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THE DIVINE HISTORY OF JESUS CHRIST

READING HALL

THE DOORS OF WISDOM

THE CREATION IF THE UNIVERSE ACCORDING GENESIS

 

BIOGRAPHYCAL UNIVERSAL LIBRARY

 

 

SAINT CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA

150-215 A.D.

BY

F. R. MONTGOMERY HITCHCOCK

 

PART I

I. CLEMENT’S HOME, THE CITY OF ALEXANDRIA II.CLEMENT’S HOME AND ITS VARYINGFORTUNES III.CLEMENT AND UNIVERSITY LIFE IN ALEXANDRIA IV.CLEMENT’S EARLY RELIGIOUS SURROUNDINGS AND THE COPTIC CHURCH V. CLEMENT AND THE JEWS . VI. CLEMENT AND PHILO’S PHILOSOPHICAL PROBLEM VII. CLEMENT AND THE CATECHETICAL SCHOOL OF ALEXANDRIA AND PHILOSOPHICAL STUDIES

PART II

I. CLEMENS ALEXANDRINUS : EDUCATION AND PHILOSOPHICAL STUDIES II. CLEMENS ALEXANDRINUS : HIS LIFE AND CHARACTER III. THE MINOR WORKS OF CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA IV.THE TRACT ON THE RICH MAN V. CLEMENT0’S WRITINGS VI. EXHORTATION TO THE GENTILES VII. EXHORTATION TO THE GENTILES, CONTINUED VIII. THE INSTRUCTOR OF RIGHTEOUSNESS IX. SOME CUSTOMS AND SYMBOLS OF EARLY CHRISTIANS REFERRED TO IN CLEMENT’S WORKS X. CUSTOMS OF EARLY CHRISTIANS XI. ASCETICISM, AND OTHER SUBJECTS

PART III

I. A SHORT INTRODUCTION TO THE STROMATEIS II. GENERAL REMARKS ON PHILOSOPHY III. JEWISH LAWS AND GREEK PHILOSOPHY—A CONTRAST IV. FAITH AND KNOWLEDGE AS RELATED TO EACH OTHER IN CLEMENT’S SYSTEM V. CLEMENT AND THE GNOSTICS VI: CLEMENT’S THEORY OF GOD VII. THE PERSONALITY OF THE WORD —DOCTRINE OF THE LOGOS  VIII. CLEMENT’S THEORIES OF THE WORLD AND MAN IX. CLEMENT’S GOSPEL OF THE INCARNATION X. SOTERIOLOGY OF CLEMENT : DOCTRINE OF SALVATION  XI. CLEMENT AND THE BIBLE XII. THE CHURCH AND THE SACRAMENTS

 

CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA

PART I

CHAPTER I

CLEMENT’S HOME; THE CITY OF ALEXANDRIA

 

The life and work of Clement of Alexandria could not, perhaps, be more favourably introduced to the notice of our readers than by a brief account of the historic city in which that life was lived and that work was done, and a general summary of the various influences that helped to mould and develop the character and genius of the man.

The city was founded by the great Alexander whose name it bore. Having crushed the Persian power for ever on the plains of Issus, 333 BC, the Macedonian conqueror had paused for a short breathing­space in his career of victory to settle affairs in Palestine and Egypt. During this period of rest he founded Alexandria, an extensive and regular city, built on a beautiful and commodious site, and destined to become the great emporium of the East.

On the north side its walls were washed by the blue waves of the Mediterranean, while the fine lake Mareotis formed its boundary on the south. The city, moreover, had the advantage of possessing two harbours, one facing the north-east and the other the south-west, so that it was possible for ships to sail in and out in all weathers, and was also connected with the interior of the country by a large canal.

Thus Alexandria was admirably situated for commerce; and as a large proportion of its inhabitants consisted of enterprising Jews and Greeks, it soon came to the front in the trade of the world. It has been said that the East and West met together in this centre to buy and sell and get gain. It was no wonder then, considering its great natural advantages, that the city very rapidly assumed vast proportions, covering in its prosperous days as much ground as modern Paris, registering nearly half-a-million free citizens, and having at its disposal more capital even than Rome.

In the days of the Empire, it was the corn-export from this great sea-port that supplied the Roman granaries; so much so, that many a time the Imperial city lay at the mercy of the Prefect of Egypt, who might easily have starved it out, by detaining the corn­fleet in the harbours of Alexandria; a fact which helps us to appreciate the charge so frequently made against Athanasius of conspiring to delay the corn from Africa.

In spite of all this wealth and influence, Alexandria could not have been called a beautiful city. The climate was mild, being tempered by the fresh Etesian breezes from the sea. And the buildings were handsome and massive, conspicuous among them being the synagogue of the Jews, the colossal Temple of Serapis, the extensive museum containing the famous library founded by Ptolemy Philadelphus, with adjacent parks for foreign animals, the Botanical Gardens, and the Observatory, from which the great Eratosthenes calculated the orbits of the planets. But there was little variety of shadow and sunlight, and there were no mountains to relieve the dull monotony of the unchanging coast-line. The city itself, however, was nobly planned. As one approached its southern gate, which was called the Moon Gate, there was a fine view of the limpid lake Mareotis, with its ferry-boats, barges, and winged Egyptian craft plying backwards and forwards between the city and the interior of the country; while the busy scene on the quays, where the stately Roman galleys were being laden with corn by a motley crowd of Copts, Nubians, Greeks, and Jews, lent a certain interest and animation to the outlook.

Leaving behind him this Babel of tongues and bustling confusion, the visitor would arrive at the Moon Gate, and passing beneath its noble portal would enter the spacious streets of this great world­city. For, indeed, it was a world in miniature, being cosmopolitan in every respect. Men and women of every colour, condition, religion, and phase of thought might be seen on each side—a pleasing contrast to the uniformity of the city.

One great street ran from the south gate to the northern, flanked on either side by spacious colon­nades—a special feature of this town—which afforded a pleasant promenade to the citizens in the hot weather, when they could enjoy the pleasure of a country stroll in the very heart of the city. It were easy to imagine the picturesque effect of the scene at night in those broad porticoes, when the torches carried hither and thither by the votaries of religion or pleasure flashed in the darkness like broken gleams of another sun, as their own poet has described it, and made the lofty arches yet more vast; while on either hand noble edifices, temples, synagogues, churches, palaces, and towers towered aloft.

The great shadowy mass that rose high above the roofs of the city buildings into the bosom of the sky was the superb Temple of Serapis, the God of Pontus, carried from Sinope by the first Ptolemy to share the majesty of Isis. This mighty structure, celebrated by Ammianus and Rufinus as one of the wonders of the world, erected on a basis a hundred feet high, and surrounded by a quadrangular portico that rested on four hundred monolithic columns—one of which alone remains the solitary guardian of past glories—was no mean rival of the grandeur of the Roman Capitol. Within its stately halls, in Clement’s day, were preserved rare treasures of gold and silver, and yet more precious than all these—a valuable library.

Passing by this magnificent edifice, which was still standing in all its glory in the second century, and advancing still further up the main street, one came to a great open space, or piazza, formed by the inter­section of the two principal thoroughfares of the city, and named Alexander’s Place after the great conqueror (Achilles Tatius). From this point, the so-called Omphalos of the city, the great seaport could be seen to its best advantage. Still proceeding in the shelter of the cloisters, after an hour’s walk one stood beneath the grand arch of the Gate of the Sun, and gazed upon the deep-blue waves of the great midland sea, sparkling in the rays of the sun and studded with the white sails of myriads of galleys. Yonder out to sea, by the left horn of the crescent-shaped harbour, stood the tall white tower of Pharos, the ancient lighthouse, on its own island, connected by moat and drawbridge with the pier; while on the right side of the harbour, as one faced the sea, the Caesareum, formerly a temple, in Clement’s day a church, rose in view, guarded by two tall obelisks, similar to that now standing on the Thames Embankment, which in Egyptian fashion stood sentinel before the sanctuary of Isis. Along­side this building was a great high-walled enclosure, the Bruchium, the royal quarter. Within these precincts lay the palaces of the Ptolemies, and the world-renowned Museum (University), with its statues, pillars, and frescoes, the wonder of the world. But, alas! the famous library, founded by Ptolemy Soter on the suggestion of Demetrius Phalereus, was no more. It had been completely destroyed during the siege of the city by Casar. Clement, however, had the advantage of being able to study in the library of the Serapeum, the nucleus of which consisted of some 500,000 volumes, which Antony had sent as a present to Cleopatra from Pergamum.

It was within the walls of the Bruchium that that ill-starred general and the fickle Queen of the Nile celebrated their premature triumph over Parthia and the world.

These are some of the interesting facts that are known of this proud metropolis of kings and illus­trious home of scholars. Such were the surroundings of the obscure life of the retiring teacher of Alex­andria. Within those city walls his placid days were spent; and in the shadow of those colonnades the gentle student often paced the marble pavement, and turned his thoughtful, tearful eyes to gaze upon the proud relics of a not inglorious past.

 

CHAPTER II

CLEMENT’S HOME ANDF HIS VARYING FORTUNES

 

In this chapter we shall say something of the opulence of the city and the character of its citizens. Alexandria certainly occupied the place of Athens in intellectual life, but in its magnificence and luxury, in its marts, bazaars, processions, and troops of slaves, it reminded one of an Oriental capital. Under the Ptolemies the monarchy of Egypt was restored, and the fine arts flourished under the most generous of patrons.

In the pages of Athenaeus one reads a very interesting account of the coronation feast of Ptolemy Philadelphus, in whose praise Theocritus composed his seventeenth idyll. In the inner pavilion, where the king sat enthroned (the historian informs us), a sumptuous repast was spread under awnings of scarlet, richly dight, suspended from pillars stately as the palm. Under these hangings one hundred and thirty-five couches of beautiful and costly workmanship were placed for the guests of the royal party; while on the silken tapestry that draped the walls with its folds of silver and gold, were inwoven the adventures of the gods. Above this ran a frieze of gold and silver shields, in the niches of which were placed in half­relief comic, tragic, and satyric groups. The ground, although the season was midwinter, was literally strewn with roses; while around the pavilion stood a hundred marble effigies, to say nothing of the untold wealth of flagons, vases, jewelled vessels, and precious metals that were displayed in lavish profusion. The masquerade commenced with a procession of the morning star Heosphorus, followed by a masque of kings and gods, satyrs, maidens, poets, Dionysus, and Maenads; while the company of the evening star, Hesperus, brought the show to an end. During this performance sixteen hundred waiters, clad in white, with ivy wreaths around their brows, handed around silver and golden cups of wine to the guests.

That exhibition, the magnificence of which almost beggars description, gives us some idea of the opulence of the city, which in after years brought in nearly £7,000,000 sterling in the way of revenue to the emperor’s private purse.

The Copts, the native inhabitants, accustomed to be pampered with gifts and shows of such a nature, were, as might be expected, fickle, unruly, and dangerous. They frequently became embroiled in strife with the Jews, whose wealth excited their cupidity, and at such times the Delta, the Jewish quarter, literally ran red with Hebrew blood. On several occasions tumults of a very terrible nature were enkindled, and by the most trivial causes: notably the civil war, which was caused in later years by a dispute between a soldier and a citizen about a pair of shoes, and which ended in the complete destruction of the Bruchium and its palaces.

Juvenal in his fifteenth satire—a poetical version of a village fight between Ombos (identified by Professor Petrie with Nubt-Ombos) and Tentyra—gives a gruesome account of the barbarous cruelty of the Egyptians, who deemed it a sacrilege to taste a leek, but would not abstain from eating raw human flesh when excited by faction fury. Theocritus likewise describes, in a manner that makes one’s blood curdle, the Egyptian marauder lurking in a dark passage ready to pounce out upon the unsuspecting passer-by and throttle him.

The Egyptians indeed do not bear an enviable reputation in the Greek and Latin classics. There are frequent comments on their dishonesty and secret violence, of which the following will suffice—

                  Noxia Alexandrea dolis aptissima tellus

Such was the general character of the populace of Alexandria, who were ever ready to take part in a street riot or a faction fight, but were entirely wanting in any true military spirit. “Imbelle vulgus” is Juvenal’s accurate description of them. Still, they were a very industrious people on the whole, both sexes being engaged in the different factories, where a brisk trade in glass-blowing, linen-weaving, and papyrus-making was carried on. In some of their ways the Egyptians presented a strange contrast to the habits of other nations. Herodotus tells us that their women buy and sell in the market, while the men sit at home plying the loom. Of this statement we find an echo in Soph. Oed. 335, where Oedipus, contrasting the faithful energy of his daughters with the selfish worthlessness of his sons, exclaims—

“Oh like in all things, both in nature’s bent

And mode of life, to Egypt’s evil ways,

Where men indoors sit weaving at the loom,

And wives outdoors must earn their daily bread.”

The modern town, called by the Turks Skanderieh, has very little traces of its former grandeur, except a column wrongly called Pompey’s Pillar. This, a monolithic block of red granite, about sixty-seven feet high and weighing about 276 tons, stands on a mound of earth some forty feet high. The capital and base are very rude and unfinished. A Greek inscription on the plinth shows that it was erected in honour of Diocletian by some prefect, of whose name only the two letters P O are legible.

Alexandria indeed fared ill when the fierce Arabs conquered the land. The ancient granary of Rome, the storied seat of philosophy and the early stronghold of Christianity, it rapidly sank to the position of a third-rate city when the Fatimite caliphs built New Cairo (967). For many centuries it remained in that dishonoured state, until, in very recent times, the importance of its position, lying as it does directly on the route to India, has restored to the city something of its ancient prestige and trade. Thus it has again become the chief commercial town of Egypt. To it are conveyed from Cairo the principal products of the interior, cotton, coffee, linseed, wool, senna, rice, gum, feathers, hides, beans, and com, by rail, river, and canal. During the past ninety years the city has made wonderful progress. When Napoleon made his celebrated campaign in Egypt, it consisted of nothing but a congeries of Arab huts, old ruins, and fortifications.

The modern town does not, however, occupy exactly the same site as the ancient home of Clement. It is built on the peninsula—once the mole or pier on which Caesar was well-nigh killed—which connects the ancient isle of Pharos with the mainland. Thanks to the Etesian winds the climate is as salubrious as ever; but the Turkish quarter of the town, as one might expect, is a standing reproach to civilization.

Of the two harbours the western is the better, being protected by a line of reefs from the sea. It could, however, only be approached with great difficulty, until at length an English company constructed a breakwater and docks, and thus converted it into a safe port.

CHAPTER III

CLEMENT AND UNIVERSITY LIFE IN ALEXANDRIA

 

It was probably in the Museum, the University of Alexandria, that the youthful Clement was educated. Here, under excellent tutors, the boy would read the famous Anthology, the turgid epic of Apollonius Rhodius, the didactic poem of Aratus on the weather, the Epigrams and the “ Causes ” of Callimachus, with its love story of Acontius and Cydippe (remarkable as being the first appearance of the sentimental romance in literature), and, above all, the sweet Bucolics and elaborate court poems of Theocritus. 

These works formed the fashionable course of study at the time when Homer was regarded as common­place, and the Greek drama was thought to be Unnatural by the hypercritical and insipid mind of the day. With an egotism worthy of modern days, each president of the University; in his turn, sought to make his “forte” the “rage” of literary circles.

Under Callimachus the epigram became very popular among a certain class. Apollonius, who succeeded him, caused the bias of public opinion to turn in favour of the epic; while the rustic idyll of Theocritus carried the young students by storm, and caused many to aspire to the dignity of a Bucolic poet. Modern taste, however, has reversed the process, and restored the old classics to their proper place, thanks to the excellent judgment and indefatigable labours of the great Aristarchus, once librarian in this Museum.

During his University career, Clement also pursued some of the more solid, if less artistic, studies in science that had been founded by Euclid on geometry, Eratosthenes on geography, and Hipparchus on astronomy. These names are sufficient in themselves, that of Euclid being well known to every school-boy, for his weal or his woe, to show the importance of the science school at the Alexandrian University. It was, indeed, the most distinguished mathematical college in the world, and in Clement’s day was appointed by the mutual consent of all the Churches to calculate the time at which the movable feast of Easter should be celebrated in each year.

We can easily believe that the average student trained in the wisdom of such great masters would, on the whole, be a more thoughtful and intelligent specimen than the ordinary pass-man, or even honour­man of the modern Universities.

The prominence of this Museum in the intellectual world was originally due to the great advantages, held out by the former kings of Egypt, to any scholar or student who would pursue his studies in the great library which Ptolemy had founded in his metropolis. This academy was founded on the principles of the schools in Athens, the precursors of all mediaeval and modern universities and colleges. We are informed that the foundation of Ptolemy contained a common hall, cloisters, and gardens, and that it was under the presidency of a principal who was a priest, but whose religious duties were apparently confined to the formal cult of the Muses, a feature borrowed from the Academy at Athens.

In addition to this magnificent establishment there was also a Jewish school, in which the works of Philo, the Septuagint, and the books of Wisdom were carefully studied.

But there was now rising into fame a school destined to eclipse both these, the famous Catechetical School of the Christians, in which Pantaenus was the first to occupy the chair of Divinity; Clement, his pupil, was the second; and the famous Origen was the third.

With these literary and religious institutions, exercising an incalculable influence upon the life and tone of her citizens, Alexandria for many years flourished as a seat of learning and culture. However, its intellectual life and lustre received a death-blow when Caliph Omar (early in the seventh century) sacked the city and burnt its books, saying that “they were useless if they agreed with the Koran, and also useless if they differed from it.”

We are glad to say, that he did not succeed altogether in his infamous purpose, for one of the most valuable MSS. of the ancient library is now in the possession of the British Museum. It is called the Codex Alexandrinus, the manuscript of Alexandria. In the year 1628 Cyrillus Lucaris, patriarch of that diocese, sent as a present to Charles I this MS., which contains the Septuagint almost complete, the whole of the New Testament with the exception of St. Matthew, and with the additional epistle of Clement to the Corinthians.

This priceless treasure was deposited in the British Museum, 1753. It consists of four volumes of large quarto size, written on vellum in double columns, with usual capital letters without spaces and accents.

This ancient and valuable relic surely gives the British student an increased interest in the illustrious University of Alexandria and its noble libraries.

 

CHAPTER IV

CLEMENTS’ EARLY SURROUDUINGS AND THE COPTIC CHURCH

 

In the early days of the Roman occupation, the natives of Egypt were devoted to the worship of Isis, Osiris, Serapis, and Anubis. And although, at first, the Romans were very much opposed to this form of religion, and demolished their temples by order of the Senate, so great a revulsion of feeling afterwards set in that in 43 BC the Triumvirs built a temple to Isis for public worship.

The worship of Isis became very fashionable in Rome on account of the licentious character of her festivals. And from the time of Vespasian she was an established Roman divinity. Domitian built ethe temples to her and Serapis in the Campus Martius.

But Isis was especially a goddess of the sea, as we may gather from the remark of Juvenal, which refers to a custom very much in vogue among Roman sailors—

Pictores quis nescit ab Iside pasci ? ”

Artists indeed carried on a lucrative trade with sailors, who were supposed to be under the protection of Isis. When a sailor had a narrow escape from di owning, as soon as he got ashore he had a picture of the disaster painted and hung it up with the dripping garments in a temple of Neptune or Isis as a tribute-offering for his salvation.

This custom has been immortalized by the verses of Horace—

“The sacred wall on which a tablet hangs

And vestments dripping from the brine,

These I have hung with supplication

An offering to strong Sea-God’s shrine”.

The story is told by Lucian that Zeus ordered Hermes to take Io across the seas to Egypt and make her into Isis, saying, “Let her be a goddess of the country; and let her be the dispenser of the winds and the saviour of the voyagers.” Thus it came to pass that Isis became the favourite deity of sailors. And so when Tibullus ventured on a sea-voyage, his beloved Delia made a vow to Isis, and the poet in the storm exclaimed—

       “Of what use is your Isis to me now, my Delia?”

Such was the ancient deity of those Copts who afterwards embraced Christianity in large numbers, and adhered to it through trial and persecution with their proverbial zeal and fury.

The monks and hermits and ascetics of Egypt were Copts, and always the most terrible champions of what they held to be the orthodox views. Antony, the founder of the monastic system, was the friend of Athanasius, the national hero, around whom the Anchorites rallied whenever his life or doctrine was assailed. In their caves and convents on the banks of the Nile, the great Coptic bishop, who stood alone against the world, ever found a secure retreat. On one occasion when he sought refuge among them, they came in their hundreds out of their cells to welcome him as a persecuted patriot, and he cried out in wonderment, “Who are these that fly as a cloud and as doves to their cotes?”. Then the abbot took the bridle of his ass, and by the light of a thousand torches, led him to their home in the sandy hills, where he was far beyond the reach of his persecutors.

Thus it was a strong national feeling which instigated the Copts to side with their national bishop against the Arians, who were essentially Greek. For Arius the heresiarch himself had been a pupil in the school of Lucian of Antioch, which was famous for its grammatical and rationalistic exegesis of scripture. We may infer this from the fact that he addressed Eusebius, bishop of Nicomedia, in a letter preserved by Epiphanius as sillokianistis, himself fellow-pupil of Lucian. And in all their dissensions, riots, and schisms, they clung to their country­man with a wonderful tenacity. It was, indeed, a red-letter day in the annals of Alexandria, when the exiled bishop was allowed to return to his diocese for a time (346 a.d.). Then the people passed out in vast numbers to receive him, as he rode over the flower-strewn and carpeted streets, with such illuminations, acclamations, and festal rejoicings, that the saying, “It is like the day when the Pope Athanasius came home,” passed into a proverb. The Christian Copts of today retain this old feud with the Greek Church. Indeed, it is said that the whole Nubian Church became Moslem rather than join the Church at Constantinople.

There is a great deal of truth in that saying. For the Copts were so exasperated by the canons of the Council of Chalcedon that they would never be reconciled with the heterodox adherents—as they considered them—of the Greek Church, and even preferred to fall into the hands of the Saracens. Indeed they hated the Greek Church and the Greek Empire of Byzantium so much, that they abjured the manners and language of the Greeks, refused to intermarry with them, and would not perform the commonest offices of humanity for them.

Yet we must not look on the Church of Egypt as only a remnant of the sect of Jacobites. “It is the only living representative” (writes Dean Stanley) “of the most venerable nation of all antiquity.” It contains, he asserts, all that is left of the lore and lineage of Egypt. And its ancient liturgies, which are written in the dialect of the Pharaohs, retain the ancient name of the city of Alexandria—Rhacotis.

The Coptic form of service is very primitive. The congregation exchange a universal kiss of peace, the worshippers wear turbans on their heads, and remove their slippers; while children, acting as deacons, remind one of that scene witnessed by the aged Bishop of Alexandria. As that prelate was sitting one day in a turret which commanded a view of the great Mediterranean Sea, he saw some little boys playing in a very solemn way upon the beach. Summoning them to his presence, he questioned them, and found that they had been playing at “baptism,” and that one of their number, duly elected, had followed the prescribed ritual, and dipped each of them in the water with the usual formula. The venerable bishop pronounced the ceremony valid, and never lost sight of the boy-bishop, whom he afterwards made his Arch­deacon. The bishop was Alexander; the boy was Athanasius.

Alexandria, once the chief sanctuary of the country, was now, in the time of Clement, the Patriarchal see of Egypt. It was said to have been founded by St. Mark, and its bishop was the only one who bore the name of “Pope” in the earlier centuries of the Christian era. After the Council of Nicaea, he was called the “Judge of the World” from his decision concerning the date of Easter, and was generally regarded with the veneration paid in later days to the Bishop of Rome.

Indeed, Gregory of Nazianzus said that the head of the Alexandrian Church is the head of the world.

The patriarch of that diocese was the Metropolitan of all Egypt, and allowed no other bishop to ordain in his jurisdiction. While in civil matters “he had gradually usurped the state and authority of a civil magistrate ... and the Prefects of Egypt were awed or provoked by the Imperial power of these Christian Pontiffs” (Gibbon).

So much for the position and importance of the Alexandrian patriarchate of which Athanasius was the first conspicuous representative.

The patriarch at the present day has a residence in Cairo. Ten other bishops, the representatives of some three hundred of older days, dwell in the same' city. And only forty monasteries out of six hundred have survived the destructive work of the Arab, while the Copts, themselves, have been reduced to some 30,000 families. “They are a race of illiterate beggars,” says Gibbon, “whose only consolation is derived from the superior wretchedness of the Greek patriarch and his diminutive congregation.” This statement is partly true, for it was a great source of sorrow to Cyril Lucar, the Patriarch of Constantinople, to know that the heretics were ten times more numerous than his orthodox Greek.

The Coptic Church is Monophysite, that is, it was so vehemently opposed to the Arian heresy, which denied the divine nature of our Lord, and to the Nestorian theory by which His two natures were divided, that it maintained that Christ had one nature alone, and that a mixture of the human and the divine.

CHAPTER V

CLEMENT AND THE JEWS

 

The campaigns of the great world-conqueror, Alexander of Macedon, prepared the minds of men, in a general way, for the doctrines of the Gospel, some three centuries before it was preached, by spreading Greek culture, thought, and language in the most distant countries of the world, and so fusing into one Greek and Barbarian. But, in a more particular manner, this end was attained in Alex­andria, his new city, where the conqueror invited the Jews, to whom he was very partial, to settle in great numbers.

Here, in the very heart of civilization, where the culture of the Greek, the mystic lore of the Copt, the discipline of the Roman, and the religiousness of the Jew were blended together, a cosmopolitan form of thought developed, which, in spite ‘of certain peculi­arities, afterwards became a soil admirably prepared for the seed of life.

There is a very interesting account of the first meeting of the Jews and the Macedonian hero in the History of Josephus. After their return from captivity, the Jews had remained the loyal subjects of the “Great King.” Nehemiah, it seems, was the last governor sent from the Court of Persia. After his death, Judea was placed under the control of the Satrap of Coele-Syria, to whom the high-priest was responsible for the administration of affairs. The history of this period is without any striking incident until we come to the priesthood of Jaddua, when news of the invasion of Asia, and the overthrow of the Persian monarch, their suzerain, in the decisive battles at the Granicus (334 BC), and at Issus (333 BC), spread a panic among the well-affected inhabitants of Palestine, which was increased tenfold when the invader turned his all-powerful arms in the direction of Syria, captured Damascus, carried Sidon by assault, and laid siege to the great city of Tyre. From that place he sent a message to Jerusalem to demand an oath of submission and supplies from the high-priest. These were refused. The, king vowed vengeance, and after the fall of Tyre, marched straight to the Holy City.

In the meantime the Jews were in terrible consternation, and Jaddua was greatly troubled. However, reassured by a dream, in which he was advised to receive the approaching Alexander as a friend, he ordered the city to be decorated with flags and gar­lands for the reception of the conqueror, and went forth in full pontifical attire, followed by an imposing procession of the priests, to meet the king on the march, or ever he drew nigh the city walls.

But when the great victor beheld the holy name Jahveh inscribed in golden letters on the tiara of the high-priest, it is said that he fell down and worshipped, to the great astonishment of the Chaldean princes and the indignation of his own friends, who scoffingly inquired why he, who had “made the whole world do him homage, knelt before the Jewish priest”?

“It is not the high-priest whom I worship,” returned Alexander, “but his God Who gave him the priesthood. In a vision at Dios in Macedonia, I saw Him arrayed in those robes, and when I was considering how I might conquer Asia, He urged me to cross the sea without delay, saying that He would Himself lead my army and give me the victory.”

Then the king, rising from his knees, took the high-priest by the hand, and entering the city, sacrificed before the people in the Temple. This story may be a myth.

It is, however, a fact, that Alexander dealt very leniently with the Jews, to whom he granted their ancient privileges and liberties. And when a few months afterwards he founded his city of Alexandria in Egypt, he gave the Jewish settlers the preference.

For a long period the Jewish colony in Egypt had rest, and multiplied; and as usual grew very rich, and lent large sums of money at interest to the uncircumcised. They were governed by one of their own princes, called the Alabarch, and by a Sanhedrim, and occupied two of the five districts (Nomi) of the city. Moreover, Ptolemy Philadelphus conferred additional advantages upon the flourishing house of Israel. Nor were they long without a temple. For during the dark days when Antiochus the Syrian was working off his rage on the country of Judea, and seeking by every indignity, pollution, and oppression, to destroy the Jewish Law and Worship, we read that Onias, the son of the high-priest, escaped to Egypt, and there obtained the permission of Ptolemy Philometer to erect a temple in the Heliopolitan nome, after the same pattern as the Temple of Jerusalem, and to con­secrate Levites and priests to its service. It is said that Onias quoted the following prediction of Isaiah to Ptolemy as a plea for the building of this temple—

“In that day shall five cities in the land of Egypt speak the language of Canaan, and swear to the Lord of hosts; one shall be called, The city of Heres (= the city of the Sun, Heliopolis). In that day shall there be an altar to the Lord in the midst of the land of Egypt, and a pillar at the border thereof to the Lord.”

This temple of Heliopolis, built by Onias, though somewhat smaller, was similar in design to the ancient fane in Jerusalem. It stood con a foundation 60 feet high, but instead of the massive golden candle-stick, a golden lamp was suspended by a golden chain from the vaulted roof; it was also adorned with votive gifts. This temple remained standing until the time of Vespasian, who ordered it to be demolished in consequence of a tumult raised by the Jews in Egypt.

Moreover, the Jews had a celebrated synagogue in Alexandria, which was built on a magnificent scale, and in which seventy golden chairs, studded with gems, were placed for the Sanhedrim. This edifice was burnt down in the time of Trajan.

Needless to say,, the Jews in Egypt soon forgot their ancient tongue, and the recension of their scriptures by Ezra. They found it more convenient to have a translation in the Greek language. This translation —the origin of which is wrapt in mystery—is called the Septuagint version, from the tradition (now universally rejected) of Aristeas, who stated that it was made in seventy-two days by seventy learned Jews. These, the story goes, were sent by Eleazar the high-priest to Ptolemy Philadelphus, who was then engaged in founding his magnificent library at Alexandria (283 BC). On their arrival, the Egyptian monarch, with a view to test their inspiration, shut them up by pairs in cells, and on the completion of the translations, which agreed verbatim with one Another, is said by Josephus to have given the translators half a million sterling for their work

Clement, following Irenaeus, gives the same account of the origin of the Septuagint version of the Old Testament. In the Stromateis he writes: “They say that the Scriptures both of the law and of the prophets were translated from the Hebrew into the Greek language in the reign of Ptolemy, the son of Lagos, or according to others in that of Ptolemy Philadelphus, and that Demetrius Phalereus displayed the greatest zeal and accuracy in superintending this work.”

He then proceeds to relate the story we have just told, which he firmly believed, regarding such an origin as the result of a special intervention of Providence on behalf of the Greeks. “For it need not occasion wonder,” he says, “that the God who inspired the prophecy should inspire the translation. For when the Scriptures had been lost in the captivity of Nabuchodonosor, Esdras (Ezra) the Levite and priest under divine inspiration restored them in the reign of Artaxerxes.”

Clement then quotes from the work of Aristobulus, addressed to Philometor, in order to show that Plato was versed in the Jewish law. The passage runs to the effect that even before the time of Demetrius, previous to the time of the Persians and of Alexander, the account of the Exodus from Egypt and the Jewish code of laws had been translated into Greek, so that they were well known both to Pythagoras and to Plato, “the Atticizing Moses, as Noumenius the Pythagorean philosopher styled him.

This story, however, although attested by such an authority as Clement, is evidently an invention. The translation was originally made for the use of the Alexandrian Jews, and was the work of various authors, who, to judge from the introduction of Coptic words, were natives of Egypt.

Dr. Edersheim suggests (History of Jewish Nation) that both the Samaritan and the Septuagint translations of the Pentateuch are based on an old Aramaean Targum or Paraphrase. He cites several passages in the LXX version, which can only be understood with the help of the Hagada, the apocryphal Prophets, and the Halacah, the apocryphal Pentateuch.

For example, he takes the translation of the book of Joshua, and shows that the Greek of chapter xiii. 22 can only be understood in the light of the Hagadic story, that Balaam had by magic flown into the air, but that Phinehas threw him to the ground and killed him in the fall. And the remarkable addition in the Septuagint version to Joshua xxiv. 30—“There they placed with him on the tomb, in which they buried him there, the stone knives with which he had the children of Israel circumcised in Galilee, when he led them out of Egypt, as the Lord had appointed them”—is also due to the same source of legend—the Jewish Hagada.

These passages prove that this Greek translation was made under the combined influences of the Jewish Targums, ancient paraphrases of the text, and the Talmud, the collection of oral traditions and interpretations on the law, and were only committed to writing in the second century after Christ, but existed for centuries before in the memory of individuals. Be this as it may, the translation shows abundant traces of mistakes, corrections, additions, and omissions.

Though it was, at first, intended only for the Egyptian, it came to be used very largely by the Palestinian, Jews; and came to be regarded as a work of the highest authority until that sacred race, unable to answer the arguments which the Christians based upon it, disowned it, and made use of a very literal version by Aquila, especially written from the national standpoint, about 160 a.d.

A well-known version of this work, which had gradually become full of errors by reason of the inaccuracy of transcribers, was undertaken by Origen in the beginning of the third century.

This great scholar of Alexandria spent twenty-eight years in collating the Greek text with the original Hebrew, and three other Greek translations, the literal rendering of Aquila, the moderate one of Theodotion, and the free one of Symmachus, Ebionite Jews.

This recension is variously termed the Tetrapla (which contains the four Greek versions of Aquila, Symmachus, the Septuagint, and Theodotion), and the Hexapla (which contains two additional columns, the Hebrew text in its original characters, and also in Greek characters). Origen marked all the changes he made in the text very carefully.

A long time after his death, Eusebius and Pamphilus found this great work in an obscure place in the city of Tyre, and removed it to the library of Pamphilus the martyr, where Jerome saw it a hundred years later. It is supposed to have perished in the sack of the city by the Arabs, a.d. 653.

There were three further recensions of the Septuagint, one by Eusebius from the Hexaplar text of Origen, one revision of the common Greek text by Lucian, and another by Hesychius. Upon these three recensions all MSS. and printed editions of the Septuagint now in use are based.

This much will suffice to show the important position of the great Jewish colony in Alexandria (in the world of letters as well as in worldly riches), and to prepare us for the great problem its noblest sons endeavoured to solve—the reconciliation of Greek philosophy and Jewish tradition.

 

CHAPTER VI

CLEMENT AND PHILO’S PHILOSOPHICAL PROBLEM

 

In order to understand the position and influence of an Alexandrian Jew, let us take the case of Philo (who was already advanced in years, a.d. 40), when he undertook an embassy to Caligula on behalf of the Jews. He was a man of wealth, position, and learning, and the brother of the Alabarch Alexander, who lent fabulous sums of money to Agrippa. Brought up from his infancy to believe in the divine source of every letter of the Septuagint version of the Old Testament, made by the Jews of Alexandria, and in after years becoming a firm adherent of the Platonic philosophy, he found it hard to reconcile his reason and his faith. He instinctively held to the Scriptures, while his reason assented to the philosophy.

To deliver himself from this dilemma, he set himself to seek for universal principles of thought in the Old Testament. Needless to say, he did not find them. And this failure was due in a large measure to his uncritical method' of study. For he did not adhere to the recognized rules of interpretation, and paid no heed whatever to the grammar, history, logical de­velopment, textual and comparative criticism of the works he studied. Having failed, then, to find the principles of Greek philosophy in the Pentateuch of Moses, he arrived at the extraordinary conclusion that everything in Scripture was allegorical; that nothing was to be literally interpreted, but that the most abstruse and, far-fetched meaning was the most probable.

Thus the letter of the text was spirited away by Philo, while the so-called spirit was retained. In this way Philo thought he would be able to find his Greek universals in the law of Moses, and so to defend the sacred literature of his countrymen from the sneers of heathen moralists and the jeers of Pagan sceptics. While, on the other hand, he fondly hoped to satisfy the narrow-minded literalism of the Pharisees, who worshipped the letter, but disregarded the spirit of the law.

If he succeeded in doing this, he would achieve the darling project of his heart—the reconciliation of Greek philosophy and Jewish tradition.

But, of course, consistently with the Greek theories he incorporated in his system, Philo could not conceive the Deity as having any sensible or human quality or feeling. He identified Him with the Absolute Being, undefinable and supreme, Who manifests Himself to the mind that soars upwards, disengaging itself from everything sensible, and so attains to an intellectual intuition of Him. Such a one loves the Supreme Being for His own sake, and longs to do His will because he apprehends Him not as man but as God.

There are others, Philo writes, who know God only after the analogy of man, and attribute to Him feelings of anger, etc. These have to be trained to virtue by the hope of reward or fear of punishment, whereas the members of the former class apprehend God im­mediately rising to an intellectual insight of His Being, and so are actuated by love; while they who form the second class know God only indirectly through the medium of His Creation and His revealed word, and so are sons of the word rather than of the true Being.

Thus Philo held that there was an inner and an outer circle of believers, and introduced the Pagan distinction of esoteric and exoteric into that religion which is for all alike, the millionaire and the beggar, the peasant and the peer, the ignorant and the learned.

This spiritualistic conception of God was directly opposed to the materialistic view the Alexandrian Jews, in general, had of their Jahveh.

One extreme had led to the other; and in this case, the mean, as ever, is right.

For the objective qualities of the Heavenly Father, which were dimly revealed to the Old Testament saints, but in these latter days more fully revealed in the person of His Only-Begotten Son, cannot be explained away in this manner. And, after all, the religion of Philo and his school was but an intellectual interpretation of Judaism, with all the features of a spiritualized worship, asceticism, contemplation, rapture, and isolation.

Intimately connected with this new departure of Judaism, which presented many attractions to the philosophical, however distasteful it may have been to the Conservative, Jew, was the sect of the Therapeutic, which some identify with the older Essenes, but which is, perhaps with more reason, to be regarded as a practical exposition of the contemplative life, solemnly advocated by many of the Jews in Egypt, the land of the mystic and the anchorite.

These Therapeutae were the Contemplatists. They lived, like the later anchorites, in cells by the Lake Mareotis. To this place, from all quarters men and women had come, leaving their households and breaking with all their natural ties, in order to meditate together upon the Being of God, and to study the law according to the new allegorical method.

They used to fast for three days out of the seven, and every Sabbath-day met together to hold a solemn convocation and to partake of a simple meal.

Such was the soil in which Gnosticism naturally took root.

For when, influenced by the new doctrine, the members of this sect professed Christianity, as a general rule, they understood it only after an unreal manner, and imagined that their intellectual knowledge of God was sufficient to atone for all their sin.

It was essentially the mystical nature of the rising religion which commended it to them, and so the truth, when they did embrace it, became in their hands imbued with such extraneous elements as theosophy, angel worship, legal righteousness, the prerogatives of high descent, and the mystery of numbers.

We must bear in mind that there was a certain class of Jews always hostile to Christianity—the proselytes of righteousness who had been circumcised, and who conformed to the stern ritual of Moses in the strictest way.

Of these Justin Martyr wrote—“They do not only not believe, but, twice as much as the heathen, blas­pheme the name of Christ.”

Whereas the proselytes of the Gate, who simply pledged themselves to abstain from the worship of idols and pagan excesses, and to adore the one God, found an especial attraction in the new Gospel, which threw a fuller light upon the nature and work of God.

Moreover, Philo had prepared the way for the doctrine of the Incarnation and Redemption by his idea of a mediating divine Word—which he, however, regarded as a manifestation of a person rather than as a personal manifestation—through which, according to him, the world was connected with God.

It is very instructive, indeed, to compare this imperfect Logos-theory of Philo with the true theory of “the Word become flesh ” in the Gospel of St. John. The Logos of St. John is real, present, and substantial, while the word of Philo is shadowy, distant, and indistinct.

The Alexandrian philosopher indeed spoke of the Word as the First-born Son, but on the subject of His Personality he is altogether silent or vague. According to Dorner and Dollinger he did not speak of this Word (Logos) as if He were a distinct Person; while Dr. Jowett declared that Philo had not made up his own mind on the subject, for at one time he treated his Word as personal, and at another as impersonal.

In this controversy we must bear in mind that the word “ person ” is applied to God in a different sense from that in which it is applied to man. And yet there is bound to be one element at least in common between the personality of God and the personality of man, and that is self-consciousness.

The argument therefore turns on this, whether or no the Word (Logos) of Philo was regarded by him as a self-conscious Being, aware of His distinctness and individuality as the Word of St. John manifestly was.

The Word of Philo, as has been said already, is a mediating Word, through which God the Abstract, the Intangible One, deals with men and manifests Himself in the world. But in another passage he spoke of this Word as the “Shadow of God, by which, as an instrument, he used to make the worlds,” that is, a shadowy instrument, which can be nothing more than a manifestation of God.

The Word, Philo goes on to say, fills all things, is the “bond ” of creation, is the “Eldest Son” and the “Archangel.” He is the “spiritual food of man,” and the “Intercessor” by whose mediating words the Creator is brought into touch with His Creation. Yet we can hardly believe that Philo is speaking here of anything more than a certain attribute of God, as, for example, His wisdom made incarnate in the world.

If we take another definition of this Word, “The word of God is the Idea of Ideas,” we have a reminiscence, or rather a reproduction of the Platonic theory of the Intelligence (nods). The “Intelligence” is the centre of causality, the agent of creation in the system of the Greek, while the Word (Logos) is the centre of causality, the agent of creation in the system of the Jew. But the Nous, “the Royal Mind,” in the philosophy of Plato is merely a principle of Intelligence in the nature of the Supreme God, and is not therefore a self-conscious personality. Now the “Word” of Philo has evidently been founded upon the “Intelligence” of Plato, and as it has been proved abundantly from the writings of Plato that he did not regard his “Intelligence” as a person, it would be a straining of the point to read a self-conscious personality into the Philonic Word, or to assert that St. John, whose Word is truly a Person manifested in His Work and Thought, distinct from the Father, and at the same time One with Him, borrowed his perfect con­ception from the imperfect idea of Philo.

Philo’s problem, as stated in the beginning of this chapter, was the reconciliation of Jewish tradition and Greek philosophy.

Thus it was that he was led to clothe his Greek theory of an abstract intangible Deity in a Jewish form, and to represent his Yahveh as the one supreme, intellectual, and living Being, manifesting Himself through the mediation of an Intelligence which, in its turn, was manifested through its ideas.

 

CHAPTER VII

CLEMENT AND THE CATECHETICAL SCHOOL OF ALEXANDRIA

 

In a previous chapter, a very brief allusion was made to the prominent position in intellectual pursuits which was won by the Catechetical School of Alexandria. This school was established under the best auspices. The grand problem which ever engaged the attention of its professors was the reconciliation of the enlightenment of the age with the Christian doctrine of the Incarnation. One cannot say that their efforts in this line were entirely crowned with success, but they, at any rate, helped to give a Christian tone to the new Cosmic philosophy.

Eusebius, the great ecclesiastical historian, speaks of a school of theology which existed in the city from very ancient times. This school was connected with the diocese of Alexandria, and the appointment of the professor consequently lay in the hands of the Bishop.

Very high qualifications were of necessity required in the catechist of this school, which had a higher aim than mere scriptural exposition, and a larger scope even than the allegorical interpretation of the Sacred Books.

The end the teachers had before them was to show the reasonableness of Christianity to men of reasoning minds, and thus to establish the Christian faith upon a rational basis.

The Catechist should then be familiar with Grecian lore, philosophy, and religion, in order-to cope with the wit and intelligence of a highly cultured race; and at the same time, to train up a class of students who were preparing for the different offices of the Christian ministry.

So it was that Clement, who. succeeded Pantaenus in the chair of theology, freely used every possible means of helping his pupils; exploring both the ancient and the recent classical authors, and studying every theory of life, creation, and God, that was to be found in the collective wisdom of the Greeks, and in the illumined page of Scripture. 

“ All learning,” he tells us, “ is useful, but the study of the Holy Scriptures is particularly essential to enable us to verify what we teach, especially when our pupils come primed with Greek erudition.”

Even the learned and ready Origen, Clement’s disciple and successor in the chair of divinity, ex­perienced this very thing, and often found much difficulty in answering the various questions and quibbles that were put to him by the Greek students, who apparently derived a great pleasure from the confusion of their lecturer.

Under these circumstances, we are not surprised to find that in the highly intellectual training college, the Articles of the Christian faith were first formulated and arranged as a system of philosophy, with which we all are familiar under the name of the gnosis, or science of Alexandria.

Of Pantaenus, the predecessor of Clement in the professorship in the Christian school, very little is known beyond the fact that he commenced life as a Stoic, and that when he became a Christian he inspired all his pupils with an intense thirst for that knowledge which he could impart^ so well, instructing them all in the tradition of the holy teaching directly handed down by father to son, from the Apostles Peter, James, John, and Paul.

The work his master so well commenced, Clement continued, because, as he tells us, “Knowledge is intended for use, and rusts when disused, just as wells, when pumped, yield a purer stream of water than before.”

The remaining chapters of this book will be devoted to a sketch of the life and a summary of the teaching of the second, and perhaps the most distinguished, of the three distinguished lecturers of the Catechetical School of Alexandria.

 

 

PART II

I. CLEMENS ALEXANDRINUS : EDUCATION AND PHILOSOPHICAL STUDIES II. CLEMENS ALEXANDRINUS : HIS LIFE AND CHARACTER III. THE MINOR WORKS OF CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA IV.THE TRACT ON THE RICH MAN V. CLEMENT0’S WRITINGS VI. EXHORTATION TO THE GENTILES VII. EXHORTATION TO THE GENTILES, CONTINUED VIII. THE INSTRUCTOR OF RIGHTEOUSNESS IX. SOME CUSTOMS AND SYMBOLS OF EARLY CHRISTIANS REFERRED TO IN CLEMENT’S WORKS X. CUSTOMS OF EARLY CHRISTIANS XI. ASCETICISM, AND OTHER SUBJECTS