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church fathers 28
THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF GREGORY OF NYSSA, CHAPTERS I, II & III
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THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF
GREGORY OF NYSSA
CHAPTER I.
A SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF S. GREGORY OF NYSSA.
IN the roll of the Nicene Fathers there is no more honoured name than
that of Gregory of Nyssa. Besides the praises of his great brother
Basil and of his equally great friend Gregory Nazianzen, the sanctity
of his life, his theoIogical learning, and his strenuous advocacy of
the faith embodied in the Nicene clauses, have received the praises of
Jerome, Socrates, Theodoret, and many other Christian writers. Indeed
such was the estimation in which he was held that some did not hesitate
to call him 'the Father of Fathers' as well as 'the Star of Nyssa (1).'
Gregory of Nyssa was equally fortunate in his country, the name he
bore, and the family which produced him. He was a native of Cappadocia,
and was born most probably at Caesarea, the capital, about A.D. 335 or
336. No province of the Roman Empire had in those early ages received
more eminent Christian bishops than Cappadocia and the adjoining
district of Pontus.
In the previous century the great prelate Firmilian, the disciple and
friend of Origen, who visited him at his See, had held the Bishopric of
Caesarea. In the same age another saint, Gregory Thaumaturgus, a friend
also and disciple of Origen, was bishop of Neo-Caesarea in Pontus.
During the same century, too, no less than four other Gregories shed
more or less lustre on bishoprics in that country. The family of
Gregory of Nyssa was one of considerable wealth and distinction, and
one also conspicuously Christian.
During the Diocletian persecution his grandparents had fled for safety
to the mountainous region of Pontus, where they endured great hardships
and privations. It is said that his maternal grandfather, whose name is
unknown, eventually lost both life and property. After a retirement of
some few years the family appear to have returned and settled at
Caesarea in Cappadocia, or else at Neo-Caesarea in Pontus, for there is
some uncertainty in the account.
Gregory's father, Basil, who gave his name to his eldest son, was known
as a rhetorician. He died at a comparatively early age, leaving a
family of ten children, five of whom were boys and five girls, under
the care of their grandmother Macrina and mother Emmelia. Both of these
illustrious ladies were distinguished for the earnestness and
strictness of their Christian principles, to which the latter added the
charm of great personal beauty.
All the sons and daughters appear to have been of high character, but
it is only of four sons and one daughter that we have any special
record. The daughter, called Macrina, from her grandmother, was the
angel in the house of this illustrious family. She shared with her
grandmother and mother the care and education of all its younger
members. Nor was there one of them who did not owe to her religious
influence their settlement in the faith and consistency of Christian
conduct.
This admirable woman had been betrothed in early life, but her intended
husband died of fever. She permitted herself to contract no other
alliance, but regarded herself as still united to her betrothed in the
other world. She devoted herself to a religious life, and eventually,
with her mother Emmelia, established a female conventual society on the
family-property in Pontus, at a place called Annesi, on the banks of
the river Iris.
It was owing to her persuasions that her brother Basil also gave up the
worldly life, and retired to lead the devout life in a wild spot in the
immediate neighbourhood. of Annesi. Here for a while he was an hermit,
and here he persuaded his friend Gregory Nazianzen to join him. They
studied together the works of Origen, and published a selection of
extracts from his Commentaries, which they called "Philocalia." By the
suggestions of a friend Basil enlarged his idea, and converted his
hermit's seclusion into a monastery, which eventually became the centre
of many others which sprung up in that district.
His inclination for the monastic life had been greatly influenced by
his acquaintance with the Egyptian monks, who had impressed him with
the value of their system as an aid to a life of religious devotion. He
had visited also the hermit saints of Syria and Arabia, and learnt from
them the practice of a severe asceticism, which both injured his health
and shortened his days.
Gregory of Nyssa was the third son, and one of the youngest of the
family. He had an elder brother, Nectarius, who followed the profession
of their father, and became rhetorician, and like him died early. He
had also a younger brother, Peter, who became bishop of Sebaste.
Besides the uncertainty as to the year and place of his birth it is not
known where he received his education. From the weakness of his health
and delicacy of his constitution, it was most probably at home. It is
interesting, in the case of one so highly educated, to know who, in
consequence of his father's early death, took charge of his merely
intellectual bringing up: and his own words do not leave us in any
doubt that, so far as he had a teacher, it was Basil, his senior by
several years. He constantly speaks of him as the revered 'Master:' to
take but one instance, he says in his Hexaemeron (ad init.) that all
that will be striking in that work will be due to Basil, what is
inferior will be the 'pupil's.' Even in the matter of style, he says in
a letter written in early life to Libanius that though he enjoyed his
brother's society but a short time yet Basil was the author of his
oratory (<greek>loUou</greek>): and it is safe to conclude
that he was introduced to all that Athens had to teach, perhaps even to
medicine, by Basil: for Basil had been at Athens. On the other hand we
can have no difficulty in crediting his mother, of whom he always spoke
with the tenderest affection, and his admirable sister Macrina, with
the care of his religious teaching. Indeed few could be more fortunate
than Gregory in the influences of home. If, as there is every reason to
believe, the grandmother Macrina survived Gregory's early childhood,
then, like Timothy, he was blest with the religious instruction of
another Lois and Eunice.
In this chain of female relationship it is difficult to say which link
is worthier of note, grandmother, mother, or daughter. Of the first,
Basil, who attributes his early religious impressions to his
grandmother, tells us that as a child she taught him a Creed, which had
been drawn up for the use of the Church of Neo-Caesarea by Gregory
Thaumaturgus. This Creed, it is said, was revealed to the Saint in a
vision. It has been translated by Bishop Bull in his "Fidei Nicaenae
Defensio." In its language and spirit it anticipates the Creed of
Constantinople.
Certain it is that Gregory had not the benefit of a residence at
Athens, or of foreign travel. It might have given him a strength of
character and width of experience, in which he was certainly deficient.
His shy and retiring disposition induced him to remain at home without
choosing a profession, living on his share of the paternal property,
and educating himself by a discipline of his own.
He remained for years unbaptized. And this is a very noticeable
circumstance which meets us in the lives of many eminent Saints and
Bishops of the Church. They either delayed baptism themselves, or it
was delayed for them. Indeed there are instances of Bishops baptized
and consecrated the same day.
Gregory's first inclination or impulse to make a public profession of
Christianity is said to have been due to a remarkable dream or vision.
His mother Emmelia, at her retreat at Annesi, urgently entreated him to
be present and take part in a religious ceremony in honour of the Forty
Christian Martyrs. He had gone unwillingly, and wearied with his
journey and the length of the service, which lasted far into the night,
he lay down and fell asleep in the garden. He dreamed that the Martyrs
appeared to him and, reproaching him for his indifference, beat him
with rods. On awaking he was filled with remorse, and hastened to amend
his past neglect by earnest entreaties for mercy and forgiveness. Under
the influence of the terror which his dream inspired he consented to
undertake the office of reader in the Church, which of course implied a
profession of Christianity. But some unfitness, and, perhaps, that love
of eloquence which clung to him to the last, soon led him to give up
the office, and adopt the profession of a
rhetorician or advocate. For this desertion of a sacred for a secular
employment he is taken severely to task by his brother Basil and his
friend Gregory Nazianzen. The latter does not hesitate to charge him
with being influenced, not by conscientious scruples, but by vanity and
desire of public display, a charge not altogether consistent with his
character.
Here it is usual to place the marriage of Gregory with Theosebeia, said
to have been a sister of Gregory Nazianzen. Certainly the tradition of
Gregory's marriage received such credit as to be made in after times a
proof of the non-celibacy of the Bishops of his age. But it rests
mainly on two passages, which taken separately are not in the least
conclusive. The first is the ninety-fifth letter of Gregory Nazianzen,
written to console for a certain loss by death, i.e. of "Theosebeia,
the fairest, the most lustrous even amidst such beauty of the
<greek>adelFoi</greek>; Theosebeia, the true priestess, the
yokefellow and the equal of a priest." J. Rupp has well pointed out
that the expression 'yokefellow ' (<greek>suzugon</greek>),
which has been insisted as meaning 'wife,' may, especially in the
language of Gregory Nazianzen, be equivalent to
<greek>adelFos</greek>. He sees in this Theosebeia 'a
sister of the Cappadocian brothers.' The second passage is contained in
the third cap. of Gregory's treatise On Virginity. Gregory there
complains that he is "cut off by a kind of gulf from this glory of
virginity" (<greek>parqenia</greek>). The whole passage
should be consulted. Of course its significance depends on the meaning
given to <greek>parqenia</greek>. Rupp asserts that more
and more towards the end of the century this word acquired a technical
meaning derived from the purely ideal side, i.e. virginity of soul: and
that Gregory is alluding to the same thing that his friend had not long
before blamed him for, the keeping of a school for rhetoric, where his
object had been merely worldly reputation, and the truly ascetic career
had been marred (at the time he wrote). Certainly the terrible
indictment of marriage in the third cap of this treatise comes ill from
one whose wife not only must have been still living, but possessed the
virtues sketched in the letter of Gregory Nazianzen: while the
allusions at the end of it to the law-courts and their revelations
appear much more like the professional reminiscence of a rhetorician
who must have been familiar with them, than the personal complaint of
one who had cause to depreciate marriage. The powerful words of Basil,
de Virgin. I. 610, a. b., also favour the above view of the meaning of
<greek>Parqenia</greek>: and Gregory elsewhere distinctly
calls celibacy <greek>parqenia</greek>
<greek>tou</greek> <greek>swmatos</greek>, and
regards it as a means only to this higher
<greek>parqenia</greek> (III. 131). But the two passages
above, when combined, may have led to the
tradition of Gregory's marriage. Nicephorus Callistus, for example, who
first makes mention of it, must have put upon
<greek>parqenia</greek> the interpretation of his own time
(thirteenth century,) i.e. that of continence. Finally, those who adopt
this tradition have still to account for the fact that no allusion to
Theosebeia as his wife, and no letter to her, is to be found in
Gregory's numerous writings. It is noteworthy that the Benedictine
editors of Gregory Nazianzen (ad Epist. 95) also take the above view.
His final recovery and conversion to the Faith, of which he was always
after so strenuous an asserter, was due to her who, all things
considered, was the master spirit of the family. By the powerful
persuasions of his sister Macrina, at length, after much struggle, he
altered entirely his way of life, severed himself from all secular
occupations, and retired to his brother's monastery in the solitudes of
Pontus, a beautiful spot, and where, as we have seen, his mother and
sister had established, in the immediate neighbourhood, a similar
association for women.
Here, then, Gregory was settled for several years, and devoted himself
to the study of the Scripture and the works of his master Origen. Here,
too, his love of natural scenery was deepened so as to find afterwards
constant and adequate expression. For in his writings we have in large
measure that sentiment of delight in the beauty of nature of which,
even when it was felt, the traces are so few and far between in the
whole range of Greek literature. A notable instance is the following
from the Letter to Adelphus, written long afterwards: -"The gifts
bestowed upon the spot by Nature, who beautifies the earth with an
impromptu grace, are such as these: below, the river Halys makes the
place fair to look upon with his banks, and glides like a golden ribbon
through their deep purple, reddening his current with the soil he
washes down. Above, a mountain densely overgrown with wood
stretches, with its long ridge, covered at all points with the foliage
of oaks, more worthy of finding some Homer to sing its praises than
that Ithacan Neritus which the poet calls 'far-seen with quivering
leaves.' But the natural growth of wood as it comes down the hill-side
meets at the foot the plantations of human husbandry. For forthwith
vines, spread out over the slopes and swellings and hollows at the
mountain's base, cover with their colour, like a green mantle, all the
lower ground: and the season also was now adding to their beauty with a
display of magnificent grape-clusters." Another is from the treatise On
Infants' Early Deaths: -- "Nay look only at an ear of corn, at the
germinating of some plant, at a ripe bunch of grapes, at the beauty of
early autumn whether in fruit or flower, at the grass springing
unbidden, at the mountain reaching up with its summit to the height of
the ether, at the springs of the lower ground bursting from its flanks
in streams like milk, and running in rivers through the glens, at the
sea receiving those streams from every direction and yet remaining
within its limits with waves edged by the stretches of beach, and never
stepping beyond those fixed boundaries: and how can the eye of reason
fail to find in them all that our education for Realities requires?"
The treatise On Virginity was the fruit of this life in Basil's
monastery.
Henceforward the fortunes of Gregory are more closely linked with those of his great brother Basil.
About A. D. 365 Basil was summoned from his retirement to act as
coadjutor to Euseblus, the Metropolitan of Caesarea in Cappadocia, and
aid him in repelling the assaults of the Arian faction on the Faith. In
these assaults the Arians were greatly encouraged and assisted by the
proclivities of the Emperor Valens. After some few years of strenuous
and successful resistance, and the endurance of great persecution from
the Emperor and his Court, a persecution which indeed pursued him
through life, Basil is called by the popular voice, on the death of
Eusebius, A. D. 370, to succeed him in the See. His election is
vehemently opposed, but after much turmoil is at length accomplished.
To strengthen himself in his position, and surround himself with
defenders of the orthodox Faith, he obliges his brother Gregory, in
spite of his emphatic protest, to undertake the Bishopric of Nyssa (1),
a small town in the west of Cappadocia. When a friend expressed his
surprise that he had chosen so obscure a place for such a man as
Gregory, he replied, that
A SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF S. GREGORY OF NYSSA.
He did not desire his brother to receive distinction from the name of his See, but rather to confer distinction upon it.
It was with the same feeling, and by the exercise of a like masterful
will, that he forced upon his friend Gregory Nazianzen the Bishopric of
a still more obscure and unimportant place, called Sasima. But Gregory
highly resented the nomination, which unhappily led to a lifelong
estrangement.
It was about this time, too, that a quarrel had arisen between Basil
and their uncle, another Gregory, one of the Cappadocian Bishops. And
here Gregory of Nyssa gave a striking proof of the extreme simplicity
and unreflectiveness of his character, which without guileful intent
yet led him into guile. Without sufficient consideration he was induced
to practise a deceit which was as irreconcileable with Christian
principle as with common sense. In his endeavours to set his brother
and uncle at one, when previous efforts had been in vain, he had
recourse to an extraordinary method. He forged a letter, as if from
their uncle, to Basil, earnestly entreating reconciliation. The
inevitable discovery of course only widened the breach, and drew down
on Gregory his brother's indignant condemnation, The reconciliation,
however, which Gregory hoped for, was afterwards brought about.
Nor was this the only occasion on which Gregory needed Basil's advice
and reproof, and protection from the consequences of his inexperienced
zeal. After he had become Bishop of Nyssa, with a view to render
assistance to his brother he promoted the summoning of Synods. But
Basil's wider experience told him that no good would come of such
assemblies under existing circumstances. Besides which he had reason to
believe that Gregory would be made the tool of factious and designing
men. He therefore discouraged the attempt. At another time Basil had to
interpose his authority to prevent his brother joining in a mission to
Rome to invite the interference of Pope Damasus and the Western Bishops
in the settlement of the troubles at Antioch in consequence of the
disputed election to the See. Basil had himself experience of the
futility of such application to Rome, from the want of sympathy in
the Pope and the Western Bishops with the troubles in the East. Nor
would he, by such application, give a handle for Rome's assertion of
supremacy, and encroachment on the independence of the Eastern Church.
The Bishopric of Nyssa was indeed to Gregory no bed of roses. Sad was
the contrast to one of his genre spirit, more fitted for studious
retirement and monastic calm than for controversies which did not end
with the pen, between the peaceful leisure of his retreat in Pontus and
the troubles and antagonisms of his present position. The enthusiasm of
his faith on the subject of the Trinity and the Incarnation brought
upon him the full weight of Arian and Sabellian hostility, aggravated
as it was by the patronage of the Emperor. In fact his whole life at
Nyssa was a series of persecutions.
A charge of uncanonical irregularity in his ordination is brought up
against him by certain Arian Bishops, and he is summoned to appear and
answer them at a Synod at Ancyra. To this was added the vexation of a
prosecution by Demosthenes, the Emperor's chef de cuisine, on a charge
of defalcation in the Church funds.
A band of soldiers is sent to fetch him to the Synod. The fatigue of
the journey, and the rough treatment of his conductors, together with
anxiety of mind, produce a fever which prevents his attendance. His
brother Basil comes to his assistance. He summons another Synod of
orthodox Cappadocian Bishops, who dictate in their joint names a
courteous letter, apologising for Gregory's absence from the Synod of
Ancyra, and proving the falsehood of the charge of embezzlement. At the
same time he writes to solicit the interest of Astorgus, a person of
considerable influence at the Court, to save his brother from the
indignity of being dragged before a secular tribunal.
Apparently the application was unsuccessful. Demosthenes now obtains
the holding another Synod at Gregory's own See of Nyssa, where he is
summoned to answer the same charges. Gregory refuses to attend. He is
consequently pronounced contumacious, and deposed from his Bishopric.
His deposition is followed immediately by a decree of banishment from
the Emperor, A.D. 376. He retires to Seleucia. But his banishment did
not secure him from the malice and persecution of his enemies. He is
obliged frequently to shift his quarters, and is subjected to much
bodily discomfort and suffering. From the consoling answers of his
friend Gregory of Nazianzen (for his own letters are lost), we learn
the crushing effects of all these troubles upon his gentle and
sensitive spirit, and the deep despondency into which he had fallen.
At length there is a happier turn of affairs. The Emperor Valens is
killed, A.D. 378, and with him Arianism ' vanished in the crash of
Hadrianople.' He is succeeded by Gratian, the friend and disciple of
St. Ambrose. The banished orthodox Bishops are restored to their Sees,
and Gregory returns to Nyssa. In (2) one of his letters, most probably
to his brother Basil, he gives a graphic description of the popular
triumph with which his return was greeted.
But the joy of his restoration is overshadowed by domestic sorrows. His
great brother, to whom he owed so much, soon after dies, ere he is 50
years of age, worn out by his unparalleled toils and the severity of
his ascetic life. Gregory celebrated his death in a sincere panegyric.
Its high-flown style is explained by the rhetorical fashion of the
time. The same year another sorrow awaits him. After a separation of
many years he revisits his sister Macrina, at her convent in Pontus,
but only to find her on her death-bed. We have an interesting and
graphic account of the scene between Gregory and his dying sister. To
the last this admirable woman appears as the great teacher of her
family. She supplies her brother with arguments for, and confirms his
faith in, the resurrection of the dead; and almost reproves him for the
distress he felt at her departure, bidding him, with St. Paul,
not to sorrow as those who had no hope. After her decease an inmate of
the convent, named Vestiana, brought to Gregory a ring, in which was a
piece of the true Cross, and an iron cross, both of which were found on
the body when laying it out. One Gregory retained himself, the other he
gave to Vestiana. He buried his sister in the chapel at Annesi, in
which her parents and her brother Naucratius slept.
From henceforth the labours of Gregory have a far more extended range.
He steps into the place vacated by the death of Basil, and takes
foremost rank among the defenders of the Faith of Nicaea. He is not,
however, without trouble still from the heretical party. Certain
Galatians had been busy in sowing the seeds of their heresy among his
own people. He is subjected, too, to great annoyance from the
disturbances which arose out of the wish of the people of Ibera in
Pontus to have him as their Bishop. In that early age of the Church
election to a Bishopric, if not dependent on the popular voice, at
least called forth the expression of much popular feeling, like a
contested election amongst ourselves. This often led to breaches of the
peace, which required military intervention to suppress them, as it
appears to have done on this occasion.
But the reputation of Gregory is now so advanced, and the weight of his
authority as an eminent teacher so generally acknowledged, that we find
him as one of the Prelates at the Synod of Antioch assembled for the
purpose of healing the long-continued schisms in that distracted See.
By the same Synod Gregory is chosen to visit and endeavour to reform
the Churches of Arabia and Babylon, which had fallen into a very
corrupt and degraded state. He gives a lamentable account of their
condition, as being beyond all his powers of reformation. On this same
journey he visits Jerusalem and its sacred scenes: it has been
conjectured that the Apollinarian heresy drew him thither. Of the
Church of Jerusalem he can give no better account than of those he had
already visited. He expresses himself as greatly scandalized at the
conduct of the Pilgrims who visited the Holy City on the plea of
religion. Writing to three ladies, whom he had known at Jerusalem, he
takes occasion, from what he had witnessed there, to speak of the
uselessness of pilgrimages as any aids to reverence and faith, and
denounces in the strongest terms the moral dangers to which all
pilgrims, especially women, are exposed.
This letter is so condemnatory of what was a common and authorized
practice of the medival Church that (3) Divines of the Latin communion
have eudeavoured, but in vain, to deny its authenticity.
The name and character of Gregory had now reached the Imperial Court,
where Theo-dosius had lately succeeded to the Eastern Empire. As a
proof of the esteem in which he was then held, it is said that in his
recent journey to Babylon and the Holy Land he travelled with carriages
provided for him by the Emperor.
Still greater distinction awaits him. He is one of the hundred and
fifty Bishops summoned by Theodosius to the second (Ecumenical Council,
that of Constantinople, A.D. 381. To the assembled Fathers he brings an
(4) instalment of his treatise against the Eunomian heresy, which he
had written in defence of his brother Basil's positions, on the subject
of the Trinity and the Incarnation. This he first read to his friend
Gregory Nazianzen, Jerome, and others. Such was the influence he
exercised in the Council that it is said, though this is very doubtful,
that the explanatory clauses added to the Nicene Creed are due to him.
Certain, however, it is that he delivered the inaugural address, which
is not extant; further that he preached the funeral oration, which has
been preserved, on the death of Meletius, of Antioch, the first
President of the Council, who died at Constantinople; also
that he preached at the enthronement of Gregory Nazianzen in the
capital. This oration has perished.
Shortly before the close of the Council, by a Constitution of the
Emperor, issued from Heraclea, Gregory is nominated as one of the
Bishops who were to be regarded as the central authorities of Catholic
Communion. In other words, the primacy of Rome or Alexandria in the
East was to be replaced by that of other Sees, especially
Constantinople. Helladius of Csarea was to be Gregory's colleague in
his province. The connexion led to a misunderstanding. As to the
grounds of this there is much uncertainty. The account of it is
entirely derived from Gregory himself in his fetter to Flavian, and
from his great namesake. Possibly there were faults on both sides.
We do not read of Gregory being at the Synod, A.D. 382, which followed
the great Council of Constantinople. But we find him present at the
Synod held the following year.
This same year we have proof of the continued esteem and favour shown
him by the Imperial Court. He is chosen to pronounce the funeral
oration on the infant Princess Palcheria. And not long after that also
on the death of the Empress Flaccilla, or Placidia, herself. This last
was a magnificent eulogy, but one, according to Tillemont, even
surpassed by that of Theodoret. This admirable and holy woman, a saint
of the Eastern Church, fully warranted all the praise that could be
bestowed upon her. If her husband Theodosius did not owe his conversion
to Christianity to her example and influence, he certainly did his
adherence to the true Faith. It is one of the subjects of Gregory's
praise of her that by her persuasion the Emperor refused to give an
interview to the 'rationalist of the fourth century,' Eunomius.
Scarcely anything is known of the latter years of Gregory of Nyssa's
life. The last record we have of him is that he was present at a Synod
of Constantinople, summoned A.D. 394, by Rufinus, the powerful prfect
of the East, under the presidency of Nectarius. The rival claims to the
See of Bostra in Arabia had to be then settled; but perhaps the chief
reason for summoning this assembly was to glorify the consecration of
Rufinus' new Church in the suburbs. It was there that Gregory delivered
the sermon which was probably his last, wrongly entitled 'On his
Ordination.' His words, which heighten the effect of others then
preached, are humbly compared to the blue circles painted on the new
walls as a foil to the gilded dome above. "The whole breathes a calmer
and more peaceful spirit; the deep sorrow over heretics who forfeit the
blessings of the Spirit changes only here and there into the flashes of
a short-lived indignation." (J. Rupp.)
The prophecy of Basil had come true. Nyssa was ennobled by the name of
its bishop appearing on the roll of this Synod, between those of the
Metropolitans of Csarea and Iconium. Even in outward rank he is equal
to the highest. The character of Gregory could not be more justly drawn
than in the words of Tillemont (IX. p. 269). "Autant en effet, qu'on
pent juger de lui par ses ecrits, c'etoit un esprit doux, bon, facile,
qui avec beaucoup d'elevation et de lumiere, avoit neanmois beaucoup de
simplicite et de candent, qui aimoit plus le repos que l'action, et le
travail du cabinet que le tumulte des affaires, qui avec cela etoit
sans faste, dispose a estimer et a loner los autres et a se mettre a
dessons d'eux. Mais quoiqu' il ne cher-chat que le repos, nous avons vu
que son zele pour sos freres l'avoit souvent engagee a de grands
travaux, et que Dieu avait honore sa simplicite en le faisant regarder
comme le maitre, le docteur, le pacificateur et l'arbitre des eglises."
His death (probably 395) is commemorated by the Greek Church on January 10, by the Latin on March (9).
CHAPTER II.
HIS GENERAL CHARACTER AS A THEOLOGIAN.
"THE first who sought to establish by rational considerations the whole
complex of orthodox doctrines." So Ueberweg (History of Philosophy, p.
326) of Gregory of Nyssa. This marks the transition from ante-Nicene
times. Then, at all events in the hands of Origen, philosophy was
identical with theology. Now, that there is a 'complex of orthodox
doctrines' to defend, philosophy becomes the handmaid of theology.
Gregory, in this respect, has done the most important service of any of
the writers of the Church in the fourth century. He treats each single
philosophical view only as a help to grasp the formul of faith; and the
truth of that view consists with him only in its adaptability to that
end. Notwithstanding strong speculative leanings he does not defend
orthodoxy either in the fashion of the Alexandrian school or in the
fashion of some in modern times, who put forth a system of philosophy
to which the dogmas of the Faith are to be accommodated.
If this be true, the question as to his attitude towards Plato, which
is one of the first that suggests itself, is settled. Against
polytheism he does indeed seek to defend Christianity by connecting it
apologetically with Plato's system. This we cannot be surprised at,
considering that the definitions of the doctrines of the Catholic
Church were formed in the very place where the last considerable effort
of Platonism was made; but he by no means makes the New Life in any way
dependent on this system of philosophy. "We cannot speculate," he says
(De Anim. et Resurrect.) .... "we must leave the Platonic car." But
still when he is convinced that Plato will confirm doctrine he will,
even in polemic treatises, adopt his view; for instance, he seeks to
grasp the truth of the Trinity from the Platonic account of our
internal consciousness, i.e. <greek>yukh</greek>.
<greek>loUos</greek>, <greek>nous</greek>;
because such a proof from consciousness is, to Gregory, the surest and
most reliable.
The "rational considerations," then, by which Gregory would have
established Christian doctrine are not necessarily drawn from the
philosophy of the time: nor, further, does he seek to rationalize
entirely all religious truth. In fact he resigns the hope of
comprehending the Incarnation and all the great articles. This is the
very thing that distinguishes the Catholic from the Eunomian.
"Receiving the fact we leave untampered with the manner of the creation
of the Universe, as altogether secret and inexplicable (1." With a turn
resembling the view of Tertullian, he comes back to the conclusion that
for us after all Religious Truth consists in mystery. "The Church
possesses the means of demonstrating these things: or rather, she has
faith, which is surer than demonstration (1)." He developes the truth
of the Resurrection as much by the fulfilment of God's promises as by
metaphysics:
and it has been considered as one of the proofs that the treatise What
is being 'in the image of Gad'? is not his that this subordination of
philosophical proof to the witness of the Holy Spirit is not preserved
in it.
Nevertheless there was a large field, larger even than in the next
century, in which rationalizing was not only allowable, but was even
required of him. In this there are three questions which Gregory has
treated with particular fulness and originality. They are:--
1. Evil;
2. The relation between the ideal and the actual Man;
3. Spirit.
1. He takes, to begin with, Origen's view of evil. Virtue and Vice are
not opposed to each other as two Existencies: but as Being is opposed
to not-Being. Vice exists only as an absence. But how did this arise?
In answering this question he seems sometimes to come very near
Manicheism, and his writings must be read very carefully, in order to
avoid fixing upon him the groundless charge that he leaves evil in too
near connexion with Matter. But the passages (2) which give rise to
this charge consist of comparisons found in his homilies and
meditations; just as a modern theologian might in such works make the
Devil the same as Sin and Death. The only imperfection in his view is
that he is unable (3) to regard evil as not only suffered but even
permitted by God. But this imperfection is inseparable from his time:
for Manicheism was too near and its opposition too little overcome for
such a view to be possible for him; he could not see that it is the
only one able thoroughly to resist Dualism.
Evil with Gregory is to be found in the spontaneous proclivity of the
soul towards Matter: but not in Matter itself. Matter, therefore, in
his eschatology is not to be burnt up and annihilated: only soul and
body have to be refined, as gold (this is a striking comparison) is
refined. He is very clear upon the relations between the three factors,
body, matter, and evil. He represents the mind as the mirror of the
Archetypal Beauty: then below the mind comes body
(<greek>fusis</greek>) which is connected with mind and
pervaded by it, and when thus trans-figured and beautified by it
becomes itself the mirror of this mirror: and then this body in its
turn influences and combines Matter. The Beauty of the Supreme Being
thus penetrates all things: and as long as the lower holds on to the
higher all is well. But if a rupture occurs anywhere, then Matter,
receiving no longer
influence from above, reveals its own deformity, and imparts something
of it to body and, through that, to mind: for matter is in itself 'a
shapeless unorganized thing (4).' Thus the mind loses the image of God.
But evil began when the rupture was made: and what caused that? When
and how did the mind become separated from God?
Gregory answers this question by laying it down as a principle, that
everything created is subject to change. The Uncreate Being is
changeless, but Creation, since its very beginning was owing to a
change, i.e. a calling of the non-existent into existence, is liable to
alter. Gregory deals here with angelic equally as with human nature,
and with all the powers in both, especially with the will, whose
virtual freedom he assumes throughout. That, too, was created;
therefore that, too, could change.
It was possible, therefore, that, first, one of the created spirits,
and, as it actually happened, he who was entrusted with the supervision
of the earth, should choose to turn his eyes away from the Good; he
thus looked at a lower good; and so began to be envious and to have...
All evil followed in a chain from this beginning; according to the
principle that the beginning of anything is the cause of all that
follows in its train.
So the Devil fell: and the proclivity to evil was introduced into the
spiritual world. Man, however, still looked to God and was filled with
blessings (this is the 'ideal man' of Gregory). But as when the flame
has got hold of a wick one cannot dim its light by means of the flame
itself, but only by mixing water with the oil in the wick, so the Enemy
effected the weakening of God's blessings in man by cunningly mixing
wickedness in his will, as he had mixed it in his own. From first to
last, then, evil lies in the <greek>proairesis</greek> and
in nothing else.
God knew what would happen and suffered it, that He might not destroy
our freedom, the inalienable heritage of reason and therefore a portion
of His image in us. 'He' gave scope to evil for a nobler end.' Gregory
calls it a piece of "little mindedness" to argue from evil either the
weakness or the wickedness of God.
II. His remarks on the relation between the ideal and the actual Man
are very interesting. It is usual with the other Fathers, in speaking
of man's original perfection, to take the moment of the first man's
residence in Paradise, and to regard the whole of human nature as there
represented by the first two human beings. Gregory is far removed from
this way of looking at the matter. With him human perfection is the
'idea' of humanity: he sees already in the bodily-created Adam the
fallen man. The present man is not to be distinguished from that bodily
Adam; both fall below the ideal type. Gregory seems to put the Fall
beyond and before the beginning of history. 'Under the form of
narrative Moses places before us mere doctrine (2).' The locus
classicus about the idea and the reality of human nature is On the
Making of Man, I. p. 88 f. He sketches both in a masterly way. He
speaks of
the division of the human race into male and female as a 'device'
(<greek>epiteknhsis</greek>), implying that it was not the
first 'organization' (<greek>kataskeuh</greek>). He hints
that the irrational element was actually provided by the Creator, Who
foresaw the Fall and the Redemption, for man to sin in; as if man
immediately upon the creation of the perfect humanity became a mixed
nature (spirit and flesh), and his fall was not a mere accident, but a
necessary conseguence of this mixed nature. Adam must have fallen:
there was no perfect humanity in Paradise. In man's mixed nature of
spirit and flesh nutrition is the basis of his sensation, and sensation
is the basis of his thought; and so it was inevitable that sin through
this lower yet vital side of man should enter in. So ingrained is the
spirit with the flesh in the whole history of actual humanity that
all the varieties of all the souls that ever have lived or ever shall,
arise from this very mixture; i.e. from the varying degrees of either
factor in each. But as Gregory's view here touches, though in striking
contrast, on Origen's, more will be said about it in the next chapter.
It follows from this that Gregory, as Clement and Basil before him, did
not look upon Original Sin as the accidental or extraordinary thing
which it was afterwards regarded. 'From a man who is a sinner and
subject to passion of course is engendered a man who is a sinner and
subject to passion: sin being in a manner born with him, and growing
with his growth, and not dying with it.' And yet he says elsewhere, "An
infant who is just born is not culpable, nor does it merit punishment;
just as he who has been baptized has no account to give of his past
sins, since they are forgiven;" and he calls infants
<greek>aponhroi</greek>, 'not having in the least admitted
the disease into their soul.' But these two views can of course be
reconciled; the infant at the moment of its physical birth starts with
sins forgotten, just as at the moment of its spiritual birth it starts
with
sins forgiven. No actual sin has been committed. But then its nature
has lost the <greek>apaqeia</greek>; the inevitable
weakness of its ancestry is in it.
Ill. 'Spirit.' Speaking of the soul, Gregory asks, 'How can that which
is incomposite be dissolved?' i.e. the soul is spirit, and spirit is
incomposite and therefore indestructible.
But care must be taken not to infer too much from this his favourite
expression 'spirit' in connexion with the soul. 'God is spirit' too;
and we are inclined to forget that this is no more than a negative
definition, and to imagine the human spirit of equal prerogative with
Deity. Gregory gives no encouragement to this; he distinctly teaches
that, though the soul is incomposite, it is not in the least
independent of time and space, as the Deity is.
In fact he almost entirely drops the old Platonic division of the
Universe into Intelligible (spiritual) and Sensible, which helps to
keep up this confusion between human and divine
'spirit,' and adopts the Christian division of Creator and Created.This
difference between Creator and Created is further figured by him as
that between
1. The Infinite.The Finite.
2. The Changeless.The Changeable.
3. The Contradiction-less.The Contradictory.
The result of this is that the Spirit-world itself has been divided into Uncreate and Created.
With regard, then, to this created Spirit-world we find that Gregory,
as Basil, teaches that it existed, i.e. it had been created, before the
work of the Six Days began. 'God made all that is, at once'
(<greek>aqrows</greek>). This is only his translation of
the verse, 'In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth;' the
material for 'heaven' and 'earth,' i.e. spirits and chaos, was made in
a moment, but God had not yet spoken the successive Words of creation.
The souls of men, then, existed from the very beginning of creation,
and in a determinate number; for this is a necessary consequence of the
'simultaneous creation.' This was the case with the Angels too, the
other portion of the created Spirit-world. Gregory has treated the
subject of the Angels very fully. He considers that they are perfect:
but their perfection too is contingent: it depends on the grace
of God and their own wills; the angels are free, and therefore
changeable. Their will necessarily moves towards something: at their
first creation the Beautiful alone solicited them. Man 'a little lower
than the Angels' was perfect too; deathless, passionless,
contemplative. 'The true and perfect soul is single in its nature,
intellectual, immaterial (1).' He was 'as the Angels' and if he fell,
Lucifer fell too. Gregory will not say, as Origen did, that human souls
had a body when first created: rather, as we have seen, he implies the
contrary; and he came to be considered the champion that fought the
doctrine of the pre-existence of embodied souls. He seems to have been
influenced by Methodius' objections to Origen's view. But his
magnificent idea of the first man gives way at once to something more
Scriptural and at the same time more scientific; and his ideal becomes
a downright forecast of Realism.
Taking, however, the human soul as it is, he still continues, we often
find, to compare it with God. In his great treatise On the Soul and the
Resurrection, he rests a great deal on the parallel between the
relation of man to his body, and that of God to the world.--'The soul
is as a cord drawn out of mud; God draws to Himself what is His
own.'-He calls the human spirit 'an influx of the divine in-breathing'
(Adv. Apolim. c. 12). Anger and desire do not belong to the essence of
the soul, he says: they are only among its varying states. The soul,
then, as separable from matter, is like God. But this likeness does not
extend to the point of identity. Incomprehensible, immortal, it is not
uncreated. The distinction between the Creator and the Created cannot
be obliterated. The attributes Of the Creator set down above, i.e. that
He is infinite, changeless, contradictionless, and so
always good, &c., can be applied only catachrestically to some men,
in that they resemble their Maker as a copy resembles its original: but
still, in this connexion, Gregory does speak of those 'who do not need
any cleansing at all (2),' and the context forces us to apply these
words to men. There is no irony, to him or to any Father of the fourth
century, in the words, 'They that are whole need not a physician.'
Although in the treatise On Virginity, where he is describing the
development of his own moral and religious life, he is very far from
applying them to himself, he nevertheless seems to recognize the fact
that since Christianity began there are those to whom they might apply.
There is also need of a certain amount of 'rational considerations' in
advancing a Defence and a Theory of Christianity. He makes this
according to the special requirements of the time in his Oratio
Catechelica. His reasonings do not seem to us always convincing; but
the presence of a living Hellenism and Judaism in the world required
them. These two phnomena also explain what appears to us a great
weakness in this work: namely, that he treats Hellenism as if it were
all speculation; Judaism as if it were all facts. These two religions
were too near and too practically opposed to each other for him to see,
as we can now, by the aid of a sort of science of religions, that every
religion has its idea, and every religion has its facts. He and all the
first Apologists, with the spectacle of these two apparently opposite
systems before them, thought that, in arriving at the True Religion
as well, all could be done by considering facts; or all could be done
by Gregory chose the latter method. A Dogmatic in the modern sense, in
which both the idea and the facts of Christianity flow into one, could
not have been expected of him. The Oratio Catethetica is a mere
philosophy of Christianity in detail written in the philosophic
language of the time. Not only does he refrain from using the historic
proofs, i.e. of prophecy and type (except very sparingly and only to
meet an adversary), but his defence is insufficient from another point
of view also; he hardly uses the moral proofs either; he wanders
persistently in metaphysics.
If he does not lean enough on these two classes of proofs, at all
events that he does not lean entirely on either, may be considered as a
guarantee of his excellence as a theologian pure and simple. But he is
on the other hand very far from attempting a philosophic construction
of Christianity, as we have seen. Though akin to modern theologians in
many things, he is unlike those of them who would construct an a priori
Christianity, in which the relationship of one part to another is so
close that all stands or falls together. Philosophic deduction is with
him only 'a kind of instruction' used in his apologetic works. On
occasion he shows a clear perception of the historic principle. "The
supernatural character of the Gospel miracles bears witness to their
divine origin (1)." He points, as Origen did, to the continued
possession of miraculous powers in the Church. Again, as regards
moral proof, there had been so much attempted that way by the
Neo-Platonists that such proof could not have exactly the same degree
of weight attributed to it that it has now, at least by an adherent of
the newer Hellenism. Philostratus, Porphyry, Iamblichus had all tried
to attract attention to the holy lives of heathen sages. Yet to these,
rough sketches as they were, the Christian did oppose the Lives of the
Saints: notably Gregory himself in the... of Gregory Thaumaturgus: as
Origen before him (c. Celsum, passim) had shewn in detail the
difference in kind of Christian holiness.
His treatment of the Sacraments in the Oratio Catechetica is
noteworthy. On Baptism he is very complete: it will be sufficient to
notice here the peculiar proof he offers that the Holy Spirit is
actually given in Baptism. It is the same proof, to start with, as that
which establishes that God came in the flesh when Christ came. Miracles
prove this; (he is not wanting here in the sense of the importance of
History). If, then, we are persuaded that God is here, we must allow
also that truth is here: for truth is the mark of Deity. When,
therefore, God has said that He will come in a particular way, if
called in a particular way, this must be true. He is so called in
Baptism: therefore He comes. (The vital importance of the doctrine of
the Trinity, upon which Gregory laboured for so many years, thus all
comes from Baptism.) Gregory would not confine the entire force of
Baptism to the
one ritual act. A resurrection to a new immortal life is begun in
Baptism, but owing to the weakness of nature this complete effect is
separated into stages or parts. With regard to the necessity of Baptism
for salvation, he says he does not know if the Angels receive the souls
of the unbaptized; but he rather intimates that they wander in the air
seeking rest, and entreat in vain like the Rich Man. To him who
wilfully defers it he says, 'You are out of paradise, O Catechumen!'
In treating the Sacrament of the Eucharist, Gregory was the first
Father who developed the view of transformation, for which
transubstantiation was afterwards substituted to suit the mediaeval
philosophy; that is, he put this view already latent into actual words.
There is a locus classicus in the Oratio Catechetica, c. 37.
"Therefore from the same cause as that by which the bread that was
transformed in that Body was changed to a divine potency, a similar
result takes place now. For as in that case, too, the grace of the Word
used to make holy the Body, the substance of which came of the bread
and was in a manner itself bread, so also in this case the bread, as
says the Apostle, ' is sanctified by the word of God and prayer:' not
that it advances by the process of eating to the stage of passing into
the body of the Word, but it at once is changed into the Body, by the
Word, as the Word Himself said, ' This is My Body;'" and just above he
had said: "Rightly do we believe that now also the bread which is
consecrated by the word of God is changed into the body of God the
Word." This way of explaining the mystery of the Sacrament, i.e. from
the way bread was changed into the Word when Christ was upon
earth, is compared by Neander with another way Gregory had of
explaining it, i.e. the heightened efficacy of the bread is as the
heightened efficacy of the baptismal water, the anointing oil (1),
&c., a totally different idea. But this, which may be called the
metabatic view, is the one evidently most present to his mind. In a
fragment of his found in a Parisian MS. (2), quoted with the Liturgies
of James, Basil, Chrysostom, we also find it; "The consecrated bread is
changed into the body of the Word; and it is needful for humanity to
partake of that."
Again, the necessity of the Incarnation, drawn from the words "it was
necessary that Christ should suffer," receives a rational treatment
from him. There must ever be, from a meditation on this, two results,
according as the physical or the ethical element in Christianity
prevails, i.e. 1. Propitiation; 2. Redemption. The first theory is dear
to minds fed upon the doctrines of the Reformation, but it receives no
countenance from Gregory. Only in the book in which Moses' Life is
treated allegorically does he even mention it. The sacrifice of Christ
instead of the bloody sacrifices of the Old Testament is not his
doctrine, He develops his theory of the Redemption or Ransom (i.e. from
the Devil), in the Oratio Catechetica. Strict justice to the Evil One
required it. But in his hands this view never degenerates, as with
some, into a mere battle, e.g. in Gethsemane, between the Rescuer and
Enslaver.
So much has been said about Gregory's inconsistencies, and his apparent
inconsistencies are indeed so many, that some attempt must be made to
explain this feature, to some so repulsive, in his works. One instance
at all events can show how it is possible to reconcile even the most
glaring. He is not a one-sided theologian: he is not one of those who
pass always the same judgment upon the same subject, no matter with
whom he has to deal. There could not be a harsher contradiction than
that between his statement about human generation in the Oratio
Catechetica, and that made in the treatises On Virginity and On the
Making of Man. In the O. C. everything hateful and undignified is
removed from the idea of our birth; the idea of
<greek>paqos</greek> is not applied; "only evil brings
disgrace." But in the other two Treatises he represents generation as a
consequence of the
Fall. This contradiction arises simply from the different standpoint in
each. In the one case he is apologetic; and so he adopts a universally
recognised moral axiom. In the other he is the Christian theologian;
the natural process, therefore, takes its colouring from the Christian
doctrine of the Fall. This is the standpoint of most of his works,
which are polemical, not apologetic. But in the treatise On the Saul
and the Resurrection he introduces even a third view about generation,
which might be called that of the Christian theosophist; i.e.
generation is the means in the Divine plan for carrying Humanity to its
completion. Very similar is the view in the treatise On Infants' Early
Deaths; "the design of all births is that the Power which is above the
universe may in all parts of the creation be glorified by means of
intellectual natures conspiring to the same end, by virtue of the
same faculty operating in all; I mean, that of looking upon God." Here
he is speaking to the purely philosophic instinct. It may be remarked
that On this and all the operations of Divine foreknowledge in vast
world-wide relations he has constantly striking passages, and deserves
for this especially to be studied.
The style of Gregory is much more elegant than that of Basil: sometimes
it may be called eloquent. His occasional digressions did not strike
ancient critics as a fault. To them he is "sweet," "bright," "dropping
pleasure into the ears." But his love for splendour, combined with the
lateness of his Greek, make him one of the more difficult Church
writers to interpret accurately.
His similes and illustrations are very numerous, and well chosen. A few
exceptions must, perhaps, be made. He compares the mere professing
Christian to the ape, dressed like a mart and dancing to the flute, who
used to amuse the people in the theatre at Alexandria, but once
revealed during the performance its bestial nature, at the sight of
food. This is hardly worthy of a great writer, as Gregory was (1).
Especially happy are his comparisons in the treatise On the Saul and
Resurrection, by which metaphysical truths are expressed; and elsewhere
those by which he seeks to reach the due proportions of the truth of
the Incarnation. The chapters in his work against Eunomius where he
attempts to depict the Infinite, are striking. But what commends him
most to modern taste is his power of description when dealing with
facts, situations, persons: he touches these always with a colour which
is felt to be no exaggeration, but the truth.
CHAPTER III.
HIS ORIGENISM.
A TRUE estimate of the position and value of Gregory as a Church
teacher cannot be formed until the question of his ' Origenism,' its
causes and its quality, is cleared up. It is well known that this
charge began to be brought against his orthodoxy at all events after
the time of Justinian: nor could Germanus, the Patriarch of
Constantinople in the next century, remove it by the device of supposed
interpolations of partizans in the interests of the Eastern as against
the Western Church: for such a theory, to be true, would still require
some hints at all events in this Father to give a colour to such
interpolations. Moreover, as will be seen, the points in which Gregory
is most like OriOn are portions of the very groundwork of his own
theology. The question, then, remains why, and how far, is he a
follower of Origen?
I. When we consider the character of his great forerunner, and the kind
of task which Gregory himself undertook, the first part of this
question is easily answered. When Christian doctrine had to be set
forth philosophically, so as to be intelligible to any cultivated mind
of that time (to reconcile Greek philosophy with Christian doctrine was
a task which Gregory never dreamed of attempting), the example and
leader in such an attempt was Origen; he occupied as it were the whole
horizon. He was the founder of theology; the very vocabulary of it,
which is in use now, is of his devising. So that Gregory's language
must have had, necessarily, a close connexion with that of the great
interpreter and apologist, who had explained to his century the same
truths which Gregory had to explain to his: this must have been the
case even if his mind had not been as spiritual and idealizing as
Origen's. But in some respects it will be seen Gregory is even more an
idealist than Origen himself. Alike, then, from purpose and tradition
as from sympathy he would look back to Origen. Though a guIf was
between them, and, since the Council of Nicaea, there were some things
that could come no more into controversy, Gregory saw, where the Church
had not spoken, with the same eyes as Origen: he uses the same keys as
he did for the problems which Scripture has not solved; he uses the
same great weapon of allegory in making the letter of Scripture give up
the spiritual treasures. It could not have been otherwise when the
whole Christian religion, which Gregory was called on to defend as a
philosophy, had never before been systematically so defended but by
Origen; and this task, the same for both, was presented to the same
type of mind, in the same intellectual atmosphere. It would have
been strange indeed if Gregory had not been a pupil at least (though he
was no blind follower) of Origen.
If we take for illustration of this the most vital point in the vast
system, if system it can be called, of Origen, we shall see that he had
traced fundamental lines of thought, which could not in that age be
easily left. He asserts the virtual freedom of the human will, in every
stage and condition of human existence. The Greek philosophy of the
third century, and the semi-pagan Gnosticism, in their emanational view
of the world, denied this freedom. With them the mind of man, as one of
the emanations of Deity itself, was, as much as the matter of which the
world was made, regulated and governed directly from the Source whence
they both flowed. Indeed every system of thought, not excepting
Stoicism, was struck with the blight of this fatalism. There was no
freedom for man at all but in the system which Origen was drawing from,
or rather reading into, the Scriptures. No Christian
philosopher who lived amongst the same counter-influences as Origen
could overlook this starting-point of his system; he must have adopted
it, even if the danger of Pelagianism had been foreseen in it; which
could not have been the case.
Gregory adopted it, with the other great doctrine which in the mind of
Origen accompanied it; i.e., that evil is caused, not by matter, but by
the act of this free will of man; in other words, by sin. Again the
fatalism of all the emanationists had to be combated as to the nature
and necessity of evil. With them evil was some inevitable result of the
Divine processes; it abode at all events in matter, and human
responsibility was at an end. Greek philosophy from first to last had
shewed, even at its best, a tendency to connect evil with the lower
<greek>Fusis</greek>. But now, in the light of revelation,
a new truth was set forth, and repeated again and again by the very men
who were inclined to adopt Plato's rather Dualistic division of the
world into the intelligible and sensible. ' Evil was due to an act of
the will of man.' Moreover it could no longer be regrded per
se: it was relative, being a ' default,' or ' failure,' or ' turning
away from the true good' of the will, which, however, was always free
to rectify this failure. It was a
<greek>sterhsis</greek>,--loss of the good; but it did not
stand over against the good as an independent power. Origen
contemplated the time when evil would cease to exist; 'the non-existent
cannot exist for ever:' and Gregory did the same.
This brings us to yet another consequence of this enthusiasm for human
freedom and responsibility, which possessed Origen, and carried Gregory
away. The <greek>apokatastasis</greek>
<greek>tpn</greek> <greek>pantwn</greek> has
been thought (1), in certain periods of the Church, to have been the
only piece of Origenism with which Gregory can be charged. [This of
course shows ignorance of the kind of influence which Gregory allowed
Origen to have over him; and which did not require him to select even
one isolated doctrine of his master.] It has also brought him into more
suspicion than any other portion of his teaching. Yet it is a direct
consequence of the view of evil, which he shares with Origen. If evil
is the non-existent, as his master says, a
<greek>sterhsis</greek>, (1) as he says, then it must pass
away. It was not made by God; neither is it self-subsisting.
But when it has passed away, what follows? That God will be "all in
all." Gregory accepts the whole of Origen's explanation of this great
text. Both insist on the impossibility of God being in ' everything,'
if evil still remains. But this is equivalent to the restoration to
their primitive state of all created spirits. Still it must be
remembered that Origen required many future stages of existence before
all could arrive at such a consummation: with him there is to be more
than one 'next world;' and even when the primitive perfection is
reached, his peculiar view of the freedom of the will, as an absolute
balance between good and evil, would admit the possibility of another
fall. 'All may be saved; and all may fall.' How the final Sabbath shall
come in which all wills shall rest at last is but dimly hinted at in
his writings. With Gregory, on the other hand, there are to be but two
worlds: the present and the next; and in the next the
<greek>apokatastas</greek>217><greek>s</greek>
<greek>tpn</greek> <greek>pantwn</greek> must
be effected. Then, after the Resurrection, the fire
<greek>akoimhtos</greek>,
<greek>aiwnios</greek>, as he continually calls it, will
have to do its work. 'The avenging flame will be the more ardent the
more it has to consume' (De Anima et Resurr., p. 227). But at last the
evil will be annihilated, and the bad saved by nearness to the good.'
There is to rise a giving of thanks from all nature. Nevertheless (2)
passages have been adduced from Gregory's writings in which the
language of Scripture as to future punishment is used without any
modification, or hint of this universal salvation. In the treatise, De
Pauperibus Amandis, II. p. 240, he says of the last judgment
that God will give to each his due; repose eternal to those who have
exercised pity and a holy life; but the eternal punishment of fire for
the harsh and unmerciful: and addressing the rich who have made a bad
use of their riches, he says, 'Who will extinguish the flames ready to
devour you and engulf you? Who will stop the gnawings of a worm that
never dies?' Cf. aIso Orat. 3, de Beatitudinibus, I. p. 788: contra
Ursuarios, II. p. 233: though the hortatory character of these
treatises makes them less important as witnesses.
A single doctrine or group of doctrines, however, may be unduly pressed
in accounting for the influence of Origen upon a kindred spirit like
Gregory. Doubtless fragments of Origen's teaching, mere details very
often, were seized upon and appropriated by others; they were erected
into dogmas and made to do duty for the whole living fabric; and even
those details were sometimes misunderstood. ' (3) What he had said with
a mind full of thought, others took in the very letter.' Hence arose
the evil of 'Origenism,' so prevalent in the century in which Gregory
lived. Different ways of following him were found, bad and good. Even
the Arians could find in his language now and then something they could
claim as their own. But as Rupp well says, 'Origen is not great by
virtue of those particular doctrines, which are usually exhibited to
the world as heretical by weak heads who think to take
the measure of everything with the mere formulae of orthodoxy. He is
great by virtue of one single thought, i.e. that of bringing philosophy
into union with religion, and thereby creating a theology. With Clement
of Alexandria this thought was a mere instinct: Origen gave it
consciousness: and so Christendom began to have a science of its own.'
It was this single purpose, visible in all Origen wrote, that impressed
itself so deeply upon Gregory. He, too, would vindicate the Scriptures
as a philosophy. Texts, thanks to the labours of Origen as well as to
the councils of the Church, had now acquired a fixed meaning and an
importance that all could acknowledge. The new spiritual philosophy lay
within them; he would make them speak its language. Allegory was with
him, just as with Origen, necessary, in order to find the Spirit which
inspires them. The letter must not impose itself upon us
and stand for more than it is worth; just as the practical experience
of evil in the world must not blind us to the fact that it is only a
passing dispensation, If only the animus and intention is regarded, we
may say that all that Gregory wrote was Origenistic.
II. But nevertheless much had happened in the interval of 130 years
that divides them and this leads us to consider the limits which the
state of the Church, as well as Gregory's own originality and more
extended physical knowledge, placed upon the complete filling in of the
outlines sketched by the master. First and chiefly, Origen's doctrine
of the pre-existence of the soul could not be retained; and we know
that Gregory not only abandoned it, but attacked it with all his powers
of logic in his treatise, De Animo et Resurrectione: for which he
receives the applause of the Emperor Justinian. Souls, according to
Origen, had pre-existed from eternity: they were created certainly, but
there never was a time when they did not exist: so that the procession
even of the Holy Spirit could in thought only be prior to their
existence. Then a failure of their free wills to grasp the true good,
and a consequent cooling of the fire of love within them, plunged them
in this material bodily existence, which their own sin made a suffering
one. This view had certainly great merits: it absolved the Deity from
being the author of evil, and so was a ' theodicee;' it entirely got
rid of the two rival principles, good and evil, of the Gnostics; and it
avoided the seeming incongruity of what was to last for ever in the
future being not eternal in the past. Why then was it rejected? Not
only because of the objection urged by Methodius, that the addition of
a body would be no remedy but rather an increase of the sin; or that
urged amongst many others by Gregory, that a vice cannot be regarded as
the precursor of the birth of each human soul into this or into other
worlds; but more than that and chiefly, because such a doctrine
contravened the more distinct views now growing up as to what
the Christian creation was, and the more careful definitions also of
the Trinity now embodied in the creeds. In fact the pre-existence of
the soul was wrapped up in a cosmogony that could no longer approve
itself to the Christian consciousness. In asserting the freedom of the
will, and placing in the will the cause of evil, Origen had so far
banished emanationism; but in his view of the eternity of the world,
and in that of the eternal pre-existence of souls which accompanied it,
he had not altogether stamped it out. He connects rational natures so
closely with the Deity that each individual
<greek>logos</greek> seems almost, in a Platonic way, to
lie in the Divine which (1) he styles <greek>ousia</greek>
<greek>ousipn</greek>, <greek>idea</greek>
<greek>idepn</greek>. They are 'partial brightnesses
(<greek>apaugasmapa</greek>) of the glory of God.' He (2)
allows them, of course, to have been created in the Scriptural sense of
that word, which is certainly an advance upon Justin; but his creation
is not that distinct event in time which Christianity requires and the
exacter treatment of the nature of the Divine Persons had now
developed. His creation, both the intelligible and visible world,
receives from him an eternity which is unnatural and incongruous in
relation to his other speculations and beliefs: it lingers,
Tithonus-like, in the presence of the Divine Persons, without any
meaning and purpose for its life; it is the last relic of Paganism, as
it were, in a system which is otherwise Christian to the very core. His
strenuous effort to banish all ideas of time, at all events from the
intelligible world, ended in this eternal creation of that world; which
seemed to
join the eternally generated Son too closely to it, and gave occasion
to the Arians to say that He too was a
<greek>kpisma</greek>. This eternal pre-existence in fact
almost destroyed the idea of creation, and made the Deity in a way
dependent on His own world. Athanasius, therefore, and his followers
were roused to separate the divinity of the Son from everything
created. The relation of the world to God could no longer be explained
in the same terms as those which they employed to illustrate the
relations between the Divine Persons; and when once the doctrine of the
consubstantiality of the Father and Son had been accepted and firmly
established there could be no more favour shown by the defenders of
that doctrine to the merely Platonic view of the nature and origin of
souls and of matter.
Amongst the defenders of the Creed of Nicaea, Gregory, we know, stands
well-nigh foremost. In his long and numerous treatises on the Trinity
he employs every possible argument and illustration to show the
contents of the substance of the Deity as transcendent, incommunicable
to creation per se. Souls cannot have the attributes of Deity. Created
spirits cannot claim immediate kindred with the
<greek>Logos</greek>. So instead of the Platonic antithesis
of the intelligible and sensible world, which Origen adopted, making
all equal in the intelligible world, he brings forward the antithesis
of God and the world. He felt too that that antithesis answers more
fully not only to the needs of the Faith in the Trinity daily growing
more exact and clear, but also to the facts of the Creation, i.e. its
variety and differences. He gives up the pre-existence of the rational
soul; it
will not explain the infinite variety observable in souls. The variety,
again, of the material world, full as it is of the miracles of divine
power, cannot have been the result of the chance acts of created
natures embodying themselves therein, which the theory of pre-existence
supposes. God and the created world (of spirits and matter) are now to
be the factors in theology; although Gregory does now and then, for
mere purposes of illustration, divide the Universe still into the
intelligible and the sensible.
When once pre-existence was given up, the parts of the soul could be
more closely united to each other, because the lower and higher were in
their beginning no longer separated by a gulf of ages. Accordingly
Gregory, reducing the three parts of man which Origen had used to the
simpler division into visible and invisible (sensible and
intelligible), dwells much upon the intimate relation between the two
and the mutual action of one upon the other. Origen had retained the
trichotomy of Plato which other Greek Fathers also, with the sanction,
as they supposed, of S. Paul (1 Thess. v. 23), had adopted. 'Body,'
'soul,' and 'spirit,' or Plato's ' body,' ' unreasoning' and '
reasoning soul,' had helped Origen to explain how the last, the
pre-existent soul (the spirit, or the conscience (1), as he sometimes
calls it) could ever have come to live in the flesh. The second, the
soul proper, is
as it were a mediating ground on which the spirit can meet the flesh.
The celestial mind, ' the real man fallen from on high,' rules by the
power of conscience or of will over this soul, where the merely animal
functions and the natural appetites reside; and through this soul over
the body. How the celestial mind can act at all upon this purely animal
soul which lies between it and the body, Origen leaves unexplained. But
this division was necessary for him, in order to represent the spirit
as remaining itself unchanged in its heavenly nature, though weakened
by its long captivity in the body. The middle soul (in which he
sometimes places the will) is the scene of contamination and disorder;
the spirit is free, it can always rejoice at what is well done in the
soul, and yet is not touched by the evil in it; it chooses, convicts,
and punishes. Such was Origen's psychology. But an intimate
connexion both in birth and growth between all the faculties of man is
one of Gregory's most characteristic thoughts, and he gave up this
trichotomy, which was still, however, retained by some Greek fathers,
and adopted the simpler division mentioned above in order more clearly
and concisely to show the mutual play of spirit and body upon each
other. There was soon, too, another reason why this trichotomy should
be suspected. It was a second time made the vehicle of error.
Apollinaris adopted it, in order to expound that the Divine
<greek>Logos</greek> took the place, in the tripartite soul
of Christ, of the 'reasonable soul' or spirit of other men. Gregory, in
pressing for a simpler treatment of man's nature, thus snatched a
vantage-ground from a sagacious enemy. His own psychology is only one
instance of a tendency which runs through the whole of his system, and
which may
indeed be called the dominating thought with which he approached every
question; he views each in the light of form and matter; spirit
penetrating and controlling body, body answering to spirit and yet at
the same time supplying the nutriment upon which the vigour and
efficacy of spirit, in this world at least, depends. This thought
underlies his view of the material universe and of Holy Scripture, as
well as of man's nature. With regard to the last he says, 'the
intelligible cannot be realized in body at all, except it be commingled
with sensation; ' and again, 'as there can be no sensation without a
material substance, so there can be no exercise of the power of thought
without sensation (1).' The spiritual or intelligent part of man (which
he calls by various names, such as 'the inner man,' the
<greek>yukh</greek> <greek>logikh</greek>,
<greek>nous</greek> or <greek>dianoia</greek>,
<greek>to</greek>
<greek>zwopo</greek><ss217><greek>on</greek>
<greek>aition</greek>, or simply
<greek>yskh</greek> as throughout the treatise On the
Soul), however alien in its essence from the bodily and sentient part,
yet no sooner is united with this earthly part than it at once exerts
power over it. In fact it requires this instrument before it can reach
its perfection. 'Seeing, then, man is a reasoning animal of a certain
kind, it was necessary that the body should be prepared as an
instrument appropriate to the needs of his reason (2).' So closely has
this reason been united with the senses and the flesh that it performs
itself the functions of the animal part; it is the 'mind' or 'reason'
itself that sees, hears, &c.; in fact the exercise of
mind depends on a sound state of the senses and other organs of the
body; for a sick body cannot receive the 'artistic' impressions of the
mind and, so, the mind remains inoperative. This is enough to show how
far Gregory had got from pre-existence and the 'fall into the prison of
the flesh.'
His own theory of the origin of the soul, or at least that to which he
visibly inclines, is stated in the treatise, De Anima et Resurrectione,
p. 241. It is that of Tertullian and some Greek Fatherd also: and goes
by the name of 'traducianism' The soul is transmitted in the generating
seed. This of course is the opposite pole to Origen's teaching, and is
inconsistent with Gregory's own spiritualism. The other alternative,
Creationism, which a number of the orthodox adopted, namely that souls
are created by God at the moment of conception, or when the body of the
foetus is already formed, was not open to him to adopt; because,
according to him, in idea the world of spirits was made, and in a
determinate number, along with the world of unformed matter by the one
creative act 'in the beginning.' In the plan of the universe, though
not in reality as with Origen, all souls are already
created. So the life of humanity contains them: when the occasion comes
they take their beginning along with the body which enshrines them, but
are not created then any more than that body. Such was the compromise
between spiritualism and materialism to which Gregory was driven by the
difficulties of the subject Origen with his eye unfalteringly fixed
upon the ideal world, and unconscious of the practical consequences
that might be drawn from his teaching, cut the knot with his eternal
pre-existence of souls, which avoided at once the alleged absurdity of
creationism and the grossness of traducianism. But the Church, for
higher interests still than those of pure idealism, had to reject that
doctrine; and Gregory, with his extended knowledge in physic and his
close observation of the intercommunion of mind and body, had to devise
or rather select a theory which, though a makeshift, would not
contradict either his knowledge or his faith.
Yet after admitting that soul and body are born together and attaching
such importance to the 'physical basis' of life and thought, the
influence of his master, or else his own uncontrollable idealism,
carries him away again in the opposite direction. After reading words
in his treatise which Locke might have written we come upon others
which are exactly the teaching of Berkeley. There is a passage in the
De Anima et Resurrectione where he deals with the question how an
intelligent Being could have created matter, which is neither
intelligent or intelligible. But what if matter is only a concourse of
qualities, <greek>ennoiai</greek>, or
<greek>Yila</greek> <greek>nohmata</greek> as
he elsewhere calls them? Then there would be no difficulty in
understanding the manner of creation. But even about this we can say so
much, i.e. that not one of those
things which we attribute to body is itself body: neither figure, nor
colour, nor weight, nor extension, nor quantity, nor any other
qualifying notion whatever: but every one of them is a thought: it is
the combination of them all into a single whole that constitutes body.
Seeing, then, that these several qualifications which complete the
particular body are grasped by thought alone, and not by sense, and
that the Deity is a thinking being, what trouble can it be to such a
thinking agent to produce the thoughts whose mutual combination
generate for us the substance of that body? and in the treatise, De
Hom. Opif., c. 24, the intelligible <greek>fusis</greek> is
said to produce the intelligible <greek>dunameis</greek>,
and the concourse of these <greek>dunameis</greek> brings
into being the material nature. The body itself, he repeats (contra
Fatum, p.
67), is not a real substance; it is a soulless, unsubstantial thing.
The only real creation is that of spirits. Even Origen did not go so
far as that Matter with him, though it exists by concomitance and not
by itself, nevertheless really exists. He avoided a rock upon which
Gregory runs; for with Gregory not only matter but created spirit as
well vanish in idealism. There remain with him only the and God.
This transcendent idealism embarrasses him in many ways, and makes his
theory of the soul full of inconsistency. (1) He will not say
unhesitatingly whether that pure humanity in the beginning created in
the image of God had a body or not like ours. Origen at all events says
that the eternally pre-existing spirits were invested with a body, even
before falling into the sensible world. But Gregory, while denying the
pre-existenee of souls in the sense of Origen, yet in many of his
treatises, especially in the De Hom. Opificio, seems to point to a
primitive humanity, a predeterminate number of souls destined to live
in the body though they had not yet lived, which goes far beyond
0rigen's in its ideal character. "When Moses," Gregory says, "speaks of
the soul as the image of God, he shows that all that is alien to God
must be excluded from our definition of the soul; and a corporal
nature is alien to God." He points out that God first 'made man in His
own image,' and after that made them male and female; so that there was
a double fashioning of our nature, <greek>h</greek>
<greek>te</greek> <greek>pros</greek>
<greek>to</greek> <greek>qeion</greek>
<greek>omoiwmenh</greek>, <greek>h</greek>
<greek>te</greek> <greek>pros</greek>
<greek>thn</greek> <greek>diaForan</greek>
<greek>tauthn</greek> (i.e. male and female)
<greek>dihrmenh</greek>. On the other hand, in the Oratio
Catechetica, which contains certainly his more dogmatic statement on
every point, this ideal and passionless humanity is regarded as still
in the future: and it is represented that man's double-nature is
actually the very centre of the Divine
Councils, and not the result of any mistake or sin; man's soul from the
very first was cornmingled (<greek>anakrasis</greek> is
Gregory's favourite word) with a body, in order that in him, as
representing every stage of living things, the whole creation, even in
its lowest part, might share in the divine. Man, as the paragon of
animals, was necessary, in order that the union might be effected
between two otherwise irreconcilable worlds, the intelligible and the
sensible. Though, therefore, there was a Fall at last, it was not the
occasion of man's receiving a body similar to animals; that body was
given him at the very first, and was only preparatory to the Fall,
which was foreseen in the Divine Councils and provided for. Both the
body and the Fall were necessary in order that the Divine plan might be
carried out, and the Divine glory manifested in creation. In this view
the
"coats of skins" which Gregory inherits from the allegorical treasures
of Origen are no longer merely the human body itself, as with Origen,
but all the passions, actions, and habits of that body after the Fall,
which he sums up in the generic term <greek>paqh</greek>.
If, then, there is to be any reconciliation between this and the former
view of his in which the pure unstained humanity, the 'image of God,'
is differentiated by a second act of creation as it were into male and
female, we must suppose him to teach that immediately upon the creation
in God's image there was added all that in human nature is akin to the
merely animal world. In that man was God's image, his will was free,
but in that he was created, he was able to fall from his high estate;
and God, foreseeing the Fall, at once added the distinction of sex, and
with it the other features of the animal which
would befit the fall; but with the purpose of raising thereby the whole
creation. But two great counter-influences seem always to be acting
upon Gregory; the one sympathy with the speculations of Origen, the
other a tendency to see even with a modern insight into the closeness
of the intercommunion between soul and body. The results of these two
influences cannot be altogether reconciled. His ideal and his actual
man, each sketched with a skilful and discriminating hand, represent
the interval that divides his aspirations from his observations: yet
both are present to his mind when he writes about the soul. (2) He does
not alter, as Origen does, the traditional belief in the resurrection
of the body, and yet his idealism, in spite of his actual and strenuous
defence of it in the carefully argued treatise On the Saul and
Resurrection, renders it unnecessary, if not impossible. We know
that his faith impelled Origen, too, to (1) contend for the
resurrection of the flesh: yet it is an almost forced importation into
the rest of his system. Our bodies, he teaches, will rise again: but
that which will make us the same persons we were before is not the
sameness of our bodies (for they will be ethereal, angelic, uncarnal,
&c.) but the sameness of a <greek>logos</greek> within
them which never dies (<greek>logos</greek>
<greek>tis</greek> <greek>egkeitai</greek>
<greek>tp</greek> <greek>swmati</greek>,
<greek>af</greek>' <greek>ou</greek>
<greek>mh</greek> <greek>fqeiromenou</greek>
<greek>egeir</greek><ss209><greek>tai</greek>
<greek>to</greek> <greek>spma</greek>
<greek>en</greek>
<greek>afqarsia</greek>, c. Cels. v. 23). Here we have the
<greek>logos</greek>
<greek>spermatikoi</greek>, which Gregory objected to as
somehow connected his mind with the infinite plurality of worlds. Yet
his own account of the Resurrection of the flesh is nothing but
Origenism, mitigated by the suppression of these
<greek>logoi</greek>. With him, too, matter is nothing, it
is a negative thing that can make and effect nothing: the soul, the
<greek>zwtikh</greek> <greek>dunamis</greek>
does everything; it is gifted by him with a sort of ubiquity after
death. 'Nothing can break its sympathetic union with the particles of
the body.' It is not a long and difficult study for it to discern in
the mass of elements that which is its own from that which is not its
own. 'It watches over its property, as it were, until the
Resurrection, when it will clothe 'itself in them anew (2).' It is only
a change of names: the <greek>logos</greek> has become this
<greek>zwtikh</greek> <greek>dunamis</greek> or
<greek>Yukh</greek>, which seems itself, almost unaided, to
effect the whole Resurrection. Though he teaches as against Origen that
the 'elements' are the same 'elements,' the body the same body as
before, yet the strange importance both in activity and in substance
which he attaches to the <greek>Yukh</greek> even in the
disembodied state seems to render a Resurrection of the flesh
unnecessary. Here, too, his view of the plan of Redemption is at
variance with his idealistic leanings. While Origen regarded the body,
as it now is, as part of that 'vanity' placed upon the creature which
was to be laid aside at last, Gregory's view of the design of God
in creating man at all absolutely required the Resurrection of the
flesh 3 (<greek>ws</greek> <greek>an</greek>
<greek>suneparqeih</greek> <greek>tw</greek>
<greek>qeiw</greek> <greek>to</greek>
<greek>ghinon</greek>). Creation was to be saved by man's
carrying his created body into a higher world: and this could only be
done by a resurrection of the flesh such as the Church had already set
forth in her creed.
Again, however, after parting with Origen upon this point, he meets him
in the ultimate contemplation of Christ's glorified humanity and of all
glorified bodies. Both steadily refuse at last 'to know Christ
according to the flesh.' They depict His humanity as so absorbed in
deity that all traces of His bodily nature vanish; and as with Christ,
so finally with His true followers. This is far indeed from the Lamb
that was slain, and the vision of S. John. In this heaven of theirs all
individual or generic differences between rational creatures
necessarily cease.
Great, then, as are their divergences, especially in cosmogony, their
agreements are maintained throughout. Gregory in the main accepts
Origen's teaching, as far as he can accommodate it to the now more
outspoken faith of the Church. What (4) Redepenning summarises as the
groundplan of Origen's whole way of thinking, Gregory has, with the
necessary changes, appropriated. Both regard the history of the world
as a movement between a beginning and an end in which are united every
single spiritual or truly human nature in the world, and the Divine
nature. This interval of movement is caused by the falling away of the
free will of the creature from the divine: but it will come to an end,
in order that the former union may be restored. In this summary they
would differ only as to the closeness of the original trojan. Both,
too, according to this, would regard 'man' as the final cause, and the
explanation, and the centre of God's plan in creation.
Even in the special sphere of theology which the later needs of the
Church forced into prominence, and which Gregory has made peculiarly
his own, that of the doctrine of the Trinity, Gregory employs sometimes
a method which he has caught from Origen. Origen supposes, not so much,
as Plato did, that things below are images of things above, as that
they have certain secret analogies or affinities with them. This is
perhaps after all only a peculiar application for his own purpose of
Plato's theory of ideas. There are mysterious sympathies between the
earth and heaven. We must therefore read within ourselves the
reflection of truths which are too much beyond our reach to know in
themselves. with regard to the attributes of God this is more
especially the case. But Origen never had the occasion to employ this
language in explaining the mystery of the Trinity. Gregory is the first
Father
who has done so. He finds a key to it in the (1) triple nature of our
soul. The <greek>nous</greek>, the
<greek>logos</greek>, and the soul, form within us a unity
such as that of the Divine hypostases. Gregory himself confesses that
such thoughts about God are inadequate, and immeasurably below their
object: but he cannot be blamed for employing this method, as if it was
entirely superficial. Not only does this instance illustrate trinity in
unity, but we should have no contents for our thought about the Father,
Son, and Spirit, if we found no outlines at all of their nature within
ourselves. Denis (2) well says that the history of the doctrine of the
Trinity confirms this: for the advanced development of the theory of
the <greek>logos</greek>, a purely human attribute in the
ancient philosophy, was the cause of the doctrine of the Son being so
soon
and so widely treated: and the doctrine of the Holy Spirit came into
prominence only when He began to be regarded as the principle of the
purely human or moral life, as Love, that is, or Charity. Gregory,
then, had reason in recommending even a more systematic use of the
method which he had received from Origen: 'Learn from the things within
thee to know the secret of God; recognise from the Triad within thee
the Triad by means of these matters which you realise: it is a
testimony above and more sure than that of the Law and the Gospel (3).'
He carries out elsewhere also more thoroughly than Origen this method
of reading parables. He is an actual Mystic in this. The mysterious but
real correspondences between earth and heaven, upon which, Origen had
taught, and not upon mere thoughts or the artifices of language, the
truth of a parable rests, Gregory employed, in order to penetrate the
meaning of the whole of external nature. He finds in its facts and
appearances analogies with the energies, and through them with the
essence, of God. They are not to him merely indications of the wisdom
which caused them and ordered them, but actual symptoms of the various
energies which reside in the essence of the Supreme Being; as though
that essence, having first been translated into the energies, was
through them translated into the material creation; which was thus an
earthly language saying the same thing as the heavenly language,
word for word. The whole world thus became one vast allegory (4): and
existed only to manifest the qualities of the Unseen. Akin to this
peculiar development of the parable is another characteristic of his,
which is alien to the spirit of Origen; his delight in natural scenery,
his appreciation of it, and power of describing it.
With regard to the question, so much agitated, of the
'A<greek>pokatastasis</greek>, it may be said that not
Gregory only but Basil and Gregory Nazianzen also have felt the
influence of their master in theology, Origen. But it is due to the
latter to say that though he dwells much on the "all in all" and
insists much more on the sanctifying power of punishment than on the
satisfaction owed to Divine justice, yet no one could justly attribute
to him, as a doctrine, the view of a Universal Salvation. Still these
Greek Fathers, Origen and 'the three great Cappadocians,' equally
showed a disposition of mind that left little room for the discussions
that were soon to agitate the West. Their infinite hopes, their
absolute confidence in the goodness of God, who owes it to Himself to
make His work perfect, their profound faith in the promises and
sacrifice of Christ, as well as
in the vivifying action of the Holy Spirit, make the question of
Predestination and Grace a very simple one with them. The word Grace
occurs as often in them as in Augustine: but they do not make original
sin a monstrous innovation requiring a remedy of a peculiar and
overwhelming intensity. Passion indeed seems to Gregory of Nyssa
himself one of the essential elements of the human soul. He borrows
from the naturalists many principles of distinction between classes of
souls and lives: he insists incessantly on the intimate connexion
between the physical growth and the development of the reason, and on
the correlation between the one and the other: and we arrive at the
conclusion that man in his eyes, as in Clement's, was not originally
perfect, except in possibility; that being at once reasoning and
sentient he must perforce feel within himself the struggle of reason
and passion, and
that it was inevitable that sin should enter into the world: it was a
consequence of his mixed nature. This mixed nature of the first man was
transmitted to his descendants. Here, though he stands apart from
Origen on the question of man's original perfection, he could not have
accepted the whole Augustinian scheme of original sin: and Grace as the
remedy with him consists rather in the purging this mixed nature, than
in the introduction into it of something absolutely foreign. The
result, as with all the Greek Fathers, will depend on the co-operation
of the free agent in this remedial work. Predestination and the 'bad
will' are excluded by the Possibility and the 'free will' of Origen and
Gregory.
THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF GREGORY OF NYSSA, CHAPTER IV (HIS TEACHING ON THE HOLY TRINITY)
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CHAPTER IV.
HIS TEACHING ON THE HOLY TRINITY.
To estimate the exact value of the work done by S. Gregory in the
establishment of the doctrine of the Trinity and in the determination,
so far as Eastern Christendom is concerned, of the terminology employed
for the expression of that doctrine, is a task which can hardly be
satisfactorily carried out. His teaching on the subject is so closely
bound up with that of his brother, S. Basil of Csarea,--his "master,"
to use his own phrase,--that the two can hardly be separated with any
certainty. Where a disciple, carrying on the teaching he has himself
received from another, with perhaps almost imperceptible variations of
expression, has extended the influence of that teaching and
strengthened its hold on the minds of men, it must always be a matter
of some difficulty to discriminate accurately between the services
which the two have rendered to their common cause, and to say how far
the
result attained is due to the earlier, how far to the later presentment
of the doctrine. But the task of so discriminating between the work of
S. Basil and that of S. Gregory is rendered yet more complicated by the
uncertainty attaching to the authorship of particular treatises which
have been claimed for both. If, for instance, we could with certainty
assign to S. Gregory that treatise on the terms
<greek>ousia</greek> and
<greek>upostasis</greek>, which Dorner treats as one of the
works by which he "contributed materially to fix the uncertain usage of
the Church (1)," but which is found also among the works of S. Basil in
the form of a letter addressed to S. Gregory himself, we should be able
to estimate the nature and the extent of the influence of the Bishop of
Nyssa much more definitely than we can possibly do while the authorship
of this treatise remains
uncertain. Nor does this document stand alone in this respect, although
it is perhaps of more importance for the determination of such a
question than any other of the disputed treatises. Thus in the absence
of certainty as to the precise extent to which S. Gregory's teaching
was directly indebted to that of his brother, it seems impossible to
say how far the "fixing of the uncertain usage of the Church" was due
to either of them singly. That together they did contribute very
largely to that result is beyond question: and it is perhaps
superfluous to endeavour to separate their contributions, especially as
there can be little doubt that S. Gregory at least conceived himself to
be in agreement with S. Basil upon all important points, if not to be
acting simply as the mouth-piece of his "master's" teaching, and as the
defender of the statements which his "master" had set forth against
possible misconceptions of their meaning. Some points, indeed, there
clearly were, in which S. Gregory's presentment of the doctrine differs
from that of S. Basil; but to these it may be better to revert at a
later stage, after considering the more striking variation which their
teaching displays from the language of the earlier Nicene school as
represented by S. Athanasius.
The council held at Alexandria in the year 365, during the brief
restoration of S. Athanasius, shows us at once the point of contrast
and the substantial agreement between the Western school, with which S.
Athanasius himself is in this matter to be reckoned, and the Eastern
theologians to whom has been given the title of" Neo-Nicene." The
question at issue was one of language, not of belief; it turned upon
the sense to be attached to the word
<greek>upostasis</greek>. The Easterns, following a use of
the term which may be traced perhaps to the influence of Origen,
employed the word in the sense of the Latin "Persona," and spoke of the
Three Persons as <greek>treis</greek>
<greek>upustaeis</greek>, whereas the Latins employed the
term "hypostasis" as equivalent to "sub-stantia," to express what the
Greeks called
<greek>ousia</greek>,--the one Godhead of the Three
Persons. With the Latins agreed the older school of the orthodox Greek
theologians, who applied to the Three Persons the phrase
<greek>tria</greek> <greek>proswpa</greek>,
speaking of the Godhead as <greek>mia</greek>
<greek>upostasis</greek>. This phrase, in the eyes of the
newer Nicene school, was suspected of Sabellianism (1), while on the
other hand the Westerns were inclined to regard the Eastern phrase
<greek>treis</greek> <greek>upostseis</greek>
as implying tritheism. The synodal letter sets forth to us the means by
which the fact of substantial agreement between the two schools was
brought to light, and the understanding arrived at, that while Arianism
on the one hand and Sabellianism on the other were to be condemned, it
was advisable to be
content with the language of the Nicene formula, which employed neither
the phrase <greek>mia</greek>
<greek>upostasis</greek> nor the phrase
<greek>treis</greek> <greek>upostaseis</greek>
(2). This resolution, prudent as it may have been for the purpose of
bringing together those who were in real agreement, and of securing
that the reconciled parties should, at a critical moment, present an
unbroken front in the face of their common and still dangerous enemy,
could hardly be long maintained. The expression
<greek>treis</greek> <greek>upostaseis</greek>
was one to which many of the orthodox, including those who had formerly
belonged to the Semi-Arian section, had become accustomed: the
Alexandrine synod, under the guidance of S. Athanasius, had
acknowledged the phrase, as used by them, to be an orthodox one, and S.
Basil, in his efforts to conciliate the Semi-Arian party, with which he
had himself been closely connected through his namesake of Ancyra and
through Eustathius of Sebastia, saw fit definitely to adopt it. While
S. Athanasius, on the one hand, using the older terminology, says that
<greek>upostasis</greek> is equivalent to
<greek>ousia</greek>, and has no other meaning (3), S.
Basil, on the other hand, goes so far as to say that the terms
<greek>ousia</greek> and <greek>up</greek>s228
<greek>stasis</greek>, even in the Nicene anathema, are not
to be understood as equivalent (4). The adoption of the new phrase,
even after the explanations given at Alexandria, was found to require,
in order to avoid misconstruc-lion, a more precise definition of its
meaning, and a formal defence of its orthodoxy. And herein consisted
one
principal service rendered by S. Basil and S. Gregory; while with more
precise definition of the term <greek>upostasis</greek>
there emerged, it may be, a more precise view of the relations of the
Persons, and with the defence of the new phrase as expressive of the
Trinity of Persons a more precise view of what is implied in the Unity
of the Godhead.
.... leather, and the slaves' stores," and the rest of his inheritance
in Chanaan(7), would never have chosen this lot, which now makes him so
angry. It was to be expected that he would revile those who were the
agents of this exile. I quite understand his feeling. Truly the authors
of these misfortunes, if such there be or ever have been, deserve the
censures of these men, in that the renown of their former lives is
thereby obscured, and they are deprived of the opportunity of
mentioning and making much of their more impressive antecedents; the
great distinctions with which each started in life; the professions
they inherited from their fathers; the greater or the smaller marks of
gentility of which each was conscious, even before they became so
widely known and valued that even emperors numbered them amongst their
acquaintance, as he now boasts in his book, and that all the higher
governments were roused about them and the world was filled with their
doings.
6. A notice of Aetius, Eunomius' master in heresy, and of Eunomius himself, describing the origin and avocations of each.
Verily this did great damage to our declamation-writer, or rather to
his patron and guide in life, Aetius; whose enthusiasm indeed appears
to me to have aimed not so much at the propagation of error as to the
securing a competence for life. I do not say this as a mere surmise of
my own, but I have heard it from the lips of those who knew him well. I
have listened to Athanasius, the former bishop of the Galatians, when
he was speaking of the life of Aetius; Athanasius was a man who valued
truth above all things; and he exhibited also the letter of George of
Laodicaea, so that a number might attest the truth of his words. He
told us that originally Aetius did not attempt to teach his monstrous
doctrines, but only after some interval of time put forth these
novelties as a trick to gain his livelihood; that having escaped from
serfdom in the vineyard to which he belonged,--how, I do not
wish to say, lest I should be thought to be entering on his history in
a bad spirit,--he became at first a tinker, and had this grimy trade of
a mechanic quite at his fingers' end, sitting under a goat's-hair tent,
with a small hammer, and a diminutive anvil, and so earned a precarious
and laborious livelihood. What income, indeed, of any account could be
made by one who mends the shaky places in coppers, and solders holes
up, and hammers sheets of tin to pieces, and clamps with lead the legs
of pots? We were told that a certain incident which befell him in this
trade necessitated the next change in his life. He had received from a
woman belonging to a regiment a gold ornament, a necklace or a
bracelet, which had been broken by a blow, and which he was to mend:
but he cheated the poor creature, by appropriating her gold trinket,
and giving her instead one of copper, of the same size, and
also of the same appearance, owing to a gold-wash which he had imparted
to its surface; she was deceived by this for a time, for he was clever
enough in the tinker's, as in other, arts to mislead his customers with
the tricks of trade; but at last she detected the rascality, for the
wash got rubbed off the copper; and, as some of the soldiers of her
family and nation were roused to indignation, she prosecuted the
purloiner of her ornament. After this attempt he of course underwent a
cheating thief's punishment; and then left the trade, swearing that it
was not his deliberate intention, but that business tempted him to
commit this theft. After this he became assistant to a certain doctor
from amongst the quacks, so as not to be quite destitute of a
livelihood; and in this capacity he made his attack upon the obscurer
households and on the most abject of mankind. Wealth came gradually
from
his plots against a certain Armenius, who being a foreigner was easily
cheated, and, having been induced to make him his physician, had
advanced him frequent sums of money; and he began to think that serving
under others was beneath him, and wanted to be styled a physician
himself. Henceforth, therefore, he attended medical congresses, and
consorting with the wrangling controversialists there became one of the
ranters, and, just as the scales were turning, always adding his own
weight to the argument, he got to be in no small request with those who
would buy a brazen voice for their party contests.
But although his bread became thereby well buttered he thought he ought
not to remain in such a profession; so he gradually gave up the
medical, after the tinkering. Arius, the enemy of God, had already sown
those wicked tares which bore the Anomaeans as their fruit, and the
schools of medicine resounded then with the disputes about that
question. Accordingly Aetius studied the controversy, and, having laid
a train of syllogisms from what he remembered of Aristotle, he became
notorious for even going beyond Arius, the father of the heresy, in the
novel character of his speculations; or rather he perceived the
consequences of all that Arius had advanced, and so got this character
of a shrewd discoverer of truths not obvious; revealing as he did that
the Created, even from things non-existent, was unlike the Creator who
drew Him out of nothing.
With such propositions he tickled ears that itched for these novelties;
and the Ethiopian Theophilus(8) becomes acquainted with them. Aetius
had already been connected with this man on some business of Gallus;
and now by his help creeps into the palace. After Gallus(9) had
perpetrated the tragedy with regard to Domitian the procurator and
Montius, all the other participators in it naturally shared his ruin;
yet this man escapes, being acquitted from being punished along with
them. After this, when the great Athanasius had been driven by Imperial
command from the Church of Alexandria, and George the Tarbasthenite was
tearing his flock, another change takes place, and Aetius is an
Alexandrian, receiving his full share amongst those who fattened at the
Cappadocian's board; for he had not omitted to practice his flatteries
on George. George was in fact from Chanaan himself, and therefore
felt kindly towards a countryman: indeed he had been for long so
possessed with his perverted opinions as actually to dote upon him, and
was prone to become a godsend for Aetius, whenever he liked.
All this did not escape the notice of his sincere admirer, our
Eunomius. This latter perceived that his natural father--an excellent
man, except that he had such a son--led a very honest and respectable
life certainly, but one of laborious penury and full of countless
toils. (He was one of those farmers who are always bent over the
plough, and spend a world of trouble over their little farm; and in the
winter, when he was secured from agricultural work, he used to carve
out neatly the letters of the alphabet for boys to form syllables with,
winning his bread with the money these sold for.) Seeing all this in
his father's life, he said goodbye to the plough and the mattock and
all the paternal instruments, intending never to drudge himself like
that; then be sets himself to learn Prunicus' skill(10) of short-hand
writing, and having perfected himself in that he entered at first, I
believe, the house of one of his own family, receiving his board for
his services in writing; then, while tutoring the boys of his host, he
rises to the ambition of becoming an orator. I pass over the next
interval, both as to his life in his native country and as to the
things and the company in which he was discovered at Constantinople.
Busied as he was after this 'about the cloke and the purse,' he saw it
was all of little avail, and that nothing which he could amass by such
work was adequate to the demands of his ambition. Accordingly he threw
up all other practices, and devoted himself solely to the admiration of
Aetius; not, perhaps, without some calculation that this absorbing
pursuit which he selected might further his own devices for living. In
fact, from the moment he asked for a share in a wisdom so profound, he
toiled not thenceforward, neither did he spin; for he is certainly
clever in what he takes in hand, and knows how to gain the more
emotional portion of mankind. Seeing that human nature, as a rule,
falls an easy prey to pleasure, and that its natural inclination in the
direction of this weakness is very strong, descending from the sterner
heights of conduct to the smooth level of comfort, he becomes
with a view of making the largest number possible of proselytes to his
pernicious opinions very pleasant indeed to those whom he is
initiating; he gets rid of the toilsome steep of virtue altogether,
because it is not a persuasive to accept his secrets. But should any
one have the leisure to inquire what this secret teaching of theirs is,
and what those who have been duped to accept this blighting curse utter
without any reserve, and what in the mysterious ritual of initiation
they are taught by the reverend hierophant, the manner of baptisms(1),
and the 'helps of nature,' and all that, let him question those who
feel no compunction in letting indecencies pass their lips; we shall
keep silent. For not even though we are the accusers should we be
guiltless in mentioning such things, and we have been taught to
reverence purity in word as well as deed, and not to soil our pages
with equivocal stories, even though there be truth in what we say.
But we mention what we then heard (namely that, just as Aristotle's
evil skill supplied Aetius with his impiety, so the simplicity of his
dupes secured a fat living for the well-trained pupil as well as for
the master) for the purpose of asking some questions. What after all
was the great damage done him by Basil on the Euxine, or by Eustathius
in Armenia, to both of whom that long digression in his story harks
back? How did they mar the aim of his life? Did they not rather feed up
his and his companion's freshly acquired fame? Whence came their wide
notoriety, if not through the instrumentality of these men, supposing,
that is, that their accuser is speaking the truth? For the fact that
men, themselves illustrious, as our writer owns, deigned to fight with
those who had as yet found no means of being known naturally gave the
actual start to the ambitious thoughts of those who were
to be pitted against these reputed heroes; and a veil was thereby
thrown over their humble antecedents. They in fact owed their
subsequent notoriety to this,--a thing detestable indeed to a
reflecting mind which would never choose to rest fame upon an evil
deed, but the acme of bliss to characters such as these. They tell of
one in the province of Asia, amongst the obscurest and the basest, who
longed to make a name in Ephesus; some great and brilliant achievement
being quite beyond his powers never even entered his mind; and yet, by
hitting, upon that which would most deeply injure the Ephesians, he
made his mark deeper than the heroes of the grandest actions; for there
was amongst their public buildings one noticeable for its peculiar
magnificence and costliness; and he burnt this vast structure to the
ground, showing, when men came to inquire after the perpetration of
this villany
into its mental causes, that he dearly prized notoriety, and had
devised that the greatness of the disaster should secure the name of
its author being recorded with it. The secret motive(2) of these two
men is the same thirst for publicity; the only difference is that the
amount of mischief is greater in their case. They are marring, not
lifeless architecture, but the living building of the Church,
introducing, for fire, the slow canker of their teaching. But I will
defer the doctrinal question till the proper time comes.
7. Eunomius himself proves that the confession of faith which He made was not impeached.
Let us see for a moment now what kind of truth is dealt with by this
man, who in his Introduction complains t |
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