our author. The best
known among them were Eusebius of Nicomedia (called by Arius the
brother of Eusebius of Caesarea), Eusebius of Emesa, and Eusebius
of Samosata.
The exact date of our author's birth is
unknown to us, but his Ecclesiastical History contains notices
which enable us to fix it approximately. In H. E. V. 28 he
reports that Paul of Samosata attempted to revive again in his
day (kath' hemas) the heresy of Artemon. But Paul of Samosata was
deposed from the episcopate of Antioch in 272, and was condemned
as a heretic at least as early as 268, so that Eusebius must have
been born before the latter date, if his words are to be strictly
interpreted. Again, according to H. E. III. 28, Dionysius was
bishop of Alexandria in Eusebius' time (kath' hemas). But
Dionysius was bishop from 247 or 248 to 265, and therefore if
Eusebius' words are to be interpreted strictly here as in the
former case, he must have been born before 265. On the other
hand, inasmuch as his death occurred about 340, we cannot throw
his birth much earlier than 260. It is true that the references
to Paul and to Dionysius do not prove conclusively that Eusebius
was alive in their day, for his words may have been used in a
loose sense. But in H. E. VII. 26, just before proceeding to give
an account of Paul of Samosata, he draws the line between his own
and the preceding generation, declaring that he is now about to
relate the events of his own age (ten kath' hemas). This still
further confirms the other indications, and we shall consequently
be safe in concluding that Eusebius was born not far from the
year 260 a.d. His birthplace cannot be determined with certainty.
The fact that he is called "Eusebius the Palestinian" by
Marcellus (Euseb. lib. adv. Marcell. I. 4), Basil (Lib. ad.
Amphil. de Spir. Sancto, c. 29), and others, does not prove that
he was a Palestinian by birth; for the epithet may be used to
indicate merely his place of residence (he was bishop of Caesarea
in Palestine for many years). Moreover, the argument urged by
Stein and Lightfoot in support of his Palestinian birth, namely,
that it was customary to elect to the episcopate of any church a
native of the city in preference to a native of some other place,
does not count for much. All that seems to have been demanded was
that a man should have been already a member of the particular
church over which he was to be made bishop, and even this rule
was not universal (see Bingham's Antiquities, II. 10, 2 and 3).
The fact that he was bishop of Caesarea therefore would at most
warrant us in concluding only that he had made his residence in
Caesarea for some time previous to his election to that office.
Nevertheless, although neither of these arguments proves his
Palestinian birth, it is very probable that he was a native of
that country, or at least of that section. He was acquainted with
Syriac as well as with Greek, which circumstance taken in
connection with his ignorance of Latin (see below, p. 47) points
to the region of Syria as his birthplace. Moreover, we learn from
his own testimony that he was in Caesarea while still a youth
(Vita Constantini, I. 19), and in his epistle to the church of
Caesarea (see below, p. 16) he says that he was taught the creed
of the Caesarean church in his childhood (or at least at the
beginning of his Christian life: en te katechesei), and that he
accepted it at baptism. It would seem therefore that he must have
lived while still a child either in Caesarea itself, or in the
neighborhood, where its creed was in use. Although no one
therefore (except Theodorus Metochita of the fourteenth century,
in his Cap. Miscell. 17; Migne, Patr. Lat. CXLIV. 949) directly
states that Eusebius was a Palestinian by birth, we have every
reason to suppose him such.
His parents are entirely unknown.
Nicephorus Callistus (H. E. VI. 37) reports that his mother was a
sister of Pamphilus. He does not mention his authority for this
statement, and it is extremely unlikely, in the face of the
silence of Eusebius himself and of all other writers, that it is
true. It is far more probable that the relationship was later
assumed to account for the close intimacy of the two men. Arius,
in an epistle addressed to Eusebius of Nicomedia (contained in
Theodoret's Hist. Eccles. I. 5), calls Eusebius of Caesarea the
latter's brother. It is objected to this that Eusebius of
Nicomedia refers to Eusebius of Caesarea on one occasion as his
"master" (tou despotou mou, in his epistle to Paulinus contained
in Theodoret's Hist. Eccles. I. 6), and that on the other hand
Eusebius of Caesarea calls Eusebius of Nicomedia, "the great
Eusebius" (Euseb. lib. adv. Marcell. I. 4), both of which
expressions seem inconsistent with brotherhood. Lightfoot justly
remarks that neither the argument itself nor the objections carry
much weight. The term adelphos may well have been used to
indicate merely theological or ecclesiastical association, while
on the other hand, brotherhood would not exclude the form of
expression employed by each in speaking of the other. Of more
weight is the fact that neither Eusebius himself nor any
historian of that period refers to such a relationship, and also
the unlikelihood that two members of one family should bear the
same name.
From Eusebius' works we gather that he must
have received an extensive education both in secular philosophy
and in Biblical and theological science. Although his immense
erudition was doubtless the result of wide and varied reading
continued throughout life, it is highly probable that he acquired
the taste for such reading in his youth. Who his early
instructors were we do not know, and therefore cannot estimate
the degree of their influence over him. As he was a man, however,
who cherished deep admiration for those whom he regarded as great
and good men, and as he possessed an unusually acquisitive mind
and a pliant disposition, we should naturally suppose that his
instructors must have possessed considerable influence over him,
and that his methods of study in later years must have been
largely molded by their example and precept. We see this
exemplified in a remarkable degree in the influence exerted over
him by Pamphilus, his dearest friend, and at the same time the
preceptor, as it were, of his early manhood. Certainly this great
bibliopholist must have done much to strengthen Eusebius' natural
taste for omnivorous reading, and the opportunities afforded by
his grand library for the cultivation of such a taste were not
lost. To the influence of Pamphilus, the devoted admirer and
enthusiastic champion of Origen, was doubtless due also in large
measure the deep respect which Eusebius showed for that
illustrious Father, a respect to which we owe one of the most
delightful sections of his Church History, his long account of
Origen in the sixth book, and to which in part antiquity was
indebted for the elaborate Defense of Origen, composed by
Pamphilus and himself, but unfortunately no longer extant.
Eusebius certainly owed much to the companionship of that eager
student and noble Christian hero, and he always recognized with
deep gratitude his indebtedness to him. (Compare the account of
Pamphilus given below in Bk. VII. chap. 32, S:25 sq.) The names
of his earlier instructors, who were eminently successful, at
least in fostering his thirst for knowledge, are quite unknown to
us. His abiding admiration for Plato, whom he always placed at
the head of all philosophers (see Stein, p. 6), would lead us to
think that he received at least a part of his secular training
from some ardent Platonist, while his intense interest in
apologetics, which lasted throughout his life, and which affected
all his works, seems to indicate the peculiar bent of his early
Christian education. Trithemius concluded from a passage in his
History (VII. 32) that Eusebius was a pupil of the learned
Dorotheus of Antioch, and Valesius, Lightfoot and others are
apparently inclined to accept his conclusion. But, as Stroth
remarks (Eusebii Kirchengeschichte, p. xix), all that Eusebius
says is that he had heard Dorotheus expound the Scriptures in the
church (toutou metrios tas graphas epi tes ekklesias diegoumenou
katekousamen), that is, that he had heard him preach. To conclude
from this statement that he was a pupil of Dorotheus is certainly
quite unwarranted.
Stroth's suggestion that he probably
enjoyed the instruction of Meletius for seven years during the
persecution rests upon no good ground, for the passage which he
relies upon to sustain his opinion (H. E. VII. 32. 28) says only
that Eusebius "observed Meletius well" (katenoesamen) during
those seven years.
In Caesarea Eusebius was at one time a
presbyter of the church, as we may gather from his words in the
epistle to that church already referred to, where, in speaking of
the creed, he says, "As we believed and taught in the presbytery
and in the episcopate itself." But the attempt to fix the date of
his ordination to that office is quite vain. It is commonly
assumed that he became presbyter while Agapius was bishop of
Caesarea, and this is not unlikely, though we possess no proof of
it (upon Agapius see below, H. E. VII. 32, note 39). In his Vita
Constantini, I. 19, Eusebius reports that he saw Constantine for
the first time in Caesarea in the train of the Emperor
Diocletian. In his Chron. Eusebius reports that Diocletian made
an expedition against Egypt, which had risen in rebellion in the
year 296 a.d., and Theophanes, in his Chron., says that
Constantine accompanied him. It is probable therefore that it was
at this time that Eusebius first saw Constantine in Caesarea,
when he was either on his way to Egypt, or on his way back (see
Tillemont's Hist. des Emp., IV. p. 34).
During these years of quiet, before the
great persecution of Diocletian, which broke out in 303 a.d.,
Eusebius' life must have been a very pleasant one. Pamphilus'
house seems to have been a sort of rendezvous for Christian
scholars, perhaps a regular divinity school; for we learn from
Eusebius' Martyrs in Palestine (Cureton's edition, pp. 13 and 14)
that he and a number of others, including the martyr Apphianus,
were living together in one house at the time of the persecution,
and that the latter was instructed in the Scriptures by Pamphilus
and acquired from him virtuous habits and conduct. The great
library of Pamphilus would make his house a natural center for
theological study, and the immense amount of work which was done
by him, or under his direction, in the reproduction of copies of
the Holy Scriptures, of Origen's works (see Jerome's de vir. ill.
75 and 81, and contra Ruf. I. 9), and in other literary
employments of the same kind, makes it probable that he had
gathered about him a large circle of friends and students who
assisted him in his labors and profited by his counsel and
instruction. Amidst these associations Eusebius passed his early
manhood, and the intellectual stimulus thus given him doubtless
had much to do with his future career. He was above all a
literary man, and remained such to the end of his life. The
pleasant companionships of these days, and the mutual interest
and sympathy which must have bound those fellow-students and
fellow-disciples of Pamphilus very close together, perhaps had
much to do with that broad-minded spirit of sympathy and
tolerance which so characterized Eusebius in later years. He was
always as far as possible from the character of a recluse. He
seems ever to have been bound by very strong ties to the world
itself and to his fellow-men. Had his earlier days been filled
with trials and hardships, with the bitterness of disappointed
hopes and unfulfilled ambitions, with harsh experiences of
others' selfishness and treachery, who shall say that the whole
course of his life might not have been changed, and his writings
have exhibited an entirely different spirit from that which is
now one of their greatest charms? Certainly he had during these
early years in Caesarea large opportunities for cultivating that
natural trait of admiration for other men, which was often so
strong as to blind him even to their faults, and that natural
kindness which led him to see good wherever it existed in his
Christian brethren. At the same time these associations must have
had considerable influence in fostering the apologetic temper.
The pursuits of the little circle were apparently exclusively
Christian, and in that day when Christianity stood always on its
defense, it would naturally become to them a sacred duty to
contribute to that defense and to employ all their energies in
the task. It has been remarked that the apologetic temper is very
noticeable in Eusebius' writings. It is more than that; we may
say indeed in general terms that everything he wrote was an
apology for the faith. His History was written avowedly with an
apologetic purpose, his Chronicle was composed with the same end
in view. Even when pronouncing a eulogy upon a deceased emperor
he seized every possible opportunity to draw from that emperor's
career, and from the circumstances of his reign, arguments for
the truth and grandeur of the Christian religion. His natural
temper of mind and his early training may have had much to do
with this habit of thought, but certainly those years with
Pamphilus and his friends in Caesarea must have emphasized and
developed it.
Another characteristic which Pamphilus and
the circle that surrounded him doubtless did something to develop
in our author was a certain superiority to the trammels of mere
traditionalism, or we might perhaps better say that they in some
measure checked the opposite tendency of slavishness to the
traditional which seems to have been natural to him. Pamphilus'
deep reverence for Origen proclaims him at once superior to that
kind of narrow conservatism which led many men as learned and
doubtless as conscientious as himself to pass severe and
unconditional condemnation upon Origen and all his teaching. The
effect of championing his cause must have fostered in this little
circle, which was a very hotbed of Origenism, a contempt for the
narrow and unfair judgments of mere traditionalists, and must
have led them to seek in some degree the truth solely for its own
sake, and to become in a measure careless of its relation to the
views of any school or church. It could hardly be otherwise than
that the free and fearless spirit of Origen should leave its
impress through his writings upon a circle of followers so
devoted to him as were these Caesarean students. Upon the
impressionable Eusebius these influences necessarily operated.
And yet he brought to them no keen speculative powers, no deep
originality such as Origen himself possessed. His was essentially
an acquisitive, not a productive mind, and hence it was out of
the question that he should become a second Origen. It was quite
certain that Origen's influence over him would weaken somewhat
his confidence in the traditional as such,-a confidence which is
naturally great in such minds as his,-but at the same time would
do little to lessen the real power of the past over him. He
continued to get his truth from others, from the great men of the
past with whom he had lived and upon whose thought he had
feasted. All that he believed he had drawn from them; he produced
nothing new for himself, and his creed was a traditional creed.
And yet he had at the same time imbibed from his surroundings the
habit of questioning and even criticising the past, and, in spite
of his abiding respect for it, had learned to feel that the voice
of the many is not always the voice of truth, and that the widely
and anciently accepted is sometimes to be corrected by the
clearer sight of a single man. Though he therefore depended for
all he believed so completely upon the past, his associations had
helped to free him from a slavish adherence to all that a
particular school had accepted, and had made him in some small
measure an eclectic in his relations to doctrines and opinions of
earlier generations. A notable instance of this eclecticism on
his part is seen in his treatment of the Apocalypse of John. He
felt the force of an almost universal tradition in favor of its
apostolic origin, and yet in the face of that he could listen to
the doubts of Dionysius, and could be led by his example, in a
case where his own dissatisfaction with the book acted as an
incentive, almost, if not quite, to reject it and to ascribe it
to another John. Instances of a similar mode of conduct on his
part are quite numerous. While he is always a staunch apologist
for Christianity, he seldom, if ever, degenerates into a mere
partisan of any particular school or sect.
One thing in fact which is particularly
noticeable in Eusebius' works is the comparatively small amount
of time and space which he devotes to heretics. With his wide and
varied learning and his extensive acquaintance with the past, he
had opportunities for successful heresy hunting such as few
possessed, and yet he never was a heresy hunter in any sense.
This is surprising when we remember what a fascination this
employment had for so many scholars of his own age, and when we
realize that his historical tastes and talents would seem to mark
him out as just the man for that kind of work. May it not be that
the lofty spirit of Origen, animating that Caesarean school, had
something to do with the happy fact that he became an apologist
instead of a mere polemic, that he chose the honorable task of
writing a history of the Church instead of anticipating
Epiphanius' Panarium?
It was not that he was not alive to the
evils of heresy. He shared with nearly all good church-men of his
age an intense aversion for those who, as he believed, had
corrupted the true Gospel of Christ. Like them he ascribed heresy
to the agency of the evil one, and was no more able than they to
see any good in a man whom he looked upon as a real heretic, or
to do justice in any degree to the error which he taught. His
condemnations of heretics in his Church History are most severe.
Language is hardly strong enough to express his aversion for
them. And yet, although he is thus most thoroughly the child of
his age, the difference between him and most of his
contemporaries is very apparent. He mentions these heretics only
to dismiss them with disapproval or condemnation. He seldom, if
ever, discusses and refutes their views. His interests lie
evidently in other directions; he is concerned with higher
things. A still more strongly marked difference between himself
and many churchmen of his age lies in his large liberality
towards those of his own day who differed with him in minor
points of faith, and his comparative indifference to the
divergence of views between the various parties in the Church. In
all this we believe is to be seen not simply the inherent nature
of the man, but that nature as trained in the school of
Pamphilus, the disciple of Origen.
The
Persecution Of Diocletian
In this delightful circle and engaged in
such congenial tasks, the time must have passed very happily for
Eusebius, until, in 303, the terrible persecution of Diocletian
broke upon the Church almost like a thunderbolt out of a clear
sky. The causes of the sudden change of policy on Diocletian's
part, and the terrible havoc wrought in the Church, it is not my
intention to discuss here (see below, Bk. VIII. chap. 2, note 3
sq.). We are concerned with the persecution only in so far as it
bears upon the present subject. In the first year of the
persecution Procopius, the first martyr of Palestine, was put to
death at Caesarea (Eusebius' Martyrs of Palestine, Cureton's ed.
p. 4), and from that time on that city, which was an important
Christian center, was the scene of a tempest which raged with
greater or less violence, and with occasional cessations, for
seven years. Eusebius himself was an eyewitness of many
martyrdoms there, of which he gives us an account in his Martyrs
of Palestine. The little circle which surrounded Pamphilus did
not escape. In the third year of the persecution (Mart. of Pal.
p. 12 sq.) a youth named Apphianus, or Epiphanius (the former is
given in the Greek text, the latter in the Syriac), who "resided
in the same house with us, confirming himself in godly doctrine,
and being instructed by that perfect martyr, Pamphilus" (as
Eusebius says), committed an act of fanatical daring which caused
his arrest and martyrdom. It seems that without the knowledge of
his friends, concealing his design even from those who dwelt in
the same house with him, he laid hold of the hand of the
governor, Arbanus, who was upon the point of sacrificing, and
endeavored to dissuade him from offering to "lifeless idols and
wicked devils." His arrest was of course the natural consequence,
and he had the glory of witnessing a good profession and
suffering a triumphant death. Although Eusebius speaks with such
admiration of his conduct, it is quite significant of the
attitude of himself, and of most of the circle of which he was
one, that Apphianus felt obliged to conceal his purpose from
them. He doubtless feared that they would not permit him to
perform the rash act which he meditated, and we may conclude from
that, that the circle in the main was governed by the precepts of
good common sense, and avoided that fanaticism which so
frequently led men, as in the present case it led Apphianus, to
expose themselves needlessly, and even to court martyrdom. It is
plain enough from what we know of Eusebius' general character
that he himself was too sensible to act in that way. It is true
that he speaks with admiration of Apphianus' conduct, and in H.
E. VIII. 5, of the equally rash procedure of a Nicomedian
Christian; but that does not imply that he considered their
course the wisest one, and that he would not rather recommend the
employment of all proper and honorable precautions for the
preservation of life. Indeed, in H. E. IV. 15, he speaks with
evident approval of the prudent course pursued by Polycarp in
preserving his life so long as he could without violating his
Christian profession, and with manifest disapproval of the rash
act of the Phrygian Quintus, who presumptuously courted
martyrdom, only to fail when the test itself came. Pamphilus also
possessed too much sound Christian sense to advocate any such
fanaticism, or to practice it himself, as is plain enough from
the fact that he was not arrested until the fifth year of the
persecution. This unhealthy temper of mind in the midst of
persecution was indeed almost universally condemned by the wisest
men of the Church, and yet the boldness and the very rashness of
those who thus voluntarily and needlessly threw their lives away
excited widespread admiration and too often a degree of
commendation which served only to promote a wider growth of the
same unhealthy sentiment.
In the fifth year of the persecution
Pamphilus was arrested and thrown into prison, where he remained
for two years, when he finally, in the seventh year of the
persecution, suffered martyrdom with eleven others, some of whom
were his disciples and members of his own household. (Pal. Mart.
Cureton's ed. p. 36 sq.; H. E. App. chap. 11.) During the two
years of Pamphilus' imprisonment Eusebius spent a great deal of
time with him, and the two together composed five books of an
Apology for Origen, to which Eusebius afterward added a sixth
(see below, p. 36). Danz (p. 37) assumes that Eusebius was
imprisoned with Pamphilus, which is not an unnatural supposition
when we consider how much they must have been together to compose
the Apology as they did. There is, however, no other evidence
that he was thus imprisoned, and in the face of Eusebius' own
silence it is safer perhaps to assume (with most historians) that
he simply visited Pamphilus in his prison. How it happened that
Pamphilus and so many of his followers were imprisoned and
martyred, while Eusebius escaped, we cannot tell. In his Martyrs
of Palestine, chap. 11, he states that Pamphilus was the only one
of the company of twelve martyrs that was a presbyter of the
Caesarean church; and from the fact that he nowhere mentions the
martyrdom of others of the presbyters, we may conclude that they
all escaped. It is not surprising, therefore, that Eusebius
should have done the same. Nevertheless, it is somewhat difficult
to understand how he could come and go so frequently without
being arrested and condemned to a like fate with the others. It
is possible that he possessed friends among the authorities whose
influence procured his safety. This supposition finds some
support in the fact that he had made the acquaintance of
Constantine (the Greek in Vita Const. I. 19 has ?gnomen, which
implies, as Danz remarks, that he not only saw, but that he
became acquainted with Constantine) some years before in
Caesarea. He could hardly have made his acquaintance unless he
had some friend among the high officials of the city. Influential
family connections may account in part also for the position of
prominence which he later acquired at the imperial court of
Constantine. If he had friends in authority in Caesarea during
the persecution his exemption from arrest is satisfactorily
accounted for. It has been supposed by some that Eusebius denied
the faith during the terrible persecution, or that he committed
some other questionable and compromising act of concession, and
thus escaped martyrdom. In support of this is urged the fact that
in 335, at the council of Tyre, Potamo, bishop of Heraclea, in
Egypt, addressed Eusebius in the following words: "Dost thou sit
as judge, O Eusebius; and is Athanasius, innocent as he is,
judged by thee? Who can bear such things? Pray tell me, wast thou
not with me in prison during the persecution? And I lost an eye
in behalf of the truth, but thou appearest to have received no
bodily injury, neither hast thou suffered martyrdom, but thou
hast remained alive with no mutilation. How wast thou released
from prison unless thou didst promise those that put upon us the
pressure of persecution to do that which is unlawful, or didst
actually do it?" Eusebius, it seems, did not deny the charge, but
simply rose in anger and dismissed the council with the words,
"If ye come hither and make such accusations against us, then do
your accusers speak the truth. For if ye tyrannize here, much
more do ye in your own country" (Epiphan. Haer. LXVIII. 8). It
must be noticed, however, that Potamo does not directly charge
Eusebius with dishonorable conduct, he simply conjectures that he
must have acted dishonorably in order to escape punishment; as if
every one who was imprisoned with Potamo must have suffered as he
did! As Stroth suggests, it is quite possible that his peculiarly
excitable and violent temperament was one of the causes of his
own loss. He evidently in any case had no knowledge of unworthy
conduct on Eusebius' part, nor had any one else so far as we can
judge. For in that age of bitter controversy, when men's
characters were drawn by their opponents in the blackest lines,
Eusebius must have suffered at the hands of the Athanasian party
if it had been known that he had acted a cowardly part in the
persecution. Athanasius himself refers to this incident (Contra
Arian. VIII. 1), but he only says that Eusebius was "accused of
sacrificing," he does not venture to affirm that he did
sacrifice; and thus it is evident that he knew nothing of such an
act. Moreover, he never calls Eusebius "the sacrificer," as he
does Asterius, and as he would have been sure to do had he
possessed evidence which warranted him in making the accusation
(cf. Lightfoot, p. 311). Still further, Eusebius' subsequent
election to the episcopate of Caesarea, where his character and
his conduct during the persecution must have been well known, and
his appointment in later life to the important see of Antioch,
forbid the supposition that he had ever acted a cowardly part in
time of persecution. And finally, it is psychologically
impossible that Eusebius could have written works so full of
comfort for, and sympathy with, the suffering confessors, and
could have spoken so openly and in such strong terms of
condemnation of the numerous defections that occurred during the
persecution, if he was conscious of his own guilt. It is quite
possible, as remarked above, that influential friends protected
him without any act of compromise on his part; or, supposing him
to have been imprisoned with Potamo, it may be, as Lightfoot
suggests, that the close of the persecution brought him his
release as it did so many others. For it would seem natural to
refer that imprisonment to the latter part of the persecution,
when in all probability he visited Egypt, which was the home of
Potamo. We must in any case vindicate Eusebius from the unfounded
charge of cowardice and apostasy; and we ask, with Cave, "If
every accusation against any man at any time were to be believed,
who would be guiltless?"
From his History and his Martyrs in
Palestine we learn that Eusebius was for much of the time in the
very thick of the fight, and was an eyewitness of numerous
martyrdoms not only in Palestine, but also in Tyre and in
Egypt.
The date of his visits to the latter places
(H. E. VIII. 7, 9) cannot be determined with exactness. They are
described in connection with what seem to be the earlier events
of the persecution, and yet it is by no means certain that
chronological order has been observed in the narratives. The
mutilation of prisoners-such as Potamo suffered-seems to have
become common only in the year 308 and thereafter (see Mason's
Persecution of Diocletian, p. 281), and hence if Eusebius was
imprisoned with Potamo during his visit to Egypt, as seems most
probable, there would be some reason for assigning that visit to
the later years of the persecution. In confirmation of this might
be urged the improbability that he would leave Caesarea while
Pamphilus was still alive, either before or after the latter's
imprisonment, and still further his own statement in H. E. VII.
32, that he had observed Meletius escaping the fury of the
persecution for seven years in Palestine. It is therefore likely
that Eusebius did not make his journey to Egypt, which must have
occupied some time, until toward the very end of the persecution,
when it raged there with exceeding fierceness during the brief
outburst of the infamous Maximin.
Eusebius' Accession To The Bishopric Of
Caesarea
Not long after the close of the
persecution, Eusebius became bishop of Caesarea in Palestine, his
own home, and held the position until his death. The exact date
of his accession cannot be ascertained, indeed we cannot say that
it did not take place even before the close of the persecution,
but that is hardly probable; in fact, we know of no historian who
places it earlier than 313. His immediate predecessor in the
episcopate was Agapius, whom he mentions in terms of praise in H.
E. VII. 32. Some writers have interpolated a bishop Agricolaus
between Agapius and Eusebius (see e.g. Tillemont, Hist. Eccles.
VII. 42), on the ground that his name appears in one of the lists
of those present at the Council of Ancyra (c. 314), as bishop of
Caesarea in Palestine (see Labbei et Cossartii Conc. I. 1475).
But, as Hefele shows (Conciliengesch. I. 220), this list is of
late date and not to be relied upon. On the other hand, as
Lightfoot points out, in the Libellus Synodicus (Conc. I. 1480),
where Agricolaus is said to have been present at the Council of
Ancyra, he is called bishop of Caesarea in Cappadocia; and this
statement is confirmed by a Syriac list given in Cowper's
Miscellanies, p. 41. Though perhaps no great reliance is to be
placed upon the correctness of any of these lists, the last two
may at any rate be set over against the first, and we may
conclude that there exists no ground for assuming that Agapius,
who is the last Caesarean bishop mentioned by Eusebius, was not
the latter's immediate predecessor. At what time Agapius died we
do not know. That he suffered martyrdom is hardly likely, in view
of Eusebius' silence on the subject. It would seem more likely
that he outlived the persecution. However that may be, Eusebius
was already bishop at the time of the dedication of a new and
elegant Church at Tyre under the direction of his friend
Paulinus, bishop of that city. Upon this occasion he delivered an
address of considerable length, which he has inserted in his
Ecclesiastical History, Bk. X. chap. 4. He does not name himself
as its author, but the way in which he introduces it, and the
very fact that he records the whole speech without giving the
name of the man who delivered it, make its origin perfectly
plain. Moreover, the last sentence of the preceding chapter makes
it evident that the speaker was a bishop: "Every one of the
rulers (archonton) present delivered panegyric discourses." The
date of the dedication of this church is a matter of dispute,
though it is commonly put in the year 315. It is plain from
Eusebius' speech that it was uttered before Licinius had begun to
persecute the Christians, and also, as Goerres remarks, at a time
when Constantine and Licinius were at least outwardly at peace
with each other. In the year 314 the two emperors went to war,
and consequently, if the persecution of Licinius began soon after
that event, as it is commonly supposed to have done, the address
must have been delivered before hostilities opened; that is, at
least as early as 314, and this is the year in which Goerres
places it (Kritische Untersuchungen ueber die licinianische
Christenverfolgung, p. 8). But if Goerres' date (319 a.d.) for
the commencement of the persecution be accepted (and though he
can hardly be said to have proved it, he has urged some strong
grounds in support of it), then the address may have been
delivered at almost any time between 315 and 319, for, as Goerres
himself shows, Licinius and Constantine were outwardly at peace
during the greater part of that time (ib. p. 14, sq.). There is
nothing in the speech itself which prevents this later date, nor
is it intrinsically improbable that the great basilica reached
completion only in 315 or later. In fact, it must be admitted
that Eusebius may have become bishop at any time between about
311 and 318.
The persecution of Licinius, which
continued until his defeat by Constantine, in 323, was but local,
and seems never to have been very severe. Indeed, it did not bear
the character of a bloody persecution, though a few bishops
appear to have met their death on one ground or another.
Palestine and Egypt seem not to have suffered to any great extent
(see Goerres, ib. p. 32 sq.).
The
Outbreak Of The Arian Controversy. The Attitude Of
Eusebius
About the year 318, while Alexander was
bishop of Alexandria, the Arian controversy broke out in that
city, and the whole Eastern Church was soon involved in the
strife. We cannot enter here into a discussion of Arius' views;
but in order to understand the rapidity with which the Arian
party grew, and the strong hold which it possessed from the very
start in Syria and Asia Minor, we must remember that Arius was
not himself the author of that system which we know as Arianism,
but that he learned the essentials of it from his instructor
Lucian. The latter was one of the most learned men of his age in
the Oriental Church, and founded an exegetico-theological school
in Antioch, which for a number of years stood outside of the
communion of the orthodox Church in that city, but shortly before
the martyrdom of Lucian himself (which took place in 311 or 312)
made its peace with the Church, and was recognized by it. He was
held in the highest reverence by his disciples, and exerted a
great influence over them even after his death. Among them were
such men as Arius, Eusebius of Nicomedia, Asterius, and others
who were afterward known as staunch Arianists. According to
Harnack the chief points in the system of Lucian and his
disciples were the creation of the Son, the denial of his
co-eternity with the Father, and his immutability acquired by
persistent progress and steadfastness. His doctrine, which
differed from that of Paul of Samosata chiefly in the fact that
it was not a man but a created heavenly being who became "Lord,"
was evidently the result of a combination of the teaching of Paul
and of Origen. It will be seen that we have here, at least in
germ, all the essential elements of Arianism proper: the creation
of the Son out of nothing, and consequently the conclusion that
there was a time when he was not; the distinction of his essence
from that of the Father, but at the same time the emphasis upon
the fact that he "was not created as the other creatures," and is
therefore to be sharply distinguished from them. There was little
for Arius to do but to combine the elements given by Lucian in a
more complete and well-ordered system, and then to bring that
system forward clearly and publicly, and endeavor to make it the
faith of the Church at large. His christology was essentially
opposed to the Alexandrian, and it was natural that he should
soon come into conflict with that church, of which he was a
presbyter (upon Lucian's teaching and its relation to Arianism,
see Harnack's Dogmengeschichte, II. p. 183 sq.).
Socrates (H. E. I. 5 sq.), Sozomen (H. E.
I. 15) and Theodoret (H. E. I. 2 sq.), all of whom give accounts
of the rise of Arianism, differ as to the immediate occasion of
the controversy, but agree that Arius was excommunicated by a
council convened at Alexandria, and that both he and the bishop
Alexander sent letters to other churches, the latter defending
his own course, the former complaining of his harsh treatment,
and endeavoring to secure adherents to his doctrine. Eusebius of
Nicomedia at once became his firm supporter, and was one of the
leading figures on the Arian side throughout the entire
controversy. His influential position as bishop of Nicomedia, the
imperial residence, and later of Constantinople, was of great
advantage to the Arian cause, especially toward the close of
Constantine's reign. From a letter addressed by this Eusebius to
Paulinus of Tyre (Theodoret, H. E. I. 6) we learn that Eusebius
of Caesarea was quite zealous in behalf of the Arian cause. The
exact date of the letter we do not know, but it must have been
written at an early stage of the controversy. Arius himself, in
an epistle addressed to Eusebius of Nicomedia (Theodoret, H. E.
I. 5), claims Eusebius of Caesarea among others as accepting at
least one of his fundamental doctrines ("And since Eusebius, your
brother in Caesarea, and Theodotus, and Paulinus, and Athanasius,
and Gregory, and AEtius, and all the bishops of the East say that
God existed before the Son, they have been condemned," etc.).
More than this, Sozomen (H. E. I. 15) informs us that Eusebius of
Caesarea and two other bishops, having been appealed to by Arius
for "permission for himself and his adherents, as he had already
attained the rank of presbyter, to form the people who were with
them into a church," concurred with others "who were assembled in
Palestine," in granting the petition of Arius, and permitting him
to assemble the people as before; but they "enjoined submission
to Alexander, and commanded Arius to strive incessantly to be
restored to peace and communion with him." The addition of the
last sentence is noticeable, as showing that they did not care to
support a presbyter in open and persistent rebellion against his
bishop. A fragment of a letter written by our Eusebius to
Alexander is still extant, and is preserved in the proceedings of
the Second Council of Nicaea, Act. VI. Tom. V. (Labbei et
Cossartii Conc. VII. col. 497). In this epistle Eusebius strongly
remonstrates with Alexander for having misrepresented the views
of Arius. Still further, in his epistle to Alexander of
Constantinople, Alexander of Alexandria (Theodoret, H. E. I. 4)
complains of three Syrian bishops "who side with them [i.e. the
Arians] and excite them to plunge deeper and deeper into
iniquity." The reference here is commonly supposed to be to
Eusebius of Caesarea, and his two friends Paulinus of Tyre and
Theodotus of Laodicea, who are known to have shown favor to
Arius. It is probable, though not certain, that our Eusebius is
one of the persons meant. Finally, many of the Fathers (above all
Jerome and Photius), and in addition to them the Second Council
of Nicaea, directly accuse Eusebius of holding the Arian heresy,
as may be seen by examining the testimonies quoted below on p. 67
sq. In agreement with these early Fathers, many modern historians
have attacked Eusebius with great severity, and have endeavored
to show that the opinion that he was an Arian is supported by his
own writings. Among those who have judged him most harshly are
Baronius (ad ann. 340, c. 38 sq.), Petavius (Dogm. Theol. de
Trin. I. c. 11 sq.), Scaliger (In Elencho Trihaeresii, c. 27, and
De emendatione temporum, Bk. VI. c. 1), Mosheim (Ecclesiastical
History, Murdock's translation, I. p. 287 sq.), Montfaucon
(Praelim. in Comment. ad Psalm. c. VI.), and Tillemont (H. E.
VII. p. 67 sq. 2d ed.).
On the other hand, as may be seen from the
testimonies in Eusebius' favor, quoted below on p. 57 sq., many
of the Fathers, who were themselves orthodox, looked upon
Eusebius as likewise sound on the subject of the Trinity. He has
been defended in modern times against the charge of Arianism by a
great many prominent scholars; among others by Valesius in his
Life of Eusebius, by Bull (Def. Fid. Nic. II. 9. 20, III. 9. 3,
11), Cave (Lives of the Fathers, II. p. 135 sq.), Fabricius
(Bibl. Graec. VI. p. 32 sq.), Dupin (Bibl. Eccles. II. p. 7 sq.),
and most fully and carefully by Lee in his prolegomena to his
edition of Eusebius' Theophania, p. xxiv. sq. Lightfoot also
defends him against the charge of heresy, as do a great many
other writers whom it is not necessary to mention here.
Confronted with such diversity of opinion, both ancient and
modern, what are we to conclude? It is useless to endeavor, as
Lee does, to clear Eusebius of all sympathy with and leaning
toward Arianism. It is impossible to explain such widespread and
continued condemnation of him by acknowledging only that there
are many expressions in his works which are in themselves
perfectly orthodox but capable of being wrested in such a way as
to produce a suspicion of possible Arianistic tendencies, for
there are such expressions in the works of multitudes of ancient
writers whose orthodoxy has never been questioned. Nor can the
widespread belief that he was an Arian be explained by admitting
that he was for a time the personal friend of Arius, but denying
that he accepted, or in any way sympathized with his views (cf.
Newman's Arians, p. 262). There are in fact certain fragments of
epistles extant, which are, to say the least, decidedly
Arianistic in their modes of expression, and these must be
reckoned with in forming an opinion of Eusebius' views; for there
is no reason to deny, as Lee does, that they are from Eusebius'
own hand. On the other hand, to maintain, with some of the
Fathers and many of the moderns, that Eusebius was and continued
through life a genuine Arian, will not do in the face of the
facts that contemporary and later Fathers were divided as to his
orthodoxy, that he was honored highly by the Church of subsequent
centuries, except at certain periods, and was even canonized (see
Lightfoot's article, p. 348), that he solemnly signed the Nicene
Creed, which contained an express condemnation of the distinctive
doctrines of Arius, and finally that at least in his later works
he is thoroughly orthodox in his expressions, and is explicit in
his rejection of the two main theses of the Arians,-that there
was a time when the Son of God was not, and that he was produced
out of nothing. It is impossible to enter here into a detailed
discussion of such passages in Eusebius' works as bear upon the
subject under dispute. Lee has considered many of them at great
length, and the reader may be referred to him for further
information.
A careful examination of them will, I
believe, serve to convince the candid student that there is a
distinction to be drawn between those works written before the
rise of Arius, those written between that time and the Council of
Nicaea, and those written after the latter. It has been very
common to draw a distinction between those works written before
and those written after the Council, but no one, so far as I
know, has distinguished those productions of Eusebius' pen which
appeared between 318 and 325, and which were caused by the
controversy itself, from all his other writings. And yet such a
distinction seems to furnish the key to the problem. Eusebius'
opponents have drawn their strongest arguments from the epistles
which Eusebius wrote to Alexander and to Euphration; his
defenders have drawn their arguments chiefly from the works which
he produced subsequent to the year 325; while the exact bearing
of the expressions used in his works produced before the
controversy broke out has always been a matter of sharp dispute.
Lee has abundantly shown his Contra Marcel., his De Eccl. Theol.,
his Thephania (which was written after the Council of Nicaea, and
not, as Lee supposes, before it), and other later works, to be
thoroughly orthodox and to contain nothing which a trinitarian
might not have written. In his Hist. Eccl., Praeparatio Evang.,
Demonstratio Evang., and other earlier works, although we find
some expressions employed which it would not have been possible
for an orthodox trinitarian to use after the Council of Nicaea,
at least without careful limitation to guard against
misapprehension, there is nothing even in these works which
requires us to believe that he accepted the doctrines of Arius'
predecessor, Lucian of Antioch; that is, there is nothing
distinctly and positively Arianistic about them, although there
are occasional expressions which might lead the reader to expect
that the writer would become an Arian if he ever learned of
Arius' doctrines. But if there is seen to be a lack of emphasis
upon the divinity of the Son, or rather a lack of clearness in
the conception of the nature of that divinity, it must be
remembered that there was at this time no especial reason for
emphasizing and defining it, but there was on the contrary very
good reason for laying particular stress upon the subordination
of the Son over against Sabellianism, which was so widely
prevalent during the third century, and which was exerting an
influence even over many orthodox theologians who did not
consciously accept Sabellianistic tenets. That Eusebius was a
decided subordinationist must be plain to every one that reads
his works with care, especially his earlier ones. It would be
surprising if he had not been, for he was born at a time when
Sabellianism (monarchianism) was felt to be the greatest danger
to which orthodox christology was exposed, and he was trained
under the influence of the followers of Origen, who had made it
one of his chief aims to emphasize the subordination of the Son
over against that very monarchianism. The same subordinationism
may be clearly seen in the writings of Dionysius of Alexandria
and of Gregory Thaumaturgus, two of Origen's greatest disciples.
It must not be forgotten that at the beginning of the fourth
century the problem of how to preserve the Godhood of Christ and
at the same time his subordination to the Father (in opposition
to the monarchianists) had not been solved. Eusebius in his
earlier writings shows that he holds both (he cannot be convicted
of denying Christ's divinity), but that he is as far from a
solution of the problem, and is just as uncertain in regard to
the exact relation of Father and Son, as Tertullian, Hippolytus,
Origen, Dionysius, and Gregory Thaumaturgus were; is just as
inconsistent in his modes of expression as they, and yet no more
so (see Harnack's Dogmengeschichte, I. pp. 628 sq. and 634 sq.,
for an exposition of the opinions of these other Fathers on the
subject). Eusebius, with the same immature and undeveloped views
which were held all through the third century, wrote those
earlier works which have given rise to so much dispute between
those who accuse him of Arianism and those who defend him against
the charge. When he wrote them he was neither Arian nor
Athanasian, and for that reason passages may be found in them
which if written after the Council of Nicaea might prove him an
Arian, and other passages which might as truly prove him an
Athanasian, just as in the writings of Origen were found by both
parties passages to support their views, and in Gregory
Thaumaturgus passages apparently teaching Arianism, and others
teaching its opposite, Sabellianism (see Harnack, ib. p.
646).
Let us suppose now that Eusebius, holding
fast to the divinity of Christ, and yet convinced just as firmly
of his subordination to the Father, becomes acquainted through
Arius, or other like-minded disciples of Lucian of Antioch, with
a doctrine which seems to preserve the Godhood, while at the same
time emphasizing strongly the subordination of the Son, and which
formulates the relation of Father and Son in a clear and rational
manner. That he should accept such a doctrine eagerly is just
what we should expect, and just what we find him doing. In his
epistles to Alexander and Euphration, he shows himself an Arian,
and Arius and his followers were quite right in claiming him as a
supporter. There is that in the epistles which is to be found
nowhere in his previous writings, and which distinctly separates
him from the orthodox party. How then are we to explain the fact
that a few years later he signed the Nicene creed and
anathematized the doctrines of Arius? Before we can understand
his conduct, it is necessary to examine carefully the two
epistles in question. Such an examination will show us that what
Eusebius is defending in them is not genuine Arianism. He
evidently thinks that it is, evidently supposes that he and Arius
are in complete agreement upon the subjects under discussion; but
he is mistaken. The extant fragments of the two epistles are
given below on p. 70. It will be seen that Eusebius in them
defends the Arian doctrine that there was a time when the Son of
God was not. It will be seen also that he finds fault with
Alexander for representing the Arians as teaching that the "Son
of God was made out of nothing, like all creatures," and contends
that Arius teaches that the Son of God was begotten, and that he
was not produced like all creatures. We know that the Arians very
commonly applied the word "begotten" to Christ, using it in such
cases as synonymous with "created," and thus not implying, as the
Athanasians did when they used the word, that he was of one
substance with the Father (compare, for instance, the explanation
of the meaning of the term given by Eusebius of Nicomedia in his
epistle to Paulinus; Theod. H. E. I. 6). It is evident that the
use of this word had deceived our Eusebius, and that he was led
by it to think that they taught that the Son was of the Father in
a peculiar sense, and did in reality partake in some way of
essential Godhood. And indeed it is not at all surprising that
the words of Arius, in his epistle to Alexander of Alexandria
(see Athan. Ep. de conc. Arim. et Seleuc., chap. II. S:3; Oxford
edition of Athanasius' Tracts against Arianism, p. 97), quoted by
Eusebius in his epistle to the same Alexander, should give
Eusebius that impression. The words are as follows: "The God of
the law, and of the prophets, and of the New Testament before
eternal ages begat an only-begotten Son, through whom also He
made the ages and the universe. And He begat him not in
appearance, but in truth, and subjected him to his own will,
unchangeable and immutable, a perfect creature of God, but not as
one of the creatures." Arius' use here of the word "begat," and
his qualification of the word "creature" by the adjective
"perfect," and by the statement that he was "not as one of the
creatures" naturally tended to make Eusebius think that Arius
acknowledged a real divinity of the Son, and that appeared to him
to be all that was necessary. Meanwhile Alexander in his epistle
to Alexander of Constantinople (Theod. H. E. I. 4) had, as
Eusebius says, misstated Arius' opinion, or at least had
attributed to him the belief that Christ was "made like all other
men that have ever been born," whereas Arius expressly disclaims
such a belief. Alexander undoubtedly thought that that was the
legitimate result to which the other views of Arius must lead;
but Eusebius did not think so, and felt himself called upon to
remonstrate with Alexander for what seemed to him the latter's
unfairness in the matter.
When we examine the Caesarean creed which
Eusebius presented to the Council as a fair statement of his
belief, we find nothing in it inconsistent with the acceptance of
the kind of Arianism which he defends in his epistle to
Alexander, and which he evidently supposed to be practically the
Arianism of Arius himself. In his epistle to Euphration, however,
Eusebius seems at first glance to go further and to give up the
real divinity of the Son. His words are, "Since the Son is
himself God, but not true God." But we have no right to interpret
these words, torn as they are from the context which might make
their meaning perfectly plain, without due regard to Eusebius'
belief expressed elsewhere in this epistle, and in his epistle to
Alexander which was evidently written about the same time. In the
epistle to Alexander he clearly reveals a belief in the real
divinity of the Son, while in the other fragment of his epistle
to Euphration he dwells upon the subordination of the Son and
approves the Arian opinion, which he had defended also in the
other epistle, that the "Father was before the Son." The
expression, "not true God" (a very common Arian expression; see
Athan. Orat. c. Arian. I. 6) seems therefore to have been used by
Eusebius to express a belief, not that the Son did not possess
real divinity (as the genuine Arians used it), but that he was
not equal to the Father, who, to Eusebius' thought, was "true
God." He indeed expressly calls the Son theos, which shows-when
the sense in which he elsewhere uses the word is considered-that
he certainly did believe him to partake of Godhood, though, in
some mysterious way, in a smaller degree, or in a less complete
manner than the Father. That Eusebius misunderstood Arius, and
did not perceive that he actually denied all real deity to the
Son, was due doubtless in part to his lack of theological insight
(Eusebius was never a great theologian), in part to his habitual
dread of Sabellianism (of which Arius had accused Alexander, and
toward which Eusebius evidently thought that the latter was
tending), which led him to look with great favor upon the
pronounced subordinationism of Arius, and thus to overlook the
dangerous extreme to which Arius carried that
subordinationism.
We are now, the writer hopes, prepared to
admit that Eusebius, after the breaking out of the Arian
controversy, became an Arian, as he understood Arianism, and
supported that party with considerable vigor; and that not as a
result of mere personal friendship, but of theological
conviction. At the same time, he was then, as always, a
peace-loving man, and while lending Arius his approval and
support, he united with other Palestinian bishops in enjoining
upon him submission to his bishop (Sozomen, H. E. I. 15). As an
Arian, then, and yet possessed with the desire of securing, if it
were possible, peace and harmony between the two factions,
Eusebius appeared at the Council of Nicaea, and there signed a
creed containing Athanasian doctrine and anathematizing the chief
tenets of Arius. How are we to explain his conduct? We shall,
perhaps, do best to let him explain his own conduct. In his
letter to the church of Caesarea (preserved by Socrates, H. E. I.
8, as well as by other authors), he writes as
follows:-
"What was transacted concerning
ecclesiastical faith at the Great Council assembled at Nicaea you
have probably learned, Beloved, from other sources, rumour being
wont to precede the accurate account of what is doing. But lest
in such reports the circumstances of the case have been
misrepresented, we have been obliged to transmit to you, first,
the formula of faith presented by ourselves; and next, the
second, which the Fathers put forth with some additions to our
words. Our own paper, then, which was read in the presence of our
most pious Emperor, and declared to be good and unexceptionable,
ran thus:-
"As we have received from the Bishops who
preceded us, and in our first catechisings, and when we received
the Holy Laver, and as we have learned from the divine
Scriptures, and as we believed and taught in the presbytery, and
in the Episcopate itself, so believing also at the time present,
we report to you our faith, and it is this:-
"We believe in One God, the Father
Almighty, the Maker of all things visible and invisible. And in
One Lord Jesus Christ, the Word of God, God from God, Light from
Light, Life from Life, Son Only-begotten, first-born of every
creature, before all the ages, begotten from the Father, by whom
also all things were made; who for our salvation was made flesh,
and lived among men, and suffered, and rose again the third day,
and ascended to the Father, and will come again in glory to judge
quick and dead. And we believe also in One Holy Ghost; believing
each of These to be and to exist, the Father truly Father, and
the Son truly Son, and the Holy Ghost truly Holy Ghost, as also
our Lord, sending forth His disciples for the preaching, said,
Go, teach all nations, baptizing them in the Name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Concerning whom we
confidently affirm that so we hold, and so we think, and so we
have held aforetime, and we maintain this faith unto the death,
anathematizing every godless heresy. That this we have ever
thought from our heart and soul, from the time we recollect
ourselves, and now think and say in truth, before God Almighty
and our Lord Jesus Christ do we witness, being able by proofs to
show and to convince you, that, even in times past, such has been
our belief and preaching.'
"On this faith being publicly put forth by
us, no room for contradiction appeared; but our most pious
Emperor, before any one else, testified that it comprised most
orthodox statements. He confessed, moreover, that such were his
own sentiments; and he advised all present to agree to it, and to
subscribe its articles and to assent to them, with the insertion
of the single word, One in substance' (homoousios), which,
moreover, he interpreted as not in the sense of the affections of
bodies, nor as if the Son subsisted from the Father, in the way
of division, or any severance; for that the immaterial and
intellectual and incorporeal nature could not be the subject of
any corporeal affection, but that it became us to conceive of
such things in a divine and ineffable manner. And such were the
theological remarks of our most wise and most religious Emperor;
but they, with a view to the addition of One in substance,' drew
up the following formula:-
"We believe in One God, the Father
Almighty, Maker of all things visible and invisible:-And in One
Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, begotten of the Father,
Only-begotten, that is, from the Substance of the Father; God
from God, Light from Light, very God from very God, begotten, not
made, One in substance with the Father, by whom all things were
made, both things in heaven and things in earth; who for us men
and for our salvation came down and was made flesh, was made man,
suffered, and rose again the third day, ascended into heaven, and
cometh to judge quick and dead.
"And in the Holy Ghost. But those who say,
"Once He was not," and "Before His generation He was not," and
"He came to be from nothing," or those who pretend that the Son
of God is "Of other subsistence or substance," or "created," or
"alterable," or "mutable," the Catholic Church
anathematizes.'
"On their dictating this formula, we did
not let it pass without inquiry in what sense they introduced of
the substance of the Father,' and one in substance with the
Father.' Accordingly questions and explanations took place, and
the meaning of the words underwent the scrutiny of reason. And
they professed that the phrase of the substance' was indicative
of the Son's being indeed from the Father, yet without being as
if a part of Him. And with this understanding we thought good to
assent to the sense of such religious doctrine, teaching, as it
did, that the Son was from the Father, not, however, a part of
His substance. On this account we assented to the sense
ourselves, without declining even the term One in substance,'
peace being the object which we set before us, and steadfastness
in the orthodox view. In the same way we also admitted begotten,
not made'; since the Council alleged that made' was an
appellative common to the other creatures which came to be
through the Son, to whom the Son had no likeness. Wherefore, said
they, He was not a work resembling the things which through Him
came to be, but was of a substance which is too high for the
level of any work, and which the Divine oracles teach to have
been generated from the Father, the mode of generation being
inscrutable and incalculable to every generated nature. And so,
too, on examination there are grounds for saying that the Son is
one in substance' with the Father; not in the way of bodies, nor
like mortal beings, for He is not such by division of substance,
or by severance; no, nor by any affection, or alteration, or
changing of the Father's substance and power (since from all such
the ingenerate nature of the Father is alien), but because one in
substance with the Father' suggests that the Son of God bears no
resemblance to the generated creatures, but that to His Father
alone who begat Him is He in every way assimilated, and that He
is not of any other subsistence and substance, but from the
Father.
"To which term also, thus interpreted, it
appeared well to assent; since we were aware that, even among the
ancients, some learned and illustrious Bishops and writers have
used the term one in substance' in their theological teaching
concerning the Father and Son. So much, then, be said concerning
the faith which was published; to which all of us assented, not
without inquiry, but according to the specified senses, mentioned
before the most religious Emperor himself, and justified by the
fore-mentioned considerations. And as to the anathematism
published by them at the end of the Faith, it did not pain us,
because it forbade to use words not in Scripture, from which
almost all the confusion and disorder of the Church have come.
Since, then, no divinely inspired Scripture has used the phrases,
out of nothing' and once He was not,' and the rest which follow,
there appeared no ground for using or teaching them; to which
also we assented as a good decision, since it had not been our
custom hitherto to use these terms. Moreover, to anathematize
Before His generation He was not' did not seem preposterous, in
that it is confessed by all that the Son of God was before the
generation according to the flesh. Nay, our most religious
Emperor did at the time prove, in a speech, that He was in being
even according to His divine generation which is before all ages,
since even before he was generated in energy, He was in virtue
with the Father ingenerately, the Father being always Father, as
King always and Saviour always, having all things in virtue, and
being always in the same respects and in the same way. This we
have been forced to transmit to you, Beloved, as making clear to
you the deliberation of our inquiry and assent, and how
reasonably we resisted even to the last minute, as long as we
were offended at statements which differed from our own, but
received without contention what no longer pained us, as soon as,
on a candid examination of the sense of the words, they appeared
to us to coincide with what we ourselves have professed in the
faith which we have already published."
It will be seen that while the expressions
"of the substance of the Father," "begotten not made," and "One
in substance," or "consubstantial with the Father," are all
explicitly anti-Arianistic, yet none of them contradicts the
doctrines held by Eusebius before the Council, so far as we can
learn them from his epistles to Alexander and Euphration and from
the Caesarean creed. His own explanation of those expressions,
which it is to be observed was the explanation given by the
Council itself, and which therefore he was fully warranted in
accepting,-even though it may not have been so rigid as to
satisfy an Athanasius,-shows us how this is. He had believed
before that the Son partook of the Godhood in very truth, that He
was "begotten," and therefore "not made," if "made" implied
something different from "begotten," as the Nicene Fathers held
that it did; and he had believed before that the "Son of God has
no resemblance to created' things, but is in every respect like
the Father only who begat him, and that He is of no other
substance or essence than the Father," and therefore if that was
what the word "Consubstantial" (homoousios) meant he could not do
otherwise than accept that too.
It is clear that the dread of Sabellianism
was still before the eyes of Eusebius, and was the cause of his
hesitation in assenting to the various changes, especially to the
use of the word homoousios, which had been a Sabellian word and
had been rejected on that account by the Synod of Antioch, at
which Paul of Samosata had been condemned some sixty years
before.
It still remains to explain Eusebius'
sanction of the anathemas attached to the creed which expressly
condemn at least one of the beliefs which he had himself formerly
held, viz.: that the "Father was before the Son," or as he puts
it elsewhere, that "He who is begat him who was not." The knot
might of course be simply cut by supposing an act of hypocrisy on
his part, but the writer is convinced that such a conclusion does
violence to all that we know of Eusebius and of his subsequent
treatment of the questions involved in this discussion. It is
quite possible to suppose that a real change of opinion on his
part took place during the sessions of the Council. Indeed when
we realize how imperfect and incorrect a conception of Arianism
he had before the Council began, and how clearly its true bearing
was there brought out by its enemies, we can see that he could
not do otherwise than change; that he must have become either an
out-and-out Arian, or an opponent of Arianism as he did. When he
learned, and learned for the first time, that Arianism meant the
denial of all essential divinity to Christ, and when he saw that
it involved the ascription of mutability and of other finite
attributes to him, he must either change entirely his views on
those points or he must leave the Arian party. To him who with
all his subordinationism had laid in all his writings so much
stress on the divinity of the Word (even though he had not
realized exactly what that divinity involved) it would have been
a revolution in his Christian life and faith to have admitted
what he now learned that Arianism involved. Sabellianism had been
his dread, but now this new fear, which had aroused so large a
portion of the Church, seized him too, and he felt that stand
must be made against this too great separation of Father and Son,
which was leading to dangerous results. Under the pressure of
this fear it is not surprising that he should become convinced
that the Arian formula-"there was a time when the Son was
not"-involved serious consequences, and that Alexander and his
followers should have succeeded in pointing out to him its
untruth, because it led necessarily to a false conclusion. It is
not surprising, moreover, that they should have succeeded in
explaining to him at least partially their belief, which, as his
epistle to Alexander shows, had before been absolutely
incomprehensible, that the Son was generated from all eternity,
and that therefore the Father did not exist before him in a
temporal sense.
He says toward the close of his epistle to
the Caesarean church that he had not been accustomed to use such
expressions as "There was a time when he was not," "He came to be
from nothing," etc. And there is no reason to doubt that he
speaks the truth. Even in his epistles to Alexander and
Euphration he does not use those phrases (though he does defend
the doctrine taught by the first of them), nor does Arius
himself, in the epistle to Alexander upon which Eusebius
apparently based his knowledge of the system, use those
expressions, although he too teaches the same doctrine. The fact
is that in that epistle Arius studiously avoids such favorite
Arian phrases as might emphasize the differences between himself
and Alexander, and Eusebius seems to have avoided them for the
same reason. We conclude then that Eusebius was not an Arian (nor
an adherent of Lucian) before 318, that soon after that date he
became an Arian in the sense in which he understood Arianism, but
that during the Council of Nicaea he ceased to be one in any
sense. His writings in later years confirm the course of
doctrinal development which we have supposed went on in his mind.
He never again defends Arian doctrines in his works, and yet he
never becomes an Athanasian in his emphasis upon the homoousion.
In fact he represents a mild orthodoxy, which is always
orthodox-when measured by the Nicene creed as interpreted by the
Nicene Council-and yet is always mild. Moreover, he never
acquired an affection for the word homoousios, which to his mind
was bound up with too many evil associations ever to have a
pleasant sound to him. He therefore studiously avoided it in his
own writings, although clearly showing that he believed fully in
what the Nicene Council had explained it to mean. It must be
remembered that during many years of his later life he was
engaged in controversy with Marcellus, a thorough-going
Sabellian, who had been at the time of the Council one of the
strongest of Athanasius' colleagues. In his contest with him it
was again anti-Sabellianistic polemics which absorbed him and
increased his distaste for homoousion and minimized his emphasis
upon the distinctively anti-Arianistic doctrines formulated at
Nicaea. For any except the very wisest minds it was a matter of
enormous difficulty to steer between the two extremes in those
times of strife; and while combating Sabellianism not to fall
into Arianism, and while combating the latter not to be engulfed
in the former. That Eusebius under the constant pressure of the
one fell into the other at one time, and was in occasional danger
of falling into it again in later years, can hardly be cited as
an evidence either of wrong heart or of weak head. An Athanasius
he was not, but neither was he an unsteady weather-cock, or an
hypocritical time-server.
The
Council Of Nicaea
At the Council of Nicaea, which met
pursuant to an imperial summons in the year 325 A.D., Eusebius
played a very prominent part. A description of the opening scenes
of the Council is given in his Vita Constantini, III. 10 sq.
After the Emperor had entered in pomp and had taken his seat, a
bishop who sat next to him upon his right arose and delivered in
his honor the opening oration, to which the Emperor replied in a
brief Latin address. There can be no doubt that this bishop was
our Eusebius. Sozomen (H. E. I. 19) states it directly; and
Eusebius, although he does not name the speaker, yet refers to
him, as he had referred to the orator at the dedication of
Paulinus' church at Tyre, in such a way as to make it clear that
it was himself; and moreover in his Vita Constantini, I. 1, he
mentions the fact that he had in the midst of an assembly of the
servants of God addressed an oration to the Emperor on the
occasion of the latter's vicennalia, i.e. in 325 a.d. On the
other hand, however, Theodoret (H. E. I. 7) states that this
opening oration was delivered by Eustathius, bishop of Antioch;
while Theodore of Mopsuestia and Philostorgius (according to
Nicetas Choniates, Thes. de orthod. fid. V. 7) assign it to
Alexander of Alexandria. As Lightfoot suggests, it is possible to
explain the discrepancy in the reports by supposing that
Eustathius and Alexander, the two great patriarchs, first
addressed a few words to the Emperor and that then Eusebius
delivered the regular oration. This supposition is not at all
unlikely, for it would be quite proper for the two highest
ecclesiastics present to welcome the Emperor formally in behalf
of the assembled prelates, before the regular oration was
delivered by Eusebius. At the same time, the supposition that one
or the other of the two great patriarchs must have delivered the
opening address was such a natural one that it may have been
adopted by Theodoret and the other writers referred to without
any historical basis. It is in any case certain that the regular
oration was delivered by Eusebius himself (see the convincing
arguments adduced by Stroth, p. xxvii. sq.). This oration is no
longer extant, but an idea of its character may be formed from
the address delivered by Eusebius at the Emperor's tricennalia
(which is still extant under the title De laudibus Constantini;
see below, p. 43) and from the general tone of his Life of
Constantine. It was avowedly a panegyric, and undoubtedly as
fulsome as it was possible to make it, and his powers in that
direction were by no means slight.
That Eusebius, instead of the bishop of
some more prominent church, should have been selected to deliver
the opening address, may have been in part owing to his
recognized standing as the most learned man and the most famous
writer in the Church, in part to the fact that he was not as
pronounced a partisan as some of his distinguished brethren; for
instance, Alexander of Alexandria, and Eusebius of Nicomedia; and
finally in some measure to his intimate relations with the
Emperor. How and when his intimacy with the latter grew up we do
not know. As already remarked, he seems to have become personally
acquainted with him many years before, when Constantine passed
through Caesarea in the train of Diocletian, and it may be that a
mutual friendship, which was so marked in later years, began at
that time. However that may be, Eusebius seems to have possessed
special advantages of one kind or another, enabling him to come
into personal contact with official circles, and once introduced
to imperial notice, his wide learning, sound common sense, genial
temper and broad charity would insure him the friendship of the
Emperor himself, or of any other worthy officer of state. We have
no record of an intimacy between Constantine and Eusebius before
the Council of Nicaea, but many clear intimations of it after
that time. In fact, it is evident that during the last decade at
least of the Emperor's life, few, if any, bishops stood higher in
his esteem or enjoyed a larger measure of his confidence. Compare
for instance the records of their conversations (contained in the
Vita Constantini, I. 28 and II. 9), of their correspondence (ib.
II. 46, III. 61, IV. 35 and 36), and the words of Constantine
himself (ib. III. 60). The marked attention paid by him to the
speeches delivered by Eusebius in his presence (ib. IV. 33 and
46) is also to be noticed. Eusebius' intimacy with the imperial
family is shown likewise in the tone of the letter which he wrote
to Constantia, the sister of Constantine and wife of Licinius, in
regard to a likeness of Christ which she had asked him to send
her. The frankness and freedom with which he remonstrates with
her for what he considers mistaken zeal on her part, reveal a
degree of familiarity which could have come only from long and
cordial relations between himself and his royal correspondent.
Whatever other reasons therefore may have combined to indicate
Eusebius as the most fitting person to deliver the oration in
honor of the Emperor at the Council of Nicaea, there can be
little doubt that Constantine's personal friendship for him had
much to do with his selection. The action of the Council on the
subject of Arianism, and Eusebius' conduct in the matter, have
already been discussed. Of the bishops assembled at the Council,
not far from three hundred in number (the reports of
eye-witnesses vary from two hundred and fifty to three hundred
and eighteen), all but two signed the Nicene creed as adopted by
the Council. These two, both of them Egyptians, were banished
with Arius to Illyria, while Eusebius of Nicomedia, and Theognis
of Nicaea, who subscribed the creed itself but refused to assent
to its anathemas, were also banished for a time, but soon
yielded, and were restored to their churches.
Into the other purposes for which the
Nicene Council was called,-the settlement of the dispute
respecting the time of observing Easter and the healing of the
Meletian schism,-it is not necessary to enter here. We have no
record of the part which Eusebius took in these transactions.
Lightfoot has abundantly shown (p. 313 sq.) that the common
supposition that Eusebius was the author of the paschal cycle of
nineteen years is false, and that there is no reason to suppose
that he had anything particular to do with the decision of the
paschal question at this Council.
Continuance Of The Arian Controversy.
Eusebius' Relations To The Two Parties
The Council of Nicaea did not bring the
Arian controversy to an end. The orthodox party was victorious,
it is true, but the Arians were still determined, and could not
give up their enmity against the opponents of Arius, and their
hope that they might in the end turn the tables on their
antagonists. Meanwhile, within a few years after the Council, a
quarrel broke out between our Eusebius and Eustathius, bishop of
Antioch, a resolute supporter of Nicene orthodoxy. According to
Socrates (H. E. I. 23) and Sozomen (H. E. II. 18) Eustathius
accused Eusebius of perverting the Nicene doctrines, while
Eusebius denied the charge, and in turn taxed Eustathius with
Sabellianism. The quarrel finally became so serious that it was
deemed necessary to summon a Council for the investigation of
Eustathius' orthodoxy and the settlement of the dispute. This
Council met in Antioch in 330 a.d. (see Tillemont, VII. p. 651
sq., for a discussion of the date), and was made up chiefly of
bishops of Arian or semi-Arian tendencies. This fact, however,
brings no discredit upon Eusebius. The Council was held in
another province, and he can have had nothing to do with its
composition. In fact, convened, as it was, in Eustathius' own
city, it must have been legally organized; and indeed Eustathius
himself acknowledged its jurisdiction by appearing before it to
answer the charges made against him. Theodoret's absurd account
of the origin of the synod and of the accusations brought against
Eustathius (H. E. I. 21) bears upon its face the stamp of
falsehood, and is, as Hefele has shown (Conciliengeschichte, I.
451), hopelessly in error in its chronology. It is therefore to
be rejected as quite worthless. The decision of the Council
doubtless fairly represented the views of the majority of the
bishops of that section, for we know that Arianism had a very
strong hold there. To think of a packed Council and of illegal
methods of procedure in procuring the verdict against Eustathius
is both unnecessary and unwarrantable. The result of the Council
was the deposition of Eustathius from his bishopric and his
banishment by the Emperor to Illyria, where he afterward died.
There is a division of opinion among our sources in regard to the
immediate successor of Eustathius. All of them agree that
Eusebius was asked to become bishop of Antioch, but that he
refused the honor, and that Euphronius was chosen in his stead.
Socrates and Sozomen, however, inform us that the election of
Eusebius took place immediately after the deposition of
Eustathius, while Theodoret (H. E. I. 22) names Eulalius as
Eustathius' immediate successor, and states that he lived but a
short time, and that Eusebius was then asked to succeed him.
Theodoret is supported by Jerome (Chron., year of Abr. 2345) and
by Philostorgius (H. E. III. 15), both of whom insert a bishop
Eulalius between Eustathius and Euphronius. It is easier to
suppose that Socrates and Sozomen may have omitted so unimportant
a name at this point than that the other three witnesses inserted
it without warrant. Socrates indeed implies in the same chapter
that his knowledge of these affairs is limited, and it is not
surprising that Eusebius' election, which caused a great stir,
should have been connected in the mind of later writers
immediately with Eustathius' deposition, and the intermediate
steps forgotten. It seems probable, therefore, that immediately
after the condemnation of Eustathius, Eulalius was appointed in
his place, perhaps by the same Council, and that after his death,
a few months later, Eusebius, who had meanwhile gone back to
Caesarea, was elected in due order by another Council of
neighboring bishops summoned for the purpose, and that he was
supported by a large party of citizens. It is noticeable that the
letter written by the Emperor to the Council, which wished to
transfer Eusebius to Antioch (see Vita Const. III. 62), mentions
in its salutation the names of five bishops, but among them is
only one (Theodotus) who is elsewhere named as present at the
Council which deposed Eustathius, while Eusebius of Nicomedia,
and Theognis of Nicaea, as well as others whom we know to have
been on hand on that occasion, are not referred to by the
Emperor. This fact certainly seems to point to a different
council.
It is greatly to Eusebius' credit that he
refused the call extended to him. Had he been governed simply by
selfish ambition he would certainly have accepted it, for the
patriarchate of Antioch stood at that time next to Alexandria in
point of honor in the Eastern Church. The Emperor commended him
very highly for his decision, in his epistles to the people of
Antioch and to the Council (Vita Const. III. 60, 62), and in that
to Eusebius himself (ib. III. 61). He saw in it a desire on
Eusebius' part to observe the ancient canon of the Church, which
forbade the transfer of a bishop from one see to another. But
that in itself can hardly have been sufficient to deter the
latter from accepting the high honor offered him, for it was
broken without scruple on all sides. It is more probable that he
saw that the schism of the Antiochenes would be embittered by the
induction into the bishopric of that church of Eustathius' chief
opponent, and that he did not feel that he had a right so to
divide the Church of God. Eusebius' general character, as known
to us, justifies us in supposing that this high motive had much
to do with his decision. We may suppose also that so difficult a
place can have had no very great attractions for a man of his age
and of his peace-loving disposition and scholarly tastes. In
Caesarea he had spent his life; there he had the great library of
Pamphilus at his disposal, and leisure to pursue his literary
work. In Antioch he would have found himself compelled to plunge
into the midst of quarrels and seditions of all kinds, and would
have been obliged to devote his entire attention to the
performance of his official duties. His own tastes therefore must
have conspired with his sense of duty to lead him to reject the
proffered call and to remain in the somewhat humbler station
which he already occupied.
Not long after the deposition of
Eustathius, the Arians and their sympathizers began to work more
energetically to accomplish the ruin of Athanasius, their
greatest foe. He had become Alexander's successor as bishop of
Alexandria in the year 326, and was the acknowledged head of the
orthodox party. If he could be brought into discredit, there
might be hopes of restoring Arius to his position in Alexandria,
and of securing for Arianism a recognition, and finally a
dominating influence in the church at large. To the overthrow of
Athanasius therefore all good Arians bent their energies. They
found ready accomplices in the schismatical Meletians of Egypt,
who were bitter enemies of the orthodox church of Alexandria. It
was useless to accuse Athanasius of heterodoxy; he was too widely
known as the pillar of the orthodox faith. Charges must be framed
of another sort, and of a sort to stir up the anger of the
Emperor against him. The Arians therefore and the Meletians began
to spread the most vile and at the same time absurd stories about
Athanasius (see especially the latter's Apol. c. Arian. S:59
sq.). These at last became so notorious that the Emperor summoned
Athanasius to appear and make his defense before a council of
bishops to be held in Caesarea (Sozomen, H. E. II. 25; Theodoret,
H. E. I. 28). Athanasius, however, fearing that the Council would
be composed wholly of his enemies, and that it would therefore be
impossible to secure fair play, excused himself and remained
away. But in the following year (see Sozomen, H. E. II. 25) he
received from the Emperor a summons to appear before a council at
Tyre. The summons was too peremptory to admit of a refusal, and
Athanasius therefore attended, accompanied by many of his devoted
adherents (see Sozomen, ib.; Theodoret, H. E. I. 30; Socrates, H.
E. I. 28; Athanasius, Apol. c. Arian. S:71 sq.; Eusebius, Vita
Const. IV. 41 sq., and Epiphanius, Haer. LXVIII. 8). After a
time, perceiving that he had no chance of receiving fair play, he
suddenly withdrew from the Council and proceeded directly to
Constantinople, in order to lay his case before the Emperor
himself, and to induce the latter to allow him to meet his
accusers in his presence, and plead his cause before him. There
was nothing for the Synod to do after his flight but to sustain
the charges brought against him, some of which he had not stayed
to refute, and to pass condemnation upon him. Besides various
immoral and sacrilegious deeds of which he was accused, his
refusal to appear before the Council of Caesarea the previous
year was made an important item of the prosecution. It was during
this Council that Potamo flung at Eusebius the taunt of
cowardice, to which reference was made above, and which doubtless
did much to confirm Eusebius' distrust of and hostility to the
Athanasian party. Whether Eusebius of Caesarea, as is commonly
supposed, or Eusebius of Nicomedia, or some other bishop,
presided at this Council we are not able to determine. The
account of Epiphanius seems to imply that the former was
presiding at the time that Potamo made his untimely accusation.
Our sources are, most of them, silent on the matter, but
according to Valesius, Eusebius of Nicomedia is named by some of
them, but which they are I have not been able to discover. We
learn from Socrates (H. E. I. 28), as well as from other sources,
that this Synod of Tyre was held in the thirtieth year of
Constantine's reign, that is, between July, 334, and July, 335.
As the Council was closed only in time for the bishops to reach
Jerusalem by July, 335, it is probable that it was convened in
335 rather than in 334. From Sozomen (H. E. II. 25) we learn also
that the Synod of Caesarea had been held the preceding year,
therefore in 333 or 334 (the latter being the date commonly given
by historians). While the Council of Tyre was still in session,
the bishops were commanded by Constantine to proceed immediately
to Jerusalem to take part in the approaching festival to be held
there on the occasion of his tricennalia. The scene was one of
great splendor. Bishops were present from all parts of the world,
and the occasion was marked by the dedication of the new and
magnificent basilica which Constantine had erected upon the site
of Calvary (Theodoret, I. 31; Socrates, I. 28 and 33; Sozomen,
II. 26; Eusebius, Vita Const. IV. 41 and 43). The bishops
gathered in Jerusalem at this time held another synod before
separating. In this they completed the work begun at Tyre, by
re-admitting Arius and his adherents to the communion of the
Church (see Socrates, I. 33, and Sozomen, II. 27). According to
Sozomen the Emperor, having been induced to recall Arius from
banishment in order to reconsider his case, was presented by the
latter with a confession of faith, which was so worded as to
convince Constantine of his orthodoxy. He therefore sent Arius
and his companion Euzoius to the bishops assembled in Jerusalem
with the request that they would examine the confession, and if
they were satisfied with its orthodoxy would re-admit them to
communion. The Council, which was composed largely of Arius'
friends and sympathizers, was only too glad to accede to the
Emperor's request.
Meanwhile Athanasius had induced
Constantine, out of a sense of justice, to summon the bishops
that had condemned him at Tyre to give an account of their
proceedings before the Emperor himself at Constantinople. This
unexpected, and, doubtless, not altogether welcome summons came
while the bishops were at Jerusalem, and the majority of them at
once returned home in alarm, while only a few answered the call
and repaired to Constantinople. Among these were Eusebius of
Nicomedia, Theognis of Nicaea, Patrophilus of Scythopolis, and
other prominent Arians, and with them our Eusebius (Athanasius,
Apol. c. Arian. S:S:86 and 87; Socrates, I. 33-35; Sozomen, II.
28). The accusers of Athanasius said nothing on this occasion in
regard to his alleged immoralities, for which he had been
condemned at Tyre, but made another equally trivial accusation
against him, and the result was his banishment to Gaul. Whether
Constantine banished him because he believed the charge brought
against him, or because he wished to preserve him from the
machinations of his enemies (as asserted by his son Constantine,
and apparently believed by Athanasius himself; see his Apol. c.
Arian. S:87), or because he thought that Athanasius' absence
would allay the troubles in the Alexandrian church we do not
know. The latter supposition seems most probable. In any case he
was not recalled from banishment until after Constantine's death.
Our Eusebius has been severely condemned by many historians for
the part taken by him in the Eustathian controversy and
especially in the war against Athanasius. In justice to him a
word or two must be spoken in his defense. So far as his
relations to Eustathius are concerned, it is to be noticed that
the latter commenced the controversy by accusing Eusebius of
heterodoxy. Eusebius himself did not begin the quarrel, and very
likely had no desire to engage in any such doctrinal strife; but
he was compelled to defend himself, and in doing so he could not
do otherwise than accuse Eustathius of Sabellianism; for if the
latter was not satisfied with Eusebius' orthodoxy, which Eusebius
himself believed to be truly Nicene, then he must be leaning too
far toward the other extreme; that is, toward Sabellianism. There
is no reason to doubt that Eusebius was perfectly straightforward
and honorable throughout the whole controversy, and at the
Council of Antioch itself. That he was not actuated by unworthy
motives, or by a desire for revenge, is evinced by his rejection
of the proffered call to Antioch, the acceptance of which would
have given him so good an opportunity to triumph over his fallen
enemy. It must be admitted, in fact, that Eusebius comes out of
this controversy without a stain of any kind upon his character.
He honestly believed Eustathius to be a Sabellian, and he acted
accordingly.
Eusebius has been blamed still more
severely for his treatment of Athanasius. But again the facts
must be looked at impartially. It is necessary always to remember
that Sabellianism was in the beginning and remained throughout
his life the heresy which he most dreaded, and which he had
perhaps most reason to dread. He must, even at the Council of
Nicaea, have suspected Athanasius, who laid so much stress upon
the unity of essence on the part of Father and Son, of a leaning
toward Sabellianistic principles; and this suspicion must have
been increased when he discovered, as he believed, that
Athanasius' most staunch supporter, Eustathius, was a genuine
Sabellian. Moreover, on the other side, it is to be remembered
that Eusebius of Nicomedia, and all the other leading Arians, had
signed the Nicene creed and had proclaimed themselves thoroughly
in sympathy with its teaching. Our Eusebius, knowing the change
that had taken place in his own mind upon the controverted
points, may well have believed that their views had undergone
even a greater change, and that they were perfectly honest in
their protestations of orthodoxy. And finally, when Arius himself
presented a confession of faith which led the Emperor, who had
had a personal interview with him, to believe that he had altered
his views and was in complete harmony with the Nicene faith, it
is not surprising that our Eusebius, who was naturally
unsuspicious, conciliatory and peace-loving, should think the
same thing, and be glad to receive Arius back into communion,
while at the same time remaining perfectly loyal to the orthodoxy
of the Nicene creed which he had subscribed. Meanwhile his
suspicions of the Arian party being in large measure allayed, and
his distrust of the orthodoxy of Athanasius and of his adherents
being increased by the course of events, it was only natural that
he should lend more or less credence to the calumnies which were
so industriously circulated against Athanasius. To charge him
with dishonesty for being influenced by these reports, which seem
to us so absurd and palpably calumnious, is quite unwarranted.
Constantine, who was, if not a theologian, at least a
clear-headed and sharp-sighted man, believed them, and why should
Eusebius not have done the same? The incident which took place at
the Council of Tyre in connection with Potamo and himself was
important; for whatever doubts he may have had up to that time as
to the truth of the accusations made against Athanasius and his
adherents, Potamo's conduct convinced him that the charges of
tyranny and high-handed dealing brought against the whole party
were quite true. It could not be otherwise than that he should
believe that the good of the Alexandrian church, and therefore of
the Church at large, demanded the deposition of the seditious and
tyrannous archbishop, who was at the same time quite probably
Sabellianistic in his tendencies. It must in justice be noted
that there is not the slightest reason to suppose that our
Eusebius had anything to do with the dishonorable intrigues of
the Arian party throughout this controversy. Athanasius, who
cannot say enough in condemnation of the tactics of Eusebius of
Nicomedia and his supporters, never mentions Eusebius of Caesarea
in a tone of bitterness. He refers to him occasionally as a
member of the opposite party, but he has no complaints to utter
against him, as he has against the others. This is very
significant, and should put an end to all suspicions of unworthy
conduct on Eusebius' part. It is to be observed that the latter,
though having good cause as he believed to condemn Athanasius and
his adherents, never acted as a leader in the war against them.
His name, if mentioned at all, occurs always toward the end of
the list as one of the minor combatants, although his position
and his learning would have entitled him to take the most
prominent position in the whole affair, if he had cared to. He
was but true to his general character in shrinking from such a
controversy, and in taking part in it only in so far as his
conscience compelled him to. We may suspect indeed that he would
not have made one of the small party that repaired to
Constantinople in response to the Emperor's imperious summons had
it not been for the celebration of Constantine's tricennalia,
which was taking place there at the time, and at which he
delivered, on the special invitation of the Emperor and in his
presence, one of his greatest orations. Certain it is, from the
account which he gives in his Vita Constantini, that both in
Constantinople and in Jerusalem the festival of the tricennalia,
with its attendant ceremonies, interested him much more than did
the condemnation of Athanasius.
Eusebius
And Marcellus
It was during this visit to Constantinople
that another synod was held, at which Eusebius was present, and
the result of which was the condemnation and deposition of the
bishop Marcellus of Ancyra (see Socrates, I. 36; Sozomen, II. 33;
Eusebius, Contra Marc. II. 4). The attitude of our Eusebius
toward Marcellus is again significant of his theological
tendencies. Marcellus had written a book against Asterius, a
prominent Arian, in which, in his zeal for the Nicene orthodoxy,
he had laid himself open to the charge of Sabellianism. On this
account he was deposed by the Constantinopolitan Synod, and our
Eusebius was urged to write a work exposing his errors and
defending the action of the Council. As a consequence he composed
his two works against Marcellus which will be described later.
That Eusebius, if not in the case of Athanasius and possibly not
in that of Eustathius, had at least in the present case good
ground for the belief that Marcellus was a Sabellian, or
Sabellianistic in tendency, is abundantly proved by the citations
which he makes from Marcellus' own works; and, moreover, his
judgment and that of the Synod was later confirmed even by
Athanasius himself. Though not suspecting Marcellus for some
time, Athanasius finally became convinced that he had deviated
from the path of orthodoxy, and, as Newman has shown (in his
introduction to Athanasius' fourth discourse against the Arians,
Oxford Library of the Fathers, vol. 19, p. 503 sq.), directed
that discourse against his errors and those of his
followers.
The controversy with Marcellus seems to
have been the last in which Eusebius was engaged, and it was
opposition to the dreaded heresy of Sabellius which moved him
here as in all the other cases. It is important to emphasize,
however, what is often overlooked, that though Eusebius during
these years was so continuously engaged in controversy with one
or another of the members of the anti-Arian party, there is no
evidence that he ever deviated from the doctrinal position which
he took at the Council of Nicaea. After that date it was never
Arianism which he consciously supported; it was never the Nicene
orthodoxy which he opposed. He supported those members of the old
Arian party who had signed the Nicene creed and protested that
they accepted its teaching, against those members of the opposite
party whom he believed to be drifting toward Sabellianism, or
acting tyrannously and unjustly toward their opponents. The
anti-Sabellianistic interest influenced him all the time, but his
post-Nicene writings contain no evidence that he had fallen back
into the Arianizing position which he had held before 325. They
reveal, on the contrary, a fair type of orthodoxy, colored only
by its decidedly anti-Sabellian emphasis.
The
Death Of Eusebius
In less than two years after the
celebration of his tricennalia, on May 22, 337 a.d., the great
Constantine breathed his last, in Nicomedia, his former Capital.
Eusebius, already an old man, produced a lasting testimonial of
his own unbounded affection and admiration for the first
Christian emperor, in his Life of Constantine. Soon afterward he
followed his imperial friend at the advanced age of nearly, if
not quite, eighty years. The exact date of his death is unknown,
but it can be fixed approximately. We know from Sozomen (H. E.
III. 5) that in the summer of 341, when a council was held at
Antioch (on the date of the Council, which we are able to fix
with great exactness, see Hefele, Conciliengesch. I. p. 502 sq.)
Acacius, Eusebius' successor, was already bishop of Caesarea.
Socrates (H. E. II. 4) and Sozomen (H. E. III. 2) both mention
the death of Eusebius and place it shortly before the death of
Constantine the younger, which took place early in 340 (see
Tillemont's Hist. des Emp. IV. p. 327 sq.), and after the
intrigues had begun which resulted in Athanasius' second
banishment. We are thus led to place Eusebius' death late in the
year 339, or early in the year 340 (cf. Lightfoot's article, p.
318).
Chapter II
The Writings of Eusebius
Catalogue Of His Works
The writings of Eusebius that are known to
us, extant and non-extant, may be classified for convenience'
sake under the following heads: I. Historical. II. Apologetic.
III. Polemic. IV. Dogmatic. V. Critical and Exegetical. VI.
Biblical Dictionaries. VII. Orations. VIII. Epistles. IX.
Spurious or doubtful works. The classification is necessarily
somewhat artificial, and claims to be neither exhaustive nor
exclusive.
I. Historical Works.
Life of Pamphilus
Martyrs of Palestine
Collection of Ancient Martyrdoms
Chronicle
Ecclesiastical History
Life of Constantine
II. Apologetic Works.
Against Hierocles
Against Porphyry
On the Numerous Progeny of the
Ancients
Praeparatio Evangelica and Demonstratio
Evangelica. These two treatises together constitute Eusebius'
greatest apologetic work.
Praeparatio Ecclesiastica and Demonstratio
Ecclesiastica.
Two Books of Objection and
Defense.
Theophaniaor Divine
Manifestation.
III. Polemic Works.
Defense of Origen.
Against Marcellus, Bishop of
Ancyra
On the Theology of the Church, a Refutation
of Marcellus
Against the Manicheans.
Epiphanius.
IV. Dogmatic Works.
General Elementary Introduction
Prophetical Extracts
On the Paschal Festival
V. Critical and Exegetical
Works.
Biblical Texts.
Ten Evangelical Canons
Gospel Questions and Solutions.
Commentary on the Psalms
Commentary on Isaiah
Commentary on Luke
Commentary on the First Epistle to the
Corinthians.
Exegetical Fragments.
VI. Biblical
Dictionaries.
Interpretation of the Ethnological Terms in
the Hebrew Scriptures.
Chorography of Ancient Judea with the
Inheritances of the Ten Tribes.
A Plan of Jerusalem and of the Temple,
accompanied with Memoirs relating to the Various
Localities.
On the Names of Places in Holy
Scripture
On the Nomenclature of the Book of the
Prophets
VII. Orations.
Panegyric on the Building of the Churches,
addressed to Paulinus, Bishop of Tyre
Oration on the Sepulchre of the
Saviour.
Oration delivered at the Tricennalia of
Constantine
Oration in Praise of the
Martyrs.
On the Failure of Rain.
VIII. Epistles.
To Alexander, bishop of
Alexandria.
To Euphration, bishop of Balaneae in
Syria.
To Constantia Augusta.
To the Church of Caesarea.
Acts of the Second Council of
Nicaea
IX. Spurious or Doubtful
Works.
Fourteen Latin opuscula were discovered and
published by Sirmond in 1643, and have been frequently reprinted
(Migne, Opera, VI. 1047-1208). They are of a theological
character, and bear the following titles:-
De fide adv. Sabellium, libri
duo.
De Resurrectione, libri duo.
De Incorporali et invisibili
Deo.
De Incorporali.
De Incorporali Anima.
De Spiritali Cogitatu hominis.
De eo quod Deus Pater incorporalis est,
libri duo.
De eo quod ait Dominus, Non veni pacem,
etc.
De Mandato Domini, Quod ait, Quod dico
vobis in aure, etc.
De operibus bonis et malis.
De operibus bonis, ex epist. II. ad
Corinth.
Their authenticity is a matter of
dispute.
On the Star which appeared to the
Magi
Fabricius (Bibl. Gr. VI. 104) reports that
the following works are extant in ms.: Fragmentum de Mensuris ac
Ponderibus; Praefatio ad Canticum Mosis in Exodo
X. Church History.
Eusebius' Church History